Opinion op the court by
JUDGE O’REARAffirming.
J. M. Perry, of Logan county, died in 1891, after having made a. will, which was probated February 2, 1891. The sixth clause of this will reads as follow»: “I give and bequeath to my son Smiley Perry the storehouse and lot ,on Main street in Russellville, now occupied by him as a drug store, the same to be used and enjoyed by him during his natural life free from all debts which he may now owe or hereafter contract; and at the death of himself and wife said property is to pass to his legal heirs. This bequest to my said son Smiley Perry is made upon the express condition that he pay to my son R. F. Perry the *19sum of $000 annually for three years, with legal interest thereon, after one year from the date of the probate of this will.” At the time the will was written, Smiley Perry was married; but, after the death of the testator, Smiley’s wife died, and he subsequently married a second wife. Having died childless some years after, leaving the second wife his widow, his heirs at law, his brothers and sisters and the daughter of a deceased sister, filed this suit to recover of Ms widow the possession of the storehouse and lot mentioned in the clause above quoted. The* circuit court construed the clause as vesting the second wife with a life estate in the property named, and entered judgment accordingly. The heirs have prosecuted this appeal.
Although the case has been argued with rare skill, evidencing much research by able counsel, we have not been cited any case in this country precisely in point. The intention of the testator, of course, where not in conflict with some prohibition of the law, is the law of the case. To arrive at that exact intention may jbe impossible-; but the court must give some construction compatible with the ordinary accepted use- of the terms employed, as we must presume, in the absence of anything appearing to the contrary, the testator intended his- language to have the meaning usually given similar expressions when employed in like transactions. It is argued for appellants that inasmuch as the testator knew the then wife of his son,'and could not possibly know that the son would have another wife, or who she would be, he could uot have purposed including the latter in his bounty, but that the first only was in his- mind. It is further argued for appellant that our statute (section 4839, Kentucky Statutes) also controls in this construction as to the time of which the *20will speaks. That section is: “A will shall be construed, with reference to the real and personal estate comprised íd it, to speak and take effect as if it had been executed immediately before 'the death of the testator, unless a contrary intention shall appear by the will.” If the testator had provided for an estate to the son and his wife during their lives, naming the wife by name or other sufficient description, so as to identify her, there could be no question that appellee could not have 'been in contemplation. Or, had the testator provided for an estate to .the son and his wife for life, with remainder to certain named persons, it seems- -that the then living wife of the son would have been ¡alone included in the term “wife.” But the testator did not create the estate with limitations imposed in either of the cases supposed. He went further to provide for others equally unknown to the testator, and whom he probably would' never know, for he provided for a remainder to the “legal heirs” of Ms son Smiley. The legaj heirs of the son, of course, would first be his children, or their descendants, if any, and would be -such descendants as might be living at his death, including not only such as were descended frotm the wife known to the testator, but such, in addition, as might be descended of a -second or any subsequent spouse-, a-nd that, too, whether b-orn before1 or after -the testator’s death. Having, then, shown clearly an intention to- provide- for any child or descendant of his son, whenever or of whatsoever wife born, he is shown to have contemplated extending Ms bounty to persons unknown to him, evidently because they were connected by their relationship to the son. He seems to have had in mind the making of such provision, not because he knew or might know them, and thereby judge of their deservedness, but because of the. *21natural claim they would have upon his son for support or assistance. This manifest idea being in mind, and the terms being so broad as to include a wife subsequently married, the testator must have so intended. This construction is fortified by certain "side lights” contained in the will. For example, in the third clause of the will he gives certain property 1o his son M. R. Perry and his wife Marian during their lives, and at their death to ‘pass to their children. There must be some reason why the’ distinction is made in the families of these two sons; for undoubtedly a distinction is made, as no other wife of M. R. Perry but Mrs. Marian could enjoy the title given. The son Smiley is shown 1o have had no children at the time the will was written, or during the testator’s lifetime. It would appear that the distinction made was in anticipation of the possibility of others becoming entitled to Smiley’s protection, besides those known to the testator. The testator appears to have had. a fairly good sized estate when the will was written. The terms of the will indicate a purpose to equalize his children in the distribution of his property. By the clause under consideration, it will be observed, the testator, while giving Smiley, for his life, the lot described, imposed on him a charge of $1,500. As this charge would, when paid, represent that sum of individual means of the son invested in the property, 'it would be but reasonable that any wife he might have at his death wmuld be permitted to enjoy that in which her husband had invested so much of his means. He wmuld be under natural and legal obligation to provide for her in certain proportion or sum of his estate, — a fact necessarily known to the testator, and presumably in his mind in adjusting this arrangement. Of course, he probably would not know such daughter-in-law, but he did *22know her claim upon the son, her husband; and what he had in hand was providing for the son’s wife, not because she happened to be a certain known person, but because she would be a person of a certain known sufficient relation, entitling her to come within the provision of his beneficence. Cogan v. McCabe (Sup.) 52 N. Y. Supp., 53, seems to clearly sustain the rule of construction herein employed, under facts quite similar to the case at bar. And to the same effect appear Mason v. Mason, 5 Ir. R. Eq., 288, and in re Lyne’s Trust, L. R. 8 Eq. Cas. 67. In Nash v. Allen 12 Ch. Div. 54, a devise to a daughter for her use during her life, and after her death for the use of her intended husband for his life, then to her children, was held to include and provide for the last husband, — the one retaining that relation at the daughter's death. Both appellants and appellee cite us Peppin v. Bickford, 3 Ves. Jr. 569. That case, however, is not strictly in line with the question here presented, though we think it rather supports the principles of the opinion. It is more like the recent case, decided by this court, of Jackson v. Jackson, 58 S. W., 423, which is also quite similar to Nash v. Allen. Cases from New York and 'Connecticut are cited by counsel for appellants, both courts of eminent authority, which appear to be in conflict with the views herein expressed. However, both of those States have statutes against perpetuities, peculiar to themselves, under the constraint of which the opinions cited seem to have been written. They, of course, can not apply here where we have not the statute mentioned. Other cases of apparently contrary view have also been cited, but a careful examination of them shows that in each instance they turned upon some peculiar phraseology of the will therein considered, evidencing in the opinion’of the court an in*23tention of the testator to confine the estate to the then living wife. Nor can the Kentucky statute quoted above be used to give a different construction to the will. It will be observed that section merely fixes the time at which the will speaks with reference to the real and personal estate disposed of by it, not with reference to the time when devisees’ rights may attach. Judgment affirmed.
Petition for rehearing for appellant overruled.