Doctor v. Turner

231 N.W. 115, 251 Mich. 175, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 571
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1930
DocketDocket No. 60, Calendar No. 34,587.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 231 N.W. 115 (Doctor v. Turner) 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
Doctor v. Turner, 231 N.W. 115, 251 Mich. 175, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 571 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

Potter, J.

Plaintiff claimed to be the owner of the following described property located in • the township of Laketon, in the county of Muskegon, and State of Michigan, to wit:

Commencing at the quarter post on the east side of section 12, town 10 north, range 17 west, thence southerly 1067.4 feet along the section line from point of beginning; thence southerly 252.6 feet along said section line, thence westerly 296.3 feet, thence northerly 209 feet, thence easterly 300 feet to point of beginning, containing about 1.5 acres, and being a part of lot one of said section lying north of the city of North Muskegon, Michigan”—

and filed the bill of complaint herein to restrain and enjoin defendants from entering upon the premises and building a roadway across the same. From a decree for plaintiff, defendants appeal.

The controversy arises over the ownership and ■possession of the premises above described claimed by plaintiff. Bear lake, according to the govern'ment survey made in 1837, extends into the southeast quarter of section 12, township 10 north, range 17 west. It is a meandered lake. The southeast *177 quarter of section 12 was divided into lots 1 and 2. Lot 2 is the west fractional half of the southeast quarter of section 12. Lot 1 is the east fractional half of the southeast quarter of section 12, and, according to the United States survey, contained 66.15 acres of land. Bear lake, at the time this survey was made, was substantially coextensive with Bear lake as it now exists. Bear creek runs southwesterly through section 7, township 10 north, range 16 west, and lot 1 of section 12, township 10 north, range 17 west. After the lands in controversy had been surveyed, and the title thereto acquired from the government of the United States by private persons, the legislature of Michigan passed Act No. 96, Laws of 1840, which provided as follows:

“Section 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of Michigan, That Sheldon Judson, Lewis Nicholson, Nathan Judson and Benjamin Barnet, their heirs and assigns be, and they are hereby authorized and empowéred to build a dam across the outlet of Bear lake, near its intersection with Lake Muskegon, on the northwest quarter of section number twenty-three, in township number ten north, of range number seventeen west, in the county of Ottawa: Provided, That said dam shall not exceed eight feet above the common low water mark. ’ ’

About the time this act was passed, a dam was built at the outlet of Bear lake, as a result of which the marshy land along Bear creek in a northeasterly direction across lot 1 of section 12, town 10 north, range 17 west, and section 7 of township 10 north, range 16 west, was overflowed, nearly, if not quite to the easterly boundary of section 7. Bear lake' likewise spread out and covered considerable land which naturally was not covered by the waters of *178 the lake. In 1881 the village of North Muskegon was incorporated and its boundaries fixed, as follows :

“Commencing at the point on the section line between sections seven and eight, in the township of Muskegon, where the quarter line running east and west intersects the same; thence west on said quarter line to the center of Bear lake; thence along the center of Bear lake to the section line, dividing sections fourteen and twenty-three, in the township of Laketon, said county; thence west along said section line to the northwest corner of said section twenty-three; thence south to the center of Muskegon lake; thence in a northeasterly direction to the southeast corner of said section seven and thence north to the place of beginning, be and the same is hereby constituted a village corporate under the name of the village of North Muskegon.” Section 1 of Act No. 359, Local Acts of 1881.

In October, 1881, a plat of the village of North Muskegon, referred to as Smalley’s map, was made and recorded as the official map of the village of North Muskegon. By that map, block 21 ran along the waters of Bear lake covering lands of lot 1 in the southeast fractional quarter of section 12, south of Bear lake as it then existed, and also the lands within the boundaries of the village above described on section 7 above mentioned.

The Cohasset Lumber Company at this time owned all of lot 1 of section 12, township 10 north, range 17 west. In 1883 the dam at the lower end of Bear lake went out, and the lake resumed its normal level. April 28, 1887, the Cohasset Lumber Company deeded to George R. Kinsman all that part of lot 1, section 12, town 10 north, range 17 west, lying north of the limits of the village of North Muskegon. Under no construction of this conveyance can it be *179 considered as covering any part of the lands in question. It conveys only land north of the quarter line running east and west through section 12.

In 1891 the city of North Muskegon was incorporated and its boundaries fixed, as follows:

“Commencing at a point where the southeast corner of fractional lot three of section eight, township ten north, of range sixteen west, Muskegon county, Michigan, intersects the shore line of Muskegon lake, running thence north on the line between lots two and three of said section to the quarter line thereof, thence west along the quarter lines of sections eight and seven of said township to the center of Bear lake, thence along the center of Bear lake to the section line dividing sections fourteen and twenty-three in the township of Laketon, said county, thence west along said section line to the northwest corner of said section twenty-three, thence south to the center of Muskegon lake, thence northeasterly along the center of Muskegon lake to a point where the section line between sections seven and eight in township ten north, of range sixteen west, would, if extended south, cross the bridge over Muskegon lake as now established, thence in a straight line to the place of beginning, including all lands in said boundaries and the portion of Bear lake and Muskegon lake (including) included therein, be and is hereby set off from the township of Muskegon and township of Laketon in said county.” Section 1, chap. 1, Act No. 215, Local Acts 1891.

June 30, 1900, the Cohasset Lumber Company deeded, by two separate quitclaim deeds, to Charles LI. Hackley and Thomas Hume, composing the firm of Hackley & Hume, a large amount of real estate, including all of blocks 20, 21, 23, 24, and 25 of the village of North Muskegon, and the unplatted part of the southwest quarter of southwest quarter of *180 section 7, town 10 north, range 16 west, and all of the northeast quarter of southwest quarter of section 7, town 10 north, range 16 west.

March 4, 1905, George R. Kinsman and wife deeded to Charles Gilbert and wife all of lot 1 of section 12, township 10 north, range 17 west, lying north of the city of North Muskegon.

June 1, 1895, by Act No. 466, Local Acts 1895, given immediate effect by the legislature, the city of North Muskegon was reincorporated and its boundaries fixed as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 N.W. 115, 251 Mich. 175, 1930 Mich. LEXIS 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doctor-v-turner-mich-1930.