Clinton v. Spencer

229 N.W. 609, 250 Mich. 135, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 935
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1930
DocketDocket No. 62, Calendar No. 34,648.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 229 N.W. 609 (Clinton v. Spencer) 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
Clinton v. Spencer, 229 N.W. 609, 250 Mich. 135, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 935 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

Anselm J. Smith et al:, plaintiffs in one suit, and Theresa C. Clinton et al., plaintiffs in another, brought separate actions against A. W. Spencer, county drain commissioner of Oakland county, Floyd H. Losee, Oakland county treasurer, John E. Ferguson, township treasurer of Southfield township, and also against S. A. Healy and E. D. Baker Company, both of Detroit, Michigan, the two contractors for building a sewer on the Eight Mile road in front of plaintiffs’ respective properties. The two suits were combined and heard as one. The questions presented and the relief prayéd for in each one of them are the same.

Smith et al. are the owners of an 80-acre farm at the northeast corner of Southfield road and the Eight Mile road, in Oakland county,'Michigan. Immediately east of their property is a narrow tract of 40 acres bordering approximately 660 feet on the Eight Mile road, belonging to parties not plaintiffs in either suit. Immediately east of said 40 acres are 120 acres fronting on the Eight Mile road, belonging to plaintiffs Clinton et al. The- frontage of the property of the two sets of plaintiffs, together with the 660 feet belonging to the 40-acre tract be *138 tween their properties, is on.e mile in length. According to the map, the Eight Mile road'in front of all of this property and for some distance east and west thereof is unpaved. The Eight Mile road is the ' division line between Oakland and Wayne counties. The south side of the road is the northerly boundary line of the city of Detroit. The Eight Mile road in this particular vicinity and for a considerable distance east and west thereof is unimproved, and consists mainly of farms. Some of them have been subdivided, but not otherwise improved. The Smith property is well drained by the already existing Muldruff and Hubbard drains. The property is assessed at $500 an acre, or $40,000. Admittedly, it is worth much more on account of its proximity to the city of Detroit. Plaintiffs stated that they would not take $3,000 an acre for it, but that they would consider $5,000 an acre. They testified that they had paid taxes for the drains on their lands.

Members of the Clinton family have resided on the 120-acre farm continuously since the year 1880 up to the time of the hearing of the case. Three different branches of the Hubbard drain, a regularly established’ drain, take care of all of the surface water on their farm. The property is farm land, but for the past two years has been used for the pasturage of cattle and horses. There are one house, two barns, and a pump house on the property. Neither the Smith nor the Clinton farms have been subdivided. There is one house on the property between the two farms. The property north of the lands in question is not built up to the Nine Mile road, except for two old farm houses on the farms. Although the assessed valuation of the Clinton property is not given, it was less favorably situated than the Smith property, which is assessed at $500 an *139 acre. The Clinton farm, therefore, would not have an assessed valuation of over $60,000 or thereabouts. It is also admittedly worth more. The testimony shows that the Clinton family had some difficulty over the title, and in order not to be bothered by real estate men during the period while they were trying to straighten out the title, they placed a valuation of $8,000 an acre on the property. Some of the frontage on the south side of the road has been subdivided, but not improved. The record further shows that the entire frontage of the Eight Mile road along which the sewer or drain in question is being-built consists of unimproved property, with the exception of a small number of farm houses which are a considerable distance apart.

The Southfield road running north and south, and beginning at the Seven Mile road, is one of the main' thoroughfares to Birmingham, Michigan. The roads parallel and crossing the Southfield road are one mile apart. Besides the Eight Mile road, which is one mile north of the Seven Mile road, there are upper roads known as Nine, Ten, and Eleven Mile roads, referred to in this opinion as the upper roads. There has been considerable real estate speculation along the Southfield road and on the upper roads. A number of subdivisions were laid out, but principally on the upper roads, some of which have been paved and improved. A number of houses have been built on or near the upper roads, but most of them are far apart, and, compared with the size of the area, they are few in number. The property in the city of Detroit, bordering on the Eight Mile road and for a considerable distance south of it, is also unimproved, and appears to be farm property. Some of it has been subdivided, but none of it has been improved so as to give it the appearance of more than a *140 farming district. The property along the Eight Mile road is an old established farming district, and apparently has been adequately drained for farm purposes by existing drains. The testimony shows that many of the subdividers on the upper roads have been anxious for a draining system that would accomplish the purpose of a city sewer, and that they were the ones who were largely instrumental in instituting proceedings for the building of a sewer under the drain law of 1923 (Act No. 316, Pub. Acts 1923), as amended.

On or about the 3d day of August, 1926, an application was made to defendant A. W. Spencer, Oakland county drain commissioner, to lay out a drainage district for a drain described as follows:

. “Commencing approximately at the Ten and a Half Mile road and running south in Southfield road to approximately the Eight Mile road, thence westerly along the Eight Mile road to the River Rouge ; the purpose being to afford a sewer of suitable kind to serve that portion of sections 24, 25 and 36 on the east of Southfield road as cannot be served by any other presently established sewer, and also to serve as wide an area on the west side of Southfield road and north of the Eight Mile road as may be possible to accomplish. Together with such subtrunks and laterals as may be deemed necessary, which said application was signed by ten freeholders, one-half of whom will be liable for an assessment on said drain.”

Thereafter, on the 14th day of July, 1927, the commissioner issued an order for laying out and designating a drainage district. The preamble to this order sets out the description of the sewer as given in the application. The order determined that the drain should be known as the “Southfield Storm *141 Sewer Drain, ’ ’ but instead of following the five miles of route as set forth in the application, it describes four independent drains or sewers, which, together with a three-mile addition thereafter made, aggregated over 13 miles in length. The route described in the application was almost wholly disregarded. The four drains are independent of one another. They each run separately and independently along the Eight, Nine, Ten, and Eleven Mile roads, and each at its western terminal empties into the River Rouge. They are'in no manner connected. There is no trunk line running through them. The building of one of them in no way affects another.

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Bluebook (online)
229 N.W. 609, 250 Mich. 135, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clinton-v-spencer-mich-1930.