2 So. 2d 344 | Miss. | 1941
The question involved in this suit is whether a possibility of reverter owned at the time of her death by the testatrix, Mrs. Fannie Willis Johnson, in certain real estate in the City of Vicksburg, was devised to a residuary devisee therein named, subject to any indebtedness of the estate and the payment of the specific legacies provided for, or descended according to the laws of descent and distribution.
On June 23, 1926, the testatrix executed a deed in favor of the Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Vicksburg, conveying the property here involved, and containing the following provision: "The land aforesaid is hereby conveyed unto the said Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Vicksburg as aforesaid for use solely as a site for a public school for white children, and with the understanding, and subject to the condition, that if the said Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Vicksburg shall not, within the period of ten years next following the date of this conveyance, erect on said land for use as a public school for white children as aforesaid, a building to cost not less than the sum of Fifty Thousand Dollars ($50,000.00), the title to said land shall, ipso facto, on the expiration of said period, revert to and become revested in me."
The Mayor and Aldermen of the City did not construct *327 a school of any kind on this property within ten years following the date of the conveyance. Mrs. Johnson, the grantor, died on September 2, 1931, which was of course prior to the expiration of the ten year period prescribed in the deed, and at her death left a will devising all her property, real and personal, which should remain after payment of the special legacies and the debts of the estate, to a residuary devisee, and in which will the appellees were named as executors.
On September 8, 1936, the Mayor and Aldermen undertook to convey the real estate in question to the executors; and thereafter these executors undertook to convey the same to the appellants, who are the next of kin and heirs at law of the testatrix. For obvious reasons these two deeds were ineffective to convey the title to the heirs at law, since their rights in the property, if any, would be by inheritance. The Mayor and Aldermen had no title to convey to the executors, after the expiration of the ten year period during which there had been a failure to erect the school building required by the terms of the deed to the City of Vicksburg from Mrs. Johnson, and hence the executors acquired no right under the deed to them from the Mayor and aldermen which they could convey to the heirs at law, their only right or interest in the property being to administer the estate according to law and in order to carry out the will of the testatrix.
This brings us to the main issue here in controversy, that is to say, whether the appellants, as the heirs at law of Mrs. Johnson, inherited from her at the time of her death in September, 1931, the possibility of reverter which was created in the property under the terms of the deed executed by her to the Mayor and Aldermen of the city in 1926, or whether the same passed at her death under the will in favor of the residuary devisee.
It is well settled that under the common law a mere possibility of reverter is not an estate, present or future, but a possibility of having an estate; that possibilities of reverter were inalienable at common law by deed or will, *328
since such a right arises out of a grant so limited that it may last forever or may terminate on a contingency, and is a mere possibility of having the fee again, which exists in a grantor after the grant of a determinable or qualified fee. Such a right, however, was at common law descendible. 23 R.C.L. 1104; 21 C.J. 1017; Copenhaver v. Pendleton,
By Article 1, Chapter XXXVI, Code of 1857, it is provided that "any interest in, or claim to, real estate, may be disposed of by deed or will, and livery of seizen shall not be necessary; and any estate may be made to commence in futuro by deed, in like manner as by will." This section was carried forward as Section 2284, Code of 1871, and was construed in the case of Cassedy v. Jackson,
This statute was construed by this Court in the case of Hamilton et al. v. City of Jackson,
It is contended, however, that the language of Section 2110, Code of 1930, brought forward from the prior codes beginning with that of 1880 only permits the conveyance of land by a writing signed and delivered, and that it therefore does not apply to a will for the reason that no title passes under a will during the lifetime of the testator and such an instrument is not a writing signed and delivered. It must be conceded, however, that under Section 3550 of the Code of 1930 any person competent to make a will has the power "to devise all the estate, right, title, and interest in possession, reversion, or remainder, which he or she hath, or at the time of his or her death shall have, of, in, or to lands . . ."; and we are of the opinion that the language of the statute granting the right to convey an estate, right, title and interest in "reversion" is not used in a restricted sense, but that "reversion" would include the right of reversion which would mature into an estate upon the happening of an uncertain future contingency the same as upon the happening of an event which at the time of the execution of a conveyance is certain to occur in the future. In other words, that it was intended by this statute to grant the right to devise by will any estate, right, title and interest in land that a testator or testatrix might then own, or at the time of his or her death shall have, and that this right *331 would include a possibility of reverter owned at the time of the execution of the will. Moreover, referring again to Section 2110, supra, such an instrument is a writing signed under an authorization for delivery upon the happening of the event which is to vest title in the devisee.
We are therefore of the opinion that the decree of the court below whereby the conveyances from the Mayor and Aldermen to the executors and from the executors to the appellants, as well as the claim of the latter as heirs at law of the testatrix, was cancelled as a cloud upon the title of the residuary devisee under the will should be affirmed, and subject to the right of the executors to pay the special legacies and any debts owing by the estate as decreed by the court below.
Affirmed.