Cook v. Grand River Hydroelectric Power Co.

346 N.W.2d 881, 131 Mich. App. 821
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 1984
DocketDocket 67391
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 346 N.W.2d 881 (Cook v. Grand River Hydroelectric Power Co.) 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
Cook v. Grand River Hydroelectric Power Co., 346 N.W.2d 881, 131 Mich. App. 821 (Mich. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

R. B. Burns, P.J.

This controversy centers on the operation of the La Barge Dam located in Kent County on the Thornapple River. Between 1971 and 1980, plaintiffs purchased properties abutting the river upstream from the dam. In 1980, defendant bought the dam and all rights appurtenant thereto from Consumers Power Company. Consumers had ceased using the dam to generate electricity in 1965 and in 1970 had ceased using the dam gates, leaving them open. After purchasing the dam, defendant renovated the power-generating equipment and prepared to re-establish it as a hydroelectric power-producing facility. In July, 1982, defendant closed the dam gates, raising the level of the water to approximately 2-3 inches above the dam’s spillway. The dam’s spillway is 18 feet above the low-water mark or approximately 698 feet above sea level.

The closing of the dam gates caused flooding on plaintiffs’ properties and, consequently, they commenced the present action seeking injunctive and monetary relief. A temporary restraining order *825 was issued, which continued in effect until the bench trial on the merits. In a bench opinion, the judge dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims, finding that the defendant had the right to impound water to a height of 699 feet above sea level and, further, that defendant had flowage easements over plaintiffs’ properties, permitting it to flood portions of their properties by operating the dam. The trial judge also rejected plaintiffs’ claim based on the Michigan Environmental Protection Act, MCL 691.1201 et seq.; MSA 14.528(201) et seq. Plaintiffs now appeal from the trial court judgment and order to that effect.

The origins of the dam are discussed in Allen v Thornapple Electric Co, 144 Mich 370, 371; 108 NW 79 (1906). The Thornapple Electric Company had purchased the original dam sometime prior to the lawsuit filed in that case and had also acquired the right to flow water over certain properties upstream from the dam. The flowage easements were recorded between 1903 and .1905. It was stipulated at trial in the present case that the express flowage easements acquired by the Thorn-apple Electric Company covered the plaintiffs’ properties with the exception of the property owned by one plaintiff who has not appealed. It was also stipulated that 18 plaintiffs purchased their property with either deeds or title insurance policies which expressly stated that their title was subject to Consumers’ flowage easements. The remaining plaintiffs bought their property pursuant to deeds which stated that their property was subject to easements of record.

As to those plaintiffs whose deeds do not specifically refer to the flowage easement, it is argued that the marketable record title act, MCL 565.101 et seq.; MSA 26.1271 et seq., operates to extinguish *826 the express easements. Section 3 of the act provides in pertinent part that a person holding marketable title takes it free and clear of any interests whose existence depends in whole or in part on any "act, transaction, event, or omission that occurred” 40 years prior to the time the person obtains title. Since the validity of the express flowage easements depends on conveyances and recordings which took place more than 40 years prior to their acquisition of the property, plaintiffs argue that the express easements are ineffective as to those plaintiffs whose deeds do not specifically refer to the easements.

Assuming, without deciding, that plaintiffs are correct in this contention, the record establishes that defendant has, nonetheless, acquired valid flowage easements over plaintiffs’ properties. The marketable record title act does not extinguish interests created by hostile possession. MCL 565.101; MSA 26.1271. Prescriptive easements fall within this category. A prescriptive easement is founded on the supposition of a grant. It arises from an open, notorious, continuous, and adverse use across the land of another for a period of 15 years. Outhwaite v Foote, 240 Mich 327, 331; 215 NW 331 (1927); Reed v Soltys, 106 Mich App 341, 346; 308 NW2d 201 (1981). A use of land is adverse when made under a claim of right where no right exists. Thus, if a claimant has obtained a conveyance of an easement which is ineffective, his use of the subservient estate, made on the assumption that the conveyance was legally effective, is adverse and not made in subordination to the owner of the burdened estate. 3 Powell, Real Property, § 413, pp 34-109 — 34-110.

We find that even if the marketable record title act extinguished the express easements acquired *827 by defendant’s predecessor in interest, defendant would still have a right to flow waters over plaintiffs’ properties because defendant would have acquired prescriptive flowage easements over the properties.

Defendant acquired all prescriptive rights appurtenant to the dam from Consumers. Consumers operated the dam from the time it acquired the facility in 1927 until the time it opened the dam gates in 1970. This operation and resultant flooding of what are now plaintiffs’ properties constituted an open, notorious, and continuous use of the properties for a period in excess of the requisite 15 years. Furthermore, if the express easements were extinguished by the marketable record title act, under the guidelines set forth above, the use of the properties was also adverse.

In addition, any prescriptive flowage easements acquired by defendant would not have been abandoned. To prove abandonment, plaintiffs would have to show continuous nonuse of the easements for 15 years. McDonald v Sargent, 308 Mich 341; 13 NW2d 843 (1944). There is no evidence of nonuse for 15 years. Rather, Consumers continued to operate the dam gates and impound water to the top of the spillway until 1970.

We must also reject plaintiffs’ argument that previous circuit court decrees limit the exercise of any easement that may have survived the marketable record title act. The 1922 circuit court decree did not alter the 1915 circuit court decision which allowed the defendant’s predecessor to impound the water up to 20.59 feet above the river’s tailwaters. Therefore, both decrees confirmed defendant’s predecessor’s right to maintain an 18-foot-high dam and to impound water to a point above the spillway. Accordingly, the trial judge was not in *828 error in concluding that the defendant is entitled to operate the dam to its full impoundment level.

We also find plaintiffs’ equitable estoppel argument to be unconvincing. Plaintiffs argue that they reasonably relied upon their 40-year chains of title showing no easements and the fact that the dam was not being used to generate electricity but had its gates open when the plaintiffs bought their properties in concluding that the dam would not affect their properties. Furthermore, plaintiffs contend that Consumers failed to advise plaintiffs of the easements or to update the county records to show the easements and thereby induced plaintiffs to buy the properties. Under these circumstances, plaintiffs argue, defendant, as Consumers’ successor, is estopped from using the easements and harming plaintiffs’ properties.

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Bluebook (online)
346 N.W.2d 881, 131 Mich. App. 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-grand-river-hydroelectric-power-co-michctapp-1984.