delivered the opinion of this Court:
The principle of the common law, that a will, devising an estate in land of the same quality and quantity, to a person, who would take the same as heir at law, shall not operate so as to break the descent, but the heir shall take as heir, and not as devisee, that being the worthier title, was early recognised and adopted in this State. Phillips vs. Dashiell, 1 H. & J., 478. Where parties claim adversely as collateral heirs at law, to a propositus, who died seized of lands derived from an ancestor, under these circumstances the question, whether he took by purchase or by descent, is necessarily first to be ascertained, as the line of descent is controlled by the source or manner of his tenure.
John A. Posey, the decedent and propositus in this case, was the only son and child of Mrs. Anne R. Saxton,, who inherited the land in question from her father, and by her will, dated the 21st of December 1858, and proved the 26th July 1859, devised the same as follows:
“I will and devise unto Joseph A. Posey, my son, my plantation whereon I now dwell, and all of my personal estate as it now stands on said plantation, also a legacy by the will of my uncle, which I shall be entitled to at the *481death of ifiy aunt Masse Budd, to him, the said Joseph A. Posey, and the heirs of Ms body lawfully begotten; should Joseph A. Posey die without heirs, of heir of his body lawfully begotten, I will and bequeath all ray estate, both real and personal, to the children of John L. Budd, in equal proportions, share and share alike; should John L. Budd have no children, from and after his death, I will and bequeath all my estate real and personal, in trust, to Benedict Joseph Lancaster, for the support of the New-Port Catholic Church.” Joseph A. Posey died in October 1860, unmarried and intestate, leaving no brother or sister, or descendant of brother or sister, except the plaintiff’s lessor, who was a half-brother by the same father. The defendant is the brother of Anne R. Saxton, by the same father, from whom the lands descended to said Anno, who left no other heir on her father’s side. Which facts being in proof, the defendant offered the following prayer: “If the jury find from the evidence that AnneR. Saxton died in 1859, seized and possessed of the lands in controversey, in fee-simple, having inherited the same from her father, and leaving surviving her, Joseph A. Posey, and that he was her sole issue at the time of her death; and if the jury further‘find that the said Joseph A. Posey died in October 1860, intestate and without issue, leaving no brothers or sisters, or descendants of brothers or sisters except the plaintiff’s lessor, who was a brother of said Joseph A. Posey of the half blood on the part of the father of the said Joseph A. Posey; and if the jury further find that at the death of the said Joseph A. Posey, his maternal grand-father, John Budd was dead, and the defendant, John L. Budd, was the sole descendant of said John Budd, and brother of said Ann R. Saxton; then the said land descended from the said Ann •R. Saxton, to her said son Joseph A. Posey, and at his death the title to the same did not vest in the plaintiff’s lessor, and the verdict of the jury must be for the defendant, notwithstanding the jury may find the due execution of the will of said Ann IP Saxton, as read in evidence;” *482which, prayer was granted, and to the granting of which, the plaintiff excepted, and prayed this appeal.
The appellant’s contend, that John A. Posey took an estate tail under the will of his mother, and being in by purchase, upon his death intestate and without heirs of his body,' the limitations over being too remote, the lands descended in fee to the heirs of Joseph A. Posey, on the part of his father, and not to the heirs of Joseph A. Posey’s mother, or his heirs on the part of his mother.
The appellees maintain the converse of this proposition.
The appellant’s insist that the existence of estates tail general, is recognised by our Acts of Assembly, and.decisions of our Courts, as distinct from estates in fee, and therefore a will devising an estate tail general, to an heir at law, does not confer on him an estate of the same quality and quantity, as that he would take as heir at law by descent.
The first instance of judicial recognition is, the case of Jones’ Lessee vs. Jones, 2 H. & J., 281, decided in 1803, by Chancellor Hanson, and affirmed by the Court of Appeals at June.Term 1808. That was an application to the Chancellor by persons claiming under a deed executed by a tenant in tail on the 13th of July 1797, to admit the deed to record, after the death of the grantor, under the provisions of the Act of 1785, ch. 72, sec. 11. That Act provides, “that in case any deed hath been or shall hereafter be executed, to the validity of which recording is necessary by law, and such deed hath not been or shall not be recorded agreeably to law without any fraudulent design or intention of the party claiming under such deed, that the Chancellor shall have full power and authority, upon application of the party claiming under such deed, and summoning and hearing the party making such deed, his heir, devisee, executor or administrator, as the case may require, and being satisfied that the. party claiming under such deed has a fair and equitable claim to the premises therein mentioned, to order and decree that such deed shall be recorded.” The Chancellor said: “It has, on a former occa*483sion been determined by the General Court, on a case submitted, that a deed executed by a tenant in tail and not recorded within six months, but recorded after the tenant’s death, under a decree .of this Court, should not operate against the issue in tail. This being the case, the party claiming under the deed, has not a title to the land, and therefore the Chancellor conceives, that he cannot with propriety decree the recording of the deed.
The appeal was argued before Chase, C. J., Buchanan, Tilghman, Nicholson and Gant, J. The Chief Justice delivering the opinion of the Court said: “It is certainly an established principle, that the heir or issue in tail, claims the land ‘per for mam doni,’ and does not derive his title to it 'from the tenant in tail, who in respect of said land, is nothing more than the conduit pipe through which the title to the land is conducted to the issue in tail, whose claim to it is from the donor according to the gift. The land of the heir or issue in tail, is not liable for the debts of the tenant in tail, nor is he compellable to execute or fulfil any contract made by his ancestor for the sale or conveyance of said .land.” * * * An estate tail is not viitbin the Act of 1785, ch. 72, for recording deeds.
“The petition must be filed against the heir, devisee, executor or administrator of the grantor, and with respect to the land entailed the heir or issue in tail, is neither heir, devisee, executor nor administrator. I have shown he cannot be considered as heir; if the land was devised-to him by the tenant in tail, he would not take as devisee, but by a title paramount per forman doni which accrues eo instante of the death of the ancestor.” It docs not appear from the proceedings in this case, when the estate tail referred to was created.
All the peculiarities of an estate tail, are certainly clearly pointed out, in contra-distinction to estates in fee-simple, without any intimation that the one had been merged in the other by the Act to direct descents, passed in 1786, ch. *48445. The case referred to by the Chancellor in 3 H. & McH., 220, decided at May term 1794, was declared to have been since considered as the law.
In the case of Smith vs. Smith, 2 H. & J., 318, the Chancellor submitted to the'opinion of Chase, C. -J., of the third Judicial District, certain questions of law arising under the will of Wm. Crandell, and the Act to direct descents, (1786, ch. 45.) The Chief Justice certified, “that the true construction of that Act as to estates tail general, created and acquired after the commencement of it,, is, that the course or manner of transmitting the tenancy in tail to the issue of the tenant, is altered or changed only by making the land descendible to all the children of the tenant in tail and their respective issue indefinitely, and not the eldest son, in the first instance, in exclusion of the other children. It could not be the intention of the Legislature to abolish estates tail general or remainders limited thereon, and to convert them into fee-simplé estates by giving them the same properties.
The judicial recognition of estates tail stood thus, until the case of Newton vs. Griffith, decided at June term 1827, when a question arose upon the construction of the will of Joseph Griffith, dated the 6th of February 1792, and the Act of 1786, ch. 45, sec. 1. The testator devised certain lands to-his two sons, Joseph and George, to them their heirs and assigns forever; and in ease either of them should decease without lawful issue or heirs of his body, the surviving son to have his deceased brother’s part, to him, his heirs and assigns .forever; and in case both should decease leaving no lawful heirs of their bodies, then and in such case, I give and devise the lands devised as aforesaid, to-my three daughters; George Griffith died without issue, leaving Joseph surviving, and Joseph died without issue, without leaving personal estate sufficient to pay his debts, leaving the three sisters surviving. The bill was filed against them to subject all the real estate of which Joseph died seized to sale, for payment of his debts.
*485The defendants claimed to hold under the will of Joseph the elder, by virtue of the limitation over to them, on the contingency of both their brother’s dying without issue, and denied that any of the lauds descended to them from Joseph the younger, as his heirs at law, and insisted they were not liable for his debts.
The Court held, “that construing this will according to the settled rules of contraction, Joseph and George Griffith, as íkc laiv stood before ike passage of ike Act to direct descents, took estates tail general, in the lands respectively devised to thorn, with cross-remainders, in tail general, remainder to Sophia, Sarah and Nancy Griffith for life.”
“The nest question is, whether any and what part of the lands so devised is liable for the dobis of Joseph Griffith, the younger, which depends on the construction of the Act to direct descents, (1786, ch. 45.)” After expressing surprise that such a question should be open to discussion at this late day, and citing the provisions of the Act to direct' descents then under consideration, they proceed. “Thus the course of descents of estates tail general, acquired after the commencement of the Act, is entirely broken, the interest of tiie reversioner or remainderman destroyed, and the land made to pass by descent from the tenant in tail precisely, and in the very same course, as if he was a tenant, in fee-simple.” Commenting upon Smith vs. Smith, 2 H. & J., and dissenting therefrom, the Court declare that restrictions upon the descent and alienation of lands in this State, were contrary to public policy, and the provisions of the Act to direct descents grew out of a disposition to remove them. In that spirit the Act to direct descents was passed, and by it all lands held in fee-simple and fee tail general, are directed to descend in one general uniform manner, without any distinction between the two kinds of estates, first to the child or descendants, and if no child or descendants, then to collaterals indefinitely. They declare that lands held in tail general created since the commencement of the Act to direct descents, being made by that Act *486to descend precisely in the same manner as lands held in fee-simple, all such estates are thereby virtually abolished and converted into estates in fee-simple, drawing to such lands all the incidents 'to lands held in fee, among which is that of being liable for the debts of those who, before that Act, would have been tenants in tail. In conclusion it was held, that Joseph Griffith the younger, and George Griffith, by operation of the Act to direct descents, took virtually estates in fee in the lands devised to them respectively (by the will which construed as the law stood before that Act, would have created in them estates tail general) and on the death of George, Joseph "and his three sisters surviving him, Joseph took one-fourth, by -descent from him, which with the whole of the lands devised to him by his father, descended to his sisters, subject to the payment of his debts. Although Smith vs. Smith was overruled, it does not appear that Jones’ Lessee vs. Jones, or Ridgely vs. Ridgely, was referred to.
This case establishes the doctrine that estates tail general are abolished since 1788, by operation of the Act to direct descents, so far as to destroy remainders limited on them, and to subject the lands to the debts of the tenant in tail and constitute those who would otherwise take “per forman doni,” heirs by descent. It also determines arguendo, that such estates are not only descendible, but devisable, having all the incidents of an estate in fee-simple. In the case of Hill vs. Hill, 5 G. & J., 95, (1833,) it is said what would have been an estate tail general before the Act to direct descents, is by that Act converted into a fee-simple. So in Tongue vs. Nutwell, 13 Md. Rep., 424. “A fee-tail in this State under an Act of Assembly amounts to a fee-simple.”
The Acts of 1786, ch. 45, and of 1820, ch. 191, are identical in the language describing the estates in lands, which are the subject of descent, viz: “That if after the commencement of this Act, any person seized of an estate in any lands, tenements or hereditaments lying or being in *487tins State, in fee-simple, or fee-simple conditional heretofore or hereafter acquired, or of an estate in fee tail general, created and acquired after the commencement of this Act, shall die intestate thereof, such lands, tenements or hereditaments shall descend in fee-simple to the kindred male and female of such person in tho following order. First, to the child or children and tlieir descendants, if any, equally, and if no child or descendant, and -the estate descended to the intestate on the part of the father, then to the father, &c. -The same words it will be perceived are here used to describe the transmission of tho estate in foe-simple and fee tail general from ancestor to heir, without distinction, implying that in both cases, the lands pass by descent and not by purchase.
The order of succession in default of lineal heirs, “when the estate descends on the part of the father,” is first to the paternal line; “and if no paternal ancestor, or descendant from such ancestor, then to tho mother of the intestate.” “And. if the estatate descended to tho intestate on the part of the mother, and the intestate shall die without child or descendant as aforesaid, then to the mother,” or heirs of the maternal line, and in default of such heirs, then to the father or paternal line.
“If the estate is or shall be vested in the intestate by purchase, or shall descend to or vest in the intestate in any other manner than as heretofore mentioned,” then the estate in default of lineal heirs, shall go to the brothers and sisters of the such intestate of the whole blood and their descendants, &c., and if no such brother or sister or descendant, then to the brothers and sisters of the hálf blood, &c.
The third class in the order of succession, in the Act of 1786, ch. 45, is described or qualified by the words, “and not derived from or through either of his ancestors,” These words were construed to be equivalent to, “by descent,” in the case of Hall vs. Jacobs, 4 H. & J., 256, and not to *488include lands inherited by one brother from another. Vide also Stewart vs. Jones, 8 G. & J., 1.
The Act of 1820, ch. 191, to avoid all doubts and embrace all other possible modes of acquiring real estates, uses the words, “or shall descend to or vest in the intestate in any other manner than as heretofore mentioned.”
The words, “descended on the part of the father,” or descended on the part of the mother, with their attending-provision, show an anxiety to preserve the line of descent, in the lineage from which' the estates were derived. The same policy would induce the Court to lean to that interpretation of wills and of the Acts to direct descents, which would preserve to families the fruits of their own acquisitions.
The references to estates tail general in the Acts above quoted, are not with any design to preserve them, but rather to distinguish them from estates tail special, and other limited estates known to the-law, and to declare that if they had not been disposed of by will, (an incident before entirely beyond the power of the tenant in tail,) they should descend as estates in fee-simple. Whether they should descend, as estates descended on the part of the father, or estates descended on the part of the mother, or “as estates vested in the intestate by purchase, or in any other manner than as heretofore mentioned,” was left to legal construction upon the facts of each particular case. The exception of “estates tail,” in the Act for amending and reducing into one system the laws and regulations concerning last wills, (1798, ch. 101,) applies to those estates created anterior to the Act of 1786, ch. 45, as well as to estates tail special, and strange to say, includes them among lands which, “in case of the proprietor’s dying intestate, descend to or devolve on his or her heirs or representatives.” It must be confessed, that in the acts to direct descents, and the Act known as the Testamentary System these words, “estates tail” are used rather ambiguously and without technical exactness.
*489(Decided June 1st, 1864.)Although the parties in Newton vs. Griffith, were not as in this case, persons claiming through different lines of ancestors, but creditors seeking to charge the lands with the debts of the propositus, on the one hand, and persons claiming in remainder under the will of George Griffith, Senior, yet the question, whether the land was vested in the propositus, hy purchase or descent, was necessarily involved and decided after great deliberation; the majority of tlie Court concurring in tbe very elaborate opinion of the Chief Justice above quoted, and Justice Stephen, in a very lengthy and learned opinion, presenting many of the points now relied on by the appellants, dissenting. If the main question were not so solemnly decided and repeatedly recognized, we should hesitate incoming to a conclusion, hut regarding certainty in the construction of the law as essential to security in estates, we are constrained to adopt the conclusion that estates tail general being converted into estates in fee-simple, hy operation of the Acts to direct descents, a devise creating such an estate in the heir at law, does not break the descent, hut he takes as heir at law hy descent and not by purchase, and in default of lineal beirs, tbe estate descends to the heir on the part of tbe ancestor from whom it was derived.
Judgment affirmed.