Plaintiff appeals as of right the judgment of the trial court in favor of defendants denying the relief requested in plaintiffs complaint.
Plaintiff leased two lots of an industrial complex to a corporation controlled by the defendants on November 12, 1968. Plaintiff subsequently became the owner of a small area of property at the southern end of the two lots, and this property also became a part of the defendants’ leasehold. In 1969, this new area was developed, a lawn established, and a ditch put in. This ditch carries water off other land owned by plaintiff and is the subject of the instant case. Testimony differed as to when it was first developed; plaintiff testified that the work done in 1969 was a modification of a ditch that had existed prior to the acquisition of the property to the south of the original two lots, although he had previously given answers to written interrogatories stating that the ditch was first put in simultaneously with the other improvements. Defendant Frank Eger testified that the ditch did not exist prior to the establishment of the leasehold, but that it was constructed after he commenced occupation.
A history of litigation between the parties commenced in 1972 when defendants’ corporation brought suit seeking specific performance of an
I.
Plaintiff claims the drainage ditch represents an easement by implied reservation. To establish an implied easement, three things must be shown: (1) that during the unity of title an apparently permanent and obvious servitude was imposed on one part of an estate in favor of another, (2) continuity, and (3) that the easement is reasonably necessary for the fair enjoyment of the property it benefits.
Harrison v Heald,
A. Necessity-
On the necessity element, the trial court held that plaintiff needed to establish that the easement was strictly necessary before it would be implied. We hold that this was error, and that plaintiff needed only to establish that the easement was reasonably necessary. We do note, however, that some confusion in this regard is justified, as Michigan law has been less than clear on the point and as easements by implication may arise under different circumstances.
An implied easement may arise in essentially two ways.
1
First, it can be implied from necessity. In this situation, an estate has been severed, leaving the dominant estate without a means of access. Before an easement will be implied in this situation, the party who would assert the easement must establish that it is strictly necessary for the enjoyment of the property. Mere convenience, or even reasonable necessity, will not be sufficient if there are alternative routes, even if these alternatives prove more difficult or more expensive. All implied easements are based on the presumed intent of the parties, but this sort is additionally supported by the public policy favoring the productive and beneficial enjoyment of property. Easements implied from necessity have been recognized
The easement with which we are involved in the instant case is of a different type, what Dean Cribbet refers to as easements implied from quasi-easements. 2 It requires that at the severance of an estate an obvious and apparently permanent servitude already exists over one part of the estate and in favor of the other. It also requires a showing of necessity, but whether that necessity needs to be "strict”, or only "reasonable”, traditionally has depended on whether the easement claimed was an implied grant, or an implied reservation. Aigler, Comment: Real Property — Easements by Implication — Creation of Easements by Implied Reservations in Michigan, 59 Mich L Rev 432 (1961).
It appears to be the position of a majority of jurisdictions that an implied grant of an easement requires only a showing of reasonable necessity, while an implied reservation of an easement in the grantor requires a showing of strict necessity. The difference seems based on the idea that a grantor will not be allowed to derogate from the grant by alleging to retain interests which the deed purports to convey.
3
Because the grantor is not al
Several Michigan cases have adopted this position, and held that when an implied reservation is involved, as in the instant case, a showing of strict necessity is required.
Brown v Fuller,
Applying a test of reasonable necessity to the facts of the instant case, we hold plaintiff sufficiently established this element. The trial court found that the several alternative drainage plans open to the plaintiff would require considerable work. One of the expert witnesses who testified placed the cost of a new drainage system at between $30,000 and $35,000. Under the facts and circumstances of this case, the effort and expense were great enough for implication of the easement to be reasonably necessary.
In order to establish his easement, plaintiff also needs to show that it was apparent at the date of severance. The testimony conflicted as to whether the drain existed prior to November 12, 1968, the date of the lease, but the trial court found that it did not, that it instead came into existence in 1969. The lease contained an option to purchase the property, and on June 22, 1973, the defendants purchased the property they had been leasing. Since the trial court held that the necessity element had not been established, it felt that it was unnecessary to decide the question of when severance took place, but remarked that if called upon to do so, the appropriate date of severance would have been the date of the lease. Since we reach a different result on the necessity element, we must decide the date of severance. If, as the trial court suggested, that date is the date of the lease, then plaintiff has failed to establish the element of apparentness since the drain was found to have first come into existence after the date of the lease. If, on the other hand, the plaintiff is right in asserting that severance did not take place until 1973 when defendants took title to the land, then the easement was apparent and plaintiff will have shown all the elements necessary to the establishment of an implied easement.
We have found no Michigan cases directly on point, but our analysis of the purpose of the severance requirement leads us to conclude that the appropriate date of severance is the date of the lease.
Simply put, a severance is required because it is legally impossible to have an ''easement” in your own land. If a person owns two adjacent tracts of land and imposes a servitude on one tract for the
II.
Plaintiff also contends that the defendants are bound to accept water drainage from his lands under a natural flow theory. The trial court disagreed, and plaintiff now argues that the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law in this regard are not supported by the record.
It is clear that the owner of the lower or servient estate must accept surface water from the upper or dominant estate in its natural flow, and equally clear that the owner of the dominant estate may not require the owner of the servient estate to accept a greater runoff by increasing or concentrating the flow.
Bennett v Eaton County,
III.
Plaintiff’s final argument that he has an easement because the lease and deed each contained general language conveying the property subject to easements reserved to the grantor is without merit. The deed listed several specifically defined easements that were reserved to the plaintiff, but
Affirmed.
Notes
See generally, 2 Thompson on Real Property, §§ 351-355, 362-364, pp 308-371, 410-446, Cribbet, Principles of the Law of Property, pp 335-340.
See note 1, supra.
An easement by implied grant is not, however, without a similar problem in that it amounts to a conveyance of an interest in land without the writing required by the statute of frauds. Courts have not generally concerned themselves with this point, perhaps viewing the
Aigler, Comment: Real Property — Easements by Implication— Creation of Easements by Implied Reservations in Michigan, 59 Mich L Rev 432 (1961).
The Court’s response to this criticism in
Ketchel v Ketchel,
