Beadle v. Gillingham

81 N.W.2d 230, 348 Mich. 1, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 381
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1957
DocketDocket 45, Calendar 47,055
StatusPublished

This text of 81 N.W.2d 230 (Beadle v. Gillingham) 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
Beadle v. Gillingham, 81 N.W.2d 230, 348 Mich. 1, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 381 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

Kelly, J.

Plaintiffs filed a bill to quiet title, seeking determination of the boundary line between their property and that of defendants, and to establish deféndants’ right-of-way over plaintiffs’ land.

The dispute resulted from 2 different descriptions of the land conveyed to plaintiffs in 1950 by the Second National Bank of Saginaw. Plaintiffs contend one description should prevail and defendants insist upon the other.

The trial court’s opinion as to where the boundary line should be established was based upon a survey made in 1931 when defendants’ property was owned by defendant Robert J. Gillingham’s father and plaintiffs’ property was owned by the Saginaw Bay Fish Company.

*3 Both parties agree as to a common point designated as “A”, which should he used in determining the boundary line. Plaintiffs and defendants differ as to how the line should be extended in a northerly and easterly direction to points “F” or “D”. Defendants contend that said line should run in a diagonal direction north 33 degrees, 23 minutes east, for the 632.2 feet between “A” and “D”. Plaintiffs contend that the line should first be extended to a point “B” north 18 degrees, 19 minutes east, for 288.1 feet, and thence north 45 degrees, 17 minutes east, for a distance of 362.8 feet to point “F”. “F” was a square monument made of cement and stone and “D” was a concrete block with an iron in the center. Defendant Gillingham testified that in his opinion monument “D” is not in the same place as originally constructed as ice and snow have moved it down towards the mouth of the Pigeon river. At the time of trial monuments “F” and “D” were 8 feet apart.

Plaintiffs introduced proof by Mr. Dufty, an officer of the Saginaw Bay Fish Company, the owner of plaintiffs’ property in 1931, in regard to the establishment of point “B”. Defendants do not challenge the truthfulness of Mr. Dufty’s testimony, but contend that his testimony should have been excluded because it was equally within the knowledge of their deceased predecessor in title (defendant Gillingham’s father) and, therefore, objectionable under the “dead man’s” statute.

An examination of this record convinces this Court that the boundary line as established by the trial court, extending from point “A” to point “B” and then to point “F” was the correct boundary line, if the proof offered by Mr. Dufty was properly received. We shall, therefore, first consider appellants’ and appellees’ contentions in this regard.

*4 Mr. Dufty was employed by tbe Saginaw Bay Fish Company in 1910 and became vice-president and manager of the company in 1919, holding that position until the company’s dissolution in 1948. He was familiar with the property in question from 1919 onward. In 1931 the Saginaw Bay Fish Company determined that it would ascertain the true boundary of the company’s holdings and employed a registered surveyor, Mr. Chapin. Mr. Dufty testified how he and others, including defendant’s father and predecessor in title, accompanied Mr. Chapin and assisted him in said survey. His testimony in regard to marker “B” is as follows:

“Q. While you were putting this monument in did you later on that day see Mr. Chapin and Mr. Gilling-ham, Sr.?

“A. I seen them here.

“Q. Where is ‘here?’

“A. At ‘B.’

“Q. And what did you see them doing ?

“A. We seen them digging a hole to put in a cement abutment, which was to be a marker.

“Q. You saw Mr. Chapin and Mr. Gillingham, Sr., digging a hole at ‘B?’

“A. Yes.

“Q. And they put in a concrete monument ?

“Q. And that monument is there today?

“A. It was there the other day. It was there since 1932.”

Mr. Dufty’s testimony, above referred to, was introduced in rebuttal to defendant Gillingham’s testimony. The court sustained defendants’ objection to Dufty’s testimony when he was placed on the stand by plaintiffs. Subsequently, defendant testified on direct examination that he received the deed to the property from his father and that “my father walked this property with me, if I may say it, to familiarize *5 me with it.” Sustaining defendants’ contention that the lot line should be established between “A” to “D” rather than from “A” to “B” to “F” as plaintiffs contend, defendant Gillingham testified on direct examination in regard to monument “B” as follows:

“Q. Do you know how ‘B’ came to be there? Did you have anything to do with it?

“A. No.

“Q. Do you know who built it?

“A. No, just as I mentioned before by my father.”

The court in its opinion commented upon the propriety of allowing Mr. Dufty’s testimony, as follows:

“The court originally rejected certain portions of the testimony of witness Dufty, then on rebuttal allowed the testimony in evidence on the theory that defendant Gillingham waived his rights to the statute when he testified on direct examination that his father (the dead man) showed him the boundary lines. It is the court’s ’opinion that defendant Gil-lingham by testifying that he walked the property with his father, the deceased person, 2 or 3 times waived his privilege of not having witness Dufty testify as to what he saw the deceased person do relative to the boundary lines.”

This Court in Rock v. Gannon Grocery Co., 246 Mich 545, 551, held:

“The statute is a shield and not a sword. Death having sealed the lips of one, the statute closes the lips of the other, except in contradiction of testimony given by witnesses having a pecuniary interest in the recovery. The statute recognizes a condition occasioned by death and establishes equality between the living in interest, but does not permit the living, in behalf of their pecuniary interest, to advance a. sword from behind the shield and forbid its parry. It has long been held that the statute may be waived. It is manifestly unfair to permit those having a pecuniary interest in the suit to testify to matters *6 equally within the knowledge of the deceased and to deny th’e opposite party the right to contradict or be heard with reference to such testimony.”

The court did not err in allowing Mr. Dufty’s testimony in rebuttal to defendant Gillingham’s testimony..

Plaintiffs in their bill of complaint alleged that defendants had a right-of-way over their property but “that since plaintiffs purchased the property in 1950 defendant Robert J. Gillingham has taken it upon himself to relocate a portion of this road to the east of the route that for many, many years the road took.” Defendants in their answer and by the testimony of defendant Gillingham admit this allegation, but justify the relocation by stating that the condition of the land required them to do so and that they utilized an abandoned railroad track.

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Related

Rock v. Gannon Grocery Co.
224 N.W. 752 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.W.2d 230, 348 Mich. 1, 1957 Mich. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beadle-v-gillingham-mich-1957.