Stephenson v. Hagan

Chief Justice Marshall

delivered the opinion of the Court—

On the 5th day of August, 1789, William Robinson, Sr., and Sarah, his wife, executed a deed, which purports to be an indenture between themselves, of the first part, and John Pitman and Dorothy P. Pit-man, of -the second part, and Peyton Robinson and William Robinson, Jr., sons of said William, of the third part, by which, “for and in consideration of the natural love and affection he (William Robinson,Sr.,) *300hath for said John Pitman and Dorothy, his wife, the daughter of the said William, and also for and in consideration of the natural love and affection which he hath to his said sons, and for and in consideration of the sums of five shillings, severally paid by Pitman and wife, and the said P. and W. Robins on, the receipt of all which is acknowledged, after covenanting to stand seized, &c., for the following uses, &c., they, the said Wm. Robinson, the elder, and Sarah, his wife, granted, bargained, and sold to said John Pit-man and Dorothy, his wife, a tract of one hundred and sixty-five acres of land, in the county of Madison, then in the State of Virginia; to have and to hold during the term of their natural lives, and for and during the term of the life of the longest liver of them, and at the decease of said John Pit-man and Dorothy P., his wife, or the longest liver of them, then the said one hundred and sixty-five acres of land, with its appurtenances, shall ensue and descend to the heirs of the said John Pitman, lawfully begotten on the body of said Dorothy, his present wife, and shall be vested in such heirs in fee simple. But if in case the said John and Dorothy shall depart this life, leaving no issue of their two bodies, then the said land and premises, &c., shall revert, return, and be again vested in the said Wm. Robinson the elder, and his heirs, to and for the uses hereinafter mentioned. And this indenture, so far as relates to said John and Dorothy, and their heirs, shall then cease and determine.” The deed, then, in case the said land shall revert to said William, Sr., after the decease of said John and Dorothy, for default of heirs of their two bodies, grants, bargains, and sells to the said Peyton Robinson and Wm. Robinson, Jr., their heirs and assigns forever, the before-mentioned tract of one hundred and sixty-five acres, to have and to hold the same unto the said P. and W. Robinson, Jr., and their heirs as tenants in common, to the only proper use, &c., of the said Peyton and William, Jr., and of their heirs and assigns forever. *301Then follows a warranty of said land to and for the uses and intents mentioned before. The land conveyed by this deed has been held under it ever since the date of the deed. In 1803, Dorothy P. Pitman died, before her husband. In 1804, John Pitman sold and conveyed the land to William Robinson, under whom the land has been since held. John Pitman died in 1839. In 1853, this action was brought by MaryJ. Stephenson, then a widow, and Irvine S. Pitman, the only living children of the marriage of John and Dorothy Pitman> grantees of William Robinson the elder, and the heirs of their bodies, to recover the land from Hagan and Stone, who were in possession. During the progress of the suit, Irvine S. Pitman released whatever title he had to the defendants, and the suit was dismissed as to him. The case then proceeded in behalf of Mary J. Stephenson aloné, and the law and facts having been submitted to the court, judgment was rendered against the plaintiff, who has brought it to this court for reversal.

The deed and facts above stated present the whole case. And it is apparent, that on the whole case, the only question is, whether the conveyance to John Pitman, created in him, as the survivor of his wife, a fee tail or a mere estate for life. If the former, the fee tail was turned into a fee simple by the statute of 1776 ; his children born of the mai’r-iage with Dorothy P. Robinson took nothing by the deed, and his sale and conveyance to William Robinson, in 1804, passed the fee simple in the land. If he was only a tenant for life, his sale and conveyance passed the estate for his life only, and the children of the marriage with Dorothy P. Robinson, to whom the land was given in remainder, became entitled on his death to the possession. And his daughter, Mary J. Stephenson, was entitled to a judgment for one undivided- half of the land, in this action, commenced within less than twenty years after- his death, It is clear that the rights of these parties depend upon the construction *302and legal effect of the deed of 1789. In determining which, we have been most earnestly urged to resort to the law as it existed before the passage of the Virginia act of 1776, abolishing entails, as furnishing, according to that act, the only test for deciding the character of the estate limited to Pitman by the deed in question; which, as having been made by parties residing, at its date, in Virginia, and for land then in that State, it is contended, was then, and is now peculiarly subject to such construction and operation as were fixed upon by the law of the time in the State of Virginia. As a part of that law, the rule in Shelly’s case, abolished by the Revised Statutes of this State, and disregarded by this court in the recent case of Turman vs. White’s heirs, 14 B. Monroe, has been adverted to, and its policy, even in this country, has been vindicated on the ground of its preventing the estate in cases to which it applies, from being locked up during the period of a life, however long, and then being subject to a division into minute particles among numerous heirs, the infancy of some or all of whom may render portions or the whole of it still longer inalienable. But this evil, great or small, is not removed by the abolition or rejection of the rule in Shelly’s case. The general law of the land, even before the adoption of the Revised Statutes, allowed, as they now do, a limitation after an estate for life, provided it is so constructed as to take effect, if at all, within a life or lives in being, and twenty-one years, and the usual period of gestation afterwards. The abolition or rejection of the rule in Shelly’s case, does not either give or enlarge this power of disposition, but only allows it to be made by words which the parties understand and use for making such a disposition, and suppose to be effectual for that purpose, but which, under the rule in question, would often so operate as to defeat the manifest intention of giving to the first taker a restricted interest and power, which would not enable him to destroy the interest intended to take effect in others *303after his death. But, without dwelling further upon a question of policy which is no longer an open one in this State, and conceding that at the date of this deed the rule in Shelly’s case was in full force in Virginia, as a part of the 'law of real estate, we are of opinion that even if that rule and the whole law of entailment, as it existed at and prior to the date of the act 1776, is to be applied as a test of the estate which Pitman, as the survivor of his wife, took under the deed now before us, he did not take an estate tail, (converted into a fee simple,) but only an estate for life, which admitted, according to the law as then and now existing, of a valid limitation to persons described as heirs of the body of himself and his wife Dorothy.

Even under the law as above supposed, it was as it is now, a principle that the intention of the parties to any valid instrument or contract, is to be ascertained, and so far as it is consistent with the rules of law to be effectuated, if the terms of the instrument are such as can have the intended operation. If the rule in Shelly’s case, or its principles, had never existed, there would have been no principle in the English law, which prevented an estate from being effectually given to one for life with remainder to his heirs, general or special, to take as purchasers at his death. It is that rule — or the principle embodied in it — which determines that the estate of inheritance intended to to vest in the heirs, shall vest in the ancestor to whom an estate for life is given by the same conveyance, so that he will have the fee either immediate or in remainder, and in tail or in fee simple, according as the limitation in remainder is immediate upon his life estate or otherwise, and is to the heirs of his body, or to his heirs general. As the rule applies expressly to the case of the gift to the first donee, being a freehold, that is, an estate for life, the intention that he shall have but an estate for life, however strongly expressed, was not deemed sufficient in itself to repel the application of the rule, if the gift in remainder be *304to his heirs, general or special, without further qualification. Nor, in. such a case, would it have been deemed sufficient to state expressly in the instrument of donation, that the heirs were intended to take, as purchasers, which is implied from the gift to the ancestor for life, and although heirs, or heirs of the body, may, in some instances, take as purchasers; yet, as in their legal sense, these words are words of limitation, applying to and describing the estate of the ancestor who first has it, and not that of his heirs, and properly implying a descent to them from that ancestor; and as, moreover, the words include, in their legal sense, the whole line of heirs of the sort described, and not merely such persons as may come within the description at aparticular time, these words were uniformly interpreted, in their legal sense, as comprising the whole line of heirs, general or special, to take, if at all, in the character of heirs, and by descent from the ancestor named, unless the estate which is intended to vest in them could not, by the terms of the gift, come to them as heirs of the first donee, or unless the legal sense of the words used in describing them as heirs, was repelled by other explanatory words or circumstances in the instrument, showing clearly that they were used in a more restricted sense,, and as a mere description of the persons who were to take when the life estate determined.

It might be always inferred from the limitation of the estate to the first donee for life, with remainder to his heirs, or to the heirs of his body, that the donor intended that the heirs should take as purchasers, and not by descent;, and in this State, the repeal of the rule in Shelly’s case, which has been mentioned, arises from, or consists in, the affirmative enactment in direct opposition to the rule, that when an estate is given to one for life, and after his death to his heirs or the heirs of his body, &c., it shall be construed as an estate for life, only, in the first donee, and a remainder in fee simple to his heirs or the heirs of his *305body, &c. This enactment, intended, doubtless, to effectuate the presumed intention of the conveyance, as inferred from the ordinary use and sense at the date of the act, of the terms and structure of the limitation supposed, gives full effect to the limitation, without regard to the technical sense of the words. The law, as understood and administered prior to the Virginia act.of 1776, and as applied to this deed at its date, interpreted these words according to their legal sense, unless it clearly appeared from the instrument itself, that they were used in a different sense.

In stating the rule in Shelly’s case, the words “heirs and heirs of the body,” are used in their legal and technical sense; and, as the rule applied to limitations in'which these words were not used, but which were made in other words requiring the same interpretation, and indicating the same intention, so it was not applied to limitations containing the .particular words above mentioned, unless they were used in their technical sense of denoting the whole line of heirs in succession. It was not a rule of construction or interpretation, by which the sense of particular words, and the intention with which they were used, was ascertained or fixed, but a rule of law, declaring the effect of a certain disposition of land, and having no operation i-n the particular case, unless there be such disposition, and no application until it was ascertained, by the aid of other rules and principles, that according to the intended sense (not the intended operation) of the words used in framing the limitation in question, the conveyance made the particular disposition to which the rule applies, and •which it virtually prohibits, by giving to it an operation and effect regardless and most frequently destructive of the intention with which it was made.

That this was the doctrine of the law as it aforetime was^abd as it existed before and at the date of the act of 1776 abolishing entails, is,, as we think, manifest■ from the remarks on the subject, made by Mr. Fearne, in commenting on the observations of *306Mr. Hargrave concerning the rule in Shelly’s case, in 1 Harg. Law Trials, 574-5. The authority of two writers so astute in their reasoning, so laborious in their investigations, and so confessedly learned in this branch of the law, is deemed more satisfactory than any exploration which we might make or attempt, of the labyrinth of cases, from a deep study of which, aided by all the lights of experience and observation, they have drawn conclusions intelligible and consistent. Mr. Fearne, in pages 188 and 189 of his work on Remainders, after remarking that the •inflexible degree of imperative control which Hargrave attributes, to the rule, would hardly be reconcilable with the long established principles applicable to the construction of wills, were it not for his resting the admission of the rule upon a previous question referable to the testator’s intention, proceeds to say, that “ Nothing can be better founded than Mr. Hargrave’s doctrine, that the rule in Shelly’s case is no medium for finding out the intention of the testator; that, on the contrary, the rule supposes the intention ■ already discovered, and to be a superadded succession to the heirs, general or special, of the donee for life ; by making such donee the ancestor, terminus or stirpes, from which the whole generation or posterity of heirs is to be accounted; that whether the conveyance has or has not so constituted an estate of freehold, with a succession engrafted upon it, is a previous question, which ought to be adjusted before the rule is thought of; that to resolve that point, the ordinary rales for the interpretation of wills ought to be resorted to; that when it is once settled, that the donor or testator has used words- of inheritance according to their legal import, has applied them intentionally to comprise the whole line of heirs to the tenant for life; -and has really made him the terminus or ancestor, by reference to whom the succession is to be regulated ; then comes the proper time to inspect the rale in Shélly.’s case; that then, too, it will appear, that being considered according to the views from *307which it (as he supposes) originated, it is perfectly immaterial whether the testator meant to avoid the rule or not; and that to apply it, and to declare the words of inheritance to be words of limitation, in the tenant for life, as the ancestor and terminus to the heirs, is a mere matter of course. That on the other hand, if it be decided that the testator or donor did not mean by the words of inheritance after the estate for life, to úse those words in their full and proper sense; nor to involve the whole line of heirs to the tenant for life, and include all of his inheritable issue, and make him the ancestor or terminus for the heirs, but intended to use the word heirs in a limited, restrictive, and untechnical sense, and to point at such individual person as would be the heir, áse., of the tenant for life at his decease, and to give a distinct estate of freehold to such single heir, and to make his or her estate of freehold the groundwork for a succession of heirs, and constitute him or her the ancestor, terminus, or stock, for the succession to take its course from; in every one of these cases' the premises are wanting, upon which, only, the rule in Shelly’s case interposes its authority, and the ride becomes quite extraneous matter.”’

Mr. Fearne, it is true, notices in tire following pages’ what is entirely obvious, that this' reference to thé intention, in respect to the use of the word heirs, áze., produces some uncertainty in the application of the rule. But he concludes (page 192)thatthe rule'cannot be discharged from this reference to the question, whether these words were or not used in a sense to comprehend the whole class of heirs described, “without exempting those words from all susceptibility of restriction, qualification, or explanation, from any other wórds or expressioris in the will, a doctrine' which (he says) is expressly negatived by those deci-’ ded cases, in Which the’ admission of the rule has-been excluded by restrictive, qualifying, or explana-tory expressions.” And in page 187, after’speaking of the propriety' or- necessity of resorting to some • genral inferences afforded by a comparison of the *308several cases in which the intention has been allowed to control the rule, he quotes, with approbation, that part of the argument of Judge Blackstone, in the case of Perrin against Blake, (decided about the year 1776,) in which he said that all the cases that had occurred from the statute of wills to that time, in which “heirs of the bodies” had been construed to be words of purchase, were reducible to these four heads: either (1st) when no estate of freehold was given to the ancestor, or (2d), where no estate of inheritance was given to the heir, or (3d) where other explanatory words were immediately subjoined to the former, or, lastly, (4th,) where a new estate of inheritance was grafted on the heirs of the body.”

In the cases coming under the two first of these heads, the rule is so clearly inapplicable, that we suppose there has been no diversity of opinion respecting them, when it was once ascertained either that no freehold was given to the named ancestor, or that no estate of inheritance was given to his heir or heirs. The rule does not create an estate either of freehold or of inheritance, when one of them, only, is given. But where both are given, the freehold to the ancestor and the inheritance to his heirs, general or special, to take after him either mediately or immediately, it vests the inheritance in him, and the heirs must take by descent, if at all, unless on one of the grounds, coming under the third or fourth head, its application to the case is repelled, and the limitation in both of its branches takes effect according to the intention. With regard, however, to the sufficiency of certain words or circumstances to repel the application of the rule by showing the sense in which the words heirs or heirs of the body, were used in the conveyance, and also upon the question whether, in the particular limitation, a new estate of inheritance was grafted on the heirs or heirs of the body, there has been, at different periods, a great difference of opinion, and a corresponding diversity of decision, as more or less regard may have been paid by differ*309ent judges to the evidences of intention or to the rules of law which operate upon it. Without attempting to present, and much less to reconcile these diversities, we refer, for a partial exhibition of them, to the Essay of William Hayes, of the Middle Temple, and the analytical tables of cases appended thereto, as published at the close of the 7th volume of the Law Library, printed in 1835. We refer, also, to the case of Prescott vs. Prescott’s heirs, 10 B. Monroe, 56, and the cases there cited, to show that the explanatory words or circumstances there deemed sufficient to repel the application of the rule, and to make the heirs of the body of the devisee for life take as purchasers, after having been decided to be sufficient in several British cases were, by a recent determination of the House of Lords, in opposition to the judgment of the Court of King’s Bench, decided to be insufficient, and afterwards so held by the courts.

But whatever diversities of opinion or decision may have existed upon the question whether, by certain terms used in a conveyance to one for life, with a further limitation to his heirs or the heirs of his body, a new estate of inheritance has heen grafted on the heirs as the stock from which the succession is to be traced as from its root, there is, as we believe, no case in which it has been decided that the rule in Shelly’s case applies to a gift to one for life, and on his death to the heirs of his body, if a new estate of inheritance is, in fact, and clearly grafted upon the heirs of his body, and which, according to the law of descents and of entails, they could not, under the description of heirs of his body, take from him by descent.

In the case of McNair’s adm’r vs. Hawkins, 4 Bibb, 380, which was a devise of land and slaves made in 1758, when by law slaves might be annexed to land and devised in tail, the testator gave his land and slaves to his daughter “Elizabeth and the children of her body, lawfully to be begotten, forever, which children of her body, lawfully to be begotten, to share the same *310equally among them, be they son or daughter, or sons and daughters, after the decease of said Elizabeth.” The court, after saying that in a will the word “children” might be deemed equivalent to the words “heirs of the body,” decided that Elizabeth took but an estate for life and that her children took by purchase; because the estate was given to children both males and females, when by the law then existing it would have gone by descent to the eldest male, alone, so that “the manner in which the estate was limited over to them precluded all legal possibility of their taking by descent,” and in the case of Prescott vs. Prescotts heirs, 10 B. Monroe, 59, the principle of the case just noticed, and of the other cases referred to, is said to be that the sense of the words “heirs of the body” was held to be restricted, and they were made to operate as words of purchase, by reason of such additional words or directions as broke the ordinary course of descent, and showed that the estate was not to descend from the first devisee.

Whether these two cases properly decide that upon the devises in question, the words indicating an estate by descent from the first taker were sufficiently qualified, either by additional explanatory words, or on the ground that a new estate of inheritance was grafted on the heirs of the body of the first taker, is not now the subject of inquiry. Wherever heirs or heirs of the body under that description take by purcease, they necessarily take a new estate, of which, if it be an estate of inheritance, they must constitute the stock or root from which the heirs or inheritors are to proceed. And if, on the other hand, it sufficiently appears that although the ancestor take a life estate by the same conveyance, they, as the heirs of his body, are intended to take a new estate of inheritance which they could not take by descent from him, either under the terms descriptive of his estate or under those in which they are described as his heirs, and under which alone they could take by descent from him, then as it would be legally impossi*311ble for them to take by descent from him the estate which is limited to them by the conveyance, they must take it by purchase. Such would be one of a new inheritance grafted on the heirs of the body of the first taker or donee for life, and whether it be considered with reference to the principles on which the application of the rule in Shelly’s case depends, as understood and explained by Fearne and Hargrave in the observations above quoted, or with reference to the current of adjudged cases with respect to the words heirs of the body, as analyzed by Judge Blackstone, it is a case in which the words ‘heirs of the body’ should be understood in a restricted sense as words of purchase, applying to thosé persons who would be heirs of the body of the tenant for life at his decease, and not as words of limitation applying to the preceding estate, and operating to unite with that estate in the ancestor the estate of inheritance intended for the heirs. In such a case there is not, either by construction or by the operation of' the rule in Shelly’s case, any 'estate of inheritance either in fee tail or in fee simple in the donee for life, but the fee is in the heirs as purchasers, that is, by force of the gift, and not by descent.

What then is the nature of the deed before us, and of the limitations which it makes of the land which it conveys? Obviously the deed' evidences a gift and not a sale. If not strictly a marriage settlement, it is at least a family settlement, by which a father makes provision for his children, and especially for his married daughter and her issue. Though in form a deed inter partes, it is in reality as much the act of the father alone who makes the gift, as a will is the exclusive act of the testator, requiring nothing from the donees, and leaving nothing for them to do, but to enjoy the gift which his benevolence has prompted. And as it proceeds from the same benevolent motives as a will, and is like it a pure donation, it should receive as such instruments *312do receive the same benign interpretation with the view of effectuating the intention of the donor.

The limitation or conveyance made by the deed may be briefly stated, as being to John Pitman and Dorothy his wife during their joint lives and the life of the longest liver of them, and at their death or the death of the survivor, the deed says the land shall ensue and descend to the heirs of said John on the body of his present wife begotten, and shall vest in such heirs in fee simple. Had the deed stopped with the declaration that after the death of the survivor of the two donees for life, John and Dorothy Pitman, the land shall ensue and descend to the heirs of the body of John Pitman on the body of his wife Dorothy begotten, then John Pitman, after the death, would have been tenant in fee tail special. For there being then nothing to repel the application of the rule in Shelly’s case, the estate of inheritance given to his special heirs by the deed, would, by operation of the rule, have vested in him, and merging the estate for life, would have made him immediate tenant of the estate described by the gift to him and the heirs of the body of himself and'the wife designated. Or to use another form of expression, the words heirs of his body, &c., would have operated as words of limitation applying to and describing his own estate, and not as words of purchase indicating or securing any direct benefit to the heirs. And as these words would be taken as describing such an estate in him as would or might be descendable to the sort of heirs described by the words of inheritance or limitation, he must, as the law aforetime was, have had an estate in special fee tail, which the act of 1776 would have converted into an estate in fee simple, of which he would have had the absolute dominion.

But the deed does not stop with the limitation to J. Pitman for life, and at his death to ensue and descend to the heirs of the body of himself and his then wife; which under the rule would have been the same as a limitation to him and the heirs of the two bodies *313mentioned. In addition to the direction that on the death of the survivor of the two donees for life, the land shall ensue and descend to the heirs of their two bodies, it is also declared that it shall he vested in such heirs in fee simple. In thus giving to them a fee simple, or declaring that upon the death of the donee for life, the heirs of his body by his wife Dorothy shall have the land in fee simple, the deed limits an estate to them which they could not take by descent from a tenant in tail. And to use the language of Chief Justice Boyle in the case before cited from 4th Bibb, “the manner the estate is limited over to them precludes all legal possibility of their taking by descent” from John Pitman, that is it was legally impossible; (as the law aforetime was,) that an estate tail in John Pitman should descend to the heirs of his body in fee simple, and the limitation of the estate in fee simple to them, shows that the words heirs of his body, &c., were not used in their technical or legal sense as comprising the whole line of heirs, such as are described, and in which the estate was to descend, but in the more restricted sense as designating the persons who, at his death or at the death of the survivor of the two donees for life, would be the heirs of their two bodies, and that it thus repels the application of the rule and the idea of an estate tail. It is moreover most obvious to oúr minds that this deed, by its limitation of an estate in fee simple to the heirs of the body of the donees for life, does graft upon such heirs a new estate of inheritance of which said heirs and not the donees for life, are to be the root and stock from which the succession is to flow and be accounted. This is manifest from the consideration that the estate in fee simple in the heirs of the body, who upon the death of the donee for life might take that estate, would be descendable not merely to the heirs of the body of John Pitman, but to the heirs general of those who might be the heirs of his body at his death, and therefore to persons who were not only not descended from him, but not de*314gcended from any of his ancestors. The heirs of the body are to have an estate different not only from that which the deed by its terms gives to the ancestor, but different from that which the rule of law, looking to all of the terms which could Imregarded as applying to his estate, would give to him. And the estates being thus of different qualities, there seems to be the same reason for saying on that ground that they cannot coalesce, and the rule in Shelly’s case does not apply, as there is for the same conclusion, where the estate for life is equitable, and the estate limited to the heirs is legal. In which case the doctrine is well established that the rule does not apply, and that the estates remain separate, notwithstanding the use of the word heir or heirs of the body of the donee for life.

But without recurring to this analogy, it is sufficient to rest this case upon the palpable ground that a new estate of inheritance is by this deed grafted upon the heirs of the body of the donee for life, which they could not take by descent from him, whether he be tenant for life or tenant in tail, and which therefore they must take under the deed and as purchasers or donees. In support of this principle, directly sustained by the opinions of Hargrave, Fearne and Blackstone, we refer to Archer’s case, 1 Coke 66, to Cheek vs. Day, Moore, 593; to be found also in Fearne on Remainders, and to Doe vs. Laming, 2d Burrow’s Rep. 1100. In the first of these cases, the gift was in substance to A for life, then to A’s next heir male, and to the heirs male of the body of such next heir male. In the second it was “to A for life, and if A marry and have heirs of his body, to A’s heir and the heirs of such heir.” In the third case it was “to A, (not for life,) and the heirs of her body as well females as males, and their heirs and assigns forever, share and share alike as tenants in common.”

The two first cases have been especially regarded as establishing the principle above stated, and hence *315the reference in the quotation from Hargrave and Fearne, supra, to the limitation, being to the heir in the singular and his heirs, as showing that a new inheritance is grafted on the heir. But the word heir denotes descent, as certainly as ‘heirs,’ and is also nomen collectivum. And as the principle is, according to all the authorities quoted, that the words ‘heirs of the body’ may be words of purchase, and are so when a new inheritance is grafted upon them, of which they, and not their ancestor, are the root or stock, it can only be necessary that the limitation be such as to show plainly and unequivocally that a new inheritance is grafted upon the heirs of the body. There may, as already observed, be a difference of opinion as to what may suffice to make this sufficiently manifest. But we think there can be no difference of opinion as to the effect of the limitation in fee simple to the heirs of the body as made in this case, as unequivocally showing that a new estate is grafted upon them. And we cannot doubt that the words are sufficient to give them an estate of inheritance of which they, and not their ancestor, the do-nee for'life, are the root and stock.

In the case of Jarvis & Trabue vs. Quigley, 10 B. Mon. 104, this court applied to a deed of gift to the relatives of the donor, the liberal construction applicable to wills, upon the same principle on which that rule of construction had been applied in England to marriage settlements and covenants to stand seized. And reference is made to 2d Vesey, Sr. 660, and 3d Atkyns, 642. The case of Turman vs. White’s heirs, 14 B. Monroe, is an example of this liberal construction. Applying the same principles to the construction of this deed, we are satisfied that the clause “and shall be vested in such heirs in fee simple,” applying to the land which it was before said shall ensue and descend to them, did give to the heirs an estate of inheritance. And as that estate could not descend to them from the previous donees, it is obvious the word descend used just before means nothing *316more than pass or go. In the case of the Attorney General vs. Wallace’s devisees, 7 B. Mon. 611, where the question was whether testator’s daughter took an estate tail, it was determined that she took only an estate for life, although the testator said, I will all my real estate &c., to be entailed to her and her child or children.

Having thus determined the legal effect of the limitation to Pitman and wife and to the heirs of their bodies, by construction of the terms in which it is made, we deem it unnecessary to protractthis opinion, by noticing subsequent expressions in the deed from which inferences might be drawn, either for or against the construction herein adopted. We remark, however, that there Is nothing in the subsequent parts of the deed which, in our opinion, can operate to give an estate tail to Pitman or to show that such was the intention of the grantors in the deed. The sense of the words used in the primary and direct limitations being fixed, the same or similar words used as introductory to the subsequent limitations over, should receive the same interpretation, and should not change the effect of the primary limitations. We refer to the case of Moore vs. Moore, 12 B. Mon. 651, and to the case of Daniel vs. Thomson, which, though first decided, is reported in 14 B. Monroe, as showing the interpretation and effect of the words ‘dying without issue or without leaving issue or heirs of the body,’ used in introducing ulterior limitations where the question of an estate tail in the first taker depends upon such subsequent introductory words. We add that although we entertain great respect for the decisions of the courts of Virginia, we do not, for reasons stated in the last case above cited, feel bound to give conclusive effect either to their construction of the statute abolishing entails, or to their declaration of the law as it aforetime was in its application to the question of estates tail after the great changes made, not only by the act of 1776, but by other general laws affecting not only the rules of descent but *317the modes of conveyance, and therefore the míes of construction. We do not, however, know of any Virginia decision directly applicable to a limitation such as is now before us, and we have been referred to none.

We are of opinion, therefore, that Pitman had only an estate for life in the land, and that the heirs of the body of himself and wife, living at his death, took a new fee simple, whence it follows that upon the facts now appearing, Mary J. Stephenson was entitled to recover one half of the land in contest in this case.

Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial in conformity with this opinion.