383 Mich. 144 | Mich. | 1970
This is a condemnation proceeding under PA 1925, No 352, as amended (CL 1948, § 213-.171 et seq. [Stat Ann 1958 Rev and Cum Supp § 8-.171 et seq.]). On April 7,1965, the Michigan State highway commission made its determination of necessity for the taking of a triangular piece of land containing 2.7 acres. The taking was total. The subject property is located in Ingham county at the southeast corner of Kipp Road, which runs east and west, and US 127, running north and south at this
In 1952, before construction of trunk line US 127 at this point, the land on which it later was laid out and now exists was owned by Elmer D. Franklin and Katie I. Franklin, husband and wife. They conveyed, by warranty deed dated May 9, 1952, a strip 200 feet in width to the state highway commission of the State of Michigan, as right of way for the proposed trunk line US 127. This deed was duly and promptly recorded. The typewritten portion of the deed in question, in describing the property conveyed, made no mention of right of access thereto or therefrom to the lands retained by the Franklins which included the 2.7 acres involved in the instant proceedings. Immediately following the typewritten description, however, there was stamped, apparently by rubber stamp, these words:
“First party acknowledges notice that said lands may be used for limited access highway purposes.”
The above-stamped portion of the deed was especially initialed by the husband and wife Franklins, who were the grantors. At that time CL 1948, § 252-.51 (Stat Ann 1958 Rev § 9.1094[1]), of which the grantors must be deemed to have had knowledge, provided in part:
“For the purposes of this act, limited access highways are defined as highways specially designed for through traffic, and over, from or to which owners
In May of 1953 the highway commissioner and Elmer D. Franklin, unmarried and as survivor of Elmer D. Franklin and Katie I. Franklin, husband and wife, exchanged deeds of even date covering the land conveyed to the former by the latter in the May 9, 1952, deed. These two 1953 deeds expressly stated that they were given and exchanged to accomplish correction of an error in the description of the May 9, 1952, deed but did not state that the stamped portion thereof was such error or in error at all.
Soon after the conveyance from the Franklins to the highway commission the latter erected a fence separating the conveyed strip from the remaining Franklin farm and thus from the 2.7-acre piece which was part of the farm.
Defendants-appellants became the last successors in chain of title from the Franklins of the latter’s farm, including the 2.7-acre piece involved in the matter.
At long last we come to the nub of the controversy herein. As so often the case in litigation, it is money. In considering the amount of the award to be made to defendants, the landowners, what are the interests involved that the commissioners were to take into consideration in determining the value of the 2.7 acres of land? If its use is limited to agricultural purposes, its value would be one thing, but perhaps considerably more if useable for such things as a gasoline station, motel, restaurant or other type of business. For these last mentioned purposes, access to and from US 127 would be highly important. Defendants claim that such right of access attached to the 2.7-acre piece, belonged to them, and should
Since the date of the deed of May 9, 1952, from the Franklins to the highway commission, conveying a strip of land for highway purposes, did the owners of the remaining abutting 2.7-acre piece of land have and retain a right of access attaching thereto for ingress and egress therefrom to US 127? That is the controlling question in this cause. The circuit judge instructed the commissioners that the answer is no. A majority of the members of the Court of Appeals, passing on the question in an appeal there, held to affirm the circuit court. The cause is now here on leave to appeal granted defendants by this Court.
In support of their position defendants cite, for the proposition that it has long been recognized that an owner whose property abuts a highway has an easement of access to the land itself from the highway, the following: Thom v. State Highway Commissioner (1965), 376 Mich 608; Horton v. Williams (1894), 99 Mich 423; Goodfellow Tire Co. v. Commissioner of Parks and Boulevards of the City of Detroit (1910), 163 Mich 249. That such easement is a property right defendants say is supported by Pearsall v. Board of Supervisors of Eaton County (1889), 74 Mich 558; Tomazewski v. Palmer Bee Co. (1923), 223 Mich 565; McMoran v. State of Washington (1959), 55 Wash 2d 37 (345 P2d 598).
Defendants contend that the deeds from Franklins to the highway commission conveyed no right to limit access from the 200-foot strip to the remaining property, and that these deeds are controlling as to
Defendants quote from Zemon v. Netzorg (1929), 247 Mich 563, 565 the following:
“Ordinarily, no estate passes by deed which is not embraced plainly within the words of grant.”
and from Ryan v. Wilson (1861), 9 Mich 262, as follows:
“In the present case, the operative words of the grant are confined to one lot, and the court is asked to extend them to both lots, on the ground that the grantor intended to convey both. To give effect to the intention of the grantor in such a case, the intent should so clearly appear on the face of the deed as not to leave a reasonable doubt in regard to it, and no principle of law should be violated in carrying it out.”
Defendants say that the 1952-1953 deeds from Franklin to the highway commission contain no words of grant which embrace the disputed access rights; that, accordingly, they did not pass to the highway commission and, hence, belong to defendants as ultimate successors in title to the Franklins. So they claim right to compensation for the 1965 taking thereof.
That right of access ordinarily attaches to property abutting a public highway and that this constitutes a property right is not disputed by plaintiff and must be accepted as long having been the law in Michigan.
In this case, however, the printed portion of the May 2, 1952, warranty deed from the Franklins to the highway commission, contains the words “grant, bargain and sell” followed immediately by the typewritten description of the property conveyed and then stamped language that the property conveyed
Costs to plaintiff.