McGee v. Eriksen

215 N.W.2d 571, 51 Mich. App. 551, 1974 Mich. App. LEXIS 944
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 1, 1974
DocketDocket 14617
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 215 N.W.2d 571 (McGee v. Eriksen) 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
McGee v. Eriksen, 215 N.W.2d 571, 51 Mich. App. 551, 1974 Mich. App. LEXIS 944 (Mich. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

O’Hara, J.

This appeal arises from a boundary dispute. The plaintiffs and defendants share a north-south boundary with the plaintiffs owning the northernmost property. They brought an action for trespass alleging inter alia that agents of the defendants had cut a fence recognized as the common boundary line between the property of the respective parties in order to enter on the land of plaintiffs and to fell certain trees. It was further alleged that this action was deliberate and intentional. Plaintiffs, accordingly, sought treble damages pursuant to MCLA 600.2919; MSA 27A.2919. The cause was tried to the court. From a judgment vesting title to the questioned land in defendants and dismissing the complaint with prejudice, plaintiffs appeal of right.

The testimony adduced at trial tended to establish the following facts: plaintiffs and defendants are adjoining landowners in Cheboygan County. The involved property is covered by dense woods and is primarily suitable for hunting purposes. On the southern boundary of the lands owned by plaintiffs they share a common boundary with the northern perimeter of property held by the defendants. That common boundary is approximately one mile in length. The precise subject matter of this *553 dispute is a strip of land north of a so-called fence line around which much of this litigation revolves. The sum total of land in dispute apparently is some 18 to 22 acres.

Plaintiff McGee acquired title to his land by warranty deed in July, 1951. Plaintiff Wildwood obtained its property in the spring of 1961. Plaintiff Rancho Paleto purchased its holdings in November of 1965. Defendants Eriksen and Fisher, jointly, purchased their land in 1951.

There was no suggestion of controversy until early in 1966 when agents of defendants Eriksen and Fisher crossed a wire fence running in the general vicinity of the boundary line. They removed a swath of trees to build a road. Prior to such activities the defendants had a survey taken which purportedly revealed the true boundary to be about 100 feet north of the fence. The trees were cut from the area between the fence and the line indicated by the survey.

It was asserted by plaintiffs that the defendants trespassed upon their lands and caused substantial damages to plaintiffs’ individual properties by severing numerous trees growing thereon. Their claim of ownership to the disputed lands was premised on the establishment of a boundary line by means of either acquiescence in the existence of an old line fence along the boundaries between the parties’ land or, alternatively, that they acquired all the involved lands by means of adverse possession. Per contra it was claimed by defendants that no trespass was committed since the lands in question belonged to them. Defendants’ assertion of title was based upon (1) the description contained in the deeds along with the alleged existence of a valid, clear chain of title and (2) the contention that by reason of a recent survey the *554 land was shown to lie within the boundaries described in pertinent deeds.

There was a serious dispute about the nature and origin of the wire which allegedly delimited the boundary line. It was variously described as a single strand and a woven wire. There was testimony that the wire was of ancient origin and some to indicate more recent placement. Parts of the wire were imbedded in nearby trees in varying depths and some old wire was lying on the ground. Other wire was in scraps entirely unattached to other wire or any tree or post.

Plaintiff McGee testified to having seen a fence about the time he purchased his property some 25 years ago. Some ambiguity exists with regard to dates since McGee only took title to his land in 1951. But he apparently lived on the land several years prior to this time since he purchased the property under land contract. Additionally, although the trial in the instant case was held in early 1970, the fence controversy which triggered the lawsuit occurred in 1966. As far as McGee knew he believed the fence to be the boundary. There had been, to his knowledge, no prior dispute over the true boundary. He related that on occasion he had been chased by defendants or their agents from their side of the wire fence back across to what he regarded as his own holdings.

Testimony by officers of the other party-plaintiffs indicates that they had purchased their land in the 1960’s and that they had relied on the wire fence in existence at that time as reflecting the true property line.

On behalf of plaintiffs two long-time residents of this area testified with respect to their knowledge of where the boundaries were located. Both wit *555 nesses professed considerable familiarity with the involved land and testified to the existence of certain fences running in an east-west and north-south direction. This testimony would indicate that various fences were apparently constructed by persons known and unidentified at different points in time. They could not testify as to personal knowledge of whether landowners prior to the party litigants herein had treated the fences as demarcating the boundary lines. At no time had they heard predecessors in title claim the fence lines as being determinative of the boundaries. They also related that where wire was affixed to trees the fence line wove in and out as it followed the random location of trees. No one was overly concerned about the exact location of their property’s outermost limits. Nor did everyone regard the fence as being absolutely determinative of where one person’s holdings began and another’s ended.

Defendants’ predecessor in title testified that about the time he purchased this property he observed no fences or wire to the north of sections 34 and 35 when he traversed the property on foot. There was, he related, a woven wire fence going north and south on a portion of section 34. He bought the property based upon the description in the deed and not the existence of any observable physical boundaries. Further testimony was to the effect that he had given his brother permission to string a wire in both an east-west and north-south direction along the supposed boundary lines. This was sometime before 1948 and intended solely to keep hunters out. The witness did not know or care where the true boundary was. When he sold the property to defendants he told them that he didn’t know the significance of any of the wires or fences and that they could not be regarded as *556 accurate. The suggestion was made that defendants have the land surveyed.

The testimony of defendants was to the effect they had spoken to their immediate grantor as they walked around the property and that he had informed them not to rely on any fences as establishing boundaries. As they traversed the area they observed bits and pieces of wire in various places but defendants attributed no significance to the wire which primarily consisted of short pieces lying on the ground or attached to trees. It bore no resemblance to a fence line. As heretofore noted, their grantor indicated the desirability of having the property lines authoritatively established by resort to a survey.

In the fall of that year (1966) defendants strung a single strand wire fence from tree to tree on the northernmost boundary of the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 N.W.2d 571, 51 Mich. App. 551, 1974 Mich. App. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgee-v-eriksen-michctapp-1974.