Spear, J.
The .claim of plaintiffs in error is that the property inherited by Leora McCammon from her father, having been ancestral property, and the plaintiffs in error being the only heirs at law of the ancestor, they are entitled, by force of our statute of descent and distribution, to the inheritance. Not that the precise estate which was owned by Leora Mc-Cammon, at her decease, came to her by inheritance, for without question, it did not, but that that property was purchased by the proceeds of the real estate which she did inherit, and which had been sold by her guardian; and that by applying the rule of equitable conversion, the funds derived from the sale continued during the life of Leora, in whatever form they were invested, to be impressed with the character of ancestral property for purposes of descent and distribution.
We think the proposition cannot be maintained. It is conceded that under the authority of Armstrong v. Miller, 6 Ohio, 119, and Pence v. Pence, 11 Ohio St., 290, the proceeds of the sale of land would have become personal property, with all the incidents of such property as to distribution, in the event of the death of Leora, but for the act of March 18, 1890, which added a proviso to section 4163, Revised Statutes (the section which directs the distribution of personal property), which proviso is: “provided, that any fund in the hands of any administrator, guardian, assignee or other, trustee which has arisen from the sale of real estate, which real estate came to such intestate by descent, devise or deed of gift from an ancestor, shall descend according to the course of descent described by section 4158 for ancestral real estate.” And the contention with respect to this proviso is that the term “any fund in the hands of any * * * guardian * * * or other trustee” means the proceeds of the sale so long as held by the guardian or trustee under his trust and unexpended, into whatsoever form he may in fact change them by investment, thus seeking by construction to engraft upon our statute the equitable rulfe, enforced in many jurisdictions, that when for any reason the court changes the character of the property belonging to infants, it will not permit the change to alter its devolution. The proposition, as applied to this* case, is open to many answers. One is that the proviso, in its language and apparent intent, is dealing with present conditions. It does not- deal with the past except that if the fund which then exists has arisen from the sale of ancestral real estate its devolution is controlled by this proviso. But the proviso cannot be aided or enlarged by the application of any equitable* rule. As held in Patterson v. Lamson, 45 Ohio St., 77, “the statutes of descent and distribution are not to be construed and administered upon equitable principles, but by rules of law,” and in Hutchings v. Davis, 68 Ohio St., 160, “courts cannot, by reason of any real or imagined equities limit, qualify or annul rights granted by legislative enactment.” In other words, the general assembly must be held to have intended to express its entire meaning by the natural import of the words used. The natural import of the term “fund which has arisen from the sale of real estate” implies a fund which has directly arisen from that source. The principle of Brower v. Bunt, 18 Ohio St., 311, is applicable here. It is there held that: “The title to real estate which must have come to an intestate by devise, or deed of gift from an ancestor, to constitute ancestral property, is the title under which the intestate immediately held.” Not that the word “directly” is found in this proviso, but neither was the word “immediately” found in the statute under review in the case above cited. If the intention had been by this proviso to give ancestral heirs any right to the proceeds of the sale of infants’ real estate inherited from the ancestor, in any form it may be made to assume in the future, such intention would have been expressed in apt language. It is not, we think, reasonable to assume that the legislature intended to go farther in the adoption of the doctrine of equitable conversion than the ordinary meaning of the words used imports.
But it seems hardly worth while to pursue this line further. Another answer fully covers the case. The proviso does not apply because the property in question was not a fund in the hands of the trustee. A fund is well defined as money or its equivalent gathered for, or to be appropriated to, a specific object. The property in controversy is not personal property of any kind; it is a right to real estate, and it isn’t of consequence what form the inheritance of the minor assumed from time to time after her father’s decease and before her own. At the time of the latter event the inheritance had taken the form of real estate to which she had a right. And this applies as well to the insurance money as to the other; so that no different rule of law is involved. The descent of real estate as to which the owner dies intestate, is controlled by either section 4158 or 4159, Revised Stab utes, depending upon whether the estate thus left came to the deceased by descent, devise, or deed, of gift, or by purchase. If by purchase, and that is the character of this estate, then , the latter section controls, and the estate in controversy. would ■ under the fifth clause of that section, and by force of the ruling in Armstrong v. Miller, supra, and Pence v. Pence, supra, pass to the mother.
There is no error in the judgment of the circuit court affirming that of the common pleas, and it will be
Affirmed.
Burket, C. J., Davis, Shauck, Price and Grew, JJ., concur.