Rindone v. Corey Community Church

55 N.W.2d 844, 335 Mich. 311, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 352
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1952
DocketDocket 51, Calendar 45,528
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 55 N.W.2d 844 (Rindone v. Corey Community Church) 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
Rindone v. Corey Community Church, 55 N.W.2d 844, 335 Mich. 311, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 352 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

Bushnell, J.

Plaintiffs Daniel Rindone and Giacomo Rindone are brothers and the owners of lands in the township of Newberg, Cass county, described as follows:

“The southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 36, excepting village lots numbers 82, 83, 98, 99, 100 and 101, excepting also school grounds and a strip of land 18 inches wide adjoining the north line of the Michigan Central Railroad grounds and street rights of the village of Corey, all in township 6 south, range 13 west.”

*313 Defendant, the Corey Community Church, a corporation, is the owner of lot 98 located at the northeast corner of Water and First streets. Defendant Leonard Norton is the chairman of the hoard of trustees of the church and defendant Duke Weston is also a trustee.

Plaintiffs brought an action to enjoin the defendants from interfering with their possession and ownership of the above described lands and to obtain a decree quieting title. A partial plat of the village of Corey, dated May 25,1872, and recorded in Cass county on May 27, 1872, shows the location of the lots and streets in question.

The Corey Community Church was built in 1887 on lot 98. Sometime later a parsonage barn was erected on the northwest corner of this lot. The entrance to the church is on the east side of the building, and the west side of the building is on the west line of the lot. Roland Rindone, the son of Daniel, has lived since 1929 on lot 85 at the southeast corner of Water and First streets. His house faces the south side of the church. Two barns are also located on the rear of lot 85, with access thereto from First street.

Daniel Rindone, who lives in Chicago, testified that since 1929 a fence with a gate in it extended across Water street southerly from the southwest corner of lot 98 to the northwest corner of lot 85. He said that the land west of the fence located in the portion of the plat designated as First street lying north of North Front street has been cultivated as a vegetable garden, and that there are some fruit trees and grapevines growing on this property. Other witnesses testified that there has been no gate in the fence for a number of years, but there was an open space ¡large enough for vehicles to enter First street. They .also denied that the land west of the church has ever ■been cultivated.

*314 First street south of M-60 has always been used as a public highway. M-60, an east and west trunk-line highway, is located on land south of North Front street that was once occupied by the Michigan Central Railroad. The south line of lot 85 is on the north side of North Front street.

Roland Rindone testified that, when the church had coal delivered and material hauled for the building of a chimney, trustee Norton first asked permission to go through the gate across Wader street and over the land located in First street. Donald Lucas, a farmer who had lived near the church for 62 years, testified that in 1911 he delivered hay to the barn on the northwest corner of lot 98 by driving north through First street from Water street, and that there was no fence across Water at the time. Defendant Norton stated that First street had been used to provide access to the church for the purpose of painting the west side, and that coal for the church and all materials used in installing a furnace and chimney were brought through First street. Duke Weston, another church trustee, who was 80 years old at the time of trial, remembered the occasional use of First street since the dedication of the church.

Because of the need of First street for additional parking purposes by those who attended the church, the township highway officers in 1950, acting under the authority of the township board, tore down the fence and graveled First street north of Water. Plaintiffs say this was a wrongful and unlawful trespass upon their property. They argue that First street is not a public highway because of the absence of an express dedication of the streets and alleys in the Corey village plat, no acceptance of the platter’s *315 ■offer to dedicate, and no nser of First street by the public.

Tbe church argues that, because its deed conveyed title to land “according to the recorded plat,” it acquired an incorporeal hereditament in First street north of Water street for use by way of convenience and necessity. It insists that neither plaintiffs nor their predecessors obtained title to the disputed part •of First street by adverse possession or user. Furthermore, that the conveyance through which plaintiffs obtained title expressly excepts therefrom certain lots, school grounds, and a strip of land 18 inches wide adjoining the north line of the Michigan Central Bailroad and “street rights” in the village of Corey.

The trial judge held that plaintiffs are the owners of the land within the limits of First street; that the recorded plat was but an offer to dedicate, and that no action was taken by the municipal authorities to accept this land as a street. He further held that the use by the church of the disputed land was insufficient to establish an acceptance by user, and since sufficient time had elapsed from the date of the recording of the plat and the claimed user, the presumption was that the land was withdrawn from dedication and that neither the public nor the defendants acquired any right in or-to the disputed land. A decree quieting title in plaintiffs was entered and defendants were perpetually enjoined from trespassing thereon and from interfering with plaintiffs’ quiet and peaceful possession.

In the light of Ryan v. Township of Royal Oak, 289 Mich 469, 474, and Kirchen v. Remenga, 291 Mich 94, 103, defendant, the Corey Community Church, acquired by deed an incorporeal hereditament, i. e., the right to use First street.

No authority has been presented in support of the proposition that the private rights of the church can *316 be extinguished by lack of acceptance of the plat by the municipal authorities.

The record fails to show by clear and cogent proof that the possession of plaintiffs was that actual, visible, open, notorious, exclusive, continuous, uninterrupted, and hostile possession which is sufficient to» ripen into title. See Stevenson v. Aalto, 333 Mich 582, 588; and Hayward v. Marker, 334 Mich 659.

It is unnecessary in this case to determine the public rights in First street north of Water, but we do-note in passing the following: Prior to 1907 it might have been possible to acquire private rights in public streets by adverse possession. Since the enactment of PA 1907, No 46 (see CL 1948, § 609.1, par 3 [Stat Ann § 27.593]), Michigan has been in line with the general rule which forbids the acquiring of such rights by prescription. The development of the law on this subject is presented in Pastorino v. City of Detroit, 182 Mich 5 (Ann Cas 1916D, 768).

The controlling law applicable to the instant case is found in Pulcifer v. Bishop,

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.W.2d 844, 335 Mich. 311, 1952 Mich. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rindone-v-corey-community-church-mich-1952.