delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit for a specific performance in which the appellant filed his bill to require the respondent Telephone Company to specifically perform its contract оf purchase of a tract of real estate which it had bargained to purchase from said Bailey. The Chancellor sustained the demurrer of the defendant and dismissed the hill, 'hence this аppeal.
The principal question is whether or not the following language, without more, created a fee simple determinable subject to a possibility of reverter in the heirs of the grantor. The following language which appears in the chain of title of the said Bailey:
“In consideration of love and interest we have in Education, we this day deed, transfer and сonvey a certain lot or parcel of land * * * To have and to hold for school purposes * * * so long as the aforesaid lot of land is used for the aforesaid purposеs.”
It is the insistence of the appellant that the words
“so
long as” are not sufficient to create a fee simple determinable subject to a possibility of reverter in the grantor or his heirs. The appellee insists that they are sufficient. Bоth parties have full briefs citing cases from various States of the Union but we do not find it necessary to respond by a discussion of each one of these cases. We think that the rule is cоrrectly stated in our own case of
Yarbrough v. Yarbrough,
“Old examples of determinable fees are limitations to one and his heirs ‘ as long as the Church of St. Paul shall stand,’ or until the grantee go to Borne;’ the most appropriate words to create a determinable fee being, during, so long as, till, until, whilst, etc., such words fitly prefacing a limitation. * * *
■ “For example, where the grant was to a religious society, ‘to have and to hold to the said (society) and their assigns, so long as said real estate shall by said society or its assigns be devoted to the uses, interests, and support of those dоctrines of the Christian religion,’ set forth in a certain formulary, it was held to create a determinable fee, terminating without entry and reverting to the grantor when the use specified ceаsed.”
Likewise, in Tiffany on Beal Property, 2nd. Yol. 1, p. 334, sec. 93, the author says in part:
“A limitation to a man and his heirs, so long as they shall have heirs of his body, or until the marriage of a certain person, or so long as St. Paul’s Church shall stand, or a tree shall stand, are among the examples given in the books of an estate which, while descending to the heirs general, is liable to terminate on the happening of some event. The text is supported by a footnote'71-a which cites Blackstone, Kent, and others.”
*198 In 18 Corpus Juris, page 301, section 281, it is said:
“A determinable fee may either arise from and be depеndent upon a condition, or arise from a limitation, the essential difference being that, in a case of a condition, the estate is not terminated ipso facto by the happening of the event upon which it may be defeated, while in the case of a limitation it passes at once by way of reverter to the grantor, or, in the case of a limitation over, to the persоn to whom it is limited, upon the happening of the event which fixes the limitation * * *. It results from this distinction that the usual technical words by which a limitation is expressed relate to time, differing from those exрressing a condition * * *.”
In 26 C.J.S. Deeds, sec. 110, p. 921, after referring to the expressions, “so long as” “while” “until”, “during”, etc., it is stated that it is not necessary to use these words, or words of this type, provided that the grantor’s intention is otherwise expressed, which is in accordance with the rule in this State to be referred to hereinafter briefly. Then the text states:
“However, the words of time previously mentioned are the usual operative words. While express provisions for reversion is not essential to the creation of the type of interest under discussion, an express provision fоr reverter may be made in the deed, and the clearest evidence of an intention to create such interest may be found in deeds where there has been a coupling of wоrds of time with a clear and definite expression of a possibility of reverter. * * * A grant to an institution so long as said institution shall exist will also suffice to create such a fee [citing a Massa *199 chusetts case]. In order that such a fee may be created, a qualification must be clearly expressed.”
Templeton v. Strong,
The clearest case that we have found on the question is
Lynch v. Bunting,
“Because it is essential that in оrder to introduce a determinable feature into a fee simple conveyance that the instrument itself must, on its face, contain a specific intent so to do, so the use of аpt and proper words may be given proper consideration. All the au- *200 tkorities, ancient and modern, are agreed that the most apt and proper words for the creаtion of a fee simple, determinable are ‘until’, ‘during’, ‘so long as’ and similar expressions, but other words may have the same effect. It will be observed that the apt phrase ‘so long as’ is a tеrm used in the present deed.
“The limiting langauge of the present deed is divisible in two parts. There is first the expression ‘and the parties of the first part have deeded this land to the parties of the second part for the purpose of school and no other purpose ***.’”
The author then states that those words alone would do no more than simply express the purpose of the grant and would not be sufficient to create a determinable fee. Then quoting further, it is said:
“The limiting phrase of the deed, however, did not stop with the foregoing quotation, but continued ‘and (the deed or the estate) shall be good so long as there is a schoolhouse kept on it and school kept there at the customary times of teaching’.
“These words are either a merely reiterated and repeated desire of user, or they constitute a special limitation of the estate. Apt and proper words for the purposе of creating a special limitation are made use of, and, except for an inclusion of an express right of reverter, it is somewhat difficult to see how a grantor could have more concisely and effectually declared such intent. The fact that the possibility of reverter is not expressly mentioned and reserved to the grantors is not a material cirсumstance, for such possibility of reverter is a legal consequence of the estate itself, *201 rather than a fact which creates the estate. If the possibility of reverter beсomes operative and the estate is returned to the grantors, the estate is not restored to the grantors as something conveyed by the reverting clause, but because the feе has ceased to be in the grantees, by reason of the happening of the prescribed event. Cookman v. Silliman,22 Del.Ch. 303 ,2 A.2d 166 , at page 168.”
That opinion cites seven supporting cases from other States. (Emphasis ours.)
Appellant cites
Walker v. Shelby County School Board,
These cases are not in point because they simply contain merely an expression of the purpose for which the grant was made, which under all authоrities is not sufficient to create a determinable fee. We are therefore constrained to hold that the estate in this case was a determinable fee. The only other quеstion raised by the assignment of error is that appellant seeks to rely upon the first section of the Act of 1819, T.C.A. sec. 28-201, that is the seven year statute to create a title in fee. Since there is absolutely no evidence of any grant from this State or the State of North Carolina, this assignment be overruled.
The.decree below is affirmed.
