On March 16, 1898, Stewart and others conveyed to Duncan certain lands attingent to and lying east of One Mile creek, in Mobile. In this conveyance the following additional terms of description appear: • , '
“Also that certain strip of land one hundred feet wide, commencing at a point on the north side of Marion street, one hundred feet west of the east line of square number three hundred and seventy-two of the Orange Grove tract; thence running in a southeastwardly direction, with even width of one hundred feet, through the northeast corner of square number three hundred and sixty-five of the Orange Grove tract; and thence eastwardly along the margin of One Mile creek until the north line of this strip reaches a point one hundred feet south of the north line of the property first above described if the same were extended across the creek; the object of conveying this last-described piece being to give track facilities in to and from the property herein first conveyed.”
On May 1, 1898, Duncan conveyed this same property, employing the same terms of description, to the Mobile Docks Company, " the appellee.
On January 9, 1907, Stewart and others conveyed to the Alabama Corn Mills Company (appellant) lands lying west of One Mile creek, including square numbered 365, to which particular reference was made in the above-quoted terms from the deed of Stewart and others to Duncan. The deed from Stewart and others to the appellant contained the usual full covenants, but the covenant 'against incumbrances reads as follows:
“That.the said property is free from all incumbrances, except it is subject to any right that we may have granted to William Butler Duncan by deed executed March 16, 1898, and recorded in Deed Book No..84 N. S., pages 536 et seq.”
The reference is to the'conveyance we have quoted, in part, above.
This bill seeks tbe construction of the conveyances made March 16 and May 1, 189S, respectively, with particular reference to the provisions pertaining to a right of way 100 feet wide across square numbered 305 for the purpose of laying tracks and operating trains thereon, so as to connect the tracks of the Mobile & Ohio Railroad Company (the owner of the appellee corporation) west of square 365 and of One Mile creek with the property lying east of One Milo creek, which was conveyed by Stewart and others to Duncan, and by Duncan to the appellee, in the year 1898.
It is clear beyond cavil that Stewart and others in their deed to Duncan — which in presently pertinent particulars Duncan reiterated in his conveyance to the appelleeintended to provide for a right of way 100 feet wide across square 365, and to invest the grantee with such a way of access over square 365 to the property thereby also conveyed, lying east or southeast of One Mile creek. This purpose is said to have failed because of the obviously abortive effort to convey a 100-foot strip of the area of square 365. In order to accord the manifest failure to make in the instrument an efficient description of a 100-foot strip of the area of square 365 — a failure so obvious that the parties could not have been otherwise than fully aware of it — an effect to render dubious the major intent of the parties, it must be implied, and thereupon accepted, that the paramount purpose of the parties was to convey an area, within the confines of square 365, rather than to invest the grantees with a 100-foot right of way, an easement, whereby the lands, then conveyed, lying east of One Mile creek, should be made readily accessible through means of the way thus expressly intended to be granted. To such an interpretation assent cannot be given without doing .violence to the clearly expressed" purpose of the parties. When fit is considered that the terms of the quoted matter from the conveyance leave completely uncertain where, on the surface of square 365, the boundary lines of the “strip” should be laid ’ — a condition of uncertainty of which the parties could not have then been ignorant— the force of the expression definitive of the “object of conveying this last-described piece” is emphasized, and the effect thereof is en-1 hanced and exalted, with the inevitable re•sult of constituting that expression the vehicle for declaring the paramount,intent entertained by the parties to the conveyance.
Affirmed.
