Defendant-Appellant, Missouri Friends of the Wabash Trace Nature Trail, Inc. (“Wabash Trace”), appeals from a grant of summary judgment entered on March 27, 1998, quieting title to a 100-foot strip and two 50-foot strips of land in favor of Plaintiff-Respondents, Danny Moore and E.R. Hutcheson, respectively. Wabash Trace claims the (rial court erred in granting summary judgment against it because it obtained title through a quitclaim deed conveying ownership from the Norfolk and Western Railway (“Norfolk”) and because it and its predecessors in title acquired title to the land through adverse possession.
We find that the three deeds at issue here restricted the quantum of interest conveyed to the railroad, and did not convey that interest for valuable consideration,- and thus the railroad did not receive title to the land in fee simple absolute, but rather received an easement to use the land until such time as the use for railroad purposes was abandoned. Once abandoned, title to the tracts reverted to the Respondents as the adjacent landowners. We also find that Wabash Trace’s adverse possession could not have started until the land was abandoned for all railroad purposes in October 1986, and since the property owners asserted their rights of ownership by filing suit in May 1996, Wabash Trace is unable to establish the requisite 10 year period for adverse claim to the land. Judgment affirmed.
7. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On December 27, 1878, F.A. and L.M. Rogers granted an interest in a 100-foot strip of property to the Council Bluffs Railroad by a handwritten deed. The deed stated it was given “in consideration of the sum of one dollar and the building maintaining and operating of a railroad by the said party of the second part, its successors and assigns_” The deed restricted use of the tract to railroad purposes, providing that the grantee railroad would have rights in the property, “so long as tis used for Rail Road purposes....” Respondent E.R. Hutcheson currently owns the land adjoining this strip of land, and alleges that, for reasons set out below, the strip deeded to the railroad for railroad purposes reverted to him once use of the strip for railroad purposes ceased. 1
*684 In January 1879, both James and Love-day Bullock, and Charles Bullock, also granted interests in 100-foot strips of their land to the Council Bluffs Railroad, “[f]or the consideration of Five Dollars to [the grantors] in hand paid and the building of a ... wire fence ... on each side of the rail road track.” Both of these deeds expressly provided that the conveyance was for purposes of a railroad, and “that in case the construction of said road shall be abandoned or not pass over said land, the right to said land is to revert to the undersigned.” Respondent Danny Moore is the current owner of land adjoining parts of the strips of land described in these deeds, and alleges that, for reasons set out below, the strips reverted to him once use of the strips for railroad purposes ceased. 2
From the period after these deeds were granted until early 1984, the Council Bluffs and St. Louis Railway Company, the Wabash Railroad, and, finally, the Norfolk and Western Railway Company, operated trains over the line which ran through this land. By the early 1980’s, rail transportation over the line had become unprofitable. Consequently, on June 30, 1983, Norfolk and Wabash jointly applied to the Interstate Commerce Commission (“ICC”) for permission to abandon the track and discontinue service for 222.3 miles of the railroad, including the part of the line in At-chison County which is at issue here. The ICC granted this request, which became effective on December 10, 1983, and gave the railroad one year to complete its abandonment. It did so in February 1984. That same month, the Northern Missouri Railroad began operating trains over the tracks between Brunswick, Missouri and Blanchard, Iowa, including the railroad right-of-way in Atchison County. This “short-line” railroad operated from February 1984 to September 1986, when the Northern Missouri Railroad discontinued its service, pursuant to permission from the ICC, because of financial problems. Norfolk removed the track and ties from this entire part of the rail corridor, including from the strips of land in question here, during the second half of 1988, completing that work by December 1988.
On June 27, 1995, Norfolk 3 executed a quitclaim deed to Wabash Trace, giving it its interest in the right-of-way, “SUBJECT, to any conditions, restrictions, reservations, licenses, leases and easements, whether or not of record.” The consideration given for these deeds is unknown; the total consideration given for a quitclaim deed by Wabash Trace for this land and other land, including land located in Nodaway County, Missouri, totaled $50,-000.00. The purpose for the purchase was to extend to Maryville, Missouri a hiking and biking trail which presently runs from Council Bluffs, Iowa, south to the Iowa-Missouri line. After Wabash Trace received this quitclaim deed, its members began to clear parts of the corridor of brush and weeds and to establish a roadbed over parts of the “abandoned” right-of-way.
On May 31, 1996, Respondents Hutche-son and Moore filed this action to quiet title in the disputed tracts of land that adjoin their property. Wabash Trace answered and requested that it be declared the owner in fee simple absolute of the disputed tract. After discovery, Respondents filed a motion for summary judgment, which was sustained by the trial court on March 27, 1998. Wabash Trace appeals.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“The propriety of summary judgment is purely an issue of law which we review
de novo
on the record submitted and the law.”
Bonds v. Missouri Dep’t of Mental
*685
Health,
III. THE RAILROAD’S INTEREST IN THE PROPERTY WAS AN EASEMENT WHICH WAS EXTINGUISHED UPON ABANDONMENT
Wabash Trace claims that Norfolk’s 1995 quitclaim deed conveyed fee simple title to all three disputed tracts to it. Specifically, as to the two Bullock deeds, Wabash Trace argues that the two original deeds of conveyance simply provided that the land would revert to the “undersigned grantor” in case the construction of the railroad was abandoned. Wabash Trace asserts that, since the railroad was built, this condition of reverter was never fulfilled. Wabash Trace also argues that, while the Rogers deed does state it is only a determinable fee so long as the property is used for railroad purposes, that restriction is not controlling here because there is no evidence that the possibility of reverter was ever conveyed to or inherited by anyone, much less to Respondents in this case.
Wabash Trace’s arguments are based on the premise that the three original deeds conveyed a fee simple title to the railroad which the railroad and its successors retained until the railroad formally disclaimed any interest in the right-of-way and passed its title to Wabash Trace through the 1995 quitclaim deed. Wabash Trace’s arguments, however, ignore the long line of case law in Missouri addressing the types of deeds at issue here, and addressing how rights of ownership are determined once a railroad track has been abandoned. This analysis begins with an examination of the relevant statutes, which, both at the time of the deeds and now, provide that a railroad has the power:
To take and hold such voluntary grants of real estate and other property as shall be made to it to aid in the construction, maintenance and accommodation of its railroads; but the real estate received by voluntary grant shall be held and used for the purpose of such grant only. 4
The term “voluntary” grant has been construed to mean a conveyance without valuable consideration.
Brown v. Weare,
In applying this statute and in developing the common law governing the effect of conveyances of a strip of land to a railroad, the courts of this State have consistently looked at three factors to determine whether a deed of land to a railroad passes title to the railroad in fee simple, or grants merely an easement in favor of the railroad, subject to later reversion to the grantor or his heirs if use for railroad purposes later ceases. These factors are: (1) whether the deed includes language conveying a “right of way;” 5 (2) the *686 amount of consideration; and (3) language in the deed limiting the use of the land for railroad purposes.
Factor (1) — use of words granting only a “right of way” — is not applicable here since none of the three deeds refer to a right of way. 6
The second factor the courts of this State examine is the consideration given by the railroad in exchange for the property. As stated above, the statute in effect at the time of the conveyances, the 1853 General Railroad Corporation Act, allowed railroads to take “voluntary grants of real estate.” Brown discussed the significance of the term “voluntary” as used in the statute:
We find there a history of the surrounding conditions which existed when Section 5128 was enacted and which is recounted in order to support the court’s analysis of the term voluntary grant. This history indicates that the “quantum of consideration” of a grant to a railroad company was indeed the purpose for the act. It is apparent that the legislature intended positively to interfere in the dealings of a railroad company with the landowners and to protect the latter if the railroad was never constructed, and also if the railroad company abandoned land acquired for its use. Therefore, the term valuable consideration must have been used in the Coates case in the sense of substance rather than in its more generally understood use in the law of conveyancing. That case could not have intended that a mere nominal consideration would be adequate to convert a voluntary grant as the latter term is used by the statute.
Brown,
Later cases have similarly interpreted use of the term “voluntary grant” to mean that the railroad must give valuable rather than mere nominal consideration in order to acquire a fee simple interest.
G.M. Morris Boat Co.,
The third factor courts consider in determining whether a grant is in fee simple or only for an easement is whether the deed contains language that restricts the railroad’s use of the land. In
Brown,
the original landowners conveyed a strip of land by a deed which provided that the grantors, “do hereby sell, convey ... the right of way for said Railroad [100] feet in width .... [t]o have and to hold the same for all the uses and purposes of said railroad company so long as the same shall be used for the construction, use and occupation of said railroad....” The court held that the deed granted only an easement because of the use of the words ‘right of way1
and also because of the provision limiting the use of the land for railroad purposes. Brown,
In
Jordan v. Stallings,
Applying factors (2) and (3) here, we note that the Rogers deed purported to convey an interest in the property, “in consideration of the sum of one dollar and the building maintaining and operating of a railroad by the said party of the second part, its successors and assigns....” The deed also restricted use of the property to railroad purposes, providing that the grantee railroad would have rights in the property, “so long as used for Rail Road purposes_” In
Brown
and
G.M. Morris Boat Co.,
the deeds recited consideration of one dollar with no other evidence of consideration. The courts in those cases held that one dollar was not substantial consideration and that the deed constituted a voluntary grant within the statute.
Brown,
The Bullock deeds similarly described the tracts as being deeded, “[f]or the consideration of Five Dollars to [the grantors] in hand paid and the building of a ... wire fence....” 8 Both of these deeds also expressly provided that the conveyance was for purposes of a railroad, stating “that in case the construction of said road shall be abandoned or not pass over said land, the right to said land is to revert to the undersigned.”
These deeds, like those set out above, recite only nominal, rather than valuable consideration under the grant. Moreover, both Bullock deeds clearly stated the land was conveyed for construction of the railroad, and provided for a reversion in the event the limitation ceased being complied with. While, here, the railroad was constructed, as noted above, it is, “[t]he expression or limitation of the use to which the property is to be put is a decisive factor in construing whether a fee or an easement was conveyed.”
Jordan,
Such abandonment occurred here. Specifically, the Norfolk and the Wabash Railroad Companies obtained a certificate of abandonment from the ICC in 1983, and abandoned the track in 1984. The Northern Missouri Railroad, a “shortline” railroad, organized and operated trains over the corridor from 1984 until late 1986. After the Northern Missouri Railroad discontinued its service, Norfolk removed the track and ties from the entire rail corridor during the second half of 1988.
“When a railroad ceases to use for railroad purposes property over which it has an easement, the original owners or their grantees thereafter hold the property free from the burden of the easement,” and, “in the absence of contrary evidence, title to the fee is presumed to be in the abutting land owners to the center of the way.”
G.M. Morris Boat Co.,
Wabash Trace also argues that, to the extent the precedent set forth above would place title back in the property owners, it should no longer be followed. Wabash Trace contends that the greater social good is now in maintaining the land corridors for future rail technology, while preserving them as linear greenways for environmental and wildlife conservation. Without addressing the merits of Wabash Trace’s intentions, we note that we are without authority to disregard the established case law that has developed in regard to railroad land grants. Arguments for a change in policy must, rather, be addressed to the Supreme Court or to the legislature. 10
IV. APPELLANTS FAILED TO ESTABLISH ADVERSE POSSESSION OF THE DISPUTED TRACTS
Alternatively, defendants claim ownership of the land in dispute because they and their predecessors in title acquired title to the land through adverse possession. In order to succeed with an adverse possession claim, a claimant must show that his or her possession is: (1) hostile and under claim of right; (2) actual; (3) open and notorious; (4) exclusive; and (5) continuous for ten years prior to the commencement of the action.
Strubberg v. Roethemeyer,
Wabash Trace argues the following facts establish its claim by adverse possession:
1.) The evidence by affidavit is that the railroad abandoned the corridor in 1988;
2.) During the period of time of over ten (10) years after 1988, the defendant-appellant and its predecessors in title claimed the land by:
(a) Using the land for a short line railroad from 1984-1986;
(b) Cutting weeds and caring for the corridor;
(c) Paying taxes on corridor;
(d) Insuring the land corridor as owner against risk to protect users;
(e) Paying $50,000.00 in consideration for a quit-claim deed to the corridor.
The record shows that Wabash Trace made a hostile, open and notorious claim of right to the land once it obtained the quitclaim deed from Norfolk in June 1995. By its own admission, however, Wabash Trace did not begin cutting weeds or caring for the disputed tract until that time. In addition, the only evidence presented by Wabash Trace regarding the payment of taxes and premiums for liability insurance on the property indicates such payments were made by it after June 1995. Wabash Trace failed to provide any evidence that these activities were undertaken by persons other than the adjacent property owners at any time between abandonment and its receipt of the quitclaim deed in 1995. Moreover, once Respondents learned of Wabash Trace’s claims to the land, they acted in a manner consistent with ownership and filed an action to quiet title in May 1996. Thus, Wabash Trace’s own actions in regard to the land are insufficient to establish its title to the land by adverse possession. To succeed in a claim for adverse possession, it must tack on to its actions those of its predecessors in title.
Wabash Trace argues that when Norfolk stopped using the tract for railroad purposes in 1983 or 1984, use for railroad purposes ended and, if the land was held by Norfolk only as an easement and not in fee, that is when any reversion occurred, and when any adverse possession claim would have begun to run.
We recently rejected a similar argument in
Boyles v. Mo. Friends of the Wabash Trace Nature Trail,
Similarly, here, Wabash Trace’s adverse possession could not have started until the land was abandoned for all railroad purposes in October 1986. Because the property owners asserted their rights of ownership in the land no later than May 1996, when they filed suit against Wabash Trace, Wabash Trace is unable to establish the requisite 10 year period of adverse claim to the land. Thus, without addressing whether the other elements of adverse possession were proven, we hold that Wabash Trace’s claim of adverse possession must fail as a matter of law.
For the reasons stated above, we affirm.
Chief Judge PATRICIA BRECKENRIDGE and Judge JAMES M. SMART, Jr., concur.
Notes
. Respondent Hutcheson owns land adjoining the abandoned right of way in Section 32, *684 Township 67, Range 38.
. Respondent Moore owns land adjoining the abandoned right of way in Section 33, Township 67, Range 38.
. Norfolk has disclaimed all interest in the property at issue.
. (emphasis added). L. 1866, P. 27, § 2. This provision is currently found in Section 388.210(2) RSMo 1994, and is identical in all respects.
. “ ‘Right of way’ has been accorded two meanings in railroad parlance - the strip of land upon which the tract is laid - and the legal right to use such strip, (citations omit
*686
ted); but where the interest conveyed is limited to right of way or for right of way the estate conveyed is an easement only.”
Schuermann Enterprises, Inc. v. St. Louis County,
. "The law is settled in this state that where a railroad acquires a
right of way
whether by condemnation, by voluntary grant or by a conveyance in fee upon a valuable consideration the railroad takes but a mere easement over the land and not the fee.”
Brown,
.
Accord, State ex rel. State Highway Comm’n v. Griffith,
. We note that the requirement the railroad build a wire fence along side the railroad tracks was apparently to avoid injury to either the railroad or the property owner by keeping cattle and other livestock from straying onto the track and being killed. The fence was not given to the property owner, and thus is arguably not consideration at all, but simply a condition of sale to avoid injury.
.
See also City of Columbia v. Baurichter,
.
See Schuermann Enterprises,
in which the Supreme Court responded to arguments that the reasons for limiting railroads in their acquisitions no longer exist because conditions have changed since the days of overreaching of landowners by railroads. The court held that, "a definite policy has been established in this state which particularly controls the nature and extent of the interest of railroads in real estate.”
. The issues decided in
Boyles
are similar to the issues we are presented here. In that case, Wabash Trace appealed from a decision of the Circuit Court of Nodaway County quieting title to segments of the same abandoned railroad in favor of adjoining landowners in Nodaway County, Missouri. The strips of land at issue there, however, were granted by condemnation rather than by a "voluntary conveyance” in a deed. In
Boyles,
we held that the railroad had abandoned the right of way, that fee simple title reverted back to the adjacent landowners, and that Wabash Trace did not acquire title to the property at issue there by adverse possession.
