City of Nashville v. Lawrence

284 S.W. 882, 153 Tenn. 606
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 284 S.W. 882 (City of Nashville v. Lawrence) 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
City of Nashville v. Lawrence, 284 S.W. 882, 153 Tenn. 606 (Tenn. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKinney,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The purpose of this suit is to determine the ownership of the fee in a street which the city of Nashville proposes to abandon.

*608 In 1880, the defendants’ ancestor, John M. Lawrence, owned a lot containing about one acre of land located on the north side of Broad street, and having a depth of about two hundred eleven feet.

This lot was bounded on the west by the property of the N. & C. Railway.

Walnut street extended south from Church street to about the center of the Lawrence propery. Lawrence thereupon dedicated a thirty-five-foot street through his lot to the city, thus extending Walnut street to Broad street.

On June 2, 1880, Lawrence conveyed that part of his lot west of the street to the N. & C. Railway and that on the east of the street to James Whitworth. In those deeds the street previously dedicated was referred to as the “new street.”

When the bill in this cause was filed the railroad owned the Lawrence property on both sides of-said “new street. ’ ’

Subsequent to said two conveyances the railway entered into an agreement with the city by which that portion of Walnut street extending from Church street to the Lawrence property was shifted to the east some twenty-five or thirty feet. The purpose of that agreement was to enable wagons and trucks to load and unload freight from the railway depot, which was west of and adjoining Walnut street. In this situation Walnut street was left with a curve in it where it entered the Lawrence property.

Before the filing of this bill the city entered into a contract with the railway by which it was agreed to shift Walnut street, where it passes through the original Law- *609 renee property, east onto the property of the railway, and thus straighten Walnut street from Broad to Church street. That agreement, however, was conditioned that the abandoned part of Walnut street was to become the property of the railway.

In this situation the defendants asserted title to the fee in said thirty-five-foot strip through the original Lawrence property; their contention being that, in the deeds of June-2, 1880, their ancestor only conveyed to the side or margin of said street, the intention of the parties being that the fee in the street should remain in the grantor.

The description of the lot conveyed in the railway deed was as follows:

“Beginning at a point on the northwest corner of Broad street and a new street thirty-five feet wide (a continuation of Walnut street) and running thence westwardly along the north side of said Broad street eighty feet to a point; thence at right angles northwardly 211.4 feet to a point; thence at right angles eastwardly eighty feet to the said new street; thence along the west side of said new street 211.4 feet to the beginning.”

The description in the Whitworth deed is in this language :

“Beginning at a point on the north side of Broad street at its intersection with the east side of a continuation of Walnut street; thence eastwardly along the north side of said Broad street seventy-five feet to the corner of a lot said Whitworth purchased from W.' D. Taber; thence northwardly with said Whitworth’s line two hundred eleven and one-half feet; thence westwardly and nearly parallel to Broad street, seventy-five feet to the *610 margin of the new or Walnut street; thence southwardly two hundred eleven and one-half feet to the point of beginning.”

The only question to he determined is, Did Lawrence, under a proper construction of these deeds, retain in himself the fee to said thirty-five-foot street?

The chancellor held that he did not, and the defendants have appealed and have assigned errors which challenge the correctness of his decree.

The cardinal rule to be followed in this State, in construing deeds and other written instruments, is to ascertain the intention of the parties.

In Williams v. Williams, 16 Lea (84 Tenn.), 171, it was said: “We have most wisely abandoned technical rules in the construction of conveyances in this State, and look to the intention of the instrument alone for our guide, that intention to be arrived at from the language of the instrument read in the light of the surrounding-circumstances.”

In Speight v. Askins, 118 Tenn., 753, 102 S. W., 75, the court said: “The cardinal rule of construction of all instruments is to ascertain from all their parts the intention of the parties to them, without regard to the formal parts, and, where the rules of law will allow, to the particular language used.”

In Campbell v. Railroad, 150 Tenn., 431, 265 S. W., 676, it was said: “It is unnecessary to cite authorities for the proposition that reservations in a deed must be construed most strictly against the grantor.”

With respect to the question under consideration, it may be said that the general rule of construction, upon *611 which all of the authorities agree, is thus stated by Mr. Kent:

“It may be considered as a general rule that a grant of land hounded upon a highway or river carries the fee in the highway or the river to the center of it, provided the grantor, at the time, owned to the center and there be no words of specific description to show a contrary intent.” 3 Kent’s Commentaries (13th Ed.), 433.

Under the title “Boundaries” we quote from 9 Corpus Juris as follows:

Section 83: “It is the established rule that a conveyance of land bounded on a street or highway carries with it the fee to the center thereof, subject to the easement of public way, provided the grantor at the time owned to the center and there are no words of specific description to show a contrary intent. In such case the street or highway is regarded as the boundary or monument, and the purchaser takes to the middle of the monument as part and parcel of the grant. So well established is this principle that it is said that the use of the words ‘to the middle line of’ really adds nothing to the interest given by a conveyance bounded by the street, and that, on the other hand, it would not lessen in any way the effect of such conveyance.”

Section 84: “Briefly stated, the reasons in support of the rule may be outlined as follows: (1) The absence of any purpose to be served in the retention by the grantor of a narrow strip of land along the boundaries of the land conveyed, or the absence of any practical use to him for the. strip of land; (2) the immediate interest of the vendee therein and its direct and substantial value to him; (3) grounds of public convenience and the prevention of *612

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Bluebook (online)
284 S.W. 882, 153 Tenn. 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-nashville-v-lawrence-tenn-1925.