Barlow v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific R. R.

Cole, Ch. J.

*278i. conveyance : rSroadfr^M of way. *277The defendant sets up ownership of the right of way under the following conveyance : “Know all *278men by these presents, that we, Lewis Barlow and Ruth, his wife, of Polk county, Iowa, for the consideration of one dollar to them in hand paid by the Mississippi and Missouri Railroad Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Iowa, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, do hereby grant and convey unto the said railroad company the following piece or tract of land in Polk county, in the state of Iowa, and particularly described as follows, to wit: a strip of land through the south-west quarter of section number six, in township number seventy-eight, north of range number twenty-three, west of the fifth principal meridian, one hundred feet in width being fifty feet on either side of the center line of said road of said company, as located or to be located by the engineers of the said railroad company, for the construction of the second division of said railroad from Iowa City, in Johnson county, to Fort Des Moines, in Polk county, Iowa : to have and to hold the same unto the said railroad company forever : provided, that in case said railroad company do not construct their road through said tract, or shall, after construction, permanently abandon the route through said tract of land, the same shall revert to and become the property of the grantors, their heirs or assigns. And the said Ruth Barlow hereby relinquishes her right of dower in the tract herein conveyed. Witness our hands and seals, this 23d day of September, 1853.” This deed was duly executed, acknowledged and filed for record on the day of its date.

The answer further avers, that the defendant, through a mortgage thereof by the grantee and a judicial foreclosure of the same, became possessed of the rights of the saidgi’antee in said conveyance, on the 6th day of August, 1866, and of all its rights, properties and franchises of every kind whatsoever, and had constructed and was *279operating the railroad the M. & M. R. R. Co. was organized for and authorized to construct. That the plaintiff became the owner of said quarter section of land, by conveyance from said Lewis Barlow and wife, subsequent to the conveyance to the M. & M. R. R. Co. above set out, and with full notice thereof. The answer also states that the land included in the said conveyance to the M. & M. R. R. Co. was, when said deed was executed, and ever since has been, fenced and used for agricultural purposes by the grantor in- said deed and those claiming under him.

The plaintiff demurred to this answer, substantially on these grounds: First. Said conveyance is in fee, and void, for uncertainty. . Second. The right or title conveyed by the deed, did not and could not pass to defendant. Third. The right conveyed to the M. & M. R. R. Co. was abandoned, and also barred by the statute of limitations.

When we take into consideration the situation of the parties to the deed at the time it was made, and the property which is the subject-matter of their contract, and the intention and purpose of the parties in making it, together with the language of the entire deed, we have but little difficulty in construing the deed as a conveyance of a right of way simply. The provision of the deed that the property conveyed is “for the construction of the second division of said railroad,” and “that in case said railroad company do not construct their road through said tract, or shall, after construction, permanently abandon the road through said tract of land, the same shall revert to and become the property of the grantors, their heirs or assigns,” is a reasonably clear manifestation of the purpose of the grantor to convey a right of way merely. It was granted for “ the construction of the railroad” and of course to be used only for- that purpose; and the right or title conveyed was to “revert” when *280the grantee ceased to use it for that purpose. The legal effect of the instrument is, therefore, no more than the conveyance of a right of way.

But, further than this, there is another rule of construction which requires that the contract should be supported rather than defeated; that is, a construction which would make the contract legal is preferred to one having an opposite effect. If, therefore, by construing the deed as a conveyance of the fee, it would be void for uncertainty of description, as appellant’s counsel claim, while as a conveyance of a right of way it would be valid, the language of the deed admitting of it, we should adopt the latter view, although such construction might not be the most natural or reasonable upon the language alone.

2._railroad: eáemenTf7: non-nser. The answer shows that this defendant, by purchase, became possessed of all the rights, titles, interests and franchises of the M. & M. R. R. Co.; that su°k purchase was for the purpose of con-structing and operating the same line of railroad which the M. & M. R. R. Co. was organized to construct and operate, and for the construction of which said company had procured the deed from plaintiff’s grantor. Under the second ground of demurrer, as above stated, the plaintiff’s counsel claim that the interest of the M. & M. R. R. Co. was a mere right in action and not an interest in the land, and did not pass by the conveyance to defendant; and, further, that the grantee in the deed, if it was only of a right of way, had lost its right to fix the line of its easement by delay; that it should have been fixed in a reasonable time; and that more than thirteen years had elapsed before the conveyance to defendant.

That the conveyance was of the right of way, and hence of an interest in land, we have already held, as above. Under our statute (Rev. § 2208) the word *281heirs” or other technical words of inheritance are not necessary to create and convey an estate. The grantee takes the title of his grantor, although no such. words are used in the conveyance to the grantor. The defendant, by the conveyance under the judicial order or decree, became possessed of all the rights of the M. & M. E. E. Co., in the right of way in controversy. The deed itself prescribes no time within which the grantee must occupy its right of way or construct its road. In the absence of such stipulation, mere lapse of time, short of the statutory bar, would not defeat the right. Nor do we recognize any force in the objection that the line of the right of way was not “ located by the engineer of- the said M. & M. E. E. Co.,” but by the engineer of the defendant, the C., E. I. & P. E. E. Co. In the abseneé of any manifest intent to rely upon the personal qualifications of a particular engineer, the grantee of the M. & M. E. E. Co., would have the same right to have its engineer locate the line, as would that company have had provided no alienation had been made.

As to the statute of limitations, it is laid down as a general rule, that if the easement has been acquired by deed, no length of time of mere non-user will operate to impair or defeat the right. Washb. on Eas. and Serv. 640, and authorities cited. In this case there was no use of the premises adverse to the defendant’s right. And, as we have seen, the alienation of the right of way by the grantee thereof was not, nor was the failure to enter upon and use the same, an abandonment of it.

The judgment of the general term overruling the demurer and reversing the judgment of the district court is-

Affirmed.