P C K Properties, Inc. v. City of Cuyahoga Falls

176 N.E.2d 441, 112 Ohio App. 492, 16 Ohio Op. 2d 378, 1960 Ohio App. LEXIS 696
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 27, 1960
Docket4969
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 176 N.E.2d 441 (P C K Properties, Inc. v. City of Cuyahoga Falls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
P C K Properties, Inc. v. City of Cuyahoga Falls, 176 N.E.2d 441, 112 Ohio App. 492, 16 Ohio Op. 2d 378, 1960 Ohio App. LEXIS 696 (Ohio Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

Doyle, P. J.

This action was commenced in the Common Pleas Court of Summit County, in which Ethel M. Fields, as the surviving spouse of Bernard C. Fields, deceased, and Richard E. Fields and Shirley Apelbaum, as the only children of the deceased Bernard C. Fields, sought a judgment declaring that they “be adjudged the owners in fee simple” of specific real property previously conveyed by the said Bernard C. Fields to the city of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio.

As a ground for the prayer of the amended petition, they pleaded that, “By reason of defendant’s failure to use said *493 premises for the purpose of creating and maintaining a public park known as and called ‘Fields Park,’ all the right, title and interest in and to said premises has reverted to the plaintiffs Ethel M. Fields, Eichard E. Fields and Shirley Apelbaum.”

Pertinent parts of the deed from Bernard C. Fields to the city of Cuyahoga Falls appear as follows:

“Know all men by these presents, that I, Bernard C. Fields, a married man, the grantor, in consideration of one and no/100 dollars ($1.00) to him paid by the city of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, a municipal corporation, the grantee, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, does hereby grant, bargain, sell and Convey to said grantee, as long as used as hereinafter set forth, the following-described premises, to wit: # # #.
“To have and to hold said premises, with all the rights, easements and appurtenances thereunto belonging, and all the rents, issues and profits therefrom, to the said grantee, subject, however, to all legal highways and zoning and allotment restrictions of record and to the conditions hereinafter contained.
“The above-described land is to be used by said city of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, for the purpose of creating and maintaining a public park to be known as and called Fields Park.” (Italics ours.)

The amended answer of the city denied that the land was not used for recreation and park purposes, and specifically pleaded “that the city has not used said property in any way inconsistent with the intended purpose.”

The city further pleaded that, “if plaintiffs Ethel M. Fields, Eichard E. Fields and Shirley Apelbaum had any right or interest in the property * * *, then said right or interest was lost by virtue of an attempted assignment of the same to P C K Properties, Inc. [one of the plaintiffs], and in which event, any condition or limitation contained in the deed # * # is extinguished, and the city of Cuyahoga Falls owns said property in absolute fee simple without a condition attached.”

Also, that “the language contained in the granting clause and the habendum clause of the deed * * * does not represent a reversionary clause or a determinable fee, and does not divest the defendant of any interest in said property, and in fact de *494 fendant says that an absolute fee was granted to the city in and to said property.”

Pursuant to trial, the court entered a judgment on the issues. In substance the court found:

1. “That the city of Cuyahoga Falls upon accepting the deed * * * did create and maintain a city park by the nonuse of the premises for any other purpose, but that the failure of the mayor to name the premises ‘Fields Park,’ as required in the deed, constitutes a condition broken and gives rise to a right of re-entry on the part of the heirs of the original grantor. ’ ’
2. “* * * that a contract was entered into between PCK Properties, Inc., and the heirs of the original grantor * * *, under the terms of which the heirs of the grantor agreed in writing to assign, convey and sell to P C K Properties, Inc., the right to reversion of the subject premises, and the seller agreed to execute and deliver any documents necessary to complete the sale, to complete the conveyance of said rights, and to execute the same upon the signing of the agreement. ’ ’
3. That “A portion of the property covered by the agreement was conveyed, and, since equity considers that done which ought to be done, * * * that the promise to convey was unconditional and in praesenti, and was to be done immediately upon the signing of the contract. This constituted an attempt to convey.”
4. “ * * * that the law of Ohio, though illogical and unsupported in reason, is settled that an attempt to convey a possibility of reverter before the right of re-entry is exercised, constitutes the extinguishment of the right.”
5. That the court was “bound to render judgment in favor of the defendant, on the premise that the attempt to convey extinguished the plaintiffs’ rights.”
6. That the amended petition of the plaintiffs should be dismissed.

At the outset of our legal observations in this appeal, it is noted that the conveyance to the city of Cuyahoga Falls embodied the limitation as to the use of the property in the granting clause (by reference, to wit: “as long as used as hereinafter set forth”), as well as in a clause immediately following the habendum clause (the clause to which reference is above made), *495 to wit: ‘ ‘ The above-described land is to be used by said city of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, for the purpose of creating and maintaining a public park to be known as and called Fields Park. ’ ’

It is further observed that, while the trial court found that the city maintained the land as a city park, it further found that the city did break a “condition” which gave right to “re-entry on the part of the heirs of the original grantor. ’ ’ For the purposes of this decision, we find the conclusions of fact, that the city maintained the land as a park but did not name the park “Fields Park,” sustained by the evidence.

A review of the many leading cases in the various states leads to the conclusion that there is a common judicial aversion toward the termination of estates or their forfeiture upon the exercise of rights of re-entry, where the grantor is a public entity such as a state, county or municipal corporation. There appears to be an expressed reluctance to hold that either a determinable fee, or an estate upon condition subsequent, has been created.

We look with deference to the rules that a determinable fee simple is an estate created with a special limitation which delimits the duration of an estate in land; and, that an estate in fee simple subject to a condition subsequent is an estate in fee simple which includes a limitation that, upon the occurrence of “a stated event the conveyor or his successor in interest shall have the power to terminate the estate so created” (I Restatement of the Law of Property, Section 45); and, that “An estate in fee simple with a condition subsequent is differentiated from an estate in determinable fee simple by the fact that the ending of the former type of estate is not automatic upon the occurrence of the event specified in the creating conveyance, while the ending of the latter type of estate is automatic upon such occurrence. * * *”20 Ohio Jurisprudence (2d), Estates, Section 23, and cases cited. See also: Warren v.

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Bluebook (online)
176 N.E.2d 441, 112 Ohio App. 492, 16 Ohio Op. 2d 378, 1960 Ohio App. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-c-k-properties-inc-v-city-of-cuyahoga-falls-ohioctapp-1960.