Ross v. Damm

260 N.W. 750, 271 Mich. 474, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 831
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1935
DocketDocket No. 1, Calendar No. 37,997.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 260 N.W. 750 (Ross v. Damm) 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
Ross v. Damm, 260 N.W. 750, 271 Mich. 474, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 831 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

The instant case arises out of a dispute between plaintiff, Catherine Eoss, and defendants, Carl P. Damm and Dollie Mae Damm, as to the respective properties to which they are entitled as the result of simultaneous conveyances made by a common grantor in 1919. Plaintiff seeks reformation of the deeds on the ground of mutual mistake and fraud. A visual picture of the properties involved is necessary for a proper understanding of the case. We have, therefore, appended a rough sketch, appropriately lettered, which will be referred to throughout this opinion. The sketch is not drawn to scale, nor is it intended to be accurate, either as to distances or as to angles. It roughly follows a blueprint introduced in evidence at the trial as exhibit “A.” We have added the letters and one or two additional lines for the sake of clarity.

In 1909 Gertrude Ii. Walsh acquired two adjoining parcels of property, situated on the southwest quarter (lot 3) of section 12, town 10 north, range 17 *476 west, Laketon township, Muskegon county, on the north shore of Bear lake, containing approximately 42 acres.' According to the description in the deeds, the western boundary of this property was the straight north and south line, BB', on the accompanying sketch, while the eastern boundary was the straight north and south line AA'. The property was bounded on the north by the road, and on the south by Bear lake. However, when Mrs. Walsh and her husband, Frank J. Walsh, took possession under the deeds, they immediately occupied up to an old fence on the east, known as the Andree fence, line CC' in the sketch. Both the Walshes and Andree, the owner of the land to the east, recognized this fence as the correct boundary line between their respective properties. Immediately after acquiring the property, Walsh had a survey made and the westerly boundary line was located by Alfred B. Horton, a surveyor, who was directed to run a line from the northwest corner of the Walsh property on the road, due south to the lake shore. However, through some error the line apparently was run in a southeasterly direction, BD', rather than due south, and seems to have paralleled an old government line some distance to the east. An oaken stake, driven on the lake shore at the point D', was generally recognized by all parties at that time and for at least 20 years thereafter, as marking the true southwest corner of Walsh’s property, notwithstanding the fact that according to the description contained in the deeds by which the tract was acquired, the true southwest corner was the point B'.

In 1910 the owner of the property west of the Walsh tract, evidently relying on the stake as marking the southeasterly point of his property, erected *477 a house overlapping the line BB'. In 1916 defendants Carl P. Damm and Dollie M. Damm, by deed from John B. Bouse and wife, acquired the property immediately west of and adjoining the Walsh property, together with the house above mentioned. The deed gave them land of the width of 2.01 chains on the north, represented by the line BB, and 3.90 chains on the south. Although there is some dispute as to where the eastern boundary of the tract conveyed to the Damm a by Bouse would fall under the rather ambiguous description contained in the deed, there is no doubt but that the parties all understood that the stake, D', marked the actual boundary between the properties of the Damms and the Walshes. Prom the time of this conveyance in 1916, Damm immediately took possession of and cultivated the property up to the stake line, BD'. Walsh testified at the trial that it was understood between Damm and himself that the stake marked the true boundary between their properties, and that he, Walsh, had never claimed any land to the west of that line. Damm was desirous of securing more frontage on the lake shore, and Walsh had promised him that if he ever disposed of his property, he would give Damm an opportunity -to purchase a 100-foot strip off the west side of his land.

In 1919 John D. Boss and Catherine Boss, plaintiff, negotiated with Walsh for the purchase of his entire property, the original price being fixed at $4,500. However, Damm reminded Walsh of their understanding as to the 100-foot strip, and it was accordingly agreed that Walsh should deduct $500 from the purchase price, and sell to Boss his entire tract less a 100-foot strip off the west side, which was to be sold to Damm for $500. A memorandum *478 to this effect was signed by Walsh and delivered to Ross, in which the parcel to be conveyed to Ross was described as containing 37 acres, while Damm’s 100-foot strip was described as approximating 6 or 7 acres. At this time Walsh believed that his property ran from the stake line, BD', on the west, to the Andree fence, CC', on the east. He also believed that there were approximately 43 acres between these two lines, and he intended to convey to Ross the 37-acre tract running from a point 100 feet east of the stake to the Andree fence. In accordance with this understanding the proposed boundary line between Damm and Ross was established by measuring from the stake, D', east 100 feet to E'. From this point the line was run due north to the road, Walsh intending it to be parallel with the stake line, BD', which he believed to be a straight north and south line. It is apparent from the record that the parties were primarily interested in the lake frontage at the time, and that but scant attention was paid to the rear of the property, which was considered of but little value, oil not yet having been discovered.

Deeds were then executed by Walsh to Damm and Ross, almost simultaneously, as part of the same transaction. It appears from the record that the descriptions contained in the deeds were obtained from a survey made by Damm prior to the execution of the deeds. The deeds were not made out by Walsh, nor did he furnish the data for them. He testified that he- did not read them carefully. The Damm deed, instead of describing a strip of land 100 feet wide, and containing 6 or 7 acres, called for a strip 232.32 feet wide, extending from line BB' to line EE' on the accompanying sketch, containing about 14 acres — notwithstanding the fact that Damm *479 and Ms predecessor in title had for years prior to that date claimed to own, without dispute by Walsh, the triangle of property between the lines BB' and BD'. On the other hand, the Ross deed, instead of describing a 37-acre tract extending to the Andree fence, 00', on the east, called for a tract bounded on the east by the line AA', and containing approximately 29.7 acres. However, the Rosses immediately went into undisputed possession of the property up to the Andree fence on the east, and subsequently, in 1928, they received a quitclaim deed from Andree to the intervening triangle of land between the line AA' and the fence, CC', containing approximately 3.9 acres. It is claimed that Damm. knew, as a result of his survey, that the stake line did not mark the true western boundary of Walsh’s property, that Damm also knew that he was receiving more, and the Rosses were receiving less property than they were respectively entitled to; and that he concealed this fact from the other parties.

Following the conveyances to Damm and Ross, a fence was built by the two parties on the line EE', between their respective properties under the deeds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 N.W. 750, 271 Mich. 474, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-damm-mich-1935.