Storer, J.
A single question is presented for our determination: What estate did Stevenson Eeddish take under the devise from his father? Was it a term for his life only, a fee simple, or a fee tail ?
The defendant claims to hold an estate in fee, while the [286]*286plaintiff's allege their father, when he made the conveyance, held an estate for life only.
Where the intention of a testator can be ascertained, we need not resort to any artificial rule to limit or extend a devise.
If the purpose of the testator can be determined without violence to the language he has used, and there is no ambiguity in the terms employed, it is our duty so to interpret the whole instrument that we shall give effect to what we are satisfied was the object of the testator in disposing of his property.
The will before us was probated in December, 1831, when the rule relied upon by the plaintiff was admitted to be the law in Ohio. McFeely’s Heirs v. Moore, 5 Ohio, 469. But by the wills act of 1840, sec. 47, 1 Curwen, 69, it was provided, “ When lands, tenements, or hereditaments are given by will to any person for life, and after his decease to his heirs in fee, or by words to that effect, the conveyance shall be construed to vest an estate for life only to such first taken, and a remainder in fee simple to his heirs.” This section was re-enacted in May, 1852. 3 Curwen, 1911.
From the fact that our legislature, so soon after the decision in Moore v. McFeely was rendered, declared that the rule in Shelley’s case should no longer be followed in construing devises, and the general unwillingness of the profession to adopt it, regarding it as a technical and arbitrary exposition of the law, we ought not to apyly it in any case, even if the statute had not been passed, unless we were required to do so to uphold a devise that would otherwise fail. Whatever estate was devised by the testator to his son became vested before the statute of 1840; but we do not feel bound to regard it with any more favor than we should if the decision in McFeely and Moore was still obligatory. In King’s Heirs v. King’s Adm’rs, 12 Ohio, 390, follo’wing their former opinion in McFeely v. Moore, the Supreme Court held that the rule in Shelley’s case, although not then applicable [287]*287to wills taking effect since 1840, was in all other respects a rule of property in Ohio; but this opinion was afterward reversed in King v. Beck, 15 Ohio, 559, where it was held that the rule referred to would not be allowed to prevail against the intention of the testator, if that intention could be effectuated without creating an estate forbidden by law.
The effect of this decision, we suppose, was in all cases where the limitation in the will was to the first taker for life by express words, to deny the application of the rule referred to, regarding the section 47 of the wills act as declaratory of the law previously existing, not as establishing a new rule, but removing, all doubt as to what the law really was. We may therefore conclude, that in every case where there is a clear expression of the testator’s purpose by the language of the devise, that the devise should hold for life only, that intention should be adhered to, without resorting to a mode of proceeding purely arbitrary to explain it.
The learned judge who decided the case of McFeely v. Moore, seemed to regard the rule with more veneration for its antiquity and the learning with which it had been discussed in England, without any particular reason for its applicability to our institutions, and it has since met with no particular favor with the profession in Ohio. The rule itself has been abolished by statute in New York, Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Illinois, and in Mississippi, New Hampshire, and New Jersey, it is applicable only to grants, and we think it should not be applied in this State to wills probated before 1840, except in extreme cases, where no other course can be followed.
We need not refer to the bitter opposition the rule encountered in-its early history, until after the conflict of nearly two centuries it was finally confirmed in Perrin v. Blake. Sufficient is it for us to feel that it would never have originated in the Hnited States, where no such condition of things existed which had induced the English courts to introduce it into the body of the common law before the revolution.
If we refer to the devise of the testator to }iis son, it vests [288]*288the devisee by explicit language with an estate for life and to his heirs, and in case of the decease of the devisee before he arrives at his majority, and without lawful issue, there should be a remainder over to the children of the testator’s sister and brother.
It is argued that the word “ heirs ” following the estate for life, there being no word preceding it designating the class of heirs, must be taken to mean heirs generally; but we think when taken in connection with the subsequent part of the devise, which gives the estate for life where the children of the devisee are named, as restricting the term “heirs” to the issue of the devisee, thus creating an estate tail, and vesting a fee simple in the children of the devisee as first donees in tail under the statute. It is admitted that the devisee, the testator’s son, not only arrived at full age, but the plaintiff's are his children, who take, we are satisfied, no estate from their father by descent, but are vested with an estate by purchase, by virtue" of their grandfather’s will.
The words “ heir, heirs, children, and issue,” are frequently regarded as convertible, and may be construed, taking i-nto consideration the whole will, to mean either one or the other, as its proper construction may require; thus, a devise to heirs may be interpreted to mean children or issue, and either restricted or enlarged, as may be necessary to carry out the purpose of the testator. Cosby et al v. Lee’s Ex’rs, 2 Disney, 460; King v. Beck, 15 Ohio, 559; and the well-considered case of Bowers v. Porter, 4 Pick. 209, where Chief Justice Parker reviews the whole law on the subject.
Judge Redfield very aptly says, in his late work on Wills, vol. 2, p. 204, that the rule in Shelley’s case has more commonly “led one side of the real intention of the devisor than almost any other;” and of a similar opinion was our Supreme Court, when they decided the case of King v. Beck, 15 Ohio, 559, on a will probated before 1840, where they held, to use the language of Judge Read, who gave the opinion, “that they had no disposition to strain a point to [289]*289bring a case within the operation of the rule in Shelley’s case, a rule, he said, which had its origin in feudal tenure, and was first adopted to secure to the lord the profits and perquisites incident to inheritances, and as an afterthought, the additional reason that it was necessary to prevent an abeyance of the fee. It is at least an artificial technicality, and just in proportion as it lacks reason, it has won upon the affections of the profession; but it is the duty of this eourt to conform its decisions, when we attempt to walk by the light of precedent from another country, to the nature of our institutions.”
While we admire the touching lamentation of Chancellor Kent, upon the abolition of the rule in New York, we have no disposition with him to mourn over its fate.
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Storer, J.
A single question is presented for our determination: What estate did Stevenson Eeddish take under the devise from his father? Was it a term for his life only, a fee simple, or a fee tail ?
The defendant claims to hold an estate in fee, while the [286]*286plaintiff's allege their father, when he made the conveyance, held an estate for life only.
Where the intention of a testator can be ascertained, we need not resort to any artificial rule to limit or extend a devise.
If the purpose of the testator can be determined without violence to the language he has used, and there is no ambiguity in the terms employed, it is our duty so to interpret the whole instrument that we shall give effect to what we are satisfied was the object of the testator in disposing of his property.
The will before us was probated in December, 1831, when the rule relied upon by the plaintiff was admitted to be the law in Ohio. McFeely’s Heirs v. Moore, 5 Ohio, 469. But by the wills act of 1840, sec. 47, 1 Curwen, 69, it was provided, “ When lands, tenements, or hereditaments are given by will to any person for life, and after his decease to his heirs in fee, or by words to that effect, the conveyance shall be construed to vest an estate for life only to such first taken, and a remainder in fee simple to his heirs.” This section was re-enacted in May, 1852. 3 Curwen, 1911.
From the fact that our legislature, so soon after the decision in Moore v. McFeely was rendered, declared that the rule in Shelley’s case should no longer be followed in construing devises, and the general unwillingness of the profession to adopt it, regarding it as a technical and arbitrary exposition of the law, we ought not to apyly it in any case, even if the statute had not been passed, unless we were required to do so to uphold a devise that would otherwise fail. Whatever estate was devised by the testator to his son became vested before the statute of 1840; but we do not feel bound to regard it with any more favor than we should if the decision in McFeely and Moore was still obligatory. In King’s Heirs v. King’s Adm’rs, 12 Ohio, 390, follo’wing their former opinion in McFeely v. Moore, the Supreme Court held that the rule in Shelley’s case, although not then applicable [287]*287to wills taking effect since 1840, was in all other respects a rule of property in Ohio; but this opinion was afterward reversed in King v. Beck, 15 Ohio, 559, where it was held that the rule referred to would not be allowed to prevail against the intention of the testator, if that intention could be effectuated without creating an estate forbidden by law.
The effect of this decision, we suppose, was in all cases where the limitation in the will was to the first taker for life by express words, to deny the application of the rule referred to, regarding the section 47 of the wills act as declaratory of the law previously existing, not as establishing a new rule, but removing, all doubt as to what the law really was. We may therefore conclude, that in every case where there is a clear expression of the testator’s purpose by the language of the devise, that the devise should hold for life only, that intention should be adhered to, without resorting to a mode of proceeding purely arbitrary to explain it.
The learned judge who decided the case of McFeely v. Moore, seemed to regard the rule with more veneration for its antiquity and the learning with which it had been discussed in England, without any particular reason for its applicability to our institutions, and it has since met with no particular favor with the profession in Ohio. The rule itself has been abolished by statute in New York, Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Illinois, and in Mississippi, New Hampshire, and New Jersey, it is applicable only to grants, and we think it should not be applied in this State to wills probated before 1840, except in extreme cases, where no other course can be followed.
We need not refer to the bitter opposition the rule encountered in-its early history, until after the conflict of nearly two centuries it was finally confirmed in Perrin v. Blake. Sufficient is it for us to feel that it would never have originated in the Hnited States, where no such condition of things existed which had induced the English courts to introduce it into the body of the common law before the revolution.
If we refer to the devise of the testator to }iis son, it vests [288]*288the devisee by explicit language with an estate for life and to his heirs, and in case of the decease of the devisee before he arrives at his majority, and without lawful issue, there should be a remainder over to the children of the testator’s sister and brother.
It is argued that the word “ heirs ” following the estate for life, there being no word preceding it designating the class of heirs, must be taken to mean heirs generally; but we think when taken in connection with the subsequent part of the devise, which gives the estate for life where the children of the devisee are named, as restricting the term “heirs” to the issue of the devisee, thus creating an estate tail, and vesting a fee simple in the children of the devisee as first donees in tail under the statute. It is admitted that the devisee, the testator’s son, not only arrived at full age, but the plaintiff's are his children, who take, we are satisfied, no estate from their father by descent, but are vested with an estate by purchase, by virtue" of their grandfather’s will.
The words “ heir, heirs, children, and issue,” are frequently regarded as convertible, and may be construed, taking i-nto consideration the whole will, to mean either one or the other, as its proper construction may require; thus, a devise to heirs may be interpreted to mean children or issue, and either restricted or enlarged, as may be necessary to carry out the purpose of the testator. Cosby et al v. Lee’s Ex’rs, 2 Disney, 460; King v. Beck, 15 Ohio, 559; and the well-considered case of Bowers v. Porter, 4 Pick. 209, where Chief Justice Parker reviews the whole law on the subject.
Judge Redfield very aptly says, in his late work on Wills, vol. 2, p. 204, that the rule in Shelley’s case has more commonly “led one side of the real intention of the devisor than almost any other;” and of a similar opinion was our Supreme Court, when they decided the case of King v. Beck, 15 Ohio, 559, on a will probated before 1840, where they held, to use the language of Judge Read, who gave the opinion, “that they had no disposition to strain a point to [289]*289bring a case within the operation of the rule in Shelley’s case, a rule, he said, which had its origin in feudal tenure, and was first adopted to secure to the lord the profits and perquisites incident to inheritances, and as an afterthought, the additional reason that it was necessary to prevent an abeyance of the fee. It is at least an artificial technicality, and just in proportion as it lacks reason, it has won upon the affections of the profession; but it is the duty of this eourt to conform its decisions, when we attempt to walk by the light of precedent from another country, to the nature of our institutions.”
While we admire the touching lamentation of Chancellor Kent, upon the abolition of the rule in New York, we have no disposition with him to mourn over its fate. 4 Kent’s Com. 267, note.
On a careful consideration of all the questions made by counsel, we are all of opinion that the testator intended to devise a life estate only to his son in the property described in the petition, with remainder over to his grandchildren, whether in fee or in tail it is .immaterial for the purposes of this action, as in either case the plaintiff must recover.
We have been favored, both by oral and written argument, with a very able discussion of the law of devises, more especially on the proper application of the rule in Shelley’s case to the devise of the testator to his son; but while we have been impressed with the thorough research of counsel into the ancient law, as expounded by Eearne and Perkins, and the more modern adjudications of the courts, while we admit they have so well vindicated the maxim “ sa'ius est petere fontes, quam sectari rivulos,” we are, nevertheless, fully persuaded the rule we have discussed is not one of construction to which we are bound implicitly to .adhere.
On the whole case, judgment will be rendered for the plaintiffs.