Griffin v. Johnson

75 N.W.2d 898, 345 Mich. 159, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 377
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1956
DocketDocket 80, Calendar 46,573
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 75 N.W.2d 898 (Griffin v. Johnson) 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
Griffin v. Johnson, 75 N.W.2d 898, 345 Mich. 159, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 377 (Mich. 1956).

Opinion

Boyles, J.

This case involves a question as to the right of the plaintiffs to use for access to their property a certain strip of land in the village of Cedarville in Mackinac county, which they claim is a public street in said village. Plaintiffs filed a bill of complaint in the circuit court for said county to enjoin the defendants from claiming said street and preventing its use by said plaintiffs. The circuit judge who heard the case, after taking testimony filed a comprehensive opinion reviewing the facts, and concluded that the strip of land in question was a public way dedicated to the public, and that the plaintiffs had the right to its use for access to their adjoining property. A decree was entered accordingly, enjoining the defendants from occupying or using said strip of land, except as a public way, and from interfering with its use by the plaintiffs. Defendants appeal.

Appellants challenge the conclusions of the trial court and the corresponding provisions in the decree *161 by asserting insufficiencies and irregularities in the proceedings whereby the land in question was platted and subsequently conveyed, and on those grounds appellants deny the right of the plaintiffs to the use of said public way. Appellants rely upon a.claim of illegalities in said proceedings.

Defendant Richard P. White and his now deceased ■wife at one time owned title in fee to all of the involved real estate. ' In 1944 White and- wife conveyed to plaintiffs the premises later known as lot 1, block 2, of .the plat, which extended to the waters of Lake Huron. White told plaintiffs at that time that there was, or would be, a roadway adjacent to said lot on the west side, extending south to the lake. In .1946 White and wife conveyed to plaintiffs the premises now known as lot 2, block 2, of said plat. A few months later White and wife conveyed to another purchaser what is known now as lot 8, block 1, of the plat. Said lot 8, like the aforesaid lot 1, fronts south on Lake Huron. Lot 8 forms the easterly boundary of block 1, and lots 1 and 2 constitute block 2. The 35-foot strip which is the subject •of this suit divides blocks 1 and 2. It likewise extends south to Lake Huron. Block 2 is on the east side of the strip, and block 1 is .on the west side. Said deeds from White and wife were given before the plat, later mentioned herein, and therefore descriptions by metes and hounds were used in said deeds.

In 1948 Mr. White engaged a registered surveyor to prepare a plat of his property, including the parcels previously sold by metes and bounds. The plat was entitled, “Supervisor’s Plat of White’s First Addition to the Village of Cedarville,” and was recorded in the county register of deeds’ office. The plat was first planned to be entitled, “R. P. White’s First Addition to Cedarville.” However, White having already sold the several hereinbefore *162 mentioned parcels which it was necessary to include in the plat, and wherefore it became necessary for White to secure the signatures of all said owners (which he did), the plat was prepared and submitted to the proper authorities as a so-called assessor’s plat. The supervisor of the township gave his approval to the proposal that the plat be made and submitted in assessor’s form and the plat was finally approved by all authorities in 1949 and thereupon recorded. Appellants make a point of the fact that it was not executed by Mrs. White. However, it was duly attested by all the officials required in the case of an assessor’s plat, although it does not contain the certificate required by paragraph 52 of the plat act (CL 1948, § 560.52 [Stat Ann § 26.482]).

Mr. White and his surveyor originally planned the plat as a so-called proprietor’s plat. The layout thereof as then planned was, so far as lot, block and public way designations are concerned, the same as the plat which was finally approved and recorded, excepting only that the strip in question was contemplated of 50-foot width instead of the final 35-foot width. The width reduction to 35 feet was necessitated by the previous conveyances herein-before mentioned.

After the plat was recorded, Mr. and Mrs. White sold specific lots of the plat by due reference thereto and, following Mrs. White’s death in late 1951, Mr. White, as survivor, continued so to do. The record shows that when Mr. White sold a lot he represented to the purchasers that they would have access to the waterfront over' the strip here involved. White’s testimony confirms that. He testified that in each instance he told the purchasers they would have access to the lake over said strip, although it might depend on acceptance of the strip as a public way by county authorities. The concrete boundary corners conforming to the surveyor’s certificate of the *163 strip correctly appear on the plat and show said strip to he delineated as a public way. On the plat the strip is a narrower extension of Short street which extends straight south and to Lake Huron. The intent of the surveyor and of all the statutory attesting officers, to designate and dedicate the strip as a public way, is evident on the face of the plat.

In September, 1952, Mr. and Mrs. Johnson (defendants-appellants) purchased an upland lot 3, block 4, of the plat from one Osterlund, who had previously acquired it from Mr. and Mrs. White. This lot was farther north on Short street, from the lots owned by the plaintiffs. The circuit judge in his opinion states that Osterlund testified that when he sold said lot 3 to the Johnsons, he informed Mr. Johnson he had the right to use the 35-foot strip for access to the water. The trial court, seeing and hearing all the witnesses, accepted Osterlund’s testimony as true.

In November, 1952, Mr. and Mrs. Johnson obtained a deed from White to the 35-foot strip in question. Mr. Johnson thereupon took possession of the strip, graveled it, constructed a barbed-wire fence along the plaintiffs’ side of the strip and negotiated with a contractor for construction of a dock on and across the waterfront end of the strip. Although the contractor warned him not to build the dock because the strip was a public way, that did not deter Mr. Johnson. He had another contractor build the dock.

Plaintiffs filed the instant bill of complaint to restrain the Johnsons from preventing their use of the strip in question and this litigation followed. The trial court stated the issue to be as follows:

“Is the strip as between the parties and as claimed’ by plaintiffs a public way, or, as claimed by defend^ ants, is it their own private property by virtue of conveyance from White?”

*164 If, as claimed by plaintiffs, it is a public way, they may use it, and restrain the defendánts-appellants from interfering with such use. The trial court filed a comprehensive opinion discussing the evidence and his' conclusions of the law, in which the court said:

“The plaintiffs have presented a case fully justifying relief as against a person or persons defending in the place and stead of Mr. White, and just as posir tively should be denied relief on the same showing as against a person or persons defending the position of bona fide purchaser without notice. This is the decisive issue in the case, and it must on the facts be resolved against Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
75 N.W.2d 898, 345 Mich. 159, 1956 Mich. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-johnson-mich-1956.