Columbus & Greenville Ry. Co. v. City of Greenwood

390 So. 2d 588
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1980
Docket52213
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 390 So. 2d 588 (Columbus & Greenville Ry. Co. v. City of Greenwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Columbus & Greenville Ry. Co. v. City of Greenwood, 390 So. 2d 588 (Mich. 1980).

Opinion

390 So.2d 588 (1980)

The COLUMBUS & GREENVILLE RAILWAY CO., a Mississippi Corporation; and Loraine Craig, Ann Craig Milner, Mary Norman Craig Brown, and Carol Craig Catlett
v.
The CITY OF GREENWOOD.

No. 52213.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

November 19, 1980.
Rehearing Denied December 10, 1980.

Arnold F. Gwin, Lott, Sanders & Gwin, Greenwood, Threadgill, Smith, Sanders & Jolly, Columbus, for appellants.

H.D. Brock, W.M. Whittington, Jr., Whittington, Brock, Swayze, Dale & Calhoun, Greenwood, for appellee.

Before PATTERSON, C.J., and WALKER and BROOM, JJ.

*589 BROOM, Justice, for the Court:

Whether a handwritten conveyance containing language "for railway track and depot" purposes vested fee simple title in the railroad or reserved a transferrable, compensable interest in the grantors is the chief issue of this suit appealed from a Special Court of Eminent Domain of LeFlore County, wherein the City of Greenwood condemned 2.58 acres of the disputed land. Defendants to the city's action were the Columbus and Greenville Railway Co. (C&G herein), and Loraine Craig, Ann Craig Milner, Mary Norman Craig Brown, and Carol Craig Catlett (the Craigs herein). The Craigs are successors in interest of the original grantors, L.H. Henry and Dr. James P. Henry, who conveyed the property to the Georgia Pacific Railway Company, C&G's predecessor in title. Dr. Henry subsequently conveyed whatever interest, if any, was reserved (by the Henry deed to Georgia Pacific) to his wife who then devised that interest to the Craigs.

After the city instituted eminent domain proceedings, the parties agreed to an order allowing the city to take the property upon depositing $150,000 with the LeFlore County Circuit Clerk until the money, by court action, would be divided between the Craigs and the C&G. Both the Craigs and the C&G claimed title to the land and therefore entitlement to the $150,000. Trial was first had by the court sitting without a jury pursuant to an agreement of the parties. The court without the jury heard the matter and ruled that the Craigs had a compensable interest but then ordered a jury trial for determination of the respective interests of the parties in the $150,000 held by the clerk of the court. The jury's finding was that the Craigs would be paid $100,000, and C&G would be paid $50,000. From a judgment to that effect, C&G appeals. In pertinent part the deed states:

In consideration of the benefit and advantages to us accruing from the construction of the Georgia Pacific Railway, and further in consideration of the sum of one dollar in hand paid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, we do hereby grant, bargain, sell, transfer, and convey unto The Georgia Pacific Railway Company (land description). To have and to hold the said strip of land in fee simple, and we do warrant the title to said land against the lawful claims of all persons. Witness our hands and seals, this 11th day of May, 1888. It is distinctly understood that should said tract of land cease to be used for railway track and depot, then and in that case the same shall revert to the heirs of the grantors herein.
/S/ L.H. Henry /S/ Jas. P. Henry.

C&G argues, among other things, that the trial court erred in holding: (1) that C&G did not own said property in fee simple absolute; (2) that the interest of the Craigs was a compensable interest; and (3) that the Craigs' evidence wholly failed to meet the burden of proof that its claimed interest had any value. C&G also contends that the court erred by failing to render the entire $150,000 judgment for C&G on the first trial and in awarding a second trial.

On their cross-appeal, the Craigs argue that the court erred by holding, at the conclusion of the first trial, that the property here being condemned had not ceased to be used for railway track and depot purposes, either in whole or in part, at the time of these eminent domain proceedings. The Craigs also maintain that the court erred in not awarding either all or 95.24% of the eminent domain award to them.

DID THE ORIGINAL DEED TO GEORGIA PACIFIC CONVEY THE TITLE IN FEE SIMPLE ABSOLUTE LEAVING NO TRANSFERRABLE OR COMPENSABLE INTEREST IN THE GRANTORS' SUCCESSORS, THE CRAIGS?

C&G argues that the following underlined controversial language in the original deed:

It is distinctly understood that should said tract of land cease to be used for railway track and depot, then in that case the same shall revert to the heirs of the grantors herein

is void for three reasons:

(1) the said limitation "to the heirs of the grantors herein" attempted to create an *590 executory interest in the heirs of the Henrys, and as such is void under the rule against perpetuities;
(2) that, under the law in Mississippi, a limitation to the heirs of the grantors is void because it cannot presently take effect, i.e., such a limitation can only take effect on the death of the grantors, and, this being so, the courts have held that this cannot be done by deed;
(3) the limitation to the "heirs of the grantors" is an attempted forfeiture provision, and as such is not favored under the law, must be strictly construed against forfeiture and against the grantors, and, in order to be given effect, must be clear and unambiguous.

Presented here is an interesting problem in semantics. C&G contends that the Henrys (original grantors) created an executory interest because they failed to retain a reversionary interest in themselves; they further contend that the executory interest is void under the rule against perpetuities.[1] C&G cites Moynihan's Introduction to the Law of Real Property (1962), at page 96, for the proposition that the possibility of reverter "can exist only in the transferor or his heirs... ." In our view just such an interest resulted from the deed in question. Significantly, the final sentence of the 1888 deed concludes, "... the same shall revert to the heirs of the grantors herein."

St. Regis Pulp & Paper Corp. v. Floyd, 238 So.2d 740, 743 (Miss. 1970) states that reversionary interests are exempt from the rule against perpetuities and quotes Jones v. Burns, 221 Miss. 833, 841, 74 So.2d 866, 868 (1944):

(A) reservation to the grantor or his heirs is a vested interest and is not within the rule against perpetuities. The distinction is shown by this quotation from 41 Am. Jur. 75, 76, 77, Section 31:
"A possibility of reverter which remains in a grantor or his successor in interest, or in a testator's heirs or devisees, where there has been created a fee simple determinable, is not subject to the rule against perpetuities. Thus, a conveyance of land to a school district upon condition that the land be used only for school purposes, the land to revert to the grantor if the district ceases to use the land for school purposes or uses it for any other purpose, does not violate the rule against perpetuities, as the possibility of reverter vests in the grantor, which he may convey and which descends to his heirs or which he may transmit by will. * *"

Writing for the Court in City of Laurel v. Powers, 366 So.2d 1079, 1082 (Miss. 1979), Justice Sugg reiterated the St. Regis ruling:

We have also held that a reservation to the grantor or his heirs is a vested interest and is not within the rule against perpetuities. St. Regis Pulp & Paper Corp. v. Floyd,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
390 So. 2d 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbus-greenville-ry-co-v-city-of-greenwood-miss-1980.