Whatever the technicalities of the law may formerly have required in the construction of deeds, the modern doctrine does not favor the application of such technical rules as will defeat the obvious intention of the grantor — not the unexpressed purpose which may have existed in his mind, of course, but his intention as expressed in the language he has employed; for it is an elementary rule of construction that, the intention of the parties shall prevail unless it is in conflict with some unyielding canon of construction or settled rule of property, or is repugnant to the terms of the grant. Such intention, as a general rule, must be sought in the terms of the instrument; but if the words used leave the intention in doubt, resort may be had to the circumstances attending the execution of the instrument and the situation of the parties at that time— the tendency of modern decisions being to treat all uncertainties in a conveyance as ambiguities to be explained by ascertaining in the manner indicated the intention of the parties. Discussing the question in
Gudger v. White,
Observing the rule that some effect must be given to every word, and that all the provisions of the instrument must be harmonized if possible, in our interpretation of the deed presented in the record, we must consider not only the habendum — “to have and to bold ... to the said party of the second part, bis beirs and assigns,” which indicates a fee simple — but also the language in the premises which the appellee assails on the ground of its insufficiency to create a fee, namely, “to said Adelai Seawell and bis heirs by bis mother and assigns.”
In
Wilkins v. Norman,
As we have said, the habendum indicates a fee simple; if the words “by his mother,” or even the phrase “and bis heirs by his mother,” bad been omitted, the premises also would have conveyed a fee. C. S., 901. It therefore becomes necessary to determine whether the limitation to the grantee’s heirs by bis mother is repugnant to or irreconcilable with the habendum.
*84 The grantee’s mother was the grantor’s daughter. She died at the birth of the grantee, who is the plaintiff. There are n'o brothers or sisters or representatives of such on the maternal side, but several brothers and sisters of the half-blood, children of the grantee’s father by the second marriage. When the deed was executed the plaintiff’s mother had been dead many years, and the grantor knew that the plaintiff was her only child.
At common law a conditional fee was a fee restrained to some particular heirs exclusive of others.
An estate given to a man and the heirs of his body was called a fee simple on condition that the grantee had issue, and by virtue of the statute de dowis conditionalibus (13 Ed., 1), 'a fee conditional limited to the heirs of one’s body was denominated a fee tail. Our statute converts estates tail into estates in fee simple, and Chancellor Kent says that conditional fees at common law, as known and defined prior to the statute de donis, have generally partaken of the fate of estates in fee tail, and have not been revived in this country. 4 Kent’s Com., 15.
Now, let us apply these principles. It is obvious that the estate described in the premises is neither a life estate nor a fee tail, and that the grantor did not intend to include in the words “heirs by his mother” other children of the grantee’s mother, for he knew there were none; and if the granting clause could possibly be construed as an estate to the grantee and his collateral heirs on his mother’s side defeasible upon the failure of such heirs or as an intent to limit the estate to any particular line of descent as’ a fee conditional at common law, such estate is enlarged by the habendum into an absolute fee simple. Our conclusion is, therefore, that the plaintiff is seized of an estate in fee and is-entitled to the specific performance of his contract. The judgment of the Superior Court is
Reversed.
