This is an appeal from a judgment entered on the decision of a justice at a Special Term in Jefferson county.
The action is for the partition of a farm, situated in Brown-ville, Jefferson county, and the case requires a construction of the will of Isaac L. Roseboom, who died at Brownville aforesaid in October, 1871.. The disposing portions of the will are as follows: After providing that all his debts shall be paid and discharged, the testator proceeds to dispose of his estate in these Avords, viz.:
“I give and bequeath to my beloved wife, Susan, one-third part of all my property, both real and personal, and to have the control of my farm as long as she remains my AvídoAV ; and I wish my son George to have the first privilege of carrying on the farm as my wife may see fit and proper, and at the death of my wife all my property, both real and personal, to be equally divided betAveen my eight children.”
On the 27th day of August, 1874, after the will had been admitted to probate, Susan Roseboom, the AvidoAV, duly conveyed to the plaintiff all the rights Avhich she had acquired to the property of Isaac L. Roseboom, under the said last will and testament. The farm in question Avas all the real estate of Avhich Isaac L. Roseboom died seized.
*313Tho said Susan Roseboom died February 20, 1877, and the plaintiff commenced this suit for a partition of the farm in the same month. The plaintiff claimed, in his complaint, to be the owner of an undivided five-twelfths of the said farm, to wit: One-third thereof by virtue of the said conveyance from Susan, the widow, and one-twelfth as devisee of Isaac L. Roseboom.
The complaint also alleged that one of the defendants, John D. Roseboom, was, at the time of commencing the suit, in possession of the farm, and receiving the rents and profits, “ or mesne profits” and enjoying tho use and occupation thereof, and prayed for an accounting for such use and occupation, and rents and profits; and if partition could not be made without great prejudice and injury to the rights of tho parties, or some of them, then that the premises be sold under the order and direction of the court, and that the proceeds of the sale, after paying the costs and expenses, be divided among the parties according to their respective rights and interest in tho premises.
The parties defendant were the other seven children, and their respective wives and husbands. The defendants all appeared and answered, and ask for a construction of the will, claiming that the effect of it was to give Susan Roseboom, the widow, an estate for life in the one-third of the real and personal property, with tho use of the remainder so long as she remained the widow of tho testator, and that each of the said children is entitled to an undivided eighth of the whole farm.
The answer of the defendants also set up that the deed from Susan Roseboom to the plaintiff was obtained by fraud and unduo influence, but of this they gave no evidence on the trial. The justice at the Special Term held upon the construction of the will, that the defendants were correct in claiming that each was entitled to one-eighth of the farm, upon the theory that tho provisions of the will whereby tho testator gave one-third thereof to the said Susan, and afterwards directed the division of his entire property equally among his eight childi’en after the death of Susan, -were inconsistent, and irreconcilable, and that the last clause of said will controlled the foregoing, and evinced an intent on the part of testator to give the said Susan only a life estate in the one-third.
To the conclusion of law thus found the plaintiff excepted, and *314appealed from, so much of the judgment as is founded thereon. The justice also found that the defendant, John D. Eoscboom, had received the rents, issues and profits of the premises, and enjoyed the use and occupation thereof since the death of the- widow, and that the reasonable value “ of such use and occupation,” was the sum of $325 per year, and that he, said John D. Eoscboom, account to the other parties to the action “ for said use and occupation and the mesne profits so received by him at the said rate of $325 per year,”' in the manner thereinafter stated.
The defendant, John D. Eoscboom, excepted to this portion of the findings and conclusions of law, and appeals from so much of the judgment as is founded thereon. The said justice also directed the said premises to be sold, and the proceeds of the sale, to be divided upon the principles set forth in said findings and conclusions of law.
The question first presented is upon the construction of the will. Did the devise to Susan, the widow of the testator, convey to her the one-third part of the farm in foe, or only a life estate ? The Eevised Statutes provide (1 E. S. [2d ed.] 739, § 1), “ The term ‘heirs,’ or other words of inheritance, shall not be requisite to create or convey an estate in fee ; and every grant or devise of real estate, or any interest therein hereafter to be executed, shall pass all the estate or interest of the grantor or testator, unless the intent to pass a less estate or interest shall appear by express terms, or be necessarily implied in the terms of such grant.” The devise, therefore, of the one-third part of all the testator’s real property to his wife Susan, in form absol-ute; conveyed to her the fee, unless the intent to pass a less estate is necessarily implied in the terms of such devise or can be gathered from the other provisions of the will. A will is to be construed according to the intentions of the testator, so far forth as. they are indicated by the language which he has used. “ If two parts of a will are irreconcilable with each other, the last part is generally to be taken as evidence of the latest intention of the testator; but this rule is only applied in those cases where the two provisions are totally inconsistent with each other, and where the intention of the testator cannot be ascertained. * * * This rule is only adopted from necessity, to prevent the avoiding of both provisions for *315uncertainty.” The testator’s intention, in harmony with which a will is to be construed, is to be derived from the language of the will, and is not to be founded- on any outside, speculation as to his motives, or. to be raised by what appears to us to be the injustice of the disposition of the property which the will clearly indicates.
The intention of the testator is to be derived from an examination of the whole will, though, in giving it such a construction as will accord with that intention, it may be necessary, to depart 'from the strict grammatical construction of the words, and to supply, transfer or reject.
By the will, in this case, the testator provides for two distinct devises, and in construing it we must give effect to both, unless •they are so entirely inconsistent and incompatible that in giving effect to the one the other must necessarily tail-. (See Trustees, etc., v. Kellogg, 16 N. Y., 84; Van Nostrand v. Moore, 52 id., 12; Taggart v. Murray, 53 id., 233; Everitt v. Everitt, 29 id., 39, o.p. 83; Van Vechten v. Keator, 63 id., 52.)
The use of the expression by a testator denoting, a gift of all his property, is in general- to be understood as. excluding such of his -property as had, by previous provisions of his will, been specifically disposed of.
In the case .of Covenhoven v. Shuler (2 Paige, 122), a testator bequeathed one-third of his personal property to his widow, and the use of. the residue of his personal- property and his farm so long as she remained his widow, and after the youngest child •became of age, all of his real and- personal- property to be divided equally among his children ; and it was held that the widow- took an absolute title to one-third of the personal property. The devise and bequest were, in substance, like those in the case at bar, the pnly difference being that in the case at bar the devise and bequest to the wife embraces one-third of the real estate as well as one-third of the personalty.
As we have seen, since the Revised Statutes, no words of inheritance are requisite to make a devise in fee, but in that respect realty stands' on the same footing as personal property. We do not find that the case of Covenhoven v. Shuler has ever been overruled or questioned upon this point, and it seems, to us a decisive and controlling authority in the case, at bar. (See, also, Chesebro *316 v. Schoolcroft, 25 Wend., 632 ; Beardslee v. Beardslee, 5 Barb., 324.)
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the widow, Susan Rose-boom, took an estate in fee in one undivided third'of the farm-, under the wilL of Isaac L. Roseboom, and that the same passed to the plaintiff by her deed, the same not having, so far as the case shows, been obtained by any fraud, imposition or undue influence. The appeal of the plaintiff, therefore, is sustained.
The next question is as to the liability of John D. Roseboom to account for the supposed rents, uses and profits of the farm since the death of his mother, Susan. We think the learned justice, at the Special Term, erred in holding the defendant liable to account to the plaintiff or any of the other tenants in common for the rents, issues or profits of the farm while it was in his possession.
' At common law it resulted from the nature of the tenure, that one tenant in common was not liable to his co-tenant to account even for the rents, issues and. profits received by him from the premises held in common, in the absence of an express agreement,' but by Statute (4 Anne, ch., 16, § 27, re-enacted in this State; 1 R. S. [m. p.], 750, § 9 [2d ed],), a joint tenant or tenant in common is given an action of account or for money had and received against his co-tenant, where the latter has received more than his just proportion. It was not, in this case, alleged in the complaint that the defendant, John D. Roseboom, occupied the premises under any agreement with his co-tenants or any of them. Nor was it proved that he had actually received any rents or profits from the premises, but the court found the annual value of the premises to have been $325, and held John D. liable to account for the use and occupation of the premises owned in common, upon that basis. The tenant in common is under the statute, liable to- account only for what he receives, not for what he takes. (Washburn on Real Property, 420; Wilcox v. Wilcox, 48 Barb., 327; Joslyn v. Joslyn, [4th Dept.], 9 Hun. 388.) .
. There was never any demand upon John D. Ros.eboom by his co-tenants or any of them to permit their joint occupancy, and ho alleged ouster shown. J ohn D. Roseboom, it is admitted, was the owner of an undivided part of the premises. Ho was' seized per my expectant. His right was diffused throughout the whole. *317The other tenants stood aloof, and did not attempt to occupy with him. What, was he to do ? Either abandon the premises, or account for what his co-tenants might be able to prove the rental of the whole was worth. He was not driven to do either. He might remain in the occupancy of the whole, so long as he did nothing to prevent his co-tenants from occupying with him and did not deny their title. We think, therefore, that the appeal of John D. Roseboom must be sustained, and upon each of these appeals the judgment must be reversed.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, the costs to be awarded after the event.
Present — Talcott, P. J., Smith and Hardin, JJ.
Judgment reversed on each appeal and new trial ordered, question of costs reserved till final determination, including costs of the appeal.