This is an action of ejectment.
Plaintiff (appellant here) claims title as remainder-man and devisee under the will of his grandfather, John Blakeney, who is indisputably shown to have been seised and possessed of the lands at the time of his death, viz., in 1862; his right of possession being thereby conditioned upon the deaths of three life tenants, his grandmother, Polly Blakeney, his father, Robert Blakeney, and his stepmother, Nancy Blakeney, the last of whom to die was his father, who departed this life May 4, 1908. Nancy Blakeney died before the testator. The defendant (appellee here) claimed title as a purchaser and by adverse possession for more than 10 years, but claims as a stranger to and not under or through the testator, John Blakeney, or his privies. The defendant or those through whom he claims had been in possession for more than 10 years before the bringing of the suit. The court gave the general affirmative charge for the defendant, and plaintiff appeals, insisting that the general affirmative charge should have been given him.
The only questions of law upon which the rights of the parties to this record depend are: First. Did this *632property pass under the will of John Blakeney? Second. Did plaintiff take under that will as a remainder-man? Third. Was his right of possession postponed until the 4th day of May, 1908, so that the statute of limitations of 10 years does not bar his action? All of these may be reduced to one — Was the defendant’s possession, or that of those under whom he claims, adverse to plaintiff? This question can and must be answered alone upon a proper construction of the will of John Blakeney, who is conclusively shown to have been the owner at his death in 1862. This property was not specifically mentioned in the will as was other property, both real and personal, for the reason that the testator did not own this land at the making of the will; but subsequently he sold that devised, and purchased this, which he owned at his death. The property mentioned in the will, real and personal, was given one-half to Polly, the wife of the testator and grandmother of plaintiff, for her life only, and the other half was given in trust during the lives and to the survivor of Robert and Nancy Blakeney, the only son, and daughter-in-law of the testator, said Robert being the father of plaintiff, and the remainder of the whole was devised to testator’s grandchildren, the children of Robert, his only son or child. While the will is unusually lengthy, this, we think, is clearly the intent and meaning of the testator. Polly survived the testator, and died a few years after the war. Nancy, the daughter-in-law, died before the testator, and Robert married again. The plaintiff is a son of the second wife of Robert, and was horn in 1866, four years after the death of the testator, but before the falling in or termination of either of the life estates. There were, however, grandchildren living at the death of the testator. The death of the survivor of the life *633tenants was the date which determined the granchilclren who should take under the will.
The will contained a residuary clause, which is as follows:
“The residue of my property (if any) is to be divided into equal parts, one-half to go to my said wife and the other half to my said trustees to be held as a portion of the trust estate. If, however, the said residue or any portion thereof consists of money, the whole of it is to go to my wife.”
The tenth and twelfth clauses of the will are as follows :
“10th. I hereby declare it to be my desire in bequeathing and devising the property in the foregoing items to protect my son and his wife and his children against any act of imprudence on his part and also any accident which may befall him hereafter.”
“12th. After the termination of the life estate of my wife in the property before bequeathed & devise to her. It is my will and the trustee then to be appointed, by my said son and his wife, is hereby directed to take possession of the same (Beal and Personal) and to hold and use and employ the same as a portion of the trust estate created in item nine of this my will, and upon the death of my said son and his wife, the same is to be equally divided among the children of my said son— provided however any other, child or children shall be born to my said son, I hereby direct, said trustee out of the negroes or their increase in this item mentioned (after the death of my wife and before the division among .my grandchildren) to give and deliver to such child or children which may hereafter be born each a negro about equal in value to the average value to the negroes specifically given to my Grandchildren. So *634as to make the final division of my property among my Grandchildren as nearly equal as possible.”
Wills speak only from the death of the testator, and must be construed as they would have been construed at the moment of death, and without regard to the consequences resulting from subsequent events, which were probably not foreseen or anticipated at the making of the will. — Taylor v. Harwell, 65 Ala. 1. We therefore conclude that from the whole will it clearly appears that it was the testator’s intention to give one-half of all his real property to his wife, Polly, for life only, to create a trust in the other half of his real estate for Robert H. Blakeney and his family, during the life of said son, provided said Robert survived his wife, Nancy, and for and during the life of Robert if his wife Nancy survived him; that, if said Nancy survived Robert, she was to have said one-half for the support of herself and children during her life; that, after the termination of these life estates in said real estate, all of the real estate should go to the children of Robert who were living at the death of the testator and at the death of said Robbert, and any who had lived between the death of the testator and the death of Robert; that after the death of Robert EL Blakeney, and not until then, the property was to be divided equally between the testator’s grandchildren, the children of Robert. Under the provisions of the will Polly and the trustee for Robert took life estates in. all the testator’s real property, with a vested remainder in the testator’s grandchildren in esse at testator’s death, in possession, only after the death of Polly and Robert, which remainder would open up to let in after-born children of Robert as they should or might come in esse. — Gindrat v. Western Railway of Ala,, 96 Ala. 162, 11 South. 372, 19 L. R. A. 839; Smaw v. Young, 109 Ala. 533, 20 South. 370; Watson v. William*635son, 129 Ala. 362, 30 South. 281; Findley v. Hill, 133 Ala. 229, 32 South. 497; Acree v. Dabney, 133 Ala. 437, 32 South. 127. Under the evidence in this case, the estate became vested in the youngest child of Robert in the year 1870. The will was executed in 1856, and is governed by the Code of 1852. The interest of the plaintiff and of such children as were not in esse at testator’s death was contingent, but under the law they took, while' not in esse, by way of executory devise. — Code 1852, § 1301. It therefore follows that life estates or interests in these particular lands were by the will of John Blakeney granted to his wife, his son, and his son’s wife, during their lives, and to the survivor, Avith remainder to the children of Robert. All the life tenants being dead, and the survivor having died less than a year before suit was brought by the remaindermen, it follows plaintiff was entitled to recover. We do not now attempt to decide the respective interest which the plaintiff or the other grandchildren or their descendents Avill take under this will, as that is not before us. It appears that there are other grandchildren who take as tenants in common with plaintiff; but as against this defendant, under the facts of this case, the plaintiff was entitled to recover the whole, and the court erred in giving the affirmative for defendant.
If there could be any doubt as to the foregoing conclusions, we think they are made certain by the following statutes and for the following reasons: Section 1592 of the Code of 1852 (Code 1907, § 6155) provides: “Every devise made by a testator in express terms of all his real estate, or in any other terms denoting his intention to devise all his real property, must be construed to pass all the real estate he was entitled to devise, at the time of his death.” Section 1604 of the Code of 1852 (Code 1907, § 6165) provides: “When any testa*636tor, after having executed a will devising any real property, afterwards makes a conveyance of his interest, and' acquires a new estate therein, such new estate passes by his will to the person to whom the original estate or interest was devised; unless it appears from the will, or the instrument conveying the estate, or by which the new estate was acquired, that the testator intended such conveyance to operate as a revocation.” Section 1591 of the Code of 1852 (Code 1907, § 6154) reads thus: “Any estate, or interest in real property, devised to a person, or corporation incapable of taking, descends to the nearest of kin capable of taking; or if he have no heirs competent to take, to the residuary devisee, if any are named in the will capable of holding such estate or interests; otherwise, to the husband or wife; otherwise to the state.” Prior to the statute of T837, a testator could only devise lands of which he was seised or owned at the date of his will; and if he made a will and devised certain real estate and afterwards conveyed it away, and acquired other such property, such other lands or new interests did not pass by the will, but passed as in case of intestacy. This rule is now changed by statute. So now, when it has been ascertained that a testator has devised all of his real estate, by virtue of the statute the will passes all the lands owned by him at his death, according to its terms, just as it before passed the estate owned at the date of making his will. — 1 Jar. Wills (5th Am. Ed.) p. 608; Johnson v. Holifield, 82 Ala. 129, 2 South. 753; Kelly v. Richardson, 100 Ala. 596, 597, 13 South. 785. “A will conveys all the property owned by the testator at his death, although between the execution of the will and the death of the testator, the propery has wholly changed.”- — Succession of Marks, 35 La. Ann. 1054; 49 Cent. Dig. § 1012, p. 1121. “A will must be held to speak from testator’s death, and whatever *637estate he then .possessed must he held to pass according to its terms.” — Henderson v. Ryan, 27 Tex. 670; 49 Cent. Dig. § 1009, p. 1119 et seq. Here there is an express devise of all the real estate to the grandchildren of the testator after the deaths of the life tenants, and they do not take as mere residuary legatees. — Maybury et al. v. Grady et al., 67 Ala. 153. By force of the statute (Code 1852, § 1592) all the real estate owned at testator’s death went one-half to his wife individually for life, and the other half went to her, as trustee, for the use of Bobert Blakeney and his wife during their lives, and a vested remainder in the whole of it to the children of Bobert who were living at the death of the testator, and a contingent remainder in the whole of it, operating by way of executory devises, to any after-born children of Bobert H. Blakeney. And, even if the wife was incapable of holding said one-half in trust, the beneficial estate granted to Bobert remained, and Bobert took a life estate in said one-half and his children the remainder, and the devise did not lapse; and, if any estate or interest lapsed, it was only the life estate of the trustee, and it passed to said Bobert, and not the fee, for that had been devised to the grandchildren by way of vested remainders and executory devises, and no trustee was necessary to support their estates. — Gindrat v. Western Railway of Alabama, 96 Ala. 165-168, 11 South. 372, 19 L. R. A. 839. And, again, “it is a maxim of equity that no trust can be permitted to fail for lack of a trustee, and courts of equity have full authority to supply any lack of this character. — Whitehead v. Whitehead, 142 Ala. 165, 37 South. 929. The will was properly recorded before five years’ possession by the life tenants. — Code 1852, § 1290 (Code 1907, § 3385) ; Sheridan v. Schimpf, 120 Ala. 475, 24 South. 940. No acts of the life tenants allowing adverse possession could de*638feat the remainders in this case. — Code 1852, § 1305. Recording of the trust will was notice to the world of the terms of the trust. — Code 1852, § 1322; Sheridan v. Schimpf, supra; Marx v. Clisby, 126 Ala. 114, 28 South. 388. The children of Robert H. Blakeney being vested remaindermen and contingent remaindermen by way of executory devises from and after the death of John Blakeney, the testator, there was never a moment of time during the period from the testator’s death in 1862 until the death of Robert H. Blakeney in May, 1908, when the statute of limitations could begin to run. Gindrat v. Western Railway of Alabama, 96 Ala. 165-168, 11 South. 372, 19 L. R. A. 839; Lecroix v. Malone, 157 Ala. 434, 47 South. 725, Edwards v. Bender, 121 Ala. 77, 25 South. 1010; Pope v. Pickett, 65 Ala. 487; Pickett v. Pope, 74 Ala. 122; Bass v. Bass, 88 Ala. 408, 7 South. 243; Findley v. Hill, 133 Ala. 229, 32 South. 497; McMichael v. Craig, 105 Ala. 382, 16 South. 883; Robinson v. Allison, 124 Ala. 325, 27 South. 461; Washington, Adm’r, v. Norwood, 128 Ala. 383, 30 South. 405; Stiff v. Cobb, 126 Ala. 387, 28 South. 402, 85 Am. St. Rep. 38; 20 Amer. & Eng. Ency. Law (1st Ed.) pp. 913-914.
In this case, by virtue of the statutes, the after-acquired property passes under the specific devises as well as under the residuary devises, and it is not. necessary to have a residuary clause in a will in order to pass after-acquired property. The devisees being the same identical persons in both the specific clauses and the residuary clause, and the testator’s intention being clear to devise the fee in all his real estate to the’ children of Robert, the fee to this after-acquired real property passed to the plaintiff and other children of Robert PI. Blakeney. It is clear from the entire will that the testator intended all his real estate to go to his *639grandchildren, share and share alike, after the deaths of Polly, Robert, and Robert’s wife, the residuary devisees as well as the specific, for in the twelfth clause of the will occurs the following; “Upon the death of my said son and his wife, the same is to be equally divided among the children of my said son, provided, etc., (giving after-born children a negro apiece) so as to make the final division of my property among my grandchildren as nearly equal as possible.” He does not say, division of property “devised in the foregoing items,” as he does in clause 10 and other clauses of the will, but refers to the division finally of all his property devised in the entire will.
The plaintiff was entitled to the affirmative charge as requested.
Reversed and remanded.
Dowdell, C. J., and Simpson and McClellan, JJ., concur.