Franks v. Sparks

121 S.E.2d 27, 217 Ga. 117, 1961 Ga. LEXIS 390
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 10, 1961
Docket21262
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 121 S.E.2d 27 (Franks v. Sparks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franks v. Sparks, 121 S.E.2d 27, 217 Ga. 117, 1961 Ga. LEXIS 390 (Ga. 1961).

Opinions

Grice, Justice.

This case involves title to land originally deeded for school purposes. The discontinuance of the school [118]*118brought about the dispute between the climants here, each of whom holds a deed which purportedly provides title. For review is the denial of the defendants’ motion for new trial. The facts necessary for consideration of the assignment of error follow.

L. C. Sparks filed an ejectment suit in the Superior Court of Franklin County, Georgia, against J. E. Franks, chairman, and others, as trustees of Bold Springs Community Center, and as individuals, for recovery of three and six one-hundredths acres of land. The answer of the defendants denied Sparks’ claim of title, asserted it in themselves, and set up that they had been since 1957 and were now in possession of the land. Trial before a jury resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendants’ amended motion for new trial was denied, and they assign error on such ruling.

The conveyances, which each of the parties claims resulted in title to him, were, chronologically, as follows.

1. In 1918 C. L. Alexander executed a warranty deed to the Board of Education of Franklin County, Georgia, to 3.06 acres, hereinafter referred to as the “school lot.” The habendum clause recited: “To have and hold the said bargained premises with all the rights, members and appurtenances thereto appertaining, for school purposes, subject to' the right of said C. L. Alexander, his heirs, to repossess the same when it ceases to be used for school purposes, the said Board having the right to move the building that may be on the same. . .”

2. In 1931 Alexander conveyed by warranty deed to Northeastern Banking Company a large tract of land which included this school lot in its geographical boundaries. Without specifically mentioning the school lot, the instrument recited that “This deed conveys all the right, title, interest or equity that the said C. L. Alexander has or might have had in and to the lands herein described.”

3. In 1932 Northeastern Banking Company deeded to W. D. Duckett the large tract which it acquired in 1931. No mention was made of the school lot but the metes and bounds encompassed it.

4. In 1934 Duckett contracted with the plaintiff to sell him this same large tract. Again, no reference was made to the [119]*119school lot, but it was included in the geographical boundaries described. In that same year, 1934, Duckett conveyed the tract to the plaintiff by warranty deed, but incorporated at the end of the description the following: “Less certain lands cut off from the above tracts of land and deeded to the Board of Education of Bold Springs School, subject to the conditions in said school house deed . . .” and less other acreage not involved here.

5. In September, 1957, the school lot having ceased in 1955 to be used for school purposes, the Franklin County Board of Education executed a quitclaim deed to the school lot to the heirs of C. L. Alexander.

6. In October 1957, the heirs of C. L. Alexander by warranty deed conveyed the school lot to the defendants, trustees of Bold Springs Community Center. This deed recited that the property embraced in it was the same as that deeded in 1918 by C. L. Alexander to the Board of Education of Franklin County, Georgia; that such prior deed provided that when the property was not used for school purposes, his heirs were “to repossess said land,” that they had repossessed it and were conveying it upon the same condition.

Thus, the plaintiff relied upon the following conveyances of the large tract whose geographical boundaries encompassed the school lot: (1) Alexander to Northeastern Banking Company (2) the Bank to Duckett and (3) Duckett to the plaintiff. The defendants claim under the following conveyances of the school lot itself: (1) Alexander to the Board of Education of Franklin County, (2) that Board of Education to Alexander’s heirs and (3) Alexander’s heirs to the defendants.

The oral evidence related almost exclusively to what occurred in 1934 between Duckett and the plaintiff insofar as their sales contract and deed were concerned. It centered around the exception in the deed, “Less certain lands cut off from the above tracts of land and deeded to the Board of Education of Bold Springs School, subject to the conditions in said school house deed.”

However, that evidence and the issues raised by it need not be considered here since this case, as we analyze it, is deter[120]*120mined by the first conveyance enumerated above, the 1918 deed from C. L. Alexander to the Board of Education of Franklin County.

Sparks, as plaintiff in ejectment, “must recover on the strength of his own title, and not on the weakness of the defendants' title." Code § 33-101. He must show not only that when Alexander executed to the bank his warranty deed on the large tract whose description encompassed the school lot, he intended thereby to convey the school lot, but also, he must show that he had such an interest in the lot that he could convey. Otherwise, the bank received no interest in the lot and therefore could pass none to Duckett for him to transfer to the plaintiff. If title to the school lot never reached Duckett, the myriad of issues arising from his 1934 deed to1 the plaintiff do1 not concern us here.

This brings us back to the 1918 deed from Alexander to the Board of Education, with its language, “To have and to hold the said bargained premises with all the rights, members and appurtenances thereto appertaining for school purposes, subject to the right of said C. L. Alexander, his heirs, to repossess the same when it ceases to be used for school purposes, the said Board having the right to- move the building that may be on the same," and to the question as to what interest in the school lot Alexander retained after this deed. Was it an alienable interest which could be transferred to the bank by his 1931 deed of the tract encompassing the school lot — or was it an inalienable interest that could not pass by that deed?

The plaintiff contends that the effect of the 1918 deed was to grant a fee simple subject to a limitation and that the interest retained by the grantor — the possibility of reversion— was alienable. But the defendants contend that the deed granted a fee on condition subsequent, leaving the grantor with the right of reentry — an inalienable interest.

Whether an instrument creates a limitation or a condition subsequent is often difficult to ascertain. The line may be a fine one. Nevertheless, it is there.

From the many statements of distinction we gather the basic difference to be this: In a limitation, the instrument creating [121]*121the conditional estate marks its duration. Words of limitation restrict the continuance of the estate and denote the period which is to determine it. The happening of the named event ipso facto terminates the estate. In a condition subsequent, the instrument creating the conditional estate marks the event upon which the estate is liable to be defeated, but some act of election on the part of the grantor or his heirs is necessary to actually determine the estate. This distinction is well illustrated by the following text statement quoted in Atlanta Consolidated Street Ry. Co. v. Jackson, 108 Ga.

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Franks v. Sparks
121 S.E.2d 27 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 S.E.2d 27, 217 Ga. 117, 1961 Ga. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franks-v-sparks-ga-1961.