Moore v. White

124 N.W. 62, 159 Mich. 460, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 861
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1909
DocketDocket No. 69
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 124 N.W. 62 (Moore v. White) 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
Moore v. White, 124 N.W. 62, 159 Mich. 460, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 861 (Mich. 1909).

Opinion

McAlvay, J.

A bill was filed in the circuit court for Cass county by complainant against defendants to restrain them from entering upon and crossing his premises, and from tearing down fences for that purpose. It appears from the bill of complaint and answer that defendants claim a way of necessity over complainant’s land. The facts are that a common grantor in the chain of title of the parties entered the lands which are situated on section 23, town 6 S., range 16 W. The description is the E. ½ of the N. W. ¼ of said-section. This land was entered as one parcel in 1837 by John Collins. He sold the N. ¿ to James Moore, complainant’s ancestor, in 1846, and the S. -} to George McCoy, defendant Ruth White’s ancestor, in 1861. Both parties to this suit derived title directly from these grantees. There is a highway along the north line, and also one along the ea,st line, of this section, and one along the E. ¿ of the south line. No other highways are in or around the section. Complainant is also the owner of the entire N. E. ¿of the section.

A. Way claimed by defendants.

B. Way proposed by complainant.

C. Old way over which defendants moved in,

The accompanying diagram shows the situation.

[462]*462The land owned and occupied as a home by defendants is entirely surrounded by the lands of others, and it is admitted that they have no way of ingress or egress except over lands owned by others. They claim they have a way by necessity over the N. E. \ of the N. W. i of this section, which is owned by complainant. When they moved upon the land they came by consent over the N. £ of the S. E. i, which is now owned by several persons as indicated on the diagram. They moved a small house onto the land, coming in that way from the road along the east side of the section. Their 40 acres and complainant’s 40 acres north of it were then, and yet remain, solid timber land, except some clearing on defendants’ land, and the part of the S. E. i over which they moved in was cleared, and defendant White, who as a tenant farmed part of the S. E. i of this section for one or two years, went in and out over that land to the north and south road, and during the same time also went in and out through the woods on the north now belonging to complainant. It is not disputed but that the right to continue to go out over the lands toward the east was refused by the owners.

For several years the defendants have continuously crossed complainant’s land, a part of the distance along the east line of the complainant’s 40 acres directly north of them, and a part of the way over complainant’s land next east of it. The record shows that on account of a low and wet place the east line cannot be followed all the way through. Complainant denies that defendants have a way of necessity or any right of way across these premises, and claims that they are trespassers. He was, and still is, willing to sell a right of way along the south line of the N. E. i of the section. They have no claim to such a route, and declined to purchase, but at one time offered $60 for a*n acre of land along the line they claim, which was refused. Complainant has forbidden defendants from crossing any part of his land. He put up a wife fence which defendants tore open, so as to allow them to go out and in across this land. On petition, the [463]*463highway commissioner laid out a highway through the center of the section north and south, which would give defendants an outlet. Complainant appealed to the town board, which reversed the action of the commissioner. Defendants have not sought to lay out a private road under the statute.

The case was heard upon pleadings and proofs, and a decree was granted complainant according to his prayer for relief. Defendants have appealed, and ask this court to reverse the decree, claiming that they have a way of necessity, created by implication, over the land lying north of their land, and which was entered with it as a single entry. That this way of necessity was created when there was a severance of this land-locked tract by the owner from the balance of his entry is also claimed. The record does not show that there has ever been an abandonment or waiver of this right claimed by defendants. Until recently these two parcels of land have been covered with standing timber. The number of years they have lived upon the land we do not discover, but one witness for complainant testified that for the first two years defendants occupied their land they were accustomed to go out over complainant’s land while they were also using the way out to the east road. Another of his witnesses testified that there was no established road through there, but he had heard that a right of way was claimed. Complainant’s son testified that they had gone that way continuously for four years by permission granted. There appears to have been no occasion for controversy while this wild land was open and unfenced. When, however, fences were built by complainant and torn down, and defendants failed to get a public highway and could not agree with complainant upon some adjustment, and insisted upon the right to cross complainant’s land, this controversy readily arose.

The authorities, as far as we have examined them, support the proposition that, under circumstances similar to the one in the case at bar, a way of necessity arises in [464]*464favor of the landlocked tract over the adjoining land of the owner. 23 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.), p. 13, and notes. Such way, being one of strict necessity, is granted by implication, and under like circumstances will be reserved by implication. 14 Cyc. p. 1,172 et seq., and notes and cases cited. A well-considered case in which this doctrine of the creation of ways of necessity by implication and reservation is discussed is Miller v. Hoeschler, 126 Wis. 263 (105 N. W. 790). It is reported and annotated exhaustively in 8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 327. The circumstances of the case at bar are such as bring it within the rule of strict necessity from which no authority examined dissents.

It was not necessary in this case for defendants to apply under the statute for the condemnation of a private road. If this way of necessity existed, it was a vested right which entitled defendants to this way over the land in question immediately north of their premises, and necessarily over no other land. The fact, therefore, that the complainant offered to sell a right of way over other land is not material. Complainant has absolutely refused to recognize any right whatever in defendants to an easement across this land. This way has never been located. The record shows that in former years plaintiff, in going out over this land, did not always follow the same path or road. This they had a right to do. No way had ever been defined. There were no fences or lines to indicate a located way. Powers v. Harlow, 53 Mich. 507, at page 513 (19 N. W. 257, 51 Am. Rep. 154).

Under present conditions, when lands are enclosed and premises used for pasture or otherwise, to allow defendants to go over the entire tract wherever they pleased would be inequitable. The right is held to be in the owner of the servient estate to locate such a way of necessity. He has refused to exercise this right and defendants have done so, and such location is not claimed to be an abuse of such right. It will not be necessary to cut a road through this timber or to fence it in. Defendants have a

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 N.W. 62, 159 Mich. 460, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-white-mich-1909.