Birch Forest Club v. Rose

179 N.W.2d 39, 23 Mich. App. 492, 1970 Mich. App. LEXIS 1868
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 29, 1970
DocketDocket 7,725
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 179 N.W.2d 39 (Birch Forest Club v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birch Forest Club v. Rose, 179 N.W.2d 39, 23 Mich. App. 492, 1970 Mich. App. LEXIS 1868 (Mich. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

Holbrook, P. J.

This case involves a claimed easement of a trail road traversing plaintiff’s land to defendants’ land. The litigants own parcels of land which adjoin each other. Defendants’ land lies north and east of plaintiff’s property. There is a 50-or-more-year-old trail road that enters from the south end of plaintiff’s club property travelling northeasterly across a bridge and creek to defendants’ land, thence north across defendants’ property turning westerly near the north boundary back onto plaintiff’s northwest property. Prom 1956 until commencement of this action the parties agreed to the mutual use of the road across each other’s property for purposes of access. Plaintiff built a new access road into its northwest property and no longer needed the trail road. Thereafter, an attempt was made to block defendants’ use of the trail road by locking a road gate located at the south line of plaintiff’s land. Defendants, having no other access to their property, broke the lock and entered. Plaintiff started this action for trespass damages and for permanent injunction against defendants’ use of the road. Plaintiff contends the road it shut off is a private road and that defendants have no right to travel over it to their property. Defendants contend: (1) it was a public road, (2) they had gained a permanent easement by adverse possession, (3) they owned an easement over the trail road by necessity, and (4) that the agreement between the parties and the resulting uses to which the trail road were put, together with the acts and conduct of the parties, now estops plaintiff from denying the defendants the use of the trail road.

*495 The learned trial judge, after a full trial, determined that the trail road was not a public road and that the defendants had failed to prove an easement by adverse possession. No appeal is taken from these rulings. The court further determined that defendants had established an easement in the trail road by necessity and also found that equitable estoppel was applicable to plaintiff and entered judgment for defendants. Plaintiff appeals both findings.

Plaintiff raises two issues on appeal: (1) Was there sufficient, credible evidence to establish an easement by necessity over the trail road? (2) Was equitable estoppel properly applied under the facts in this case?

I.

Plaintiff purchased the northwest quarter of section 25, Sylvan Township, Osceola County, Michigan, from Edgar Wise in 1956. It was over this piece of property that the trail road was located and used by defendants for ingress and egress to their land described as the south half of the southwest quarter of section 24, of the same township. Defendants purchased their 80 acres in 1951 from Hoag and Gwin, who had previously purchased the land in 1941. Title to both the 160- and 80-acre pieces of land at one time was in the name of a common grantor.

Hoag and Gwin, while they owned the present Rose property, improved the trail road by having a bridge built over the Doc and Tom Creek on the 160-acre piece of land. At the time of the building of the bridge Mr. Wise, the owner, was present and gave his permission. After the defendants purchased the property in 1951, they kept up the trail *496 road and in 1953 made major repairs to the bridge and dragged the road on occasion as needed.

The defendants and Hoag and G-win used this trail road for ingress and egress to the 80 acres continuously from 1941 until shortly before this suit was started. This use could be termed as one of permission or it could be more rightly construed to be an easement by necessity. There was testimony by one of the early settlers that at one time many years ago there was a cabin on the present Rose property and that the trail road in question was the only road to that property.

The trial court ruled that at the time of the commencement of this action this trail road was the only road to defendants’ home and land. That there was an easement by necessity under the facts in this case is obvious.

Some time after the suit was commenced the plaintiff made some kind of an offer to defendants of a right-of-way 33 feet wide and three-fourths of a mile long whereby it claimed that defendants could gain access to their land from the north.

The leading case in this area of easement by necessity is Waubun Beach Association v. Wilson (1936), 274 Mich 598. Plaintiff points out that this case holds that a right-of-way of necessity continues until some other lawful way has been acquired and the fact that a former way of necessity continues to be the most convenient way will not prevent its extinguishment when it ceases to be absolutely necessary. Plaintiff maintains that the proposed grant of a 33-foot strip by plaintiff to defendants allowing access from the north fulfills this obligation. The complaint was filed February 14, 1968. No mention or offer of the 33-foot strip was made until August 8, 1968, in reply to an affirmative defense. The Waubun case also holds that the rights of the re *497 spective parties are to be determined on the facts as they stood when the suit was brought or complaint issued. To hold that one may sue first and obtain his cause of action afterwards is to set aside a rule of long standing in this state. When the complaint was filed in this case, the trail road was truly the only means of access to defendants’ property. According to the rule in Waubun, after suit is commenced, it is too late to suggest or provide an alternative access route. The Waubun case is also distinguishable for other reasons. In Waubun there was in existence an alternate road across other premises which was open and used. In the instant case there is no alternate road in existence, no dedication or. grant, only an offer. Waubun holds that a right-of-way of necessity continues until some other lawful way has been acquired. At the time of this suit, and as far as can be determined, still, there is no lawful alternate means of entry. A mere offer to grant or sell a right-of-way over other land is not material. Moore v. White (1909), 159 Mich 460.

Waubun defines a way of necessity on p 608 as follows:

“* * * a way of necessity is based upon an implication of an intended grant and the use of it is based entirely upon such implication or consent to its use. The basis of a way by prescription is adverse possession and use and the basis of a way by necessity is the implication of permissive use.”

The trial court found that the trail road was in fact the only right-of-way to defendants’ property; and that requiring defendants to build a road from the north was not feasible and is, “in fact”, no right at all.

As to issue 1, the trial judge’s determination of the law is correct and his findings of fact are sup *498 ported by sufficient and credible evidence in the record.

II.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 N.W.2d 39, 23 Mich. App. 492, 1970 Mich. App. LEXIS 1868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birch-forest-club-v-rose-michctapp-1970.