Randy Hildebrant v. Shannon Badgero

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 13, 2018
Docket341117
StatusUnpublished

This text of Randy Hildebrant v. Shannon Badgero (Randy Hildebrant v. Shannon Badgero) 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
Randy Hildebrant v. Shannon Badgero, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

RANDY HILDEBRANT, also known as RANDY UNPUBLISHED HILDEBRANDT, September 13, 2018

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 341117 Mecosta Circuit Court SHANNON BADGERO, JOHN L. STEFFES, and LC No. 16-023528-CH SHAWN REIM,

Defendants-Appellants, and

ROBERT K. KAUFMAN,

Appellant.

Before: MURRAY, C.J., and CAMERON and LETICA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this property dispute, defendants Shannon Badgero, John L. Steffes, and Shawn Reim, together with their trial counsel, Robert K. Kaufman, appeal the trial court’s order granting partial summary disposition in favor of plaintiff, Randy Hildebrant, and the trial court’s subsequent judgment in favor of plaintiff. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

The Weeks family owned four adjacent parcels of property in Morley, Michigan, labeled parcels B, C, D, and E. Parcel B is the northern-most parcel, followed by C, D, and E. An easement, known as Weeks Drive, runs along the eastern border of the properties, ending at parcel E. Thus, in order to gain access from the main road, named Three Mile Road, to parcel E, a person must cross parcels B, C, and D by way of Weeks Drive. The western boundary of the four properties borders a wooded trail with a forest and other property on the other side. The following diagram illustrates the layout of the properties:1

1 For ease of reference, this Court has included a compass with the diagram.

-1- A member of the Weeks family eventually conveyed parcel E to Corinne K. Cousineau (known at the time as Corinne K. Nelson) by warranty deed. Cousineau obtained approval from Aetna Township to split parcel E into two separate parcels, known as parcels E1 and E2. The parcels are split horizontally, where parcel E1 is north of parcel E2. The split effectively landlocked parcel E2, leaving it with no access to a main road. In 2005, Cosineau conveyed Parcels E1 and E2 to Kimberly Freas. Parcel E1 was conveyed by warranty deed and Parcel E2 was conveyed by quitclaim deed. The deeds to parcels E1 and E2 contained language establishing an easement over parcel E1 for the benefit of parcel E2 so that it could have access to Weeks Drive and ultimately Three Mile Road.

On the same day that Freas obtained the parcels, she also obtained a mortgage over parcel E1. In 2012, Flagstar Bank foreclosed on the mortgage, and parcel E1 was sold to defendant Reim. Defendants Badgero and Steffes purchased parcel E1 from Reim by way of a land contract. Freas retained in fee simple parcel E2 until she conveyed the property to Anthony Joseph Evans. In 2013, Evans sold parcel E2 to plaintiff. In 2015, plaintiff received a letter from defendant Reim’s attorney, Kaufman, threatening prosecution for trespass if plaintiff continued to traverse defendants’ property in his truck to get to his own property. On May 28, 2015, plaintiff attempted to access his property along Weeks Drive, but Reim blocked entry where parcel E1 bordered parcel D on Weeks Drive. Plaintiff filed a police report. Over defendants’ objection, plaintiff obtained a special use permit to build a manufactured home, but defendants continued to refuse to allow plaintiff access to his property. Plaintiff asserted he was forced to incur extra living expenses because he could not access his land and build his home. Further, defendants removed the locks to plaintiff’s well and began supplying water to their property. A surveyor concluded that the well was on plaintiff’s property.

Plaintiff brought a quiet title action seeking a declaration that he has an appurtenant easement over parcel E1 for ingress and egress to his landlocked property. Plaintiff’s complaint alleged the existence of an easement on three distinct theories—express easement, easement by

-2- implied reservation/implied grant, and easement by necessity—and also included claims for ejectment, trespass, and conversion. He also sought a declaration that the water well was his property, to enjoin defendants from using the well, and damages. Plaintiff filed a motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(9) and (C)(10), arguing there was no genuine issue of material fact that he had an express easement, an easement by implied reservation/implied grant, and an easement by necessity. The trial court granted partial summary disposition in favor of plaintiff, concluding that plaintiff had an express easement as set forth in the deed from Cousineau to Freas. With respect to the alternative grounds for finding an easement, the trial court stated:

And as to the implied easement; easement by necessity; whether it’s the reasonably necessary or strictly necessary standard, both of those are satisfied. . . . But I think that as to the reasonable necessity, the continuity of use, the unified nature of the two lots were once one common owner were split, that roadway that existed for a long time; documented by the aerial photographs, I think there is no question that there was an understanding at the time of . . . common ownership that when that single unified lot was split, that southern lot that resulted from the split, subsequently owned by plaintiff, reasonably needed to go over the pathway that was well established and continuously existed for many, many years. . . . . An absolute necessity here. There’s no question, no challenge that the lot that plaintiff purchased, that at the time it was split by Ms. Nelson/Cousineau, it was landlocked and it was absolutely necessary to use the 66-foot easement over defendants’ resulting parcel to get to the public way on Three Mile Road.

The trial court deferred ruling on remaining issues relating to an injunction, ownership of the well, damages, and sanctions. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court convened a meeting in chambers with the attorneys for plaintiff and defendants. Thereafter, defendants filed objections to plaintiff’s proposed order, two motions to disqualify the trial judge for bias, a motion for sanctions, and a motion for reconsideration of the order granting partial summary disposition in favor of plaintiff. The trial court denied the motions for disqualification, which were then reviewed and denied by a judge appointed by the State Court Administrator’s Office. Additionally, the trial court denied the motion for reconsideration. Following a hearing on plaintiff’s remaining claims, the trial court entered an order granting an injunction enjoining defendants from “blocking or otherwise interfering with Plaintiff’s superior right of use of said 66 foot wide easement over the East 66 feet of Defendants’ Parcel, for all purposes of ingress and egress to Plaintiff’s Parcel.” The order also enjoined defendants from removing water through plaintiff’s well, ordered defendants to remove their pipes and wires leading to plaintiff’s well, awarded plaintiff $8,400 in compensation for costs related to additional housing expenses incurred as a result of defendants’ obstruction of the easement, and awarded plaintiff $500 for the use of plaintiff’s well. Defendants now appeal, challenging the trial court’s decisions as to the easement, the decision on the motion for reconsideration, the request for sanctions, and the judicial bias determination. They request this Court to conclude that plaintiff does not have an easement appurtenant over defendants’ parcel, that the trial court should be disqualified, and, should the case be remanded, that a new judge should be reassigned to the case on remand.

-3- II. MOTION FOR SUMMARY DISPOSITION

A. STANDARD OF REVIEW

This Court reviews de novo a trial court’s decision regarding a motion for summary disposition. Home-Owners Ins Co v Smith, 314 Mich App 68, 73; 885 NW2d 324 (2016).

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Randy Hildebrant v. Shannon Badgero, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/randy-hildebrant-v-shannon-badgero-michctapp-2018.