delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court:
But two questions are here involved, wbicb are stated in tbe brief of appellants, as follows:
“First. Is tbe intestacy of Mary O. Metzger to be considered as occurring as of tbe date of her'death, or is it to be considered as arising thereafter, upon tbe death of her husband, and as taking effect from that time, when tbe trust created by her will failed ? ■
“Second. Is tbe one-half interest in 925 Massachusetts avenue, directed by tbe will to be purchased, to be considered as real or personal property ?”
From tbe language of tbe will, Mrs. Metzger seems to have intended to acquire title to tbe Massachusetts avenue property, and establish tbe Donn Memorial therein. Tbe residue of her estate was to be used for its maintenance. The power of appointment conferred upon tbe executor was a mere naked power depending upon bis discretion. There is no chancery power in this country wbicb could have compelled him to make tbe selection, nor has any trust survived wbicb can be executed through tbe aid of a court of chancery. Equity will not enforce the’ execution of a mere naked power. 1 Story, Eq. Jur. sec. 169. *317It follows that there being no trust which equity can enforce, and no provision having been made in the will for the contingency which has arisen, the power here delegated cannot be held to be a trust belonging to executorship. “Where there is nothing more than a power of appointment conferred by the testator, there is nothing on which a trust, on general principles, can be fastened. The power given is a mere agency of the will, which may or may not be exercised at the discretion of the individual. And if there be no act on his part, the property never having passed out of the testator, it necessarily remains as a part of his estate.” Fontain v. Ravenel, 17 How. 369, 387, 15 L. ed. 80, 87.
In England, upon failure of the person designated in the will to make appointment, the prerogative power of the King, as parens patrice, is invoked through the chancellor to give effect to the charity, but no such power has been extended to the chancery courts in this country. The-portion of the estate here involved remained in the testatrix. No title whatever passed to the executor. As to this property, it is as if no will had been made. In the event of the failure of the intended charity, due to the neglect of the executor to make the appointment, there is nothing in the will to indicate an intention on the part of the testatrix to make a different distribution of the estate than the law would make if there were no will. As was said in Fairman v. Beal, 14 Ill. 245: “Nothing passes under the clause conferring the power, until the power itself is exercised. Sugden, Powers, chap. 3, ¶ 1; 4 Kent, Com. 319 and 536.”
This principle is amply supported by the authorities. In Frazier v. Frazier, 2 Leigh, 642, 645, 649, where John Erazier left by will the management of his estate to his brother James, with power of sale and distribution “among the legatees of my personal estate, according to their merit or deserts, as he may see at a future day what time may turn up.” The court held the expression, “legatees of my personal estate,” to mean next of kin. James survived his brother, but failed to make the appointment as directed in the will, concerning which the court *318said: “John Frazier died intestate with respect to that fund; and his surviving brother [James] was entitled to a moiety of it, as a part of his general assets, and the four children of his deceased brother Samuel, to the other moiety; two of whom having since died, one of them intestate and unmarried, that moiety was equally distributable between the surviving brother and the representatives of his deceased brother and sister, respectively.”
Counsel for. appellants rely chiefly upon the case of Blount v. Walker, 31 S. C. 13, 9 S. E. 804. In that case, one Sarah J. Harris bequeathed to J. H. Walker and his heirs the use of her estate in trust for her daughter, Mrs. Blount, for life and then to her issue, or, failing issue, to such persons as she might appoint. Mrs. Blount died without issue, and attempted by will to make the appointment, but the will, because of illegal execution, was 'declared void. Mrs. Blount having failed to malee appointment as provided in the Harris will, the issue arose as to whether the heirs at law of Mrs. Harris at the time of her death or those who constituted her heirs at law at the time of the death of Mrs. Blount should take. A majority of the court took the latter view.
We think, however, that the present case is clearly distinguishable from that case. There, all the judges were in agreement that, if the testatrix be held to have died intestate, the estate would pass as of the date of her death. In this case, it is conceded that Mrs. Metzger died intestate,- — the only question being when the intestacy attached. There, a trust was created; here, a mere agency existed. This distinction is of the greatest importance. In the South Carolina case, the majority of the court held that the testatrix died testate, and that the fee to the estate passed to the trustee and his heirs, who were vested with the power to sell and convey the property of the testatrix in fee simple. This power the court held inconsistent with a mere estate in the trustee for the life of the daughter, Mrs,. Blount. It follows, under this holding, that when Mrs. Blount died without legally exercising the power vested in her, the fee *319remained in the trustee, giving rise to a resulting trust in favor of the heirs at law of Mrs. Harris as of the date when it arose. On this point the court said: “This is because the grant or devise of a fee conditional passes the whole estate to the tenant in fee, leaving nothing in the grantor or devisor which can be the subject of devise or inheritance, and hence it is settled that, upon the termination of such an estate, it goes to those who can bring themselves into the class of heirs of the person creating the estate at the time when the estate terminates, and not to those who were heirs at the time of the death of such person. Adams v. Chaplin, 1 Hill, Eq. 265; Deas v. Horry, 2 Hill, Eq. 244; Pearse v. Killian, M’Mull. Eq. 231.”
The fact that Millard Metzger under the will was permitted during his lifetime to enjoy a life estate in the rents and revenues derived from the Tenth street property, without power to dispose of the property otherwise than as expressly provided in the will, does not change the situation. The reversion, after the life estate, was left in the disposal of the husband under the power of appointment, and where one is devised a life estate, with power to dispose of the reversion, only the life estate passes. If the power of disposition of the reversion remains unexecuted, the property reverts to the legal heirs of the testator to be distributed as by law provided. Pate v. Barrett, 2 Dana, 426; Freeman v. Okey, 56 N. C. (3 Jones, Eq.) 473, 477. In the Freeman Case the coxirt said: “The bequest in the present case is in express terms to the wife for life, with an absolute power of disposition, which confines the interest which the wife took in the slaves, to a life estate, and leaves them still a part of her husband’s estate, as she died without exercising her power.”
In the present case, aside from the life estate in the Tenth street property and the personal estate, no title passed to the husband. Without the charity, there was intestacy as to the real estate. Of course, the title to the personal estate passed to the husband as executor, for the purposes of administration, and the payment of debts and the small bequests as to which *320the will of the testatrix was carried out. Indeed, as it turned out, the balance of the personal estate belonged to the husband under section 1160 of the Code [31 Stat. at L. 1315, chap. 854], The court in the Blount Case, considering the alternative _ of the proposition there presented, which meets • the present case, said: “If, however, the trustee took an estate only for the life of Mrs. Blount, then, as the ulterior limitations after the death of the life tenant have failed by reason of her dying without issue, and without executing the power of appointment, there is a case of intestacy, and the estate, subject to the life interest of Mrs. Blount, descended immediately upon the death of the testatrix to her heirs, and as Mrs. Blount was then her sole heir, became vested in her.”
This is. in line with the decision in Holt v. Hogan, 58 N. C. (5 Jones, Eq.) 82, where the testator gave half of his personal property and certain of his real estate to his widow for life, “with the privilege of disposing of the same by will, or otherwise, amongst our children at her death.” The failure of the wife to make appointment was held to create intestacy as of the date of the death of the testator, and the widow, though dead, was entitled to her distributive share “of this undisposed fund, for the life estate given to her by the will does not exclude her from claiming her part of what is not embraced by the will.” There, is nothing in the will before us to indicate any intention on the part of the testatrix, should the charity fail, to malee any other disposition of the portion of her estate here involved than that which the law would have made had she died without a will. The presence of such an intention is essential before the court will intervene to set aside the rights of the heirs at law to take under the statutes of distribution. Ackroyd v. Smithson, 1 Bro. Ch. 503, 3 P. Wms. 22, 7 Eng. Rul. Cas. 8.
We come now to the second proposition urged by counsel for appellants, — namely, that the purchase by the executor of the one-half interest in the Massachusetts avenue property operated as a conversion of personal property into real estate, thereby depriving the next of kin of Millard Metzger of so much of the *321personal estate as was exchanged for real estate. The error in which counsel have fallen arises from treating the estate conveyed to the intended charity as a trust. By reason of the failure of the executor to make the appointment, no trust was created in him. No resulting trust, therefore, arose, — the power delegated to the executor being a mere agency which was not carried out.
There being no trust, it follows that Mrs. Metzger died intestate as to the real and personal estate donated to the charity until the charity should come into being. The charity having failed, no title to that portion of her estate passed; hence, there could be no lawful conversion of any portion of it, real or personal, that could affect those entitled by law to take. The rule is well stated by Judge Alvey in Rizer v. Perry, 58 Md. 112, 118, as follows: “The leading idea in all such cases is that where the testator directs real estate to be sold for special purposes, as in this case, if those purposes, or any portion of them, become incapable of taking effect, the heirs at law will take, for there is an end of the disposition, where there is an end of the purposes for which it was made; therefore, where land is directed to be sold and converted into money, and the whole or part is given for a purpose, which fails by reason of illegality, the whole or part which on this account remains undisposed of, results to the heir at law; as, for instance, where money to arise from the sale of land is given to a charity, and the gift is void according to the statute of mortmain, or is otherwise limited so that the bequest is void, the heir is entitled.”
In the case at bar, no intent is expressed to make any disposition of the property other than as a gift to the intended charity. There is nothing from which the court can infer an intent to deprive the husband of the personal estate in favor of the next of kin. Indeed, the clear intent was to deprive both of any interest in the estate by a gift of the entire residue to the intended charity. Of course, the rule is the same whether the conversion be of realty into personalty, or of personalty into realty. “The same principle, it is now settled, applies in the *322conversé case of money being directed to be laid out in land, ■which, is then devised for a limited estate only; the fund ultra that interest, though eventually turned into land, goes as personal estate undisposed of to the residuary legatee or next of kin of the testator, on the ground that the will operates to convert the fund so far only as it disposes of it.” J arman, Wills, 6th,Am. ed. 613, ** 586, 589.
’ It is contended by Percy Metzger, one of the appellees, that by the terms of the will Millard Metzger became vested with an absolute title in all of the real estate of which he could only be devested by the creation of the intended charity. Since no trust was created in the executor, and no title, legal or equitable, passed to him of the property donated to the charity, the contention is without merit.
The decree is affirmed, with costs. Affirmed.