A construction is asked of the following clause ■of the will, viz; “ The plantatien that my son George S. Sottlemoir now lives on lying in Burke County three hundred and fifty acres to be sold after he gets possession of the plantation that I now live on &c.” The ambiguity of meaning arises out of the total lack of punctuation in the sentence. A careful consideration of this clause, and of the •whole will, does not fully satisfy us of the intention of the testator. Did he mean that only 350 acres, out of,the plantation, should be sold, or did he mean that the plantation, estimated to contain 350 acres, should be sold ? Both parties agree that the whole plantation, having been worked for a number of years as one farm, consisted of two adjoining tracts, one of 400 acres, and the other of 70 acres.
After much thought, we have concluded that the meaning of the testator was, that the entire plantation should be sold, and that the words “ three hundred and fifty acres” are only an accumulative description of the property, and not of the amount of land intended to be sold; as much as to say, “ I will that my plantation in Burke County, that is, three hundred and fifty acres, be sold.” Considering the designation of the number of acres as only an alternative ■description of the plantation, the rule of construction is well settled, that where there is in the first place an unambiguous and certain description of the thing, and afterwards, another description which fails in certainty, the latter shall be rejected, The authorities cited by the plaintiffs’ counsel, as well as good sense, establish this proposition. That the testator meant that the whole plantation should be sold, we Ihink sufficiently appears from the following reasons :—
1. The case agreed admits that the two tracts, one of 400 *399acres and the other of 70 acres, in all 470 acres, compose ' the “plantation” upon which the son, George, resided 'The testator proceeds in the same sentence thus: “An' = the balance of the land joining George’s plantation whei'e he now lives in Burke County to be equally divided, &c. ’ The testator in fact owned another tract of land joining George’s plantation. Now if 350 acres are carved out r‘‘ •.the “plantation” which consists of 470, there would b left remaining, 120 of the plantation, undisposed of; fo£ the words of the will, “the balance of my land joining George’s plantation,” do not embrace the plantation itself or any part of it, but do fit and embrace the other land,! outside of, but joining the plantation. The contention of¡ the defendants cannot prevail, unless they can show byj some established rule of construction, that “the balance of: my land joining George’s plantation ” mean not only thcj adjoining land, but a part of the plantation itself. J3.it i whore the words of a -will clearly embrace a particular thing, and do not embrace another, Courts are not at liberty to change or enlarge the language of the testator, so as to apply to and embrace the other thing; and especially is this so, where neither the context of the will nor the general purpose of the testator, requires such a construction. Nothing else appearing, the ordinary presumption is, that a testator will make an equal distribution of his property among his children. By giving effect to the will as wc construe it, we see little or no disparity between the devises and bequests to them; for while the daughters get more land than two of their brothers, they get fewer slaves; and the other brother, George, apparently gets a larger share than either of the others. So the construction contended for by the defendants derives no support from the other provisions of the will.
2. If 350 acres of land are to be carved out of the plantation aud sold, what part is it and how is it to be ascer-*400tkined? The will does not designate the part, or make any provision for ascertaining and setting it apart. The case ife unlike Harvey v. Harvey, 72 N. C. 570. There, the testa-Íor devised to his son A 250 acres of land including the raildings which he occupied, and to his son B 250 acres including the buildings where he resided, and the residue to be sold, and the proceeds to be divided among his other ¡children. The Court, after some, hesitation, and that they ¡might not declare the devises void for uncertainty, held ¡that the children were tenants in common, and that it was ‘competent for the Court, by intervention of commissioners, to render that certain which was before uncertain, and time effectuate the intention of the testator. There, the devises were certain to the extent that they included the buildings where each son resided, and thus constituting initial points from which the devises could be ascertained and made certain. But in our case there is no starting point from which the S50 acres can be laid off and set apart. It is true that the executors did carve out of the plantation and sell 350 acres of the land, but it was by a law unto themselves, and as they pleased. None of the parties interested could interpose and say that it should be taken from this or that part-of the tract, because all were equally in the dark, where the will was silent.
We do not say that the construction contended for by the defendants would make the devise void for the uncertainty, though the cases of Blakeley v. Patrick, 67 N. C. 40, Grier v. Rhyne, 69 N. C. 346, and Pemberton v. McRae, 75 N. C. 497, are strong authorities to that effect; but in endeavoring to ascertain the intention of the testator, which certainly was that his will should take effect, we are not to suppose that he would make a disposition of any part of his properly, which would subject it to the risk of being declared void, as in Proctor v. Pool, 4 Dev. 370. On the contrary, we fe l bound to give the same construction of the will in this cast, *401as was given in Dodson v. Green, 4 Dev. 488; Stowe v. Davis, 10 Ire. 431; Woods v. Woods, 2 Jones Eq. 420; Bradshaw v. Ellis, 2 Dev. and Bat. Eq. 20. Woods v. Woods, was a case much, like tbe present, and we think is decisive of it. 'There, the testator devised “the tract of land whereupon I now live and reside, containing two hundred and twenty-five acres more or less.” The tract was made up of an original tract, and several others afterwards added, and which had ■been used by the testator as one plantation. It really contained between four and five hundred acres, yet it was held that all was conveyed by the terms of the devise.
Our opinion upon the case agreed is that it was the intention of the testator that the whole plantation, composed of the 400 acre tract and the 70 acre tract, should be sold, á,nd the proceeds divided between Sarah Mull and Agnes Bettlemoir.
There is error.
Per Curiam. Judgment reversed.