41 S.E.2d 137 | Ga. | 1947
1. The petition for a declaratory judgment under the act of 1945 (Ga. L. 1945, p. 137), alleging that there existed an actual controversy, in that the petitioner claimed a fee-simple title as remote grantee under a deed executed January 29, 1914, and that the defendants, as remote grantees under a quitclaim deed executed October 10, 1936, by the same common grantor, and by virtue of a clause in the deed executed January 29, 1914, reserving a perpetual right to remove sand from the land conveyed, for which the grantee and his successors were to be paid 10 cents per car, claimed title to the sand, the petition praying that the reservation clause be declared void as violative of the rule against perpetuities — was not subject to demurrer upon the ground that a proper case was not made under the statute or that the Superior Court of Taylor County, where the defendants resided and the suit was brought, was without jurisdiction because the land lies in Talbot County.
2. The reservation clause above referred to was a perpetual option to buy the sand at 10 cents per car, and was void because violative of the rule against perpetuities.
The defendants jointly demurred generally to the petition upon the grounds: It alleges no cause of action either legal or equitable. It shows no meritorious controversy between the parties. It shows no title or interest of the petitioner in the subject matter of the alleged controversy but, on the contrary, shows that the petitioner has no interest or title to the same. This demurrer was overruled.
The defendants filed an answer admitting that they were residents of Taylor County and that there was an actual controversy as alleged in the petition, and denied the allegation that the outstanding chain of title under which the defendants claimed renders title to the land, in so far as the right to mine the sand is concerned, uncertain. The answer admitted the chain of title as shown by the abstract attached to the petition, and denied the allegations as to the invalidity of the reservation in the deed referred to in the petition, and denied that seven years had elapsed since the petitioner obtained his deed to the land, and admitted that the defendants hold a deed to the sand on the lot of land in question. By amendment the defendants alleged that the land in question was sandy and contained sand of good commercial value and was of no practical value for any other purpose than as sand for commercial purposes, that with the best known machinery and implements approximately 100 years would be required to mine and market the sand on the tract of land, and for this reason long term reservations are necessary and this fact was known to the petitioner when he purchased the land without the sand.
The petitioner filed a written motion to strike the answer and all amendments upon the ground that they set forth no meritorious defenses to the petition. This motion was sustained and the answer as amended stricken. Thereupon the judge entered judgment decreeing that the reservation in the deed from Kirkpatrick Sand Cement Company to J. C. Miller, dated January 29, 1914, was null and void ab initio and was without force and effect, that the petitioner has a fee simple title to the land described in the petition subject only to any lease or contracts that he himself may have made, and that the defendants have no interest in said land or in the sand on the land by reason of the reservation which is above declared void. The defendants were restrained from interfering with the petitioner in the possession and enjoyment of the *743
land. To this judgment the defendants excepted, assigning error also upon the judgment overruling their general demurrer to the petition and the judgment sustaining the petitioner's motion to dismiss the defendants' amended answer.
1. The general demurrer raises the question of the court's jurisdiction. Curtis v. College Park Lumber Co.,
2. The exception to the dismissal of the amended answer and the exception to the final judgment involve the same legal question and will be dealt with together. Both of these exceptions will be controlled by a construction of the reservation clause in the deed dated January 29, 1914. If that clause is an unqualified reservation of title, then the above exceptions must be sustained. If, on the other hand, it is merely an option, neither exception can be sustained. It is settled law that an exception of an interest in land contained in a deed constitutes an estate in the land. Houser v. Christian,
Does the reservation clause meet the legal definition of an option? An option is an agreement conferring upon one a right to buy described property within a fixed period of time and for a stated price. Black v. Maddox,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Wyatt, J.,who dissents.