James Pelham v. Brian Lynn Bates

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 19, 2019
Docket341231
StatusUnpublished

This text of James Pelham v. Brian Lynn Bates (James Pelham v. Brian Lynn Bates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James Pelham v. Brian Lynn Bates, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

JAMES PELHAM, UNPUBLISHED February 19, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 341231 Lenawee Circuit Court BRIAN LYNN BATES, LC No. 16-005507-CH

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: CAVANAGH, P.J., and BORRELLO and REDFORD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this quiet title action, defendant appeals as of right the trial court’s order denying defendant’s motion for summary disposition and granting plaintiff’s motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10). The trial court concluded that there was no genuine issue of material fact that an easement by prescription had been established over defendant’s property for ingress and egress to plaintiff’s otherwise landlocked property. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

This case arises out of a dispute over plaintiff’s ability to access his property by crossing a strip of property owned by defendant. Plaintiff owns three parcels of property in Lenawee County, Michigan. Parcels 1 and 2 are adjacent to one another, and Parcel 2 is separated from Parcel 3 by a strip of land that was formerly a railroad right of way and currently is owned by defendant. Parcel 3 is north of Parcel 2, and the former railroad right of way runs approximately east-west.

Plaintiff was conveyed all three parcels in 2009 and traced his chain of title for the three parcels back to 1985, when John and Josephine Alfonsi conveyed all three parcels to Bluford and Linda Sloan. In 1994, the Sloans conveyed the three parcels to Duaine and Marion Lindeman.1 The three parcels were conveyed to U.S. Bank, NA via sheriff’s deed in 2007, and the statutory redemption period expired in 2008 without the property having been redeemed. U.S. Bank, NA conveyed the three parcels to plaintiff in 2009.

Defendant’s property had been owned by Bernice Kerr in 1964, when Kerr conveyed a section of “the Michigan Central Railroad Company’s former Ypsilanti Branch right-of-way” to Letha Kelley. Letha conveyed the property to herself and Dan Kelley in 1983, and the property was conveyed from Dan’s estate to Marsha Kelley in 2002. In 2011, Marsha initiated an action to quiet title to property that included the former railroad right of way. Marsha obtained a default judgment quieting title in her favor and indicating that she held title in fee simple absolute. Plaintiff was not a named defendant in Marsha’s quiet title action, but Marsha’s action did name the Alfonsis and “their heirs and assigns.” Marsha conveyed property containing the former railroad right of way to defendant in 2012.

The dispute at issue in the instant case apparently developed in November 2014, when defendant called the police and accused plaintiff of trespassing on his property after finding plaintiff’s tracks in the snow. According to plaintiff, prior to November 2014, he had always crossed the former railroad right of way to access Parcel 3.

Plaintiff initiated this action on January 29, 2016. In his complaint, plaintiff alleged that Parcel 3 is surrounded by Goose Creek and the former railroad right of way, that Goose Creek is dangerous to cross because it “is very deep and has quick sand mud surrounding it,” that it is impossible to access Parcel 3 without crossing the former railroad right of way or crossing defendant’s property in order to cross Goose Creek, and that the only reasonable means of accessing Parcel 3 is to cross the former railroad right of way from Parcel 2. Plaintiff further alleged that previous owners of Parcel 3 had accessed Parcel 3 without a recorded easement. Specifically, plaintiff maintained that Lindeman indicated that he had been able to cross the former railroad right of way to access Parcel 3 when he owned that parcel from 1994 to 2008 because he had an agreement with Dan Kelley, who owned the former railroad right of way at the time. According to plaintiff, Buford Sloan also accessed Parcel 3 when he owned it by crossing the former railroad right of way. Plaintiff alleged that he obtained the parcels at issue believing that he would be able to access Parcel 3 via the former railroad right of way as previous owners had done.

Plaintiff asserted three counts in his complaint: easement by prescription, acquiescence, and easement by necessity. Regarding easement by prescription, plaintiff alleged that an easement by prescription had been created based on the use of the former railroad right of way to access Parcel 3 by plaintiff and his predecessors in interest, the Sloans and the Lindemans. Next, plaintiff alleged that both defendant and defendant’s predecessors in interest to the former railroad right of way had acquiesced to the use of that strip of land as an easement for accessing Parcel 3 for more than 15 years. Finally, plaintiff sought an easement by necessity based on his

1 Because Marion is not otherwise involved in the underlying facts of this case, we refer to Duaine Lindeman as “Lindeman” throughout this opinion.

-2- allegations that Parcel 3 was landlocked and that he was constructively unable to access the property by any means other than crossing the former railroad right of way.

After the trial court denied a motion for summary disposition filed by defendant and a separate motion for partial summary disposition filed by plaintiff, plaintiff moved again for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10). Plaintiff primarily argued that a prescriptive easement across the former railroad right of way had been created as a result of the use of plaintiff, as well as his predecessors in interest, dating back to at least 1985. Because the use had been ongoing for so long, argued plaintiff, the burden was on defendant to show that the use was merely permissive. Plaintiff maintained that once the easement was established, it passed by the deed of the dominant estate even though not actually mentioned in the instrument. Plaintiff also argued that the easement by prescription had been created before plaintiff even acquired the parcels.2

In support of this argument, plaintiff attached the affidavits of Duaine Lindeman and Tim Kelley. Lindeman averred that Bluford Sloan allowed him to hunt on the three parcels beginning in 1985, before Lindeman bought the property from the Sloans. According to Lindeman, Bluford Sloan told him that Dan Kelley (the owner of the former railroad right of way at the time) “told Bluford Sloan that he could use the abandoned railroad property for access to the third parcel of property located on the North side of the abandoned railroad tracks because the abandoned railroad belonged to both of them.” The Sloans also used the former railroad right of way to access other property that they owned in addition to Parcel 3. Lindeman averred that the Sloans told him when he bought the parcels from them that he had the right to use the former railroad right of way to access Parcel 3; Lindeman further averred that after he bought the parcels, Dan Kelley told him that he could use the abandoned railroad property to access Parcel 3 because it belonged to both Dan and Lindeman. Lindeman averred that he used the former railroad right of way to access Parcel 3 from the time he began hunting on the property and that he continued to use it openly until approximately 2007.

Tim Kelley is the son of Letha Kelley, who previously owned the former railroad right of way. Tim averred that when Letha purchased the property from Bernice Kerr in 1964, Kerr still owned approximately 3 acres of property north of the railroad right of way that became landlocked.

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James Pelham v. Brian Lynn Bates, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-pelham-v-brian-lynn-bates-michctapp-2019.