147 A. 820 | Conn. | 1929
Samuel N. Rockwell owned a farm in the town of Newington, and on February 28th, 1859, by warranty deed conveyed a portion of the farm containing sixteen rods to the Southeast School District of Newington "so long as said District shall occupy the *268 same for school purposes and no longer." On May 29th, 1875, Rockwell conveyed the entire farm, including the portion previously conveyed to the School District, to John H. Poindexter by warranty deed in which no mention was made of any reversionary interest in the school property. The plaintiffs are successors in title of Poindexter to the tract of land conveyed to him by Rockwell. In 1925 the town of Newington abandoned the use of the sixteen-rod plot for school purposes, and thereupon obtained a quitclaim deed of the plot from the son and only surviving heir of Rockwell. The defendants Banulski are successors in title of the town of Newington to the sixteen-rod plot. Both parties claim title to the sixteen-rod plot, the plaintiffs under the warranty deed of the whole farm from Rockwell to Poindexter, and the defendants under the quitclaim deed of the sixteen-rod plot from his son to the town of Newington.
The deed from Rockwell to the School District granted an estate which was to continue only so long as the property was used for school purposes. If at any time it ceased to be so used the title reverted to the grantor. Because the estate might last forever it was a fee. But, since it might be terminated at any time by the discontinuance of such use, it was not a fee simple, but what is usually called a base, determinable or qualified fee. First Universalist Society v. Boland,
The trial court was of the opinion that, though a possibility of reverter might be conveyed by an instrument in which specific reference was made to the interest conveyed, such reversionary interest would not pass under a deed in which it was not mentioned and which did not therefore express an intention to convey such interest. The court apparently overlooked the rule that a deed will be taken to convey the entire property and interest of the grantor in the premises unless something appears to limit it to a particular interest.Hoyt v. Ketcham, supra, p. 63. In that case it was held that a quitclaim deed, given upon payment of a mortgage, which contained the usual recital that the releasor conveyed "all right, title, interest, claim and demand whatsoever" which he had in the property, conveyed to the release a right to enter for condition broken although the deed contained no reference to such right. It cannot be said that Rockwell, by his warranty deed to Poindexter, conveyed a less interest in the property than would have passed under a quitclaim deed releasing to him whatever interest he may have had in it. Since his deed contained no statement that it was intended to convey anything less than his entire interest in the property, it must be construed as conveying, and being intended to convey, whatever interest the grantor had in it at the time of the execution of the deed, and therefore to include his reversionary interest in the tract conveyed to the School District.
Since the plaintiffs had by mesne conveyances acquired the reversionary interest of Rockwell in the *271 School District tract, the title to this tract reverted to them upon the happening of the event which terminated the estate of the School District, and the defendants took nothing by the conveyance from the son of Rockwell to the School District, their predecessor in title.
There is error, the judgment is set aside, and the cause remanded to the Court of Common Pleas with direction to enter judgment in favor of the plaintiffs.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.