Lakeside Oakland Development, LC v. H & J Beef Co.

644 N.W.2d 765, 249 Mich. App. 517
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 2002
DocketDocket 226903, 228797
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 644 N.W.2d 765 (Lakeside Oakland Development, LC v. H & J Beef Co.) 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
Lakeside Oakland Development, LC v. H & J Beef Co., 644 N.W.2d 765, 249 Mich. App. 517 (Mich. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Murphy, J.

The trial court granted summary disposition, pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), in favor of plaintiff Lakeside Oakland Development, L.C., (seller) against defendants James W. Crawford and Harry Eiferle, Jr., and defendant/third-party plaintiff H & J Beef Company (buyers) in this real property action. 1 The trial court also granted a motion for summary disposition by third-party defendants Thomas A. Duke Company and Mark W. Szerlag (realtors), pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (10), with regard to H & J’s third-party complaint. The trial court further ordered H & J to pay $7,273 in costs and attorney fees to the realtors for filing a frivolous third-party complaint. The buyers appeal as of right in Docket No. 226903, and H & J appeals by leave granted in Docket No. 228797. The appeals were consolidated. We reverse the judgment granting the seller’s motion for summary disposition in Docket No. 226903 and remand the matter to the trial court. We affirm the judgment granting the realtors’ motion for summary disposition *520 in Docket No. 228797; however, we reverse the order awarding costs and attorney fees to the realtors.

I. UNDERLYING FACTS

The buyers operate various Arby’s Restaurants, and in 1995, they negotiated for the purchase of land from the seller on which the buyers wished to construct an Arby’s. The seller owned several parcels, and the buyers agreed to the purchase of a one-acre parcel for $275,000. An important aspect of the purchase, according to the buyers, was an easement from the parcel they were purchasing to a side street. This easement would allow customers alternate ingress or egress to and from the restaurant, as opposed to the busy thoroughfare on which the restaurant fronted.

A purchase agreement, executed in July 1995, provided that the seller would grant the buyers a permanent easement to the side street in a location on which the seller and the buyers mutually agreed. The buyers negotiated directly with the realtors, who were acting on behalf of the seller. The buyers claim that the easement was agreed on and that the location was identified in a survey map that was prepared by a surveyor hired by the realtors. A closing was scheduled for May 10, 1996. Before the closing, the realtors sent the buyers a packet of closing documents, including the survey map highlighting the easement. The seller had executed both a warranty deed with an attached legal description of the property on which the Arby’s was to be built and a closing statement. However, there was no reference to an easement, or legal description of an easement, contained in the warranty deed or on the attached legal description of the parcel being sold. The warranty *521 deed indicated that the property to be conveyed was as described in the attached rider. The attached legal description of the parcel being sold referred to the warranty deed. There was no document providing that the seller was granting the buyers an easement over any specific area, and the survey map contained neither language to that effect nor the seller’s signature.

The seller was not present at the scheduled closing, which was handled by the realtors, a title company, the buyers, and the buyers’ realtor. The buyers inquired about the easement, and the title company insisted on a legal description of the easement before closing the sale. The realtors promised the buyers that there would be no problem, and that they would take care of the matter by obtaining the legal description of the easement. The warranty deed, other closing documents, and the buyers’ payment were placed in escrow with the title company pending the realtors’ submission of the easement description. On May 24, 1996, the parties closed in escrow when the realtors provided the title company with a legal description of the easement. The easement description, prepared for the realtors by their surveyor on the surveyor’s letterhead, did not refer to the warranty deed or have the signature of the seller. The easement description contained no language indicating that the sellers were granting the described easement to the buyers. The buyers’ payment was released from escrow to the seller. The title company recorded the warranty deed with the two attached legal descriptions (three pages consecutively recorded).

The buyers, believing that the sale of the land with the easement was now complete, started construction *522 of the Arby’s. Well over a year after the legal documents were recorded, and after construction was under way, the seller advised the buyers that they were trespassing because the buyers had no easement rights. The seller claimed that the buyers surreptitiously attached the easement description to the warranty deed and that it never agreed to such an easement. The conflict allegedly arose when the seller was attempting to sell the remaining parcels, over which the purported easement existed, to another party. The realtors maintained that the seller did in fact approve the easement description and the conveyance of the easement. The seller denied the realtors’ claim, and there is apparently no written authorization from the seller to the realtors to grant the easement.

H. COMPLAINT AND THIRD-PARTY COMPLAINT

The seller filed suit to quiet title, also alleging slander of title, breach of contract, and trespass. The seller sought to have voided any recorded easement in order to clear the cloud on the title, and it sought money damages. The seller alleged that there was no writing to satisfy the statute of frauds for pmposes of conveying an easement. H & J then filed a third-party complaint against the realtors. H & J sought indemnification if the seller became entitled to any damages, and it sought damages for loss of the easement if the seller succeeded in its action to have the easement voided. H & J maintained that it had done nothing wrong, and that the realtors should be held fully responsible. The realtors claimed that H & J had no cause of action because no duty was owed to H & J, only to the seller.

*523 IE. TRIAL COURT’S RULINGS ON MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY DISPOSITION

The trial court agreed with the realtors concerning the lack of a duty, and it granted their motion for summaiy disposition and awarded them $7,273 in costs and attorney fees on the basis of the filing of a frivolous third-party complaint by H & J. The trial court subsequently granted the seller’s motion for summary disposition on the basis of the statute of frauds, and the court entered an order extinguishing the recorded easement and declaring it void ab initio. The trial court, citing MCL 566.106, found that the buyers failed to produce either a sufficient written agreement establishing conveyance of an easement or a written agreement between the seller and the realtor showing that the realtors had authority to grant the purported easement. The seller’s claim for damages was subsequently dismissed by the trial court in light of the fact that the easement was extinguished.

IV. DOCKET NO. 226903—REVIEW OF JUDGMENT GRANTING THE SELLER’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY DISPOSITION

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Bluebook (online)
644 N.W.2d 765, 249 Mich. App. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakeside-oakland-development-lc-v-h-j-beef-co-michctapp-2002.