Prismatic Foundation v. Eliot Street LLC

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 28, 2023
Docket360450
StatusUnpublished

This text of Prismatic Foundation v. Eliot Street LLC (Prismatic Foundation v. Eliot Street LLC) 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
Prismatic Foundation v. Eliot Street LLC, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PRISMATIC FOUNDATION, UNPUBLISHED September 28, 2023 Plaintiff/Counterdefendant- Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

v No. 360450 Wayne Circuit Court ELIOT STREET, LLC, WOODWARD MACK 22, LC No. 20-012822-CB LLC, and WOODWARD ELIOT, LLC,

Defendants/Counterplaintiffs- Appellees,

and

SEC WOODWARD ELIOT, LLC,

Defendant/Counterplaintiff- Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

Before: LETICA, P.J., and MURRAY and PATEL, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this dispute primarily involving questions related to an easement for parking arising out of either an express agreement, by prescription, or via a plat subdivision, plaintiff, Prismatic Foundation, appeals by right the trial court order granting in part and denying in part defendants’, Eliot Street, LLC’s, Woodward Mack 22, LLC’s, SEC Woodward Eliot, LLC’s, and Woodward Eliot, LLC’s,1 motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10). Specifically, the trial court found that there was no genuine issue of material fact that plaintiff was not entitled to an easement for parking, plaintiff only possessed an easement for ingress and egress over Eliot Street between Woodward Avenue and John R, and defendants Eliot Street, Mack 22, and Woodward

1 Defendants are referred to collectively as “defendants” or individually as “defendant Eliot Street,” “defendant Mack 22,” “defendant SEC,” and “defendant Woodward Eliot.”

-1- Eliot possessed an easement for ingress and egress over a portion of plaintiff’s property. Defendant SEC cross-appeals this same order with respect to the court’s ruling that plaintiff has an easement for ingress and egress over Eliot Street between Woodward Avenue and John R. Additionally, plaintiff challenges the trial court’s earlier order granting partial summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) in favor of defendants on the basis that plaintiff did not possess a prescriptive easement for parking. We conclude the circuit court did not err by finding that: (1) no express easement nor any prescriptive easement granted plaintiff parking rights; (2) defendants Eliot Street, Mack 22, and Woodward Eliot hold an easement over a portion of plaintiff’s property; (3) defendants’ easement for ingress and egress over the disputed property was not abandoned; and (4) plaintiff is not entitled to attorney fees and costs under MCL 565.108. However, the circuit court erred by finding that plaintiff did not have an easement for parking arising out of the applicable plat and that plaintiff’s easement extended from Woodward Avenue through John R. Accordingly, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.

I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The property at the center of this dispute is Lot 17 of a platted subdivision, “Brush Subdivision of Part of Park Lots 17, 18, 19, 20, 27 and Part of Brush Farm Adjoining,” located in Detroit, Michigan. In 1884, a plat map of this name depicting this subdivision was filed that subdivided park Lots 17 through 21 and part of the adjoining Brush Farm east of these lots (hereinafter, “1884 Plat” or “Brush Farm”). Lot 17 fronts the south side of Eliot Street and is the middle of seven lots situated between an alley to the west and John R to the east, both of which run perpendicular to Eliot Street. Eliot Street is shown as 60 feet wide on the 1884 Plat and it runs all the way from Woodward Avenue on the west to Braun Street on the east. The plat also includes language dedicating the streets and alleys “to the perpetual use of the public.” The following is a portion of the 1884 Plat, with Lot 17 and Eliot Street highlighted:

-2- In the 1890s, a residence was constructed on Lot 17. In 1926, the owner of the residence died and bequeathed fee title to the property to the University of Michigan (the University), subject to the requirement that the Prismatic Club (hereinafter, “Club”) be granted use of the property for its monthly Saturday night meetings. Since that time, the residence has been continually used as plaintiff’s clubhouse.2 Later, in 1961, the University entered into an agreement under which the Club assumed management of the property, including the authority to exercise the powers of ownership on behalf of the University. In the decades since plaintiff began using the residence, substantial changes to the surrounding area occurred, with many lots becoming vacant or converted into parking or commercial buildings.

By 1992, the American Red Cross had acquired multiple lots in the subdivision with the intent to construct a laboratory and create a closed, campus-like setting. To achieve this purpose, the Red Cross sought to vacate Eliot Street between Woodward Avenue and John R, i.e., including the block of Eliot Street that Lot 17 abutted, making the street inaccessible to the public. In turn, the site plan included a landscaped walkway around the clubhouse and also a large parking lot immediately west of the clubhouse; in effect, the clubhouse would have no direct access to a public

2 The property was originally owned and occupied by Levi Barbour, who was a regent of the University of Michigan and member of the Prismatic Club. In 2014, the Prismatic Club formed plaintiff, i.e., the Prismatic Foundation, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.

-3- street. The Red Cross sent a letter to the Club, seeking its support for the development, which included its preliminary site plan.

After extended negotiations, the Club eventually agreed to support the Red Cross’s development, conditioned on the requirement, inter alia, that the Red Cross provide its members parking. In particular, the Club and the Red Cross entered into a letter agreement in October 1993 (hereinafter, “Development Agreement”), which provided the following with respect to parking:

11. Parking for the caretaker will be needed, on an exclusive basis; two spaces should suffice. The most convenient would be the two spaces nearest Eliot on the north and nearest the west of the Property. By the same token we shall need the use of at least twenty spaces on Saturday nights from October 1st until June 1st the following year between the hours of seven P.M. and eleven P.M. We occasionally use the club on Sunday but because of your schedules we see no problem. Implicit in the use of parking space is the right of ingress and egress to it from Woodward and/or Mack for the benefit of all persons lawfully approaching or leaving the Property.

The Development Agreement was signed by both Red Cross’s senior principal officer and the Club’s president and treasurer.

The Red Cross submitted the Development Agreement to the city of Detroit in support of its petition to vacate the portion of Eliot Street. Then, in a 1994 Resolution, the City Council granted the petition to vacate the portion of Eliot Street between Woodward Avenue and John R. While the Resolution referenced that the Red Cross had submitted the Development Agreement to the City Council, the Development Agreement was never recorded. The Resolution, however, was recorded in the records of the Wayne County Register of Deeds. By operation of law, when the portion of Eliot Street was vacated, title in one half the street up to its center line (30 feet) vested in the University of Michigan as owner of Lot 17, for the width of Lot 17 (50 feet). See MCL 560.227a(2).

After the Red Cross completed its development, the Club members began regularly using the Red Cross’s parking lot unimpeded and traversed by foot from the parking lot along the concrete walkway to enter the Club. Members also sometimes drove their vehicles on the walkway in order to deliver supplies to the clubhouse or to exit the parking lot.

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Prismatic Foundation v. Eliot Street LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prismatic-foundation-v-eliot-street-llc-michctapp-2023.