This is an action of ejectment involving the title to a piece of land in Lincoln county.
The facts are admitted.
*447The case turns upon the effect to he given to the following clause in a deed from Oliver 'Holmes (the common source of title) and his wife to Azra A. Holmes, dated, April 11, 1855, and duly recorded about the same time, viz.:
“To have and to hold * * * unto him the said Azra A. Holmes for and during his natural life and then to his two children, Laura Eliza and Mary Emily Holmes, and their heirs and assigns forever, and if either of said children shall die without issue in the lifetime of their father, then all of said lands is to go to the survivor.”
The chronology of the principal facts, affecting the controversy, is as follows;
First. Mary Emily Holmes died without issue, some years before Azra A. Holmes.
Second. Azra died in April, 1888. *
Third. He left his widow, the defendant in possession, and his daughter, Laura Eliza, one of the plaintiffs, who has intermarried with Mr. McCulloch, the other plaintiff.
The fact that the limitation above quoted appears only in the ‘'habendum” clause of the conveyance to Azra A. Holmes does not deprive it of its legal force or effect. All parts of the deed should be considered in gathering its meaning, and the true intent it designs to express, throughout, should be effectuated.
In the premises of this deed “A. A. Holmes” is named as grantee, while in the habendum the extent of his estate is defined, and the remainder now in consideration carved out.
All parts of an instrument are to be construed as ■consistent with each other, if such construction be possible.
Where land is conveyed to an individual, without adding to his name, as grantee, the word “heirs” or *448other words of inheritance, the fee thereby passes to him under the law of Missouri, ‘ ‘unless the intent to pass a less estate shall expressly appear or be necessarily implied in the terms of the grant.” Revised Statutes, 1889, sec. 8834. The intent to pass a less estate is very evident in the present ease, and is lawfully expressed. Farrar v. Christy’s Adm’rs (1857), 24 Mo. 452; Spyve v. Topham (1802), 3 East, 115.
Even under the strictest common-law rules of conveyancing, a stranger to those mentioned in the premises of a deed might be introduced in the habendum as a grantee in remainder. 1 Wood on Conveyancing [6 Eng. Ed.] habendum (B), p. 336.
The limitation in the case at bar is not uncertain or obscure. Azra took a life estate in possession. During its currency, one of the possible remaindermen died. The other, the present plaintiff, survived Azra. She is plainly entitled to the estate, the contingency having been resolved in her favor. The trial court so held. Its judgment is affirmed.
Sherwood, C. J., Black and Brace, JJ., concur.