DELIVERED THE OPINION OF THE COURT.
A. E. G-oatley Raving conveyed her property to appellee Campbell, in trust for benefit of creditors, he brought this action for settlement of his transactions as trustee and for sale of her property, including a tract of one hundred and eighty-five acres now in controversy for payment of debts ; and at the March term, 1892, of the court, a judgment was rendered for sale as prayed for in the petition.
*349But at the September term, 1892, appellants R. W. Mitchell, A. R. Mitchell and Hugh T. Mitchell, were, on their motion, made parties defendants, having filed a petition which was treated as an answer and cross-petition.
They state, in substance, that their mother, Maria ■Jane Mitchell, formerly Walker, died abotit eight years previously, leaving them her only children. That though she and her husband, father of defendants, in 1866 sold and conveyed absolutely the •one hundred and eighty-five acres in question to R. P. Goatley, under whom A. E. Goatley claims, she, their mother, had only a life estate, remainder in fee being vested in them by the will of her brother and their uncle, Robert L.' Walker, from whom the land was derived. Whether they have any interest in the land must, of course, depend upon proper construction of that will, dated in 1851 and admitted’ to record in 1854. -
Except ten or twelve acres of land the testator stated he had promised to let his brother Murry Walker have, and desired conveyed to him, all his estate of every kind was in express terms devised to his mother and sister Maria Jane, to be held as" a means of support for themselves, and to enable them to care for the children of his sister Emily Plat. But it was provided that in case Maria Jane died before those children were raised, he desired his brothers Murry and John, one or both, to take charge of the children and property, in conjunction with his mother, if living, and carry out his wish in regard to them, and to ultimately dispose of his estate for benefit of *350Ms heirs, -though his mother was not, in any event, to be disturbed in her possession and ownership of the property.
Provision in case of his sister Maria Jane being alive when the children mentioned were “raised and old enough to no longer require care of guardians and support,” is in the following language: “But if my sister Maria Jane is living, she is to continue the ownership of the estate, and do as she pleases with it at her death, provided she leaves heirs of her own body, which heirs are to take it. But if she dies without leaving heirs of her own body, then my will is, that brothers John and Murry Walker are to dispose of the estate for the benefit of my heirs at law.”
Whether Maria Jane Walker took under the clause quoted the fee, or an estate for life with power of disposition, is the main and decisive question.
It is a well established rule that a devise of an estate generally or indefinitely, with a power of disposition, carries a fee. But as said in Kent’s Commentaries, volume 4, 335, “in construing the instrument, in cases Where the party has a power and and also an interest, the intention is the great object of inquiry.”
We do not think there is much difficulty in determining what was the testator’s plan for disposing of his estate; for it was evidently well considered and matured. The term “ownership,” used to describe the quantity of estate he intended his sister Maria Jane to have, according to its common signification, comprehends a fee, and can not be prop*351erly restricted so as to mean a mere life estate. And the proviso of her leaving, heirs of her own body, who were to take'the estate, was obviously intended to be operative only in case she died intestate, and not to limit the estate already given to her. ' For their absolute right to take it can not be at all reconciled with her unqualified power to do as she pleased with it at her death. Moreover, if the testator had intended to restrict the devise to a life estate, it is a reasonable supposition he would have used the word children instead of heirs, to indicate who were at all events to take at her death.
When the will was written, Maria Jane was unmarried, and it is very plain he intended she should have the fee defeasible upon the contingency of her dying without children and passing to his heirs, who, in that case, would have been her right heirs.
Then as she acquired a fee, power existed to dispose of the land in question by either deed or will, subject, however, to defeat of the title conveyed upon the contingency mentioned, and the words “at her death” were evidently not intended, and did not have effect, to qualify that power, but were used rather to negative the idea of a life, estate.
As, therefore, the contingency upon which alone the fee with which Maria Jane was invested was to be defeated, did not happen,- Goatley became invested, in virtue of the deed of herself and husband, Mitchell, with absolute title to the land in question.
Judgment affirmed.