Olsen v. Village of Grand Beach

276 N.W. 481, 282 Mich. 364, 1937 Mich. LEXIS 544
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1937
DocketDocket No. 140, Calendar No. 39,686.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 276 N.W. 481 (Olsen v. Village of Grand Beach) 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
Olsen v. Village of Grand Beach, 276 N.W. 481, 282 Mich. 364, 1937 Mich. LEXIS 544 (Mich. 1937).

Opinions

North, J.

The plat of Grand Beach Springs was filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of Berrien county on July 2, 1908. It bears the following*:

“Dedication
“Enow all men by these presents, that the New Buffalo Land & Improvement Company, a corporation, by Floyd B. Perkins, president, and George H. Ely, secretary, has caused the lands embraced in the annexed plat, to be surveyed, laid out and platted, to be known as Grand Beach Springs, Michigan, and that the streets and alleys as hereon shown are hereby dedicated to the use of the public.”

This plat had been previously examined and approved by the auditor general of the State of Michigan. 1 Comp. Laws 1897, § 3372; 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13235. At that time the platted land was part of the township of New Buffalo. In 1934 the village of Grand Beach was incorporated and the streets involved in the instant case are now embraced within the village limits. Grand Beach *367 Springs plat lies to the southeast and along the shore of Lake Michigan, but does not extend to the shoreline. On the plat, Lakeview avenue runs practically parallel to Lake Michigan, and nearer the lake the plat shows another parallel street named Grand Beach boulevard. Connecting these two streets and extending southeasterly into the platted area are several streets, three of them Ely avenue, Oak avenue and Cedar avenue, being the streets involved in the instant suit. The only portions of these three streets concerned in this litigation are those portions extending northwesterly from Lake-view avenue to Grand Beach boulevard. However, appellant asserts that portions of other streets in the plat similarly situated will be affected by the outcome of the present litigation.

Following the recording of the plat many lots were sold therein. The plaintiffs in this suit purchased their lots in 1917 and 1918. Their respective properties and those of other owners are described by reference to lots and blocks of “Grand Beach Springs addition;” and each of plaintiffs’ parcels is adjacent to a portion of one of the three streets involved in this litigation. Plaintiffs claim that the part of Ely avenue, Oak avenue and Cedar avenue extending northwesterly beyond Lakeview avenue was never accepted by the public, that the public has not assumed control or made use of the same; and therefore that portion of these streets as platted should be considered abandoned or vacated. Becently the village of Grand Beach undertook to improve the mentioned portions of these streets and thereupon plaintiffs filed their bill in chancery whereby they seek to have defendants, the village and village officers, “permanently enjoined from interfering with the property of the plaintiffs and *368 that portion of Oak avenue and Ely avenue (and by amended bill Cedar avenue) lying between Lake-view avenue and Lake Michigan as designated in the said plat of Grand Beach Springs and from excavating, grading, removing trees or shrubs, or changing that portion of Oak avenue and Ely avenue (and Cedar avenue) lying between Lakeview avenue and Lake Michigan until the further order of this court. ’ ’ The relief sought by plaintiffs was decreed in the circuit court, and the defendant village has appealed.

In brief it is appellant’s contention that it has assumed control of these streets and has made such use of Ely avenue, Oak avenue and Cedar avenue, as well as other portions of the recorded plat, as constitutes acceptance in law; and that appellees’ contention that the portion of the three streets in question have been abandoned is not sustained by the record in this case.

At the outset it should be noted that the corporation which dedicated this plat is not a party to this suit; and also that there is no testimony in this record of an attempted revocation, nor is there any evidence of formal acceptance of the plat. Appellees say that the question involved is this:

“Was the offer of dedication accepted by the public authorities within a reasonable time and before the offer was withdrawn by plaintiffs exercising acts of ownership in certain streets as platted?”

Inasmuch as plaintiffs were not the parties who dedicated this plat, it is not obvious what authority they would have to withdraw the dedication. Instead, unless the dedication was actually withdrawn or the plat abandoned or vacated, it appears that plaintiffs could acquire no rights in these platted *369 streets except on the theory of having acquired such rights by adverse possession. The possibility of their making such a claim is foreclosed by the statute. 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 13964, subd. 3. But instead of attempting to claim title by any rights of adverse possession, appellees have sought to accomplish the same result on the theory of estoppel. In their brief they say:

“It is the contention of plaintiffs and appellees herein that the defendants and appellants are es-topped from any right to open the streets.in question due to the fact that the offer of dedication was never accepted by the public authorities.”

As being decisive of acceptance of this plat by the public authorities we note the following facts which appear from this record: The Grand Beach Springs plat was laid out in the sand dune territory which is characteristic of this portion of the eastern shore of Lake Michigan. Whatever paving was done in the streets of this plat was paid for by those who platted the subdivision, and the paving was done, before plaintiffs purchased their lots. The stub ends of Ely avenue, Oak avenue and Cedar avenue which plaintiffs claim have been abandoned extend into the sand dunes lying- on the northwesterly side of Lakeview avenue, which is a paved street. Also Ely avenue and Oak avenue .on the opposite side of Lakeview avenue from the stub ends are paved. For something like 15 years the Ipcal affairs of this .-subdivision were controlled by an organization known as the property owners’ association. At least to some extent this association supervised and financed local care and improvements. In this line of activity- it caused cement walks about five feet in width to be constructed down the center line of each of these *370 three stub streets so that access might be had to the property lying to the northwest between the plat and the shore of Lake Michigan. At least in the stub end of Ely avenue there was a board walk at the time plaintiff McGurren purchased and one was constructed early in Oak avenue. .While appellees assert that these walks were solely for the convenience of property owners in the subdivision, we are satisfied from the record that public use was made of these walks and of these stub ends of the respective streets. Obviously because of the nature of the land it was practically impossible to use these portions of these streets for vehicular purposes; but the remaining portion of the plat, so far as the streets are concerned, seems to have been developed in a normal manner, even to the extent of paving the major portion of Ely avenue and Oak avenue as well as the intersecting street to which these stub ends are contiguous.

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Bluebook (online)
276 N.W. 481, 282 Mich. 364, 1937 Mich. LEXIS 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olsen-v-village-of-grand-beach-mich-1937.