R. R. Improvement Ass'n v. Thomas

131 N.W.2d 920, 374 Mich. 175, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 313
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1965
DocketCalendar 54, Docket 50,620
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 131 N.W.2d 920 (R. R. Improvement Ass'n v. Thomas) 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
R. R. Improvement Ass'n v. Thomas, 131 N.W.2d 920, 374 Mich. 175, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 313 (Mich. 1965).

Opinion

Black, J.

On too many occasions in recent years this Court has found it necessary to remand equity cases for á reason known specially to equity’s jurisdiction. See Sternberg v. Baxter, 373 Mich 8, 18; Falkner v. Brookfield, 368 Mich 17, 25; Kent v. Bell, 368 Mich 443, 451; Kenney v. Village of Novi, 367 Mich 75, 76, 77, and Crocker v. Crocker, 362 Mich 6, 8, all of which quote or cite Culy v. Upham, 135 Mich 131 (106 Am St Eep 388). In Culy v. Upham this regularly quoted passage appears (p 135):

“"We do not wish, by our silence, to seem to approve the procedure adopted in this case. If we had *178 disagreed witb. the trial judge.on the legal proposition discussed in this opinion, we could not have made a final disposition of the case. We should have been forced to remand the record for another hearing in the court below. As a general rule, suits at chancery should be so tried in the lower court that, when they are appealed, this Court may finally dispose of the issue raised by the pleadings.”

This chancery case was -not thus tried. It was tried upon pleadings and exhibits, motions for summary judgment, view of the subject premises by the trial judge, .and argumentative statements of fact by counsel. No opinion of the trial judge, or findings, of fact by him, were filed. The judge merely said “I feel that the motion [for summary judgment] is well taken and I grant the motion.” The result was a decretal judgment permanently enjoining appellant from using the west 70 feet of lot 15, of the residentially restricted subdivision we shall-describe, for the purpose sought below by her. She appeals.

Oakland county’s Brookside Hills Subdivision makes up an estate type of highly restricted resi-déntial property. The lots in the subdivision are unusually large. Some of the winding roadways as platted, South Hills road included, lead into dead ends. ' The complete plat, approved and recorded in 1924, dedicated all roadways as platted “to the "owners of lots in said subdivision.” The recorded restrictions brought to scrutiny by appellees’ motion for summary judgment include clause (b). Additional clauses (4) and (5), upon which clauses ap-pellees also rely, will be considered in division “Second” infra. Clause (b) reads:

“(b) That each lot and buildings thereon shall be used only for strictly private residence purposes, -and ho building shall be moved onto any lot or lots .in said plat.”

*179 Appellant Thomas, individually and as guardian of the estates of her two minor children, owns the west 70 feet of lot 15 of the subvidision; also a much larger tract adjoining lot 15 on the south. Lot 15 extends 397.54 feet east-west along the south side of slightly curving South Hills road. Its south boundary, which at the specific point is also one of the two south boundaries of the plat, measures due east-west 373.18 feet. The mentioned tract is not a part of the subdivision and is known as parcel 3.

*180 Appellant desires to utilize parcel 3 for residential purposes and, to gain ingress and egress between parcel 3 and South Hills road as platted, proposes to grade and maintain a connecting roadway over the 70-foot strip. Exhibit 2, a sketch not drawn to scale, appears in the margin. It depicts the location and relation of the respective lots and parcels. The “lots” designated in exhibit 2 are in the subdivision. The “parcels” are not. Exhibit 2 includes but a small part of the subdivision.

In her amended pleading (styled counter complaint) appellant alleges:

“2.
“That the defendant Thomas has on several occasions, the last occasion being during the month of June, 1963, requested the said Brookside Hills Protective Association and some owners of land in Brookside Hills Subdivision to permit her, without intervention of this court, to use the west 70 feet of said lot No. 15 of Brookside Hills Subdivision for ingress and egress to the lands of these minor children, known as parcel 3 of the said G-nau unrecorded plat area, and which land abuts said lot 15 on the south. That such request has always been coupled with the offer to impose on said adjoining land the same restrictions upon the use thereof that apply to the lots lying within the said subdivision. This request has always been rebuffed.”

To such allegation appellees pleaded:

“2.
“Answering paragraph 2 of the amended counter complaint, these counter-defendants admit the allegations therein set forth and in further answer say that the defendant’s offer as a practical matter is a nullity, that her offer cannot be- actually accomplished and that the allegations set forth in said paragraph are immaterial.”

*181 Appellant alleges that there is no other way, except by expensive bridging or similar crossing of the Eonge valley, to connect parcel 3 with an outlet. * Appellees deny such allegation. That issue remains unsettled. So much for facts thus far disclosed.

First: An important question of property law is presented. Both counsel have briefed it with diligence and manifest understanding that whatever we say of it will affect more—much more—than this Brookside Hills controversy. The issue is bound to recur, regularly, as like residential restrictions are correspondingly tested by outlet-inlet demands. Such being the case we have decided to treat the point now, so far as that may safely be done in the absence of desirable proof and findings. Thus we may eliminate another appeal after proceedings on remand are completed.

Appellant states the question this way:

“In a subdivision, restricted for residence purposes, is the use of a portion of a lot therein for ingress to and egress from abutting land outside the subdivision, violative of such restriction of use?”

The question both counsel would have us decide is broader than that. It adds up to this: Considering a subdivision thus dedicated and restricted, where the owner of such lot-portion offers to impose upon abutting property (likewise owned by him) the same residential restrictions as are applicable to lots within the subdivision, may he utilize the aforesaid portion to connect such abutting property with one of the roadways of the subdivision without violating the residential restrictions? The answer, *182 given now prior to the taking of testimony, will not, as we shall see, decide the case. It will however assist due disposition thereof.

There is a modern annotation headed “Maintenance, use, or grant of right-of-way over restricted property as violation of restrictive .covenant” (25 ALR2d 904). The annotator’s general summation (p 906)' provides an appropriate opening for discussion :

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Bluebook (online)
131 N.W.2d 920, 374 Mich. 175, 1965 Mich. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-r-improvement-assn-v-thomas-mich-1965.