Thе Supreme Court considered that by the terms of the will there was a devise in trust by implication of that part of the homestead farm described in the second clause to John Hover; and that, as the trust term was to continue during the minorities of the three grandchildren, the devise was void as creating an illegal perpetuity. But it was held that by rejecting this void devise there would remain a direct and immediate devise in fee to the grandchildren, subject, of course, to be defeatеd by the happening of the event by which the executory limitations were to take effect, and it was adjudged that such was the effect of the will. I concur in the result at which the Supreme Court arrived, but not upon the precise grounds on which it is placed in the opinion. That supposes the testator’s intention to" have been to withhold the legal estate from these devisees until they should all have arrived at the age of twenty-one years, and in the meantime to vest the title in the trustee. The change wrought in the will, by the application of this theory, would be to anticipate the gift to the grandchildren by the whole period of their minorities, to transform a devise, which was intended to be distant and contingent, into one which will be immediate and direct, and to subvert the power of management during the nonage of the children, which was carefully provided for by the testator. The cases referred to in the opinions do not go the length of authorizing so great a departure from the provisions of a will. In
Savage
v.
Burnham
(
Gott
v.
Cook
(
But I am of opinion that John Hover did not, by the terms of this will, take any estate in the part of the homestead devised for the benefit of the grand-children. There are no words importing a devise to him, and he is not called a trustee. Ample powers of management, and a right to receive the rents and profits, are indeed given, but these duties could be very well executed under a trust power. So far as the grand-children, who are the principal beneficiaries, are concerned, they might be performed by a general guardian. The land, it is true, is subjected to other charges than those which concern the grand-children, and it might be convenient to have them enforced through the agency of a trustee. That, however, is not indispensable. The creditors and the widow have a lien on the land, which may readily be enforced at their suit by the judgment of a court possessing equity jurisdiction. The inquiry then is, do the provisions of the will manifest an intention in the testator to- vest an estate in John Hover. To devise an estate by implication, there must be such a strong probability of an intention to give one, thаt the contrary cannot be supposed. (Jarman on Wills, 465.) Devises by implication are sustainable only upon the principle of carrying into effect the intention of the testator, and unless it appears, upon an examination of the whole will, that such must have been the intention, there is no devise by implication.
(Rathbone
v. Dyckman,
The cases which are relied on, in the opinion of the Supreme Court, though they furnish strong examples of the implication of a trust estate, do not, I think, require that we should affirm the existence of such an estate in this case.
In
Bradley
v.
Amidon
(
*601 But I am of opinion that the court ought- never to imply a trust from general language, where the duties committed to the alleged trustee could be executed under a trust power, and where the trust estate, if held to result from the language and general dispositions of the will, would be a violation of the statute. Here, if a devise in trust is held to be created, the trust term, being to continue during their minorities, is clearly void. The will should, therefore, I • think, be construed as conferring a trust power of management-, the estate vesting in the meantime in the grand-children, under the express devise to them. If the language of a deed or will is susceptible of two constructions, and by adopting one of them it would be unlawful, while if the other were follоwed it would be valid, the latter interpretation should be given to it, ut res magis valeat quamqgereab.
The difference between this position and the views of the Supreme Court would, at first, appear to be slight. Both reject the alleged trust estate in John Hover. But in the argument of the opinion of the Supreme Court, a trust term is held to be created by implication, but being illegal, it is supposed that the dispositions of the will may be so changed as that the grand-children may take an immediate estate, where none was intended to be conferred on them until the expiration of the three minorities. The judgment of the Supreme .Court would apparently have been the same if there had been a formal and technical devise in trust to John Hover during the three minorities. If such had been the case, my opinion, as I have said, is that the estate would have descended to the heirs-at-law. I have, therefore, attempted to show that there was no estate, but only a power conferred upon John Hover, and that the grand-children took a fee simple conditional under the formal devise to them. It appeared to me material to state these distinctions, as the case might otherwise .furnish a precedent for modifying the provisions of a will in a manner which might prove dangerous, and which does' not appear to be warranted by prior adjudications.
*602
The plaintiffs had no right to institute this suit, to settle the construction of the will. They were, at best, оnly heirs-at-law of the testator, and if the devise of the homestead was void, as they contend, they had only to bring their direct action in the nature of ejectment to recover their shares in the premises.
(Brown
v. Smith,
That part of the judgment of the Supreme Court, adjudging the supposed trust estate in John Hover to be void, does not create any embarrassment. According to our judgment, no trust еstate was devised to him. The judgment, in this respect, accomplishes no practical result. The grand-children should not be prejudiced by the judgment against John Hover.
That part of the judgment of the Supreme Court which has been appealed from, does not appear to require any modification.
The judgment of the Supreme Court should be affirmed.
All the judges concurring,
Judgment affirmed.
