Plaintiffs appeal as of right the trial court’s order granting summary disposition in defendant’s favor and dismissing plaintiffs’ claims. Because a prescriptive easement in gross, commercial in nature, may be apportioned and because the apportionment of the easement in this matter does not materially or unreasonably increase the burden on the servient estate, we affirm.
This matter arises from a dispute over whether defendant acquired the right to enter plaintiffs’ land to place and maintain cable television lines on already existing utility poles that Detroit Edison (Edison) used to transmit electricity. Edison undisputedly acquired the right to install and maintain electrical lines and poles on plaintiffs’ property, and entered into an agreement with defendant allowing defendant to place and maintain cable television lines on the same utility poles (“apportioning” or partially assigning Edison’s right to use the utility poles). When plaintiffs discovered that defendant was stringing cable lines on their property without their permission, they filed a complaint against defendant alleging a continuing common-law trespass and seeking recovery for damage to their land under MCL 600.2919.
Notably, plaintiffs had filed a prior action against defendant in 1999 that was pending when the instant case was initiated. The 1999 case (Heydon I) involved defendant’s placement of cable lines on utility poles used by Edison on another parcel of their property. In Heydon 1, Edison had been granted an express easement over the property by plaintiffs’ predecessors in interest for purposes of providing and maintaining electricity and had apportioned its right to defendant, thereby allowing defendant to place and maintain cable television lines on the existing utility poles. That case proceeded to this Court, and, in Heydon v MediaOne of Southeast Michigan, Inc, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued December 22, 2005 (Docket No. 255186), a panel of this Court affirmed the trial court’s grant of summary disposition in defendant’s favor, holding that defendant had the right (as a partial assignee) to use Edison’s easement on plaintiffs’ land. Upon resolution of Heydon I, both parties moved for summary disposition in the instant matter, and the trial court granted defendant’s motion, dismissing plaintiffs’ claims.
This Court reviews de novo a trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition.
Zsigo v Hurley Medical Ctr,
Plaintiffs raise five arguments on appeal. First, plaintiffs contend that the
“An easement is the right to use the land of another for a specified purpose.”
Schadewald v Brule,
“An easement in gross is one ‘benefiting a particular person and not a particular piece of land.’ ”
Dep’t of Natural Resources v Carmody-Lahti Real Estate, Inc,
“ ‘[A]n easement may be created by express grant, by reservation or exception, or by covenant or agreement.’ ”
Rossow v Brentwood Farms Dev, Inc,
An easement by prescription results from the use of the property of another that is open, notorious, adverse,
and continuous for a period of 15 years.
Goodall v Whitefish Hunting Club,
Here, the parties agree that Edison holds an easement in gross, acquired by prescription over plaintiffs’ property. Michigan caselaw generally dictates that easements in gross, if of a commercial character, are alienable property interests and thus assignable. See, e.g.,
Johnston v Michigan Consolidated Gas Co,
Only a few states have addressed, in reported decisions, whether this particular type of easement is apportionable, and most focus their attention on whether the easement is exclusive or nonexclusive in reaching their conclusions. In
Zhang v Omnipoint Communications Enterprises, Inc,
“Courts have generally concluded [however] that an easement in gross is capable of division when the instrument of creation so indicates or when the existenceof an ‘exclusive’ easement gives rise to an inference that the servitude is apportionable.” In this context, “exclusive” means that the “easement holder has the sole right to engage in the type of use authorized by the servitude.” In other words, the grantor does not retain common rights with the easement holder to engage in the same activity for which the easement is granted. See Hoffman v. Capitol Cablevision Systems, Inc, 52 App. Div. 2d 313, 315, 383 N.Y.S.2d 674 (1976) (finding easement exclusive because grantor never had attempted to engage in distribution of electricity). This common versus exclusive rights distinction is predicated on the notion that “one who grants to another the right to use the grantor’s land in a particular manner for a specified purpose but who retains no interest in exercising a similar right himself, sustains no loss if, within the specifications expressed in the grant, the use is shared by the grantee with others.... We agree that the grant of an exclusive easement implicitly confers the authority to apportion those easement rights to third parties. (Internal citations omitted).
Closest to the facts of the present case is Jackson v City of Auburn,_So 2d_; 2006 Ala Civ App LEXIS 168 (Ala Civ App, 2006). In Jackson, the plaintiff acquired property in 1978 on which the Alabama Power Company (APCo) maintained a power pole and power lines. Over the years, plaintiff sent several letters to APCo requesting that the power lines and pole be removed. APCo made no effort to rectify the situation. Lightwave Technologies, Inc. (Lightwave), entered into a pole-sharing agreement with APCo and, sometime in late 2000 or early 2001, began installing fiber-optic cable to the existing power pole on the property. In 2003, the plaintiff sued APCo and Lightwave (and others), primarily for trespass. The trial court found that APCo had acquired a prescriptive easement in gross over the property and next considered “whether APCo has the right to apportion its prescriptive easement and whether its apportionment to Lightwave was within the scope of the prescriptive easement.” Id. at *18. The Jackson court agreed that “prescriptive, exclusive easements in gross, like APCo’s are apportion-able,” id. at *36, then turned its focus on the scope of APCo’s prescriptive easement, the use that established the prescriptive right, and whether APCo’s apportionment changed the character of the easement.
Also somewhat similar is
Hise v BARC Electric Cooperative,
254 Va 341;
Here, there is no evidence that plaintiffs could or did use the easement for the purpose of erecting and maintaining power lines. Edison having that sole privilege, its easement, like APCo’s in Jackson, is an exclusive, prescriptive easement in gross. See 5 Restatement Property, § 493, comment c.
Plaintiffs have provided no caselaw holding that a prescriptive easement in gross, commercial in nature, cannot be apportioned. 2 Restatement Property, 3d, Ser-vitudes, § 5.9, p 61 states that “[transferable benefits in gross may be divided unless contrary to the terms of the servitude, or unless the division unreasonably increases the burden on the servient estate.” An easement in gross is an alienable, and thus transferable, property right. See Johnston v Michigan Consol Gas Co, supra. Taking this into account, and finding guidance from our sister states on this issue, we hold that a commercial, exclusive easement in gross acquired by prescription can be apportioned unless contrary to the terms of the servitude, or unless the division unreasonably increases the burden on the servi-ent estate.
Plaintiffs next argue, naturally, that the easement is invalid because the apportioning of the prescriptive easement to defendant materially burdens and imposes a new burden on that easement. We disagree.
As previously indicated, one who holds a prescriptive easement is allowed “to do such acts as are necessary to make effective the enjoyment of the easement,” and the scope of the privilege is determined largely by “what is
reasonable under the circumstances.”
Mumrow, supra
at 699. The owner of an easement cannot materially increase the burden of the easement or impose a new and additional burden on the servient estate.
Delaney v Pond,
There are cases outside this jurisdiction, which plaintiffs cite, to support the position that placing cable wires in a utility easement imposes a new burden on the servient estate. In Jackson, supra, the court found that only those rights acquired by APCo could be apportioned, and that APCo acquired only the right to string electrical power lines over the property. The court thus concluded that APCo’s apportionment to Lightwave for the purpose of stringing cable television wires was beyond the scope of its easement.
The Missouri court reached a similar result in
Ogg v Mediacom, LLC,
the rights of the holder of an easement acquired by prescription are defined solely by the character and extent of the use made thereof during the prescriptive period. That is to say, when an easement is acquired by prescription, the rights of the holder are “fixed and determined by the use under which it is gained.... Under prescription an exclusive right of possession can not be established but only a qualified right for a particular purpose.” [Id. at 809 (internal citations omitted).]
The Ogg court determined that the right acquired by the electric company was only to operate and maintain electrical wires, and that apportioning its right to allow Mediacom to string cable wire on the poles impermis-sibly expanded the character or extent of the prior prescriptive use. Id. at 810.
Other states have reached the opposite conclusion. In
Centel Cable Television Co of Ohio, Inc v Cook,
58 Ohio St 3d 8;
Only one Michigan case has addressed this issue, and it resolved the matter as Ohio did. In
Mumaugh v Diamond Lake Area Cable TV Co,
While we are not bound by
Mumaugh,
see MCR 7.215(J)(1), we see no reason to reach a different conclusion. Plaintiffs assert that the new and additional burden on the servient estate would be the doubling of maintenance and repair use of the property. However, this appears to be speculation, as there is no indication of the extent of the maintenance and repair that would be necessary for the cable lines. There is also no evidence of the extent of
The above being true, the issue becomes whether the apportioned easement is contrary to the terms of the servitude. The easement at issue being prescriptive in nature, there are no express “terms” against which to measure the use. As stated in Mumrow, supra at 699, the scope of the privilege enjoyed by the owner of a prescriptive easement “is determined largely by what is reasonable under the circumstances.”
Edison clearly acquired a right to string and maintain electrical lines on utility poles located on plaintiffs’ property. There was no evidence presented to establish that the stringing of additional wires on the same poles by a cable company is unreasonable. As indicated in Centel Cable Television Co, supra, it is “apparent that companies broadcasting television signals through coaxial cable utilize electrical power or ‘electric energy’ ” Id. at 11. The apportionment of Edison’s easement allows for similar transmission and uses the original purpose of the easement; therefore, the apportionment is not contrary to the terms or prior use of the servitude.
Plaintiffs next contend that the CCPA prohibits cable companies from “piggy-backing” on private easements such as the one at issue. While both parties raised and addressed this issue in their summary disposition briefs, the trial court merely stated that the CCPA was constitutional and did not address the specific argument set forth here. Because the trial court did not rule on the issue and appellate review is limited to issues actually decided by the trial court, we need not necessarily address this issue on appeal.
Allen v Keating,
Plaintiffs also argue that interpreting and applying the CCPA to allow cable companies to “piggy-back” on private easements violates the taking clause of the United States Constitution. On this issue, the trial court simply opined that the CCPA was constitutional, without further explanation. However, in light of the fact that the only constitutional issue raised by the parties with respect to the CCPA concerned the taking clause, the trial court effectively ruled that the CCPA does not violate the taking clause.
This Court reviews questions of law involving statutory interpretation de novo.
Michigan Muni Liability & Prop Pool v Muskegon Co Bd of Co Rd Comm’rs,
“ ‘Taking’ is a term of art with respect to the constitutional right to just compensation and does not neces
sarily mean the actual and total conversion of the property. Whether a ‘taking’ occurs for which compensation is due depends on the facts and circumstances of each case.”
Hart v Detroit,
This issue can be resolved by looking to the CCPA itself. 47 USC 541(a)(2)(C) provides that in using easements the cable operator shall ensure “that the owner of the property be justly compensated by the cable operator for any damages caused by the installation, construction, operation, or removal of such facilities by the cable operator.” Because the act contains language addressing just compensation, it can be presumed that Congress anticipated arguments premised on a violation of the “taking clause” and sought to address the same within the act. Mumaugh, supra, recognized as much:
We further note that Congress included a provision for just compensation of the property owner for any damages caused by the cable company when installing, constructing, operating, or removing its facilities. 47 USC 541(a)(2)(C). We believe that this provision sufficiently addresses the problem of the Fifth Amendment prohibition against the taking of private property without just compensation raised by plaintiffs. [Id. at 605-606.]
We agree with Mumaugh and hold that the CCPA adequately addresses the concerns raised by plaintiffs regarding the taking of private property for public use without just compensation.
Plaintiffs also assert on appeal that the doctrines of laches, law of the case, stare decisis, and res judicata do not preclude their action because there was no unexcused or unexplained delay in bringing the matter, the Heydon I and Mumaugh cases are not binding precedent, and there was a material difference between the facts of the present matter and those in Heydon I. Generally, to preserve an issue for appellate review, it must be raised by a party and addressed by the trial court. Brown, supra at 599. Appellate review is limited to issues actually decided by the trial court. Allen, supra.
Here, the trial court did not address or actually decide if any of the doctrines cited by plaintiff are applicable. While, in certain circumstances, review may still be appropriate, we decline to address the arguments here.
Affirmed.
