Hanson v. Huetter

62 N.W.2d 663, 339 Mich. 130, 1954 Mich. LEXIS 418
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1954
DocketDocket 24, Calendar 45,977
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 62 N.W.2d 663 (Hanson v. Huetter) 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
Hanson v. Huetter, 62 N.W.2d 663, 339 Mich. 130, 1954 Mich. LEXIS 418 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

Kelly, J.

Lot 8 of Supervisor’s Plat No 8 of Southfield township is located in the village of Franklin, county of Oakland. This lot abuts the westerly side of Franklin road with a frontage on said road of 84 feet and runs westerly therefrom a distance of 132 feet. Plaintiffs are the owners of the south 35 feet of said lot and defendants purchased the north 49 feet thereof.

Plaintiffs contend they have a perpetual and unobstructed easement for a general driveway extending from Franklin road in a westerly direction to the west end of lot 8, said easement being 10 feet in width and involving a parcel of land on the south side of defendants’ north 49 feet. Plaintiffs requested that the court recognize said easement by decree and enjoin defendants from constructing a building on said 10-foot area. Defendants filed a cross bill asking the court to declare that:

“Cross defendants may, by suitable order of this court, be directed to reconstruct the roof of their building so that the water thereon will not drain unto cross plaintiffs’ property; that the projection of the eaves of said building and the projection of the window ledges of said building will be ordered to be removed, and that the oil tank vent pipe will be directed to be removed.”

The court denied plaintiffs’ prayer and granted to defendants the relief sought in their cross bill.

An examination of the record as to the previous ownership of lot 8, before it was split into the present *133 plaintiffs’ south tract and defendants’ north tract, discloses that the 1930 owner mortgaged the entire lot on August 4, 1930. On May 17, 1941, the 1930 owner secured a release of said mortgage for that part of lot 8 described in this case as plaintiffs’ south 35 feet. After said release, said 1930 owner granted her rights to said 35 feet to William S. Morse, and on March 18, 1943, executed to Morse a grant of easement to the 10-foot strip now in question.

Morse executed a warranty deed to plaintiffs on January 25,1945, to the south 35 feet and in the same deed Morse stated that he was granting all easements he acquired from the 1930 owner under her grant to him of March 18, 1943, but with the statement: “Provided, however, that the covenants of warranty herein contained shall not apply to the aforementioned easement.”

The 1930 owner failed to meet her obligations as established in the August 4, 1930, mortgage, and foreclosure proceedings involving all of that part of lot 8 referred to as the northerly part culminated in a sheriff’s deed to Evangeline M. Young on October 14, 1947. There was no redemption, and plaintiffs admit they received notice of the foreclosure proceedings. Defendants are the owners of the northerly part of lot 8 by virtue of a deed executed to them by the said Evangeline M. Young.

CL 1948, § 692.10 (Stat Ann § 27.1230), provides:

“Unless the premises described in such (sheriff’s) deed shall be redeemed * * * such deed shall thereupon become operative, and shall vest in the grantee therein named, his heirs or assigns, all the right, title, and interest which the mortgagor had at the time of the execution of the mortgage, or at any time thereafter.”

This Court has held that if there is no redemption ■a sheriff’s deed vests in the grantee and assigns all *134 right and title of the mortgagors existing at the time of the execution of the mortgage. Chauvin v. American State Bank, 242 Mich 269; Piotrowski v. State Land Office Board, 302 Mich 179.

The easement in question did not exist when the August, 1930, mortgage was executed. A subsequent grant of easement by the mortgagor without the mortgagee’s permission and consent could not have been enforced against the mortgagee. The foreclosure placed in defendants’ grantor all the right and title that existed in the mortgagee at the time of the execution of the mortgage. Therefore, plaintiffs’ contention that they have a perpetual and unobstructed easement by virtue of a grant by the original owner and mortgagor made subsequent to said owner’s execution of the mortgage, cannot be sustained.

Plaintiffs contend defendants were guilty of laches and, therefore, estopped from either denying plaintiffs’ easement or asking removal of plaintiffs’ building from defendants’ property. In order to dispose of these questions it is necessary that there be called to attention some of the main facts pertinent to the use of the said north and south parts of lot 8 by the plaintiffs and defendants.

There was only 1 building on lot 8 when plaintiffs purchased the south part in January, 1945, and this building was located on the north part of said lot. This building, somewhere between 30 and 50 years old, was a 1-story frame building occupied by a family and a cleaning establishment. Plaintiffs constructed a 35 x 52-foot building and commenced using it as a gasoline station and garage repair shop in February, 1947.

Defendants had operated a hardware business for 5 years in the building on the north part of lot 8 at the time this litigation was commenced. They originally took occupancy in the latter part of 1946 *135 under a 5-year lease. Defendants became part owners of the north part of said lot with Alfred Pee and wife on June 22, 1948, and thereafter Pee and wife conveyed their one-half interest to defendants by deed dated May 19, 1950.

On January 17,1949, the attorneys for the defendants sent the following letter to Mr. Hanson:

“We are writing you in behalf of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Pee and Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Huetter, who have recently completed the purchase of the property adjoining your location.

“Our clients advised us that you have been using, for driveway and parking purposes, a strip of their land, being the southerly portion, approximately 10 feet wide. In order to avoid any question arising in the future, it will be necessary that yon make definite arrangements with our clients concerning future use of this property if you so desire.”

The plaintiff, Mr. Hanson, consulted with his attorney after receiving this letter and immediately thereafter contacted the defendant, Mr. Huetter, in his store. Hanson’s description of what happened after he had shown Mr. Huetter the letter is set forth in the following testimony:

“I went in with this letter. I said, ‘I have got a letter from your attorney and it says that the easement no longer exists.’ Well, I said, ‘I just can’t quite make it out because my deed and abstract both show that there is an easement there,’ and I said, ‘It sure is a tangled up mess,’ and which they admitted it was, and I said, ‘What do you Avant me to do?’ We talked for a while. I don’t know exactly what it was—we were talking about the tangled up mess, and the various different times the property had changed hands, and I said, ‘Do you have any objections to me using it?’ and they said ‘No.’ So we continued to use it. I stopped using the easement when they started putting their footings in and they blocked it in November of last year 1951.”-

*136 Mr. Huetter stated that at the conference mentioned above: “We instructed Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 N.W.2d 663, 339 Mich. 130, 1954 Mich. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-huetter-mich-1954.