233 N.W. 393 | Mich. | 1930
Plaintiff, claiming to own land in the city of Detroit platted as Roehm street, filed a bill of complaint against defendants asking that he be decreed to be the owner of the premises; that the city of Detroit be decreed to quitclaim its interest to him, and that defendants be enjoined from making or asserting any right, title, claim, or demand to the premises, and from interfering with his peaceable possession thereof. Defendants answered, admitting they claimed the lands as a public street, asserted that they had served notice on plaintiff to remove certain obstructions therein, that since the dedication of said lands for street purposes the street had always been open for public use, and the city was in the actual possession of the street, such street was open to public travel, and the defendant city had spent large sums of money in improving it.
Plaintiff alleges as a ground for relief the claims and pretenses of defendants constitute a cloud upon the title of plaintiff to the premises in dispute. Defendants deny plaintiff is entitled to the whole or any part of the relief prayed. The testimony was taken in open court, and the trial judge visited the premises. There were once buildings belonging to plaintiff on the disputed lands. Notice was served on him in 1926 by the city to remove the same. Such buildings burned. The department of public works of the city removed the debris from the premises, graded the street, and, the witnesses testify, the city is in possession of it now and was in such possession at the time of the filing of the bill herein. The trial court said:
"After a careful inspection of the property, I am confirmed in my opinion that the property is, and was at the time of the filing of the bill of complaint in this case, in possession of the defendant." *500
It held that where, as here, defendants were in possession of the premises, a bill to quiet title would not lie, and the only remedy was by ejectment.
Plaintiff's claim to the property in dispute is based upon a conveyance in 1907 from Mason. If Mason had title to convey when the deed was made to plaintiff, then plaintiff acquired title, March 25, 1907, when plaintiff's deeds are dated. April 17, 1907, Act No. 46, Pub. Acts 1907, became effective, prohibiting any one from acquiring rights by adverse possession in a street.
Did Mason have title to convey? He received a quitclaim deed of the premises in 1899. At that time one could not become abona fide purchaser under quitclaim deed. Walker v. Schultz,
The testimony supports the conclusion reached by the trial court that defendants were, at the time of the filing of the bill of complaint, in actual possession of the property in dispute.
It has never been held that one in actual and peaceable possession of real property could be lawfully disseized except by a judgment of his peers and the law of the land, under our Constitution, without the right of trial by jury.Blackwood v. Van Vleet,
The decree of the trial court is affirmed, with costs.
WIEST, C.J., and BUTZEL, CLARK, McDONALD, SHARPE, NORTH, and FEAD, JJ., concurred.