C. L. Beasley filed his petition against F. M. Calhoun and others, and prayed for an injunction to restrain the defendants from interfering with his possession of certain described
The court did not err in so refusing. Upon the death of the wife the husband had not title to this real estate or interest therein. It is true that upon the death of the wife leaving no children the husband is her sole heir. Civil Code, § 3930. That, properly construed, means that he is the sole heir, where there are no children, of the property left by the wife which was hers. But in the present case the wife had only a life-estate, and the remainder created by the terms of the deed was a contingent remainder, being contingent as to the person who should take the remainder; and the only issue of the manage having been born dead, there was no one in whom this estate became vested. It never became a vested remainder. There was no one to take at the death of Irene Calhoun. The husband was not included in the word “heirs,” under the provisions of the deed creating the remainder. The Civil Code § 3660, provides that “Limitations over to ‘heirs/ ‘heirs of the body/ ‘lineal heirs/ ‘lawful heirs/ ‘issue/ or words of similar import, shall be held to mean ‘children/ whether the parents be alive or dead.” Construing the word “heirs,” in the deed from F. M. Calhoun to his daughter Irene Calhoun, to mean “children,” as that statute directs, the
Judgment affirmed.