
    ROBERT FOSTER et al. vs. ROBERT N. CRAIGE et al., EX’RS OF ANDERSON E. FOSTER.
    Where a testator, after several devises and bequests, concluded thus: ■ “The,balance of my property to be applied to the payment of my just debts. Should there be a surplus, it is my 'will and desire that it be equally divided among the heirs of my deceased brother S. F. and the heirs of D. C.” It was held that as the “property” mentioned in the will was a mixed fund of real and personal estate, and was to be applied in the first place to the payment of debts, the executors 'had a power by implication to sell a tract of land not specifically devised, for the payment of debts and for distribution.
    The defendants, as the executors of the last will of Anderson E. Foster, sold to the plaintiffs a tract of land beiong-to the estate of the said Anderson, made a deed of bargain and sale for the same, and took a bond for the purchase money, upon which they afterwards obtained a judgment and issued execution .at law. The plaintiffs then filed this bill, and obtained an injunction restraining the collection of the debt, on the ground that the defendants had no power or right to make title to the said land. The will of Anderson E. Foster contained the following clause: “As to the disposition of my worldly estate, both real and personal, I make the following, viz: Item, Igive and bequeath to my sister” &c. The testator then proceeded to make several devises and bequests, and concluded the disposition of his estates thus: “The balance of my property to be applied to the payment of my just debts. Should there be a surplus, it is my will and desire that it be divided equally among the heirs of my deceased brother - Samuel Foster, and the heirs of David Craige.” The defendants were appointed executors, and qualified as such. The testator was in debt about fifteen thousand dollars. The land sold was a portion of the balance of the testator’s property not before devised or bequeathed by the will. The executors, in their answers, averred that they sold the land to pay the debts, and to distribute the surplus agreeably to the directions of the will. The case was heard in the Superior Court of Davie county, on the last circuit, before his Honor Judge Nash, on a motion to dissolve the injunction; and the injunction being dissolved, the plaintiffs appealed from this interlocutory order.
    Where <rai lands but it i>7™ homed there, if the side is to be op... p!ied by the CXCCLPc,is iii the execu-then of theji- office a pond- 10 sell intl be implied to the execu-t >1-s
    
      No counsel' appeared for the plaintiffs in this court.
    
      Hoke, Alexander and Boyden for the defendants.
   Dantel, Judge,

after stating the case as above, proceeded as follows: Where there is in the will a genera] direction to lands, but it is not stated by whom the sale is to be made, there, if the produce of the sale is to be applied by the exec-utoi’s *n execution of their office, a power to sell will be to executors. Tylden vs. Hyde, 2 Sim. & Stu. 288. The principle that a direction that lands shall be sold, generally, (without saying by whom) for a purpose which brings the fnnawithii the province of the executors, as to pay debts or legacies, or both, confers on them a power of sale by implication, is established by several cases. Inchly vs. Robinson, 2 Leon. 145-Carvill vs. Carvill, 2 Chan. Rep. 301-Lockton vs. Lockton, 1 Cha. Cas. 179-Blatch vs. Wilder, 1 Atk. Rep. 420-1 Powell on Devises 244 (Jarman's Edition. note 4.) If the testator had simply directed the distribution, among certain objects, of an un~ mixed fund arising from the sale of land only, then the hei] alone could sell. Bentham vs. Wiltshire, 4 Madd. Rep 44. But in the case before us, the fund is not ouiy one that is mixed of real and personal estate, but is one for the pay-meut of the testator's debts; and the surplus thereafter only to be distributed among certain objects. Tylden vs. Hyde, was a case where a mixed fund of real and persotial estate was directed to be sold and converted into money, and the same to be distributed among certain objects: The Vice Ohancellor nevertheless said "here the produce of the sale is to be confounded with the personal property, which mus necessarily be divided by the executors; and a power to sel is therefore implied to the executors." That the "property~ which the testator directed to be applied to pay his debts, in eluded his undisposed of lauds, is evidently to be collected from what he has said in the other parts of his will. The word "property" is also equivalent to estate, in its operation to pass the interest in the land, as ~ve1I as the land itself and land will pass in a will by either of the said words. Roe dem. Shell vs. Pattison, 16 East 221-Nicholls vs. Butcher, 18 Ves. 194-Patton vs. Randall, 1 Jac. & Wal. 189-2 Powell on Dev. 419, (Jarman's edition.) The testatori does not, in so many words, direct a sale of the balaii~e of his property; but he says it shall be applied to pay his debts. It canuot be appTied in that manner without a sale; asale is therefore ordered by the testator hImself; and the executors had an implied power to convey. The deed executed by the executors conveyed what title the testator had in the Jand, to the present plaintiffs. We are, therefore, of the opin-. ion, that the interlocutory decree in the Superior Court was correct. This opinion is to be certified to the Court below, and the plaintiffs must pay the costs of the appeal.

If a tesistor ~`~~l)1Y directs the ~hstpibu_ los, srnon~ cer sin objects. of an Uiii~~ixc,l fusd crising from the sa'c ot land only, ttten the heir alone can sell.

The word "property" is equ va-lent to "estate" in its operation tn pass the interest in land as wet as ~lie land itseif and land will pass irs a will by either of these words.

Pjsr Curiam. Decree to be affirmed.  