The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
Putnam J.We have examined this case with much care to ascertain if it were possible to give a fee simple estate to Joseph Ayres, agreeably to what seems to us to have been the intent of the testatrix, but we are satisfied that the rules of law will not permit a result so desirable.
The devise contains no words of inheritance. But the omission of such words, it has been contended by the counsel for the demandant, may be supplied by the charge to which the testatrix subjected the devisee,1 by the facts and circumstances proved by parol, and by a fair interpretation of the whole instrument taken together.
In regard to the supposed charge upon the devisee, it is sufficient to say that it did not survive the testatrix. She gave the estate upon the condition that the devisee should serve her as coachman so long as she should require him to do so, but she did not subject him to any charge or duty upon taking the estate after her decease. And it does not appear that the devise was intended as a satisfaction for the services of the devisee, or that he ever knew of the provision which his mistress had made for him, until after her death. It cannot be said then that this estate came to the devisee subject to any charge. What is given, whether in fee or for life, is given in a manner to be enjoyed without any payment or duty to be made or performed by the devisee. So that ground of argument fails entirely.
And the inference to be drawn from the face of the will is not more favorable to the demandant. There are no words of inheritance used in any of the devises of the estate,
*408until we come to the original residuary clause of the will The testatrix gives her mansion-house in Cambridge to one, a farm to another, and various tracts of land to others ; and when she comes to the disposition of the residuum, it is to be divided “ to and among the several persons herein named as legatees, their heirs and assigns for ever, in proportion to the true value of the several legacies.” Now there is nothing ;u the residuary clause to show whether a fee or a life estate is given in any devise before contained in the will. If a life estate, then the remainder expectant upon the death of the devisee would pass under the residuary clause. And although we may individually believe that the testatrix intended to give a fee, and not merely a life estate, in the farm to her aunt, and in the house to her old coachman, yet looking at the wil. only, we must judicially come to a different result. If the devise referred to another devise in the same will, and expressed an intention that the devisees should be equally benefited, and upon legal construction the other devise carried a fee, as in the case of Cook v. Holmes et ux., 11 Mass. R. 528, [see Rand’s ed. 532, n. b,] the law might supply the omission of words of inheritance.1 But the will is not so expressed, and the original residuary clause itself, which it has been supposed might have had some bearing, is repealed by the residuary clause in the codicil ; which establishes the original will “ so far forth as the same was not changed by the codicil,” and that was merely in regard to the disposition of the residuum. So that upon the face of the will we are constrained to determine that the devisee took only an estate for life.2
We are now to consider the facts and circumstances ex trinsic to the will. The principle that a devise is always intended by the devisor to be for the benefit of the devisee,
*409(adopted in Sargent v. Towne, 10 Mass. R. 303,) will not apply to the case at bar; for the devise of an estate for life only in a dwellinghouse is certainly a benefit. In the case last cited the Court say, “ that averments are received of facts which were known to the testator, and which may be reasonably presumed to have influenced him in the disposition of his property.” But it was proposed in the case at bar, to give m evidence the parol declarations of the testatrix to Hilliard, and his inference from them that she intended.,to give a fee Suppose that the words of the will, according to the rules of the law, do give only an estate for life, and that the verbal declarations of the testatrix were of an unequivocal intention to give a fee, they would seem to be inadmissible, as they would contradict the writing as interpreted by the settled rules of the law. If a positive verbal declaration of an intention contrary to that which the law infers from the words used in the will be not admissible, the declarations of a circumstantial character would seem inadmissible, a fortiori; for the inference which might be drawn from the latter might be wrong, and the former would not be liable to that objection. The parol evidence however seems not for the purpose of explaining what is doubtful, (as in the case of an imperfect description of the person to whom the legacy is given,) but of controlling what the law considers settled upon the face of the will. It is not to prevent the failure of a bounty which the law presumes to have been intended, but to extend it beyond the legal inference of the words used in the will. If we were to yield to the argument, we should substitute a verbal in the place of the written will.1
We are all of opinion, after much consideration of the case, that the demandant should be nonsuited.
See Bowers v. Porter, 4 Pick. 198.
See Baker v. Bridge, 12 Pick. 33; Butler v. Little, 3 Greenl. 239.
See Sargent v. Towne, 10 Mass. R. (Rand’s ed.) 307, n. a ; 4 Kent’s Com. (3d ed.) 535 to 541, and cases cited in the notes; Van Alstyne v. Spraker, 13 Wendell, 578. It is now provided by the Revised Statutes, that every devise of land in any will made after the enactment of the same, shall be construed to convey all the estate of the devisor therein, which he could lawfully devise, unless it shall clearly appear by the will that the deviso/ intended to convey a less estate. Revised Stat. c. 62, § 4
See Sargent v. Towne, 10 Mass. R. (Rand’s ed.) 307, n. a; 2 Stark. Evid (5th Amer. ed.) 553, 554, n. 1.