Tomecek v. Bavas

740 N.W.2d 323, 276 Mich. App. 252
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 3, 2007
DocketDocket No. 258907
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 740 N.W.2d 323 (Tomecek v. Bavas) 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
Tomecek v. Bavas, 740 N.W.2d 323, 276 Mich. App. 252 (Mich. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinions

OWENS, J.

Defendants/counterplaintiffs Andrew Bavas, Joyce Bavas, Inez Bavas, Stanley Stasch, Julie Stasch, Martha Stasch, Fatricia Curtner, Timothy McGree, Feter Stratigos, Alice Stratigos, and Famela Kruegar and defendants Devereaux Bowly, Jr., Michael Jones, Laura Avery, Julia Fietras, David Derbyshire, Ellen LaFountain, Jonathan Rodgers, Royal Rodgers, [256]*256Lee Stahl, III, and Susan Stahl1 appeal as of right, and plaintiffs Frank and Janis Tomecek cross-appeal as of right, the October 15, 2004, “Stipulated Corrected Judgment Partially Revising Plat of O.T. Henkle.” We affirm.

I. BASIC FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY '

Plaintiffs and defendants are neighboring property owners in the O.T. Henkle Subdivision along Lake Michigan in Chikaming Township, Berrien County. The subdivision is bordered on the west by Lake Michigan and on the east by Lake Shore Road. Plaintiffs own Lot 2 in the subdivision and wish to build a home on this lot. However, by virtue of a 1974 restrictive agreement, they cannot do so “unless and until a municipal sanitary sewer line is made available to the premises.” Lot 2 is landlocked, with ingress and egress afforded by way of a “drive easement” over Lots 1 and 3 from Lake Shore Road. Plaintiffs wish to use this drive easement to access sewer and other utilities. Defendants assert that this is an impermissible use of the drive easement.

The underlying facts are not in dispute. O.T. Henkle originally owned all the property in the plat. On his death, the property passed to C.W and Virginia Henkle, Gladys Fairclough, and Jane H. Henkle (referred to by the parties as the “original grantors”). Before the [257]*257property was platted in 1976, it was divided into six parcels, five of which were sold to the defendants or their predecessors in interest and one of which, Lot 2, was retained by the original grantors. In 1976, Lot 2 was conveyed to Jane Henkle and plaintiffs jointly.2 Plaintiffs owned Lot 2 jointly with Jane Henkle from 1976 until 1999, when plaintiffs became the sole owners of the lot by quitclaim deed.

When Lot 1 was conveyed in 1967, it was conveyed subject to an easement for beach access and subject to another easement, for the benefit of Lot 2, for the installation, maintenance, and repair of utility lines, poles, pipes, and conduits over the northerly five feet of Lot 1. However, in 1972, the portion of Lot 2 at which the utility easement abutted the property was conveyed to the owners of Lot 1, thus separating Lot 2 from the utility easement over the northerly portion of Lot 1. As a result, after the 1972 conveyance, Lot 2 lacked all access to utilities from Lake Shore Road.

In 1975, the O.T. Henkle plat was filed with the township.3 The plat depicts an approximately 10-foot drive easement for Lots 3, 4, and 5 along the southern edge of the plat (referred to by the trial court and the parties as the “south drive easement”), a water easement running from Lake Shore Road through Lots 3 and 4 to Lot 5, and a 20-foot-wide drive easement over Lots 1 and 3 for the benefit of Lots 2 and 4 (referred to by the trial court and the parties as the “central drive easement”).4

[258]*258In 1978, the original grantors purported to grant to the township an easement for sewer lines within the south drive easement. It is undisputed that the original grantors no longer owned any legal interest in the property through which the easement was purported to be granted, having conveyed fee-simple title in Lots 3,4, and 5 to defendants or their predecessors in interest before 1978.

In 1984, the original grantors purported to convey to plaintiff Janis Tomecek fee-simple title to all areas identified on the plat as drive easements and parking easements. As with the purported 1978 grant of an easement for sewer lines, it is undisputed that this conveyance was ineffective because in 1984 the original grantors lacked any legal interest in the property containing the platted easements.

As the trial court noted, the dispute in this case is whether the central drive easement can also be used for the utility and sewer lines needed pursuant to the restrictive agreement for plaintiff to build on Lot 2. In their amended complaint, plaintiffs asked the trial court to (1) issue a declaratory judgment delineating the extent of the central drive easement as platted, (2) establish an easement by necessity for public utilities, coexistent with the central drive easement, and (3) correct or revise the plat to provide for a utility easement for the benefit of Lot 2, consistent with the intent of the original grantors that all lots in the plat have access to utilities and that the lot owners be allowed to build on them.

The trial court granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary disposition delineating the extent of the central drive easement as platted. The court explained that a declaration of the extent of plaintiffs’ rights in the platted easement was necessary in order to guide plaintiffs’ future conduct and preserve their legal rights. The trial court [259]*259then concluded that the platted drive easement was unambiguous. It entitled plaintiffs to use the easement as “a [right of] way which grants a right of passage over land.” However, the trial court refused to establish an easement by necessity for public utilities, thus granting defendants’ motion for summary disposition on that count.

Finally, the trial court considered whether plaintiffs were entitled to revision of the plat pursuant to MCL 560.221 and MCL 560.226(1). The trial court ultimately concluded that plaintiffs had met the burden necessary to warrant a revision of the plat to include a utility easement coexistent with the central drive easement for the benefit of Lot 2. The trial court observed that defendants “have already run utility lines under their own [south] drive easement,” and, therefore, it found “very compelling” plaintiffs’ argument that defendants could not reasonably challenge plaintiffs’ request to amend or revise the plat to allow plaintiffs to run utilities under the central drive easement. Further, the trial court noted:

. . . Defendants have not submitted any admissible evidence which would support a reasonable objection to Plaintiffs [sic] request to revise the plat, nor have they offered any admissible evidence of any reasonable objection which would be of any value to the public. All of the objections asserted by Defendants relate [only] to private concerns and involve purely private interests.

The trial court granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary disposition, ruling that plaintiffs “may revise the plat to include a utility easement over the central drive easement for the benefit of Lot 2.”

II. JUDICIAL REVISION OF PLAT

Defendants argue that the trial court erred when, basing its authority on the Land Division Act, it ordered [260]*260the revision of the plat to create a utility easement for Lot 2 in the land subject to the existing drive easement to the property. We disagree.

We review de novo a trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition. Dressel v Ameribank, 468 Mich 557, 561; 664 NW2d 151 (2003). “The extent of a party’s rights under an easement is a question of fact for the trial court, which we review for clear error.” Little v Kin,

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Tomecek v. Bavas
740 N.W.2d 323 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
740 N.W.2d 323, 276 Mich. App. 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tomecek-v-bavas-michctapp-2007.