Gableman v. Department of Conservation

15 N.W.2d 689, 309 Mich. 416, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 347
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1944
DocketDocket No. 11, Calendar No. 42,652.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 15 N.W.2d 689 (Gableman v. Department of Conservation) 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
Gableman v. Department of Conservation, 15 N.W.2d 689, 309 Mich. 416, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 347 (Mich. 1944).

Opinion

Bushnell, J.

Plaintiff Charles Gableman is the owner of lot 9 in Sunrise Heights subdivision, Highland township, Oakland county, Michigan, fronting on White lake. He has occupied these premises for some 20 years and has invested upwards of $7,500 in a home thereon. In pursuance of its policy to make the waters of the State available to the public, defendant Department of Conservation purchased four contiguous 50-foot lots in this subdivision, i. e., lots 10, 11, 12 and 13, which immediately adjoin plaintiff’s property. The restrictions of record in this subdivision read substantially as follows:

“Said land is subject to the following restrictions which will run forever with the land to-wit: said lot shall not be sold, leased or occupied to or by any person whatsoever not belonging to the Caucasian race.”

A deed executed in 1942 on lot 11 contains the following restriction:

“Said lot shall not be sold, leased or occupied to or by any person whatsoever not belonging to the Caucasian race.”

After securing title to the lots the department filled in the shore line at a narrow point near the public roadway in order that fishing boats might be launched into the lake from the roadway, and to complete the project the department plans to do certain grading on top of this fill, sod the same, place guard posts running from the county highway *419 in a semicircle pattern to provide a roadway for cars to drive off the main road while launching boats, and to construct a timber boat ramp from the top of the fill to the water’s edge, and to erect signs.

Before this work was completed, plaintiff filed a bill of complaint in the Oakland’county circuit court in which he averred that a public fishing site is contrary to the restrictions upon the use of the premises and to the general plan in existence in the subdivision. He alleged that if defendant completed its project it would constitute a nuisance in that:

“(a) Excessive noise will come from the intended use.

“ (b) Defendant by said construction will destroy the natural shore line, this preventing the plaintiff the full use and enjoyment of his property on said lake.

“ (c) That plaintiff will be prevented free access to his property by said obstruction. ’ ’

The circuit judge found that the character and complexion of the subdivision is strictly residential, and that of its 25 to 30 homes the, cheapest one in the subdivision would be worth not less than $2,000, and that the presence of a public fishing site in the subdivision would—“definitely and perceptibly decrease the value of the homes in said subdivision and will especially decrease the value and be damaging to the property of the plaintiff whose house, of the value aforesaid, will be located only the width of a single drive from the lots to be used by the State for parking purposes for those utilizing said' fishing site.”

The circuit judge also' said:

“The shore line of White lake opposite the four lots now owned by the State was, prior to the time that construction of the fishing site was commenced, *420 curving’, the land gradually sloped from the road‘way to the water’s edge. The natural shore line has now been destroyed and will be further destroyed if the project is completed.. The fill which is located in front of the four lots, which fill extends from the road into the lake, definitely destroys the natural beauty of .the lake as viewed from plaintiff’s property,—the pictures introduced in evidence not to the contrary. From the use to which the fishing site was put prior to the injunction, before the same was advertised or generally known to be a public site, it is apparent that said fishing site is and will continue to be a traffic hazard, located as it is on a curve of the road, which services the subdivision and adjacent communities. It was also apparent that there was and will be attending noise from the parking of cars and from people going to and from the lake. After viewing the property subsequent to the taking of the proof, the court finds that the natural shore line as well as the natural beauty has been changed and that such changes will be more apparent and more damaging if and when the State is permitted to complete its project which will entail the grading of the four lots to the level of the road in order to make them usable for parking purposes.”

Defendant department has appealed from a decree permanently restraining it from—“violating the restriction of the subdivision known as “Sunrise Heights,’ a subdivision located in Highland township, Oakland county, Michigan, and from carrying out or utilizing the property acquired, being lots 10, 11, 12 and 13, aforesaid, as a part of the public fishing site contemplated.”

Although the trial judge held that the use of'these lake lots by those of the Negro race would not constitute occupancy within the meaning of the language in the restriction, that question is before us on this hearing de novo. In the recent case of Bradford v. Goldman, 290 Mich. 338, this-court followed the gen *421 eral rule that occupancy means actual possession. See, also, Adair v. Bonninghausen, 305 Mich. 137.

Applying the reasoning of these authorities, those of the Negro race who might have access to White lake for fishing purposes through the facilities of the Department of Conservation would neither occupy nor possess these lands.

The court was of the opinion that a general plan existed in the subdivision; that the character and complexion of the neighborhood was residential; and that a public fishing site within the subdivision would be foreign to its development and should be restrained.

“Restrictions which are not a matter of record and of which a party has neither actual nor constructive notice cannot be enforced ag*ainst such party. * * * Nor are the plaintiffs entitled to have the restrictions as such enforced.” Muskegon Trust Co. v. Bousma, 247 Mich. 98, 101.

See, also, Kathan v. Stevenson, 307 Mich. 485.

The record shows that one of the lots in this subdivision has been occupied by a boat livery for approximately 10 years. If there ever was a so-called plan restricting the property to residential use only, that plan has not been followed and the department is .not bound by it.

The use proposed by defendant department cannot be restrained1 on esthetic grounds. A similar argument was urged in Smith v. City of Ann Arbor, 303 Mich. 476, with respect to a city dump. The court said in that case:

“Plaintiffs claim that the dump is attractive to school children, that its effect is harmful, decreases the self-confidence of the pupils, causes an increased tendency to lie and disobey, and is bad for their morale. As said by Mr. Justice Wiest in Perry Mount Park Cemetery Ass’n v. Netsel, 274 Mich. 97, *422

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 N.W.2d 689, 309 Mich. 416, 1944 Mich. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gableman-v-department-of-conservation-mich-1944.