MINERVA PARTNERS LTD V FIRST PASSAGE LLC
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STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
MINERVA PARTNERS, LTD,
FOR PUBLICATION
February 6, 2007
9:05 a.m.
Plaintiff/Counter-DefendantAppellee/Cross-Appellant,
v
No. 270778
Grand Traverse Circuit Court
LC No. 05-024464-CH
FIRST PASSAGE, LLC,
Defendant/Counter-PlaintiffAppellant/Cross-Appellee,
and
Official Reported Version
SHERMAN J. EATON, JR., MARILYN EATON,
JOHN F. EATON and FRANK EATON,
Defendants.
Before: Murray, P.J., and Fitzgerald and Owens, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
In this appeal, the parties dispute the ownership of an abandoned portion of Keystone
Road in Garfield Township, Grand Traverse County. Defendant First Passage, LLC, appeals by
right the order of the Grand Traverse Circuit Court denying its motion for summary disposition,
in which order the trial court also quieted title to the disputed property by dividing it along the
centerline of the abandoned road and holding that each party held title to the portion of Keystone
Road adjoining that party's property. Plaintiff Minerva Partners, Ltd., cross-appeals the trial
court's order denying each party a private easement for ingress or egress across the disputed
property owned by the other party. We reverse the trial court's order quieting title to the
disputed property, but we affirm the trial court's holding that neither party retains easement
rights over the portion of the disputed property held by the other party.
Keystone Road, a road oriented in a southwest to northeast direction, became a public
road between 1895 and 1908. Although it is unclear what method was used to dedicate the land
as a road, the parties stipulate that the road was not created by plat or other formal dedication
pursuant to statute, but was created either through common-law dedication or the highway-by-
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user doctrine. In 1997, the Grand Traverse County Road Commission abandoned the portion of
Keystone Road in dispute in this case.1
In 1935, Ilo E. Tannewitz received title to land, including the property now belonging to
plaintiff and defendant, from her husband. With this transfer, Tannewitz owned land on both
sides of the road. Further, the property transferred to Tannewitz, as described in the February
1935 deed, included the property under the road.
In November 1956, Tannewitz deeded a parcel of property south and east of the road to
the Cherryland Humane Society. This parcel's northwest boundary was the southeast right-ofway of Keystone Road; the description of the property in the deed did not include the land under
the road.2 Tannewitz transferred two additional parcels of land to Cherryland in September 1959
and May 1967. The property included in the metes-and-bounds descriptions of these parcels did
not include any land under Keystone Road.
In April 1958, Tannewitz transferred several parcels of land to the Traverse City
Industrial Fund, Inc.,3 including the land now belonging to plaintiff north and west of the road.
In this deed, this parcel was described as follows: "The Southeast quarter of the Southwest
quarter, except: . . . that part South and Easterly of [the road]."
In September 1981, the Industrial Fund transferred title to the parcel bordering the road
(and now belonging to plaintiff) to Essex Group, Inc. In February 1988, Essex transferred title
of this parcel to United Technological Automotive, Inc. (UTA). The metes-and-bounds
descriptions of the property in these deeds indicated that the property was bounded by the
northwest right-of-way line of the road. Accordingly, these deeds did not transfer title to land
under the road to the purchasers of the property.
Tannewitz died on January 5, 1982. In her will, she left the remainder of her property,
including her residual rights to the property under and surrounding the road, to her niece, Ruth
Anna Raub Eaton. Ruth Anna died intestate in February 2000. Her sons John, Sherman, and
Frank Eaton inherited her property. Accordingly, any residual rights to property under the road
vested in them.
1
In this opinion, we refer to the abandoned portion of Keystone Road in dispute in this case as
"the road."
2
Tannewitz originally transferred this property to Cherryland subject to a right of reverter. In
May 1967, she again transferred the property to Cherryland, free of the right of reverter. The
November 1956 and May 1967 deeds identify the northwest boundary of the property as the
southeast right-of-way of Barlow Road. Apparently, "Barlow Road" is another name for
Keystone Road. Defendant does not dispute that Cherryland, its predecessor in interest, did not
receive title to the land under the road in either the November 1956 or the May 1967 deeds.
3
The Traverse City Industrial Fund is now known as the Traverse City Area Industrial Fund.
We refer to this entity as "the Industrial Fund" in this opinion.
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After the road commission abandoned the road in February 1997, Cherryland continued
to use an approximately 140-foot long portion of the former road abutting LaFranier Road to
access its property.4 Although this access route did not span the width of the road, it included
property located on both sides of the centerline. In October 2004, Cherryland purchased any
remaining property interest that John and Sherman Eaton had in the access route. Cherryland
transferred title to the property it owned south and east of the road, plus title to its interest in the
access route, to defendant on November 5, 2004.5
On November 22, 2004, defendant purchased any remaining property interest that the
Industrial Fund had in the access route. Defendant received any property interest that Frank
Eaton, his heirs, and his assigns had in the access route through a judgment quieting title issued
in March 2005.6
Although the information included in the lower court record does not establish a clear
chain of title after UTA obtained ownership of the parcel north and west of the road, the parties
do not dispute that Lear Corporation owned this property by 2004. On March 10, 2005, Lear
filed a complaint to quiet title to the property located in the road. Specifically, Lear claimed
ownership of the portion of the access route located northwest of the centerline.
On March 29, 2005, the Industrial Fund transferred to Lear its interest in property located
in the road, but not the access route. The deed specified that the property constituting the access
route had not been transferred to Lear because the Industrial Fund had already transferred its
interest in this property to defendant. Lear subsequently sold the property north and west of the
road and any interest it had in the land within the road to Minerva Partners, Ltd. The trial court
substituted Minerva Partners for Lear as plaintiff in this action in December 2005.
In March 2006, defendant moved for summary disposition, arguing that it held fee title to
the portion of the access route located north and west of the centerline of the road. Plaintiff filed
a cross-motion for summary disposition, asserting that under Michigan law, after the
abandonment of a public road, the remaining parcel of land reverts to the abutting property
owners to the centerline of the former roadway, regardless of the existence of a deed to the
contrary. Moreover, plaintiff argued, the owner of land abutting a public road has a private
easement across that road even after its abandonment.
4
In this opinion, we refer to the portion of the road adjoining LaFranier Road and used to access
Cherryland's (now First Passage's) property as "the access route."
5
In this deed, Cherryland also transferred title to adjoining property located in the road
southwest of the access route and spanning the distance between the centerline and the southeast
right-of-way line of the road. The parties provide no evidence indicating that Cherryland ever
held title to this property.
6
Defendant failed to locate Frank Eaton when attempting to purchase the interests that other
parties might have in the access route, necessitating legal action to quiet title with regard to
Frank's interest in the property.
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After two hearings regarding the matter, the trial court concluded that when the road was
abandoned, title to the property to the centerline automatically reverted to the abutting
landowners. However, the trial court also concluded that neither party retained private ingress
and egress rights over the portion of the road on the other party's side of the centerline.
I
Defendant argues on appeal that the trial court erroneously concluded that, after the road
commission abandoned the road, ownership of the half of the road abutting each party's property
reverted to that landowner. We agree. We review de novo both a trial court's ruling on a motion
for summary disposition and its decision in an action to quiet title. Maiden v Rozwood, 461
Mich 109, 118; 597 NW2d 817 (1999); Burkhardt v Bailey, 260 Mich App 636, 646; 680 NW2d
453 (2004). We review the entire trial court record to determine if the trial court's order granting
summary disposition was in error. Maiden, supra at 118.
Generally, a dedication is "'an appropriation of land to some public use, accepted for such
use by or in behalf of the public.'" Gunn v Delhi Twp, 8 Mich App 278, 282; 154 NW2d 598
(1967), quoting Clark v Grand Rapids, 334 Mich 646, 656-657; 55 NW2d 137 (1952). The
dedication of private property can occur either pursuant to statute or under common-law
principles. Gunn, supra at 282. This Court has noted that, "[f]or a road to become public
property, there generally must be either 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."
Beulah Hoagland Appleton Qualified Personal Residence Trust v Emmet Co Rd Comm, 236
Mich App 546, 554; 600 NW2d 698 (1999).
Although a variety of acceptable methods exist to dedicate a parcel of land as a public
highway, not all dedications of land result in a similar interest being passed to the public
authority. The nature of the real property interest passing from the grantor to the government
unit depends on the method of dedication. Kalkaska v Shell Oil Co (After Remand), 433 Mich
348, 354 n 11; 446 NW2d 91 (1989). "'The effect of a dedication under the statute has been to
vest the fee in the county, in trust for the municipality intended to be benefited, whereas, at
common law, the act of dedication created only an easement in the public.'" Id., quoting Village
of Grandville v Jenison, 84 Mich 54, 65; 47 NW 600 (1890). Similarly, the highway-by-user
statute creates an easement for public use in private property. See Eyde Bros Dev Co v Eaton Co
Drain Comm'r, 427 Mich 271, 281-282; 398 NW2d 297 (1986).
An easement cannot be abridged or taken away by the owner of the burdened land after it
has been granted or otherwise established. Murphy Chair Co v American Radiator Co, 172
Mich 14, 28; 137 NW 791 (1912). However, an easement may be lost through abandonment.
Goodman v Brenner, 219 Mich 55, 60; 188 NW 377 (1922). An easement is abandoned when
the owner of the easement relinquishes it with the intention of releasing his or her right to the
easement. Id. After the easement is abandoned, the unencumbered fee simple interest in the
land previously burdened by the easement remains in the titleholder. Dep't of Natural Resources
v Carmody-Lahti Real Estate, Inc, 472 Mich 359, 388; 699 NW2d 272 (2005).
Pursuant to MCL 224.18(3), when a board of county road commissioners abandons a
road, "the road or part of the road shall cease to exist as a public highway . . . ." The treatise,
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Michigan Civil Jurisprudence, considering the law of easements in the context of roads dedicated
to public use and then abandoned, characterizes the general rule as follows: "Upon a vacation or
abandonment of the street by the public, the fee of the abutting owners becomes free of the
easement, which is thereby extinguished and terminated."7 12 Michigan Civil Jurisprudence,
Highways and Streets, § 222, p 262-263.
The parties do not dispute that the road was not created pursuant to statutory dedication
and acceptance and that the county only received an easement over the property. Easements do
not carry title to the land over which they are exercised and do not dispossess the landowner of
its property. Rusk v Grande, 332 Mich 665, 669; 52 NW2d 548 (1952). Accordingly, the county
did not acquire title to the land under the road, and title to the land under the road remained with
the private owner. When the road commission abandoned the road in 1997, the owners of the
land under the road retained title to this property free of the public easement.
Our Supreme Court has long held that
a conveyance of land bounded on a highway, street, or alley carries with it the fee
to the center thereof, subject to the easement of public way, provided the grantor
at the time of conveyance owned to the center and there are no words in the deed
showing a contrary intent . . . . [Loud v Brooks, 241 Mich 452, 456; 217 NW 34
(1928).]
Although our Supreme Court recognized the common-law rule that, in the absence of a contrary
intent, the adjoining landowners own title to land to the center of a road, the language of the deed
still controls. "The general rule is that courts will follow the plain language in a deed in which
there is no ambiguity." Farabaugh v Rhode, 305 Mich 234, 240; 9 NW2d 562 (1943).
"[I]t is the duty of the court to construe a deed as it is written, and if a
deed is clear and unambiguous, it is to be given effect according to its language,
for the intention and understanding of the parties must be deemed to be that which
the writing declares. The meaning of the words used, and not what the parties
may have intended by such language, is controlling." [Gawrylak v Cowie, 350
Mich 679, 683; 86 NW2d 809 (1957), quoting 26 CJS, Deeds, § 86, p 828.]
If the deed, on its face, indicates that a grantee has received title to the land adjacent to a road,
but not to the land under a road, the terms of that deed must be enforced.
Accordingly, to determine who owns title to the land under Keystone Road, we must
consider the terms of the deeds in the chains of title for plaintiff 's and defendant's parcels to
determine if each grantor in the chain of title for each party's land intended to convey the land
7
MCL 224.18, which describes the circumstances under which, and the procedures by which, a
county road may be abandoned, does not explicitly state which party receives title in fee to the
abandoned parcel.
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under the road and, if so, whether that grantor had title to that land when making that
conveyance.
As discussed earlier, the metes-and-bounds description of the property that Tannewitz
transferred to Cherryland specifically excluded the transfer of any portion of the property under
the road. When Tannewitz sold her property to the Industrial Fund, though, she transferred to
the Industrial Fund title to her property in the quadrant in which the parties' parcels are located,
except for her property located south and east of the road. Accordingly, title to the land under
the road vested in the Industrial Fund. Yet when the Industrial Fund transferred title of its
property northwest of Keystone Road to Essex, the metes-and-bounds description of the property
transferred ended at the northwest right-of-way line, specifically excluding any portion of the
property lying under the road. Accordingly, at the time the road was abandoned, the Industrial
Fund held title to the land under it. When the road commission abandoned the road, the
Industrial Fund continued to hold title to the property, but this land was no longer burdened by
the public easement.
However, defendant purchased the interest that the Industrial Fund had in the access
route (and, as a precautionary measure, also acquired any residual interest that Ruth Anna's sons
and heirs might have had in the route). Because defendant purchased the property interest of
every entity holding an interest in the access route, defendant now has fee title to the access
route. Accordingly, the trial court erred when it split the road down the center and quieted title
to each half of the road to the adjoining landowner. Title to the access route on both sides of the
centerline should have been quieted in defendant.
We also note that defendant does not have title to any portion of the road other than the
access route. Ruth Anna's sons and the Industrial Fund only transferred their interests in the
property within the access route to defendant. Although Cherryland's deed transferring its
property to defendant included the parcel between the centerline and the southeast right-of-way
line of the road and southwest of the access route in its property description, Cherryland never
had title to this parcel and, therefore, had no property interest to transfer to defendant.
Accordingly, the trial court erred when it quieted in defendant's favor title to the property
between the centerline and the southeast right-of-way line and southwest of the access route.
II
On cross-appeal, plaintiff argues that the trial court erroneously concluded that neither
party had a private easement for ingress and egress across any part of the road owned by the
other party. Specifically, plaintiff maintains that, because it owns land abutting the road, it
retained a private easement across the road after the road commission abandoned it. We do not
agree. This is a question of law that we review de novo. See Fraser Twp v Linwood-Bay
Sportsman's Club, 270 Mich App 289, 293; 715 NW2d 89 (2006).
Plaintiff asserts that it has an easement over the road on the basis of the doctrine of
estoppel. However, this claim of estoppel fails because plaintiff does not explain how the
doctrine applies in this situation.
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An estoppel arises where: (1) a party by representation, admissions, or
silence, intentionally or negligently induces another party to believe facts; (2) the
other party justifiably relies and acts on this belief; and (3) the other party will be
prejudiced if the first party is permitted to deny the existence of the facts . . . .
[Cook v Grand River Hydroelectric Power Co, Inc, 131 Mich App 821, 828; 346
NW2d 881 (1984).]
However, plaintiff provides no evidence indicating that defendant induced it to believe that it
had an easement over the road or that it relied on this belief. Conversely, the applicable deeds
indicate that plaintiff did not have title to the land under the road, and plaintiff does not
otherwise present testimony or documentation indicating that it had, or reasonably believed that
it had, a private easement over the road.
Instead, plaintiff observes that owners of lots adjoining platted streets retain private
easement rights over these streets after their abandonment by public authorities. It argues that
this Court should expand this rule to conclude that the owner of a lot adjoining an unplatted road
should also retain private easement rights over the road after its abandonment. We disagree.
The purchaser of property recorded in a plat receives both the interest described in the deed and
the rights indicated in the plat. Kirchen v Remenga, 291 Mich 94, 102-110; 288 NW 344 (1939);
Fry v Kaiser, 60 Mich App 574, 577; 232 NW2d 673 (1975). Further, "[a] grantee of property in
a platted subdivision acquires a private right entitling him '"to the use of the streets and ways laid
down on the plat" . . . .'" Nelson v Roscommon Co Rd Comm, 117 Mich App 125, 132; 323
NW2d 621 (1982), quoting Rindone v Corey Community Church, 335 Mich 311, 317; 55 NW2d
844 (1952). When a county road commission abandons a public right-of-way, it only
relinquishes the public's right to use that road, street, or easement. See MCL 224.18(3). By
bestowing the right to use streets in a subdivision on the owners of lots in that subdivision, the
plat gives these owners a right to use these streets that is independent of the public's right to use
these streets once they are dedicated for public use. Accordingly, if the platted streets in a
subdivision are abandoned for public use, the lot owners still retain a separate, private right to
use the streets in that subdivision. Essentially, the lot owners retain an independent easement
over the streets formerly dedicated for public use, which is unaffected by the road commission's
abandonment of these streets.
But the owners of land adjoining unplatted roads dedicated for public use do not
necessarily have easements or other property rights to the roads or the underlying land, besides
the general rights that they, as members of the public, have to use these roads. Accordingly,
when an unplatted road is abandoned and the public's right to use the road is relinquished, an
adjoining landowner may only use the abandoned road if it has an independent easement right or
other property interest in the land under the road.
However, as discussed earlier, plaintiff fails to establish that it has private ingress and
egress rights to its property from the disputed portion of Keystone Road. Specifically, the
applicable deeds do not indicate that plaintiff received fee title to or easement rights in any
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portion of the road, and plaintiff presents no other evidence indicating that it had been granted
private easement rights to the road. Further, plaintiff fails to argue that it has an easement to its
property over the road by operation of law.8 See Chapdelaine v Sochocki, 247 Mich App 167,
172; 635 NW2d 339 (2001). Accordingly, the trial court did not err when it concluded that
neither party has a private easement for ingress and egress over the portion of the road held by
the other party.
The trial court's order quieting title to the disputed portion of abandoned Keystone Road
is reversed. The trial court's holding that neither party has easement rights of ingress and egress
over the property held by the other party is affirmed. The case is remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
/s/ Christopher M. Murray
/s/ E. Thomas Fitzgerald
/s/ Donald S. Owens
8
Easements created by operation of law include easements of necessity and easements by
implication. These easements are often created when a parcel is landlocked or an easement
across another's property is otherwise necessary to access the parcel. See Chapdelaine v
Sochocki, 247 Mich App 167, 172; 635 NW2d 339 (2001); Schmidt v Eger, 94 Mich App 728,
731; 289 NW2d 851 (1980). The abandoned portion of Keystone Road apparently is a
convenient means of access to both plaintiff 's and defendant's properties. However, plaintiff has
other means of ingress and egress to its property, and fails to argue whether access to its property
by way of Keystone Road is sufficiently necessary to establish an easement by operation of law.
-8-
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