Young v. Thendara, Inc.

43 N.W.2d 58, 328 Mich. 42, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 312
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1950
DocketDocket 21, Calendar 44,690
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 43 N.W.2d 58 (Young v. Thendara, Inc.) 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
Young v. Thendara, Inc., 43 N.W.2d 58, 328 Mich. 42, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 312 (Mich. 1950).

Opinion

Boyles, C. J.

Thirty-three individual plaintiffs filed the bill of complaint in this case, claiming to constitute a class representing all owners of lots in Thendara Park Country Club, a subdivision in Independence township, Oakland county. Their purpose in filing the bill was to establish certain easements claimed by them in the use of the parks, club grounds, et cetera, in said subdivision. The property referred to in the bill includes, inter alia, a golf course, clubhouse, boathouse, beach, several parks and a road across one of them. During the hearing, the trial court dismissed the case as to 23 of the plaintiffs, and from such dismissal no question is raised on this appeal. The decree as entered further provides that as to the remaining 10 plaintiffs (5 individuals and their wives), the defendants were permanently restrained from in any way interfering with said plaintiffs’ free use of said road, the club grounds, golf course, boathouse, docks, aggregating 8 parks in all; and after naming the 10 plaintiffs adds “in common with other lot owners in Thendara Park Country Club, a subdivision.” The apparent purpose of such addition seems to have been to include all lot owners, together with the 23 individuals as to whom the bill was dismissed, as a class, represented *46 by the 10 individual plaintiffs who prevailed as the remaining plaintiffs in the case.

The defendants filed a cross bill seeking a finding of fact and law as to each separate parcel of land purchased by the defendants from the State at scavenger sale, a decree that said purchase created a new title in the defendants, and that the plaintiffs had no right or interest in said property. From the decree entered as above stated, the defendants appeal.

In 1925, one Wayland D. Stearns and his wife recorded a plat of the Thendara Park Country Club subdivision. There were approximately 1,220 lots, 8 so-called parks, including a golf course (outlot A), club grounds park block 6, clubhouse, boathouse, beach, et cetera. The elaborate scheme of a country club subdivision failed and in 1935 a receiver was appointed over the interests of the subdividers. The plattors conveyed their interests to the receiver (with exceptions unimportant here), and on March 3,1939, the receiver, by order of court, conveyed said interests in the property to a grantee from whom said title became vested in one Kathryn Adams pri- or to 1940. In the meantime, the taxes for the years 1928 to 1935 had accumulated and become delinquent, as a result of which the park properties involved herein were sold for delinquent taxes in May, 1938, and bid in by the State. The title of the State became absolute November 3, 1939. On that date previous owners and the holders of liens and incumbrances “ceased to have any more interest in the title to the lands * * * than any stranger to that title.” James A. Welch Co., Inc., v. State Land Office Board, 295 Mich 85.

On March 28, 1940, the defendant Thendara, Inc., obtained a quitclaim deed from Kathryn Adams of all her right, title and interest in the property in the subdivision. However, this conveyed no rights to *47 Thendara, Inc., as to any “park” property which the State had sold for delinquent taxes, the title to said property having become absolute in the State on November 3d of the preceding year. Thereafter the said property was put up for sale by the State land office board at so-called scavenger sale, and in February and March, 1941, Thendara, Inc., purchased club grounds block 6, and amphitheatre park block 9, from the State at said scavenger sale. In July, 1941, defendant N. C. Zack purchased from the State at scavenger sale the remaining parts of the park property in question. In the interim between those dates, section 9 of the State land office board act * had been changed by the legislature, to which change reference will be made later.

Plaintiffs introduced in evidence a properly certified copy of the original plat, but otherwise there was no proof of the dedication of streets, parks, et cetera, shown on the plat. Appellants here claim that said dedication cannot, be considered, relying on Township of Pontiac v. Featherstone, 319 Mich 382. However, in view of our conclusion in this case, that question becomes unimportant. In the original plat the plattors dedicated 2 roads, naming them (not involved here), “to the use of the public,” and all other streets, walks, parks and paths “to the use of the owners of lots in said subdivision.” The gist of plaintiffs’ claim here is that the plaintiffs, as a class, representing all owners of lots in the subdivision, have an easement in the parks by reason of the “use,” namely, the right to use the clubhouse and all of the other parks. Other “streets, walks, * * * and paths” are not involved.

Plaintiff Denne acquired title to a lot in the subdivision by deed from Stearns, the platt'or, in 1928, and later by deed from Thendara, Inc., in July, 1941. *48 Said deeds did not contain any reference to any conveyance of an easement in the parks owned by the plattors, or by the defendants, nor does this record show what disposition has been made of Denne’s case, or his claim of an easement, unless it is “in common with other lot owners.” He is not mentioned by name in the decree. Plaintiffs Frechette and wife obtained their title by assignment of a contract from the original owner of their property who had obtained a contract from the State after the scavenger sale by “redeeming” it. According to appellants’ brief, plaintiffs Tingler and wife, Jewell and wife, and Arnold and wife, obtained deeds from the defendants. But in none of their conveyances did the defendants grant to them any easement or use in the park property here involved. Plaintiff Young and wife obtained a quitclaim deed from Thendara, Inc., on March 18, 1941, and later, in October, 1942, a warranty deed from the same grantor. Their deeds did not include an express grant of any easement in the use of the parks in question. The above-mentioned Frechettes, Tinglers, Jewells, Arnolds, and Youngs are the only plaintiffs mentioned by name in the decree enjoining the defendants from interfering with their “free use” of the parks here involved. Any other owners, if granted any relief by the decree, would have to be considered as “class owners” under the addition to the above names in the decree “in common with other lot owners” in the subdivision. The diversity of sources from which titles to lots have been acquired by all other possible' lot owners, the doubt as to the title of their grantors at the time their respective rights accrued, shows the impracticability of considering all owners of lots in the subdivision as- a class for the purpose of decreeing their individual rights, in the case at bar. See Barker v. Township of Vernon, 63 Mich 516, 519.

*49 Plaintiffs claim an easement across club grounds park block 6 by prescription—tbe right to the use of a road across said park for access to some of plaintiffs’ lots. No claim is made of a way of necessity, or by dedication in the plat.

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.W.2d 58, 328 Mich. 42, 1950 Mich. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-thendara-inc-mich-1950.