SMITH
v.
SCHOOL DIST. NO. 6 OF JEFFERSON COUNTY.
Supreme Court of Missouri, Division No. 1.
Thurman & Blackwell, Hillsboro, for appellant.
Dearing & Matthes, M. C. Matthes and Joseph G. Stewart, Hillsboro, for respondent.
LOZIER, Commissioner.
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in a suit involving title to real estate. The judgment was that defendant is the fee simple owner and that plaintiff has no title to or interest in the land. The sole issue is the construction of a deed conveying an 80' by 350' tract for school purposes.
The facts were stipulated. In 1877, Willard Frissell owned 290 acres of land of which the disputed tract was a part. In that year, Frissell conveyed the tract to School District No. 4 by a deed containing this provision:
"The said land being hereby conveyed to said school district for the sole and express use and purpose of and for a schoolhouse site and it is hereby expressly understood that whenever said land shall cease to be used and occupied as a site for a schoolhouse and for public school purposes that then this conveyance shall be deemed and considered as forfeited and the said land shall revert to said party of the first part, his heirs and assigns."
*796 In 1879, Frissell conveyed his 290 acres to Zeitinger by a warranty deed in which the schoolhouse tract was specifically "reserved." In 1883, Zeitinger conveyed a part of the 290 acres to Philip Edinger by a warranty deed in which the schoolhouse tract was specifically "excepted." After Philip Edinger's death, Charles Edinger acquired title to the Philip Edinger acreage. In 1942, Charles Edinger conveyed the Philip Edinger acreage to plaintiff-appellant by a warranty deed in which the schoolhouse tract was specifically "excepted."
Defendant-respondent School District No. 6, successor to School District No. 4, was grantee of the tract in a special warranty deed dated December 12, 1947, and recorded September 7, 1950, the same date as that of the last of several acknowledgments. This deed, in which grantors describe themselves as "the sole surviving heirs of Willard Frissell, deceased," recited: "This deed being made for the purpose of releasing any and all claims the grantors have as heirs of Willard Frissell to the provisions in a deed dated August 1, 1877, executed by Willard Frissell to School District No. Four (4) in Township No. Six (6) of the County of Jefferson and State of Missouri."
It was stipulated that the schoolhouse tract "has not been used for school purposes since on or about September 1, 1950, and that the defendant school district does not propose to again use the property for the purpose of holding school thereon, but if the court decrees that defendant is the owner of said property, it intends to sell same and use the proceeds derived from the sale thereof for school purposes."
We agree with the parties that the estate Frissell conveyed to School District No. 4 was a fee simple determinable. Frissell conveyed his whole interest with this qualification: The district was to use the tract only for school purposes and, upon cessation of such user, Frissell's conveyance of the fee simple was to be "forfeited" and the entire estate "revert" to Frissell, "his heirs and assigns." In Board v. Nevada School District, Mo.Sup.,
The parties agree that Frissell conveyed such an estate. However, plaintiff contends: Frissell retained a "reversion"; and such reversion was assignable and passed to plaintiff as Frissell's remote grantee or assignee of the lands of which the tract was originally a part under conveyances which expressly either "excepted" or "reserved" the schoolhouse tract. "A reversion is a present vested interest or estate, and it arises by construction and operation of law whenever a grantor has conveyed less than his whole interest or estate, the undisposed portion being his when the grant is terminated." 31 C.J.S., Estates, § 106, p. 126. See Davis v. Austin,
Plaintiff urges that whatever interest Frissell had was alienable or assignable and passed to plaintiff as Frissell's remote grantee or assignee of the lands of which the tract was originally a part. As it is clear that Frissell's intention was not to convey *797 his possibility of reverter, we need not decide whether a possibility of reverter is alienable or assignable in Missouri.[1]
As stated, Frissell's conveyance to Zeitinger "reserved" the schoolhouse tract. We must determine Frissell's intention from the deed itself (Rummerfield v. Mason,
Contrast Brown v. Weare,
As to defendant's claim of title, it is agreed that Frissell's "sole surviving heirs released" to defendant whatever interest Frissell or his heirs may have had in the schoolhouse tract. "the possibility of reverter which remains in the grantor on the conveyance of a qualified or determinable fee to real estate * * * is stated generally in the authorities to pass to the heirs of the grantor or creator." 16 Am. Jur., Descent and Distribution, Sec. 28, p. 795. See also Restatement, Property, Sec. 164, p. 606; authorities listed in Footnote 1. "Both under the modern law and under common-law principles the authorities are well agreed that a possibility of reverter after a determinable fee is capable of being released to the tenant in fee simple determinable. Such release has the effect of turning the determinable or qualified fee into a fee simple absolute." 33 Am.Jur., Life Estates, Remainders and Reversions, Sec. 206, pp. 686, 687, citing Anno.,
The judgment is affirmed.
VAN OSDOL and COIL, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by LOZIER, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
All concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] See Section 442.020 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. (conveyances of "any estate or interest [in lands]"); University City v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co.,
