Eckle v. Ryland

256 Mo. 424 | Mo. | 1914

LAMM, J.

— Partition. In the- Lafayette Circuit Court. On May 27, 1891, Eusebia N. Buford, widow and owner, executed to one Edwards, as trustee, a deed to lands in said county and duly spread it of record. Edwards took possession and be and a successor in trust executed tbe trust. As tbe main question binges on whether ber son, Legrand G., took a vested remainder under that deed that be could devise in case be died prior to tbe death of tbe two life beneficiaries, William M. and Eusebia N.. we reproduce tbe deed to* speak for itself, thus:

Know All Men by These Presents: That for the purpose of providing for the maintenance and support of my son, William M. Buford, being of impaired mind, for life, and for the love I bear for. my children and grandchildren hereinafter named, and other good considerations thereto moving, and also for and in consideration of the sum of one dollar to me in hand paid, the receipt of which I do hereby acknowledge, I, Eusebia N. Buford, widow, of the county of Lafayette and State of Missouri, have this day granted, bargained and sold and do hereby grant, bargain and sell unto Elisha M. Edwards of said county of Lafayette and State of Missouri as trustee for the purposes hereinafter mentioned, the following described real estate and property, formerly belonging to my said son, William M. Buford, being situate and lying in said county of Lafayette in the State of Missouri, to-wit: the west half of the northwest quarter of section numbered one and east half of the northeast quarter of section numbered two both in township numbered fifty and range numbered twenty-five; also the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section numbered twenty-four in township numbered fifty-one and range numbered twenty-five.
The said Elisha M. Edwards, as trustee, to take and receive the rents, issues and profits of said lands and premises, and, out of the same, to pay first, the taxes that may be assessed thereon, the necessary and proper cost and expense of keeping the said premises and • the buildings, fences and other improvements thereon in good and proper repair, the costs of keeping the buildings on said property properly insured against loss by fire, storm and other casualty, and the necessary costs and expenses of the trusteeship herein provided for, and the balance shall be, by the said trustee, kept, appropriated and used, for the proper and comfortable support, maintenance, care, clothing and keeping of my beloved son, 256 Mo. -28 *434William M. Buford, the payment of his medical bills and his custody, if necessary, in an asylum for the insane, and for all other proper and necessary expenditure to keep my said son in comfort, for and during the term of his natural life. At the death of my soni if I, the said Eusebia N. Buford, be then living, then the said trustee shall use and appropriate the net rents, issues and profits of said land, for my use, and shall pay over the same to me, for my individual use, on my death, should I survive the said William M. Buford, .and, on his death, should he survive me, the said trust herein provided for shall terminate, and the title to the said real estate and property shall go to, and vest in my two other children, I-iegiand G. Buford and Florence I. Banks, one-third each, or to their heirs, should they or either of them, be dead, and the remaining one-third shall vest in my two grandchildren, Le-grand Ryland and Buford Ryland, as joint tenants, and to their survivor, for life, with the remainder, to my two children, Legrand G. Buford and Florence I. Banks, and their heirs, share and share alike, in fee simple forever. Any funds on hand, with said trustee, on the termination of tills trust, is to be paid over, and disposed of, in the same way as is provided for the disposition of the land, except that the share of the said Ryland grandchildren therein shall be paid to them absolutely;
To have and to hold the said real estate hereby conveyed, and all the rights, privileges and appurt¿nances thereto belonging, unto the said Elisha M. Edwards, as trustee, as aforesaid, for the purposes of this trust for and during the natural life of me, the said Eusebia N. Buford, and the natural life of the said William M. Buford, as hereinbefore provided, and to my said children and grandchildren, as hereinbefore provided, and to those who take the shares and remainder in fee, and their heirs and assigns forever. The said Eusebia N. Buford, hereby covenanting to and with said trustee, and said other parties, and their heirs and assigns, for myself, my heirs, executors and administrators, to forever warrant and defend the title thereto against the lawful claims and demands of all persons whomsoever, except as against the taxes thereon for the year 1891, which said trustee is to pay out of said rents and profits.
In testimony of all which I hereto subscribe my name and affix my seal this 27th'day of May A. D. 1891.

While William M. Buford was yet alive, Legrand U. Buford died, to-wit, in October, 1909, leaving two children by his first wife, dead, and a widow, the plaintiff Lida M. Buford, and a will. The two' children are the plaintiff Florence D. Eclde and the defendant Cole*435man G. Bnford. As the two Ecldes, husband and wife, and the widow Lida M. claim under the due prohate of the will of Legrand G. Buford, to the exclusion of the son, Coleman G., we let the will also speak for itself, thus:

I, L. G. Buford, of Eldorado Springs, in the county of Cedar and State of Missouri, being of sound mind and memory, and considering the uncertainty of this frail and stansitory life do therefore make, ordain, publish and declare this to be my last will and testament:
First. I • order and direct that my executrix hereinafter named pay all my just debts and funeral expenses as soon after my decease as conveniently may be.
Second. After the payment of such funeral expenses and debts, I give, devise and bequeath to my beloved wife, Lida Buford, all my personal property (not herein excepted) and also one-half of my one-third interest in two hundred acres of land situate in Lafayette County, Missouri.
3rd. I will and bequeath to my daughter, Florence, and her husband, W. R. Eckle, the other cine-half of my interest in two hundred acres of land situate in Lafayette County, Missouri.
4th. To Coleman Eckle, my grandson, I will my watch.
5th. To my son, Coleman G. Buford, I will one dollar.
6th. In case of the death of my wife, Lida Buford, before the sale of said real estate as above stipulated then I will that my daughter, Florence, and her husband, W. R. Eckle, shall have the whole of said interest in said real estate.
Lastly I make, constitute and appoint Lida Buford, my wife, without bond to be executrix of this my -last will and testament, hereby revoking all former wills by me made.
In witness whereof I have hereunto subscribed my name and affixed my seal the 21st day of October in the year of Our Lord one thousand nine hundred and nine.

On March 16, 1910, plaintiffs brought suit to partition the land described in the foregoing deed of trust, making Legrand Ryland sole defendant. Afterwards said son of Legrand G. Buford, to-wit, Coleman G., came in as a party defendant. He filed answer claiming to be a cotenant with plaintiffs, and his codefendant, Ryland. Plaintiffs joined issue thereon. The answer of defendant Ryland is unimportant as he rests *436satisfied. As the controversy primarily ranges aronnd the construction of the foregoing deed, and secondarily around the construction of the foregoing will, and since the claims of the respective parties will presently appear, the pleadings setting them forth are unimportant.

Presently such proceedings were had that an interlocutory judgment in partition was entered adjudging that Coleman G. took no interest under said deed of his grandmother or under the will of his father. He excepted to that judgment and preserved the evidence upon which it was rendered and his exceptions in a term bill. Afterwards a partition sale was made, followed by an order of distribution in accordance with the interlocutory judgment excluding him. Thereupon, at the heels of the final judgment approving that order of sale and distribution, he without success filed a motion for a new trial and again excepted and in apt time filed his principal bill and in due form appeals.

The facts are stipulated and have been already outlined. They consist, first, of said deed and will; second, of facts which for perspicuity’s sake we set forth over again a little more in detail and compactly, thus: Eusebia N. Buford, the ancestor and common source of title, died in 1895. Pour children were born to her, to-wit, Legrand Gr. Buford, Florence I. Banks (a married daughter, a plaintiff), William M. Buford (who died single) and a daughter who intermarried with Mr. Ryland and died leaving two children by him, Legrand (a defendant) and Buford (who died prior to suit). The son of Eusebia, William M., was non compos and died after his brother Legrand Gr., who, twice married, died in 1909 testate in Cedar county, leaving two children by his first wife, a daughter, Florence B., aged thirty-nine years, intermarried with one Eckle (both plaintiffs), a son, Coleman G., aged forty-one years (who was, as said, made a defendant on his *437■own motion), the above will duly probated, and a widow (the plaintiff Lida M.). William M. Bnford died ■on the third day of March, 1910. Eusebia’s grandchild, Buford Ryland, died on a date not given, but, as said, before suit.

If Legrand Gr. Buford, dying as he did before the beneficiary last surviving, William M., did not take a vested remainder under his mother’s deed, or (put differently) did not take a vested interest defeasible on condition subsequent, to-wit, his death prior to the termination of the trust, then his will was not effective as a devise of the land, and, hence, his widow took no interest therein under that will and appellant takes as a purchaser under his grandmother’s deed and not by inheritance from his father; hence the judgment is wrong. Appellant stands for that hypothesis and construes the deed accordingly.

Furthermore, assuming (for the purposes of the argument alone) that Legrand Gr. Buford took a vested estate under his mother’s deed and not a mere contingent one, as appellant contends on the hypothesis just put, then, for that turn, the position of appellant is that Legrand Gr. did not include in his will the particular one-third interest made subject to the Ryland life estate and, hence, as to that third, it is a case of intestacy and the judgment is wrong in that aspect.

The interest of Florence I. Banks is not in dispute. The life interest of Legrand Ryland in one-third was commuted into cash and is not in dispute. If appellant be right in his principal contention then his sis-' ter, Mrs. Eckles, takes by purchase under the grandmother’s deed the same as he. Accordingly, will or no will, appellant says he has no substantial controversy with her. This narrows the controversy to one between him and his stepmother, Lida M. Buford, and she alone files a brief as respondent, stating therein the questions to be:

*438“First. Did Legrand Gr. Bnford take a vested interest in the two hundred acres of land which he could dispose of by will?
“Second. Did Lida M. Buford take one-half of that interest under the will of her husband, Legrand Gl. Buford?”

We may be in error, but we infer all parties took down their shares except that a receiver was appointed below and took charge of the stepmother’s share in the proceeds of the sale pending appeal, its disposition to abide the event.

Any other record facts pertinent to propositions ruled, will appear in due course.

I. Of error in refusing to consider or give instructions.

Appellant asked instructions declarative of the law on his construction of the deed and will as put in the two foregoing hypotheses. The court neither gave nor refused them, but ignored them. Appellant complains of that from two angles, to-wit: First, in refusing to pass on them at all; second, in refusing to give them.

There was no conflict in the evidence. In fact the case, one at law, is an agreed one. The trial was to the court. Under such circumstances the agreed facts are equivalent to a special verdict and the only function of instructions would be to indicate whether the trial court had the right theory of the law on the agreed facts. Now, if his judgment was right, then, for appellate purposes, his theory of the law was either bound to be right, or, if not right, then the ratio decidendi matters not a whit; for, as we have here the agreed facts as well as the judgment, we can as well affirm or reverse that judgment without instructions as with the'm. In such case we can “administer the true law.” [Cox v. Sloan, 158 Mo. l. c. 429.] To be reversible error, the error must materially affect the merits, and it is plain enough that a refusal of instruc.*439tions interpreting the deed and will, or the refusal to-pas s upon them one way or the other, could not materially affect the merits on an agreed case. The situation is not new. It has been here and dealt with before and the propositions just laid down are sustained by Baumhoff v. Railroad, 171 Mo. l. c. 125; State ex rel. v. Cummings, 151 Mo. l. c. 57; and Kronenberger v. Hoffner, 44 Mo. l. c. 191 et seq. “Where the facts are undisputed,” says Bliss, J., in that case, “the decision of the court, if wrong, is error of law, whatever may be the formal declarations of law, or whether there be any.” And from the same judge we have in Aubuchon v. Bender, 44 Mo. l. c. 570, this: “No agreed statement of facts can fix a conclusion of law.”

If the case had not been an agreed case, or if the evidence had been conflicting, a different rule might obtain. [Suddarth v. Robertson, 118 Mo. l. c. 293.] Cases may be found like Hisey v. Goodwin, 90 Mo. 366, holding it error to refuse to consider instructions in a law case tried to the court, but that holding runs with the fact that the evidence was pro and con in that case. Other cases may be found where a refusal to consider instructions was taken as tantamount to a refusal of them. [Karriger v. Greb, 42 Mo. 44.] So that, viewing the instant ease from the angle of refusing to give or from that of refusing to consider (or treating it as a case with no instructions asked) it amounts to the same thing, to-wit, the merits are not affected by such incident, where, as here, appellant files a motion for a new trial raising the point that the judgment is not supported by the evidence, and as here, saves his exception to overruling it.

. The point, being without substance, is disallowed.

II. Bid Legrand G. Buford take a vested remainder under Ms mother’s deed to Edwards?

He died prior to his brother, William. Edwards-was seized to William’s use during his life. If Le-*440grand Gr. Buford took a vested remainder on the delivery of the deed to Edwards, trustee, then the devise in his will was effective, though he died prior to William. If, on the other hand, Legrand Gr. Buford took only a contingent remainder (the contingency being that he survive his brother, William) then, while such contingent remainder or interest (that is, the mere “chance of having”) was alienable subject to the chance of nothing passing on the contingency’s not happening (Godman v. Simmons, 113 Mo. l. c. 130 et seq.; Buxton v. Kroeger, 219 Mo. l. c. 251 et seq.); yet such contingent remainder would not be devised for the very good reason that a will is ambulatory, revocable, it only takes effect at the death of testator and in this case the same event that makes the will effective, to-wit, death, makes it impossible for the contingency on which it was to take to happen.

The main question in the case, to-wit, was there a vested remainder in Legrand G. Buford created by his mother’s deed, turns on a thorough analysis of that instrument thereby feeling out and establishing the intent of the grantor. Her intention is the worthy part, the principal thing, and, however difficult the task of ascertaining it, it is a necessary judicial task because the controlling maxim is: The intention of the man is the soul of the instrument (Animus hominis est anima scripti), and the rule of law is that when the intention of the grantor in a deed or the testator in a will is ascertained, then the bounden duty of a judge is to make that intention effective unless it contravenes some positive rule of law.

In interpreting deeds and wills, the foregoing rule is a cardinal one to which all others are mere aids. [Roberts v. Crume, 173 Mo. l. c. 579; Cox v. Jones, 229 Mo. l. c. 62; Chew v. Keller, 100 Mo. l. c. 369.]

Moreover, in chief part, the guiding rules in discovering and uncovering the intent of a grantor or testator, if that intent be at all obscure, are these:

*441(a) The construction must not be on this or that part of the instrument to itself, but must be on the entire instrument from side to side, end to end and by its four corners — anywhere, everywhere, within its top, bottom and sides.

(b) The object to be subserved and the circumstances surrounding the grantor or testator are to be kept in view.

(c) ITis words are to be understood and taken in the sense indicated by the whole instrument.

(d) Effect must be given to all its words and clauses if that be possible in reason, so that each is made operative and effective to some purpose.

(e) The best mode of interpretation is to reconcile one clause with another where that can be done without straining the words by hairspun theories or overnice refinements.

(f) In a will, more than in deeds, and yet in the latter, the language used varies so materially and so much that precedents are rarely controlling in a concrete case except as they may furnish general aiding rules. Therefore the best interpretation of a will or deed is the instrument itself.

Agreeable to those pronouncements are: Cox v. Jones, 229 Mo. l. c. 62 et seq.; Armor v. Frey, 226 Mo. l. c. 666; Feller v. Lee, 225 Mo. l. c. 332; Chew v. Keller, 100 Mo. l. c. 369; Bean v. Kenmuir, 86 Mo. l. c. 669; Schorr v. Carter, 120 Mo. l. c. 413; Utter v. Sidman, 170 Mo. l. c. 294 et seq., which, in turn, but announce the harmonious sum of all correct. modern judicial exegesis in those particulars.

Quickened and admonished by those general principles, attend, to an analysis of the deed. Its consideration was the moral duty the mother, Eusebia, owed to her unfortunate son William to provide for his maintenance and care during his natural life out of the property once belonging to him. Next, her own support for her own life. The other considerations are *442set forth, as follows: “For the love I have for my children and grandchildren hereinafter named and other good considerations to me moving,” and the nominal sum of one dollar paid. It is argued for respondent that there is no indication that the mother in her conveyance had in mind any other grandchildren than those “hereinafter named,” to-wit, Buford and Legrand Ryland whose mother (her daughter) was -dead. It is argued for appellant that that is too narrow, too starved a view under the glow of all the words •of the deed. The fact being that Eusebia had at the time other grandchildren, as shown by this record, counsel for appellant point to that provision of the deed which speaks of the “heirs” of Legrand U. Buford and Florence I. Banks as within the range of her bounty should either her son Legrand Gr. or her daughter Florence I. be dead when the life uses fell in, when the trust became executed and when the title was to vest — -all those things coming to pass at one and the same stroke. They point further to the fact that in the habendum the real estate was to be held (not only for the children and grandchildren “as hereinbefore provided” but) as follows: “And to those who take the shares and remainder in fee, and their heirs and assigns forever.” They argue that those expressions in the deed, when taken with the warranty clause, running in favor of the trustee “and said other parties and their heirs and assigns” and especially when taken in connection with the provision relating to the time when “the title to said real estate and property shall go to and vest in” Legrand Gr. Buford and Florence I. Banks, unerringly indicate that Eusebia had in mind grandchildren other than the two Rylands.

We state the contentions on the consideration phase of this deed as one useful element in leading up to and getting at grantor’s intent; not for the purpose of letting the case turn on that as an only pivot, but because of its being of significance in throwing a dry *443light upon the main clause presently considered. In leaving this phase of the matter we observe: The natural presumption would arise, we think, that the grandmother had not only ties of love and affection for the two Ryland grandchildren, but for her other grandchildren, and that the claims of affection and blood between her and all of them would presumably dictate the course the title should take under the same or similar circumstances. Presumably, we think, under similar circumstances (to-wit, the death of her :son or other daughter prior to his or her being vested with title) she would want the title to go to those who might be of her blood relatives, to-wit, their children, or at least relatives of her blood. That view of it is within the reasoning of Earl, J., in Tillman v. Davis, 95 N. Y. l. c. 25.

Under the Statute of Descents and Distribution title descends through the blood and that statute but accords with the law of nature. [Hockaday v. Lynn, 200 Mo. l. c. 466 post and ante.] Preliminarily we deem it of importance, as a matter of a priori reasoning, to note the absence of anything in this deed evidencing a lack of love and affection for any of her other grandchildren although they were impliedly, though not expressly, named in the conveyance. If this be so and if presumably all her grandchildren stood on a par in her affection, barring the one fact that as to the Rylands their mother was dead, then, if any of her other children should also die prior to the time for the vesting of the title, there is nothing in this deed showing the grandmother would not want her grandchildren to take in lieu of their ancestor, it being' allowable to reason from similar to similar.

When love and affection enter into the consideration of a deed its flow (and the objects of it) are not without some interpretative value. In Bean v. Kenmuir, 86 Mo. l. c. 669 (the only case I know of in which the writer of the opinion did not agree to his own opin*444ion, but writing one way, believed tbe other and dissented) it was said: “It is apparent that the actual consideration of the deed is one of love and affection, and we must find, if we can, the course the grantor designed and intended the title to take. ’ ’ In Huss v. Stephens, 51 Pa. St. l. c. 289, stress was put upon the consideration of a deed expressed to be the love and affection of the grantor for his grandchildren. Says Woodward, C. J.: “He intended, by that sure token, that they should take an estate from him. Had he named them he could scarcely have been better understood.” In that case the grant was to the “heirs of Andrew Lantz, J'r., son of the grantor” then in full life.

Coming now to the pivotal clause in the deed, we will presently restate it, prefacing some further observations by way of analysis of the instrument, viz.: The conveyance did not create a dry trust to be at once executed under the Statute of Uses. Contra, it was a live trust burdened with manifold duties and responsibilities on the part of the trustee seized to uses. The primary use ran in favor of the unfortunate son, during his life, for the net rents and profits of the trust estate. If he died prior to the mother, there was a like use in her favor during her life. Observe, up to this point in the deed, to-wit, her death or his death (outside of the consideration clause of the deed) there were no words tending to show the course the whole title should' take on the equitable life estate falling in. In many deeds that peculiarity is not present, but it is present here, is to be reckoned with and stands to be assigned some office. When the surviving owner of this equitable life estate dies, it was at that moment the grantor for the very first time takes up the question of what was to become of the title, up to that time vested in the trustee. She then for the first time speaks of title and the vesting of title. Attend to her words, viz.:

*445“On my death should. I survive the said William M. Buford, and on his death should he survive me, the said trust herein provided for shall terminate and the title to said real estate and property shall go to and vest in my two other children, Legrand Gr. Buford, and Florence I. Banks, one-third each, or to their heirs should they or either of them he dead, and the remaining one-third shall vest in my two grandchildren, Le-grand Ryland and Buford Ryland, as joint tenants and to their survivor, for life, with the remainder to my two other children Legrand Gr. Buford and Florence I. Banks, and their heirs, share and share alike, in fee simple forever. Any funds on hand with said trustee on the termination of this trust is to he paid over and disposed of in the same way as is provided for the disposition of the land except the share of the said Ryland grandchildren therein shall he paid to them absolutely.”

Under that conveyance, where was the title up to the time of William’s death? Clearly in the trustee. Vest means to accrue to, to be fixed, to take effect. [Black’s L. Diet. (2 Ed.), tit. “Vest.”] Now, when was the title to vest, to be fixed, in anyone else? Clearly on the termination of the trust. In whom was it then to vest by the express command of the grantor, who dominated the situation? Clearly in Legrand Gr. Buford and Florence I. Banks, one-third to each, but, observe (for thereby weighty matter hangs) only on a contingency, to-wit, on the contingency of their being alive. The title goes and vests in the alternative. Thus, if they are alive then to or in them. Otherwise, what becomes of it? Look again to the words of the deed, to-wit: “orto their heirs should they or either of them he dead.” When the grantor passed from the two-third interest to the Ryland one-third out of which another life estate was carved (to-wit, a joint one with the right of survivorship) the phraseology of her deed changes somewhat and the remainder runs “to *446my two other children, Legrand Gr. Bnford and Florence I. Banks and their heirs, share and share alike,, in fee simple forever.” It will he observed that in the first instance the word or is nsed followed by ‘to-their heirs should they or either of them be dead,”' and in the next instance the word and is nsed and nothing is said about the death of Legrand Gr. Bnford or Florence I. Banks but the “and” is followed by “their heirs, share and share alike, in fee simple forever.”

There was another contingency in the mind of grantor, namely, that the trustee might be in funds, when his trust terminated. What disposition was he to make of them? They were to be paid over and disposed of in the same way provided for the disposition-of the land except the Ryland share was to he paid to them absolutely. There is nothing to show that such contingency arose, but if it had arisen would the trustee have been authorized to pay Legrand Gr. Buford’s share (he then dead) to his administrator or executor, or must he pay it over to the “heirs” of Legrand GL Bnford precisely as the title to the real estate went in the event of his death before the termination of the trust?

It is obvious that seeking the intent of the testator, through the analysis of this deed, we have reached a point where we must consider ‘the legal significance of the use of the word heirs. We must consider the fact that the word or was nsed in one instance and the word and in the other in the clause referring to heirs. We must consider whether the word heirs is ever used in the sense of children or otherwise than as a word of limitation and if so, when. We must consider whether or may not he nsed for and and vice versa where the apparent dominating intent of the grantor calls for that interpretation. And we must take all those words in the sense indicated by the whole instrument, and the object to be subserved thereby. Let us look to those matters.

*447In the first place, learned counsel on neither side take the position that the change in phraseology in the disposition made of the Ryland one-third, as over against the disposition of the Buford third, is of any significance by itself. Both sides present their case at our bar on the implied theory that the deed should be so construed that all three thirds are subject to the same limitations in so far as the question of the remainder being vested or contingent is concerned. Put differently (barring for the present the will), the case is presented to us on the theory by appellant that if, by the deed, he loses all interest in the Ryland third then he by that token loses all. interest in the Buford third. So, respondent’s counsel submit the case on. the theory that if Legrand Gr. Buford did not take a vested remainder in his third he took no vested remainder in the Ryland third. Such concessions, we take it, proceed on the broad and sensible idea that-it would be unreasonable to conclude that the grandmother would intentionally introduce such confusion in the devolution of the estate as would spring on the theory there was created a vested remainder in one-third and a contingent remainder in the other. That,, making “confusion worse confounded,” would be a mischievous interpretation not to be made so long as-there were two ways about it.

In the next place the general rule is that the word heirs has a “technical” or'“artistic” meaning in wills and deeds. Ordinarily it is a word of limitation ascontradistinguished from one of purchase and a party coming within that designation is held to take by descent or inheritance and not as a purchaser. [Garrett v. Wiltse, 252 Mo. 699.] The curious may consult-that case as an attempt to throw light on the ordinary use of the word heirs as a word of limitation and not of purchase. But an exception to the rule is as well established as the rule itself, viz., that if the will or deed shows by its context that the word was-*448used as one of purchase, that is, as equivalent to children or grandchildren, as one not indicative of an expanding of the estate of the ancestor into an estate of inheritance, hut as one designating a new class of beneficiaries, as one operating to give the estate imported by it to the heirs described not derivatively but originally, then the word heirs is a word of purchase, but the presumption is it was used as a word of limitation and so it is taken unless the other meaning appears from the intendment of the instrument. [Garrett v. Wiltse, supra; Roberts v. Crume, 173 Mo. l. c. 579 et seq.] The Chew-Keller case (100 Mo. l. c. 369) formulates the doctrine of a line of others, prior and subsequent, in this way:

“The word 'heirs’ will be considered as a word of limitation and not of purchase, unless the will shows clearly that it is used to designate a new class of beneficiaries. [2 Washb. Real Prop (5 Ed.), 654; Landon v. Moore, 45 Conn. 422; Thurber v. Chambers, 66 N. Y. 42; Linton v. Laycock, 33 Ohio St. 136.] So the word 'heirs’ will be held to mean child or children when necessary to carry out the clear intention of the • testator. [Haverstick’s Appeal, 103 Pa. St. 394.] Indeed, these rules apply as well to deeds as to wills. [Rines v. Mansfield, 96 Mo. 394; Waddell v. Waddell, 99 Mo. 338.]”

The exception to the general rule requiring the word heirs to be taken as á word of limitation, i. e., the exception we have been speaking of, which, when the context points the way, reqires it to be taken as one of purchase, is merely putting in force the master rule for interpreting a deed or will by the intention of the grantor or testator. Agreeable thereto is Waddell v. Waddell, 99 Mo. l. c. 345-6, whereat we said:

“There is no lack of authority in support of the position that, if the words used in the context warrant it, and such construction will carry into effect the manifest intention that moved the execution of the *449■deed or the signing of the will, then such intention will be made effectual, and the word heirs will be construed as meaning children, and vice versa, and children as issue, grandchildren or descendants, if- the justice or reason of the case requires it. [4 Kent (13 Ed.), 419; 3 Wash. Real Property (5 Ed.),- 282; Haverstick’s Appeal, 103 Pa. St. 394; Warn v. Brown, 102 Pa. St. 347.] And the fact that a deed is the instrument' requiring such liberality of construction; provided such construction is just and reasonable and accords with the evident intent of the grantor, and it is consistent with the principles of law, should not be allowed to defeat such liberal and beneficial construction any more than if the instrument under examination were a will. [Huss v. Stephens, 51 Pa. St. 282, and cases cited; Wyth v. Blackman, 1 Vesey, Sr., 196; Royle v. Hamilton, 4 Vesey, 437.] ”

By the same cardinal rule of construction whereby the intention is first ascertained and then made effective, the word or may be read and or vice versa. [29 Cye. 1505 et seq.; State v. Bulling, 100 Mo. l. c. 93; Maguire v. Moore, 108 Mo. l. c. 273.]

Or and and are not treated as interchangeable in judicial exposition; for “or” does not mean “and” nor does “and” mean “or” in precise speaking or writing, but when the literal reading introduces absurdity or hardship the one word may be put as a substitute for the other, if thereby obscurity is not im troduced, but, to the contrary, the obvious intent is subserved.

There is another principle to be reckoned with, namely, in case of doubt the law favors vested estates and an estate should be held to vest at the earliest possible moment, unless'a contrary intention is clearly manifested in the grant. [Tindall v. Tindall, 167 Mo. l. c. 225.]

Mindful of each and every of the premises, we *450have critically studied this deed in the light of those applicable principles of construction and those applicable rules of law and, not without hesitation at first, for the question is nice, have come to the conclusion that Legrand Gr. Buford did not take a vested remainder at the time of the execution of his mother’s deed, nor, being dead at the appointed time, did he ever take a vested remainder. We think the whole clear intendment of the conveyance leads up to the reasonable conclusion that the title was not intended to vest in any other than the trustee until the death of William M. and Eusebia Buford and that on the death of the survivor of them, then, and not till then, was the estate in remainder to vest. Our conclusion is also that then it was to vest on the happening of - a contingency and in the alternative. The contingency was that Legrand Gr. Buford should then be alive. The alternative was that if he be dead it should vest in his heirs and that the grantor meant to use the word heirs in the sense of children and not in an artistic or technical sense. Any other view assigns no meaning or office at all to the phrase* <£or to their heirs, should they or either of them be dead.” Did she not have the legal right to say when the estate should vest, and in whom? Did she not exercise that right? Did its exercise contravene any rule of law? In respondent’s view that phrase might as well be eliminated and when the grantor spoke those words she might as well (nay, much better) have held her tongue. But the common sense of it lies another way. The just view is to assign an office to those words and not make of them an empty phrase or a rhetorical flourish to perish by construction. We are very well aware of the process of reasoning by which that phrase could be eliminated as meaningless, to wit, that the bare word heirs adds nothing to the deed under our statute (R. S. 1909,-sec. 2870')' and that, as no living person can have an heir, death was necessary to create *451an heir in the law of conveyancing without saying so. Therefore saying so avails nothing. But as the phrase is introduced by the word or and, taken as a whole, it fills a substantial office in designating who should take the estate at the instant of time when by the command of the deed it was to vest, in case death had interposed prior to that time, we are loath to apply overnice refinements and subtleties to rid the deed of that pregnant phrase solemnly set down.

There is much refinement in the learning on contingent and vested remainders. The definitions of the one and the other are well marked down in the books. The difficulty has always been in close cases to apply, those definitions to the particular facts in judgment in each particular case. Sometimes, in judicially (but injudiciously) undertaking to add matter expansive or explanatory of those definitions, it has resulted in trying to explain something already obscure by something more obscure. Obscurum per obscurius. We shall avoid that pitfall. Blackstone defines a contingent remainder thus (2 Bl. Comm. *169):

“Where the estate in remainder is limited to take effect, either to a dubious and uncertain person, or upon a dubious and uncertain event; so that the particular estate may chance to be determined and the remainder never take effect.”

Bingham on Descents (p. 125) defines a contingent remainder thus:

“A contingent remainder is that part of an estate in fee bestowed conditionally upon one of two or more persons, which one is not certain; the rest of which is bestowed definitely upon some other person or persons named. The part not thus definitely disposed of to some particular person or persons, is provided to go to some other person or persons of two or more named, which of the two or more is left uncertain, and is to be fixed and made certain by succeeding events. The remainder itself is certain, but the pern *452son who is to have it is uncertain until it is determined by the events named.”

Those definitions we approved in Dickerson v. Dickerson, 211 Mo. l. c. 490.

Minor (adopting from Fearne) defines it (2 Minor Inst., p. 337):

“A contingent remainder is a remainder limited to an uncertain person, or on an uncertain event, or so limited to a certain person, and on a certain event, as not to possess the present capacity to take effect in possession, should the possession become vacant.”

Fearne points out, that (1 Fearne, Rem., pp. 373-4) . . two or more several contingent fees may be limited merely as substitutes or alternatives one for the other, and not to interfere; but so that one only take effect, and every subsequent limitation be a disposition substituted in the room of the former, if the former should fail of effect. [Diving an example.] And this sort of alternative limitation was termed a contingency with a double aspect . . . and these were limitations of which the one was not expectant upon, and to take effect after the other, but were co-temporary; to commence from the same period, not indeed together, but the one to take effect in lieu of the other, if that failed.”

Washburn, speaking to contingent remainders, says (2 Wash, on Real Prop. [5 Ed.], p. 608):

“A contingent remainder is one whose vesting, or taking effect in interest is, by the terms of its creation, made to depend upon some contingency which may never happen at all, or may not happen within a requisite prescribed time, by reason whereof it§ capacity of vesting or taking effect in interest may be forever defeated. Or, in the language of another, it is one ‘which is limited to a person who is not ascertained at the time of the limitation, or which is referred for its vesting or taking effect in interest to an event which may not happen till after the determina*453tion of the particular estate,’ or upon the happening of some uncertain and doubtful event, or where the person to whom it is limited is not ascertained or yet in being. . . . Until the contingency has happened, the remainder is rather a possibility in its character than an estate; although it has become a familiar quality of an estate, to understand and apply which involves much nice learning. It is always an executory interest from its very nature.”

Says this court, through Black, J. (Rodney v. Landau, 104 Mo. l. c. 257):

“The vested or contingent character of a remainder is determined, not by the uncertainty of enjoying the possession, but by the uncertainty of the vesting of the estate.”

Having those definitions in mind, we lay great stress on the fact that a time was nominated in the deed itself for the estate to vest in those who were to take the remainder, and that at that crucial time there was a contingency provided, and an alternative sprang, pointing the course the title was to take in one of two ways — one way in case of death, the other in case of life.

While, as said, the case is a close one, bristling with difficulties, yet we think the conclusion announced is well within (if not all the facts, at least) the reasoning of the late eases of Buxton v. Kroeger, 219 Mo. l. c. 245; Dickerson v. Dickerson, 211 Mo. l. c. 490, and others collated in appellant’s brief from our own and the highest courts of other states. The tendency of modern decisions on questions of .contingent and vested remainders has been more and more to break away from the technical refinements of the old common law learning (Utter v. Sidman, 170 Mo. 284; Williamson v. Brown, 195 Mo. 313; Godman v. Simmons, 113 Mo. 122; O’Day v. Meadows, 194 Mo. 588; Buxton v. Kroeger, 219 Mo. l. c. 245) and allow deeds to be effective in line with the intent of their faces as *454'gathered from the everyday, good sense of their language.

If it be asked where was the equitable estate in remainder after Eusebia executed her deed by delivery, the answer must be that it is of no consequence where it was. It did not have to vest at the making of the deed. Under the law of real property as now administered in this jurisdiction, a deed may “create a freehold estate in futuro, that is, a contingent estate per auter vie without creating at the same time and by the same deed or instrument a particular estate to support it,” as required by the old learning. [O’Day v. Meadows, 194 Mo. l. c. 621 et seq.; R. S. 1909, sec. 2876; Buxton v. Kroeger, 219 Mo. 224.]

On the agreed case on the facts, on the reasoning employed and the authorities cited the conclusion must be the trial judge, whose learning and wisdom in the law we rate high, erred in applying the law to the agreed case, and, to use the formula of the old Greeks, he will pardon us for not agreeing with him. There are cases the reasoning of which would possibly sustain the judgment, and others contra. Uniformity, however serviceable, has not always been possible even in judicial exposition although it proceeds on contemplation and not impulse. When Lord Sandwich complained in the House of Lords that he did not understand what orthodoxy and heterodoxy meant, and Bishop Warburton whispered in an aside, “Orthodoxy, my Lord, is my doxy; heterodoxy is another man’s doxy,” the remark no little illuminates some judicial doctrines on remainders. Without taking an extreme position in animadverting upon this doxy and against that, yet it is clear to me the conclusion arrived at and announced is sustained by reason and principle. This conclusion makes it unnecessary to consider the question of intestacy as to the Ryland one-third, bottomed on a construction of Legrand G. Burford’s will; *455for it makes that will empty and wholly inoperative as a devise of the land in question.

Accordingly the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to make the interlocutory judgment in partition effective in favor of appellant and to modify the final judgment on the report of sale and the distribution of the proceeds the same way.

We do not understand the appeal as intended to upset the sale itself. As we gather the controversy ranges around the right of appellant to a share in the land and his right to the proceeds of that share (now in the receiver’s hands) as between him and Lida M..Buford. The directions encompass that end and protect appellant’s rights as herein determined.

All concur.
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