DocketNumber: Docket No. 289200
Citation Numbers: 287 Mich. App. 690
Judges: Connell, Owens, Sawyer
Filed Date: 4/1/2010
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/10/2024
This case involves a dispute regarding the use of and property rights attached to a 20-foot by 120-foot strip of property at the end of Hitchcock Avenue along Higgins Lake in Gerrish Township, Roscommon County. After a bench trial, the trial court determined that the disputed strip of property was part of Hitchcock Avenue and, therefore, subject to the same restrictions regarding its use as those set forth in Jacobs v Lyon Twp (After Remand), 199 Mich App 667; 502 NW2d 382 (1993). We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A. OVERVIEW AND DESCRIPTION OF THE SITE
The property in dispute is a 20-by-120-foot strip of land along the shore of Higgins Lake. Both plaintiff and the Roscommon County Road Commission claim that Hitchcock Avenue is 50 feet wide at this point, while defendants claim that the property in dispute is not part of Hitchcock Avenue, so Hitchcock Avenue is only 30 feet wide at this point. The northern 20 feet of Hitchcock Avenue are located in Section 9 of Township 24 North, Range 3 West, in Gerrish Township, while the southern 30 feet are located in Section 16, Township 24 North, Range 3 West in Gerrish Township. Accordingly, the road straddles the section line as it runs in an east-to-west direction.
Photographs of the site taken in 2006 indicate that Hitchcock Avenue is paved to approximately the eastern edge of DeWitt’s Landing. On approximately the southern half of the property (corresponding to the portion of the property in Township Section 16), a paved cement boat ramp leads to the water.
The photographs also show that a vehicle guardrail is located at the eastern edge of DeWitt’s Landing, stretching along the northern half of the eastern boundary of the property. The guardrail is approximately 20 feet long, and it separates the roadway from the grassy area to the west. A “Road Ends” sign and a red diamond-shaped sign are posted immediately behind the guardrail. Another photograph depicts a sign posted by the DLDA on the property, which reads in part, “No tax dollars are spent on upkeep of this road end. Our volunteer organization keeps the dock, beach, ramp and grassy hill in a safe and sanitary condition for the public to enjoy.” (Emphasis in original.)
B. THE 30-FOOT STRIP
The southern 30 feet of DeWitt’s Landing (the 30-foot strip) is located in Section 16 of Gerrish Township and is part of the platted community of Pine Bluffs. The Pine Bluffs plat indicates that the northernmost 30 feet of the platted property, stretching approximately 400 feet from Higgins Lake to Pine Bluffs Road, was originally identified as “North Street.” The westernmost 120 feet of “North Street” corresponds to the 30-foot strip. This plat dedicated the streets shown on the plat “to the use of the public.”
Although the 30-foot strip was never used as a road per se, it has been used for some time to provide access for vehicles moving boats in and out of the water. Over half a century ago, DLDA members installed a cement boat ramp on the 30-foot strip, and over the years they have continued to maintain the boat ramp on behalf of
In separate litigation in the late 1990s, the Roscommon Circuit Court determined that the 30-foot strip was a platted road dedicated to the public and, accordingly, it limited certain shore activities on the 30-foot strip, precluded the erection of private docks, boat hoists, and other anchorage devices, and permitted the erection and maintenance of one common public dock. The use of the 30-foot strip is not in dispute in this case.
C. PROPERTY TRANSFERS INVOLVING THE 20-FOOT STRIP
Specifically, this case concerns the use and ownership of the northern 20-by-120 feet of DeWitt’s Landing (the 20-foot strip). All parties acknowledge that this property is not located within the plat of Pine Bluffs, but is adjacent to the northern boundary of the plat. Unlike the 30-foot strip, which appears to consist primarily of the boat ramp, the 20-foot strip functions more as a small park. The underlying dispute in this case concerns whether this 20-foot strip is a public road and, therefore, whether the use restrictions that apply to the 30-foot strip also apply to the 20-foot strip.
At the turn of the 20th century, the land north of the Pine Bluffs plat, including the 20-foot strip, was also platted. This plat, known as the Kenwood plat, was dedicated and registered in 1901.
Between 1903 and 1909, Myrtle E. Hellen purchased either all or a substantial portion of the property in the Kenwood plat. After acquiring this property, Hellen petitioned the circuit court to vacate the Kenwood plat. The portion of Hellen’s petition for vacation included in the lower court record indicates that she sought vacation of the plat, in part, because the plat was badly conceived. According to the petition, the widths of the streets and alleys were not clearly laid out and, apparently, the property had never been marked to show the layout of the plat, making it impossible for Hellen to resell the property and artificially increasing the taxable value of her land. Finally, Hellen requested “that the court may vacate the said plat and its lots, blocks, streets, and alleys ....” The Roscommon Circuit Court, recognizing that there appeared to be no opposition to Hellen’s petition, entered an order vacating the Ken-wood plat on September 9, 1909, which was recorded by the register of deeds on August 13, 1912.
In its initial motion for summary disposition, plaintiff submitted an affidavit from the owner of a local title search company, who claimed that according to a title search that she conducted, Hellen never conveyed the 20-foot strip of land at the southern edge of her property (which included the 20-foot strip at issue in this case) when she sold her land years after the plat was vacated. However, both parties later agreed that the information provided in this affidavit was incorrect, because Hellen did include the 20 feet at the southern edge of her property in her subsequent sale of this land.
In February 1931, the Andersons sold some of their property to Francis and Faith Ross. The parcel that the Andersons sold to the Rosses excluded the 20-foot strip in question.
The Rosses owned the property they purchased from the Andersons for the rest of their lives.
D. PUBLIC DEDICATION OF HITCHCOCK AVENUE
Although the Kenwood plat dedicated all the streets and alleys depicted therein to the use of the public, the
At its April 16, 1940, meeting, the road commission resolved to incorporate particular metes-and-bound roads into the county road system. The roads listed for incorporation into the county road system included the road located on the north side of Section 16, but did not include a road located on the south side of Section 9.
When asked if the road commission had ever performed maintenance on either the 20-foot or the 30-foot strips, Burns replied:
Not that we can find in our records and not to anyone that I have asked. In fact, I asked someone just yesterday when I went to visit the site, Clint Stauffer, worked for the road commission for thirty-nine years, hiring in about sometime in the Fifties, I thought maybe he would know if we put that ramp in or we did some type of work, you know,*703 on the other side. He said we have never done anything down there in any position that he has been in, nor has the current foreman.
Burns also acknowledged that a 1957 road commission map labeled the land at the end of Hitchcock Avenue “DeWitt Landing.” Finally, she acknowledged that the 20-foot strip never contained a paved or dirt area that would permit vehicular access to the lake.
E. TESTIMONY OF MYRTLE MOORE
Myrtle Rydell Moore, an elderly area resident, discussed her family’s use of DeWitt’s Landing in the 1920s. Moore, who was born and raised near DeWitt’s Landing, would accompany her family to DeWitt’s Landing as a young child, where they would swim, recreate, and have parties and picnics. Moore explained that her family would usually recreate at an area along the lakeshore just to the south of DeWitt’s Landing, along the beach in front of the cottages that were later built at the northern edge of the Pine Bluffs plat. Moore indicated that there was a “path” to the water that her family used to get to DeWitt’s Landing, although she did not indicate where this path was located or whether any part of it traversed the 20-foot strip. She believed that others must have used the path to the water as well, because the path was “well-worn.” Her impression was that the property at DeWitt’s Landing was “[available for use by anyone.”
Moore claimed that the area became known as “DeWitt’s Landing” after the DeWitts built their house on the property immediately to the south of the 30-foot strip, but she could not remember when this occurred. She estimated that people began referring to the site as “DeWitt’s Landing” in the late 1930s or early 1940s. According to Moore, the DeWitts often would maintain
Moore testified that she would see cars drive down to the lake to unload boats into the water. She also saw others use the path in question to take trucks onto the lake to cut ice during the winter. Moore and her family would not picnic in the area where boats were launched into the water, but “to the side.” Moore did not believe that the road commission ever maintained or plowed the lake access point, stating instead that she believed that the road commission “only went as far as where the people drove in to their house or garage.” Moore was never asked, and never indicated, whether the path and the vehicular access to the lake were on the 20-foot strip or on the 30-foot strip.
E HISTORICAL USE OF DEWITT’S LANDING
Although Moore testified regarding the historical use of DeWitt’s Landing as a recreational area and lake access point, it appears that by the 1940s and 1950s, DeWitt’s Landing was overgrown and an “eyesore.”
gully wash-out with tin cans and junk and brush that people had thrown in there. And it was not very easy to get down to the lake even on foot and some people were beginning to get little boats, like a little rowboat or maybe a small aluminum boat or something. And they would try it back down there to unload their boat and have a problem getting out and it was a bad situation.
According to its members, apparently the DeWitt Landing Association, the precursor to the DLDA, was formed at some point in the late 1950s or early 1960s, when Roy DeWitt, who owned the property immediately to the south of DeWitt’s Landing, obtained permission from the county road commission to improve the road end. DeWitt contacted a number of backlot owners to form the DeWitt Landing Association (later the DLDA) and to help care for DeWitt’s Landing. The association members paid for and constructed the cement terrace/retaining wall and flat patio for picnic tables, planted and maintained the grassy area for sunbathing, and filled in the area along the lake with sand for use as a beach. The association members also paid for and installed the cement drive leading to the lake.
Apparently a barrier was first installed on Hitchcock Avenue at the eastern edge of the 20-foot strip in 1960. Earlier photographs of the site show a series of posts indicating a road end and blocking further vehicular traffic, while later pictures depict a guardrail. The blacktop ended at the guardrail. Although it is undisputed that the area of Hitchcock Avenue east of the guardrail is a 50-foot wide blacktop road used by the public and maintained by the county road commission, the parties have not identified any evidence that the road commission ever took any steps to maintain the 20-foot strip. Instead, many DLDA members confirmed that the 20-foot strip was never used or maintained as a road, but instead had been used for over 50 years by DLDA members and the public for lounging, sunbathing, and recreating. The DLDA maintained picnic tables and a bulletin board on the site, and members helped mow, clean, and maintain the 20-foot strip. DLDA members affirmatively testified that for over 50 years, they had never seen the county road commission, or any other governmental entity, maintain or otherwise perform any work on the 20-foot strip.
Every year, DLDA members would install a seasonal dock on the 20-foot wide strip that extended into Higgins Lake. Several DLDA members used the seasonal dock at the end of the 20-foot strip to dock and moor boats overnight; for some, this use stretched as far back as the 1940s.
Beginning in the 1980s, the properties on the north and south sides of DeWitt’s Landing began to change hands, and new owners began challenging the DLDA’s historic use of the property. When a subsequent owner of the DeWitt property sought to have the road commission abandon the western 120 feet of Hitchcock Avenue in March 1987, several back-lot owners wrote letters opposing the proposed abandonment, noting that the general public regularly used the road-end to reach Higgins Lake. The county road commission voted against abandoning the road.
A few months later, the same landowner informed the road commission that picnic tables and a bulletin board, historically placed by DLDA members on the 20-foot strip, were located in the right-of-way. The road commission acknowledged these concerns and promised
G. THE MCLELLANS’ OBJECTIONS REGARDING DEWITT’S LANDING
Thomas and Claudia McLellan currently own the property directly to the north of the 20-foot strip. Apparently the McLellans saw the property once before they purchased it, in November 1999, and there were no boats, hoists, or picnic tables on the 20-foot strip at the time.
Thomas McLellan, who testified at the bench trial in this case, did not appear to have any objection to most of the historical activities that took place on the 20-foot strip. He explained that the property had a “very long dock,” and that individuals used the property “as a park, basically, swimming, lot of activities that weren’t objectionable.” McLellan’s primary concern appeared to be with largely illegal activities that he claimed were occurring on the property, such as public urination and public intoxication. McLellan did not indicate that defendants or other DLDA members ever committed
H. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The McLellans created the Pine Bluffs Area Property Owners Association, Inc.,
Plaintiff moved for summary disposition, arguing that the northern 20 feet of Hitchcock Avenue was dedicated to the public for use as a road through common-law dedication and, therefore, could not be used to erect permanent mooring structures in Higgins Lake, for nonincidental and nontemporary docking, and for recreational purposes. The trial court granted partial summary disposition to plaintiff, finding that questions of fact existed regarding whether the 20-foot strip constituted a road, but it also ordered that the 20-foot strip of land could no longer be used for nontemporary
After the August 2008 bench trial, the trial court set forth its findings of fact on the record. In its statements, the trial court indicated an apparent belief that the 20-foot strip was part of Hitchcock Avenue pursuant to a statutory dedication. The trial court, noting that the roads set forth in the Kenwood plat were dedicated to the public, reasoned that the dedication was never removed when the plat was later vacated. The court then stated that Hellen had not excluded the southernmost 20 feet of her property when she sold her property after the plat was vacated, confirming that she had not intended to remove the dedication of the streets and alleys to the public in the Kenwood plat when she sought vacation of the plat in 1909. When both parties pointed out that Hellen had sold the southernmost 20 feet of her property as part of a larger conveyance and that the Andersons were the first landowners who chose not to include in the deed describing the property conveyed the 20-foot strip when selling their property, the trial court concluded, “Well, the portion dedicated
In a written judgment, the trial court ruled that the contested 20-foot strip was a public road established by common-law dedication and ordered that the 20-foot strip could no longer be used for recreational purposes, including “sunbathing, lounging, picnicking, and other activities that are non-incidental to the use of the water’s surface of Higgins Lake.” The court also prohibited nontemporary mooring of watercraft and the erection of nontemporary mooring structures, including boat hoists and wet anchors, on the bottomlands of Higgins Lake. Although in its oral findings from the bench the trial court had indicated a belief that defendants’ activities were a nuisance, it did not address this issue in the written judgment.
II. STATUS OF THE 20-FOOT STRIP
On appeal, defendants challenge the trial court’s determination that the 20-foot strip is part of Hitchcock Avenue, arguing that particular findings of fact by the trial court were clearly erroneous and that the trial court’s conclusion that the 20-foot strip was part of Hitchcock Avenue is incorrect. We agree. We review a trial court’s findings of fact for clear error, MCR 2.613(C), and questions of law de novo, Ross v Auto Club Group, 481 Mich 1, 7; 748 NW2d 552 (2008).
In its judgment, the trial court indicated that the 20-foot strip was a public road pursuant to a common-law dedication. However, the trial court’s fact-finding
In particular, although the trial court ruled that the 20-foot strip was a public road pursuant to a common-law dedication, throughout its fact-finding it maintained that the 20-foot strip was a public road because the dedication of the Kenwood plat was never rescinded. Such reasoning appears to be more in keeping with a rationale that the 20-foot strip was part of Hitchcock Avenue pursuant to a statutory dedication. Finally, the parties raise as an issue whether the 20-foot strip could be considered a public road pursuant to the highway-by-user doctrine.
The somewhat disjointed reasoning presented by the trial court, as well as the parties’ desire to address whether the property in question is a public road
For a road to become public property, there generally must be a statutory dedication and an acceptance on behalf of the public, a common-law dedication and acceptance, or a finding of highway by public user. Village of Bellaire v Pankop, 37 Mich App 50, 54-55; 194 NW2d 379 (1971). For a statutory dedication under the Land Division Act, MCL 560.101 et seq.; MSA 26.430(101) et seq., the well-established rule is that two elements are required: a recorded plat designating the areas for public use, evidencing a clear intent by the plat proprietor to dedicate those areas to public use, and acceptance by the proper public authority. Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, 451 Mich 420, 424; 547 NW2d 870 (1996). Public acceptance must be timely and must be disclosed through a manifest act by the public authority either formally confirming of accepting the dedication and ordering the opening of the street, or by exercising authority over it, in some of the ordinary ways of improvement or regulation. Id. Similarly, a valid common-law dedication of land for a public purpose requires (1) intent by the property owners to offer the land for public use, (2) an acceptance of the offer by the public officials and maintenance of the road by public officials, and (3) use by the public generally. Bain v Fry, 352 Mich 299, 305; 89 NW2d 485 (1958); Boone v Antrim Co Bd of Rd Comm’rs, 177 Mich App 688, 693; 442 NW2d 725 (1989). Finally,*714 establishing a public highway pursuant to the highway by user statute, MCL 221.20; MSA 9.21, requires (1) a defined line, (2) that the road was used and worked on by public authorities, (3) public travel and use for ten consecutive years without interruption, and (4) open, notorious, and exclusive public use. Bain, supra.
We will address each method of creation of a public road in turn, as well as whether the evidence supports a ruling that the 20-foot strip was a public road.
A. STATUTORY DEDICATION
In Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, 451 Mich 420, 423; 547 NW2d 870 (1996), our Supreme Court considered a circumstance similar to that found in this case, addressing whether unimproved roads platted along the shore of Higgins Lake and dedicated to public use in the first decade of the last century had been accepted by the public. The Kraus Court identified the general, long-accepted rule for valid dedication of land in this state:
In cases like these, the well-established rule is that a valid dedication of land for a public purpose requires two elements: a recorded plat designating the areas for public use, evidencing a clear intent by the plat proprietor to dedicate those areas to public use, and acceptance by the proper public authority. Lee v Lake, 14 Mich 11, 18 (1865). Public acceptance must be timely, Wayne Co v Miller, 31 Mich 447, 448-449 (1875), and must he disclosed through a manifest act by the public authority “either formally confirming or accepting the dedication, and ordering the opening of such street, or by exercising authority over it, in some of the ordinary ways of improvement or regulation.” Tillman v People, 12 Mich 401, 405 (1864). In Miller, this Court explained that the requirement of public acceptance by a manifest act, whether formally or informally, was necessary to prevent the public from becoming responsible*715 for land that it did not want or need, and to prevent land from becoming waste property, owned or developed by no one. Id. at 448. [Id. at 424.]
“However, the mere certification of a plat does not constitute acceptance of all the dedicated property.” Marx v Dep’t of Commerce, 220 Mich App 66, 74; 558 NW2d 460 (1996). Instead, the governmental authority must accept the publicly dedicated parcel of land in question, either by a formal resolution or informally through “ ‘the expenditure of public money for repair, improvement and control of the roadway’ ” or through public use. Id., quoting Eyde Bros Dev Co v Roscommon Co Bd of Rd Comm’rs, 161 Mich App 654, 664; 411 NW2d 814 (1987), abrogated in part on other grounds by Kraus v Gerrish Twp, 205 Mich App 25, 46-47 (1994).
Further, timely acceptance of dedicated lands in a plat requires that the acceptance of the dedication “must take place before the offer lapses or before the property owner withdraws the offer.” Marx, 220 Mich App at 78. “As long as a plat proprietor or his successors take no steps to withdraw an offer to dedicate land for public use, the offer is treated as continuing.” Id. at 79. However, when the property owner undertakes an affirmative act to withdraw the offer, such as using the property in a manner that is inconsistent with public ownership, the offer of dedication is withdrawn. Id. at 80.
The Kenwood plat was dedicated in 1901 and vacated by court order in 1909. The parties provided no evidence that the county ever attempted to accept the dedication of the streets and alleys located in the Kenwood plat before its vacation, either by formal resolution, by expending money on the property, or by indicating that the public used the streets and alleys (including the 20-foot strip) for their intended purpose.
Instead, the plat was vacated before any acceptance of the dedication therein occurred. Further, Hellen, who owned most or all of the property in the plat at the time of its vacation, specifically requested in her petition that the “lots, blocks, streets, and alleys” in the plat be vacated, apparently because the layout of the plat made the property difficult to resell and affected her property taxes. Although the dedication of the public land in the Kenwood plat was not formally withdrawn through a separate court action, Hellen specifically requested the vacation of streets and alleys in the plat in her petition for vacation, and the trial court granted her request, vacating the plat in its entirety. In the absence of any evidence to the contrary, the vacation of the plat constitutes an affirmative act to withdraw the offer of dedication. See Olsen v Village of Grand Beach, 282 Mich 364, 368-369; 276 NW 481 (1937) (recognizing the vacation of a plat as equivalent of the withdrawal of a dedication).
Accordingly, the evidence presented at trial leads to only one conclusion; that the dedication of the streets and alleys in the Kenwood plat was withdrawn when the plat was vacated, before the county made any attempt to accept these streets and alleys. The trial court’s conclusion to the contrary was clearly erroneous.
Further, instead of treating the vacation of the Ken-wood plat as a withdrawal of the dedication before acceptance, the trial court appears to conclude that the
More importantly, however, the Kenwood plat had been vacated for over 25 years before the county road commission passed the first McNitt act resolution. To accept the public lands dedicated in the Kenwood plat, the county had to accept the dedicated lands before the offer was withdrawn. Marx, 220 Mich App at 78. Even if the county road commission did attempt to accept the dedication in the Kenwood plat through McNitt act
The trial court also determined that the dedication of streets and alleys for public use was never withdrawn after the Kenwood plat was vacated because the deeds of the property transferred after the Kenwood plat was vacated did not include the 20-foot strip. However, as the deeds introduced into evidence make clear, and as both parties noted during the trial court’s oral findings of fact, Hellen included the 20-foot strip when she sold her property in 1922, and the deed did not identify the 20-foot strip as a road or distinguish it in any way. The 20-foot strip continued to be included in deeds in subsequent sales in 1924, and eventually Osian and Huida Anderson acquired ownership of the 20-foot strip, along with the property to the north of it. They subsequently did not include the 20-foot strip with the property that they sold to the Rosses in 1931. Although the trial court was made aware of this at the end of its fact-finding, the trial court did not change its ruling or indicate in any detail the extent, if any, to which its apparent misunderstanding of the facts might have affected its decision.
B. COMMON-LAW DEDICATION
The trial court’s rationale for determining that the 20-foot strip is a public road pursuant to common-law dedication is unclear. The clearest indication of its rationale for determining that a common-law dedication existed comes from its response to the parties at the end of its fact-finding, when the parties informed the trial court that several deeds describing transfers of the property after the Kenwood plat was vacated did not
Again, “a valid common-law dedication of land for a public purpose requires (1) intent by the property owners to offer the land for public use, (2) an acceptance of the offer by the public officials and maintenance of the road by public officials, and (3) use by the public generally.” Appleton Trust, 236 Mich App at 554. A common-law dedication does not need to be formal, and “dedication may occur without a grant or even written words.” Boone v Antrim Co Bd of Rd Comm’rs, 177 Mich App 688, 693; 442 NW2d 725 (1989). However, the Boone Court also noted that to have a common-law dedication, “there must be a clear and positive intent to dedicate, as unequivocally demonstrated by the actions of the owners. If intent is established, there must also be either an express declaration or some acts by a public authority indicating acceptance.” Id. (citations omitted).
We do not agree with the trial court’s conclusion that the mere fact that a subsequent owner of the property
In the absence of any evidence to provide context for the sale, the Andersons’ decision not to convey the 20-foot strip to the Rosses does not constitute an unequivocal demonstration of a clear and positive intent to dedicate the 20-foot strip to the public for use as a road. Although it is conceivable that the Andersons could have chosen not to convey the 20-foot strip because they intended for the property to be used as a road, it is also conceivable, for example, that they chose not to convey the 20-foot strip because they wanted to provide area residents with a site close to Hitchcock Avenue where they could recreate. Further, considering that the lower court record indicates that the Rosses consented to the historical recreational use of the 20-foot strip during their long residence at the property to the north of the strip, it is also conceivable that the Rosses chose not to purchase the 20-foot strip because they wanted their neighbors who lacked lake access to have a place available along the water for picnics and general recreation.
Further, we do not believe that the fact that all or part of the 20-foot strip had once been dedicated as a road in a vacated plat indicates that the Andersons had a clear and positive intent to dedicate the 20-foot strip to the public for use as a road when they sold some of
In addition, the trial court appeared to base its conclusion that the Andersons intended to dedicate the 20-foot strip to the public as a road on its determination that the 20-foot strip had been used as a road for at least seven years by the time of the 1931 property transfer. The trial court based this fact-finding entirely on the testimony of a long-time Higgins Lake resident, Myrtle Moore, who had testified regarding her family’s use of DeWitt’s Landing for recreation in the 1920s. However, we agree with defendants that the trial court’s factual determinations on this point are clearly erroneous.
When addressing whether the dedication of a strip of land along the southern boundary of the Kenwood plat was ever rescinded, the trial court stated:
The only person we have who can say that is Myrtle Moore and she says — and she testified in her deposition, and it is there, that it was a road, they used it, people used it to launch, and that the DeWitts allowed them — the picture says in front of the DeWitt’s — allowed people to use the beach in front of them, not that portion. And even if they did, does it outweigh the formal dedication, the*722 writing in the plat of Kenwood? Does it outweigh the writing in the deeds out, where they don’t deed out that twenty feet? No. So we have that.
It is not clear from the trial court’s statements how much weight it placed on Moore’s testimony when determining whether the 20-foot strip was intended to be a road, although the trial court admittedly placed more weight on her testimony than on testimony concerning later uses of the property. But regardless, the trial court appeared to base its determination that the 20-foot strip was used as a road in the 1920s on a misreading of Moore’s testimony. Although Moore testified that she and her family would go to DeWitt’s Landing for recreation when she was a child, she never specifically identified that the “path” that she and her family used to get to the water was on the 20-foot strip, and not on another part of the lakeshore. Further, although she also testified that she saw individuals drive trucks onto the lake to cut ice during the winter and launch boats from the lakeshore, again, she never identified whether this travel occurred on the 20-foot strip. Accordingly, the trial court’s determination that Moore’s testimony established that the 20-foot strip was used as a road or path to the water is clearly erroneous. At most, Moore’s testimony establishes that a road or path to the water existed in the general area, but it does not, on its own, establish that the road or path was specifically on the 20-foot strip.
Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court erred when it determined that the 20-foot strip was a public road through a common-law dedication. Because the evidence included in the lower court record fails to establish that the Andersons intended to offer the 20-foot strip for public use, we need not address the other elements of a common-law dedication.
The trial court never appeared to address whether the 20-foot strip is a public road pursuant to the highway-by-user doctrine. However, because the parties raise this as an issue, and because consideration of this doctrine is necessary to ensure a complete review of the issue, we will address whether the 20-foot strip is a public road pursuant to this doctrine. Again, to establish a public road pursuant to the highway-by-user statute, MCL 221.20, plaintiff must establish “(1) a defined line, (2) that the road was used and worked on by public authorities, (3) public travel and use for ten consecutive years without interruption, and (4) open, notorious, and exclusive public use.”
The evidence included in the lower court record is insufficient to establish that the road commission or other public officials ever used or maintained the 20-foot strip. Initially, the trial court determined that the road commission expended some money on the 20-foot strip, apparently by putting in a guardrail. However, we do not believe that the mere fact that the road commis
Also, there is no evidence in the lower court record regarding whether the road commission actually performed maintenance work on the 20-foot strip itself. Instead, DLDA members testified (and their signs on the property indicate) that the road commission has never spent money on or otherwise maintained the 20-foot strip. Further, a road commission employee testified that she could find nothing in the road commission’s records indicating that it performed maintenance on the 20-foot strip. Although there is some evidence that the road commission entertained requests to perform repairs on the boat ramp on the 30-foot strip and to seek removal of the picnic tables and bulletin board seasonally placed on the 20-foot strip, there is no evidence that the road commission ever acted on these requests. Accordingly, we conclude that the road commission never used and worked on the road, as is required to establish that certain property is a public road pursuant to the highway-by-user doctrine.
Next, defendants claim that the trial court erred when it concluded that the limitations set forth in Jacobs, regarding the use of road ends along Higgins Lake, applied to the 20-foot strip because the 20-foot strip is not a road and, even if the 20-foot strip were a road, Jacobs does not apply to roads created by common-law implied dedication. Jacobs addresses whether certain activities occurring at the end of a platted road along the shore of Higgins Lake violated the statutory dedication of the street in the original plat “ ‘to the use of the Public.’ ” Jacobs, 199 Mich App at 671. The Jacobs Court specifically confined its review to the question “whether the disputed activities are within the scope of the plat dedication.” Id. Because we have concluded that the 20-foot strip is not a road under any of the previously discussed theories, this issue is moot.
IV ADVERSE POSSESSION AND PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENT CLAIMS
Defendants argue that they have a vested right in the 20-foot strip under either a theory of adverse possession or prescriptive easement. Because the 20-foot strip is not a road, the road commission has not acquired any jurisdiction over the 20-foot strip. Accordingly, title to the property rests in the Andersons, the last titleholders of the property, and their heirs or devisees.
There is no evidence that the Andersons or their descendents still maintain a presence at Higgins Lake. Yet the evidence also indicates that the DLDA, a nonprofit organization, used and maintained the 20-foot strip for at least 50 years. The evidence suggests that in this situation, the DLDA might have a claim of adverse
V SUMMARY PROHIBITIONS REGARDING MOORING AND BOAT HOISTS
Defendants argue that the trial court erred when it granted plaintiffs motion for summary disposition in part and prohibited the DLDA from placing boat hoists in the water or mooring boats, claiming that this determination was incorrect and premature. We agree. Any determination regarding whether the DLDA is entitled to permit its members to place boat hoists in the water or to moor boats on the 20-foot strip depends on the nature of the rights that the DLDA has to the property. Accordingly, our review of this issue would be premature. Instead, remand for further fact-finding is necessary to determine actual rights to the 20-foot strip. After a determination is made regarding the nature of the DLDA’s interest, if any, in the 20-foot strip, the trial court will then be in a position to reconsider the nature of the DLDA’s right to place boat hoists in the water or moor boats in the water off the 20-foot strip in light of this factual determination.
VI. NUISANCE
Finally, defendants question the trial court’s ruling that certain uses of the 20-foot strip constitute a nuisance. In particular, defendants claim that the evidence presented did not support the trial court’s determination and, regardless, plaintiff had no claim under
The trial court’s holding with regard to this issue is unclear. The trial court addressed the nuisance issue in its oral findings of fact, indicating that a nuisance existed because people were making loud noises, urinating, and having bonfires on the 20-foot strip. The trial court then appeared to conclude that a nuisance existed because DLDA members were using the property in a manner inconsistent with the limitations set forth in Jacobs. The judgment in this case does not address the nuisance issue specifically; instead, it simply prohibits certain activities on the 20-foot strip, including sunbathing, lounging, picnicking, and other activities non-incidental to the use of the water’s surface of Higgins Lake, because these activities are “beyond the scope of the dedication.” The trial court never actually ruled, either at the bench trial or in its judgment, that making loud noises, urinating, and having bonfires on the 20-foot strip was a nuisance, nor did it issue a ruling preventing these activities from occurring.
We speculate that the trial court simply concluded that its judgment restricting the use of the 20-foot strip would be sufficient to address any alleged nuisance. The trial court’s statements at trial, combined with its failure to address the issue in its judgment in this case,
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Historically, the membership of and actions undertaken by these organizations were largely interchangeable, and eventually the DeWitt Landing Association and the DeWitt Dock Association merged to form the DeWitt Landing and Dock Association (DLDA). Accordingly, we will refer to these three organizations as the DLDA throughout this opinion.
According to one area resident, vehicles only traveled west of the guardrail when using the boat ramp to launch or pick up boats.
Several members of the DLDA maintained that they did not recall the county road commission or any other governmental entity performing roadwork or maintenance oh the 30-foot strip. Instead, the DLDA performed all maintenance on the 30-foot strip, including maintenance of the public boat ramp, with the consent and permission of the county road commission.
The plat consisted of the following land:
*697 Comprising Lots No. (2) two (3) three and four (4) of Section nine (9) Town 24N R3 West Roscommon Co Mich. Commencing at a point marked thus <g> at the meander post on the east bank of Higgins Lake on Section Line Between Section Nine and Sixteen. Then running East on Section Line 880 to West Vs Post Bet. Sec 9 & 16 marked thus. ®Thence north on West Vs line Sec Nine 3996.96 feet to NW Vs Post Sec nine marked Thus ®, thence west on north Vs line 1255 feet to meander post marked thus. ® Thence southerly along the meander line Sec. Nine 4007 ft to the place of beginning.
There is no Block 13 on the plat. Instead, what would sequentially be labeled “Blk 13” is instead labeled “Blk A.”
Although these individual parcels are not called “lots” on the plat, but are simply numbered, they are referred to as “lots” in subsequent deeds. We will use the term “lots,” with a lowercase “1,” to refer to these smaller parcels, and to distinguish these parcels from the larger Lots 2, 3, and 4.
Although the plat is unclear regarding the exact width of the alleys, the parties agree that the alley in question is 15 feet in width.
The deed described the property owned by the Andersons as follows:
Commencing at the meander post between sections nine and sixteen, township twenty-four north, range three (3) west, thence east on section line four hundred feet, thence north at right angles two hundred and fifty feet, thence westerly and parallel with said section line to the shore of Higgins Lake, thence southerly along the shore of Higgins Lake to the place of beginning, being part of Lot (4) four, section (9) nine, township twenty-four (24) north, range three (3) west.
The parcel that the Rosses acquired in this transaction is described as follows:
Commencing at a point on the shore of Higgins Lake twenty (20) feet north of the meander post between Section Nine (9) and Sixteen (16) from place of beginning, thence East four hundred (400) feet thence north seventy three and one half (73V2) feet, thence west about four hundred (400) feet to the shore of Higgins Lake, thence southerly about seventy three and one half (73V2) feet along the shore of Higgins Lake to a line drawn east and west through the point of beginning, thence east along this line to point of beginning, except the following described property, commencing twenty (20) feet north and two hundred (200) feet east of the*700 meander point between Sections Nine (9) and Sixteen (16) for a point of beginning, thence east thirty (30) feet, thence north seventy-three and one half (73V2) feet, thence west thirty (30) feet, thence south seventy-three and one half (73V2) feet to place of beginning. The land hereby conveyed is seventy three and one half feet in width throughout and is part of Lot Four (4), Section Nine (9), Township Twenty-four (24) North Range Three (3) West.
The deed parties of the second part, their heirs and assigns forever, shall have in common with first party, his heirs or assigns forever, the use for road purposes of the land excepted by the conveyance.
The record does not indicate whether the Andersons later sold the 156V2-foot parcel. Apparently the Andersons’ heirs have not been identified, and they were never contacted regarding, nor are they involved in, this litigation.
It appears that at some point the Rosses bought an additional 73V2 feet to the north of their lot, making the total width of their lot 147 feet. Regardless, none of the descriptions of their property included in the lower court record include the 20-foot strip.
Moore discussed the contents of four photographs from the 1920s depicting her and her family recreating near DeWitt’s Landing. In one of these photographs, a dirt road can be seen in the distance, and Moore claimed that this was the path or trail that she and her family used to access the lakeshore. The road depicted in the photograph does not appear to be within 120 feet of the water. Instead, it appears to be further back, where the paved portion of Hitchcock Avenue is located.
Plaintiff claims that photographs from the 1940s depict a trail over the 20-foot strip to the lake. The trial court never discussed these photographs. These photographs depict a scrubby, sandy area roughly where the beach on the 20-foot strip is now located. It is not apparent from these photographs that the sandy area depicted is, in fact, a road.
Photographs that appear to he from the early 1960s show a cement truck and depict local men (not construction workers) laying cement and digging out sod on the boat ramp. Apparently this ramp replaced an earlier boat ramp on the site.
Apparently DLDA members conducted a lottery to determine which members could moor boats at the dock.
The flyer states:
The Dewitt Landing Association, a group of 30 families, contribute money and volunteer work to provide maintenance of the grassy knoll, beach, dock and picnic tables for the public to enjoy. There is no maintenance assistance from any governmental organization and because litter of any kind left on the beach or road surface will wash into the lake with rain water and damage the delicate balance of nature in the lake water ... we must be very diligent.
The McLellans’ property is the land to the north of and adjacent to the 20-foot strip. As discussed earlier, this property is part of the former Kenwood plat, which was vacated in 1909. The property is not part of the plat of Pine Bluffs.
At this time, a cross-claim that defendants had filed against the MDEQ regarding the use of the dock on the 20-foot strip as a “marina” without a proper permit was dismissed as moot.
Although it is unclear whether the northern 20 feet of Hitchcock Avenue east of the guardrail is a public road by either statutory or common-law dedication, the county road commission, which has undisputedly maintained the entire 50-foot width of the road east of the guardrail for decades, would easily he able to establish that the entire 50-foot width of the paved, maintained portion of Hitchcock Avenue is a road pursuant to the highway-by-user statute. Accordingly, this Court’s ruling with regard to the status of the 20-foot strip would not realistically call into question the road commission’s jurisdiction over the maintained portion of Hitchcock Avenue.
Further, to establish this element, the road commission must demonstrate that it has kept the road in a “reasonably passable condition.” Boone, 177 Mich App at 694. We do not believe that placing a guardrail and a “Road Ends” sign at the eastern edge of the 20-foot strip indicates that the road commission (as opposed to DLDA members) intended to do anything to maintain the 20-foot strip itself in a “reasonably passable condition.”
This Court has listed the circumstances under which a claim of adverse possession may be established:
In order to establish a claim of adverse possession, a plaintiff must provide “clear and cogent proof that possession has been actual, visible, open, notorious, exclusive, continuous, and uninterrupted for the statutory period of fifteen years.” Kipka v Fountain, 198 Mich App 435, 439; 499 NW2d 363 (1993). The fifteen-year period begins when the rightful owner has been disseised of the land. MCL 600.5829. “Disseisin occurs when the true owner is deprived of possession or displaced by someone exercising the powers and privileges of ownership.” Kipka, [198 Mich App] at 439. In addition, a plaintiff must also show that the plaintiffs actions were “hostile” and “under claim of right,” meaning that the use is “inconsistent with the right of the owner, without permission asked or given, and which use would entitle the owner to a cause of action against the intruder.” Wengel v Wengel, 270 Mich App 86, 92-93; 714 NW2d 371 (2006) (quotation marks and citation omitted). [Canjar v Cole, 283 Mich App 723, 731-732; 770 NW2d 449 (2009).]
“An easement by prescription results from use of another’s property that is open, notorious, adverse, and continuous for a period of fifteen years.” Plymouth Canton Community Crier, Inc v Prose, 242 Mich App 676, 679; 619 NW2d 725 (2000). A prescriptive easement is either
“(1) a use that is adverse to the owner of the land or the interest in land against which the servitude is claimed, or
“(2) a use that is made pursuant to the terms of an intended but imperfectly created servitude, or the enjoyment of the benefit of an intended but imperfectly created servitude.” [Mulcahy v Verhines, 276 Mich App 693, 700; 742 NW2d 393 (2007), quoting 1 Restatement Property, 3d, Servitudes, § 2.16, pp 221-222 (emphasis omitted).]
In its brief, plaintiff acknowledges that it is seeking relief under a theory of private nuisance. In Capitol Props Group, 283 Mich App at 431-432, this Court stated:
The elements of a private nuisance are satisfied if (a) the other has property rights and privileges in respect to the use or enjoyment interfered with, (b) the invasion results in significant harm, (c) the actor’s conduct is the legal cause of the invasion, and (d) the invasion is either (i) intentional and unreasonable, or (ii) unintentional and otherwise actionable under the rules governing liability for negligent, reckless, or ultrahazardous conduct. Cloverleaf Car Co [v Phillips Petroleum Co, 213 Mich App 186, 193; 540 NW2d 297 (1995)]. To prove a nuisance, significant harm to the plaintiff resulting from the defendant’s unreasonable interference with the use or enjoyment of property must be proven. City of Jackson v Thompson-McCully Co, LLC, 239 Mich App 482, 490; 608 NW2d 531 (2000).
Accordingly, the trial court would need to apply this test to determine if a nuisance, in fact, occurred in this case.