Weisenburger v. Kirkwood

151 N.W.2d 889, 7 Mich. App. 283, 1967 Mich. App. LEXIS 572
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 10, 1967
DocketDocket 1,318
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 151 N.W.2d 889 (Weisenburger v. Kirkwood) 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
Weisenburger v. Kirkwood, 151 N.W.2d 889, 7 Mich. App. 283, 1967 Mich. App. LEXIS 572 (Mich. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

Holbrook, J.

This appeal concerns the determination of common boundary lines between plaintiffs’ and defendants’ adjoining lake lots on Bills lake in Newaygo county, Michigan.

The pertinent facts appear as follows: Through their predecessors in title plaintiffs and defendants have a common grantor. The common grantor deeded a parcel of land in 1944 to defendants’ predecessor in title, Paul Kovach, giving the following general description:

“Commencing 459.26 feet east and 90.64 feet north of southwest corner of government lot 4 of section 30, township 12 north, range 11 west, thence east 161 feet, to water’s edge, thence north 25° east 100 feet, thence west 161 feet, thence south 25° west 100 feet to the place of beginning.”

The common grantor also deeded, a parcel of land in 1947 to plaintiffs’ predecessor in title, giving the following description:

“Part of government lot 4, section 30, township 12 north, range 11 west, described as commencing *286 at the oue-quarter post on south side of said section, thence east on sec line 411.8 ft to an iron pipe, thence north 24° 30' E 219 feet to an iron stake (this being the place of beginning), thence N 24° SO7 E 73 feet, thence south 68° 10' E 192 feet to the high water mark of Bills lake, thence Sly along high water mark 50 feet to an iron stake, thence N 83° 30' W 161 feet to place of beginning; the southerly line of the above described parcel being the northerly line of parcel previously deeded to Kovach.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Plaintiffs entered into possession of their lake lot in 1952 and defendants entered into possession of their lake lot in 1957.

The controversy of the parties arises over a triangular piece of property, not covered by either of the parties’ metes and bounds descriptions, lying between the south line of plaintiffs’ lake lot and the north line of defendants’ lake lot. ' An iron stake has been placed at the one point where the metes and bounds descriptions of the parties meet, which is the vertex of the triangle and the point closest to Bills lake. From this one point, the triangle in question extends in a westerly direction to Stray Drive where the base of the triangle is located.

Plaintiffs claimed to have exercised possession over the triangular piece of land in the form of mowing the grass, raking leaves and cutting weeds thereon since 1952. Conversely, the defendants claimed to have exercised possession themselves and through their predecessor in mowing the grass, raking the leaves, and maintaining a well house, well pit, and fireplace either in part or wholly within the triangle since 1948. Although the well house and fireplace were later removed, defendants piled wood in that area.

Plaintiffs also claimed that the last clause of their property description (which appears in italics, *287 supra) manifests an intention on the part of the common grantor to convey all property north of the metes and bounds description of the Kovach property to plaintiffs’ predecessor in title.

In 1958, the county supervisor prepared and recorded supervisor’s plat No 1, Croton township, Newaygo county, Michigan. This plat, among other things, defined both plaintiffs’ and defendants’ property by lot numbers including their common boundary line.

■ After hearing the testimony and considering the exhibits, and having visited and viewed the area in question, the trial judge concluded that the errors in description rendered impossible any reconciliation of the deeds aside from the one common point. Then in equitably resolving the controversy, the trial judge made the following determination:

“The supervisor’s plat allocates to plaintiffs 0.2 of one foot more frontage on Bills lake and 3.8 feet more frontage on Stray Drive than their description demands; that said plat allocates [to defendants] 1.53 feet less frontage on Bills lake and 5.3 feet more frontage on Stray Drive than their description demands; that the parties and their predecessors in title have acquiesced in a line substantially corresponding to the plat line for a number of years; that the court has viewed the premises, and such view confirms the plat line as the line that has been recognized and used as the boundary by the parties; that no inequity results from the boundary as placed by the plat line.
“The law applicable to this case is found in Jackson v. Deemar, 373 Mich 22, and cases cited therein. ‘If acquiescence follows resolving a doubt as to where the line is * * * such line so established and acquiesced in is the line, and the acquiescence need not continue for the statutory period.’ In said case, it was also held that the acquiescence *288 of predecessors in title can be tacked on that of the parties.
“Therefore, it is the opinion of this court that the line between the land of the parties hereto as established by the supervisor’s plat No 1 of Croton township is the line as determined by the acquiescence of the parties and that such line is equitable and fair to both parties.”

Also of concern in the trial court and here on appeal is a further controversy between these parties, to wit, the direction their common boundary line is to take because of the receding shoreline of the bay on which the parties’ property is located. The shoreline of Bills lake has receded some 30 or more feet from the metes and bounds descriptions contained in the deeds of the parties.

In resolving this particular controversy, the trial judge applied the ruling in Cutliff v. Densmore (1958), 354 Mich 586. Therein, it was held that owners of inland lake front property are entitled to the just proportion of the land between old and new shorelines. Using the supervisor’s plat to determine the respective numerators and the denominator, the trial judge found that plaintiff was to receive as a just portion 33.75% and defendant 66.25% of “the shoreline allocated to the parties hereto on a proportionate basis considering all the property owners around the bay.”

Plaintiff appeals these equitable decisions of the trial court raising 2 issues: (1) Whether a common boundary line was established between the property of the parties by resolution or agreement followed by acquiescence and (2) whether a boundary line should be drawn from the common point of both parties’ property near the lake to the center of the cove or bay.

Adverse possession over the disputed triangular piece of land was not established by either party. *289 Plaintiffs contend that the trial court’s theory of acquiescence is not sustained by the pleadings and evidence. The doctrine of acquiescence, as recognized in Michigan, is found in Jackson v. Deemar (1964), 373 Mich 22. Therein, the Michigan Supreme Court quoted from Johnson v. Squires (1956), 344 Mich 687, 692, as follows (pp 25, 26):

“We had occasion, in the case of Renwick v. Noggle,

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Bluebook (online)
151 N.W.2d 889, 7 Mich. App. 283, 1967 Mich. App. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weisenburger-v-kirkwood-michctapp-1967.