This suit is brought to obtain a judicial construction of the will of Richard H. Phelps. In the first clause he gives to his wife an annuity and the use of certain real estate for life, or so long as she remains his widow and lives on the premises. Under that clause no question arises.
*360The second clause is as follows : “ All my estate, real and personal, of which I may die possessed (the aforesaid annuity and reservations excepted), I give equally to my children, Roswell, William, and Alline, or in the event of the decease of either of them without leaving issue at his or her decease, the portion of said deceased is to be shared equally by the survivors or their issue.”
The first and most important question is—What estate do the children take ? Is it a fee or a life estate ?
It is difficult to distinguish this case from White v. White, 52 Conn., 518; and still more difficult to distinguish it from Coe v. James, 54 Conn., 511. In each of those cases it was held that the death of the devisees spoken of in the will meant death during the lifetime of the testator. We are inclined to follow those cases and adopt the same construction in this case.
We find that view strongly supported by several considerátions suggested by other portions of the will. The leading thought in the mind of the testator was, to give all his property to his family—his wife and children. He first provides for his wife and then for his children. There is no primary gift to the grandchildren. The gifts to them, so far as they may be called gifts, are secondary, incidental and contingent. We see nothing in the case indicating a preference for grandchildren. There is no lack of confidence in his sons, for they are made executors; nor in his daughter or her husband, for he is made a co-executor, and, in one contingency, a trustee. If we compare the first and second clauses we shall see that the testator knew the difference between a life estate and a fee ; and he had in mind the appropriate language for creating the former, for in giving a life estate in the first clause he did so expressly, leaving nothing to implication. There is a marked difference in the language of the two clauses. It is inconceivable that he should desire to give but a life estate and should use language so much unlike that in the first clause and so apt to convey a fee. If he had stopped after naming his children, and omitted the rest of that clause, no doubt could be *361entertained as to liis meaning. We think that clause was added, not for the purpose of providing for his grandchildren upon the death of his. children after a possible long life, but in view of the possibility that they might die young, or at least before he did; so that if we read the will as intending death during his own lifetime, we shall harmonize those two clauses and give effect to his real intention. Not only so, but that construction aids us materially in understanding and harmonizing other portions of the will. The third clause is as follows : “ My daughter Alline is to keep her share in her own sole and separate right, or until her children shall marry or become of age, and should she die without living issue her portion is to revert to her brothers Roswell and William, or either of them, or their heirs, as survivors.” We remark, parenthetically, that the words “her share” and “her portion” are more applicable to a fee than to a life estate. They seem to imply that she has an interest in the principal, as such, and not merely a right to the income.
But to return. Precisely what is meant by this language it is not easy to see. There is a slight implication that he intended that her children on marrying or becoming of age should have her portion of his estate ; but he does not say that, and his language does not necessarily imply it. Therefore we cannot say legally that he meant it. In providing that his daughter should enjoy her portion as her separate property, it seems to have occurred to him that that might not always be necessary, and so he adds, “ or until her children shall marry or become of age.” The rest of that clause is plain enough, provided we assume, as we do, that he intended death during his lifetime. Hence all that is expressed in this clause with sufficient certainty is, that if his daughter dies before he does, leaving no issue, her portion shall go to her brothers; and if she lives to come into possession of her share, she shall enjoy it as her sole and separate property.
We may add that the word “portion,” used in the second clause of the will, is much more applicable to a share of an *362estate in view of a prospective division of it under a will, than to the same share after it has passed to the distributee and is being enjoyed by him. It is then almost invariably spoken of as his property or his estate, and no longer as his share of an estate. It is therefore a word that the testator would more naturally have used with reference to shares of his estate that would at once upon his death become fixed, and to facts which would then operate at once upon the distribution of his estate, than with reference to the ultimate disposal of the shares at the end of the lives of the legatees.
A further consideration in favor of the view that the “ dying without issue ” in the second clause of the will means a dying in the lifetime of the testator, is, that while the contrary view would give his children severally only life estates in the portions given them, yet the gift over to the survivors on the death of either without children has no such limitation attached to it, and passes to the survivors in fee. No reason can be conceived why the children should take only life estates in the primary bequests, and yet fees in the secondary or contingent ones.
The fourth clause of the will is as follows:—“ In case of the decease of my son William before his youngest child becomes twenty-one years of age, my real estate in Maryland, occupied by him, is to be sold, and the avails thereof, with the rest of his share, are to be invested in the state of Connecticut by my executors, and his children are to reside in said state in order to receive the benefit of the avails of this portion, and the general care and supervision of them and their property and its income and expenditure are to be under the care and supervision and control of my executors, according to their best judgment, for their education and support, and the support of their mother if living, until the youngest surviving child becomes twenty-one years of age, and then their portion is to be given to said children or the survivors of them. In case of the decease of said children and of their father before they are twenty-one years of age, leaving no issue, their portion is to revert to my chil*363dren Roswell and Alline, and in case of their decease then to their issue.”
If we bear in mind that the testator is speaking of William’s death during his own lifetime, it is not difficult to discover his meaning. He contemplates such death in one of two contingencies—leaving children, the youngest child being under twenty-one years of age, or leaving no children or the issue of children. In the former contingency the share that would otherwise have gone to William is placed in trust until the youngest child comes of age, for the support and" education of the cliildren, and the support of the mother if living, when the principal is to be distributed to the children. In the latter contingency William’s portion is to go to his brother and sister or their issue. Inasmuch as William survived the testator, the trust fails, the widow and children of William take nothing under the will, and the whole fourth clause becomes inoperative, as neither contingency on which it depends has happened or ever can happen.
A question is made whether the provision that the children shall provide for the widow, in case the provision for her support proves to be insufficient, is a charge upon the éstate. That question has not been discussed by counsel, and as no one appears in behalf of the widow, who, perhaps, has more interest in that question than any one else, we have deemed it inexpedient to decide it.
The Superior Court is advised that the children take their respective shares in fee simple; that the daughter takes her share to her sole and separate use; and that her children and the children and widow of William take nothing under the will.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.