Faulkenberry v. Norfolk Southern Railway Co.

563 S.E.2d 644, 349 S.C. 318, 2002 S.C. LEXIS 69
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 29, 2002
Docket25454
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 563 S.E.2d 644 (Faulkenberry v. Norfolk Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faulkenberry v. Norfolk Southern Railway Co., 563 S.E.2d 644, 349 S.C. 318, 2002 S.C. LEXIS 69 (S.C. 2002).

Opinion

WALLER, Justice:

This is a property dispute concerning ownership of a 200' wide strip of land between Monticello Road and the Broad River in Columbia, upon which Appellant, Norfolk Southern Railway Co. (Railroad) operates its railroad. The circuit court ruled the property in question is owned by Respondent, J. Larry Faulkenberry. We affirm.

FACTS

There is no dispute as to the underlying facts in this matter. Railroad’s track bisects Faulkenberry’s 200 acre piece of property, leaving approximately 97 acres on the western side of the tracks, which abut the Broad River. Railroad seeks to prevent Faulkenberry from using a crossing over the tracks.

Railroad claims title to the property pursuant to an 1845 Act which created its predecessor in interest, the Greenville and Columbia Railroad Company. Faulkenberry claims title under the last known recorded instrument of record in the chain of title for the property on both sides of the tracks. Title records prior to 1865 do not exist as they were burned by General Sherman in 1865 during the Civil War. Railroad does not dispute that Faulkenberry owns the property to the east and west of the railroad tracks in fee simple. The only issue *320 is what right or title each party has to the strip of land encompassed by the railroad tracks.

The Greenville and Columbia Railroad Company, was formed pursuant to 1845 Act No. 2953(Act). 1 Sections 9-12 of the 1845 Act set forth Railroad’s powers with respect to acquisition of property upon which to operate. Those sections provide, in pertinent part:

9. That [Railroad] shall have power and capacity to purchase, take and hold in fee simple or for years, to them and their successors, any lands, tenements or hereditaments, ... and in like manner to purchase all private rights of way or water courses that may lie on or across the route through which the said Railroad may pass ...
10. That in any case where lands or private rights of way may be required ... and the same cannot be purchased from the owner ... for want of agreement as to price or from any other cause, the same may be taken by the Company at a valuation to be made by the Commissioners ... appointed by the Court of Common Pleas_and the lands and right of way so valued by the Commissioners ... shall vest in the said Company in fee simple, so soon as the valuation thereof may be paid, or tendered and refused. ...
11. That in the absence of any written contract between the said Company and the owner ... of land, through which the said Railroad may be constructed ... it shall be presumed that the land upon which the said Railroad may be constructed, together with one hundred feet on each side of the center of said road, has been granted to the said Company by the owner ... and the said Company shall have good right and title to the same, (and shall have, hold and enjoy the same) unto them and their successors, so long as the same may be used only for the purposes of the said road and no longer, unless the person or persons to whom any right or title to such lands, tenements or hereditaments descend or come, shall prosecute the same within two years next after the construction of such part or portion of the said road as may be constructed upon the land of the said person or persons so having or acquiring *321 such right to the title as aforesaid, and if any person or persons to whom any right or title to such lands ... belong ... do not prosecute the same within two years next after the construction of the part of the said road upon the lands of the person or persons so having or acquiring such right or title as aforesaid, then he or they, and all claiming under him or them shall be forever barred to recover the same ...
12. That all lands not heretofore granted to any person nor appropriated by law to the use of the State, within one mile from the centre from the main track of the said road that may be constructed, be, and they are hereby vested in the said Company and their successors, so long as the same may be used for the purposes of the said road and no longer.

(Emphasis supplied). Railroad acquired the land used for its tracks pursuant to Section 11, above. The circuit court, pursuant to numerous cases of this Court, held Railroad acquired only an easement to use the tracks, rather .than a fee simple determinable, and that, in any event, Faulkenberry was entitled to an easement by necessity. 2

ISSUE

Did Railroad acquire a fee simple determinable in the land occupied by the tracks by virtue of section 11 of 1845 Act No. 2593?

DISCUSSION

As noted above, Railroad acquired its interest in the land at issue under section 11 of the 1845 Charter, which granted to it and its successors “good right and title ... so long as the same may be used only for the purposes of the said road and no longer.” The Act required the person having title to prosecute for compensation within two years or be forever barred to recover the same. At issue is whether this language granted a fee simple determinable estate in the property, or whether it merely created an easement.

*322 Railroad correctly points out that “so long as” language in a deed is generally held to create a “fee simple determinable” estate. See Purvis v. McElveen, 234 S.C. 94, 98-99, 106 S.E.2d 913, 915 (1959) (fee simple determinable is an estate in fee with a qualification annexed to it). See also 28 Am.Jur.2d Estates § 28 (1966)(an estate in fee simple is created by any limitation which 1) creates an estate in fee simple and 2) provides the estate shall automatically expire upon the occurrence of the stated event).

Although use of a qualification (“so long as,” “until,” or “during”) is generally used to indicate a determinable estate, it does not necessarily indicate a grant is in fee. 3 Notably, in 1868, the General Assembly enacted 1868 Act No. 43, § 7, providing that, upon payment of compensation, “the right of way over said lands ... shall vest in [Railroad] ... so long as the same shall be used for such highway, and no longer; but the fee in such lands ... shall remain in the owner thereof ...” (Emphasis supplied). Clearly, under 1868 Act No. 43, § 7, the interest created is an easement, rather than a fee simple determinable, notwithstanding use of the phrase “so long as.” 4 Accordingly, we find use of the phrase “so long as” *323 does not necessitate a finding of a fee simple determinable estate.

Both this Court and the Court of Appeals have held the language of section 11 granted only an easement to Railroad. Waring v. Cheraw and Darlington Ry., 16 S.C. 416 (1882); Ragsdale v. Southern Ry. Co., 60 S.C. 381, 38 S.E. 609 (1901); Southern Ry. v. Beaudrot, 63 S.C. 266, 41 S.E. 299 (1902); Hill v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
563 S.E.2d 644, 349 S.C. 318, 2002 S.C. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faulkenberry-v-norfolk-southern-railway-co-sc-2002.