Blatchford v. Newberry

Mr. Justice Dickey,

dissenting:

The decision in this case seems to me to do violence to the intention of the testator, distinctly stated by the words of the will, when taken in their true and legal meaning.

I have examined with care at least one hundred cases referred to in the briefs of counsel, and I find no case, — where the will disposes of the whole estate, clearly cutting off the inheritance and provides for a succession of estates, the prior of which is a life estate, — in which the words, “after the decease” of the prior donee, have been construed to postpone the beginning of the ulterior estate until the physical death of the prior donee, after the termination of the prior estate,— where the effect of such construction is to leave the property constituting the subject of the gift, in idleness during the interval, in the hands of trustees having no beneficial interest therein, and to the present use of no one. It is believed no such case can be found in England or America.

I concur in the decision in so far as it holds that in this will the words of survivorship (as to the descendants of the brothers and sister) are to be referred to the period of final distribution under the will. I also concur in the view that, “if the time for distribution has in fact arrived, the claim, that the devise is still contingent, is without force, because the donees are ascertained in such case by the arrival of the time of distribution.” And so I agree that the prime enquiry in this case is, “What is the time of distribution under the will ? Has the period for distribution arrived?”

On that prime question my views are not in accord with those expressed by my brother Sheldon, in behalf of the majority of the court. I think the time has in fact arrived; and the decree of, the circuit court ordering immediate distribution was right and that it ought to be affirmed.

The only words of the will in the case at bar, which, in my judgment, relate in anywise to the disposition of the residuary estate in controversy, are the following:

The testator devises and bequeaths unto trustees (named in the will) “ the residue and remainder of all' my estate, real and personal, * * * in trust for -the purposes hereinafter fully set forth.”

“It is my will and desire to make provisions for my beloved wife, Julia Butler Newberry, * * * and I do hereby direct that my trustees pay to her for her support during her natural life the sum of $8000 annually.” * * * “ None of the foregoing provisions for the benefit of my wife shall be operative, * * * unless she shall, within twelve months after my decease, relinquish all right, title or demand which she may have, or be entitled to by law byway of dower or otherwise, to my estate, or any part or portion thereof.”

“It is my will, and I hereby direct, that * * * my said trustees shall divide the net income annually arising from the residue and remainder of my estate * * * equally between my said daughters, Mary L. Newberry and Julia It. Newberry, to be theirs absolutely. * * * If from any cause the net income of my estate shall, at any time, be inadequate to the support of my daughters, and there shall not be in the hands of my trustees, from such net income, sufficient to' enable them to pay over, yearly and every year, to each of my said daughters at least the sum of $2500, then, in such case, I direct that my trustees take from the principal of my estate so much as will make up with the net income a sum sufficient to enable them to apportion to each of my said daughters $2500, and to pay the same to them respectively * * * as hereinbefore provided.” * * *

“In case of the death of either of my said daughters, having no lawful issue living, I will and devise that the portion of the net income which would have belonged to such daughter (as hereinbefore provided) had she survived) shall, from and after her decease, belong to and be paid over by my said trustees to my other daughter, if she survive, but if she, too, has then deceased, leaving lawful issue, then such portion shall belong to and be paid over to such lawful issue until the final distribution of ray estate, as hereinafter provided.”

“And it is my will, and I direct, that in case of each and every bequest, and of every instance in which I have directed my trustees to pay over money to any person whomsoever, if the person or persons to whom or for whose benefit I have made such bequest, or directed any money to be paid, as aforesaid, shall have deceased, or for any cause be incapable of taking, then the amount so bequeathed, or so directed to be paid over, shall revert to and become a part of my estate, unless I have otherwise specifically directed.”
“In case of the death of both or either of my daughters during the lifetime of my wife, leaving lawful issue living, it is my will, and I difect, that such lawful issue shall have and receive from my said trustees the portion of the net income from my estate which would have belonged to that one of my daughters from whom they are descended, had she survived.” * * *
“It is my will, and I direct, that after the decease of my wife, and after the decease of both of my daughters, * * * then as soon after the decease of my said wife and both of my said daughters, as the same can conveniently be done, my said trustees shall divide amongst, distribute and pay to the lawful issue of my said daughters the whole of my estate then remaining in the hands of my said trustees.”
“In case of the death of both my said daughters without leaving lawful issue, then immediately after the death of my wife, if she survive my said daughters, but if not, then immediately after the decease of the last surviving of my said daughters, my said trustees shall divide my estate into two equal shares * * * and shall at once proceed to distribute one of said shares among the lawful surviving descendants of my brothers and sister; * * * the other share of my estate shall be applied by my said trustees, as soon as the same can consistently be done, to the founding of a free public library.” * * *

By a codicil, the annuity for his wife is fixed at $10,000 instead of $8000.

The testator died Nov. 6, 1868, leaving a widow and the two daughters, Mary and Julia, mentioned in the will. The widow renounced the provisions of the will and took her dower and a share of the personal property under the statute, v The daughters died without issue, Mary in February, 1874, and Julia April 4th, 1876. The trustees have paid all the legacies, and the widow is still living.

To ascertain the true meaning and intention of this will, let us examine some of the axioms of the law, and notice some of the views and rules which have been recognized and universally observed in like cases.

Where the absolute owner of property in perpetuity carves out of this perpetual estate several estates, fixing the time when each estate is to begin, and when it shall end, if the time named for the end of one such estate is also the time named for the beginning of the next estate, they are called successive estates, and the result of such plan of disposition is called a succession of estates.

In such case where the time named for the ending of one estate and the beginning of the next, is provided to occur upon the happening of a contingency, such contingency is called a limitation, because it is the boundary between the first estate and the second estate.

In such ease, where the contingency in question relates to the first taker alone, and not to the second taker, or any other person, such contingency constitutes only a limitation or boundary between the estates, and does not constitute a qualification as to the second taker; and the words designating such a contingency are regarded as words of mere boundary, and are not words of qualification as to the second taker; for that contingency, not relating to the second taker, does not constitute a qualification of the second taker, and is not a thing essential to his capacity to take.

Words describing a contingency on which one estate is to cease and another begin, are not to be understood as a qualification essential to the capacity of the second taker to take, unless that contingency relates to the second taker personally, or at least to some person other than the first taker.

The fallacy of the reasoning of counsel for appellants (it seems to me) consists, in the main, in a failure to distinguish the words of this will, (which are used as words of mere limitation — as boundaries — between the successive estates provided for,) from words of the will used as words of qualification as to the ulterior takers. Throughout their argument they constantly assume, without discussion or authority, that certain words of the will are in fact used as words of qualification of the next takers — when the words on which they rely are in truth used in the will as words of mere boundary between the successive estates, — as words of mere limitation.

The words of this will referring to the decease of the wife and to the decease of the daughters, respectively, are used, (as I think,) as words of mere boundary between successive estates, — and the only words of qualification,' bearing upon this case, are the words referring to the survivorship of the descendants of the brothers and sister,. and requiring that, to enable them to take, they shall survive the three estates for life mentioned in the will.

Counsel do not question what is said in Shepard’s Touchstone, 435, note k, that “ if a prior estate fails, either from incapacity of the prior devisee to take, or from the devise having lapsed, or otherwise, the remainder takes effect as if there had been no such prior devisenor do they question what is said in Theobold (on Construction of Wills, 450,) that “when there is a gift to A for life, and after his death to B, if A is incapable of taking, or if he refuse to take, the remainder is accelerated nor do they seem to question the ground of this doctrine to be, as stated by Jarman, “that although the ulterior devise is in terms not to take effect in possession until the decease of the prior devisee, if tenant for life, yet in point of fact it is to be read as a limitation of the remainder, to take effect in every event which removes the prior estate out of the way.” Jarman on Wills, (3d ed.) 539.

But they seem to fail to take note of that part of Jarman’s words saying that “it is to be read as a limitationThey do not observe that the decease mentioned as the contingency on which the prior estate is to end, and on which the ulterior estate is to begin, is a contingency having relation to the prior devisee only, and having no relation to the ulterior devisee, and therefore the words “ after the decease ” are to be held words of mere boundary, — or, in the language of Jarman, words used “as a limitation,” and are not words of qualification, essential to the capacity of the ulterior devisee to take. His capacity to take not being affected by such words, he takes the moment the boundary is passed, which is designated by the words “the decease” of the prior devisee; which mean the end of the prior estate.

That this is the true meaning of such words,when used in a will which clearly cuts off the heirs by a residuary clause, or other equivalent clauses (unless controlled by other provisions of the will, or by considerations other than '.the words “after the decease,”) is established by an unbroken line of authority from the earliest days; and no court in England or America has ever held otherwise so far as I can learn.

The briefs and arguments in this case are able and comprehensive, and the research so exhaustive that I feel safe in assuming that if any such case could have been found, it would have been produced for our consideration.

In Jull v. Jacobs, 18 Moak’s R. 775, the devise was to a daughter of the testator “during her lifetime,” and “after her decease” to be divided equally between “her children on their becoming of age.” The daughter signed the will as a witness, and for that cause, under the English statute, the devise to such daughter .was void. The question was as to the disposition of the property devised, during the period between the death of the testator and the actual death of the daughter.

The vice chancellor said: “ Where property is limited to A for life, and after his decease to A’s children, if A forfeit the life estate, his children have a right immediately, because ‘from and after the decease’ means from and after the determination of the life estate, and hoAvever it -is, terminated, Avhether by death or forfeiture, it is gone; * * * that Avould be the conclusion I should come to from the reason of the thing, without the decisions. But the decisions are all the same way.”

He quotes from Lainson v. Lainson, 18 Beav. 1, with approval, the Avords of Lord Romilly,Avhere he says: “Although the expression used is that the estate of the son is only to take effect ‘from and after the decease’ of John Lainson, I am of opinion that the meaning is from and after the determination of his estate, by death or otherwise. In deciding this, I fulfill the intention of the testator.” * * * And he adds: “This doctrine rests upon the authorities from the earliest period downwards.”

So in Young v. Robinson, 8 Jur. N, S. 825, it is said by Lord Cramworth to be “ a rule Avell established by all the authorities, as Avell as upon principle, that prima faoie, survivorship means the time at which the enjoyment by the survivor begins; * * * if there be a previous life estate, then ‘ at the termination of that life estate;’ ” (and, on the foregoing authorities, we may add) whether by the death of the life tenant or otherwise.

So in Fox v. Rummery, 68 Maine, 121, the gift in question was to the wife of the testator “ during her natural life,” and “ after her decease ” to a trustee for the use of an adopted son named, “if he should survive her.” The widow renounced the benefits of the will. The heirs of the testator claimed the income of that part of the estate until the actual death of the widoAV. The court said : “All the Avife’s interest in it is at an end as much as if she were dead. The rule is, that the extinction of the first interest carved out of the estate accelerates the right of the second taker,” and held that the right of the adopted son to that part of the estate begun at once — although, in terms, he was not to take unless he survived the widow. He survived the life estate provided for her in the will, and “after her decease” meant after the determination of her life estate. Here it will be observed the words, “ after her decease,” having relation only to a contingency to happen to the prior donee, was held not a qualification as to the ulterior donee, and although to survive her was made a qualification of the ulterior donee, (being a contingency to happen to him,) still, surviving her, was held to mean,surviving her life estate, because the end of her life was a mere limitation, or boundary of the first estate, meaning the end of her estate.

So in Macnitt’s Exr. v. Macnitt et al. 24 N. J. 227, the testator gave to his wife the income of certain property for life, or so long as she remained unmarried, and “after her decease or marriage ” to go to an infant daughter. The widow refused the provision of the will. The court held the .gift vested in the infant daughter immediately upon the renunciation of the widow — though she had neither died nor married — and this because the contingencies of death or marriage, having relation to the prior donee, were each a mere limitation or boundary between the estates, which by the will were to be successive, and hence were not essential qualifications to enable the ulterior donee to take.

The distinction between contingencies marking the boundaries of estates which are mentioned in wills as mere limitations and contingencies which are to be regarded as qualifications, without which no donee can take, is noticed in Merry v. Hill, 8 L. R. Eq. Cases 622. There, the residue of an estate was given to trustees to sell and convert and pay the income thereof to Mary Ann Merry for life, and after her decease to pay and divide the same among all and every such child or children of her, as should survive her and who should attain the age of 21 years, with a provision for paying £100 per annum, for each child towards its support and education, and during the “ suspense of absolute vesting to accumulate the residue, if any.” The question was whether those children who survived the life estate took vested interests at the end of that estate, although they had not attained the required age, and it was held they did not; that to survive that estate “is not to be the sole qualification of their taking,” but they must also attain 21 years of age, “because that is described as the qualification by which they are to take, and no child can take who does not attain that qualification.”

And after some further discussion, it is said the words (when they attain the age of 21) show “that their attainment of the age of 21 years is to be a qualification for their taking.”

The life tenant in that case was actually dead, and survivorship at her death was also a necessary qualification of an ulterior taker; but had her estate been terminated by any cause other than death, that qualification would by all the authorities have been held to be survivorship at the termination of the life estate in question. And all this upon the principle that the words “ after her death,” relating to a contingency applicable only to the holder of the prior estate, are words of mere boundary or limitation ; while the words “ who survive,” relating to the second taker, are therefore words of qualification, meaning those who survive the termination of the life estate; and the words relating to the age of the ulterior taker are words of absolute qualification, and not words of mere boundary.

In the case at bar the death of each of the holders of prior interests under this will (in every part of it where such mention is made) is mentioned as the contingency upon which the estate of that holder is to cease, and also as the contingency upon which the estate {quo ad hoc) of the ulterior donee shall begin, and is introduced into this will as a limitation only, and not as, a qualification of the next taker j being a contingency in each instance, having relation only to the prior donee and having no relation to the subsequent donee. To be a survivor at the termination of the prior estate is, however, a necessary qualification in this will of each of the ulterior donees, but a qualification which by this record each'of the appellees possesses.

The following cases were decided upon the same principles: Eavestoff v. Austin, 19 Beav. 591, where a prior life estate was removed by a revocation thereof in a codicil; this was held to answer the words “ after the decease ” of the prior donee, and the ulterior donees were let in at once, although the prior donee was still living.”

So in Yeaton v. Roberts, 28 N. H. 459, where the prior donee refused the gift, and this was held to fulfill the words fixing the decease of the prior donee as the time when the ulterior donees should take, and the ulterior donees were let in at once, while the prior donee was still living.,

So in Adams v. Gillespie, 2 Jones’ Eq. 244 N. Car. R., where the renunciation of the gift by the phior donee was held to fulfill the words fixing the death of the prior donee as the time when the ulterior donee should take.

So in Holliday v. Walker, 3 Jones’ Eq. 36, in which it was said “ the same result which would have been arrived at by the death” (of the prior donee, had she taken under the will), “must in our opinion be brought about by her .dissent” or refusal to take under the will.

So in Waddell v. Terry, 4 Cold. 51, where the renunciation of the gift by the prior donee named, was held to let in the ulterior donees at once, although the latter in terms were to take only after the death of prior donees.

And so in Craven v. Brady, (L. R. 4 Eq. 209,) where the life estate,devised to a wife, was terminated -by forfeiture, and where, by the terms of the will, the son was to take a life estate to begin “immediately after her decease,” it was held that the son took upon the termination of the wife’s estate by forfeiture, and this while the wife was still alive. In this case Lord Bomilly uses the following words, (page 215): “If the testator has expressed an intention that if the appointment for his wife for life should cease by reason of forfeiture, in that event the appointment in favor of the son should take effect at once, then the son’s estate is accelerated, and I think this testator has expressed such an intention, and that this is made clear by the words to which I have already referred, whereby he makes the appointment to his son of these lands immediately on the decease of his wife; and, secondly, he directs that the forfeiture which may take place shall determine her estate as effectually as by her actual decease. I think the two taken together make a clear expression of intention that the' appointment in favor of the son is to take place as soon as that in favor of the widow fails, and consequently the estate of the son is to be accelerated.”

Now, apply this language to the case at bar, and, following Lord Bomilly,say: “If the testator has expressed an intention” (in case of the death of his two daughters without issue) “that if the provision made for his wife for life should cease by reason of” her renunciation, “in that event the” provisions in favor of his nephews and nieces “should take efleet at once, then” the estate of the nephews and nieces “is accelerated, and I think this testator has expressed such an intention, and this is made clear by the words to which I have already referred, whereby he makes the” provision for his nephews and nieces to take effect “immediately on the decease of his wife; arid, secondly, he directs that the forfeiture, which may take place, shall determine her estate as effectually as by her decease. I think the two taken together make a clear expression of intention that the” provision in favor of the nephews and nieces “is to take place as soon as that in faVor of the widow fails, and, consequently, the estate of the” nephews and nieces “is to be accelerated.”

This very case of Craven v. Brady is referred to as against the conclusion of the circuit court in this case, as .is said" “in regard to the controlling effect of the intention in the application of the rule as to accelerating the remainder,” and this, as I suppose, because it says distinctly that the intention must control. Of course the intention must control; but the question in this case (as in every case in the construction of a will) is, what is the intention. This case makes plain the path to follow°in seeking the intention, and holds that the words providing for a forfeiture of the rights of the wife under the will taken together with the words giving an estate to the nephews and nieces (under the facts of this case) “immediately after the decease” of the wife “make a clear expression of intention that the gift to them” is to take place as soon as that in favor" of the widow fails, “and that their estate is to be accelerated.”

So by the rule in Jarman these words, “after the decease” of the life tenant, are to be read, “after the end of the life estate,” in such cases; and if so read the words of this will make a clear expression of an intention that, when the wife’s life estate ends, the ulterior estate begins.

Guided by these authorities and these reasons, let us seek the true intention of the testator from the true and legal meaning of his words.

Let it be noted that by the words of the will we are expressly forbidden to indulge in any conjecture as to the purposes of this trust; for the testator has most distinctly declared in the granting clause, to his trustees, that the purposes of the trust are “fully set forth” in the will itself. Another palpable feature of the will is that the inheritance is most explicitly cut off, — so there is no ground for the suggestion of partial intestacy. It must not be forgotten that the appellees are the residuary legatees of the one-half of the estate which they claim. It is also obvious from the reading of the will that the testator understood that bequests and devises might fail from causes other than the death of the donee, for he says, “if the person or persons (to whom I have made any bequest or directed any money to be paid) shall have deceased, or for any cause be incapable of taking,” etc.

It is equally obvious that his intention, as to the body of his estate, was to create a succession of estates, — one to follow the other consecutively and closely; the will on its face provides strictly for just such a succession of estates.

Every one of these estates, by the words of the will, is to begin at the same time that its predecessor ends.

Keeping in mind, then, the rules, that “if a prior estate fails for any cause, the remainder takes effect as if there had been no such prior devise,” and that in case of a “ gift to A for life, and after his death to B, if A refuses to take, the remainder is accelerated;” and keeping in view the idea “that although the ulterior devise is in terms not to take effect in possession until the decease of the prior devisee (if tenant for life), yet it is to be read as a limitation of the remainder, to take effect in every event which removes the prior estate out of the way,” and that this is because “from and after the decease” means “from and after the determination of the life estate;” and remembering that “this doctrine rests upon the authorities from the earliest period downwards;” and also that in seeking the intention of the testator, we must inquire “what does that mean which he has written,” and remembering a rule to which that is said to be subordinate (in Brown v. Lyon, 6 N. Y. 420,) and which is, that “where words and phrases have received a fixed legal interpretation by repeated decisions, such words and phrases, when employed by the testator in his will, are to receive such legal and fixed interpretation as a long series of decisions has attached to them,” we can not find much difficulty in giving a true interpretation to what is said in this will.

It seems to me it is to be read, in so far as it applies to the facts which have actually happened, as follows: “It is my desire to make provision for my wife, and I direct my trustees to pay to her, during her natural life, the sum of $10,000 annually, and that they divide the net income annually arising from the residue of my estate, equally between my two daughters.”

“ In case of the termination of the life estate herein given to either of my daughters — in the absence of issue by that daughter, that portion of the net ' income which would have gone to her if her estate had continued, shall belong to my other daughter.” ,
“ In case of the termination of both the estates for life, respectively given herein to my daughters, then if the estate (for her life herein given to my wife,) shall have terminated— my trustees shall divide my estate into two equal shares and. distribute,” etc.

Thus the law declares this will is to be read. These are the express provisions of the words of this will. They are not to be disregarded in this their true meaning, unless other words of the will forbid this reading.

If this be the true version of this will, it follows, that by the renunciation of the widow, that part of the income given to her was at that time accelerated and given to the daughters.

It was here where the acceleration took place in fact. As is aptly quoted with approval by counsel for appellants, from standard authorities, “ A gift of the produce of a fund for life is a gift of the fund itself for life.1”

After the renunciation of the widow, each of the daughters was entitled to one-half of the net income from the whole body of the estate for her natural life, and had therefore an estate for life in one-half of the body of the estate.

This was the result of the acceleration caused by the termination of the life estate offered to the wife, and if the trustees did their duty they paid to the daughters, from and after the renunciation, the whole of the net income of the body of the estate so long as theji both lived, (and although this record is silent on that matter, I doubt not they did so.) When Mary died, February, 1874, by the terms of the will Julia took the whole of the body of the estate for her natural life, and was, during her life, entitled to receive from the trustees the income from the whole estate.

It follows, that on April 4, 1876, when Julia Newberry died, the whole estate was ready for distribution. The prior estates were all out of the way, and it became the duty of the trustees to divide and distribute to the residuary devisees.

The words “ immediately after the death of my wife, if she survive my daughters,” are plainly words of mere limitation ■ or boundary, and are not words of qualification as to the ulterior takers of the estate. They plainly have reference to the succession of estates, mapped out so distinctly in this will. By sound reason, as well as by authority, they simply mean, after the termination of the life estate of my wife, if that shall continue after the end of both the estates for life given to my daughters.

This rule of construction has no exception whatever in the text books, or in the English cases, even as against the heirs, in whose behalf it is sometimes claimed in such case that the use of the estate,for the time between the end of the prior life estate and the actual death of the person named as tenant for life,is not disposed of by the will, and should therefore go to the heir. This, too, is the rule in American cases.

This rule is universal in every court which has passed upon the question in England and America as applied to cases where the inheritance is expressly cut off, as in the case at bar, by a residuary clause or its equivalent. Even as against the heir, where the inheritance is not expressly cut off, the rule has prevailed, so as to exclude the inference of partial intestacy, in all courts, so far as I can learn, except in one case, — that of Augustus v. Seabolt, of which I will speak hereafter: remarking here only, that by the teaching of that case,the time for final distribution of this estate has come.

The rule under discussion applies only to successive estates, and does not always apply to specific legacies made payable at the death of a life tenant. Two eases illustrating this remark are relied upon to support the claim of the trustees in this case. These cases are Firth v. Denny, 2 Allen, 468, and Hinckley v. The House of Refuge et al. 40 Md. 469. These cases relate to specific legacies, and not to strictly successive estates, and are therefore not in point in this case. I will refer to the Maryland case hereafter.

In the case of Firth v. Denny, 2 Allen, 468, the testator directed his trustees to invest the sum of $9000 and pay “the net income thereof to his wife during her life,” and after her death he gave one-half of this fund to three persons (who by another part of the will were made his residuary legatees,) and the other half of this fund he gave to various legatees in specified sums to each. The widow waived the provisions of the will. The trustees, under the statute of that State, asked directions from the court as to the disposition of this fund. The residuary legatees claimed the whole fund of $9000, and that the special bequests were defeated, and if not entitled to that, they insisted that the legacies of the one-half of the fund were not payable at any rate until the wife’s death.

Counsel for the donees of these latter legacies insisted that the waiver of the widow did not defeat these legacies, and that “ if they are entitled to receive their legacies, but not until the death of the widow, the court may order a proper sum to be set aside for the purpose, or order the sum paid now with a deduction.” The points and authorities of counsel are given in the report. No one of the authorities which I have mentioned was cited; nor was the principle of these authorities adverted to; and this, no doubt, because it was not strictly a case of a succession of estates; nor does it appear that the special legatees claimed a right to immediate payments. The court directed that the $9000 must remain in the hands of the trustees until the death of the widow, and on her death one-half should be applied to the special legacies and the other half to the residuary legatees, and that in the meantime the entire income of the whole fund should be paid, from time to time, to the residuary legatees.

It will be seen at once that if this case be followed as authority it would keep the body of this estate in the custody of the trustees until the death of Mrs. Newberry, but it would give to the complainants one-half of the income during the interval, Avith which they would no doubt be content. I do not regard this case as a matter of any moment on this question. The controversy in the case was on another question. It was insisted by the residuary legatees that the main purpose of raising the $9000 fund having failed by the renunciation of the widow, the Avhole gift to the trustees of that fund lapsed and fell into the residue for the residuary legatees. This position the court refused to sustain. The authorities cited in the case all relate to that question, and there seems to have been no claim for immediate payment in behalf of the special legatees of half that fund.

As before remarked, even this case Avould give one-half the income to these complainants as residuary legatees.

The case to which I refer as exceptional, and on which counsel for appellant seem to rely, is that of Augustus v. Beabolty 3 Met. 155, Avherein the Court of Appeals of Kentucky is supposed to have disregarded the line of cases above; but, on a careful examination of that case, though it differs from the current of the cases quoted by me, it is found to be in harmony with my conclusions.

In Jarman on Wills, and in Jull v. Jacobs, and in Lainson v. Lainson, the Aimrds “ after the decease ” of the life tenant are held to mean “after the termination of the life estate,” as a rule even as against the heir, in cases where there is no residuary clause in the will.

In Augustus v. Seabolt it is conceded that this is the rule in all cases where there is a residuary clause, or where the Avill is such as to cut off in every respect the inheritance; but the Court of Appeals held, that in cases where the Avill contains no residuary clause or other equivalent provisions cutting off the heir expressly, the rule of construction is otherwise. The rule as laid down in Kentucky sustains the appellees in the case at bar, for no one can question that this will cuts off effectually the inheritance.

In that case the testator devised to his wife, among other things, his farm “during her natural life,” with a proviso that “in case she shall marry she is only to hold that part of the farm which lies eastwardly from the lane,” and also provided that “after her death the farm should be divided equally between the surviving children” of certain named brothers of the testator. The widow marriéd, and while she still lived, the heirs at law of the testator claimed the use of that part of the farm not lying eastwardly from the lane, during the period from the marriage of the widow until her death. The executors proposed to pay the income for that period to the then surviving children of the brothers named in the will. The will contained no residuary clause.

The chancellor refused the claim of the heirs, founding his judgment upon the idea that the testator intended to dispose of his entire estate by his will, and that such intention is to be gathered from the terms of the will.

The Court of Appeals say of this decision of the chancellor, “ if ihis view be correct, no doubt can be entertained of the propriety of his judgment.” That court, after discussing the various clauses of the will, and differing from the chancellor as to whether by the terms of the will the inheritance was cut off, further say: “Now in the absence of any residuary clause in the will, it can not be said that provision was made for the contingent interest in the land west of the lane, which would exist upon the marriage of the widow and continue until her death,” and so the judgment of the chancellor was reversed. v

It will be observed that in that case the question arose between the heirs and the ultimate devisees, and not between the ultimate devisees and trustees holding the naked title without any beneficial interest in the estate.

The chancellor and the Court of Appeals agree in the proposition, that in a will containing a residuary clause, or any clause or clauses by which the inheritance is cut off, the words “ after the death ” must be construed to mean, after the termination of the prior estate of a life tenant, Avhether by death, marriage or any other cause. They do not seem to hold (as is taught by authorities supra) that such should be the construction without a residuary clause or its equivalent. It is sufficient for the present case, that, according to the vieAVs of both the chancellor and of the Court of Appeals in this Kentucky case, the time for final distribution to the ultimate donees has arrived in the case at bar. If the will of Mr. Newberry did not contain the clause calling in as a part of the body of his estate every bequest and direction to pay money Avhere the donee is incapable of taking, and did not contain any other clauses cutting off the inheritance, the case of Augustus v. Seabolt might be an authority against immediate distribution, but, Avith these provisions in the will, that case is an authority in point in favpr of immediate distribution and directly in favor of the next takers under the Avill. I say it might be against immediate distribution in such case; but even that is not clear, for that will differs from this in an important feature. By this will a close succession of estates is provided for on the face of the will. In that case on the face of the will the succession of estates was not perfect. By the terms of that will the estate of the Avife, had an alternative limitation, death or marriage, but the limitation at which the estate of the ulterior donees was to begin, was, by the terms of the will, to depend upon only one of these contingencies. It may be that the Court of Appeals of Kentucky for that reason did not regard the case one of a succession of estates, on the face of the will. In the case at bar the succession of estates on the face of the Avill is close and clearly defined. The declaration of the Court of Appeals is, therefore, stronger for this doctrine of acceleration than is necessary for my views in this case. In neither this case nor in the Firth v. Denny case was the controversy with trustees having no beneficial interest.

In the Kentucky case, as shown, the use went to the heir instead of the ulterior donee, upon the ground that there was partial intestacy; and in the case in Massachusetts, no mention was made of the question of acceleration, — the counsel for the ulterior donees merely saying, “ if the defendants are entitled to receive their legacies, but not until the death of the widow, a proper sum may be set aside for them.” The court gave the income meanwhile to the residuary legatees. In the case at bar the appellees are residuary legatees of half . of this estate.

Among the numerous cases to which attention has been called in the case at bar, no case has been found in which such words have been held, of themselves, sufficient to postpone the ulterior donee where there is no express direction to hold until some other event, nor any express direction to hold for some other purpose, and where there is no other person to whom the use meanwhile can be given. •

Counsel for appellants refer to the case of Hinckley v. The House of Refuge et al. 40 Md. R. 461. That case recognizes the rule here stated, but makes an-exception to the rule upon equitable grounds peculiar and special to that case, for the purpose of preventing injury which, it is said, Avould otherwise be caused to the residuary legatees. The Avill in that case granted the residue of the estate to a trustee in trust to. pay the income to his wife for life, and, at her death, to pay out of the principal certain legacies to certain charitable institutions, and then to hold the remaining part of the estate (so in his hands as such trustee) one-half for the use of all the children of testator’s daughter, Avho might be living at the death of his wife, and the other half for the use of the children of testator’s sister, who might be living at the decease of the wife; but in no eATent to be distributed to the children except as they should come to the age of majority.

The widow renounced the testamentary gifts, and took her dower and statutory allowance.

The charitable institutions claimed immediate payment of the legacies. This was resisted by the residuary legatees.

The court held that inasmuch as the gifts tq the residuary legatees were greatly reduced by the renunciation, they should be compensated for their loss out of the estate rejected by the widow, so far as it could be done without putting the charitable institutions in a position worse than that which they would have occupied had the widow accepted the gifts of the will, and on this ground directed the fund claimed by them to be put out at interest to accumulate a fund for the benefit of the residuary legatees until the death of the widow, and then the legacies were to be paid to the benevolent institutions, and the balance to be held for the use of the residuary legatees.

In that case the court refer to and approve the doctrine for which I contend, as before that time laid down by that court in the cases of Darrington v. Rogers, 1 Gill, 403, and Clark v. Tenneson, 33 Md. R. 85.

In the case now under consideration there are no such equitable considerations to be subserved by postponement; nor is there here, as there, a direction to the trustees “to hold and invest all the net income for accumulation” until the majority of the residuary legatees respectively. One of the purposes set forth in that will was to hold “for accumulation.” Ho such purpose is set forth here.

A case much relied upon by counsel for appellants, is that of the Estate of Matthew Delaney, 49 Cal. 76. The testator devised the residue of his estate to his executors in trust to sell certain lands and invest the proceeds, and to pay out of the income, to his wife, a certain sum monthly, “during her natural life,” and to divide the surplus, paying one-fourth to his wife and dividing three-fourths thereof between his surviving children, and, on the death of his wife, the balance of any money or lands remaining to be divided equally among his surviving children. The testator died in December, 1865. The will was probated January 11, 1866. One only of the executors named accepted the trust. The widow renounced the benefits of the will July 16, 1866. The executor sold part of the real estate and conveyed the same by deeds to the purchasers, dated in 1867, 1869 and in 1870, and paid out the proceeds in the discharge of debts of the testator and expenses of administration. The testator left him surviving a widow and three children, Edward, Cecillia and Mary, who were also his only heirs at law. Edward was executor. On May 15, 1871, the executor, wishing to close the business of the estate, filed in the probate court his petition for “final distribution,” together with accounts of his receipts and disbursements. These were not questioned. Three days after the application for final distribution thus made by the executor, a cross-petition was filed, May 18, 1871, by the daughter (Mary) of the testator, (then 'Mrs. Mary McCurrie), in which she claimed, also, that “the estate was ready to be closed/5 and ashing distribution among the three children, “according to their several rights.55

The case was heard at the May term, 1872, of the probate court. At the hearing, it, was claimed by Mrs. Mc-Currie, that by the renunciation of the widow the plan of the trust created by the will was defeated, “that the object for the creation of the trust was thereby terminated/5 and that an end was thus put to "the power of the executor and trustee to make sale, under the will, of lands, and that the sales made were void, and hence she insisted that all the lands should be distributed equally among the three children as heirs at law, stating that the heirs at law had elected to take their shares without being reduced to cash.

The probate court held otherwise, and set apart the sold lands to the respective purchasers, but divided the lands remaining unsold equally among the three as ultimate devisees. ■

This decree Mrs. McCurrie brought, before the Supreme Court of California for review. The decree of the probate court was affirmed.

Here it will be observed that, by the terms of the will, “the balance of the money and lands” was to be divided among the surviving children only “on the death” of his wife. But upon the principle, that in such case the words “on the death,” mean on the termination of the life estate, the distribution was made upon the renunciation of the widow, although she was still living.

Counsel for appellants seem to have entirely misapprehended this case. Speaking in their brief of it, they say, “the court held that the renunciation did uot extinguish the trusts declared in the will, which were not only to sell but to hold the proceeds invested until the death of the wrife, and then distribute to surviving children.” * * * “It” (the court) “confirmed the trust powers of the executors and their sales, and refused the distribution.”

It is true the court did hold that “the renunciation did not extinguish the trusts declared in the will,” but the court did not hold that the trustees should “hold the proceeds invested until the death of the wife, and then distribute to surviving children.” On the contrary, the court confirmed the decree of the probate court, by which the entire residue of the estate (after paying debts, legacies and expenses) was immediately distributed to the then surviving children, as ultimate donees under the will, and this while the widow was still living.

Again, the court did “confirm the trust powers of the executor and his sales,” but the court did not “refuse the distribution.” The report of the case does not set out the decree of the probate court, but on page 85 Rhodes, J., who delivered the opinion of the court, speaking of this decree, calls it “the decree of final distribution from which this appeal is taken.” This attracted my attention, and at my request I have been furnished an authenticated copy of the record of the decree, which enables me to state the case accurately. The controversy in the case was not for or against immediate distribution. The trustee did not claim the right to hold until the death of the wife. The lawyers on both sides of that case, and both the probate and Supreme courts, all seem to have assumed the law on this subject to be as I insist it is, and so no question was raised against the acceleration of the estate of the ultimate donees, and it was taken for granted by all concerned that if the will stood, the widow’s life estate under the will being out of the way by reason of the renunciation, the time for ultimate distribution under the will had come.

The case involved an entirely different question. In the report of the case, on page 78, is found a brief statement of the petition of Mrs. McCurrie, which states her claim to be “ that by the renunciation of the widow * * * that portion of the estate devised to the executors in trust became subject to distribution among the heirs at law in the same manner as if the said Matthew Delaney had died intestate.” This claim embraced the lands sold by the executors, and the claim was that the deeds and sales were void, and that all the lands should be distributed to the heirs, not to them as devisees, but as heirs.

In the governing opinion in the case at bar (speaking of this California case) after stating the claim of Mrs. McCurrie that the lands be distributed among the heirs as intestate property, it is said the court denied this claim, and then the following is quoted from the opinion of the court in California:

“The renunciation of the widow * * * did not extinguish the trusts declared in the will nor divest the executor <3 of the fee in the remaining portion of the property. The executor retained the same powers over the portion of the estate remaining * * * after the renunciation * * * that he possessed prior to the renunciation.” Now, these words are found in the opinion in the Delaney case, but they relate not to the question of acceleration, but to the question as to the validity of sales made by the executor of that part of the lands sold after the renunciation.

It was claimed the executor lost the power of sale by the renunciation, and it was in condemnation of that proposition these words were used by the Supreme Court of California.

It is not perceived that these words of that court have any bearing whatever upon any question involved in the case at bar. There is no claim in this case that the powers of the trustees appointed by Mr. Rewberry have in any way ceased, or that they have in any degree lost their control over the estate. The claim here is that the trustees shall proceed in the exercise of their powers under the will — not that the trusts have failed or been defeated. They are asked to perform the duties imposed upon them by the will in the discharge of their trust.

This California case in its facts and in its decision is, however, a potent authority in support of the decree of the circuit court in this case. There, as here, the final distribution was ordered by the will to be made to survivors at the decease of the wife. There, as here, the wife was given a life estate.

There, as here, she renounced the gift and asserted her legal rights. There, as here, the final distribution was ordered to be made at the termination of the life estate offered the wife, although she was still living. There, as here, the distribution was to those who survived the life estate offered the widow, although they had not survived her natural'life. This decree was affirmed by the Supreme Court of California.

Counsel for appellants, however, quote Festing v. Allen, 12 M. & W. 279, Rhodes v. Whitehead, 2 DeGex & Sm. 532, Carver v. Burgess, 18 Beav. 541, Loch v. Lamb, 4 L. R. Eq. D. 372, Newman v. Newman, 10 Sim. 51, Knight v. Knight, 2 Sim. & Stu. 490, Bull v. Pritchard, 1 Russ. 213, Botsford v. Hebbell, 3 Ves. Jr. 363, Duffield v. Duffield, 3 Bl. R. R. 260, and perhaps other cases, to support the position that the time for distribution to the descendants of the brothers and sister of the testator is fixed by the terms of the will at the termination, not of any estate, but of the life of Mrs. Rewberry. Roue of these eases give any support to that proposition.

In all and each of these cases the ulterior donees were to take only upon the attainment of a given age, and it was in each of them held, that no donee could take until the required age was attained. It will be observed, the contingency, thus held a necessary qualification to the taking of the ulterior donee, was in none of these cases named as the boundary at which the prior estate was to end, and that the contingency in question had no relation to the former donee, but had a personal application to the ulterior donee; and so upon the principle here presented, such contingency was not named as a mere limitation or boundary between estates which were to be closely consecutive, but was named in every one of these cases in the will as a qualifioation of the ulterior donee or donees. These cases are in no way analogous to the case at bar.

There is another class of cases to which we are referred, wherein marriage by the person or persons named as ultimate or ulterior donee or donees, or the alternative of marriage or the attainment of a given age by such ulterior donee, or to survive when some other person shall attain a given age, is made by the terms of the will a condition to the taking effect of the gift. These cases are equally irrelevant for the same reason.

Such is the case of Leake v. Robinson, 2 Mer. 263, and others.

In another class of cases survivorship by the ulterior donee at the decease of the prior donee, (a life tenant) is held an essential qualification of an ulterior donee, upon the ground that, by the terms of the will, the gift was only to such as survived the prior donee.

In every one of these cases the prior estate was not out of the way until the actual death of the prior donee, — as in Hearn v. Baker, 2 K. J. 386, Knight v. Poole, 32 B. 548, Stevenson v. Gullan, 18 B. 590, Spurred v. Spurred, 11 Have, 54, Hoghton v. Whitgrave, 1 J. & W. 146, and Vorley v. Richardson, 8 D. M. & G. 126, and other cases quoted by counsel for appellants, and among these the case of Drake v. Pell, 3 Ed. Ch. 267. In all - these cases the boundary between the prior estate and the following estate had not been reached by the death of the prior donee, or by any other cause.

But as said above, no ease has been produced and it is believed no case can be found in England or America where by the will the inheritance is clearly cut off, in which the prior estate (being a life estate) is out of the way by any contingency, other than death, wherein the next taker under the will has been postponed until the actual death of the prior donee upon the ground merely that, by the terms of the will, he was only to take “after the decease” of the former donee.

The case of Roe’s Executors v. Roe, 21 N. J. 253, is submitted as such a case, but it is not. In that ease, by the will, the executors were directed to invest a certain sum in a well improved farm and to stock it and to hold the same in trust until the death or marriage of the testator’s wife, or the arriving at 21 years of age by his youngest child, for the use of his wife and his sister during her widowhood, and also for the use of five of his children (named), as a home for his wife and these five children. He directed that if either of these children should marry, his or her right to enjoy the home should cease. The whole was to be divided equally among all of his children, when his wife should die and the youngest child be 21 years of age. The widow renounced the provisions of the will.

Thereupon certain children, named in the will as ultimate donees, and not of the five named as prior donees, claimed that by the renunciation of the widow the plan of the testator was defeated, and that the trust had failed and was therefore at an end, and that the whole estate should therefore be at once distributed among the ultimate donees under the will. The other children and the sister claimed that the rights of the widow alone were affected by her refusal to take under the will.

The court held the gift to the prior donees was joint, and that by the renunciation the widow alone lost her interest; that the trust had not failed nor had it been accomplished; that the widow could not divest the interests of the sister or the five children; and directed a home and support to be provided for the five children, and the widow to live with them if she chose, furnishing her own support.

The residue of the estate was, by the will, expressly directed to be kept invested for accumulation till the youngest child became of age, and the court so ordered.

It will be seen at once that this case of Boe’s estate bears no analogy to the case at bar and gives no support to the position of appellants. There, the purposes of the trust, in a great degree, remained to be accomplished. Here, accumulation is not set forth as one of the purposes, and the purposes are all at an end. There, five of the children and the sister of the testator still lived and had a right to the benefits of the estate in question until the youngest child should be of age. The prior estate was not out of the way.

So in Plympton v. Plympton, 6 Allen, 178, the trustees were to pay three-quarters of the income from the body of the estate to the testator’s wife until her death or marriage, for the use of herself and her two children-, — the widow renounced.

The court held that the three-quarters of the income must all go to the children, and she, being their guardian, should receive it for them, notwithstanding her renunciation.

As will be seen, her renunciation ended her interest in the fund,' but did not take away the interests of the children, or disqualify her from acting as guardian for her children. The prior estate of the children was not out of the way.

I think I have established the proposition, that where words, designating the end of a life as the termination of one estate and as the beginning of a next succeeding estate, such words are to be taken prima facie to mean the end of the life estate, and not merely the end of the life of the anterior tenant.

Noxv suppose that this will, instead of adopting the machinery of one set of trustees, had adopted a plan to accomplish the same ends by the use of two sets of trustees, and that the body of this estate had been granted to these trustees, to hold in trust during the three lives (of the wife and the two daughters) expressly and only for the purpose of paying out during that period all of the net income of the estate from year to year, ($10,000 annually to the wife, and the residue of the income to his txvo daughters, or the survivors thereof, or to their children,) with all the directions contained in this will, as to not mortgaging certain parts, and as to improving certain parts, and as to the mode of investing funds constituting part of the estate; and that the remainder was, by the will, to vest in certain other trustees at the end of these three lives, for the sole purpose of distribution among the grandchildren, if any, and if none, then one-half for distribution among his nephexvs and nieces, and the other half for application for the purposes of a public library.

In such case, if the last set of trustees were now claiming the custody of the estate for distribution, could their claim be lawfully denied? The only purposes “fully set forth” in this will — as purposes of this trust — are, first, the distribution of the income as directed; and second, the distribution of the body of the estate when no further income is needed for distribution. Heretofore these trustees held for the purpose of providing for and applying net income; noxv they hold for the distribution of the body of the estate, and for no other purpose.

Noxxr, what are the considerations, which, it is supposed, take this case out of the rule of construction which I have attempted to establish and illustrate? The grounds assumed in this regard do seem to me far from satisfactory, and, indeed, entirely untenable.

We are not at liberty to embark on a voyage of conjecture, outside the express words of the will, in search of intent, for we all approve the words of Williams, where he says the intention of the testator is always “to be sought in his words and a rigorous attention to them,” and that otherwise the mind is apt to be led insensibly to speculate upon “what the testator may be supposed to have intended to do, instead of strictly attending to the true question, which is, what that which he has written means.” And as already suggested, the words and phrases which he has written must have given to them that meaning which a long and unbroken line of decisions has established as their true meaning. I adopt as apt the words of my brother Sherdon where he says: “It is not the intention to be deduced from speculation upon what the testator may be supposed to have intended, but it is the intention as spoken hy the words of the will.” Let us bear this in mind while we examine the suggestions made against the application of the rule giving the true meaning of the words we have discussed.

It is conceded that the rules laid down by Jarman, and in the cases of Jull v. Jacobs and Lainson v. Lainson, are sound, and that “ a gift to A for life and from and after the decease of A to B, C, D, or anybody else, means from and after the determination of the estate” of A; “and whether the estate is determined by revocation or by death, or by the incapacity of the devisee to take, or bjr any other circumstance, the life estate being out of the way the remainder takes effect,” and this because, under such circumstances, the courts universally hold, unless the contrary clearly appears, that the remainder has “only been postponed in order that the life estate be given to A.”

But it is said “this doctrine of acceleration is not an arbitrary one.” Certainly not; it is, as held by all courts, the result of the true meaning of such words, — the plain meaning of the words — and not, as suggested by counsel — the meaning “as words of art.” By acceleration is not meant acceleration to a time earlier than that indicated by the words of the will, but acceleration to a time earlier than that at which the prior estate would have ended, if not determined by a cause other than that named in the will. It it also s'aid : “ When it is the evident intention of the testator that the remainder should not take effect till the expiration of the life of the prior donee, the remainder will not be accelerated.” Certainly not; but that evident intent must be expressed in the will, or necessarily implied from other words of the will. The words “after her decease,” or like words, used as words of mere limitation of successive estates, do not indicate such intent, no matter how often they may be repeated; for they mean, in every form they take, the termination of the life estate.

Again, it is said “no artificial rule of construction can be allowed to prevail over the intention.” I here protest against this rule of construction being characterised as artificial. It is not. It was adopted at a very early day in England, and has been universally followed in this country, because it is a rule of interpretation which leads to the true intention of the testator, and it is neither arbitrary nor artificial. It is just, wise and natural. I grant that it is not so inflexible that no express words or necessary implications can overcome this rule of interpretation of such words as “after the decease,” when used as the limitation of a prior estate and as the beginning of a subsequent estate.

There are no words so cogent in our language that, when used in a will, their primary meaning can not be overcome by the use of other words in the same will, or by necessary implication from such other words. All I claim under this rule is, that the Avords “ after the decease,” when used in a will in reference to a life tenant as the time for the begin-O ning of a subsequent estate, must be taken to mean after the end of the life estate in question, and are not to be taken to mean after the end of the actual life of such tenant, where the estate is ended by some other cause. And such meaning is to prevail as giving the true intention of the testator, unless these words are shown to have a different meaning and to indicate a different intention by other words of the will or by necessary implication from such other words. I concede that this rule “is applied in promotion of the presumed intention of the testator,” — not merely an intention shown by other parts of the will, but an intention made manifest by these words themselves, in this their primary meaning in such cases. I concede, too, that “when it is the evident intention of the testator that these words should not have this meaning,” or “that the remainder should not take effect till the end of the life of the prior donee,” the rule does not apply. I concede “the rule would not apply if there was the expression of a contrary intent,” and that “any expressed intention would be paramount to the rule.”

It is said “no question is made as to this general rule.” But what I find as an imperfection in the mode of reasoning against the conclusion of the circuit court is, that while the rule is avowedly conceded, it is first slurred as artificial, and its use as arbitrary, and then, in discussing the words of the will, the rule (so conceded) is entirely ignored and disregarded ; and the words “after the decease,” instead of being construed by the rule, are constantly treated as though they meant prima facie “after the end of the actual life,” instead of “after the end of the life estate,” which is their prima facie meaning under the rule, when introduced as mere words of boundary. Thus, it is said, the rule is relied upon “to change the fixed time of distribution in this case.” How this rule is not invoked to change the fixed time for distribution, but it is relied upon to show Avhat time is in truth fixed for that purpose by the Avords of the will, when properly understood.

Thus, too, it is said “there is no hint of an intention” that the failure of the Avife to take shall hasten or in anywise" affect “the expressed time of the distribution.” Hoav, by the rule conceded as above, the expressed time for distribution is the end of the three estates for life carved out by the will. Jarman says these words are to be so read. If so read they furnish the expressed time, and there was no need of any further hint on the subject. Again, although by the conceded rule, in the absence of contrary overcoming words, the appointed time for distribution in the contingencies which have happened is at the termination of the three estates named, “the death of the wife” is said to be the “appointed time” for distribution. And it is said : “Had it been the intention of the will that there should be distribution at the end of the estates,” a certain place in the will would be a fit place “to have signified such intention, but there is no intimation that way.” Here again is a suggestion in utter disregard of the rule. This suggestion is, that though by the rule “after the decease” prima facie means “after the end of the life estate,” still the want of a further declaration, or at least a further intimation to that effect, is a ground for giving the words another meaning. In fact the Avhole argument (notwithstanding the admission that this rule of construction can not be questioned) rests upon the implication that the words “after the decease of my Avife” must be taken to refer to her actual death and not to the termination of the testamentary estate offered to her. This, by implication, is reversing the rule. And so (after expressing the opinion that “the intention of the will is that the time of distribution should be the Avife’s death”) it is added, “And this intention is not deduced solely from the Avords used that the distribution shall be “immediately after the decease of my wife,” but is manifested from other provisions of the will. It would seem if, as is conceded, “no question is made as to this general rule” that such intention ought not to be deduced at all from the words used, “ after the decease of my wife,” for by the rule, beyond debate, an intention the very reverse of that indicated is to be deduced from the use of these Avords themselves. The conclusion reached is thus confessedly founded in part upon a disregard of the rule.

And again, it is said, “seeing he wills that distribution shall be made immediately after the decease of my wife,” what reason is there for saying “that the rejection of the provisions of the will by the wife is the equivalent of the wife’s decease, and that at the death of the last surviving daughter is the time for distribution?” If there be no question about the general rule, which is professedly conceded, the reason for so saying is the same as the reasons on which the rule is founded, and which are fully given in the authorities.

The rule is to prevail unless overcome by other words of the will. Let us now consider what other words of the will are supposed to repel the legal inference to be drawn from the words of the provision in question.

The considerations supposed to-arise from other words of the will, tending to show an intention of the testator that this well known rule of construction shall not apply, are the following:

1. Such an intention is supposed to arise from the fact that he has not in any other words of the will said that the rule shall apply, and hence no such intention is to be deduced from these words. I have already shown that this mode of reasoning is inconsistent with the broad concession that no question can be made as to this being the general rule.

2. It is suggested that the words “after the decease of my wife” must have been used with reference to the end of her life, and not with reference to the end of her life estate, for the purpose of preventing a distribution of the estate to grandchildren while in their minority, and to prevent it from going into the hands of guardians instead of remaining in the hands of the trustees “of his own choice.” If we are to speculate at all on this subject, to do so wisely we must try to place ourselves in the same circumstances which surrounded the testator when he used the words in question.

We must bear in mind that his trustees were at that time not young men — one about 47 and the other not less than 56— and by the tables the death of the last surviving trustee would probably occur within 28 years; that his wife was not less than 45 years of age, his eldest daughter not more than 22 and his youngest daughter not over 20 years of age ; and that by the tables the probable duration of the life of the survivor of the two daughters was about 47 years, and that the probable duration of the life of the survivor of the three (his wife and two daughters) was at that time not over 50 years.

If the widow should accept the estate offered her, the time (for distribution to grandchildren, if any,) probable to the mind of the testator was about 50 years.

If she should reject the estate and the distribution was to take place at the death of the last surviving daughter, the time for such distribution then probable to the mind of,the testator would be about 47 years off, and the postponement, likely to arise from one construction, beyond the time probably indicated by the other construction, would not exceed three years, and would not probably occur until the end of 47 years, and at that time the last survivor of the trustees named would probably have been dead for about 19 years.

The will was published last in 1868. It was then probable that neither of the trustees named would be alive after 1896. It was not probable that both daughters would be dead before 1915. The youngest daughter, if about 20 in 1868, would be about 45 in 1893, and no grandchildren could reasonably be expected after that year. It follows that it was probable at the time of making the will that no final distribution could occur before 1915, and that at that time there could be no grandchildren born later than 1893, and hence none less than 21 years of age, and it was also probable that the trustees of his choice would at that time have both been in their graves for about 19 years. I can not believe that a desire to keep this estate out of the hands of guardians of minor grandchildren, after the death of both of his daughters, could have had any influence with the testator in the seléction of the words of this will in this regard.

The chance for one of these trustees, of the testator’s “own choice,” to supervise personally the estate of an infant grandchild of the testator, under the provisions of this will, after the death of both of these daughters, was so exceedingly slender that to me it seems a great stretch of fancy to suppose the testator had such contingency in mind when making this will. Had he designed to keep the body of his estate from the hands of guardians of minor grandchildren, it would have been an easy thing to have said so. It is suggested that otherwise he had shown less love for his daughters than for his unborn grandchildren — in this, that to the latter he gives, at the end of the three lives, the estate absolutely, while neither of his daughters could ever have anything beyond the net income from the estate. This I take it was meant as a kindness to the daughters, to protect the estate of each from waste by the possible improvidence of her husband.

It is not perceived that the clause directing immediate distribution to his grandchildren at the end of the three several estates for life (provided in this will for his wife and for his daughters), indicates any intent that acceleration shall not take place.

The law often casts large estates, by inheritance, upon children of tender years. And nothing in this will tends to show the testator designed to avoid such result. He has nowhere said that anything shall be withheld from his grandchildren, if any, until they reached a given age, or for accumulation. The whole estate was, under this will, liable to be oast upon a single infant grandchild, by the death of the wife of the testator and his two daughters, long before such grandchild should escape minority. But there was no probability of such result.

It is next suggested that the effect to follow renunciation by the wife, is specifically expressed to be the falling into the body of the estate of the testamentary gifts so rejected, and it is said no other effect is mentioned, and it is said no hint is given of an intention to hasten or affect the time of distribution ; and it is suggested that had such intention existed, here would have been a most fitting place in the will to have signified such intention. I do not think so. The matter of final distribution is not referred to at all in this part of the will. This proffered gift being thus made a part of the estate, it followed, without further words, that it became subject to the other provisions of the will, which do direct what shall be done with the body of the estate. The subject of the final distribution of the whole estate is not in any manner prescribed until much later in the will. Many contingencies are provided for after this clause, before the subject of final distribution is treated of. In fact, wliile this clause embraces no doubt the annuity to Mrs. Newberry, it is general, and covers many other gifts in the will, and it would have been a very bungling document had the draftsman stopped there and explained in detail what should be all the effects which would follow the falling in of each such gift. The words are, “I direct that in case of each and every bequest and of every instance in which I have directed my trustees to pay over money to any person or persons whomsoever, if the person or persons to whom or for whose benefit I have made such bequests or directions shall have deceased or from any cause be incapable of taking, then the amount so bequeathed or so directed to be paid over shall revert to and become a part of my estate, unless otherwise specifically directed.” An examination of the whole will shows a vei’y large number of bequests and of directions to pay over money. Had the draftsman of this will, after having prescribed this general rule, injected into this will, at this place, all-the results in detail which in every contingency might be brought about thereby, it would have made the will very voluminous and could only have been accomplished by a man of great genius and imagination. Such a will would have been an anomaly on earth. When it was declared that these failing gifts should not- be regarded as intestate property, but should revert and become a part of the body of his estate, it followed, without further words, that, as a part of the body of the estate, these defeated gifts should be dealt with as the other parts of the body of the estate, according to the provisions found elsewhere in the will.

It is also thought that the words “after the decease” of the wife must be construed to refer to the end of the life and not to the end of the life estate, because clauses referred to indicate an expectation that the estate would remain in the hands of trustees for a considerable length of time. No doubt the testator did have that expectation. I have shown that he had reason to expect that 47 years would pass away before the end of the life estate-of the last surviving daughter, and even if the wife did renounce, the estate would probably be in the hands of trustees for that length of time; and if the wife should not renounce, he had reason to expect that final distribution would not come under the will in less than about fifty years. But I think the directions as to the management of the estate are just as appropriate to a probable term of 47 years as they would be to a probable term of fifty years. I can not believe the chance of what might occur in that probable interval of three years — in the probable future fifty years ahead — had much influence in the choice of words in this will. I do not, therefore, see how the directions to his trustees that they should not mortgage or sell certain property while it remained in their custody, or the advice as to the application of rents to the improvement of certain property, or the direction as to the kind of securities in which moneys in their hands should be invested, tend to shed any light as to his intention on the subject — the time for final distribution. These directions are as appropriate in one case as in the other. Certain it is, they constitute no part of the purposes of the trust, which the testator says “are fully set forth” in the will. They ave merely directions and suggestions as to the be.-t mode of accomplishing the purposes which are set forth.

It is suggested that we are to depart from the rule of construction in question, and say the actual death of the wife is meant, and not the end of her estate, because of a supposed intent on the part of the testator, that in. case his wife should survive both of his daughters the estate should be held during that interval for accumulation.

I have shown how remote and unimportant was the chance of such a contingency, and have' already alluded to the fact that holding for accumulation is nowhere mentioned as one of the purposes of the trust. That fact alone ought to dispose of this suggestion. But I have given that conjecture more careful consideration, and I find not only is no mention made of any such duty imposed upon these trustees, but the provisions of the will show, affirmatively, that accumulation was not one of the purposes of this trust. Let us again place ourselves, in imagination, in the same circumstances under which the testator made this will, and bear in mind that the probability, to his mind, was that the survivor of his two daughters would not die in less than forty-seven ye.ars, and' then read this will, and we find that, by its provisions, all the net income was to be paid out during that entire period, and that accumulation during that entire period was expressly forbidden. ° "Whether his wife accepted or not there would be in all probability, in any event, only a period of about three years in which accumulation was possible under the will. Under these circumstances the conjecture that he had in view accumulation in the future, probably forty-seven years away, and for a period of but three years’ probable duration, seems very far-fetched. The directions as to improvements of parts of the property seem, therefore, to have been made with a view of producing income to be spent from year to year, and not in anywise with a view to accumulation.

Much stress seems to be laid upon the thought that the testator had clearly in mind in making this will that the testamentary gifts might be rejected. No doubt this is true, but it is equally plain he supposed she would accept these gifts, and to make this doubly sure he increased the annuity in 1868 from $8000 to $10,000. Counsel for the trustees say in their printed argument, “The provision was in fact much more ample and much more convenient for her than her one-third of the net product of the realty in Avhich she had dower.” They also say “this will was made and the testator .died before the decision of this, court was rendered in the case of McMurphy v. Boyles,” 49 Ill. 110, and that “it was not'then known that the Avidow was entitled absolutely to one-third of the personalty, and it was supposed that her statutory interest consisted of her dower and the share of the personalty called her award.” This shows the reason for what was the expectation of the testator upon which the Avill was drawn. He undoubtedly knew she might reject the testamentary gifts offered, and demand her statutory allowance. But he expected and supposed she would accept his offer.

In view of these facts the language of the Vice-Chancellor in Bull v. Jacobs may well be applied to this will. We may well say: “It is perfectly clear that the direction that the distribution, after the death of the daughters, should be delayed until after the death of the wife, simply because she Avas to have the Avhole income as a security for the annuity, and Avas to have and enjoy her homestead. If she can not have this, why are the nepheAVS and nieces and the founding of this library to be postponed? The reason for their .postponement altogether ceases. They are not to have it until after her death, because the testator assumed that she would accept the testamentary gifts, and enjoy them during life. But he was ignorant of the law, which gave his widow one-third of all the personal property, and, hence, that the price he offered for her statutory rights was inadequate. He postponed his nephews and his nieces solely to support the provision offered to his wife, and if he had known that she would not take the offered gifts, he would not have postponed his nephews and nieces. He would not have left them destitute in the meantime.” These are the inferences drawn by Lord Romilly from the use of the words, “after the decease of my wife.” In Fox v. Rummery, Yeaton v. Roberts, McNitt’s Ex. v. McNitt et al., Halliday v. Walker, Waddell v. Terry, and in the case of the Estate of Matthew Delaney, the facts were the same in this regard. The testator had in each case vividly in mind that the widow might reject the testamentary gifts offered, but that fact did not affect the application of the rule of acceleration.

Under the head of other words which should be considered, (as it is suggested,) “ as bearing upon the testator’s intention,” we are referred to the provision that all failing bequests shall revert to and become part of the body of the estate; and to the provision which, at the end of the three lives, gives the whole of the estate to his grandchildren, if' any; and to the clause which directs that in the management of his estate by his trustees, certain property in Chicago shall not be sold or mortgaged during the lifetime of his wife and daughters, or either of them, nor until it shall be necessary to divide for final distribution; and to provisions concerning the powers and discretion given to the trustees concerning leases, sales, and improvements in the erection of stores and other kinds of buildings, as they may judge best; and to directions in regard to investment of moneys, and the class of securities to be sought.

These are all the provisions of the will which are supposed to show any evident intent that the remainder should not be accelerated. Ro one of these provisions expresses any such intent; nor does any one of them necessarily imply such intent: no such intention is “spoken by the words of the will.” And were we at liberty to enter the field of conjecture, and “ speculate upon what the testator may be supposed to have intended to. do,” I can not find in these clauses ground even for speculation in favor of an evident intention on the part of the testator that after the end of the three life estates, within the lifetime of his wife, the final distribution should be postponed until the physical death of his wife.

How do the words of the provision that, on the failure of every devise or bequest, the subject of the devise should revert to and become a part of the body of the estate, indicate such an intention? These words merely cut off the inheritance and exclude all inference of partial intestacy. According to the teaching in Augustus v. Seabolt, the indication is directly the other way. • There, it was held that the failure to cut off the inheritance prevented acceleration. It was there declared that had the inheritance been cut off the meaning of the will would have demanded acceleration : here, it seems to be supposed to have a contrary effect, and that case is referred to in support of the position that a provision cutting off partial intestacy, prevents acceleration, and shows that the meaning of the will in such case does not demand it. This is not what the Court of Appeals of Kentucky said in that case. That court said exactly the contrary of the proposition for which that caséis here cited. It seems to me this clause in this will is cogent in favor of the proposition that upon the renunciation of the widow in this case, the life estate offered her was then accelerated and went to the daughters for life, and left nothing in the way of final distribution except the estates for life of the daughters.

Now these are the only parts of the will relied on in this ease “as bearing upon the testator’s intentions,” and of which it is said they contain “other words of the will which should be considered.” It does seem to me that these provisions fall far short of showing clearly that “it is the evident intention of the testator that the remainder should not take effect till the expiration of the life of the prior donee.” In fact such an inference from these provisions can not be other than mere speculation “upon what the testator may be supposed to have intended to do.” Certain it is no such expressed intention is found in these clauses, by “a vigorous attention” to their words; nor can such intention be found by “strictly attending to the true question, which is what that which he has written means.” In fact there are no words in this will which, in any sense, tend to show that final distribution should await the actual death of the widow, except the phrase, “after the decease of my said wife and of both my said daughters,” and the phrases “in case of the death of both my said daughters” without issue, then immediately “after the death of my wife, if she survive,” but if not, then immediately “after the decease” of the last surviving daughter, my trustees shall divide my estate.

I have attempted to show that these words do not tend to show that final distribution should await the actual death of the widow, (but do show that it should await only the termination of the life estate,) and I do not understand it to be claimed, avowedly, that, of themselves,- they do so show. But for that conclusion reliance is placed on the “other words” above noticed; and I think I have shown that these other words are wholly inadequate to bring about any such result.

The idea that the testator should, without any apparent purpose, place his estate in trust, to be held, not for the benefit'd f any known donee, but simply that it should lie in idleness, (except in its growth by possible accumulation,) until a future day, in the hands of trustees answerable to no mortal as to the manner of its management, to be kept in such a way as to be of no beneficial use to any person whatever, for an indefinite length of time, is so unnatural, so improbable, that no case has been found in which any such provisions have ever been made by any testator, so far as I have been able to discover. If appellees have as yet no interest in this estate, who can be found having such an interest in the estate as would enable him, should the trustees commit waste, to call to account these trustees before any court? We ought not, then, to assume lightly that the testator intended to accomplish a thing so unreasonable; surely not upon any mere speculation as to such intent, or without clear evidence found in the words of, the will itself.

It is a requirement of the law, that all property shall at all times be vested in somebody; for the law does not tolerate the idea of property without an owner.

It is the policy of the law that the right of present enjoyment of the use of all property shall at all times rest in somebody; for property is preserved and protected by law, for its use; and this policy is so decided, that unless the obstacles standing in the way are clear and unequivocal, the law does not tolerate the existence of such obstacles.

Cases are found wherein the testator has left property in the hands of trustees to be held until the ulterior donee should attain a given age, and should thus become supposably capable of preserving it. There are even cases where property is directed to be held until the birth of a child or children, expected or hoped for, and for whom it was intended, in such contingency, to provide. In such cases there is apparent on the face of the will the purpose itself, and the reason for the purpose is plain. No such purpose is found in this will, and no reason for any such purpose. To hold for mere accumulation is nowhere shown or set forth as one of the purposes of the will. Modes by which the estate may be preserved and rendered productive for the current and ultimate purposes of the will are set forth; but no design is shown anywhere to hold for mere accumulation.

But it is suggested, in support of the position of appellants, that the dower estate is still in existence. It is said, “there , are no words of the will connecting the time for final distribution with the so-called testamentary estate of the wife any more than the statutory estate; nor in fact with either of them at all.”

If the rules of construction laid down by the authorities, applicable to the phrases in this will having reference to the lifetime of the wife, and to the time of her death, (in connection with the termination of her testamentary estate, and in connection with the beginning of ulterior estates, in the succession of estates mapped out by this will,) are adhered to and respected, it seems to me this last remark is hardly correct.

It is shown above that the words of the will do closely connect the time of final distribution with the testamentary estate of the wife,by first making her decease the boundary at which that estate is to cease, and then providing that the final distribution shall not be made, until that contingency occurs, which, as we have seen, means, until the termination of that testamentary estate.

These rules, as already shown, do connect the time for final distribution with the termination of all three of the estates for life, given or offered in the will, and final distribution is to follow close upon the end of the last of these three testamentary estates.

It is said “the widow has now a life estate in one-third of all the realty, showing there to be the same impediment of a life interest in the widow to final distribution now, that there would have been had she accepted the testamentary estate and annuity.”

Is not this again a departure from the true question, which is, what do the words of the will mean ? We are not to “speculate as to what the testator may be supposed to have intended to do.” By the words of the will properly construed the distribution was to await the end of the last of the three testamentary life estates. Ho words of the will say that it shall await the end of the dower estate. But, in answer to this, (which seems to me mere speculation,) it may be said that the dower interest vested by law in the wife is her own property, and was not the property of the testator.

He, by his will, had no power or authority to dispose of that interest, and he has not attempted to do so. The will says nothing about it, save so far as an offer is made in the will for the purchase of it.

In itself the dower interest constitutes no more an impedí-' ment to immediate distribution than would the ownership by a stranger of an undivided interest in the lands, the residue of which constitute a part of the estate of the testator. The reason of the testator for postponing final distribution until the end of the testamentary estate, is plain from the words of the will. The distribution was not postponed on account of any dower interest, but for the sole purpose (clearly set out in the will) of securing well to his wife the provisions made for her in the will, and it can not be presumed that he expected his wife would refuse to take what he provided for her by will.

The testator intended that the annuity offered to his wife shpuld be secured beyond all question, and so secured that his wife, seeing the absolute certainty of the security, might the more certainly accept it. And to that end he made the same a first charge upon the net income of the Avhole body of the estate, and provided that final distribution should await the determination of that — her life estate— given in the will. He did not intend to nourish or sustain the income of his wife from her dower interests at any given standard whatever, and hence he did not charge any part of his estate for that purpose. That is not one of the purposes of the trust, for it is not “set forth” in the will. The maintenance of the dower estate is nowhere set forth in the will as one of the purposes of this trust, and we must bear in mind that we must look to the will for the purposes of this trust, for these purposes are declared expressly to be “fully set forth” therein, and no purpose, not therein fully set forth, can properly be held one of these purposes.

Again, it is said the testamentary estate of the Avife is but an offer in lieu of the statutory estate of the AvidoAv.

This is, undoubtedly, true; and it is also true that the testator kneAV it might not be accepted. This shoAA’S simply that the testator, by his Avill, subjected the body of his estate before final distribution to three principal purposes, if they could be accomplished, and thus made the same each a charge upon the body of his estate in the hands of his trustees. The first purpose was to buy in the wife’s statutory estate and thus increase the value of his own, and to that end he offered (inter alia) an annuity of $10,000 for life to his wife and to make the same a first charge upon the net income of his whole estate.

The other purposes were to furnish an annual income for. life to each of his daughters of at least $2500, and to that end he appropriated the net income of the whole of his estate (subject to the charge of his wife’s annuity) and he also subjected to this purpose so much of the principal of his estate as should be needed (if any) as would make each daughter’s annual income in every year at least $2500.

These three purposes are “fully set forth” in the will,to be accomplished (if accepted) before final distribution, and when the income of. the estate should no longer be needed for either of these three cardinal purposes, he directed that final distribution should take place immediately to the grandchildren, if any, and if not, then in the manner sought in this suit. It is laid down in Sears v. Hardy (120 Mass. 529) the estate of mere trustees must end in all cases where the trusts upon Avhich an estate is dexhsed, fail or are accomplished. He noAvhere intimates in his Avill that the doAver estate is to be nourished from funds in the hands of his trustees, or that distribution should axx’ait the end of that estate. This idea that the outstanding dower of the xvidoxv is an impediment to present distribution finds no support in the authorities. Ho elementary Avriter has made such a suggestion, and the adjudged cases are against it. This suggestion is a credit to the originality of counsel, for the thought can be found in no law library, though hundreds of cases have occurred Axdiere the idea, if sound, Avould have been potent.

In the case of Fox v. Rummery, supra, the testator gaxm to his Avife, “in lieu of dower,” one-half of his remaining estate “ for and during her natural life,” granting her full power to sell every part of the same and make reinvestments as she might deem expedient, “ and after her decease, should my adopted son survive her, I give and bequeath all the then existing remainder of said half part to the trustees herein provided for the use of my adopted son.”

The widow waived her rights under the will and took her statutory estate, dower, etc.

The heirs of the testator claimed that the use and income of that part of the property rejected by the widow, for the period from the renunciation until her death, was not disposed of by the will, and fell to them by inheritance. They insisted that by the terms of the will the adopted son was to take nothing of this part of the estate until “ after her decease.”

But the court held there was no intestacy, and speaking of the renunciation said, “ that the effect thereby produced is that the Avife take her doAver in realty,” etc., “leaving the remainder of that moiety to pass under the will to the trustees for the adopted son.”

The court said, “ All the Avife’s interest in it is at an end as much as if she Avere dead. The rule is that the extinction of the first interest carved out of the estate only accelerates the right of the second taker. This is the only disposition of this surplus of the wife’s moiety Avhich is consistent Avith the testator’s declared will.” Here, the dower estate was held no impediment to the next taker.

So in Yeaton v. Roberts, supra, the testator gave to his wife the residue of his estate “ for and during her natural, life,” and then to go in fee to the children of Oliver Yeaton and Leavit Yeaton.

The widow renounced the benefits of the will, and took her statutory estate.

It Avas held that the children of Oliver Yeaton and Leavit Yeaton took under the will at once, and that upon the refusal of the widow to take the life estate provided for her in the will, the ulterior limitations took effect, notwithstanding the widow still lived.

In that case, the testator (with full knowledge that liis widow might reject the life estate offered by the will and take her dower) provided that at the end of her natural life this property should go to a class — the children of Oliver Yeaton and the children of Leavit Yeaton — and yet the court did not construe this language to indicate an intention on the part of the testator that the distribution to the class named should await the falling in of the dower life estaté; but did understand it to show that such .distribution should await the end of the life estate offered to the widow in lieu of her dower, and should be delayed no longer.

So in the case of McNitt’s Executors v. McNitt et al. supra, the gift under the will as part provision made to the wife of the testator in lieu of dower, was to trustees to pay the income from certain lands and from certain stocks and bonds “during the term of her natural life, or so long as she shall remain my widow,” and “after her decease or marriage” to permit an infant daughter to enjoy the same, etc.

The widow renounced, and the rights of this infant daughter were held to take effect at once, and no mention is made of the idea that the dower estate was in the way of this acceleration.

So in the case of Holliday v. Walker, supra, where the gift was to the wife of the testator during her natural life, and at the death of his wife this gift was to go one-half to Wm. B. Walker, and the other half to Elizabeth Evington if she lived to be married, and between the death of the wife and the marriage of Elizabeth, her share was to go to trustees for her support and maintenance.

Walker died before the testator. The widow renounced and took her dower. It was held that acceleration took place at once, although the dower estate was still in esse, the court saying, “the same result which would have been arrived at by the death of the widow must, in our opinion, be brought about by her dissent.” Again, in Waddell v. Terry, supra, the testator, by his will, said, “I give all my real and personal property to my Avife, Mary E. Manley, and my son, Thomas J. Manley, to be equally divided between them, as hereafter specified, to-wit: I give to my wife a life estate in one-half of all my property, and if she dies before

my son, the half given to her to revert to my son, if he dies before my Avife the half given to him shall revert, to her during life, and if my son die Avithout issue before he is twenty-one years old, the net proceeds of my crops shall be paid into the hands of my two brothers, John and James, and of my two sisters, Frances and Mary; but if my wife should be living at the death of my son, my property shall belong to her for life, and then the proceeds paid over to my brothers and sisters, or other heirs, as I above directed. I direct that all my property shall be kept together for the benefit of my Avife and son during their lives, or the life of the survivor of them, and at their death to be kept together for the benefit of my brothers and sisters, or other heirs, and the net proceeds paid them or their representatives. If my son shall arrive at twenty-one years of age and shall survive my wife, then I give all my estate to him and his laAvful issue living at the time.” The AvidoAV renounced her rights under the Avill and took her dower and share of the estate under the law. The son afterwards, during his minority, died without issue. The brothers and sisters claimed that their interest vested at the death of the son, and that they were entitled to the beneficial interest in the estate from and after his death.

On the other hand, it was contended by the defendants, the heirs, that the remainder was contingent until the death of the son, and though it then vested in the brothers and sisters, it did not then take effect in possession and would not take effect in possession until the actual death of the widoAV, and claimed that the beneficial interests for and during the interval between the death of the son and the death of the widow, by operation of law should go to the heirs.

The court here decided that there was no partial intestacy, and held, “upon principle as well as authority,” that the use and enjoyment of the interest in remainder took effect immediately on the determination of the prior estate, and gave the immediate beneficial interest to the brothers and sisters, under the will, although the widow was still alive and enjoyed her dower estate.

I might accumulate cases of this kind without limit, but it is sufficient to say, that after a careful research and an examination of the long list of authorities collected and presented by counsel for appellants, I have found no case of a life estate given to a widow, with a remainder over to others, and in which the widow renounced her rights under the will and took her dower and allowance under the law, where it was held by the court that the existence of the dower estate prevented the next taker from taking immediately, the testamentary life estate Avhich was rejected by the Avidow being out of the way.

■ Again, it is suggested that the Avill plainly contemplates that the final. distribution should be integral and complete, whether to grandchildren or between descendants of his brothers and sister and the public library. In this'view I' concur. But it is said, “the reversion expectant in the dower lands can not be distributed until the death of the doAveress.” This seems to me a mistake. Such reversion expectant had a present money value, and can be sold or set off in distribution at once, Avithout any legal obstacle Avhatever.

Lastly, it is said the estate of the trustees under the Avill is in the Avay of present distribution. If that be so it will always be in the Avay. I think it is not in the Avav, but is an essential factor in the accomplishment of the thing soug'ht. There could be no final distribution under the will unless the trustees held title to the property. As Avell might an administrator, after payment of all debts, refuse to distribute the remaining personalty among the heirs upon the ground that his legal title to the personalty was in the way — alleging that his intermediate estate was still in the way.

It is suggested that it could not be “thought necessary that the whole of this large estate should be kept together to support a trust to pay an annuity of $10,000 to the wife.” It is said, “but a small ¡portion of the estate would be needed to produce that annuity, and that this annuity is not made an express charge upon the estate.”

It does not seem, now that this estate has turned out so productive, in point of fact, that it was necessary to keep this large estate together for the mere purpose of maintaining an annuity of $10,000. But in construing the will we must look at the views which, from the words of the will, the testator seems to have entertained in relation to the estate at the time when he made his will. When the will was first drawn he provided an annuity of only $8000 for his Avife, and $2500 for each of the daughters, making in all only $13,000 a year. It may well be supposed, for aught that appears in this record that, at the time the Avill Avas made, a large portion of this property Avas unproductive real estate, subject to heavy taxation, and liable to heavy burdens in the shape of special assessments for local improAmments, and the testator evidently was desirous that there should be no failure to produce these annuities, and appears, from the Avords of the will, to have apprehended that the estate might not produce at all times the necessary amount, to produce even the amount of $13,000 a year net. This is evident from the provision found in the will, that if the income should not be sufficient to pay these annuities to his Avife and his daughters, his trustees Avere to take enough from the principal of the estate to pay the annuities. Although, in point of form, these annuities are not declared expressly to be a charge upon the estate, and although they are not made a charge, in the sense of being liens upon any particular property of the estate, still the intention of the testator to subject the entire estate, in the hands of his trustees, to the support of those three life estates, is plain and palpable and is clearly expressed by the words of the will, and they are the three leading purposes of the will, and the only important purposes that are set forth in the will, to be accomplished prior to the final distribution of the estate. Hence the annuities are, in substance and legal effect, made each a charge upon thé estate.

It is suggested that the annuities for the wife “might have been provided for as was done by the court in Sears v. Hardy ,” supra, “by setting aside a part, say $200,000, invested in such securities as are directed by the will,” and “then the rest of the estate would be disengaged.” The suggestion here made

of a mode by which “the estate would be disengaged,” by providing for the annuity in another way, by necessary implication, concedes that the annuity is made a charge upon the estate by the will. If this be so, it is not perceived that it is a matter of any significance whether such charge be fastened upon the estate expressly, or merely by necessary implication. It is enough that the wife’s annuity was, by the legal effect of the words of the will, made a charge upon the estate, — and a first charge to take precedence of all other things. The annuity to his daughters was made secondary thereto.

It is, no doubt, true the testator might have provided for this annuity expressly, in the mode suggested; but it is also true that he did not do so, and we have no warrant for speculation as to the motives of the testator not expressed in the will, or for speculation as to the sufficiency of the reasons governing the testator. With money now at three per cent, (in United States bonds as advised by this will) $200,000 would produce but $6000 a year for the widow, instead of $10,000, — so the wisdom of the testator in not adopting the course suggested, is .vindicated.

It is enough for us that the testator chose to support each and every one of the annuities, for his wife and daughters for life, with the income from the whole of his estate, and to postpone its division until all of that service had been performed by the estate ; and surely, if he postponed division longer than necessary, that is no reason why this court should postpone it still longer.

As to this case of Sears v. Hardy, its philosophy is against, rather than for, appellants in this case.

The testator in that case gave the residue of his estate to trustees, in trust, to hold, invest, manage and take care of, and' expressed a wish that they invest one-half thereof in productive real estate, stores to be preferred, and one-half in bottom mortgages.

He gave to his son $30,000, to be paid to him when he attained 21 years of age, and ordered so much of the income of the body of the estate as might be needed for that purpose, to be used for his support and education, and directed $4000 annually to be paid to him when 21 years old, and $6000 a year when 25, and $10,000 a year when 30 years old.

The son having attained 21 years, and received his legacy of $30,000, there was left in the hands of the trustees a large surplus not needed to support the annuities for the son. The will did not give to the trustees any direction as to the disposition of this surplus.

The son was the only heir, and by him it was insisted that this surplus was not disposed of by the will, and therefore fell to him by inheritance. The trustees claimed that the gift to them as trustees, “in trust,” to “hold," etc., gave the surplus of the estate to them, and, not having any direction as to its use, they should hold the same to their own use.

* The court held that the trustees could only hold for the purposes of their trust, and that there arose a resulting trust in favor of the heir, as to this surplus, and directed that the trustees retain in their hands enough of the estate to produce a net annual income of $10,000, as a provision for the son’s annuities, and that the balance of the property be transferred to the heir.

This case is quoted by appellants and mentioned with approbation by the court in the case at bar. If it has any application to the case at bar, its teaching is against the appellants. It would seem to teach that if Mrs. Newberry had not renounced and the trustees were now paying her the annuity of §10,000, and the ultimate takers had applied to the court for that purpose, it would have been proper for the court in this case to have set aside enough to support that annuity, and to have ordered at once a transfer of the surplus to the ultimate donees under this will. If this be so, there now being no annuity to support, the position that they should now transfer and divide seems to follow necessarily.

In view of the considerations and authorities herein presented and discussed, I am forced to the conclusion that, as this will provides for a regular succession of consecutive estates, — (the termination of each of the intermediate estates being marked by words indicating the decease of the holder as its end, and as the beginning of the next succeeding estate), — : these words are used as mere words of limitation, and not as words of qualification, as to the ultimate takers.

And I can not see that this conclusion is forbidden by the other words of the will referred to, providing that the funds of all failing bequests shall thereby become part of the body of the estate, or by those words providing that the grandchildren, if any, shall take the estate at the end of the last of the three lives named ; or, by those which direct that certain property shall not be mortgaged by the trustees, nor sold until necessary for final distribution; or by those words giving advice and direction as to sales and leases of other property, and as to the improvement of certain parts of the property, or directions as to the mode of investing surplus moneys. Nor can I perceive that- these words are at all inconsistent with this construction (or that any one of these clauses, or all of them, tend in the slightest degree to repel this construction) of the governing Avords in question. Nor can I perceive that the existence of the dower estate militates against this conclusion, or stands at all in the way of executing the plain meaning of the governing words of the will, in their true and legal meaning according to the canons of construction recognized by every court in England and America.

If this be so, the legal effect of the facts has been and is, • that on the renunciation by Mrs. Newberry the daughters took by acceleration that which would have been their’s had she died, that is, the whole income so long as they both lived; and at the death of Mary the whole of the income was cast upon Julia; and at her death it was cast upon the appellees and the public; and then it became the duty of the trustees to make division and final distribution.

Mulkey, J.: I concur in the foregoing dissenting opinion.