Akers v. Baril

2 N.W.2d 791, 300 Mich. 619, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 655
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1942
DocketDocket No. 1, Calendar No. 41,743.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2 N.W.2d 791 (Akers v. Baril) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Akers v. Baril, 2 N.W.2d 791, 300 Mich. 619, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 655 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

A" tract of over 57 acres at the southeast corner of Wattles and Crooks roads in Royal Oak township, county of Oakland, Michigan, was divided into 9 parcels by its owner, George J. Sass. For better understanding of the facts, a rough draw *621 ing is given below wbicb corresponds to plaintiffs’ Exhibit 2, as modified by stipulation filed by the parties and testimony.

Two cases involving the same easement, claimed by Gerald Baril and wife and Evelyn Setter, were consolidated, tried and brought here on one appeal. The trial court held that the northerly 25 feet of the 10 acres immediately below parcels Nos. 1, 2 and part of 3 were impressed with an easement in favor of the claimants. George J. Sass, the former owner of the entire tract, did not plat the property but sold large lots by metes and bounds. Parcel 1 is bounded on the north by Wattles road, known also as the 17-Mile road, and on the west by Crooks road. Parcel 1 contains somewhat less than 5 acres of land. Parcels 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 each contain 5 acres. South of parcels 3 and 4 there was carved out a 3-acre tract. The other two tracts consist of 10 and 17 acres each, as shown by the drawing. Evelyn Setter, *622 Sass’s grantee and the owner of parcel 3, deeded the southerly 1%-acre subparcel to Gerald Baril and wife. They built a home and a garage thereon. It will be noted that this 1%-acre, the 3-acre and the 17-acre tracts have no frontage on the main roads. The 1%-aere parcel is wholly, isolated, at least for vehicles of all kinds, if it does not have the use of the easement as to ingress and egress claimed by its owners. There is a deep and wide depression between the 1% and the 3% acres of parcel 3, which is filled a large part of the time with water. The only way the owners of the 1% acres of property would have for their vehicles would be over the 25-foot strip, or by means of a bridge which they would have to build at a cost both prohibitive and out of proportion to the valne of their entire property. The bridge would lead to the upper 3% acres owned by Mrs. Setter, mother of Mrs. Baril.

On May 3,1928, Sass and wife, and others, deeded the 10-acre parcel to Frank and Jennie Hopkins. The deed after giving a description of the property stated :

“The first parties hereby reserve the north 25 feet of the above-described property for roadway purposes.”

In June, 1937, Hopkins and wife sold on land contract to George "W. Akers and Louise C. Akers the same property with the same north 25 feet excepted for roadway purposes. Both in 1928 and 1938, Hopkins and wife gave mortgages on the property containing the same description and the same reservation. Counsel stipulated that at the time Sass reserved the 25-foot strip for roadway purposes, he was also the owner of the entire parcel 3 and the 3-acre tract, which we have designated parcel 7 on the drawing. As late as June 23, 1937, in order to correct the description in the former deed, *623 Sass and wife gave Hopkins and wife a quitclaim deed of the same property. The deed, as recorded, contained the same reservation as to the north 25 feet for roadway purposes.

In August, 1937, Sass and wife deeded the entire parcel 3 to Evelyn Setter and on the same day she deeded the southerly 1% acres thereof to Gerald Baril and Lila M. Baril. In 1940, Hopkins and wife gave a new land contract to Akers but dated it back to June 22,1937, the date of the former contract, and left out the reservation of the 25 feet for right of way. At about the same time, Sass gave a quitclaim deed dated back to June 22, 1937, to Hopkins. It contained no reservation of the right of way. Subsequent to 1928 an additional right of way was established down the easterly side of parcel 4. This would give the owners of parcel 7 (the 3-acre tract) and the 17-acre tract means of ingress and egress. However, the reservation of an easement of way apparently for the benefit of all of grantor’s remaining property adjacent to such first right of way, and existing at the time of the sale of the remaining property, cannot subsequently be extinguished by the former grantor.

The titles to both parcels 3 and 7 were in Sass, when he reserved the right of way in his deed to Hopkins, hence with respect to those parcels such reservation was not void under the rule that a stranger to a deed may take nothing by way of reservation therein. The language of the reservation does not specify whether the easement was intended to be in gross or appurtenant, nor, if the latter, appurtenant to what lands. An easement will never be presumed to be a personal right where it can be construed as appurtenant to some estate, notwithstanding the silence of the deed. Jones v. Stevens, 276 Mass. 318 (177 N. E. 91,76 A. L. R. 591); Lindenmuth v. Safe Harbor Water Power Corp., *624 309 Pa. 58 (163 Atl. 159, 89 A. L. R. 1180). Where an owner conveys part of his land and reserves an easement over it, without specifying that such easement is to be appurtenant to land retained by him, the surrounding circumstances, including the adjacency of the way to the land retained, may be considered by the court in order to ascertain the intention that the easement was intended to be appurtenant thereto. Tusi v. Jacobsen, 134 Ore. 505 (293 Pac. 587, 71 A. L. R. 1364). The way in suit, viewed in the light of the broad language reserving it and the further fact that the grantor in the deed retained title to lands adjacent thereto, would naturally be construed as appurtenant to all such adjacent and retained lands. Both Hopkins and Sass, the former owners, testified that they intended to reserve the right of way for the benefit only of the 3-acre and 17-acre parcels, but when the latter did not require this easement as a way of necessity because of the other way over parcel 4, such 25-foot right of way was forgotten to all intents and purposes by the witnesses until the grantee of the south 1% acres of parcel 3 began using it.

John, the husband of Evelyn Setter, to whom Sass deeded parcel 3, stated that at the time the parcel was purchased from Sass, the latter stated that the right of way was up to the owners connecting with that road, that it was for the use of anyone connecting with it, that all the property touching the roadway was entitled to it. Evelyn Setter largely corroborated what her husband had stated with regard to the conversation with Sass. Setter further testified that they knew at the time that the southerly 1% acres without means of ingress and egress would otherwise be inaccessible because of the wide natural depression in soil which was impassable because filled with water most of the year and bridgeable only at a prohibitive cost, that *625 one could not drive from the 17-Mile Road to the 1% acres in the very driest part of the year.

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Bluebook (online)
2 N.W.2d 791, 300 Mich. 619, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/akers-v-baril-mich-1942.