It is to be presumed that the testatrix intended every part of her will to take effect. Several years before its execution she had entered into an agreement with her husband, made upon a valuable consideration, by which she undertook to make her will in such a way that 1,000 shares of stock in the Brainerd Quarry Co. and all her other property should ultimately go to her nine children hi equal shares. The will which she in fact made is obviously inconsistent with the obligation which she thus assumed. This inconsistency, however, cannot affect its construction, whatever rights it might give the husband to present a claim against her estate.
The personal estate, not specifically bequeathed, was all needed for the payment of debts and charges. The general legaciés must therefore fail, in whole or part, unless they can be satisfied out of real estate, not specifically devised. The remainder in the Middletown homestead and Clinton house falls within that description. By the terms of the will it became the property of the residuary devisees, at law, under the general residuary clause. It is not devised to the executor, but he is directed to convert it into money as fast as salés can be profitably effected. This constitutes, in favor of any *526whose interests under the will cannot otherwise be secured, an equitable conversion of realty into personalty. Fisher v. Banta, 66 N. Y. 468.
The direction by the testatrix that her general legacies shall be paid, is as explicit as her direction that the proceeds of these lands, after satisfying certain debts and charges, shall go to her children. These children were her residuary legatees and devisees. In substance, therefore, the eighth clause declares that the net proceeds of these sales shall become part of her residuary estate. The residue of an estate is that only which remains undisposed of after satisfying all particular legacies and devises, including any which, as here, may be made by a codicil. The doctrine of equitable conversion is not one to be invoked only by those whose immediate benefit the testatrix may seem to have had especially in view in ordering the sale. All her testamentary dispositions are to be taken into account, and if there be any apparent inconsistency between them, the last expression of her intent, to be found in the codicil executed but a few weeks before her death, by which the main pecuniary legacies are given, is entitled to especial weight. A conversion was therefore necessary for the purposes of the will in favor of the general legatees, and the remainder in the Middletown and Clinton real estate, when disineumbered from the liens and charges upon it, constitutes as to them a fund of money out of which they can demand payment.
A claim is made in behalf of some of these to a preference, in case the assets should prove insufficient to satisfy all the bequests. This rests upon evidence, introduced by them, subject to exception, that the provisions in their favor were made upon a valuable consideration.
It is conditionally found upon that evidence, in case this court should deem it admissible, that by the will of Mary M. Brainerd, the mother of the testatrix, who died in 1872, legacies were given to five persons who are named in the second clause of the will now under consideration. That gives to Elizabeth Goodwin, Catherine Coope and Grace E. B. Hasbrouck $500 each, to Mary E. Pope, $300, and to the two *527children of Rosalie W. Osborn, $150 each. Mrs. Brainerd’s will gave Catherine Coope an annuity of $50 so long as she remained unmarried, and made a similar provision for Grace Coope (now Mrs. Hasbrouck); it also left $50 to Elizabeth Goodwin, and $100 each to Rosalie W. Osborn and Mary E. Pope. These five persons executed a release of their legacies, at the request and for the benefit of Mrs. Pike, and in consideration of her promise that they should lose nothing by it, but that she “ would either pay them in her lifetime, or, if unable to do so, would make provision for payment thereof in her will.” She made no such payments in her lifetime. Mrs. Hasbrouck was married in 1883.
There is nothing on the face of Mrs. Pike’s will to indicate that the legacies given in the second clause were made in discharge of any existing obligation. This cannot be attributed to her ignorance of the importance of such a statement, for the sixth clause expressly refers to and confirms an agreement with three of her children, by which they relinquished certain legacies given to them by the will of Mrs. Brainerd in consideration of receiving from Mrs. Pike the right to receive, during the life of Mr. Pike, the income from certain shares in the Brainerd Quarry Company, and declares it to be her will that they should continue to receive it from her estate until his decease. Nor are the provisions of the second clause equivalent to those in Mrs. Brainerd’s will, the benefit of which the five persons in question relinquished. One of them, Mrs. Osborn, died before the will of Mrs. Pike was made. Her estate receives nothing under its provisions, but three times what Mrs. Brainerd left her is giyen to her children. Two others receive a fixed sum in lieu of an annuity, less in the case of each than the sum to which the annuity would have amounted. The two remaining legatees are given considerably more than was left to them by Mrs. Brainerd.
It is unnecessary to determine whether the evidence thus received was admissible. It is questionable, at least, whether one general legatee can ever be preferred to another on the ground that he is a guasi-creditor, unless the will itself shows that he occupies that position. Lord v. Lord, 23 Conn. 327, *528336; Fairfield v. Lawson, 50 id. 501, 508. But assuming, for the purposes of this case, that the evidence was competent, the finding made upon it, taken in connection with the will, fails to show an intent on the part of Mrs. Pike to give any of her general legatees a priority over the rest. Such an intent could only he established by clear and unequivocal proof. Duncan v. Franklin Township, 43 N. J. Eq. 143, 10 Atl. Rep. 546. The grouping of the five persons, in whose behalf the claim to a preference is made, together in the second clause, makes it probable that she had in mind the rights under Mrs. Brainerd’s will which they had surrendered in her favor, but the free hand with which she gave to each, or to their representatives, what she thought proper, as well as the omission of any reference to her promise of compensation, indicates that she regarded that as furnishing a reason for the bestowal of bounty, rather than as establishing a legal demand. The intention of the testatrix, manifested by the will, when read in the light of all the attending circumstances which may properly be considered, is the determining rule for our decision. No legatee can claim under the will more than she meant to give. If any of them were dissatisfied with the provisions made in their favor, and had a legal claim for more, their remedy was to present claims against her estate for a breach of contract.
The executor has paid, in discharge of funeral expenses and other unsecured debts and proper charges, more than the total amount of the personal estate left by the testatrix, exclusive of the shares of the Brainerd Quarry Company, which were specifically bequeathed. The general legatees now claim that this entitles them, under General Statutes, § 556, to a contribution from the specific devisees and legatees. This statute provides that “ when any estate bequeathed or devised to any person shall be taken for the payment of debts and charges, all the other legatees, devisees, or heirs, except the widow, where the devise is made in lieu of dower, shall contribute their proportional part of such estate to the person from whom such legacy or devise shall be taken away, and he may maintain an action to compel such contribution,” *529Under our common law as modified by General Statutes, § 510, the funds from which debts and charges are to be paid, if the will contains no direction to the contrary, are: first, the personal estate not specifically bequeathed; second, the real estate “ not specifically described and devised; ” third, specific legacies; and fourth, specific devises. Brainerd v. Cowdrey, 16 Conn. 1, 498. The provisions of § 556 first appear in the Revision of 1821 (p. 206, § 28) in the following words: “ When any testator, by his last will and testament, shall give any personal or real estate to any person or persons, and the same, or any part thereof, shall be taken and sold for the payment of the testator’s debts, as the law provides, all the other legatees, devisees, or heirs, shall refund their average or proportional part of such loss, to the person or persons, from whom such legacy or devise shall be taken away; and he or they may maintain an action at law to compel such contribution.” By the law then existing (Revision of 1821, p. 206, § 27), when the debts and charges could not be paid out of the personal estate without depriving the widow or heirs of stock or implements necessary for the business on which their livelihood depended, they might be satisfied in part by a sale of real estate in such manner as the Court of Probate might judge most equitable for the widow and heirs, or devisees.
These two sections of the Revision of 1821 are found, with slight alteration, in the Revision of 1866 (pp, 418, § 48, 414, § 55). In preparing that of 1875 it was thought necessary to pursue a rigid policy of abbreviation and condensation, in order to keep our general laws within the compass of a volume of moderate size. Revision of 1875, preface xii. The statute now particularly in question was reproduced (p. 371, § 14) with the omission, among other things, of the words “and sold” after “taken.” Revisers are presumed not to change the law, if the language which they use fairly admits of a construction which makes it consistent with the former statute. State v. Neuner, 49 Conn. 232, 235; Westfield Cemetery Association v. Danielson, 62 id. 319. General Statutes, § 556, must therefore be read as applying only to a contribu *530fcion in favor of those to whom some real or personal estate has been'devised or bequeathed of which they have been deprived by a judicial sale, or, in other words, in favor of specific devisees or legatees. Pecuniary legacies are not bequests of property which is susceptible of sale. If a specific legacy or devise is taken for the payment of debts and charges, a contribution may be demanded from those (other than the widow taking a provision in lieu of dower) to whom something was given which has not been taken away. Resort cannot be had to specific legacies or devises, so long as any estate not embraced by them remains. The funds applicable to general legacies must have been exhausted before the conditions can arise upon which the statute takes effect. No general legatee, therefore, can claim its benefits.
The legacies contained in the second clause of the will under consideration hear interest, under the ordinary rule, from one year after the decease of the testatrix. Those to the grandchildren named in the codicil bear interest, in the case of each, from the time named for the payment, whether that fall within or after a year from their grandmother’s decease. 2 Redfield on Wills, *469; Bartlett v. Slater, 53 Conn. 102.
The Superior Court is advised that (1) the net proceeds of the remainder in' the Middletown and the Clinton real estate is a fund from which the pecuniary legacies given in the second clause of the will and the codicil may be lawfully paid; (2) the legacies given in the second clause bear interest from March 3,1892, and those given in the codicil from the dates when they were respectively made payable; (3) there is no preference to be given to any of said legacies over others; and (4) there can be no contribution in favor of the general legatees by reason of the application of any personal estate to the payment of debts and charges.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.