Lori Edinger-Fowler v. Harry Kezelian

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 23, 2018
Docket339164
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lori Edinger-Fowler v. Harry Kezelian (Lori Edinger-Fowler v. Harry Kezelian) 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
Lori Edinger-Fowler v. Harry Kezelian, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

LORI EDINGER-FOWLER, RICK HAMILTON, UNPUBLISHED BRENT GOINGS, and SUSAN GOINGS, October 23, 2018

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v No. 339164 Livingston Circuit Court HARRY KEZELIAN and PATRICIA LC No. 16-028878-CH KEZELIAN,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and GLEICHER and LETICA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiffs appeal by right the trial court’s order denying their motion for summary disposition and granting defendants’ cross-motion for summary disposition. This case involves an ownership dispute over a subdivision outlot that was reserved by the developer for future road purposes. The homeowners on either side of the outlot claimed ownership to a portion of the outlot through adverse possession or acquiescence, but the circuit court summarily dismissed their claims. We conclude that the homeowners on one side of the outlot (Lori Edinger-Fowler and Rick Hamilton) created questions of fact regarding ownership that precluded summary dismissal of their claims. Because those claims are now revived, the circuit court will also need to consider the outlot owners’ claim to an easement by necessity to cross the outlot to access otherwise landlocked property beyond. We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

A. FACTUAL HISTORY

At issue in this case is ownership of “Outlot A,” which abuts a cul-de-sac at the end of Hartun Drive in the Deer Creek No. 2 subdivision in Brighton. Brent and Susan Goings were the first to construct a home on the cul-de-sac in 1996. They own Lot 37 on one side of Outlot A. Thomas and Marisa Anderson constructed their home in 1998 on Lot 85, on the other side of Outlot A. The Andersons sold Lot 85 to Lori Edinger-Fowler and Rick Hamilton (plaintiffs) in 2015. The following map illustrates this area:

-1- The area including and surrounding the Deer Creek subdivisions was originally owned by the Kezelian family. When the Kezelians divided their land to sell to subdivision developers, they retained a large rectangular parcel to the north, containing the historic family farmhouse, wetlands, and woods. The subdivision developers reserved outlots in their plat maps to access areas on the Kezelians’ reserved land in the event the Kezelians later sold the reserved land for development. The recorded plat map describes the parcel at issue in this case as “Outlot A for future road purposes.” Wetlands on the Kezelians’ property limit possible construction north of Outlot A—on “Parcel 6,” marked as “unplatted” on the above map—and cut off any other means to access the site. Although the subdivision developer had previously owned Outlot A, the Kezelians repurchased ownership before this suit was initiated.

When the Goings bought their property, the developer’s sales agent, John Weatherly, “made it clear that the outlot was there and it was owned by” the developer, Mitch Harris. Weatherly advised that “[t]here was a possibility of putting a future road” through Outlot A, but Weatherly “didn’t see how [Parcel 6] could be built on” given the wetlands. Susan remembered Weatherly stating, “[T]here’s potential to put one or two houses back there,” and that the outlot “would be used to access back there,” “more like a driveway with only two houses” at the end.

The Goings knew they did not own Outlot A. However, Harris had cleared and bulldozed a portion of Outlot A, “making [the Goings’] yard actually beyond the portion of the property line.” The Goings hired a contractor to lay sod on a small part of Outlot A—on the front 20 to 25 feet, on the half closest to their property. They did this “for esthetics in the neighborhood.” The Goings installed a sprinkler system on their own lot and purposely angled the sprinkler heads to water Outlot A as well. The Goings’ children played in Outlot A, the -2- family kept the area mowed and fertilized, and they removed nuisance brush and weeds. The Goings’ garden lay partly on Outlot A. Brent testified that he would not have invested so much into Outlot A’s cultivation and maintenance had Weatherly told him that Parcel 6 would likely be built upon in the future. Susan indicated that if Weatherly had given them that information, they would not have purchased Lot 37, because they wanted to live on a cul-de-sac.

Thomas Anderson also testified that Weatherly advised him of Outlot A’s existence and that it could be used in the future to “access” building sites on Parcel 6, although in Weatherly’s opinion the chance was slim. Thomas claimed that “nobody ever said anything” about the type of access, leading him to believe it could be “a road, a trail, a walkway, I don’t know.” He also did not know that Outlot A was the only means to access Parcel 6. Marisa Anderson believed Parcel 6 “was non-buildable because it was wetlands and it was protected.”

Thomas noted that survey stakes were in place during construction of the Anderson home and that he later learned they were too far over, actually on Outlot A. At the time, however, Thomas relied on the stakes when he contracted to have his driveway poured and to have a mailbox and shrubbery installed on the driveway’s far side. As a consequence of that reliance, his driveway would meet any new road placed on Outlot A in an inconvenient manner, and the mailbox and shrubbery are almost completely on Outlot A. The Andersons sodded the front 20 to 25 feet of Outlot A closest to their property, sprinkled grass seed in the back, and planted a line of small pine trees on the outlot. The Andersons also had a sprinkler system installed, including on the far side of their driveway. The Andersons used these sprinklers, as well as other methods, to keep Outlot A watered. The Andersons paid the Goings’ children to mow Outlot A and their yard, and the Andersons assisted in keeping Outlot A free of fallen trees, limbs, and weeds. They did these tasks to beautify the neighborhood and because “it would have looked unkempt otherwise.”

Harris claimed that “one of the neighbors asked” Weatherly for permission before laying sod and maintaining Outlot A. Unfortunately, Weatherly passed away in 2016, before he could be deposed. Neither the Goings nor the Andersons testified that they were the ones who had asked permission to alter Outlot A. Harris corroborated the Goings’ and Andersons’ recollections that they were advised that development on Parcel 6 was unlikely, noting “[t]here wasn’t enough sites” to make a profit. Harris would not have been “surprise[d]” if Weatherly told the residents that Parcel 6 “will never be developed because it can’t be developed . . . because of environmental issues and the wetland areas[.]” However, Harris could not recall if he personally had any discussions with the Goings or the Andersons about Outlot A.

Hamilton testified that he had no discussion with the Andersons about Outlot A and had no idea that it even existed until the Kezelians arrived with bulldozers, intending to push their way through to Parcel 6. Until that time, Hamilton had assumed his yard extended to the midway point of the area he later learned was Outlot A. The Kezelians had a survey conducted and stakes were laid along the boundaries of Outlot A. Hamilton noted that the stakes went between his driveway and mailbox: “[T]he first stake [was] inches from where [plaintiffs’] driveway is.” Because Thomas installed sprinklers on the far side of the driveway and Hamilton noted that sprinkler heads were found “in the wooded area, up to and around the front of the mailbox,” several sprinkler heads were actually located on Outlot A. Hamilton continued the Andersons’s practice of paying the Goings’ youngest son to mow on Outlot A and personally

-3- removing weeds and fallen trees from the area.

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Lori Edinger-Fowler v. Harry Kezelian, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lori-edinger-fowler-v-harry-kezelian-michctapp-2018.