Central Land Co. v. City of Grand Rapids

4 N.W.2d 485, 302 Mich. 105
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1942
DocketDocket No. 25, Calendar No. 41,788.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 4 N.W.2d 485 (Central Land Co. v. City of Grand Rapids) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Land Co. v. City of Grand Rapids, 4 N.W.2d 485, 302 Mich. 105 (Mich. 1942).

Opinions

North, J.

This is an action in ejectment wherein the plaintiff-grantor charges the defendant city has breached a condition subsequent and that in consequence thereof title to the land in suit has reverted to plaintiff. On trial without a jury defendant city had judgment. Plaintiff has appealed.

By a deed dated October 22, 1937, plaintiff conveyed to defendant city two pieces of property in Kent county containing approximately 25 acres for park, street and boulevard purposes. The consideration is stated to be “one dollar and other good and valuable considerations.” Defendant city claims that it paid consideration by means of contracting to build a road, which would benefit plaintiff’s remaining land. Plaintiff sought to show that the conveyance was a gift. The deed contains the following condition:

‘ ‘ This conveyance is given upon the express condition that the two parcels of land abo^e described shall be used solely for park, highway, street, or boulevard purposes; and if any part thereof be not used for any of such.purposes, or at any time cease to be used for such purpose, or at any time be used for any other purpose, said part or parts shall immediately revert to the grantor, its successors or assigns; and it shall be lawful for the grantor, its successors, or assigns to reenter and repossess the same or any part or portion thereof, and thereafter *108 to peaceably hold and enjoy the same as if these presents had not been made.”

All went well until 1939. The city had undertaken to build the highways it had agreed to construct. In 1939, plaintiff found oil on its adjacent lands and commenced drilling operations. On July 12, 1939, defendant city entered into a contract with defendant Rex Oil & Gas Company whereby the latter was to drill for oil on the land which plaintiff had conveyed to defendant city for park, street and boulevard purposes.

Plaintiff immediately took steps to protect its claimed rights under the above condition in the deed. It wrote a letter to the city protesting and charging that the land would revert to it if such drilling should occur. Shortly thereafter, plaintiff served notice that it considered that the city had breached the condition, and that the city should surrender up the property. Finally, plaintiff brought this action against the city. Rex Oil & Gas Company intervened as a party def endant.

The main questions involved in this case are: 1. Did title to the oil and gas under the lands plaintiff conveyed to defendant vest in the city? 2. Was there a breach of the condition above quoted which has caused a reverter of all the land, or of the parts actually used in the drilling operations?

Title to the land here involved was conveyed by plaintiff to the defendant city in fee subject to condition subsequent. Upon conveyance in fee title to the oil and gas under the land passed by the grant from plaintiff to the city, see Attorney General v. Railway Co., 263 Mich. 431 (94 A. L. R. 520); Quinn v. Railway Co., 256 Mich. 143. In the latter case we said:

“The deed contains no reservation to grantors. The grantee took title to the gas and oil in place. If there is a pool common to- the lands of both parties, *109 then, if defendant may not drill, plaintiff, by tapping the pool, may take oil belonging to defendant. Such a result could not be sanctioned.”

To the same effect see 24 Am. Jur. p. 535, wherein it is also stated: ‘ ‘ Thus, it appears to be settled that when the fee to land has been granted or dedicated to the public for nse as a street or highway, any subterranean deposits of gas or oil therein pass with the fee and do not remain in the grantor or dedicator.” Plaintiff herein cannot successfully charge that the giving of an oil lease by the city was ultra vires. Quinn v. Railway Co., supra, holds only the State may raise this question.

The primary question in this case is whether there was a breach of condition subsequent by the city in giving an oil lease to defendant Rex Oil & Gas Company. The factual background of the case must be borne in mind in passing upon this question. Plaintiff herein is an agency or subsidiary of the Pere Marquette Railway Company. In August, 1937, these two corporations entered into a contract With the city of Grand Rapids in consequence of which the city acquired title to the property involved in this suit. The agreement recited that title to the land was to be conveyed to the city “upon the terms and conditions and for the consideration hereinafter expressed, to which the city agrees.” Among such terms and conditions it was provided that the city should convey to the railway company a parcel of land containing 4.07 acres and should construct certain streets or highways. The land was conveyed to the railway company and the highways were constructed at a cost of more than $400,000. Clearly, there was consideration for the conveyance of land in suit to the city.

At first blush it might seem that the maintenance and operation of one or more oil wells on this park *110 property would be in violation of the restricted purposes for which the land was conveyed to the city; but in determining whether there has been such a real and substantial violation of the condition in the deed to the city, consideration should be given to the purpose obviously sought to be accomplished by the condition embodied in the grant. This park land was so located and of such a character that it might have well been used for commercial or industrial sites. Plaintiff and the railroad company had nearby acreage of like character. Obviously, and we think primarily, plaintiff and the railroad company were interested in having the grant to the city limited in such a way that the property conveyed to it could not be developed as commercial or industrial sites in competition with like property owned by plaintiff or the railroad company. It also seems reasonably certain that in a strict sense it was not contemplated by the city’s grantor that the land in suit should be used only for boulevard, street and park purposes. This would seem to appear from the fact that in the deed to the city the grantor reserved to itself and to its successors and assigns “the perpetual right and easement to lay and maintain one or more pipelines on, over and across the parcel of land herein first above described,” being the 17-acre parcel of park land.

Defendants have taken rather extraordinary care in so operating the oil wells on the park property that this activity does not materially impair the use of the land for the purposes for which it was conveyed to the city. No storage tanks are maintained on the property, but instead they are somewhat distantly located on other property. The pipelines leading from the wells to the storage tanks are for the most part, if not wholly, laid underground in the park area, excepting where such pipes extend *111 along or across the highway passing through the park. Only a small, and not particularly unsightly or objectionable, structure is maintained at the location of each well.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.W.2d 485, 302 Mich. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-land-co-v-city-of-grand-rapids-mich-1942.