LEECO GAS & OIL COMPANY
v.
COUNTY OF NUECES.
Supreme Court of Texas.
*630 Francis I. Gandy, Jr. and John Pichinson, Corpus Christi, for petitioner.
Carlos Valdez, Co. Atty., & assistants Carol McCollister, Paula A. Wyatt, and James Rosenkild (Co. Atty.'s Office), Corpus Christi, for respondent.
OPINION
GONZALEZ, Justice.
This is a condemnation suit. The issue is whether Nueces County, as grantee in a deed, may condemn a possibility of reverter on land given to the County and pay mere nominal damages to the owner of the reversionary interest. The trial court answered this issue in the affirmative and the court of appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court.
In 1960, Leeco gift deeded fifty acres of land on Padre Island to Nueces County for use as a park. Leeco retained a reversionary interest in the deed whereby the County would keep the property "so long as a public park is constructed and actively maintained" by the County on the property. The County dedicated and maintained a park on the property. However, in 1983, the County began condemnation proceedings against Leeco's interest. The commissioners awarded Leeco $10,000 for its reversionary interest. Leeco appealed to the county court at law where the trial judge granted a partial summary judgment against Leeco resolving all issues except damages. In a separate trial to determine compensation for Leeco, experts testified that the land was worth between $3,000,000 and $5,000,000. The trial court awarded Leeco $10 in nominal damages.
Leeco brings several points of error claiming that the County is estopped from condemning the property by its acceptance of a deed with knowledge of the reversionary interest. Leeco also challenges the measure of damages. We first address the estoppel argument.
The Texas Constitution provides that "[n]o person's property shall be taken... for ... public use without adequate compensation being made, unless by the consent of such person. . . ." Tex. Const. art. I, § 17. Acquiring an interest in land to establish and maintain public parks involves a governmental function. See generally Schooler v. State,
Generally, under the Restatement of Property, a mere possibility of reverter *631 has no ascertainable value when the event upon which the possessory estate in fee simple defeasible is to end is not probable within a reasonably short period of time. See generally Restatement of Property § 53 comment b (1936). In affirming the $10 award of nominal damages, the court of appeals relied on City of Houston v. McCarthy,
Here, one county official testified that there were "various ideas and proposals and schemes" about putting income producing activities on the land. The same official further stated that "it would be in the County's best interest" to own the park outright so that it "may in the future consider plans that are inconsistent with the present deed restrictions." Furthermore, in the County's Original Statement in Condemnation, the County pleaded that its plans for future development of the Park included "uses which could be construed to cause Plaintiff's determinable fee estate, to terminate and cease." The County further alleged that the "present use and operation of the Park" placed an "undue burden upon Plaintiff in its future development of the Park." Thus, this is not a case of condemning a "remote" possibility of reverter, but rather an attempt by the County to remove the "burden" of the reversionary interest by condemning the interest and paying nominal damages.
Also, in the McCarthy, Sabine and Hamman decisions, a governmental entity, which did not previously own the future interest or the possessory defeasible estate, was condemning the entire fee to the property. Although in McCarthy and Hamman the owner of the possessory defeasible estate was also a governmental entity, a different and "paramount" governmental entity was the condemnor. Hamman,
There is a constitutional requirement that if the County is to condemn land, it must adequately compensate the landowner for the property interest taken. McCarthy,
We hold that when a governmental entity is the grantee in a gift deed in which the grantor retains a reversionary interest, if that same governmental entity condemns the reversionary interest, it must pay as compensation the amount by which the value *632 of the unrestricted fee exceeds the value of the restricted fee. See, e.g., Ink v. City of Canton,
We reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand this cause to the trial court to determine the amount by which the value of the unrestricted fee exceeds the value of the restricted fee.
CAMPBELL, J., concurs in an opinion joined by ROBERTSON and KILGARLIN, JJ.
CAMPBELL, Justice, concurring.
I concur in the result in this proceeding because there is some precedent for the court's holding. In future cases, however, I would hold that if a political subdivision has accepted a gift by deed that grants a fee simple determinable interest, initiation of condemnation proceedings by the grantee on the reversionary interest is a renunciation of the gift. Condemnation is an act inconsistent with the granted, authorized use and will cause the granted estate to terminate and revert to the grantor in fee simple absolute.
ROBERTSON and KILGARLIN, JJ., join in this concurring opinion.
