Jones v. Oklahoma City

1943 OK 307, 145 P.2d 971, 193 Okla. 637, 1943 Okla. LEXIS 43
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 5, 1943
DocketNo. 28928.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1943 OK 307 (Jones v. Oklahoma City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Oklahoma City, 1943 OK 307, 145 P.2d 971, 193 Okla. 637, 1943 Okla. LEXIS 43 (Okla. 1943).

Opinions

HURST, J.

This is a condemnation proceeding, instituted by plaintiff, Nettie E. Jones, against defendants, Nora E. Wallace, W. R. Ramsey, and the city of Oklahoma City, to assess damages resulting from the appropriation by the city of certain real property for public use under its power of eminent domain. Nora E. .Wallace and W. R. Ramsey by answer and cross-petition each claimed to be the owner of the property and sought like relief. Upon trial judgment was rendered for the defendant city, and plaintiff, Nettie E. Jones, and defendants Nora E. Wallace and W. R. Ramsey separately appeal.

The facts in this case are in many ways very similar to those in the case of Oklahoma City v. Local Federal Sav. & Loan Ass’n et al., 192 Okla. 188, 134 P. 2d 565. The land here involved lies near the land involved in that case and consists of the north 40 feet of lots 27 and 28 in block 21, original townsite of Oklahoma City, and a strip of land 10 feet wide, adjacent thereto on the north, the south half of a former alley. The tracts involved in both cases are now part of an area commonly known in Oklahoma,City as civic center, and were formerly part of the right of way of certain railroad companies. The city of Oklahoma City acquired these parcels, together with the other lands comprising the right of way, by quitclaim deed from the railroad companies, dated December 4, 1928, and took possession thereunder on December 4, 1930.

On May 8, 1891, Eugene Wallace was the owner of the said lots. On that date he and his wife conveyed the north 40 feet thereof to the railroad company by deed, the material portions of which are as follows:

“That the parties of the first part . . . do by these presents remise, release and quit claim unto the said party of the second part and to its successors and assigns, all their right, title, interest, claims and demand in and to the following described tract, piece and parcel of land . . . namely forty feet off the north end of lots No. 27 and 28 in block 21 . . . being intended for the use and occupation of said second party its successors and assigns as and for its right of way for the construction, operation and maintenance of its railroad and business at or upon the land hereby released and quit claimed. Provided that in case of abandonment of said premises by said second party, its successors or assigns for the purposes above mentioned the same shall revert to the grantors, their heirs or assigns. Together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining. To have and to hold the same to *639 the said party of the second part and to its successors and assigns to the sole and proper use, benefit and behoof of the said party of the second part, its successors, and assigns forever for the use and purposes thereinbefore set forth. . . .”

Thereafter, on October 13, 1891, Eugene Wallace and wife conveyed said lpts to J. B. Wheeler by quitclaim deed, making no reference therein to the grant to the railroad company. On August 2, 1893, J. B. Wheeler and wife by quitclaim deed conveyed said lots in their entirety to J. H. Wheler. On April 8, 1899, J. H. Wheeler and wife conveyed to John Threadgill said lots “except the 40 feet off the north end of all of said lots belonging to” the railroad. By mesne conveyances executed by John Threadgill and his successors in title, each containing an exception of the north 40 feet, the south 100 feet of said lots was thereafter conveyed to the defendant W. R. Ramsey, and he was the owner of the south' 100 feet at the time the railroad company abandoned the north 40 feet thereof for railroad purposes on December 4, 1930.

On August 24, 1903, the city by ordinance confirmed a former grant to the railroad company of a “right of way” through the alley between First and Second streets. This alley includes the 10-foot strip adjoining the said lots on the north, above referred to.

Nettie E. Jones is the sole heir of J. H. Wheeler, deceased, Nora E. Wallace is an heir, and the holder by assignment of the interest of all the other heirs of Eugene Wallace, deceased, said assignment being in the form of a quitclaim deed dated June 27, 1932.

Nettie E. Jones, Nora E. Wallace, and W. R. Ramsey each contends that he or she was the owner of the land involved on December 4, 1930, when the city took possession thereof, and each claims the right to receive whatever compensation may be awarded therefor in the condemnation proceeding. The bases of their various contentions are as follows:

Nora E. Wallace contends that the right reserved by Eugene Wallace, when he conveyed the land to the railroad company on May 8, 1891, was no more than a right of re-entry for breach of a condition subsequent; that under the statutes in force at that time such right was not transferable, and that the quitclaim deed of October 13, 1891, from Wallace to J. B. Wheeler, although purporting to convey all of said lots, did not operate to transfer, and was not an attempt to transfer, such right of re-entry; and that such right resides in her as his heir and as assignee of his other heirs.

Nettie E. Jones contends that the deed of Wallace to the railroad company conveyed merely an easement, and that he retained the servient fee, which was alienable; that if not an easement, the estate conveyed was at most a determinable fee upon conditional limitation and not a determinable fee upon condition subsequent; that after such conveyance there remained in Wallace, not a mere right of re-entry, but an estate in reversion, which was alienable; and that J. H. Wheeler acquired such servient fee or reversionary estate by the conveyances from Wallace and J. B. Wheeler conveying the lots to him in their entirety, but that J. H. Wheeler expressly excepted such estate by his deed of April 8, 1899, to John Thread-gill, and that such servient fee or estate did not pass thereby, but remained in him and descended to her as his heir.

W. R. Ramsey agrees with the contentions of Nettie E. Jones as to the nature of the estate retained by Wallace in his deed to the railroad company but contends that the deed from J. H. Wheeler to John Threadgill of April 8, 1899, whereby he conveyed said lots “except the 40 feet off the north end belonging to” the railroad, did not clearly express an intention to reserve the servient fee or reversionary estate, and that since J. H. Wheeler thereafter owned no other land adjacent' to the right of way, such estate, under the doctrine of Cuneo v. Champlin Refining *640 Co., 178 Okla. 198, 62 P. 2d 82, passed to John Threadgill with the fee to the adjoining south 100 feet of the lots, and thence by mesne conveyances to him.

1. Several of the contentions thus made have been settled by our decision in the case of Oklahoma City v. Local Federal Sav. & Loan Ass’n, above. In that case we held that a deed, identical in form with that of May 8, 1891, from Wallace to the railroad company, conveyed a determinable fee upon condition subsequent, and not a determinable fee upon conditional limitation „ (for a good statement of the distinction between the two, see that case), and that the grantor thereafter had no estate in the land so cenveyed, but only a power to declare a forfeiture of the estate for condition broken, called a right of re-entry.

On May 8, 1891, the General Statutes of the Territory of Oklahoma of 1890

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1943 OK 307, 145 P.2d 971, 193 Okla. 637, 1943 Okla. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-oklahoma-city-okla-1943.