Bailey v. Eagle Mountain Telephone Co.

303 S.W.2d 726, 202 Tenn. 195, 6 McCanless 195, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 379
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 303 S.W.2d 726 (Bailey v. Eagle Mountain Telephone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Eagle Mountain Telephone Co., 303 S.W.2d 726, 202 Tenn. 195, 6 McCanless 195, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 379 (Tenn. 1957).

Opinion

*196 Mr. Justice Swbpston

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit for a specific performance in which the appellant filed his bill to require the respondent Telephone Company to specifically perform its contract of purchase of a tract of real estate which it had bargained to purchase from said Bailey. The Chancellor sustained the demurrer of the defendant and dismissed the hill, 'hence this appeal.

The principal question is whether or not the following language, without more, created a fee simple determinable subject to a possibility of reverter in the heirs of the grantor. The following language which appears in the chain of title of the said Bailey:

“In consideration of love and interest we have in Education, we this day deed, transfer and convey a certain lot or parcel of land * * * To have and to hold for school purposes * * * so long as the aforesaid lot of land is used for the aforesaid purposes.”

It is the insistence of the appellant that the words “so long as” are not sufficient to create a fee simple determinable subject to a possibility of reverter in the grantor or his heirs. The appellee insists that they are sufficient. Both parties have full briefs citing cases from various States of the Union but we do not find it necessary to respond by a discussion of each one of these cases. We think that the rule is correctly stated in our own case of Yarbrough v. Yarbrough, 151 Tenn. 221, 269 S.W. 36, in an opinion by Green, Chief Justice. We do not mean to say that case is exactly analogous on the facts because *197 tlie language was not only “so long as” but in addition there was express provision for a reversion. Nevertheless 151 Tenn. on page 228, 269 S.W. on page 37, of the opinion Judge Green in quoting from Brewster, On Conveyancing, Sec. 173, et seq., says in part as follows:

“Old examples of determinable fees are limitations to one and his heirs ‘ as long as the Church of St. Paul shall stand,’ or until the grantee go to Borne;’ the most appropriate words to create a determinable fee being, during, so long as, till, until, whilst, etc., such words fitly prefacing a limitation. * * *
■ “For example, where the grant was to a religious society, ‘to have and to hold to the said (society) and their assigns, so long as said real estate shall by said society or its assigns be devoted to the uses, interests, and support of those doctrines of the Christian religion,’ set forth in a certain formulary, it was held to create a determinable fee, terminating without entry and reverting to the grantor when the use specified ceased.”

Likewise, in Tiffany on Beal Property, 2nd. Yol. 1, p. 334, sec. 93, the author says in part:

“A limitation to a man and his heirs, so long as they shall have heirs of his body, or until the marriage of a certain person, or so long as St. Paul’s Church shall stand, or a tree shall stand, are among the examples given in the books of an estate which, while descending to the heirs general, is liable to terminate on the happening of some event. The text is supported by a footnote'71-a which cites Blackstone, Kent, and others.”

*198 In 18 Corpus Juris, page 301, section 281, it is said:

“A determinable fee may either arise from and be dependent upon a condition, or arise from a limitation, the essential difference being that, in a case of a condition, the estate is not terminated ipso facto by the happening of the event upon which it may be defeated, while in the case of a limitation it passes at once by way of reverter to the grantor, or, in the case of a limitation over, to the person to whom it is limited, upon the happening of the event which fixes the limitation * * *. It results from this distinction that the usual technical words by which a limitation is expressed relate to time, differing from those expressing a condition * * *.”

In 26 C.J.S. Deeds, sec. 110, p. 921, after referring to the expressions, “so long as” “while” “until”, “during”, etc., it is stated that it is not necessary to use these words, or words of this type, provided that the grantor’s intention is otherwise expressed, which is in accordance with the rule in this State to be referred to hereinafter briefly. Then the text states:

“However, the words of time previously mentioned are the usual operative words. While express provisions for reversion is not essential to the creation of the type of interest under discussion, an express provision for reverter may be made in the deed, and the clearest evidence of an intention to create such interest may be found in deeds where there has been a coupling of words of time with a clear and definite expression of a possibility of reverter. * * * A grant to an institution so long as said institution shall exist will also suffice to create such a fee [citing a Massa *199 chusetts case]. In order that such a fee may be created, a qualification must be clearly expressed.”

Templeton v. Strong, 182 Tenn. 591, 188 S.W.2d 560, is cited, which case did not contain the technical words and in fact did not contain any words sufficient to show an intention on the part of the grantor to create a determinable fee; the Court simply held that a determinable fee is not favored by the law and will in no particular be implied but must be clearly expressed. Mountain City Missionary Baptist Church v. Wagner, 193 Tenn. 625, 249 S.W.2d 875, is a case where no technical words, supra, were used, but there was an express provision for a reversion in ease the property should cease to be used for church purposes. The Court found from an examination of the entire instrument that the intention was to create a determinable fee. That opinion by no means undertakes to lay down any rule that there must be an express provision for a reverter, where apt technical words are used that are sufficient alone to create a determinable fee, absent any contrary intention appearing in the whole instrument.

The clearest case that we have found on the question is Lynch v. Bunting, 3 Terry 171, 29 A.2d 155. The author of that opinion, after pointing out the distinction between a fee simple determinable and a fee simple subject to a condition subsequent, all of which is referred to, supra, has this to say (29 A.2d page 157):

“Because it is essential that in order to introduce a determinable feature into a fee simple conveyance that the instrument itself must, on its face, contain a specific intent so to do, so the use of apt and proper words may be given proper consideration. All the au- *200

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Bluebook (online)
303 S.W.2d 726, 202 Tenn. 195, 6 McCanless 195, 1957 Tenn. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-eagle-mountain-telephone-co-tenn-1957.