Opinion op the court by
Appirming.
In 1890 William Shelby executed a deed for 153 acres of land to John W. Folden and his wife, Georgiana, the daughter of the grantor, “during their natural lives 'only, and at their death the same is to revert to the legal heirs of the party of the first part.” In 1888, W. W. tShelby ■and wife conveyed- 216 acres o,f land to John W. Folden and his wife, Georgiana, “to have and to hold the aforesaid-land 'to the parties 'oif the second part, and, upon their death without having been disposed of by deed or will, the same is to descend to the heirs of said Georgiana Fol-den.” William Shelby in 1879 had made a will in which he devised the 153-aere tract to Georgiana Folden in fee
Nothing is- involved except the construction of the two deeds. Appellants’ claim is that, by the deeds in question, Mrs. Folden and her husband would, at common law, have been tenants by entireties, with right of survivorship upon the death of either, but by the ox>eration of section 2143, Kentucky Statutes, they became tenants in common, without any right of survivorship, and that upon the deat*h of Mm. Folden an undivided one-half interest in the land conveyed in the deed of William Shelby reverted
The common-law right of survivorship in joint tenancy was abolished by the act of 1796 (now section 2348, Kentucky Statutes), but tenancy by entireties of husband and wife remained as at common law until the enactment in 1852 of what is now section 2143, Kentucky Statutes. That section is as follows: “If real estate be conveyed or devised to husband and wife, unless a right of survivorship is expressly provided for, there shall be no mutual right to the entirety by survivorship between them, but they shall take as tenants in common, and the respective moieties be subject to the respective rights of the ' husband or wife as herein fixed, with all other , incidents to such tenancy.” Appellants contend that, as a tenancy by entireties might exist in an estate in fee, in tail for life, or for years (Hardenburg v. Hardenburg, 18 Am. Dec. 382; Hiles v. Fisher (N. Y. App.) 39 N. E. 337, (30 L. R. A. 305), the statute must be applied— and was so intended — to all holdings which at common law would have been tenancies by entireties, and. that there is no right of survivorship in any such case; the tenants holding as if unmarried, as tenants in common. Elliott v. Nickols, 4 Bush, 502. On behalf of appellee it is contended that the section quoted does not apply to a conveyance to husband and wife jointly of a life estate only; and, further, that if it could be applied to a life es-