Tomlinson v. Nickell

Green, Judge:

The question involved in this case is the true interpretation of the following clause in the will of William Dunsmore of Monroe county: “ All the remainder of my land, including my wife’s third I give to my son Jacob W. Dunsmore — my wife’s third after her death. If my son Jacob Dunsmore should die without having heirs, he. shall divide the land between *157his sister’s heirs as he may think proper.” To whom does this land devised to Jacob H. Dunsmore now belong upon the facts agreed in this ease? First, what was the estate, which under this clauss Jacob H. Dunsmore took in the land upon the death of the testator, William Dunsmore, his father? This must depend upon the true meaning of the words “ if my son Jacob Dunsmore should die without having heirs, he shalldivide the land” in' a specified manner. Whatever construction be given to these words, it is obvious that Jacob II. Dunsmorehad on .the death of his father, the testator, a defeasible fee simple in this land devised to him; for it is devised to him without any words of limitation. The language of the will is “ I give the land to my son Jacob H. Dunsmore.” This language was a devise of the land to Jacob IT. Dunsmore in fee simple. (See Code of Va. of 1860, ch. 116 § 8, p. 559). But it- is obviously made a defeasible fee simple by the words immediately following: “ If my son Jacob Dunsmore shall die without having heirs, he shall divide the land” among certain parties specified. Upon the occurring of the event here specified “ Jacob Dunsmore dying without having heirs” his fee simple estate before granted was terminated and by an executory Imitation is shifted to others as a shifting devise.

The next enquiry is: What was the contingency according to the testator’s will, on which the fee simple estate in this land devised to his son Jacob H. Dunsmore was thus to terminate and shift to others? The words of the will are : “If my son Jacob Dunsmore should die without having heirs.” If this language is construed according to its technical meaning, the contingency, upon which Jacob H. Dunsmore’s fee simple estate in this land was to terminate, and the fee shift to others, has never happened. So far from dying “without having heirs” he died having very mauj' heirs, all the plaintiffs in this action and many others. But did the testator in this phrase, “ivithout having heirs,” mean to use the word “heirs” in its technical meaning, or did he mean by the word heirs as here used “heirs of his body ?” If he meant “heirs of his body,” then as his son did die “without having heirs,” and his fee simple estate was terminated by his death, the fee shifted to others by the terms of the will. How the testator, when he used the words “if my son Jacob Dunsmore *158should die without having heirs ho shall divide the land between his sisters’ heirs as he may think proper,” clearly and obviously meant, “if he should die without having heirs of his body.” 'For it would be an evident absurdity to suppose that the devise over to his sisters’ heirs should he made to depend on the death of Jacob II. Dunsmoro without heirs, as this could not he the case so long as his sisters had heirs, for their heirs could always ho his heirs, if he had no others. If therefore the testator meant the devise to J. H. Dunsmore’s sisters’ heirs should take effect only in the event of their brother’s death without heirs, the conclusion must he that the testator under no circumstances intended, that these heirs of Jacob H. Dunsmore’s sisters should have any interest in this land, which conclusion would be a positive contradiction of the words of the will. All this absurdity can be avoided by construing the words, “without hewing heirs” to mean “without having heirs of his body.” Accordingly it has been uniformily held from the earliest times, that “when real estate is devised over in default of heirs of the first devisee, and the ulterior devisee or devisees stands related to the prior devisee, so as to he in the course of descent from him, whether in the lineal or collateral line and however remote, the word heirs, the wanting of which by the first devise is to he the contingency on which the devise over is to take effect, will always he construed to mean ‘heirs of the body;’ hut if the devise over is to a stranger then the word ‘heirs’ would he given its usual technical meaning.”

In Law v. Davis, 2 Stra. 850, the court say: “So if a devise he to A. and his heirs and for want of heirs to B., the brother of A., these last words restrain the word heirs to mean only ‘heirs of his body’ because it is impossible that A. can want an heir general while he has a brother.” Tt would obviously he otherwise if B. was in no way related-to A. but a stranger.

Very many cases of this character have been decided in the same manner and for the same reason. See Parker v. Thacker, 3 Lev. 70; Webb v. Hearing, Cro. Jac. 415; Lyte v. Willis, Cas. temp. Talb. 1,; Allen v. Spendlove, 1 Freem. 74; Pickering v. Towers, Amb. 363; Ives v. Legge, reported in note 3 T. R. 488; Doe on Dem. Comberbach v. Sir R. Perryn, 3 T. R. 484; Nottingham v. Jenkins, 1 P. Wms. 23; Goodnight *159v. Goodridge, Willes 369; Gibbs, C. J., in Hatch v. Bluck, 6 Taunt. 485; Aumble v. Jones, 1 Salk. 238; Attorney-General v. Gill, 2 P. Wms. 369; 1 Cowp. 234. I know of no authority in opposition to these decisions.

My conclusion therefore is that Jacob H. Dunsmore under the clause oí his father’s will took clearly not an absolute fee simple but only a defeasible fee simple in the lands so devised to him. His fee simple estate terminated and was shifted to others, “when he died without having heirs of his body,” which is admitted to be the fa^t. Of course therefore his grantee, Samuel W. Hickell, had no estate whatever in the land in controversy, unless he acquired some estate from the fact that the wife of Jacob H. Dunsmore, united with her husband in the deed of March 12, 1872. Had she then any estate either vested or contingent in this land to convey ? She clearly had not. If her husband had had a fee simple absolute in the land, she would have had no estate in it vested or contingent which she could convey. A wife during the life of her husband can never have any estate of any sort in her husband’s lands. What she has is a contingent right of dower in his lands, which he holds in fee simple. Hut this is no estate. It is contended by the counsel for the plaintiff in error, that it is equivalent to a contingent estate for life in one third of his fee simple lands provided she outlives her husband. But this is clearly a mistake. For upon the death of her husband, if she had such contingent life-estate in one third of his lands, it would immediately vestin her by operation of law; hut it does not vest in her, for all the land held by her husband in absolute fee on his death vests in his heirs in foe simple. It is true it is the duty of the husband’s heirs to assign to her dower, that is, to set off to her one third in value of her husband’s fee simple lands which have descended to his heirs, this third to be held by her for life. Hot until this assignment is made does the widow have any estate in her husband’s lands. If he does not perform this duty, she may bring a suit and compel the laying off of such dower by metes and bounds to be held by her for life. So that in her husband’s life-time she really has but a possible future right to have laid off to her one third in value of bis lands which he holds in fee; and this *160right extends not only to the lands, which during the marriage he held in absolute fee, but also to all lands held by him during the marriage in fee simple, though his lee in them may have been a defeasible fee simple, which so far as the interest of the husband in them may have been defeated, and his estate terminated by his death, and his lands by a shifting devise on his death have gone to others. Even in such case the estate is, as it were, extended so as to allow to the widow a right to have laid oft to her one third in value of such lands as her dower to be held by her for life. See Jones et ux. v. Hughes, 27 Gratt. 560, and Medley v. Medley, 27 Gratt. 568.

But this right to have dower laid off to her in her husband’s lands, in which he had during the marriage a defeasible estate in fee simple, constitutes during the lifetime of her husband or even after his death, till this dower -was actually assigned to her, no estate of any kind in his land; hence the fact that she united with her husband in a deed to a third party conveying land, in which her husband had such defeasible fee simple, which, it so happened, terminated at his death, could not possibly confer on such party any estate in the land or in any part of it after her husband’s death, for she had no estate contingent or vested to convey. This was expressly so decided in Corr v. Porter, 33 Gratt. 278. Judge Staples in delivering the opinion of the court in that case goes still further, as I understand him, and says in effect, that the fact, that the wife united with her husband in a deed conveying land, in which her husband had such defeasible estate, confers on the vendee no rights of any character but simply operates to prevent her from setting up any claim to dower after her husband’s death; and that the purchaser acquires no rights legal or equitable. But so far as he states in substance that the fact, that the wife unites with her husband in sueli deed conferred on the vendee after the death of the husband, no equitable rights of any sort to the value of what would have been her dower interest in this land or any other right, is merely an obiter dictum; and, I must confess, his reasoning on this matter is not very satisfactory. The views taken by Scribner in his work on Dower, vol. 2 pp. 5, 8, when speaking of inchoate dower as a right of property is *161to my mind much more satisfactory than what is said by Judge Staples. But as I am satisfied, that the fact that Dunsmoro’s wife united with him in the deed, whereby this land was conveyed to Samuel W. Nickell, conferred on Nickell no sort of estate in aiiy part of this land after her husband’s death, it is unnecessary of course in this case to consider, whether it conferred on him any equitable right-judge Staples evidently thinks it did not. He may be right; but I am not now prepared to say that he is, and I therefore express no opinion on the snbjoet-

The next enquiry is: Was the legal title to the whole or any part of the lands in controversy in the plaintiffs or in any of them? The answer to this enquiry depends upon the construction given to that portion of William Dunsmore’s will, which directed in the contingency, which did happen, “that Jacob IT. Dunsmore should divide the land between his sisters’ heirs as he may think proper.” This was a power coupled with a trust. The rule is thus laid down in Milhollen v. Rice, 13 W. Va. 510, point 7 of the syl.: “If the devisee of a life estate is simply authorized to dispose of the property at her death' among a certain definite class as she may think proper this will be held to be a power in the nature of a trust, unless it otherwise appears from the will, that the duty to execute such power to be inferred from its being granted, was designed by the testator to be left to be performed or left unperformed at the option of the party on whom such power was conferred. The rule being, that when there appears a general intention in favor of a class and a particular intention in favor of individuals of the class, and the particular intention fails from that selection not being-made, the court will carry into effect the general intention in favor of the class.”

The whole question, in case a power is given to one, who lias a life estate, to dispose of the fee to a class of persons to be divided among them as the life-tenant may think proper, as to when it is to be considered as a power coupled with a trust or when it is to be regarded as not coupled with a trust is fully discussed in this case of Milhollen v. Rice, the discussion of the question extending from page 543 to 566. The authorities are there fully reviewed; and from them and *162from the conclusion reached by the court, as contained in the portion of the syllabus above cited, I conclude that the authority conferred by the will of William Dunsmore on his son, Jacob IT. Dunsmore, in case he should die leaving no heirs of his own body, to divide the laud, which he had given him, among the heirs of his sisters in such way as he might, think proper, was a power coupled with a trust; and that the testator desired this division under these circumstances to be made by his son among the heirs of his three sisters, and did not wish these lands to descend in fee simple to all the heirs of the testator. And to whom this land should go, whether to all his heirs or only to the heirs of his three daughters, the testator did not design to be left to the judgment or option of his sou, Jacob Dunsmore. All that he intended, should his son leave no heirs of his own body, was that his sou should divide the land among such of his sisters’ heirs as he might select and in such proportions as he might choose. But he did not intend to leave to his judgment in effect to decide, whether he should by leaving this power unexecuted confer a large portion of the estate on persons other than the heirs of these three sisters of Jacob H. Duns-more. It was a power given to him coupled with a trust, which it was his duty to have executed. The language of the will, that uif his son should die without having heirs” (meaning heirs of his body) uhe should divide this land among the heirs of his sisters as he might think proper” shows clearly, that the testator did not intend to leave it optional with his son to decide, whether this land in such a contingency should go ultimately to the heirs of the testator generally or should go to or among the heirs of his three daughters. This-question the testator intended to decide for himself and did by his will decide, that in such contingency this land should go' ultimately to or among the heirs of these three daughters of the testator. When a trust of this character is created, the courts of the present day and those for a long time past construe the bequest or devise as a gift by implication to the objects of the power in default of the power being exercised, and the property will be regarded as given or devised to each individual of the class equally, and each will be regarded as holdiug directly under the terms of the will; the power cou-*163ferred is regarded as extending only to the selection from or distribution amongst the class of objects, and if the power is irot exercised the estate goes to each member of the class equally. See Lord Elden’s remarks in Brown v. Higgs, 8 Ves. 576; Kemp v. Kemp, 5 Ves. 849; Witts v. Boddington, 3 Bro. C. C. 95; Maddison v. Andrews, 1 Ves. 57; Longmoon v. Brown, 2 Ves. 124; Whitehurst v. Harker, 2 Ired. Chy. 292. But when the division is to be made among several classes it does not follow, that in default of the exercise of the power the estate will always be divided among all the members of the several classes equally per capita; but of this we will speak more at large presently.

But we must consider first, whether the division, the power to make which was given to the son of the testator but not exercised by him, was a division among the members of one class only, that is to say, the children of these sisters of this son, who might be living at his death, as the court below has decided in effect, or was it a division to be made among three distinct classes, that is the heirs of these three sisters severally. This last is apparently the meaning of the testator, if we give to the language he has used its usual and technical meaning. His words are: “IT e shall divide the land among his sisters’ heirs.” The word heirs must receive its usual and technical meaning, unless the context dearly indicates, that the testator used the word in some other sense. There are a number of cases, in which it has been held, that the will dearly showed that the testator used this word heirs in some other than its technical sense. Thus if the devise is a present one to take effect immediately on the death of the testator, and is to the heirs of a person known to the testator to be living, as such a devise could not possibly take effect immediately on the testator’s death, as the ancestor would be living, and no one can be the heir of a living person, this would show clearly that the testator by making a devise to the heirs of such living person to take effect at once did not use the word heirs in its technical sense but used it as the equivalent of heirs apparent, and hence in such case the heirs apparent of such person would immediately on the death of the testator take the estate devised to the heirs of such living ancestor, as the testator’s clearly *164expressed will could in no other-manner be carried out. But this reasoning has no application to the case when the devise, as in the case now before us, is not a present or immediate devise to the heirs of a person known to the testator to be living’, but is a limitation of a future estate to the heirs of such living person or persons to take effect after the tei’-mination ot some preceding estate. In such case there is no necessity to construe the word heirs as heirs apparent in order' to effect any expressed purpose of the testator. The strict legal signification of the word heirs can be attached to it as used by the testator, aud yet the purposes expressed by him be fully carried out. For in such case, as in the case before us, the estate devised to the heirs is not intended to vest or come into possession till the termination of some present estate created by the same will; and giving to the word heirs its usual legal signification, the testator’s will is not as in the other ease necessarily defeated. For though the party, whose heii’s are given such future estate, be living, yet he may die, before the particuler estate ends, and must die at some time, and whenever he does die, his heirs will be in existence to receive the future estate intended by the will to be devised to them to take effect at a future time. See Reid v. Stuart, 13 W. Va. 338; Campbell v. Rawdon, 18 N. Y. 412; Criswell’s Appeal, (5 Wright) 41 Pa. St. 288; Richardson v. Wheatland, 7 Metc. (Mass.) 169.

In the case before us the devise intended for the benefit of the heirs of the three sisters’-of Jacob II. Dunsmorc was not only a devise to take effect in futuro, but that it would ever take effect at all was contingent upon the death of Jacob II. Dunsmorc without heirs of his body. According therefore to these authorities, the words “ divide the land between his sisters’ heirs” must be regarded as having their usual signification; and the object of the testator’s bounty must be regarded as the three classes, the heirs of the three sisters of Jacob II. Duns-more, the word heirs receiving its usual technical meaning, that is, such persons as would on the death of each of the sisters severally be the heirs according to the law in force at the time of their several death's. But it is argued by the counsel for the defendant in error, that the will shows clearly on its face that the testator by using these -words “ the heirs *165of his sisters” did not mean Avliat his words import, but tlmt he meant the children ot these three sisters, whether any or all of the sisters were living when this estate was to vest in the devisees, that is, at the death of their brother, Jacob H. Dunsmore, without heirs of his body. This, it is claimed, is shown to have been the meaning of the testator, because he repeatedly used this word “ heirs” in the will and always obviously' meant not the heir proper of the ancestor named hut the children of such person, though he was still living. It is trae, that the testator had obviously used this word heir in this improper sense as meaning children, but he has not done so uniformly, as is claimed. In one place for instance he say's, that two hundred dollars which he had given to Eliza Vines, one of his married daughters, was “to be for the benefit of- herself and heirs specially'.” It is difficult to say what the testator meant by this language. I suspect he meant, that this legacy was to be for her sole and separate use, but if so, he has expressed his meaning so imperfectly, that the courts could never give effect to his supposed meaning; certainly this very inaccurate expression could not aid in the interpretation of any other portion of his will. Again he says: “If there are not funds from the sale of land and personal property sufficient to pay my debts and my heirs as directed, they shall, after receiving equal proportions, wait for the balance till the black man is sold.” By the word heirs as used in this sentence, the testator evidently meant not his heirs 'proper nor his heirs apparent nor all his children, but only Charles L. Dunsmore, William H. Dunsmore and his three daughters, five of his children to each of whom he had given two hundred dollars. Again the testator says: “ The land I give my son, James A. Dunsmore, is only for his benefit during his life, and at his death is for his heir or heirs.” I see in this clause no reason why the word heir or heirs should be construed to mean child or children. There is no indication, that the testator intended to give to these words any other than their usual and technical meaning; and I feel quite sure that his will would be much better interpreted, by giving to these words their usual and technical sense than by first surmising, that the testator had some other meaning and then carrying out this supposed purpose.

*166Let us suppose for instance, that the only deseen dent of James A. Dunsmore living at his death was a grand-child. If we give to these words of the will their usual and technical sense, this grand-cliild would receive the whole of the laud left by this will to his grand-father. Can any one doubt that this would accord with the wish of the testator? If however the construction insisted on by the counsel of the deiendant in error should be given to the word heir or heirs, as here used, this grand-son would get but one fifth of the grand-father’s lands, and all the balance would go to his gran,d-uncles or grand-aunts and their numerous 'decendants, heirs of the testator. I cannot believe that this would be in accord with his will. The word heirs is used nowhere else in this will except in the-clause, which we are construing, which is: “If my sou, Jacob II. Dunsmore, should die without having heirs he shall divide the land between his sisters’ heirs as he may think proper.” Now we have seen that the word heirs when first used in this sentence does not mean children, but does meau “heirs of his body,” and this is entirely different from the word children in this connection. Suppose for the words, “heirs of his body” we were to substitute children and make this sentence read, as the counsel of the defendant in error would have it read: “If my son Jacob II. Dunsmore should die without having children, he shall divide the land between his sisters’ heirs as he may think proper;” and suppose that he had children all of whom died before Jacob II. Dunsmore, thus leaving him no descendants. Still the condition, on which the fee simple given to Jacob II. Dunsmore was to terminate, and a shifting devise arise putting the fee simple of these lands in the heirs of the sisters of Jacob II. Dunsmore, would not have occurred, and ho would have had in such case, an absolute estate in fee simple in this land in-obvious violation of the wishes of the testator. On the other hand, if it were said that this will ought to be interpreted so that Ms fee simple estate would terminate, if he did not have children living at his death, were it possible to so construe the will if we interpret this word as meaning children it would not help to carry out the testator’s meaning. For if Jacob II. Dunsmore had a child, who died during his father’s lifetime but left a child, a grand-child of Jacob II. *167Dunsmore, it is obvious that, according to tlic testator’s will the fee simple of the estate oí Jacob H. Dunsmore ought not to terminate at his death. Yet if this word heirs is to he interpreted as meaning children it would terminate, and the heirs of the three sisters would get this land to the total exclusion of the grand-sou of Jacob TT. Dunsmore. There could not be a more obvious violation of the testator’s wishes. But giving to this- word heirs as used by the testator in the first part of this clause, which we are interpreting, its usual technical meaning modified only to the extent that it has been under such circumstances modified by the uniform decisions of the courts so as to make it read, if “Jacob Dunsmore dies without heirs of his body he shall divide,” &c., we avoid all these glaring violations of the testator’s wishes in the contingencies we have supposed, -which when the testator’s will was written were quite likely to occur.

My conclusion thereforels, that we cannot find in this will any such uniform meauing attached by the testator to the word “heirs” as will give us auy aid in determining what he meant, when he directed in a certain contingency “this land to be divided among the heirs of the sisters of Jacob II. Dunsmore.” But in truth if we had found that in all the other clauses of this will, except the one we are construing, the word heirs was uniformly used by the testator as synonymous with the word children;yet we could not for that reason attach that meaning to it in this cause. Dor as was well said by the supreme court of Alabama in Lloyd v. Rumbo, 35 Ala. (new series) 712, Chief Justice Walker delivering the opinion of the court, “The word heirs occurs in a clause preceding and in one succeeding the sixth; and it is argued, that the words in those clauses must mean children, and that the testator must be supposed to have used the word in the same sense in the sixth clause.- It is a general, but not a universal rule, that the same word is to be understood in the same sense, when it occurs more than once in the same will. A well established exception to this rule is, that if a word'has a technical meaning in the law, and is accompanied by a context, in one clause, which shows the intention of the testator that it should be understood in a different sense, while in another clause it is used with reference to a different sub-*168joct, being accompanied by nothing explanatory of it, the word is to receive in the latter clause its technical meaning. Flinn v. Davis, 18 Ala. 122; Doe d. Cadogan v. Ewart, 7 Ad. & E. 636 (34 Eng. Com. L. R. 187); Streetford v. Buckley, 2 Ves. Sr. 170, 181; Doe d. Chattaway v. Smith, 5 M. & S. 126, 131; Sheffield v. Orrery, 3 Atk. 282, 288; Forth v. Chapman, 1 P. Wms. 664; 2 Williams on Ex’or 928; 2 Lomax on Ex’or (marg.) 76; Mazyck v. Vanderhorst, 1 Bailey’s Eq. 48; 2 Jar. on Wills 419.”

The rule thus laid down might perhaps have been laid down somewhat broader, and might have required perhaps the technical meaning to be given to a word, where there was nothing to show a contrary purpose except the use of the same word in a non-technical sense in other clauses of the will or even in the same clause of the will. But as laid down it covered the case before the Alabama supreme court, as it covers the ease now before us. One other objection however is urged by the counsel for the defendants in error to giving to the words in the clause wc are discussing uhis sisters’ heirs” the usual technical meaning; and that is, that Jacob Dunsmore, the son, if he should die without leaving heirs, •was to divide the land between his sisters’ heirs. And it is said that this must have meant his sisters’ children, as he could not have divided this land among persons then not born perhaps, and certainly no't known if any of his sisters were still living. This view seems to me to be without force. It is obvious, that this will intended that the testator’s son, Jacob H. Dunsmore, should divide this land by his will, as it is.clear the division under no circumstances could take effect till after his death; for the contingency, on which it was to take effect was, “If Jacob 11. Dunsmore should die without heirs of his body” which of course could not occur till his death. Now I see no sort of difficulty in Jacob Dunsmore dividing this land by his will among “the heirs of his sisters, as he might think proper,” whether all of the sisters were dead or some of them were living. Of course if they were all dead.when the will was written by Jacob II. Duns-more dividing this land, there would be no difficulty in making such division. And I can see no difficulty in Jacob II. Dunsmore making the division of this land as he might *169think proper by will, though some of his sisters were living. Could he not by will if he chose, have given to the heirs of any of his living sisters on her death any portion of his land he pleased, as a fourth or a half? Could he not have given such fourth or half to the male only orto the female heirs-only of his sister on her death ? Could he not have given what portion he pleased to the eldest heir of his sister .on her death, or, if he chose, to the youngest heir? In short could lie not by his will have divided this land among the heirs of his sisters in any manner lie might think proper though some or all of them were living, when he made his will? I can see no kind of necessity to interpret the words “his sisters' heirs” as meaning the children of his sisters living at the death of their brother, Jacob TL Dunsmore. The court below by the judgment it rendered seems to have so interpreted this will, and as a legitimate consequence rendered a judgment in favor of all the plaintiffs, who were all the children of these three sisters living at the death of the brother, Jacob H. Dunsmore. This judgment is based on the idea, that the objects of the testator’s bounty were all the children of these three daughters of the testator; and this being the view of the court, it properly held that the devise was by implication to all these children, the objects of the power conferred, in default of its being exercised. If the words “ his sisters’ heirs ” mean as the court below appears to have construed them “ his siste7's’ children,” then this land on the death of the son, Jacob II. Dunsmore, would at once have gone to the twenty-six children of these sisters then living to the exclusion of all the children born subsequently. Tor it is settled, that when a particular interest is carried out with a gift.over to the children of another person, such gift will embrace not only the objects living at the death of the testator, but all who may subsequently come into existence before the period of distribution, but will not include any person, who comes into existence after the period of distribution. See Ayton v. Ayton, 1 Cox 327, and various other authorities referred to in 2 Jar. on Wills 156. This of itself is a very strong reason why the words “heirs of his sisters” used in this will should not be interpreted as children of his sisters.

The testator died in the spring of 1860. Of course there*170fore all the children of his three daughters, who were under age when this suit was brought in February, 1883, were born after February, 1863, or nearly three years after the testator’s death. Two at least of the children of Catharine Tomlin-son, one of these daughters, that is Catharine Tomlinson and CoraB. Tomlinson would, if the heirs of these three daughters are interpreted to mean children of these three daughters, have been excluded from all interest in this land had the sou of the testator, Jacob II. Dunsmore, died within two years after the death of the testator, though because of his happening to live longer they are not excluded; and so too all the children who might be born to any of these three daughters after the death of their brother, Jacob IT. Dunsmore, would have to be excluded, if by “his sisters’ heirs” is meant his sisters’ children. It would seem to be a singular interpretation of this will, which would lead to such results.

By the heirs of his sisters it seems to me was obviously meant the immediate families of the sisters’ children and descendants living at the death of the sisters. And thus the technical and usual interpretation of this word heir prevents the exclusion from the testator’s bounty of any of the children, who might be living at the death of their mother, one of these sisters, whether he or she happened to be born after or before the death of Jacob II. Dunsmore; and it can scarcely be believed, that the testator meant to make any distinction between children born to these sisters before and those who were born after the death of Jacob II. Dunsmore, for no reason can be conceived why he should make such a distinction. But as I interpret this will, all such injustice and all unreasonable distinctions not dreamt of by the testator are avoided. For of course none of the shares or interest in this land, on the contingency which has happened, the death of Jacob II. Dunsmore without leaving heirs of his body living at his death, could vest till the death of one of these three sisters. One of these sisters, Mary Leach, died in 1881 about a year before Jacob II. Dunsmore died, and therefore one third of this land on the death of Jacob II. Dunsmore, leaving no heirs of his body went under the will of Wm. Duns-more, the testator, to the heirs of Mary Leach in fee simple, who were a number of children, whom she left living at her *171death.. They got this one undivided third of this land in Controversy in fee simple under this will, simply because they were the heirs of their deceased mother, Mary Leach, and they got just such interest, as they would have inherited, had she and her two other sisters owned this land in fee simple; and this follows from the land being devised to the heirs of these sisters respectively. The heirs of these three sisters do not, as we interpret this will, take in their own right, but only as representing their respective mothers, the daughters of the testator; and this being the case, they should take it as it were per stirpes, that is, the shares which their mothers would have taken had the land been devised to them in fee simple, and not per capita, as they would have taken had the land been devised to the children of these three sisters instead of to the heirs of these three sisters. See Wythe v. Thurlston, 2 Amb. R. 554; Gale v. Bennett, 2 Amb. R. 681; Rowland v. Gorsuch, 2 Coxe’s Cases in Equity 187, 189.

The next enquiry is, as but one of these sisters was dead when this suit was instituted, and her children could claim but one undivided third part of the land in controversy in fee simple, and as no interest in this land belonged to the defendant below, Samuel W. Nickell, after the death of his grantor Jacob H. Dunsmore, leaving no heirs of his body, and as the other sisters, Catharine Tomilson and Eliza Vines, were still living and could therefore have then no heirs, where was the legal title to the remaining two undivided third parts of the land in controversy? As under the condition of things, which has arisen since the testator’s death, there was no one, in whom more than one third part of this land could vest on the death of Jacob II. Dunsmore leaving no heirs of his body, and as the remaining two undivided third parts of this land are not disposed of by this will till the death of the two sisters surviving, Catharine Tomlinson and Eliza Vinos, as a matter of com’se these two undivided third parts of this land on the death of Jacob II. Dunsmore leaving no heirs of his body descended to the heirs of the testator, Wm. Dunsmore, that is, as I understand, to Louis Dunsmore, Eliza Vines, Cath-arine Tomlinson, J. A. Dunsmore, the children of Mary Leach, deceased, and the children of Wm. Dunsmore, deceased, one undivided third part to be held by them till the *172death of either Catharine Tomlinson or Eliza Vines, when it is to go in fee simple to those who may then be her legal heirs, and the other part to be held by them till the death of the survivor of these two sisters, then to go to those who may then be her legal heirs.

The judgment of the circuit court of Monroe county rendered on June 6, 1888, must therefore be reversed, set aside and annulled; and the defendants in error must pay to the plaintiff in error his costs in this Court expended; and if by the agreed state of facts it' was possible for this Court to determine, who among the plaintiffs were the heirs of Mary Leach, deceased, this Court would render a judgment in their favor for one undivided third part of the land in controversy to be held by them in fee simple, and would act upon and determine what further, if anything, should be done under the petition of Samuel W, Nickell to bo allowed-for his permanent improvement on this laud. But as the agreed facts do not show who are the heirs of Mary Leach, deceased, they are too imperfect to enable this Court or the circuit court to render any judgment in the case, and the agreed facts must be set aside and the case remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings. We suppose that Wra. Leacli, John A. Jjeach and Sarah C. Leach, plaintiffs below, are children of Mary Jjeach, but we cannot be assured merely from their names, that Sarah C. Leach is a daughter of Mary Jjeach, deceased. As for all we cau know from the agreed facts she might be a daughter of Catharine Tomlinson or Eliza Vines, who had married some one named Jjeach. So we may suppose that Angoline Style, ElizaS. JTpton and Mary J. Harris, are daughters of Mary Leach, deceased. But wo have no groundfor so surmising, except simply because the position of their names in the declaration is either with or near that of others, who are Leaches. Of course we could not assume this important fact from this mere position of their names in the declaration. It is not among the facts agreed, as if true, it should have been, in order to enable this Court to render any judgment in their favor. The agreed facts must be set aside as being too indefinite to permit any judgment to be rendered on them; and the case must be remanded to the circuit court of Monroe county to be pro-*173ceederl with according to the principles laid down in this opinion, and further according to law.

We express no opinion in reference to the petition filed by Samuel W. Nickell relating to permanent improvements put on this land by him. It is obvious that his right to file this petition in the manner, in which he did was based on the fact that a judgment for this land had been rendered against him by the court; and as this judgment must be reversed and sot aside, this petition must therefore be stricken from the files, and the order permitting it to be filed set aside. After a proper judgment has been rendered in this case by the circuit court of Monroe county, this petition may be again presented, and must then be dealt with as the circuit eon rt deems proper; but as the plaintiffs may file with their declaration, if it is not to be regarded as already done, a statement of the profits and other damages, they mean to demand under § 30, ch. 90 of the Code, and the defendant may under § 32 same ch. file his claim for improvements, there may be no occasion for defendant to prosecute this action again. We say nothing about this petition now, except that if the ultimate judgment or claim of the plaintiff below should be only for an undivided third part of this land, as belongingto the heirs of Mai’y Leach in fee, and it should be held that the defendant Samuel W. Nickell is entitled to be compensated for his permanent improvements, he could claim to charge against the heirs of Mary Leach only oiie third part of these improvements, if that be the extent of their claim to this land.

REVERSED. Remanded.