Naimish v. Wardlow

106 N.W.2d 770, 362 Mich. 198, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 514
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1961
DocketDocket 83, Calendar 48,277
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 106 N.W.2d 770 (Naimish v. Wardlow) 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
Naimish v. Wardlow, 106 N.W.2d 770, 362 Mich. 198, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 514 (Mich. 1961).

Opinion

Carr, J.

The circuit judge before whom this suit was heard filed as the basis for the decree entered a well-considered opinion presenting the facts and the issues raised by the pleadings and the proofs of the parties. From our examination of the record before us we are convinced that the conclusions set forth in said opinion were fully supported by the proofs. We therefore adopt the following opinion of the circuit judge as the opinion of this Court:

“In September, 1953, the defendant, Norman F. Rice, purchased a farm in section 14, Highland township, Oakland county, Michigan, with frontage on Duck lake. For many years the land had been owned and occupied by the Wardlow family. In the following year the plaintiffs, John G. and Madelon N. Naimish, purchased land in section 11, Highland township, from Mr. and Mrs. Dean B. Wilhelm, who, like the Wardlows, were old residents of the community. Plaintiffs’ land adjoins the defendants’ land on the south and borders in part on Duck lake.
“The 2 farms are separated by the section line between sections 11 and 14, and the boundary line is marked by a line fence established years ago. The fence line as extended easterly runs into Duck lake, and this litigation is concerned with the location of that line fence and its proximity to Duck lake.
“Easterly of Duck lake lies White lake, a much larger body of water. When the community was first settled the waters of White lake flowed naturally *200 through low'lands into Duck lake arid from Duck lake again over low lands on to the west.
“In 1886, for reasons now unknown, a county drain was established at the southwest end of the lake and the natural water level of Duck lake lowered some 3 feet.. As-a consequence of the lower lake level the land area covered by the waters of Duck lake was greatly reduced in size and those who owned land adjacent to the lake obtained additional land for cultivation.
“In 1921 Bert and Maude Wardlow owned and farmed the lands now owned by the defendant, and the Wilhelms owned and farmed the lands presently belonging to the plaintiffs. Together they owned all the frontage on the southwest end of the lake. Having concluded that their property interests would be enhanced by bringing the lake level back to its former natural height, they obtained the approval of county officials (although such approval does not appear in public records) and in the absence of recorded objections by other affected property owners, proceeded to install a permanent watertight box at the drain entrance with a top opening some 3 or more feet above the original drain opening. The waters of Duck lake then rose to a height comparable to that attained in its original state and has remained at that level to this.date subject to variations caused by seasonal conditions, excessive rains, droughts, and manipulations of boards in the box at the drain entrance.
“In 1948 the waters.of White lake became excessively high-and in order to take care of an unusual flow of water from that lake into Duck lake,, the' drain at the southwest end of Duck lake was cleaned and improved by public authorities with no drastic-change in the level of the lake. In 1953 the defendant, Norman F. Rice, had a canal dug into his land from the shore line of Duck lake and with the permission of county authorities installed a new drain entrance some 300 feet south of the earlier inlet, again with no appreciable change in the lake level.
*201 “It was of course inevitable that the boundary-lines of the water area known as Duck lake would change in 1886 when the original drain was installed, and again later in 1921 when the drain entrance was raised. In the year 1886 the waters of the lake covered more land than is covered today. After the installation of the drain in that year the lake area was much smaller. In 1921 the water again rose to near its original height and has remained at substantially the same elevation to the present time. New lake boundaries developed and water covered land that had been exposed during the period from 1886 to 1921. Significantly in relation to this cause, the rising waters created a small bay on the north side of the lake extending into plaintiffs’ property at a point about 150 feet east along the section line from the quarter section corner. The bay isolated a small portion of Bert Wardlow’s land from the larger area.
“Thirty-four years later, after the defendant, Norman F. Itice, had acquired the Wardlow property, he decided to fill in the bay in order to build a road to the isolated land. Completion of the road would have prevented the plaintiffs from reaching the waters of Duck lake at that point. Plaintiffs immediately brought this action to restrain the defendants from continuing to fill or build up their land and alleging that they are equitably estopped from interfering with plaintiffs’ established riparian rights. The defendants on the other hand insist that the land upon which they seek to build a road was never beneath the waters of Duck lake as legally established and that therefore the plaintiffs have no riparian rights in the water which sometimes covers their land.
“To reach a decision in this cause first requires a finding of facts and to that end the court finds from the testimony and exhibits that:
“(1) The installation of the county drain in 1886 lowered the natural lake level of Duck lake to approximately a U. S. G. S. elevation of 1,013.56 feet.
*202 “ (2) In 1921 Dean B. Wilhelm, the plaintiffs’ predecessor in the chain of land title, and Bert 'Wardlow, the defendants’ predecessor in chain of land title,, mutually and intentionally cooperated in the construction of a new drain inlet for the purpose of raising the elevation of the water level of Duck lake.
“(3) In the months immediately following the installation of the new drain inlet, the lake level raised to a U. S. G. S. elevation of approximately 1,016.63 feet. . •
“(4) The average U. S. G. S. elevation of the lake-has remained at 1,016.63 feet since that date with fluctuations above and below that height due to seasonal conditions.
“ (5) Asa consequence of the change in water level elevation in 1921 the waters of Duck lake flowed northerly across the section line unto the plaintiffs’' land creating a small bay from which bay the plaintiffs and their predecessors in chain of title have consistently had access to the waters of Duck lake.
“(6) Since 1921, and excepting only for rare-drought periods, there has been water in the small' bay separating the defendants’ larger land area from the small isolated area east of the bay.
“(7) The plaintiffs and their predecessors in chain of title have in no way disturbed or changed the-topography of the land under the waters of the bay.
“(8) The east and west line fence separating the-lands of the parties has, through long acquiescence of the owners of the 2 parcels, become the true boundary line of the properties.

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Related

Lenawee County Board of Commissioners v. Abraham
287 N.W.2d 371 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1979)
Rice v. Naimish
155 N.W.2d 370 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
106 N.W.2d 770, 362 Mich. 198, 1961 Mich. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/naimish-v-wardlow-mich-1961.