delivered the opinion op the court. '
The appellees, January 20, 1869, owned a large body of land in Daveiss county, immediately outside the city of Owensboro. This land is crossed by the Owensboro & Nashville Railroad — then the Owensboro & Russellville Railroad — and appellees being desirous of securing the depot for Owensboro on said land, which, as they believed, would enhance the value of their remaining land, they granted to the appellant the right to the possession — not the fee — to three acres and a fraction of an acre of said land. The contention of the appellant is, that it had the right to remove the depot and hold the possession of the ground for other railroad purposes (switching, etc., being the uses), notwithstanding it had removed .the depot about a mile to another part of the city. The granting clause is as follows; “ That the party of the first part, for and in the consideration that the second party has, and does hereby agree to locate the Owensboro depot of the said road on the ground hereinafter mentioned, have granted, and by these presents do grant, to the said party of the second part, for the use of said depot and machine shops and other railroad purposes, the following parcel *139•of ground lying,” etc. The habendum is as follows: “ To have and to hold said parcel of ground for the use of said railroad depot, and other railroad purposes, such as they may deem proper, to the said party of the second part, so long as the same shall be used for said purposes. But in the event the said railroad shall discontinue the said point as a depot for the said road, and said ground .shall no longer be useful for said purposes, or should the road he discontinued when built, then said Griffith and ¡Sweeney have the right to resume the possession of said property, allowing to said railroad company the right to remove any improvements they may have put thereon; or, in default of this, and at the election of the said railroad company, it may, by paying to Griffith and Sweeney the present value of said property, entitle itself to the .absolute fee-simple; and said Griffith and Sweeney will, in this contingency, execute any further conveyance that may be necessary to such vesting of the absolute title.”
As said, the appellees being the owners of a large landed estate adjoining Owensboro, and hoping that if the railroad depot was located on a part of it that that fact would invite enterprise in that direction and cause their remaining land to be enhanced in value, they granted the possessory right to said piece of land to the appellant upon the sole consideration that it would erect a depot building thereon; and it would follow, as a matter of course, that the possessory right thus granted was not to last longer than said piece of ground was used as a depot ground, for the consideration of the possessory grant was the erection of a depot on the land ; and it follows, as a matter of course, that if the consideration ceased, the *140possessory right would cease also, and the possession would revert to the grantors.
But the grantors, not willing to leave their rights in this regard to construction merely, stipulated that this possessory grant was “ for the use of said depot, machine shops and other railroad purposes.” This language is explicit, that the sole consideration of the possessory grant was the building of the depot and its use as such upon said ground ; and the latter expression in the clause quoted, “machine shops and other railroad purposes,” was not an additional consideration for the possessory grant, but as limiting the use of the ground to railroad purposes alone. The habendum further shows that the erection of a depot on the ground and its continuing use as a depot was the sole consideration of the possessory grant, and the other uses to which the ground might be applied were merely privileges that might be used in conjunction with its use as depot, and not independently of that use. The habendum reads : “ To have and to hold said parcel of ground for the use of said railroad depot and other railroad purposes, such as they (it) may deem proper, to the said party of the second part, as long as the same shall be used for said purposes.” Here, again, the distinct declarations, the first of which, evidently referring to the consideration for the grant, that, the appellant is to hold the parcel of ground for the Use of the depot, and the other referring to the privilege-to use the land for such other railroad purposes as the appellant might deem proper, are repeated.
The next clauses are : “ But in the event the said railroad shall discontinue the said point as a depot, and said-grant shall no longer be useful for said purposes,” etc.,, *141the appellees “ have right to resume the possession of said property.” It is contended that the latter clause, to-wit: and said grant shall be no longer useful for said purposes,” enlarges the right of the appellant to hold the possession of said property as long as it may be used for any railroad purposes whatever, notwithstanding it has ceased to use the land as a depot. This contention is not tenable. If it was, it would enlarge and contradict the consideration of the grant to such an extent as to totally destroy it; for property might be useful to the appellant for many railroad purposes that would lessen or ■destroy the value of adjoining property instead of enhancing its value; and, as said, the enhancement of the balance of the appellee’s adjoining property being the sole consideration for the grant of the laud for the purpose of a depot, its object, if the contention of the appellant be allowed, would be defeated; and to allow the appellant to hold possession of the property, notwithstanding it had defeated the consideration, would be allowing them to hold the possession of appellee’s property without any consideration therefor.
As intimated, to allow the contention of the appellant, a conflict between the granting clause and the habendum would be presented, and in such case the rule is well settled that the habendum must yield, unless a contrary intention appears, and such intention thus appearing, the habendum must control. As said, such intention does not appear in this case, but the contrary intention is manifest.
The judgment is affirmed.