Dossett v. New Orleans Great Northern Railroad Co.
This text of 295 So. 2d 771 (Dossett v. New Orleans Great Northern Railroad Co.) 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.
Opinion
W. Dixon DOSSETT, Individually, and as Father and Next Friend to W. Dixon Dossett, Jr., et al.,
v.
NEW ORLEANS GREAT NORTHERN RAILROAD COMPANY, and Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
Sillers, Roberts, Pearson & Eddins, Rosedale, for appellants.
Wells, Wells, Marble & Hurst, J. Jerry Langford, Jackson, for appellees.
RODGERS, Presiding Justice.
This is an action brought by the appellants W. Dixon Dossett, an adult, W. Dixon Dossett, Jr., Virginia Brooke Dossett, and William Kethley Dossett, minors, by next friend; against the above named railroad companies, which later merged with the Illinois Central Railroad Company, to form the Illinois Central Gulf Railroad Company, for the purpose of cancelling as a cloud the claim of the appellee railroad companies to a fee title in and to a certain strip of land described in an instrument dated the 25th day of January, 1907, from appellants' predecessors in title to New Orleans *772 Great Northern Railroad Company. A copy of the pertinent parts of the written instrument is hereto appended.
The appellants contend that the language of the instrument clearly shows that the grantors conveyed an easement across the property therein described as a right-of-way for the use of the railroad and was not, as claimed by the appellees, a fee simple title to the land used by the railroad.
The railroad companies answered and claimed the land described in the instrument, not only from the instrument itself, but also by adverse possession.
The Chancery Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County, Mississippi, heard testimony and examined other written instruments, some of which will be discussed later. The court reached the conclusion that the instrument complained of was a deed rather than an easement. The chancellor entered a decree dismissing the bill of complaint and granting the appellants an appeal.
Appellants have appealed to this Court and have filed two assignments of error:
(1) The trial court erred in holding that the instrument in writing from William L. Dossett and Mabel Dossett to New Orleans Great Northern Railway Company conveyed a fee simple title rather than an easement; and
(2) The trial court erred in not holding that defendants, as permissive users, were precluded from claiming the land in question by adverse possession.
We have reviewed the testimony, and we have made a careful study of the applicable law since the issue is largely a question of law. We agree with the chancellor and affirm the chancery court decree.
Without reviewing the cases as to the obvious ambiguity in the instrument, wherein it is said at one place to be "a right of way", at another place to be a conveyance of "a strip of land for a right of way", and at another place the timber on the right-of-way is granted, and the right of the railroad to use earth, gravel, stones, shells and other materials for construction and maintenance of the railroad, [see 23 Am.Jur.2d Deeds § 159, at 205-208 (1965)] it becomes necessary to resort to the legal rules of construction to determine the meaning of the instrument.
In the case of Richardson v. Moore, 198 Miss. 741, 750, 22 So.2d 494, 495 (1945) we had the following to say on this subject:
"(1) [T]he deed must be read in the light of the circumstances surrounding the parties when it was executed; (2) that the construction should be upon the entire instrument, and each word and clause therein should be reconciled and given a meaning, if that can be reasonably done; (3) that the main document and that to which it refers must be construed together; (4) that if the wording of the deed is ambiguous, the practical construction placed thereon by the parties will have much weight in determining the meaning; and (5) that in case the deed is ambiguous, and subject to two possible constructions, one more favorable to the grantee, and the other more favorable to the grantor, that construction favorable to the grantee will be adopted."
We may sometime determine what a written instrument is by determining what the parties thought it to be, and how they treated the subject matter.
We said in Sumter Lumber Co. v. Skipper, 183 Miss. 595, 184 So. 296 (1938):
"[A]nd when the parties have for some time proceeded with or under the deed or contract, a large measure, and sometimes a controlling measure, of regard will be given to the practical construction which the parties themselves have given it, this on the common sense proposition that actions generally speak even louder than words." 183 Miss. at 608-609, 184 So. at 298-299.
*773 This rule has been reinforced recently by St. Regis Pulp and Paper Corp. v. Floyd, 238 So.2d 740 (Miss. 1970):
"It has long been an established rule of law in this state that where, as is urged here, some ambiguity exists, which pro arguendo we consider, the interpretation placed upon the deed by the grantees and their successors in title deserves and merits consideration here insofar as intent is concerned." 238 So.2d at 744.
Both parties cite general rules from the leading encyclopedias as being supportive of their positions. In 65 Am.Jur.2d Railroads § 75, at 387 (1972) it is said that:
"The estate or interest acquired by a railroad in land conveyed to it for a right-of-way is generally construed to be an easement, but a railroad may, unless prohibited by statute, acquire the fee in the right-of-way where the deed of conveyance is sufficient for that purpose and the statute permits a railroad to acquire a fee in its right-of-way."
The writer goes on to say that:
"It has been held that where a deed contained additional language referring in some way to a `right-of-way', it operated to convey a mere easement rather than a title in fee. * * * In this connection, a habendum clause, in accordance with the general rule of construction of deeds, must yield to the granting clause, although, in fact there is no conflict between the two clauses where the granting clause is for a railroad right-of-way and the habendum clause has no such limitation, since the habendum clause may be interpreted as warranting a title to an easement which is granted in perpetuity. * * *
In instances, however, involving the construction of deeds granting `land' rather than a `right', the result has been reached that the fact that the deed contained additional language embodying some reference to a `right-of-way' did not operate to limit the estate conveyed or to cut it down from a title in fee to an easement." 65 Am.Jur.2d Railroads § 77, at 388-389 (1972).
The Supreme Court of Mississippi has been faced with cases similar to the present one, and although none of these cases is precisely "on point", a consideration of them is helpful in illustrating the factors which the Court deems important.
The case of Williams v. Patterson, 198 Miss. 120, 21 So.2d 477 (1945) is somewhat similar to the facts in the present case. In that case this Court held that the instrument gave a "right-of-way" and not full fee title. The obvious difference between the Williams case and the case at bar is that in the instant case, the grantor conveyed "a strip of land" for a right-of-way. See also New Orleans & Northeastern RR v. Morrison, 203 Miss. 791, 35 So.2d 68 (1948) in which a right-of-way was also granted.
In Mississippi Central Railroad Co. v. Ratcliff, 214 Miss. 674, 59 So.2d 311 (1952), the instrument conveyed land.
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