BIEKER v SUTTONS BAY TOWNSHIP SUPERVISOR
Docket No. 139955
Court of Appeals of Michigan
Submitted June 9, 1992. Decided December 29, 1992.
197 Mich App 628
Submitted at Grand Rapids at 9:05 A.M.
The Court of Appeals held:
Reversed and remanded for issuance of a writ of mandamus.
SHEPHERD, P.J., concurring in the result, stated that the process provided under
REFERENCES
Am Jur 2d, Eminent Domain § 47; Highways, Streets, and Bridges §§ 1-3, 48.
Way of necessity where only part of land is inaccessible. 10 ALR4th 500.
Accessibility, way of necessity over another‘s land, where a means of access does exist, but is claimed to be inadequate, inconvenient, difficult or costly. 10 ALR4th 447.
HIGHWAYS — PRIVATE ROADS AND TEMPORARY HIGHWAYS ACT — CONSTITUTIONAL LAW.
The private roads and temporary highways act, which allows the construction of a private road through private property owned by others upon an application by a private landowner to a township supervisor and a jury‘s finding of necessity and appraisal of damages for affected landowners, does not violate
Flickinger & Associates, P.C. (by Mary A. Owens), for the plaintiff.
James R. Williams, for the defendant.
Before: SHEPHERD, P.J., and CONNOR and M. F. SAPALA,* JJ.
OPINION OF THE COURT
CONNOR, J. Plaintiff, Ruth A. Bieker, brought this action for a writ of mandamus to compel defendant, the supervisor of Suttons Bay Township in Leelanau County, to comply with the provisions of the opening of private roads and temporary highways act,
Plaintiff‘s land is surrounded by private property owned by others. On August 30, 1989, she applied to defendant for a private road to connect her property to a nearby public road. The act purports to give people the right to apply to township supervisors for private roads to be laid out across another‘s land.
A panel of this Court found the private roads act to violate
Since this Court‘s decision in White Pine, other jurisdictions have found similar statutes to be constitutional. See Dowling v Erickson, 278 Ark 142; 644 SW2d 264 (1983); Deseret Ranches of Florida, Inc v Bowman, 349 So 2d 155 (Fla, 1977); Pratt v Allen, 116 Misc 2d 244; 455 NYS2d 904 (1982). In Marinclin v Urling, 262 F Supp 733 (WD PA, 1967), aff‘d 384 F2d 872 (CA 3, 1967), a federal court decided that such a statute does not violate the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.
Upon reflection, we find the analysis in White Pine flawed, and decline to follow it.
The statute was enacted over one hundred years ago. 1881 PA 243, ch VIII, § 1 et seq. There is no question that when enacted it was valid, because at the time our constitution provided:
Private roads may be opened in the manner to
be prescribed by law; but in every case the necessity for the road and the amount of all damages to be sustained by the opening thereof, shall be first determined by a jury of free holders; and such amount, together with the expenses of proceedings, shall be paid by the person or persons to be benefited. [ Const 1850, art 18, § 14 . See alsoConst 1908, art 13, § 3 .]
Our current constitution contains no such provision. However, the history of the constitutional change does not show any intent to remove from the Legislature the power to provide for private roads in cases of necessity. Indeed, the legislative history suggests the opposite.1
Unlike common-law easements of necessity, the statute does not purport to protect a preexisting right of access, but sets forth a procedure for “the
Nevertheless, we do not believe that the statute violates the constitutional prohibition against condemnation for private use. We find a public use is embodied in the statute itself, and by its terms the statute will only provide relief when circumstances comprising the prerequisite public use are found to exist.
The statute provides for the laying out of private roads only where necessary.
The statute does not require a claim of necessity to be included in an application for a private road, and states that a supervisor “shall” convene a jury upon receiving an application.
Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
M. F. SAPALA, J., concurred.
SHEPHERD, P.J., (concurring). I concur in the result, but write separately because I accept the analysis of the dissenting opinion in White Pine Hunting Club v Schalkofski, 65 Mich App 147; 237 NW2d 223 (1975).
The private road act has nothing to do with the taking by a public authority of property for a public purpose. I agree with the White Pine dissent that the act is a limitation upon the use of private land similar to an easement by necessity — the difference being that in the case of the easement there must be privity of contract and the courts have implied an intention to create an easement.
In cases where there is no privity of contract (and therefore no intention to create an easement) the statute allows the same result. The only question then would be whether the statute is repugnant to the 1963 Constitution. In the White Pine
Because I believe that the statute provides a substitute method of acquiring the same access achieved by an easement of necessity, I do not believe it is either appropriate or necessary for this Court to find a public purpose in the statute.
I also do not believe that Poletown Neighborhood Council v Detroit, 410 Mich 616; 304 NW2d 455 (1981), can be appropriately cited in this case. In Poletown, the public authorities were contemplating an official condemnation. Private individu-
Notes
Mr. Hatch: I notice that this amendment strikes out not only the Stafseth amendment, but also sections c, d and e. My question concerns section c which deals, not with public roads or public property but private roads which may be open and I wonder, if this section is stricken from the constitution if the legislature would have the power to provide for the establishment of private roads.
Mr. Danhof: Mr. Hatch, I point out to you that it states that private roads may be open in a manner prescribed by law. It was left to the legislature. You have a common law right of necessity, as Mr. Hutchinson pointed out to me today before he left. Other states have taken care of this particular problem without having constitutional language thereon. I see no reason why Michigan should have it.
Mr. Hatch: It would be your understanding that by striking out this provision the legislature would still have the authority to provide that a private individual may establish a private road by taking land from another private individual?
Mr. Danhof: Assuming necessity and that damages are paid; and as to necessity, of course, there would be a big problem to show that he actually needed the way out. I would see nothing that would prohibit that to be done in the exercise of sovereign authority. [2 Official Record, Constitutional Convention 1961, p 2846.]
