Edwin S. George Foundation v. Allen

31 N.W.2d 716, 320 Mich. 552, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 596
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1948
DocketDocket No. 39, Calendar No. 43,892.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 31 N.W.2d 716 (Edwin S. George Foundation v. Allen) 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
Edwin S. George Foundation v. Allen, 31 N.W.2d 716, 320 Mich. 552, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 596 (Mich. 1948).

Opinion

*554 Sharpe, J.

Plaintiff, Edwin S. George Foundation, filed a bill of complaint to restrain defendants from trespassing upon its lands, from placing boats on tbe shore of Island lake belonging to plaintiff, from allowing persons to cross plaintiff’s premises to go to the shore of the lake, and from interfering with plaintiff in the construction of a line fence.

On July 13, 1943, plaintiff filed its bill of complaint in which it is alleged that the Edwin S. George Foundation is a charitable trust created and existing under a trust indenture dated March 4,1935; that plaintiff is the owner of lands bordering on Island lake, having become the owner of said lands through a warranty deed executed by Edwin 8. George on March 4, 1935; that defendants, Bert J. Allen and Ethel Allen, his wife, obtained title to approximately three acres of land in 1923, said land being adjacent to property owned by plaintiff; that Island lake covers a portion of plaintiff’s property; that defendants cross plaintiff’s land in order to get to the lake; that defendants have placed boats on the shore of the lake belonging to plaintiff which defendants rent, lease and loan to persons desiring them; that defendants have threatened to destroy any fence which may be erected on a line between property owned by plaintiff and defendants; and that defendants have no right to cross plaintiff’s land in order to get to the waters of the lake.

Defendant Bert J. Allen filed an answer to plaintiff’s bill of complaint and admits plaintiff is the owner of a part of the northeast one-half of the northeast one-quarter of section 18, but denies there is a common boundary line between plaintiff and defendants’ properties. He alleges that defendants have exercised open and visible control over the property in dispute for a period of more than 15 *555 years and because of such use they have acquired title by adverse possession. He also filed a cross bill of complaint and asked that title be quieted in defendant; and that plaintiff be enjoined from trespassing upon said premises. However, during the course of the trial and on motion of his attorney, the above'mentioned cross bill was dismissed.

Defendant Ethel Allen filed an answer to plaintiff’s bill of complaint in which she denies, that the purposes set forth in the trust agreement are being-carried out or are sufficiently definite to constitute the basis for a valid trust, or that the alleged trustees are functioning according to the purport of said agreement; she denies that the deefl of March 4, 1935, executed by Edwin S. George to the plaintiff foundation makes plaintiff the owner of the land. She admits that defendants have threatened to tear down any fence which plaintiff attempts to build which would separate defendants’ property from the lake and by way of affirmative answer asserts that prior to the ownership of Edwin S. George of any property bordering on said lake, the defendants acquired the ordinary riparian rights over Island lake as a shore owner, including the right to use said water for boating, bathing, fishing and domestic use; and that said right was attached to defendants ’ land when they acquired title to the same.

Prior to the trial of said cause, defendants made a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s bill of complaint for the reason that said bill of complaint does not state facts which entitle plaintiff to relief in a court of equity; and for the further reason that no line has ever been established between the premises in dispute and plaintiff is not entitled to have the question of the location of the boundary determined in a *556 chancery suit. The trial court denied the motion stating:

“I am of the opinion that this dispute and difference between the parties here goes far beyond the mere physical location of this fence; it seems to me that one of the main things is the right of the parties here to use boats and have access to the lake or trespass upon lands that are in the possession of the plaintiff, and the main thing here, it seems to me that the plaintiff is seeking to restrain interference with lands that might not even be remotely connected with defendants’ property.”

The cause came on for trial and at the close of all evidence the trial court entered a decree determining that plaintiff is the. owner of the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 18, Bloomfield township, Oakland county, Michigan; that defendants have no right, title or. interest of any kind or nature in the lands of plaintiff; that the lands of plaintiff and the lands of defendants have a common line between them,described as follows:

“Commencing at a point on the N. and S. 8th line of the N.E. % of section 18, town 2 north, range 10 east, Bloomfield township, Oakland county, Michigan, located southerly on said 8th line 1180.09 feet from the north line of said section 18; thence easterly along the E. and W. 8th line of the N.E. % of said section 18, a distance of 495.7 feet to an iron fence post located at the N.E. corner of said Allen property, said corner -being also a corner of the vacated plat of Island lake estates, Bloomfield township, Oakland county, Michigan, this line being the line located in a survey of Wilbur S. McAlpine, being offered as an exhibit in said cause and a copy thereof attached thereto for reference.”

The decree also restrained defendants from maintaining any boats on plaintiff’s property constituí *557 ing the shore of Island lake or entering plaintiff’s-lands; and from interfering with plaintiff in the construction of a fence-on the common line between the properties of plaintiff and defendants. .

In an opinion,,the trial court made the following finding of facts:

“Plaintiff Foundation is the’owner-of the northeast % of the northeast % of section 18, Bloomfield township, Oakland county, Michigan. Plaintiff became the owner of said premises by "warranty deed dated March 4, 1935. As the entitling of this case would indicate, said title was obtained from Edwin S. George, who became the owner of said premises by a warranty deed dated March 26, 1910. Defendants became the owners of lands in said township, described as a parcel of land in the southeast % of the northeast % of section 18, described as commencing at the northeast [northwest1?] corner of the southeast % of the northeast Pi-' of section 18, thence south 16 rods, thence east 30-rods, thence north 16 rods, thence west 30 rods to the place of the beginning, containing 3 acres of land.

“The common east and west line between the Foundation’s property as heretofore described and the defendants’ property as heretofore described, is some 100 feet from the shore of Island lake. The point of beginning in this case -must, of necessity, be a factual determination by the court of the location of the east-and-west common line between the plaintiffs ’ and the defendants’ property. To this end much of the proof taken concerns itself with, the location of said line and to the end that the court might more easily follow and evaluate said proof, the property was-viewed in detail in the presence of the attorneys, parties litigant and principal witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.W.2d 716, 320 Mich. 552, 1948 Mich. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwin-s-george-foundation-v-allen-mich-1948.