Escher v. Bender

61 N.W.2d 143, 338 Mich. 1, 46 A.L.R. 2d 539, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 285
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1953
DocketDocket 63, Calendar 45,952
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 61 N.W.2d 143 (Escher v. Bender) 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
Escher v. Bender, 61 N.W.2d 143, 338 Mich. 1, 46 A.L.R. 2d 539, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 285 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Adams, J.

This is an action in chancery to set aside a conveyance of real estate on the ground that it was induced by the fraud, misrepresentation and mistake of the defendant.

• Joseph P. Bender, defendant and appellant, owned lot - 3; - section 2, township of Sauble, Lake county, Michigan. Some years ago the land was used as a farm, but it now has' greater value as a resort area because of its proximity to a number of lakes.

In 1951, Meta Olga Escber, plaintiff and appellee, became interested in purchasing the property as an investment. She viewed the area in company with *3 the defendant and 2 real estate brokers and was told the approximate boundaries of the lot. While the defendant had no survey, he told plaintiff that he - knew the extent of his property and pointed out certain fences, trees, water channels and lake shores as marking the'property lines. Plaintiff was told that the property had an extensive shore line on 3' lakes and that it included within its boundaries a' trout, creek for a distance of some 500 to 600 feet northeasterly from a bridge on the premises.

Plaintiff decided to purchase the property and on May 11, 1951, an agreement was executed, under the provisions of which defendant. agreed to sell the. property. The agreement provided for the delivery of certain instruments and moneys to an escrow agent who was authorized to complete the transac-; tion upon the fulfillment of stated conditions and. requirements, 1 of those conditions-being that the defendant supply an abstract of "title and tax history certified to date which when examined by a designated attorney would place “a good marketable title in the name of the first party.”

The conditions of the escrow having been apparently complied with, defendant on June 6, 1951, conveyed the property by warranty deed to the plaintiff and the plaintiff paid to defendant the sum of $7,000 in cash and gave a mortgage and note for the unpaid balance of $7,000.

Thereafter, plaintiff employed a registered surveyor to survey the property in anticipation of its development as a summer resort area. The survey- or, working from the original government survey and a private survey made in 1908 and utilizing certain monuments located some distance from the property; established the boundary lines of the área as. described., in ..the conveyance; The survey Indicated that the property had substantially the. .same, frontage on one lake as represented by defendant, a *4 much, lesser frontage on a second lake and none on the third. It also appeared from the survey that the description included considerably less of the trout stream than had been pointed out to the plaintiff prior to sale.

When plaintiff discovered that the survey did not include much of the land, and particularly the lake and river frontage, that she had been led to believe she had purchased from the defendant, she promptly gave written notice to the defendant that she was rescinding the purchase, tendered a deed of the property, and demanded the return of the down payment, mortgage and note. Upon defendant’s refusal to set aside the transaction, plaintiff instituted this action alleging that because of the fraud, misrepresentation and mistake of the defendant, she had not received the property which defendant had agreed to convey to her.

Defendant, in his answer, alleged that the property was fenced on the north and east sides and on a part of the south side and that the remaining boundaries were marked by the shore line of lakes and channels. Further, that he and his predecessor in ownership had openly used the premises within such boundaries for a period of approximately 40 years without interference or objection from others and that, as a result of such acquiescence by adjacent property owners in the boundary lines as established and maintained, such fences and shore lines had become the legal boundary line of the premises known as lot 3, section 2, Sauble township, Lake county. It was the contention of the defendant, therefore, that having established the boundaries of the lot by acquiescence of adjacent land owners and having produced an abstract which showed a marketable title to the lot, he had fulfilled the requirements set forth in the sales agreement.

*5 At the conclusion of the trial, the court found that defendant did not have marketable title of record to a substantial portion of the land purportedly conveyed to plaintiff and decreed that the conveyance be set aside because of misrepresentation and mistake. Defendant appeals.

When a boundary line between adjacent parcels of land is established by a fence or other marker and the line so established is acquiesced in by the owners of the adjacent parcels, it has been held that the line becomes the actual boundary line of the properties and will not be changed even though a subsequent survey shows error.

“Where coupled with acquiescence is the further fact that it has continued for the statutory period, such acquiescence for such statutory period fixes the line. Call v. O’Harrow, 51 Mich 98; Diehl v. Zanger, 39 Mich 601; Greene v. Anglemire, 77 Mich 168; F. H. Wolf Brick Co. v. Lonyo, 132 Mich 162 (102 Am St Rep 412); Marion v. Balsley, 195 Mich 51. So in Gildea v. Warren, 173 Mich 28, the plaintiff had not-been in possession of the premises for the statutory period. If the question of tacking'was involved, she could not tack on the period of occupancy of her predecessors in title, but the fences had been acquiesced in for more than the statutory period and it was held that they fixed the line, and in Bunde v. Finley, 224 Mich 634, while the court held that defendant could not tack on the period of possession of his predecessor to his own in order to establish adverse possession, we at the same time sustained the following instruction:
“ ‘Where a fence has been treated and acquiesced in as the correct boundary line between adjacent owners for 15 years the boundary line ought not to be disturbed even if there were some variance from the true line, and a long established fence is better evidence of actual boundaries settled by practical *6 location than a survey made after the monuments' of the original survey, have disappeared. And where a boundary line has been recognized and acquiesced in for 15 years it would not be disturbed by reason of new surveys.’
“The instant ease falls within the line of cases last •discussed. The testimony clearly establishes that for over 40 years the line claimed by defendant has been acquiesced in. On both sides of the line the respective parties have used to the line and no further; for many years a fence was maintained; in later years the business property has been used up to the line and, as we understand the record, improvements of some cost have been made by defendant.. That the respective parties have acquiesced in the line for more than the statutory period is abundantly sustained by the proof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 N.W.2d 143, 338 Mich. 1, 46 A.L.R. 2d 539, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/escher-v-bender-mich-1953.