Stephen R Cole v. Benzie County Parks and Recreation Commission

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 2016
Docket325384
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stephen R Cole v. Benzie County Parks and Recreation Commission (Stephen R Cole v. Benzie County Parks and Recreation Commission) 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
Stephen R Cole v. Benzie County Parks and Recreation Commission, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

STEPHEN R. COLE, GREGORY A. COLE, and UNPUBLISHED ELLEN ANN COLE, February 9, 2016

Plaintiffs/Counter Defendants- Appellees,

v No. 325141 Benzie Circuit Court BENZIE COUNTY PARKS & RECREATION LC No. 09-008496-CZ COMMISSION and COUNTY OF BENZIE,

Defendants/Counter Plaintiffs- Appellants,

and

BENZIE COUNTY ROAD COMMISSION,

Defendant/Counter Plaintiff- Appellee.

STEPHEN R. COLE, GREGORY A. COLE, and ELLEN ANN COLE,

v No. 325384 Benzie Circuit Court BENZIE COUNTY PARKS & RECREATION LC No. 09-008496-CZ COMMISSION and COUNTY OF BENZIE,

Defendants/Counter Plaintiffs,

Defendant/Counter Plaintiff-

-1- Appellant.

Before: MURPHY, P.J., and WILDER and BORRELLO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

After a bench trial, the trial court entered a final judgment and order granting in part the claims of plaintiffs, Stephen R. Cole,1 Gregory A. Cole, and Ellen Ann Cole, for a public road by common-law dedication, implied easement, and prescriptive easement against defendants, the County of Benzie (the County), Benzie County Parks and Recreation Commission (the P & R Commission), and Benzie County Road Commission (the Road Commission). In these consolidated appeals, the County and the P & R Commission (Docket No. 325141) and the Road Commission (Docket No. 325384) each appeal as of right the final judgment and order as it relates to the easement on their property. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. PROPERTIES AT ISSUE

This case involves three adjoining parcels—the Railroad Point Parcel (RR Point Parcel), the Cole Parcel, and the County Road Commission Parcel (CRC Parcel)—which are located along the southern shore of Crystal Lake in Benzie County. The RR Point Parcel is the westernmost property and is owned by the County and operated by the P & R Commission. Plaintiffs own the Cole Parcel, which is located in between the other two parcels. The CRC Parcel, located to the east of the Cole Parcel, is owned by the Road Commission and leased to the County. To the north of all three parcels is Crystal Lake. To the south, the RR Point Parcel has frontage on Mollineaux Road, but the Cole Parcel and the CRC Parcel do not. The Cole Parcel is separated by a steep bluff between the smaller lakefront portion of the parcel and the remainder of the parcel.

The CRC Parcel is heavily wooded, and neither the CRC Parcel nor the RR Point Parcel have any structures built thereon. The remnants of an old cabin were found on the Cole Parcel in 1985.

B. CLAIMED EASEMENTS

Plaintiffs claim the right to access their property over a two-track road or trail that crosses the RR Point Parcel and the CRC Parcel. The portion of the two-track that crossed the RR Point Parcel was designated as Easement A and the portion that crosses the CRC Parcel was

1 Plaintiff Stephen R. Cole died during the pendency of this case and Gregory Cole, as personal representative of the Estate of Stephen R. Cole, was formally substituted as a party. According to plaintiffs, Stephen R. Cole’s estate has been probated and Gregory and Ellen Cole are now the sole owners of the Cole Parcel.

-2- designated as Easement B. Easement A begins at Mollineaux Road and extends through the RR Point Parcel to the western boundary of the Cole Parcel. This easement provides access to the Cole Parcel from Mollineaux Road. Easement B begins at the eastern boundary of the Cole Parcel and extends in a loop through the CRC Parcel and back to the eastern boundary of the Cole Parcel near Crystal Lake. This easement provides access to the lakefront portion of the Cole Parcel by skirting the steep bluff. Plaintiffs also claimed an easement along the Crystal Lake shoreline of the RR Point Parcel and passing through two parcels owned by third parties, which was designated as Easement C. The trial court found that plaintiffs’ claim regarding Easement C was not ripe for decision and dismissed the claim without prejudice. The following aerial view depicts the three parcels and the locations of the claimed easements:

C. TITLE HISTORY

The RR Point Parcel, the Cole Parcel, and the CRC Parcel were originally one parcel of land owned by a single party. In 1912 and 1913, the CRC Parcel was split from the RR Point Parcel and the Cole Parcel. At some point, the State of Michigan acquired the CRC Parcel and, in 1937, the State deeded the CRC Parcel to the Road Commission. In 1938, the then-owners of the RR Point Parcel and the Cole Parcel, Jacob and Maude Hauch, executed a release of right-of- way granting a 66 foot wide easement to the Road Commission for “road right of way purposes.”

-3- In 1962, the RR Point Parcel and the Cole Parcel were split. The then-owner of both parcels, Ruth M. Frees, sold the RR Point Parcel to Edmund and Ingrid Appelhof and Fred and Violet Bradford, and sold the Cole Parcel to J. Agnew Appelhof and Ruth Appelhof. The deed conveying the RR Point Parcel provided that the conveyance was “subject to easements and rights of way of record, including easements over said Lot 3 to the East 320 feet thereof.” The deed conveying the Cole Parcel described the property being conveyed and provided: “Except railroad right-of-way for Ann Arbor Railroad and easement to Benzie County Road Commission.”

In 1963, the Road Commission leased the CRC Parcel to the County for 99 years “for park purposes only.” In February 1985, plaintiffs purchased the Cole Parcel by land contract from J. Agnew Appelhof. In 1998, Ingrid Devine, a/k/a Ingrid Appelhof, deeded the RR Point Parcel to the County.

D. USE OF EASEMENTS

In addition to the remnants of an old cabin, Gregory discovered an old tire on an unspecified location of the two-track and the trial court took judicial notice of the fact that the tire appeared to be from before the 1940s. One witness, Jack Goodson, testified that, as a child, he used to travel on the two-track by Jeep with his grandfather, and later drove his ATV and truck on the track. Although Goodson did not provide specific dates of his use, he testified that his grandparents owned a cottage in the area since 1942 and his parents built a cottage in 1957. Another witness, Thomas Larson, drove on the two-track several times a year from 1956 to 1964 or 1965 in order to access Crystal Lake and fish. After that time, he also walked on the two- track once or twice a week.

Gregory testified that he, his family, his friends, and his neighbors used Easements A, B, and C hundreds of times from 1966 to 1985. After signing the land contract in 1985, he also used the easements to access the Cole Parcel. He and his family were at the property 20 to 26 weekends a year, and three or four weeks a year in the summer.

Gregory kept brush and vegetation off the two-track by weed whacking two or three times a year. He also cleared limbs so that an emergency vehicle could drive down the two- track. Gregory maintained the entire length of Easements A, B, and C. Gregory did not ask for permission to perform the maintenance. Gregory had no knowledge of the Road Commission performing maintenance on Easement B. In 2001, when plaintiffs had the portion of the Betsie Valley Trail on their property relocated, dump trucks drove on the easements for three days. The excavators also put down more gravel on Easement A and replaced the culvert on the Cole Parcel.

Mark Hunt, a friend of Greg and Stephen, testified that Easement A was more like a driveway than a two-track, at least near Mollineaux Road. He testified that, from Mollineaux Road, it is apparent that heavy equipment was used and dirt and gravel were put down, and it is visible that someone maintained the road in the mid-1990s.

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Stephen R Cole v. Benzie County Parks and Recreation Commission, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephen-r-cole-v-benzie-county-parks-and-recreation-commission-michctapp-2016.