Stewart v. Hunt

5 N.W.2d 737, 303 Mich. 161, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 369
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1942
DocketDocket No. 15, Calendar No. 41,846.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 5 N.W.2d 737 (Stewart v. Hunt) 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
Stewart v. Hunt, 5 N.W.2d 737, 303 Mich. 161, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 369 (Mich. 1942).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

Plaintiffs and defendants respectively own substantial summer homes on adjoining pieces of property fronting on Lakeview avenue and extending to Lake Michigan in the village of Grand Beach, Michigan. Defendants’ right to use a concrete walk approximately two feet in width between the two houses is the subject of this litigation. De *163 fendants Hunt claim an easement by prescription in this walk or right of way. It is built entirely on the land belonging to plaintiffs, who filed this bill to restrain defendants from trespassing on plaintiffs’ property by using the way, and to quiet title in plaintiffs. Plaintiffs dismissed the bill as to all defendants except the Hunts. After hearing, the circuit court dismissed the bill upon its merits. Prom this decree plaintiffs appeal.

Defendants claim a perpetual easement appurtenant in the walk. The burden of proving the existence of an easement is upon the claimant thereof. Turner v. Hart, 71 Mich. 128, 137 (15 Am. St. Rep. 243); Dummer v. United States Gypsum Co., 153 Mich. 622, 642. If defendants’ right to the way rests on permission, such permission may be withdrawn at any time, however long continued. Wortman v. Stafford, 217 Mich. 554, 558, 559. The record shows beyond any doubt, however, that, even assuming the user of the way by defendants and their predecessors in title to have been adverse, no owner in defendants’ chain of title since the walk was first used owned defendants’ land (and, hence, no such owner used the claimed way) for as long as 15 years. The record is barren of any claim by defendants either that any conveyance in their chain of title refers to the claimed way or that any parol transfer of such way was made in connection with any such conveyance, except that Margaret and Julia Hunt testified that one Anna Brown, the real estate agent who handled the sale of defendants’ land from their immediate predecessor in title, C. Walter Yandell, had told the Hunts, before the sale and in the presence of C. Walter Yandell, that, the right of way in the concrete walk was used by both houses, ‘ ‘ and was to

*164 continue to be used by both parties.” Construing this assertion as equivalent to a parol transfer of the claimed easement by C. Walter Yandell to the . Hunts, because made in his presence and theirs and not objected to by him, we might find sufficient privity between defendants and C. Walter Yandell to enable them to tack his period of ownership of the land and user of the way to' their own, but, even so, the two periods in combination do not aggregate 15 years. For a similar factual situation where the interest claimed was land not included in claimant’s conveyance, rather than an easement not so included, see Maes v. Olmsted, 247 Mich. 180, 183.

Thus we are brought to the main question in the case. Can the periods of adverse user of a claimed easement appurtenant by the successive owners of the claimed dominant tenement be tacked together to aggregate the 15-year period of prescription, where no single period amounts to 15 years, in the absence of any privity between the successive owners established either by references to the easement in their conveyances or by parol transfers thereof in connection with such conveyances? We are mindful of the great number of decisions from other jurisdictions which answer this question in the affirmative. The law of this State, however, prohibits such tacking. Zemon v. Netzorg, 247 Mich. 563. Notwithstanding severe criticism of this decision (28 Michigan Law Review, pp. 81, 599), that case sets forth the applicable law of this State on this question. Any change, if desirable, should be accomplished by legislation, prospective in operation, rather than by judicial redecision, which would disturb vested rights.

Nor can the way in suit be claimed as a way of necessity. The exhibits in the record show that defendants or their predecessors could always have *165 built a walk across their own land from the street to their house. Indeed, several years prior to the present suit, defendants did build such a walk.

Plaintiffs’ and defendants’ lands were once united in ownership. Shortly after the walk was originally laid, the two parcels were severed, the common ■owner conveying plaintiffs’ parcel and retaining defendants’ himself. The grantee of plaintiffs’ land paid the common owner one-half the cost of the two houses and intervening walk (then a board walk), because both parties believed that the dividing line between plaintiffs’ and defendants’ lands bisected the board walk lengthwise. Later, on the same assumption, when a cement walk was substituted for' the board walk, the then owners of the two parcels each paid one-half the cost of putting in the cement walk. Surveys subsequently established that the true dividing line runs so as to include the entire walk and even a few inches of one of the walls of defendants’ house on land belonging to plaintiffs. Though the cost-sharing scheme is similar to that in Wilkinson v. Hutzel, 142 Mich. 674, where we held that a roadway half on one owner’s land and half on his neighbor’s was merely a mutual accommodation founded in permissive user, the facts of the instant case are really less favorable to defendants herein than were those of the cited case to the claimant therein, because here the way is entirely on plaintiffs’ land. As has already been held, however, even if the user herein be assumed to have been adverse, it did not continue a sufficient length of time in any one owner to ripen into prescription, and tacking will not, under the circumstances disclosed by this record, be permitted.

There is no merit to the claim that plaintiffs’ proper remedy is ejectment. Plaintiffs are in possession of the land over which the way in dispute *166 lies. A party in possession may not bring ejectment, bnt must resort to a bill in equity. Beaver v. Zwonack, 250 Mich. 96.

In their brief plaintiffs ask that defendants be perpetually enjoined “from trespassing upon the premises of the plaintiffs either by the use of the steps and passageway or by the maintenance of the encroaching overhanging of the eaves or the out-swinging screen door.” No relief is asked as to the encroachment by the wall of defendants ’ house. The eaves, attached to the top of this wall, do, of course, project over the plaintiffs’ land and passageway. Their function, as disclosed by the exhibits, is the retention and channeling off of rain water from defendants’ roof. Plaintiffs’ passageway is thus benefited by the eaves. Plaintiffs, in the statement of relief sought in their brief, do not ask that the very slight encroachment of defendants’ wall on plaintiffs’ property should be removed. The use of the eaves and of the downspout attached to defendants’ house' results in discharging the rain water from defendants’ roof onto defendants’ own property, rather than into the passageway. It is claimed that defendants have a continuous easement in the right to have the eaves overhang and that such right passed to defendants’ property on the severance of the two tenements. Morgan v.

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Bluebook (online)
5 N.W.2d 737, 303 Mich. 161, 1942 Mich. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-hunt-mich-1942.