Donehue v. Nilges

266 S.W.2d 553, 364 Mo. 705, 45 A.L.R. 2d 1150, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 567
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 12, 1954
Docket43659
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 266 S.W.2d 553 (Donehue v. Nilges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donehue v. Nilges, 266 S.W.2d 553, 364 Mo. 705, 45 A.L.R. 2d 1150, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 567 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

*707 LOZIER, C.

Defendants-appellants (herein called defendants) have appealed from an adverse judgment rendered in an action brought by plaintiffs-respondents (herein called plaintiffs) to determine title to real estate.

Construction of a deed conveying a determinable fee is involved.

The land involved is a two-acre tract (herein called the school tract) in the NW% NW]4; Sec. 32, T. 44, R. 8 W., Osage County (herein *708 called the quarter-quarter). Between the west line of the quarter-quarter and the Linn-Luystown north-south public road (to the east) is an eight-acre strip. The school tract is the south two acres of that strip.

In 1908, Joseph Boes, owner of the quarter-quarter, and his wife Lena conveyed the school tract to the Board of Directors of School District No. 6: “To have and to hold unto the parties of the second part and their successors in trust for the use and benefit of the aforesaid” school district “so long as the aforesaid premises shall be used for a school house site and no longer, and if the aforesaid premises be no longer used for a school house .site, then the aforesaid premises shall revert to and become the property of the grantors herein or those claiming title to the aforesaid” quarter-quarter “ by, -through or under said grantors.” (The language we have italicized is hereafter referred to as the “clause.”)

District No. 6 took possession of and erected a sehoolhouse on the tract. In 1909, District No. 6 was succeeded by School District No. 28. In 1951, District No. 28 became a part of Reorganized School District No. 2. District No. 2 abandoned the use of the site for school purposes and sold the sehoolhouse and outbuildings to defendants. (There is no issue here as to the ownership of the buildings or the district’s right to sell them to defendants. See Board v. Nevada School District, 363 Mo. 328, 251 S. W. 2d 20, 26 [10]; Anno. 28 A.L.R. 2d 564.)

Joseph Boes, who died in 1910, devised the quarter-quarter to his wife for life, with remainder to his children, Mike, Gertrude, Mary and George. After the widow’s death in 1927, Mike, Gertrude and Mary conveyed to George their undivided three-fourths interest in the quarter-quarter “except” the school tract. In 1933, George conveyed to W. Henry Nilges ‘ ‘ all that part * * * that lies west of the Linn-Luystown public road, except” the school tract. In 1943, W. Henry Nilges reconveyed to George the part west of the road “except” the school tract. In 1944, George conveyed to Theodore Boehm all of the quarter-quarter “except” the school tract. In July, 1945, Boehm conveyed to William P. Kuster all of the quarter-quarter “except” the school tract (the deed also contained a specific conveyance of all of the part west of the road “except” the school tract). In October, 1945, Kuster conveyed to Ben IT. Brandt all of the quarter-quarter “except” the part west of the road. In 1947, Kuster conveyed to plaintiffs all of the part west of the road “except” the school tract. (The deed also conveyed to plaintiffs the NE 1 /^ NE 1 ^, Sec. 31, immediately west of the eight-acre strip in the NW14 NW 1 /^ Sec. 32.) In 1951, the four Joseph Boes children, as his heirs, quitclaimed the school tract to defendants.

The trial judge ruled, inter alia: The Joseph Boes deed to the school district “created a fee simple determinable * * * which continued * * * until the happening of the event upon which the *709 estate was determinable, namely, the abandonment of the land as a schoolhouse site * * * and thereupon the estate passed to the person or persons to whom it was granted by limitation over * * * namely, the owners of that part of” the quarter-quarter “abutting said two-acre tract of land, which is that part of said” quarter-quarter “lying west of the said Linn-Luystown road and which said part of said quarter-quarter section is now, and was at the time of the abandonment of said tract * * * as a schoolhouse site, vested in plaintiffs herein * * (Our italics.)

Joseph and Lena Boes conveyed to the school district a determinable fee, a fee simple estate which automatically terminates upon the occurrence of a specified event or cessation of user for a specified purpose; and there' remained in the grantors a possibility of reverter.” Board v. Nevada School District, 363 Mo. 328, 251 S. W. 2d 20, 24[3, 4]. (That is the possibility of again having the fee simple estate. 2 Tiffany, Real Property (3rd Ed.), Sec. 314, p. 10. Note the kind of “possibility of reverter” instantly involved. Too often, that term is applied both to the interest remaining in the 'grantor of a determinable fee—the true possibility of reverter—and the right of entry for condition broken retained by the grantor of a fee .upon condition subsequent—the “power of termination.” See Restatement, Property, Secs. 154, p: 526, and 159, p. 570. In the latter instance, the fee conveyed does not automatically terminate upon condition broken. See Chouteau v. City, of St. Louis, 331 Mo. 781, 55 S. W. 2d 299, 301 [4], )

The concluding “clause” of the deed conveying the determinable fee provided that, upon termination of that fee, “the aforesaid- premises shall revert to and become the property of the grantors herein or those claiming title to the afórésaid” quarter-quarter “by, through or under said grantors. ’ ’ Upon. the assumption that the “clause” was an attempt by the grantors to assign the possibility of reverter: Defendants contend that the possibility of reverter was unassignable and that it descended to the four Joseph Boes children under whose deed defendants claim; that, even if the possibility of reverter was assignable and wás assigned by the grantors, plaintiffs were not the assignees because of the “exceptions” of the school tract from the conveyances of the quarter-quarter, or parts thereof, in plaintiffs’ chain of title. (Defendants make no point that plaintiffs own, “by, through or under” Joseph and Lena Boes, only a.small part of the quarter-quarter, the six acres abutting the school tract on the north or that Brandt, the owner of the other thirty-two acres abutting the tract on -the east, is not a party.) Plaintiffs’ position is that, by the ‘ ‘ clause ’ ’ the grantors assigned the possibility of reverter to them as the owners, “by, through and under” the grantors, of the part of the quarter-quarter abutting the school tract on the north.

*710 However, we need not rule whether the instant possibility of reverter was assignable 1 because we do not believe that the grantors assigned or attempted to assign their possibility of reverter. Clearly, they intended that: Upon the termination of the determinable fee, the school tract was to pass to the then owners of the quarter-quarter— either to the grantors, themselves if they still owned the quarter-quarter or to their then successors in title to and owners of the quarter-quarter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
266 S.W.2d 553, 364 Mo. 705, 45 A.L.R. 2d 1150, 1954 Mo. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donehue-v-nilges-mo-1954.