80 Ga. 391 | Ga. | 1888
The will was made and probated in 1847, long before the adoption of the code, for which reason §2250, if not a mere restatement of- the prior law, has no application to the case. The rule of decision must be found in the law as it existed when the will took effect.
The testator devised to his daughter certain land “ to her and her children, free from the disposition of any future husband.” The daughter then had no children, but bore children after the testator’s death.
Under one of the resolutions in Wilde’s case, 6 Ooke R. 17, as heretofore expounded by this court, this devise, creating no express estate for life in the daughter, but connecting unborn children directly with her in conveying the fee, would in England have created an estate tail. Wiley Parish, & Co. vs. Smith, 3 Ga. 551; Jossey vs. White, 28 Ga. 270, 271 ; Sandford vs. Sandford, 58 Ga. 260. The law of Georgia inhibits entails, and by the act of 1821 (Cobb’s Dig. 169,) enforces the inhibition by enlarging them into estates in fee simple.
There is nothing in this will to negative an estate tail but the exclusion of the daughter’s future husband, and that can have no such effect for the reason that his exclusion is equally consistent with both kinds of estate here in question, to-wit, an estate in the daughter for life only
Judgment affirmed.