This action of disseizin was brought to the Superior Court for Middlesex County, at the September term, 1877, and by that court reserved for the advice of this court as to what judgment shall be rendered therein.
Aaron Brainard died in 1849, leaving one daughter, Mary Ann Dickinson, the wife of Charles A. T. Dickinson, and one son, Charles L. Brainard; by his will he devised the demanded premises to his daughter; she died in 1852, intestate, seized of the premises, leaving as issue of her marriage two children, Ann G. Dickinson and Aaron B. Dickinson; the said Ann died in July, 1863, unmarried, childless, intestate, and seized of the premises, which upon her death fested in the said Aaron B. Dickinson, as her brother and sole heir at law; Aaron B. Dickinson died in December, 1863, seized of the premises, of full age, intestate, leaving neither widow, child, grandchild, brother, sister, nor descendants of any brother or sister; his father, Charles A. T. Dickinson, and his cousin, Louisa F. Clark, the plaintiff, survived him; after the payment of his debts there remained of the estate of Aaron B. Dickinson for distribution several pieces of land which had descended to him from his mother; one-half of his real estate was distributed to Louisa F. Clark, the plain-' tiff, as ancestral estate; the other half, including the demanded premises, was distributed to his father, Charles A. T. Dickinson, as his heir at law; and the father died in 1876, leaving a will, by which he devised a life estate in the demanded premises to his wife.
Charles L. Brainard, son of Mary Ann and Charles A. T. Dickinson, died prior to the death of Aaron B. Dickinson, leaving surviving him Louisa F. Clark, the plaintiff, his only child and sole heir at law. Her co-plaintiff is her husband.
The law of descents in force at the death of Aaron B. Dickinson may be found in the General Statutes, Revision of 1866, page 415, section 59, and that part applicable to the present question is as follows:—“All the real estate of the intestate, which came to him by descent, gift or devise from his parent, ancestor or other kindred, shall belong equally to the brothers and sisters of the .intestate, and those who legally represent them, of the blood of the person or ancestor from whom such estate came or descended; and in case there be no brothers and sisters or legal representatives as aforesaid, then equally to the children of such person or ancestor and those who legally represent them; and if there be no such children or representatives, then equally to the brothers and sisters of such person or ancestor and those who legally represent them; and if there be none such, then it shall be set off and divided in the same manner as other real estate.”
The plaintiff, Louisa E. Clark, insists that the law looks to the origin of the title in the first purchaser of the estate, namely, Aaron Brainard, and that his blood is to inherit it regardless of the intermediate devolution by descent or devise; that Aaron Brainard is the ancestor from whom Aaron B. Dickinson inherited; and that, being the sole suri iving representative of the children of Aaron Brainard, she inherits it.
The defendants insist that the estate passed immediately and directly from Ann G. Dickinson to her brother Aaron B. Dickinson; and that upon his death intestate, unmarried, leaving no widow, child, grandchild, brother, sister, or child of any brother or sister, it passed to his father, Charles A. T. Dickinson, his next of kin and sole heir at law, in the same manner as other real estate not ancestral.
In Buckingham v. Jacques, 37 Conn., 402, certain real estate belonged in fee in the year 1825 to Samuel Burr, who died in that year leaving all his estate to his three daughters, Lucretia Weeks, Clarissa Ells and Abigail- Nichols. Lucretia
Herein this court determined that the statute with regard to the distribution of ancestral estate refers to the immediate and not the remote ancestor; and this must dictate the answer to bo given to the Superior Court in the case before us.
We may add that the Supreme Court of the United States, speaking through Story, J., placed a like construction upon a similar statute in Rhode Island; and that a like statute in Ohio has received the same intei'pretation. Gardner v. Col
We advise the Superior Court to render judgment -for the defendants.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.