Barbaresos v. Casaszar

37 N.W.2d 689, 325 Mich. 1, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 319
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1949
DocketDocket No. 1, Calendar No. 43,863.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 37 N.W.2d 689 (Barbaresos v. Casaszar) 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
Barbaresos v. Casaszar, 37 N.W.2d 689, 325 Mich. 1, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 319 (Mich. 1949).

Opinion

North, J.

Plaintiffs are the owners of improved business property fronting approximately 38 feet on Linwood avenue in Detroit. Defendant is the owner of improved business property adjoining plaintiffs’ property on the south and having a Linwood avenue frontage of 77 feet. These properties are.on the westerly side of Linwood. The north 28.91 feet of plaintiffs’ property extends back 119 feet to a paved public alley, but the balance of plain *3 tiffs’ property is only 77 feet deep. Defendant’s property has the same depth of 77 feet back westerly from Linwood, and is bounded on the south by a public street — Virginia Park. Plaintiffs claim that they have as appurtenant to their property a right of driveway 10 feet wide extending from Virginia Park across the rear of defendant’s property; and plaintiffs allege that defendant has interfered with their lawful use of the driveway by parking trucks and other vehicles therein, and that defendant has threatened to permanently close the driveway by erecting a fence thereon and a building. Issue was framed and after hearing the injunctive relief sought by plaintiffs was denied and their bill of complaint dismissed. Plaintiffs have appealed. For both clarity and brevity we accompany our opinion with an outline of the property involved.

*4 Plaintiffs’ property consists of parcels designated A and B. The latter parcel extends back 77 feet to the west side of the 10-foot driveway. Defendant owns parcel C which also extends back to the west side of the driveway. Bnt both parcels B and C are subject to the driveway easement. The owner of parcel D is not a party to this suit, and it is indicated on the outline only because it together with parcels B and C was owned by the common grantor in the chain of title under which these litigants through mesne conveyances became possessed of their respective titles.

Prior to August, 1917, Louis Chernoff and wife became the owners of parcels B, C and D. They never owned parcel A. In August, 1917, the Chernoffs conveyed parcel .C but they reserved for themselves, their heirs and assigns “the right to use * * * as a driveway jointly with the owners of” parcels B and C a strip of land 10 feet in width adjacent to the easterly side .of parcel D.

In September, 1917, the Chernoffs sold and conveyed parcel D, including the right in the grantees, their heirs and assigns, to the 10-foot driveway over the west end of parcels B and C “jointly with the owners of” parcels B and C.

And in 1919 the Chernoffs sold and conveyed the remaining portion of their property, parcel B, which had only 9.73 feet frontage on Linwood and a depth of 77 feet. The warranty deed contained the provision that conveyance was “subject however to an easement in the westerly 10 feet of said parcel of land, which easement consists of a driveway for the use of the owners of” parcels B, C and D.

At the time the Chernoffs owned the parcels hereinbefore referred to the property was unimproved. In none of such conveyances or in any other conveyance disclosed in his record did any right of easement in the driveway become appurtenant to *5 parcel A. Defendant admits that plaintiffs have an easement in this right of way that is appurtenant to parcel B, but strenuously objects to plaintiffs imposing an additional burden on the easement by using the driveway to serve all of plaintiffs’ larger needs incident to the buildings located in part on parcel B but to a much greater extent on parcel A. A restaurant business is conducted in the building which occupies the whole frontage of parcels A and B on Linwood, and a bakery is operated in another -building which occupies the full width of parcel A at the westerly end thereof adjacent to the public alley.

As against defendant’s claim in the respect just above noted plaintiffs assert that by user over a period of 20 odd years, they have a prescriptive right to continue the use of the driveway as an easement subservient to both parcels A and B.

The following facts are pertinent. Plaintiffs, Peter and Pauline Barbaresos, obtained title by quitclaim deed from Bankers Trust Company of Detroit January 24,1941, to parcels A and B, the latter parcel being subject to the driveway easement over the west 10 feet thereof. The whole Linwood frontage of these 2 parcels is occupied by a 2-story brick building. Plaintiff Dan Barbaresos and George Vatsis, as partners, conduct a restaurant business in the first story and there are living quarters above. While the record fails to disclose how plaintiff Dan Barbaresos became vested with any interest in parcels A and B, it was stipulated in the trial court that he is a joint owner with the other two plaintiffs.

In June, 1944, defendant purchased the vendee’s interest in a land contract for parcel C and approximately one year later obtained title from an Illinois corporation. Prior to his purchase of parcel C, defendant as a tenant had occupied one of the 4 stores located thereon since 1922 and had full knowledge *6 of the driveway and its use along the rear of these stores.

The only contested issue in this case is whether plaintiffs are right in their contention which, as stated in their brief, is: “Plaintiffs claim an easement by prescription in favor of Lot 1 (parcel A) by adverse user for a period of more than 20 years.” At the conclusion of plaintiff’s brief their contention and the relief sought by them are stated as follows:

“For the reasons and law cited, we submit that there is an easement for alley purposes in the 10-foot strip which is appurtenant to lot 1 (parcel A), and the 9.73 feet of lot 2 (parcel B) owned by plaintiffs. That the user of this right of way has been under a claim of right for 22 years which is a longer time than is necessary to establish an easement by prescription. * * * And * * * (a decree should be) entered here establishing the rights of the plaintiffs to use this strip for the purpose of all their property (parcels A and B) and an injunction issued restraining defendant from interfering with plaintiffs’ use of this easement.”

The bill of complaint herein was filed and process served in April, 1945. As before noted, plaintiffs did not become the owners of this property until January 24, 1941. Nothing appears in this record which would justify a holding that they are entitled to have tacked onto their claim of easement any rights which their predecessors in title might have acquired. In so stating we are mindful that George Vatsis (who is one of the partners conducting a restaurant business in plaintiffs’ property) from August, 1924, to the time when plaintiffs purchased, conducted the Stafford Lunch Bar which was located on parcel B and possibly also on the southerly part of parcel A, although the record is not clear as to this latter circumstance. It does appear that prior *7 to plaintiffs’ purchase (1941) the brick building on parcels A and B was divided into 2 stores with separate entrances from Linwood. Vatsis conducted his business in the southerly one of these 2 stores. Prom August, 1924, to January, 1941, the 10-foot driveway was continuously used to bring merchandise, milk, coal, et cetera, for Vatsis’ needs in his business, and also to remove garbage and ashes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 N.W.2d 689, 325 Mich. 1, 1949 Mich. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbaresos-v-casaszar-mich-1949.