Gowdy v. Gordon

215 N.W. 702, 240 Mich. 558, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 936
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1927
DocketDocket No. 43.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 215 N.W. 702 (Gowdy v. Gordon) 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
Gowdy v. Gordon, 215 N.W. 702, 240 Mich. 558, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 936 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

Sharpe, C. J.'

This suit was brought to quiet title to a tract of land bordering on Lake Michigan mostly *559 in section 36, but including a small triangular lake shore parcel in section 35, town 7 south, range 21 west, New Buffalo township, in the southwest corner of Berrien county, Michigan. Personal service was made upon some defendants, and others who could not be personally served were brought in by statutory substituted service. Some of the defendants failed to appear and pro confesso decree was entered as to them. So far as disclosed by this record, the only defendants who answered issuably and contested the case were defendants and appellants Louis E. Gordon and his wife, Lena, who were included as defendants because they had made claim to the small triangular parcel in section 35 and an easement over a claimed road constructed by their grantor and used by him and themselves to reach the lake shore. A decree quieting title as prayed was granted plaintiffs, and defendants Gordon have appealed.

Town 7 south, range 21 west, is but a small fractional township, containing parts of only two or three sections in its southeast corner. The remaining sections of the township, if outlined, would extend beyond the meander line into Lake Michigan. The triangular parcel in controversy here consists of but a fraction of an acre. The northwesterly side of this triangle extends apparently 300 feet, more or less, northeast and southwest along the lake shore to the section line between sections 35 and 36 which is its north apex, its east side being the east line of section 35. Its essential value is as lake frontage for lands lying back of and adjoining it, which its diagonal .shore line might suggest, if oriented at right angles to the lake shore, were partly in both sections 35 and 36. Along the frontage the lake shore is a sandy beach, slightly rising from the water’s edge for 100 feet or more to an abrupt bluff, said to rise about 50 feet to a higher level of back land, which parallels the lake shore in its general course.

*560 Plaintiffs and defendants Gordon both own land in the northwest quarter of section 36 bounded directly on the west by the west line of said section. The Gordon property, consisting of about 41 acres, is directly north of the Gowdy place and is bounded on the northwest by Lake Michigan with a waterfront of several hundred feet, its direct north boundary being the north line of section 36, now called “Town Line avenue.” The Gowdy property in that section all lies back or east of the bluff and has no waterfront.

The early settlers in that locality confined their activities to lands lying back of the bluff, between it and a public highway lying further to the east, called the “Lake Shore road,” apparently adjusting their views and development out of line with the government lines of the property, in the particular that they ranged northwest and southeast nearer at right angles with the public highway to the east and the lake front to the west.

Ira Smith was an early settler in that locality and acquired considerable land there. He located his home in section 36 on what is now the Gowdy property, some distance west from the public highway, and early laid out a private road through his own land convenient to his place, known as the “Ira Smith private road.” This private road terminated east of the top of the bluff somewhere near the north and south government line between sections 35 and 36. Its general direction towards the lake is 71° 25' west. It apparently terminated near the southeastern apex of the triangle in controversy.

The Gowdys and Gordons trace title to their lands in section 36 back to Ira Smith as their common grantor. The Smiths, Gowdys, and one Wood, who long owned and sold to the Gordons their land in section 36, were neighbors for many years in that locality. All parties used the Ira Smith private road in common. *561 It marks the line between plaintiffs’ and defendant Gordons’ holdings in section 36 and the latter’s easement to its use is undisputed. The lake shore front was difficult of access because of the bluff and cut little, if any, figure in the economy of early activities in that locality. It remained in its natural condition uninclosed and unimproved, though the shore was visited from time to time as parties desired for bathing, fishing, picnicking, or any other purpose. Ira Smith at one time built a stairway down the bluff to make the shore front more accessible.

Plaintiff H. W. Gowdy testified he had known that bluff 40 years; that after he purchased his place in section 36 he located the west line of that section and set a cement marker on it near the end of the Ira Smith private road in 1909; that he later became desirous of securing some water front and negotiated with members of the M. O. Smith family, who owned a tract of water front land on the opposite side of the line in section 35, and contracted with the M. O. Smith heirs for it, with the full knowledge of Wood, some time before the latter sold his place to the Gordons, but owing to death in that family and other obstacles he did not get his deed for it until 1924. His deed includes the triangular piece in controversy here. In the meantime lake shore property for resort purposes became valuable, and defendant Louis Gordon purchased his holdings in section 36 from the Woods, who had resided upon it for many years, and proceeded to plat it for resort purposes, calling the subdivision “Gordon’s Beach.” His surveyor in running the lines for platting it found that this small triangular piece in the northeast corner of section 35 interfered with platting lots at right angles to the lake front on the Gordon property in section 36 for between 100 and 200 feet northeast of the west section line of 36. Gordon claimed to own this triangular piece, but, so *562 far as the map before us shows, did not extend any of his right-angle lines towards the lake into or through it. He recorded his plat and sold some $16,000 worth of lots, most if not all up the. shore from this claimed interference. Upon some of those lots cottages were built and a resort established. His claim to this triangle in section 35 and right of way to the beach over it are the only questions, before us in this appeal. The lands owned by these parties in section 36 and the right of each to use the Ira Smith private road to where he terminated it, at the west side of his property, near the west line of section 36 and the top of the bluff, are not in dispute. The triangular parcel in question here 'belonged to another Smith (Marvin 0.), from whose heirs .plaintiff later bought it.

When the case came on for hearing in the trial court plaintiffs’ counsel in his opening first said to the court in the presence of opposing counsel:

“It is stipulated by and between the counsel for the respective parties that defendants, Louis Gordon and Lena Gordon — the Gordons have no record title to any portion of section 35, and make no claim to record title to any portion of section 35, New Buffalo township.”

After the case for plaintiffs was well under way, the court addressed defendants’ counsel, and the following was said:

“The Court: Do the defendants claim title to any of the land, or claim an easement to the lake?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 N.W. 702, 240 Mich. 558, 1927 Mich. LEXIS 936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gowdy-v-gordon-mich-1927.