199 Mich. 35 | Mich. | 1917
(after staling the fads). The first 17 assignments are predicated upon alleged errors in the admission or exclusion of testimony. In our view of the case these assignments require no discussion.
The 18th assignment is based upon the findings of fact and of law by the court below. We are well satisfied that the defendants took by their conveyance from the plaintiffs title in fee simple to an undivided one-sixteenth interest in the water frontage. We are equally well satisfied that defendants could make a conveyance of lot 10 and retain title to said one-sixteenth interest. The purchaser from defendants of lot 10 acquired no interest in the lake frontage, and the deed from plaintiffs to defendants contains no Iimi
But it is contended on behalf of plaintiffs that defendants are, at most, tenants in common of said lake frontage, and as such tenants in common they have no right to appropriate any aliquot part thereof to their own use and to exclude therefrom their co-tenants. As an abstract legal proposition, this position is undoubtedly sound, but we do not think it controlling in the case under consideration. It appears undisputed in the record that the value of each of the 16 lots was less than the value of the undivided one-sixteenth of the lake frontage. It further appears undisputed that, while the plaintiffs were the owners of fifteen-sixteenths of the undivided parcel, they, through their
“Moreover, in several instances a parol partition followed by either long possession or by valuable improvements, has been held to be conclusive upon the parties” — citing Joyce v. Williams, 26 Mich. 332, and Cronin, v. Gore, 38 Mich. 381.
An examination of these cases, will demonstrate that upon the facts they are readily distinguishable from ■the case at bar, but if the acts of the parties in interest at the time the defendants’ boathouse was erected, where it now stands, do not amount to an oral agreement to partition the lands, held in common, now performed by the defendants, they still constitute a sufficient license from one cotenant to his fellow cotenant to warrant the erection of the structure. The record shows no revocation of said license, and until it is revoked we are of opinion that defendant may justly maintain his boathouse where it stands. See volume 25, Cyc. p. 647, where it is said:
“According to the better opinion, however, where nothing more than a mere oral license appears, it is' revocable at the will of the licensor, whatever expenditures the licensee may have made, provided the licensee has reasonable notice and opportunity to remove his fixtures and improvements. To hold otherwise would be to override the statute of frauds and convert an executed license into an estate in land, which is going a greater length than equity ever went under the doctrine of part performance.”
The judgment is affirmed.,