Cass County Park Trustees v. Wendt

105 N.W.2d 138, 361 Mich. 247, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 319
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1960
DocketDocket 27, Calendar 48,459
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 105 N.W.2d 138 (Cass County Park Trustees v. Wendt) 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
Cass County Park Trustees v. Wendt, 105 N.W.2d 138, 361 Mich. 247, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 319 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

Black, J.

{concurring). Plaintiffs sued to abate a barbed wire fence defendant had constructed for the purpose of preventing public passage — and uses related to such passage — between a county highway and Cass county’s Eagle lake. 1 At the point of controversy such highway skirts Eagle lake for a considerable distance. Por a corresponding distance— at the same point — the highway separates defendant’s property from the lake. It seemingly is agreed (see Croucher v. Wooster, 271 Mich 337) that defendant holds legal title to the entire highway subject to the public right. On that basis defendant claimed and now claims the right to maintain the fence between the respective rights of highway use and navigational-recreational use.

The highway is of black-top construction. At one time it was the principal thoroughfare between Cas-sopolis and Elkhart. Like Croucher (and unlike presently considered Meridian), there is at the point of controversy no land between the highway and the' “somewhat deep” waters of the lake. The result,, fully shown by testimony and finding, is that the ordinary public right of use of such highway 2 has,. *249 for many years opposite defendant’s property, been joined in fact with the corresponding public right of use of the waters of the lake. Whether such public rights have been joined together in law, and so may he enjoyed generally without interposition of defendant’s fence, is the question before us.

The chancellor, relying principally on a previous adjudicatory suit and the unappealed decree entered therein, ruled in favor of the public authorities and entered a decree restraining defendant as recited in the margin. 3 Prom such decree defendant appeals and presents this question:

“Where a public highway has been established by user along and to the edge of a nonprivate lake, does the fee owner of the right-of-way have the right to erect a fence along the water’s edge of the highway right-of-way?”

The previous suit was brought by defendant Wendt and his wife Patricia, as plaintiffs, against the Cass county hoard of road commissioners. By such suit Mr. and Mrs. Wendt sought injunctive relief, and a money decree, alleging that the road commission had no right to holster and “build up” the highway along the waterside — by means of stone fill and the like — and was in fact “trespassing” on their land by such activity. That suit resulted in a decree adjudging “that the public has acquired an easement by user for highway purposes across any lands of the plaintiffs which lie 33 feet easterly [the waterside] *250 Of the following described line and-westerly thereof to the shore of Eagle lake (here follows the appropriate legal description).”

Thereafter, such decree having become final, Mr. ■Wendt constructed the mentioned fence. This suit, presenting its afore-stated question, followed.

To sustain his affirmative answer to such question defendant relies particularly on Meridian Township v. Palmer, 279 Mich 586. There, however, the contentions of the public authorities were statedly limited, and there was no earlier adjudication of a pertinent public right. A decisive factor, apparently, was the failure of Meridian township to adduce (p 590) “testimony showing any interest in the public beyond an easement of passage over the 66-foot strip, constituting the road.” Yet I would not evade due —and possibly overdue — re-examination of Meridian. The naked dixit of Meridian — that Backus v. City of Detroit, 49 Mich 110 (43 Am Rep 447), does not apply where a highway skirts rather than ends at navigable water — has bred more disputatious litigation than it has settled. This is well known to veteran circuit judges of such counties of Michigan as are blessed with a plenitude of navigable lakes and waterways.

The situation made by Meridian is especially difficult for public authorities charged with the duty of maintenance and protection — from erosion — of such water-contiguous public ways. Further, as the demand grows for private frontage on navigable waters, more and more of that which Backus once prevented takes place at the expense of the public right.

Backus — -surely a leading presentation of Michigan’s “Big Four” — did not reason to its- decree on any supposed theory that the law therein expounded is or should be different when the public way borders *251 and follows the water’s edge. 4 And .'it requires no< torrént of words to demonstrate that Backus was-broadly designed as a guide for all like cases where public ways actually end in or contiguously border the waters of navigable lakes and watercourses. The principal authority relied on by Mr. Justice Cooley (writer of Backus) actually was an instance of dispute involving a waterfront street,- in Pittsburgh, which extended along rather than terminated in the river Monongahela (Barclay v. Howell’s Lessee, 31 US 498 [6 Pet 498, 8 L ed 477]). What was said in Barclay became, by adoption in Backus, good Michigan law. I would adopt again, and apply as presently decisive, the reasoning of Barclay as follows (p 512):

“If is admitted by both parties, that the river Monongahela, being a navigable stream, belongs to the public; and a free use of it may be rightfully claimed by the public, whatever may be the extent of its volume of water. If Water street be bounded by the river on the south, it is only limited by the public right. To contend that between this boundary and the public right, a private and hostile right could exist, would not only be unreasonable, but against law.”

Having adopted the rule of Barclay the Court — in Backus (p 118) — went on to quote from a New Jersey case as follows:

“If the shore is extended into the water by alluvial deposits, or is filled in by the proprietor of *252 the soil, the public easement is, by operation of law, extended from its former terminus over the new-made land to the water.”

Meridian should be overruled, and Backus should be reinstated for general application where it is shown that a street or highway actually and in the natural state of things contiguously borders or ends in navigable public waters. Thus should respective and well understood public rights be joined, one and inseparable.

The plaintiff authorities, representing Cass county, have over the years at public expense provided along Eagle lake “the means of access from the highway by land to the highway by water” (Backus, p 120).

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Bluebook (online)
105 N.W.2d 138, 361 Mich. 247, 1960 Mich. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cass-county-park-trustees-v-wendt-mich-1960.