Ronald Graham v. Edward McPhail

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 2022
Docket355892
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ronald Graham v. Edward McPhail (Ronald Graham v. Edward McPhail) 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
Ronald Graham v. Edward McPhail, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

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

RONALD GRAHAM, UNPUBLISHED April 14, 2022 Plaintiff/Counterdefendant-Appellant,

v No. 355892 St. Clair Circuit Court EDWARD MCPHAIL, RONALD CLIFFORD LC No. 19-002221-CH MCPHAIL, and JAMES MCPHAIL,

Defendants/Counterplaintiffs- Appellees.

Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and MURRAY and O’BRIEN, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff/Counterdefendant Ronald Graham appeals as of right the trial court’s order determining his easement across defendant’s property was a certain dirt roadway. In the trial court, the parties—neighbors with adjoining properties—clashed over which of two driveways was plaintiff’s easement. After a bench trial, the trial court concluded defendants/counterplaintiffs, Edward McPhail, Ronald McPhail, and James McPhail, were correct about the easement’s location. On appeal, plaintiff argues the trial court’s conclusion about the easement’s location was clear error, and that the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion for a new trial or relief from judgment, and by denying his request for an evidentiary hearing. We affirm.

I. FACTS

A one-day bench trial was held to resolve this property dispute. Plaintiff’s lot was landlocked, and at trial plaintiff argued his easement to access the highway, Bryce Road, was a gravel driveway (“the Gravel Drive”). Defendants argued plaintiff’s easement was a two-track dirt trail that wound through the woods on defendants’ property (“the West Drive”).

In May of 1972, members of defendants’ family were deeded the back half of a parent parcel of land (the McPhails’ lot). The McPhails’ lot did not have access to Bryce Road, and so their deed provided an easement over the front half of the parent lot to access Bryce Road. The deed described the easement as “an easement over and across the lands of the grantors in a North

-1- and South direction same being an existing roadway from [B]ryce Road to the lands of the grantees, approximately 20 feet wide to be used for ingress and egress to the lands herein granted.”

About 10 years later, defendants’ family created a new lot in the southeast corner of their lot. This would become plaintiff’s lot. The deed provided plaintiff’s lot an easement, and the deed described the easement the same way the McPhails’ 1972 deed described the McPhails’ lot’s easement: “an easement over and across the lands of the grantors in a North and South direction same being an existing roadway from Bryce Road to the lands of the grantees, approximately 20 feet wide to be used for ingress and egress to the lands herein granted.” Each subsequent deed in the chain of title to plaintiff’s lot—including plaintiff’s own deed—described the easement using essentially this same language.

When plaintiff first moved in to his lot in 2019, he began using the West Drive to access his lot. But eventually, plaintiff came to believe the Gravel Drive was the easement described in his deed. Plaintiff sued defendants for trespass and nuisance, alleging the Gravel Drive was his easement and defendants were interfering with his right to use it.

At the bench trial, Ronald McPhail indicated that when the McPhails moved onto their lot in 1972, the Gravel Drive did not exist yet—only the West Drive did. Specifically, Ronald testified his father put in the Gravel Drive a few years after 1972. Also, Ronald testified that only the West Drive connected to plaintiff’s lot, as the Gravel Drive never connected to plaintiff’s lot. He testified all his family members who had lived on plaintiff’s lot before plaintiff, used the West Drive to access plaintiff’s lot. According to Ronald, defendants used the Gravel Drive only with the business they run on their lot. Bolstering Ronald’s testimony on whether the Gravel Drive connected with plaintiff’s lot were photographs showing a grassy field separated plaintiff’s lot from the Gravel Drive. In that grassy field, defendants store semitruck trailers and other equipment, effectively blocking plaintiff’s lot’s access to the Gravel Drive.

Plaintiff offered no evidence to controvert Ronald’s testimony that only the West Drive existed at the time the McPhails received the deed to their lot. But plaintiff did offer evidence controverting Ronald’s testimony about whether the Gravel Drive connected to plaintiff’s lot. Harold Smith, plaintiff’s friend, testified he dug up gravel in the grassy field between plaintiff’s lot and the Gravel Drive. Plaintiff also introduced aerial photographs from 1990, 1995, and 2000 showing the Gravel Drive used to connect with plaintiff’s lot.

After the bench trial, the trial court concluded the evidence showed the West Drive was the easement described in plaintiff’s deed, and plaintiff failed to prove otherwise. First, the trial court found the Gravel Drive never connected with plaintiff’s property:

Plaintiff presented no physical evidence that the gravel driveway ever ran directly to his property. Photographs admitted into evidence suggest just the opposite—that the gravel driveway ends on Defendants’ business property; that Defendants store trucks in a grassy and somewhat overgrown area beyond where the gravel driveway ends; that a fence separated Defendants; and Plaintiff’s property when Plaintiff purchased his.

-2- Second, relying on Ronald’s testimony, the trial court found the description of the easement in the McPhails’ 1972 deed could not be referring to the Gravel Drive. And because all the deeds in plaintiff’s lot’s chain of title used the same description, it followed those deeds also could not be referring to the Gravel Drive:

Most convincing to this Court is the date on which the gravel driveway was installed. Defendants presented uncontroverted testimony that Defendant Ronald McPhail’ s father installed the gravel driveway to the business in 1977, years after the easement granting access to Plaintiff’s property had been established. That testimony established that the gravel driveway could not have been the easement described in the instruments of conveyance, as it did not even exist when the easement was first granted.

The trial court entered a judgment declaring the West Drive was plaintiff’s easement.

Plaintiff moved for a new trial or relief from judgment under MCR 2.611(A)(1)(b) or (A)(1)(h), arguing that Ronald had perjured himself. To prove Ronald perjured himself, plaintiff attached to his motion evidence that neither party introduced at trial, including a 1964 aerial photograph which plaintiff alleged showed the Gravel Drive existed as early as 1964. He also attached aerial photographs from the 1980s showing the Gravel Drive connecting with plaintiff’s lot. Finally, plaintiff provided a “Surveyor’s Opinion,” which stated that the Gravel Drive was in fact the intended easement and that the driveway in the 1964 aerial photograph was in the same location as the Gravel Drive is today. Based on this evidence, plaintiff opined, he was at least entitled to an evidentiary hearing on whether Ronald committed fraud or misrepresentation.

Defendants opposed plaintiff’s motion, arguing plaintiff’s new evidence did not show Ronald lied. Implicitly conceding that a driveway had always existed in the same location as the Gravel Drive, defendants argued Ronald intended to say his father laid down gravel on top of this path after the McPhail family took possession. Ronald did not mean his father forged a new path. Also, defendants noted plaintiff could have produced this evidence at trial, but failed to do so. Finally, defendants argued—even if authentic—plaintiff’s 1964 aerial photograph did not prove the West Drive did not exist in 1964.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Ronald Graham v. Edward McPhail, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ronald-graham-v-edward-mcphail-michctapp-2022.