Booker v. Wever

202 N.W.2d 439, 42 Mich. App. 368, 1972 Mich. App. LEXIS 942
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 28, 1972
DocketDocket 10342
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 202 N.W.2d 439 (Booker v. Wever) 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
Booker v. Wever, 202 N.W.2d 439, 42 Mich. App. 368, 1972 Mich. App. LEXIS 942 (Mich. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

Holbrook, J.

Plaintiffs and defendants are neighbors owning adjoining lake lots on Wolf Lake in Muskegon County, Michigan. The plaintiffs purchased their lot in 1966, defendants in 1962.

*370 Through the course of events over the years prior to and including the aforementioned dates, the level of Wolf Lake has been dropping, leaving lands uncovered by reliction in front of the lots owned by the parties. The defendants have placed railroad ties along a line which they contend is the proper boundary line on the land uncovered by reliction and claimed by riparian right. Plaintiffs contend that these railroad ties, in part, mark off land lawfully belonging to the plaintiffs by virtue of their riparian rights.

Plaintiffs commenced a declaratory judgment action against the defendants in Muskegon County Circuit Court on May 15, 1970, seeking a determination of the location of the common boundary line between the adjoining lake lots. The cause was tried before the trial judge without a jury. From a judgment of no cause of action against plaintiffs, plaintiffs appeal.

I.

Whether the trial court erred in finding that Wolf Lake was not basically circular in shape so as to preclude the application of the jGlum aquae doctrine in apportioning the land uncovered by reliction?

Plaintiffs contend that the trial court’s determination that Wolf Lake is pear-shaped for the purpose of determining the parties’ respective rights to the land uncovered by reliction is erroneous. They assert that the uncontroverted testimony and exhibits presented at trial indicate that Wolf Lake is essentially a round lake which would require the application of the ;Glum aquae rule to apportion the land uncovered by reliction.

The history of Wolf Lake indicates that the land *371 surrounding the lake including the properties in question was originally owned by the United States Government who conducted a survey of the lake in 1837. The lake at that time was pear-shaped. Subsequently, the lake and its surrounding lands were patented to the State of Michigan by the United States Government. The properties in question were thereafter conveyed to various owners down to the present parties.

Sometime more than 20 years ago, a public causeway road was built over the neck portion of the pear-shape of the lake. A culvert allows water from the top of the original pear-shaped portion to flow into the main body of the lake. Some water is retained in the top portion of the pear of the lake.

The county surveyor, testifying as an expert witness, indicated that the top portion of the pear of the lake cut off by the causeway is a non-navigable, low marsh area that is no longer considered a part of the lake. Because of this, plaintiffs contend that the lake is now bound by. this causeway and that the shape of the lake is and should be found to be essentially round for the purpose of apportioning the land uncovered by reliction.

It is clear that where the United States, as owner of land surrounding a lake, which is at the time a permanent body of water in a defined basin, conveys such land, riparian rights may thereafter be attached to such lands and passed to subsequent grantees. Lee Wilson & Co v United States, 245 US 24; 38 S Ct 21; 62 L Ed 128 (1917); United States v Hale, 7 F2d 882 (CA 8, 1925); United States v Rhodes, 3 F2d 771 (CA 8, 1925); 67 CJ § 276, p 850; 112 ALR 1114; 23 ALR 783. If a lake was a permanent body of water in a defined basin at the time the United States parted with its title to the land surrounding it, and if the meander line *372 was properly run, riparian rights attach under the state law, and become vested in the patentees and their grantees. United States v Rhodes, supra. It is also clear that Michigan adheres to the rule of law that riparian rights attach to lots bounded by natural water courses including inland lakes. Bauman v Barendregt, 251 Mich 67 (1930); St Helen Shooting Club v Mogle, 234 Mich 60 (1926); 112 ALR 1114.

Applying these rules to the instant case, it appears that when the land surrounding Wolf Lake, which was originally owned by the United States Government, was patented to the State of Michigan, the riparian rights thereto vested in the state. These vested riparian rights attached to all of the lands surrounding the lake. The rule of law for ascertaining these rights was the method applicable for pear-shaped or irregularly shaped lakes. Weisenburger v Kirkwood, 7 Mich App 283 (1967). This continued to be the proper method for ascertaining the vested riparian rights for the lands surrounding the lake even though the shape of the lake may have changed over time. Plaintiffs have not cited any authority for the proposition that the method of ascertaining the riparian rights on a lake is changed when the shape of a lake may change over time. Thus, when the properties in question were conveyed to the various grantees in the chain of title down to the present parties, the vested riparian rights as ascertained by the method applicable to pear-shaped lakes attached to each such conveyance, none having been reserved. We therefore hold that the trial court did not err in determining that for the purposes of ascertaining the parties’ riparian rights in the land uncovered by reliction, Wolf Lake is, as originally surveyed by the United States Government, a pear-shaped lake.

*373 II.

Whether the trial court erred in determining that plaintiffs’ predecessors in title over a period of 67 years from 1903 all acquiesced in the occupation of defendants and their predecessors in defendants’ present estate so that plaintiffs aré now bound by such acquiescence?

Plaintiffs contend that the trial court’s theory in its finding of acquiescence is not sustained by the pleadings or the evidence.

The doctrine of acquiescence is well-settled in Michigan.

"The doctrine of acquiescence, as recognized in Michigan, is found in Jackson v Deemar, 373 Mich 22 (1964). Therein, the Michigan Supreme Court quoted from Johnson v Squires, 344 Mich 687, 692 (1956), as follows (pp 25, 26):
" 'We had occasion, in the case of Renwick v Noggle, 247 Mich 150 [1929], to examine the doctrine of acquiescence in the establishment of boundary lines and we there held (p 152):
"' "The rules for establishment of a boundary line by acquiescence are summarized by Mr. Justice Fellows in Hanlon v Ten Hove, 235 Mich 227, 231, 232 (46 ALR 788) [1926]:
"While acquiescence alone is not a defense, if acquiescence follows the resolving of a doubt as to where the line is or the settlement of a bona fide controversy, which settlement agreement contemplates an agreed line, and the monuments of such line are fixed and maintained thereafter, such line so established and acquiesced in is the line, and the acquiescence need not continue for the statutory period;

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Bluebook (online)
202 N.W.2d 439, 42 Mich. App. 368, 1972 Mich. App. LEXIS 942, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/booker-v-wever-michctapp-1972.