50 Mich. 500 | Mich. | 1883
The complainants prayed the Superior Court of Detroit, sitting in chancery, to find and declare the existence of a permanent passage way on certain premises of the parties, and to enjoin the defendant from committing any encroachment or disturbance on it. The case was heard on bill, answer and evidence, and dismissed, and complainants appealed.
An alley laid out by the Governor and Judges extends from John R. street westerly for several yards where it narrows to a point and terminates between Madison and Adams avenues. The passage way in question is alleged to be a narrow way engrafted on this alley as a continuation, and running westerly several feet but having no opening at the west. The block is bounded on the east and west by
, A schedule marked “ A ” and made a part of the bill is alleged to be a correct representation of the block and lots and of the alley made by the Governor and Judges and of the passage or opening appended to it which is here in controversy ; the latter being colored red.*
It will be observed that this statement refers to the alley made by the Governor and Judges and to the appendix claimed to be an extension as a single continuous way.
The complainants further state on information and belief that said alley was not laid out originally as it exists and has existed for the last twenty-five years; but about the year 1851 said William Ohapoton and James Brennan, the predecessors in estate of these parties, “ agreed to open said alley where colored red (alluding to a red space on the schedule intended to suggest the form and location of that part which is in dispute and which is claimed to be a continuation of the alley proper) as it now lies, and has existed since that time, and to leave the same open forever thereafter as such alley or right of way; and they did thereupon open said alley to its present width and proportions, and it has so existed ever since, and the said Brennan and Ohapoton, having so agreed as aforesaid and opened said alley, built their respective fences on the lines of said alley and left the said alley or right of way open for the use of each other and their heirs and devisees.”
The bill contains nothing descriptive of the alleged right or of the locus in quo beyond these statements and what is represented by the schedule. These statements in the bill concerning an agreement between Ohapoton and Brennan to open a passage way, and in regard to the opening of it, and in relation to its extent, width and shape and use are
Unless the case is a clear one it is not the province of the court to establish and protect a way for passage either on the ground of enforcing specific performance of a partly executed oral agreement or on that of declaring and protecting a prescriptive right resulting from a use which originally sprang from such an agreement. Does this record disclose such a case ? Does the bill state one ?
Now a right of way which is too indefinite for a determinate description is too indefinite to be established and protected by the court of chancery. Assuming that the right which is actually in controversy, or rather the right which complainants contemplate, to be capable of such a description, the rule then applies that the complainant must so state his case' that if admitted by answer, or proved at the hearing, the court can decree upon it. Has that been done ? Are the means given to enable the court to declare in its paper decree exactly what right of passage exists, and of what shape and dimensions the place is, and precisely where it is located with reference to lot lines and permanent erections ?
These questions suggest serious difficulties. It would not do to recognize any other mode or kind of use than such as can be justified by the actual state of things, nor would it be allowable to locate the way or any part of it, whatever the shape, on the land of third persons or separate from the site to which it actually belongs. But suppose these difficulties to be waived. How is it with the evidence? How does that compare with the bill, and what effect has it towards making out a case capable of being decreed ?
The fact is proved that about 1851 and during the before mentioned ownership of Chapoton and James Brennan, they agreed orally to appreciate equal portions from their lands to widen to 10 feet the point of the alley laid out by the Governor and Judges, and to open from that point a passage way of that width to the west line of what is
What then is the result ? It seems too plain for controversy that no case can be gathered from the bill that the evidence would support, and on the other hand the proofs themselves appear to be too ambiguous, uncertain and indeterminate to afford the necessary data for a favorable decree. In this aspect the difficulty is much the same that is seen in cases for specific performance of unwritten agreements where the description of the property or other material parts are either too uncertain in themselves or too uncertain under the evidence, which amounts there to the same thing, to enable the court to extend any relief. Brown v. Brown 47 Mich. 378 ; King v. McCully 38 Penn. St. 76. No more can be drawn from the facts than they contain.
Decree affirmed with costs.