The Chief Justice
delivered the opinion of the court.
Richard Holcomb, the testator, in and by his last will and testament, bearing date on the twenty-sixth day of December, 1783, gave to his son, John Holcomb, by appropriate and technical words, an estate tail in the premises in question, and upon his death under twenty-one, or without issue, the testator gave the estate over to his surviving daughters. The language of the devise is as follows :
“Item. I give and bequeath unto my son John ILol comb (being my only son) my two homestead plantations, that is, that on which I dwell and that on which Abraham Pittinger liveth, with the premises and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in áriywise appertaining, as they aré butted arid described, and contains, as by the respective deeds bequeathed me by iriy father as by his last will dated the seventeenth day of the sixth month, Anno Domini 1743, to him, the said John Holcoirib, arid his heirs (that is the issue .of his body lawfully bégotteri, being either male or female,) for ever, to have possession of the above mentioned premises when he arrives at the mature age of twerity-oné years, also iriy clock and writing-desk, arid a two-year old colt, arid the smh of sixty pounds current money of the state aforesaid, to bé paid unto him at the age of twerity-one years aforesaid; and if in case my said sori John Holcomb die before he comes and arrives to the said age of twerity-one, or without issue, heirs of body • lawfully begotten, that then, my will is, that the said two plantations, the said sum of sixty pounds, clock, writing-desk, and two-year old colt, being the legacy of my said sOri, be equally divided amongst iriy surviving children, in irianner and the form my executors shall judge most proper and advantageous.”
John Holcomb, the devisee iri tail, survived the age oi twenty-one, but died without issue. He also Survived both his sisters:
The first question: iri the causé is, whether the limitation over to the daughters of the testator took effect, or whether it failed, either by reason of the failue of the contirigency upon which it was to take effect, or by the death of the daughters before the devisee in tail.
It has long been á settled rule of construction, that when thére is a devisee fee in with 4 limitation ovér, iri case the devisee die under twenty one, or without iSsué, the word or is construed <md, and consequently the devisé ovei* will not take effect unless both events happen, i. e., unless the devisee die under age and without issue.
The reason for the rule is thus stated by Mr. Jarman : “ The ground for changing the testator’s expression in these cases is, that as, by making the event of the devisee leaving issue a condition of his retaining the estate, he evidently intends that a benefit shall accrue to such issue through their parent, it is highly improbable that he should mean this benefit to depend upon the contingency of the devisee attaining majority; while, on the other hand, it is very probable that the testator should intend, in the event of the devisee dying under age leaving issue, to give him an estate which would devolve upon the issue; but that if he attained twenty-one (the age at which he would acquire a disposing competency) he should take the estate absolutely, i. e., whether he afterwards died leaving issue or not. The change of or into and, therefore substitutes a reasonable, for a most unreasonable scheme of disposition.” 1 Jarmam, on Wills 444; 1 Powell on Dev. 379, Jarmans note.
In Nevison v. Taylor, 3 Halst. 45, Chief Justice Kirkpatrick, speaking of a similar devise, said, “ It is evidently a mere mistake of the testator in expressing what he must certainly have intended. And it is a mistake so common, and I may say almost so universal, that the courts of justice have thought themselves bound to establish a peculiar rule of construction to provide .against it. They have, for this purpose, established it as a principle, that they have authority, and from time immemorial they have exercised the authority, of construing or, in these limitations over, to mean and, in order to carry into effect the manifest and rational intention of the testator.”
In the Lessee of Hauer v. Sheetz, 2 Bin. 545, Ch. Just. Tilghman said, “ the word or is stripped of its usual disjunctive signification, and converted into a conjunction copulative ; because, if it was construed disjunetimely, the devisee, who was the first object of the testator’s bounty, might die under twenty-one leaving children, and those rhildren would be deprived of the estate which would pass over to other persons. It is very natural that a man should give his son an estate in fee, and yet provide that it should go to a third person, in case his son died without issue and before the age at which the law permitted him to dispose of it, either by contract or by devise; but that he should give him a fee simple, and then deprive his children of it because he happened to die before twenty-one, is altogether unnatural and improbable. The cases, therefore, that have been cited on this subject stand on a foundation not to be shaken.”
In Beltzhoover v. Costen, 7 Barr 18, Mr. Justice Rogers, in delivering the opinion of the court, says, “ The intention of the testator, to which all other rules are subordinate, is the governing rule in the construction of wills ; but to discover the intention, certain rules have been adopted, by which the court is as much bound as by the general rale itself. Thus, in wills, it is now a settled rale of construction, that where there is a devise of inheritance to any person, and a devise over, depending on his age or issue, whether these events are connected by a conjunctive or disjunctive participle, the estate of the first taker is absolute.if either of the events take place. The controlling reason given in all the cases is, that otherwise, if the first taker should die under age leaving issue, such issue would be disinherited.”
In Jackson v. Blamshan, 6 Johns. R. 54, the testator, having by his will given to his children real and personal estate, further directed that if any one or more of his children should die before they arrive to twenty-one, or without lawful issue, his or her share should be divided among the survivors. Kent, Oh. Just,, in delivering the opinion of - the court, upon a review of the authorities, held the rule to be settled, that the. word or, in the clause of limitation over, must be construed and, and he added, “ It is now to be, hoped that the question on the constrnet »n of those words in a will will- never hereafter be revived. It is important, when a question of this kind has become once settled, (and it is almost immaterial which way) that it should not be disturbed, for it grows into a landmark of property.”
The change of phraseology is not made on the ground that there are other provisions in the will rendering it clear that such was the intention of the testator, But, iu the absence of any other provision in the will in relation to the matter, the construction results from the language of the devise itself. It rests upon the broad and satisfactory ground, that the controlling purpose of the testator may otherwise be defeated. He obviously intends a benefit not only to the first devisee, but to his issue, and whether that issue be born and the devisee die before or after he is of age, cannot be supposed at all to affect the testator’s purpose.
The rule has been repeatedly recognised and sanctioned in this state, and ought not to be regarded as a doubtful or open question. Den v. Taylor, 2 South. 420; Nevison v. Taylor, 3 Halst. 43 ; Den. v. Mugway, 3 Green, 330; Den v. English, 2 Harr, 280.
But it is insisted that this rule is not applicable where the first devisee takes an estate in tail, and not a fea The rule certainly was not applied to an estate tail in the case of Woodward v. Glasbrook, 2 Vern, 388. But no reference whatever is made by the court to the nature of the estate of the first devisee, nor does it appear on what ground the decision was made. In Brownsword v. Edwards, 2 Vesey, sen. 249, Lord Hardwicke said, arguendo, that the rule would not be adopted in case of an estate tail, but-that was not the point decided. In the recent ease of Mortimer v. Hartley, 6 Exch. R. 47, the point was for the first time expressly decided.
There is no ground of distinction between the two classes of cases, except it be, that in case of estates tail, if the construction be adopted, the testator will die intestate as to the reversion. The case of Mortimer v. Hartley was decided upon the authority of Brownsword v. Edwards. The court admitted that if the first devise had been in fee, they would have felt bound, by the numerous authorities - on that subject, to hold that or must be construed and. But they added, as none of the authorities apply to an estate tail, and we have Lord Hardwicke’s high authority for distinguishing such a case, we are of opinion we ought ■ to do so, and abide by the ordinary sense of the words. The only reason given by the court for the decision is,, that thereby they carry into effect a manifest and declared intention of the testator, to give the remainder over upon the determination of the estate tail, and defeat only a presumed intention of the testator, viz. that the issue of the first devisee should be benefited by the death of the parent before the time specified in the will. But it is obvious that this reasoning applies as well to an estate in fee as to an estate tail. Even the acute and discriminating mind of Baron Parke has suggested no real distinction between the-two casés, and he is content to rest his decision upon the authority of a dictum of Lord Hardwicke. Few names in jurisprudence could give higher authority to any opinion, and yet it is manifest that to rest a rule of construction upon such reasons must tend to unsettle, if not to subvert the rule itself.
On the other hand, the reason assigned for the rule-applies much more strongly in the case of an estate tail that in that of a feé.-When a fee simple is given to the first devisee,- and a devise over upon his death without issue, there • is only a presumed intention of the testator to benefit-the-issue, founded on the limitation over in default of such issue. - But -in the case of an estate tail there is an express limitation of the estate to the issue, and a declared intention of the testator that they shall be benefited. To hold, therefore, that their estate shall be defeated because their birth occurred, and their parent died, before he was twenty-one, defeats the clearly expressed intention of the testator and the controlling purpose of the devise.
The propriety of applying this rule of construction in the case of an estate tail is made more manifest by the effect given by our law to a devise in tail. The operation of such devise under the statute (Nix. Dig. 196, § 11,) is to give to the devisee in tail a mere estate for life, and to his issue an estate in fee. The case, therefore, is brought directly within the operation of the general rule • of construction, as applied to estates in fee; and it rests upon much stronger reasons than if there had been a devise in fee to the first taker, because unless the limitation over is made to depend upon the contingency of the devisee dying under age and without issue, the estate in fee given to the children by operation of the statute under the will, will be defeated by the death of the parent under the age of twenty-one.
Where, therefore, there is a devise, either in fee or in tail, with a limitation over in case the devisee die under twenty-one, or without issue, the word or must be construed and, unless there are words in the will manifesting a contrary-intention.
There is clearly no such intention apparent in the will or Eichard Holcomb; on the contrary, the limitation over being of personal chattels, some of them of a perishable nature, as well asof real estate, it being made to the surviving children, and to be apportioned by the executors, tend very strongly to indicate that the solo contingency m the mind of the testator was the death of his son under twenty-one without issue; and that his death at an indefinitely remote period without issue did not enter into his contemplation. It is not intended, how ever, to rest the construction in the present case at all i.pon these circumstances, hut solely upon the express words of the devise, and the well settled rule by which their interpretation is governed.
The limitation over to the daughters of the_ testator, must be construed to take effect only upon the death of John Holcomb, the devisee in tail, dying under age and without issue. Upon any other construction, though John Holcomb left issue, yet if he died under twenty-one, the estate of his children would have been defeated, although the declared intention of the testator, and his controlling purpose, as manifested in the will, was to give an estate to those children. John Holcomb, having survived the age • of twenty-one, the’ contingency upon which the limitation over to the daughters was to- take effect failed, and the limitation over did not take effect. The daughters of the testator took nothing by the devise. The reversion consequent upon the determination of the estate tail devised to John remained in the testator, and upon his death descended to his heirs at law.
It descended immediately upon the death of the testator, and of eourse to his heirs then living, and according to the then existing statute of descents, viz. in the proportion of two shares to the son and one share to each of the daughters. .
This view of the law renders .it- unnecessary to expreso any opinion upon the other questions discussed upon the ax gument.
The judgment below must be affirmed.
For affirmance — The Chancellor, the Chief Justice and Judges Elmer, Ryerson, Vredenburgh, Arrowsmith, Cornelison, Huyler, Risley, Valentine, and Wills.
For reversal — None.
Cited in Moore v. Rake, 3 Dutch. 590.