Wilhelm v. Herron

178 N.W. 769, 211 Mich. 339, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 692
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1920
DocketDocket No. 68
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 178 N.W. 769 (Wilhelm v. Herron) 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
Wilhelm v. Herron, 178 N.W. 769, 211 Mich. 339, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 692 (Mich. 1920).

Opinion

Fellows, J.

Plaintiff seeks by this bill to quiet title to a strip of land 42 feet wide at the north end, 31 feet wide at the south end, and 1,963.5 feet long, situated on the west half of the southeast quarter of section 3 of Lansing township, Ingham county, and to restrain defendant from taking gravel therefrom or trespassing thereon. Sufficient facts are stated in the bill to sustain it as a bill to quiet title and to afford the other relief as incidental thereto. Defendant and his wife as tenants by the entirety hold the record [341]*341title to the disputed strip and own land to the east thereof. Plaintiff’s sole claim of title is by adverse possession. In 1877 one Clayton W. Everétt owned both pieces of land. The record title of the parties appears from the following statement taken from the opinion of the trial judge:

“March 3, 1877, Clayton W. Everett became the owner of the southeast quarter of section three, and on August 21, 1878, he conveyed to Elizabeth K. Taylor the east twenty-four acres of the west 26.45 acres of that part of the southeast quarter of section three lying southeast of the center of the public highway and bounded on the east by a tract of twenty-two acres of land conveyed by him to Hiram Perkins and Charles D. Potter.
“Elizabeth K. Taylor died intestate, possessed of the land, and September 12, 1902, the probate court determined her heirs, among whom was Joseph A. Strowbridge, who later acquired the interests of his tenants in common.
“August 1, 1879, Everett conveyed to Edwin D. Allen'the west 2.45 acres of that part of the southeast quarter of section three lying south of the highway.
“November 12, 1880, the auditor general, by tax deed, conveyed to E. D. Allen the Taylor description of land for the delinquent taxes of 1878.
“November 18, 1882, Allen by quitclaim deed conveyed such tax title to Joseph A. Strowbridge, reciting in the deed that the object was ‘to release a tax’ title on said premises, and excepting the use of the premises until Strowbridge should sell the same, and excepting the fences of the lands and giving Allen the privilege of removing the same, Allen to pay the taxes/
“May 12, 1903, Strowbridge deeded Allen the east' 22% acres of the west 26.45 acres of the southeast quarter of section three ‘bounded east by the tract of 22 acres conveyed by Clayton W. Everett to Hiram Perkins and Charles D. Potter, excepting the fences around said piece of land/
“March 20, 1911, Allen deeded to plaintiff the west 24.95 acres off the west side of the quarter section in ■question,
[342]*342"The record title to the portion of defendants’ land to which plaintiff claims title by adverse possession, was conveyed by Clayton W. Everett on October 4, 1877, to Hiram Perkins and Charles D. Potter and on November 2, 1888, by Perkins and Potter to James-H. Wellings and on January 7, 1912, by James H. Wellings to Richard C. Herron and Amy Herron.”

While the record does- not disclose the date of the-, death of Elizabeth K. Taylor, it must have been as early as 1882 as in that year Strowbridge acquired by quitclaim deed the interest of two of her heirs, and after the probate proceedings in 1902 and before he conveyed to Allen and presumably to clear up the title in anticipation of such sale he acquired another quitclaim deed from other heirs.

It will be noted that by the terms of the deed to Strowbridge Mr. Allen was to have the use of the land and was to pay the taxes for such use. We agree with the trial judge that the relations of landlord and tenant existed between Mr. Allen and Mr. Strowbridge and that where such relations exist the possession of the tenant is the possession of the landlord.' The testimony shows that during such tenancy Mr. Allen used and occupied land which included the disputed strip up to a certain fence to which we shall presently refer; but the testimony would not-justify us in finding that 'his use and occupancy of the disputed strip was in his own right for his own benefit or other than as tenant of Strowbridge until the time he purchased. So far as the record discloses all the lands he occupied except the 2.45 acres deeded to him in 1879 were occupied as Strowbridge’s tenant. We therefore do not determine the question stressed at the argument that Allen could acquire by adverse possession title to land not contemplated in his lease from Strowbridge as the record does not, we think, make such a case. So far as this record discloses Allen occupied the land his' landlord had occupied before the tenancy began [343]*343and he occupied no other. Whatever use Allen made of the disputed strip was as tenant of Strowbridge and such use was in connection with the other lands he was using as such tenant. He does not appear to have asserted any claim in himself or to have had any occupancy hostile to Strowbridge, and so far as his occupancy was adverse to defendants’ predecessors in title, it was for the benefit of Strowbridge. We must hold upon this record that whatever benefit was derived by such use inured to the landlord, and Allen’s occupancy of the disputed strip as tenant could not be tacked on to his occupancy'as owner of the 22% acres after'he purchased that amount of land from Strowbridge.

When Strowbridge deeded to Allen on May 12, 1903, he deeded the east 22% acres of the west 26.45 acres, and its east boundary was the tract of 22’ acres conveyed by Clayton W. Everett to Hiram Perkins and Charles D. Potter, a quantitative description. If Strowbridge had acquired title to the disputed strip by adverse possession he did not convey such title to Allen, nor can Allen tack on to his possession after he purchased the possession by Strowbridge of lands not included in the description or apparently intended to be conveyed for the purpose of making up the statutory period of adverse possession. In the case of Sheldon v. Railroad Co., 161 Mich. 503, this question was fully considered and the authorities were collected in the majority opinion written by Mr. Justice Stone. That opinion so exhaustively considers the question that we forbear repetition. We there held (we quote from the syllabus) :

“Separate successive disseisins cannot be tacked so as to constitute one and a single continuous possession, unless there is privity of estate between the successive parties in possession, each coming in as the. transferee of the possessory rights of his predecessor.
“Where the grantee relies upon his deed to show [344]*344privity of estate, he cannot have the benefit of the grantor’s possession of lands which are not conveyed by the deed.”

See, also, Lake Shore, etc., R. Co. v. Sterling, 189 Mich. 366; Kushler v. Weber, 182 Mich. 224, 205 Mich. 400.

There is testimony in the case that when plaintiff bought of Allen he was shown the boundaries and fences including the fence to which we have referred and to which we shall presently again refer, and the contract between him and Allen was introduced in evidence. In this contract the premises were described in general terms and the description may be deemed broad enough to include the disputed strip.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 N.W. 769, 211 Mich. 339, 1920 Mich. LEXIS 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilhelm-v-herron-mich-1920.