Hiller v. County of Anoka
Hiller v. County of Anoka
Opinion
Syllabus
Minn.Stat. §
Appellants challenge summary judgment for county in a mandamus action to compel county to condemn property. We affirm.
Respondent Anoka County subsequently sought to expand the Rum River North Regional Park. The expansion plans encompassed both the strip of land and part of appellants' property. In 1987, the City of St. Francis, never having constructed a road on the strip, transferred its interest to the county by quitclaim deed. The county then removed the fence around the strip and initiated condemnation proceedings on the parts of appellants' land within the park expansion.
In a March 1993 letter to the Anoka County commissioners, appellants requested that the county include the strip in the condemnation action, asserting that they had acquired the strip by adverse possession. The county denied appellants' request, and appellants filed this mandamus action to compel the county to initiate condemnation proceedings for the strip. Both parties sought summary judgment. Appellants challenge summary judgment in favor of the county.
The parties agree that the 1917 deed conveyed a fee simple determinable interest in the strip and that the grantor retained a possibility of reverter under which the property would revert to the grantor in fee simple absolute if the town failed to use the property for street or highway purposes.1
Where, as here, the grant requires the grantee to use the property in a way in which it is not currently being used, courts have construed the grant to allow the grantee a "reasonable time" to begin using the property as required in the deed. E.g. Salt Lake City v. Utah,
The question arises because appellants' interest is based on a claim of adverse possession against the grantor's heirs. Appellants argue that because the city failed after a reasonable time to construct a road, the reversion was triggered and the town's interest was automatically extinguished — allowing appellants to adversely possess the property from the grantor's heirs (or successors). But if the reversion was never triggered, then appellants' claim fails because Minn.Stat. §
We agree with the district court, however, that under the circumstances of this case, Minn.Stat. §
[A]ll private covenants, conditions, or restrictions created by which the title or use of real property is affected, cease to be valid and operative 30 years after the date of the deed * * * creating them, and may be disregarded.
Minn.Stat. §
Our holding accords with contemporary principles of property ownership; it protects the free alienability of property.See Wichelman v. Messner,
Appellants argue that subdivision 2a (originally subdivision 2) does not apply because it was repealed from 1982 until reenacted in 1988, and that the reversion was triggered during that period — in 1987 when the city quitclaimed its interest to the county. See 1982 Minn. Laws ch.
By referring to "private covenants, conditions or restrictions," subdivision 2a might apply only to limitations that are not inherent in the grant itself — as opposed to the defeasible estates which are inherently subject to a condition. But a fee simple determinable does include a "condition," and the statute expressly excludes only the "right[s] to reenter" that accompany a fee simple subject to a condition subsequent. Minn.Stat. §
We believe that section
Affirmed.
so long as the same shall be kept, used and maintained by said Town, its successors or assigns, and said public, for street and highway purposes and none other, and to revert to the grantors, their heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, upon the same ceasing to be so kept, used and maintained.
records in the office of the county recorder or files in the office of the registrar of titles in the county in which the real estate affected is located, on or before March 30, 1989, a notice sworn to by the claimant or the claimant's agent or attorney * * * stating that the covenant, condition, or restriction is not nominal and may not be disregarded.
Minn.Stat. §
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.