Opinion by
In consideration of #1.00 and his natural love and affection for her, Isaac Ackerman conveyed — to quote from the deed— “ unto her, my said wife, Sarah Ackerman, her and my heirs and assigns, all my estate, real, personal and mixed, that is to say,” — here follows a description of divers lands, buildings and chattels — “and all of my effects whatsoever, .... to have and to hold the said estate hereby granted and assigned unto her, the said Sarah Ackerman, her and my heirs and assigns and to her only proper use and behoof for herself and her and my heirs and assigns.” At the date of this deed and at the date of his death intestate about two years later, Isaac had three children — Ansel, a son by his deceased wife, and John M. and Mary C., a son and a daughter by his second wife Sarah. After the death of Isaac, Ansel died intestate, leaving to survive him a widow and three children, and at a later date Sarah conveyed the land in dispute by deed in fee simple to her son John M. After her death, the children of Ansel brought this action of ejectment against John M. and claim to recover one undivided third part of the land.
If the words, “ her and my heirs,” must be interpreted so as to exclude every person who at the death of Sarah was not an heir of both Isaac and Sarah, the plaintiffs have no case. But however strict be the rule of law as to the interpretation of the word heirs, there is no rule of law, which, without regard to the intention of the grantor, compels such construction of the words “ her and my ” as would exclude the heirs of the grantor by his first marriage. Nor can it be truthfully said that, irrespective of. rules of law, the phrase itself is so plain and unambiguous as to preclude inquiry as to the meaning the parties intended to be taken from it. If analogous precedents be needed to support these preliminary statements, we may cite Luce v. Harris, 79 Pa. 482, and Lehman v. Lehman, 29 Pa. Superior Ct. 60 ; s. c. 215 Pa. 344. In the former case a devise of land to Jacob and his wife Eliza, to be “ equally divided among their children at their death,” was construed to include the children of Jacob by a former wife. In the latter case, the children of the insured by a former wife were held entitled to share in the proceeds of a policy of life insurance, which was issued after his second marriage, and by its
Whilst the precise words, heirs “ of the body,” are not necessary to the creation of an estate tail, it is requisite that the heirs shall be limited to be procreated by, or begotten on, some body certain, either by express words or by words amounting to so much : Beresford’s Case, 7 Rep. 41; 2 Preston on Estates, 484, 490; 2 Blackst. Com. 114; Lessee of Hall v. Vandegrift, 3 Binney, 374; McIntyre v. Ramsey, 23 Pa. 317; Jones v. Jones, 201 Pa. 548. It results that a conveyance to A, and the heirs of the grantor and the heirs of the grantee, even though the grantor and the grantee are husband and wife, neither by express words nor by necessary implication ■ creates an estate tail, which by virtue of the act of 1855 becomes an 'estate in fee simple. ' And it is very clear that a granting clause in that form does not, ex vi termini, vest a fee simple in sev
In this state, when the word “ heirs ” is used as a word of purchase, it means “ statutory heirs ” — those persons designated by the intestate act to take the estate not disposed of by last will and testament: Clark v. Scott, 67 Pa. 446. We are of opinion that the word must be given that interpretation here; but it was uncertain who would be the heirs of Isaac, and who would be the heirs of Sarah. If Isaac had survived both Ansel and Sarah, it would seem that the children of Ansel would not be entitled to take, because at her death they would be neither heirs of Isaac nor heirs of Sarah. But this did not happen. When Isaac died Ansel, his son by his first wife, and John M. and Mary, his children by his second wife, became his heirs. They answered to the description, “my heirs.” But as it was not certain that no other children would be born to Sarah by a second marriage, the share or shares that the heirs of Isaac would take must await the termination of the particular estate; at least, that view is most favorable to those who might claim as the heirs of Sarah alone, and for present purposes may be taken for granted. If, therefore, Ansel had survived Sarah, the life tenant — no other children having been born to her by a second marriage — the persons who at the termination of the particular estate would have answered to the description, “ my heirs,” would have been Ansel, John M. and Mary. In that event Ansel would have taken a third of the whole or of a moiety, depending upon considerations hereafter to be
The judgment is reversed, and judgment is now entered in favor of the plaintiffs for an undivided third part of the land described in the case stated.
