Court Opinion

ID: 4387975
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-04-17 09:05:31.484532+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:23:10.659079
License: Public Domain

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
                 revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

                           STATE OF MICHIGAN

                            COURT OF APPEALS

WALTER WENDLING, LINDA WENDLING,                                     UNPUBLISHED
BRIAN WENDLING, ROBIN WENDLING,                                      April 16, 2019
BRAD WENDLING, LINDA ANN WENDLING
TRUST, KEITH KRENTZ, and JUSTINE
KRENTZ,

               Plaintiffs/Counterdefendants-
               Appellees,

v                                                                    No. 342382
                                                                     Alcona Circuit Court
WILDCAT CLUB,                                                        LC No. 15-002555-CH

               Defendant/Counterplaintiff-
               Appellant.

Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and CAVANAGH and CAMERON, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

        Defendant, the Wildcat Club, 1 appeals as of right the trial court’s order, entered following
a bench trial, quieting title to a disputed strip of land in plaintiffs’ favor. The Club claims that
the trial court’s finding that it acquiesced to the location of the disputed boundary line was
against the great weight of the evidence. We affirm.

                                             I. FACTS

        Plaintiffs own adjoining parcels of land that comprise a portion of the northern border of
the Club’s 960-acre parcel in Alcona County. From east to west, plaintiffs’ four properties
consist of the east and west Krentz parcels, owned by Keith and Justine Krentz, the Wendling

1
  The Wildcat Club is a large parcel of land that club members use for hunting and other
activities.

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parcel, owned by Walter,2 Linda, Brian, Robin, and Brad Wendling, and the Linda Ann
Wendling Trust parcel. A wire runs east and west between the parcels and it varies from the true
property line by approximately 38 to 94 feet to the south of the boundary line. The disputed strip
of land is the approximately seven-acre area between the wire and the true property line,
bordering plaintiffs’ and defendant’s properties. Plaintiffs brought an action to quiet title to the
disputed strip of property on the theories of adverse possession and acquiescence. Defendant
brought a counterclaim to quiet title and for trespass, seeking damages and injunctive relief.

         At the bench trial, plaintiffs Keith Krentz and Linda, Brian, and Brad Wendling testified
concerning the existence of the wire at the southern edge of their respective properties and their
understanding that it represented the property line. Hans Langschwager, as an agent of the Club,
testified that the wire was a “guide” to warn club members and visitors that they were nearing
the boundaries of the Club. He established that there are survey markers at the corner of each of
plaintiffs’ parcels, which are north of the wire line. According to both Langschwager and Davy
Beaudoin, a Club member, they knew the wire was not the true property line and had used the
disputed area for activities including hunting small game and four wheeling. Langschwager and
Beaudoin also testified that there were similar wires on the eastern, western, and southern
borders of the Club’s property and that they were close to the surveyed property line.

        Brian, Brad, and Linda Wendling testified that a club member named Gene Montley
restrung a new wire in the same place as the old wire in the 1997. According to Beaudoin, who
assisted Montley in stringing the new wire, Montley showed him how many feet the wire was
from where the true property line should have been. Langschwager testified that although
Montley was a member of the Club, the Club did not give him authority to string the new wire.

       The Club presented evidence of two surveys conducted in the area. In 1978, Duane
MacNeill surveyed both of the Krentz parcels and the Wendling parcel. This survey was
recorded and there are markers at the corners of the parcels. In 1997, Wade-Trim conducted a
survey of the area, but it was not recorded. Both surveys placed the property line in
approximately the same location and the parties do not dispute that location. The Wade-Trim
survey also noted the location of the wire fence.

         Additionally, the parties testified regarding plaintiffs’ activities in the disputed area. The
Wendlings’ properties were clearcut in the area north of the wire on two occasions. The
Wendling Trust property was clearcut to the wire when the Wendlings purchased it in 1990.
Langschwager testified that he discovered this between 1991 and 1993 and the Club decided not
to pursue legal remedies. The Wendling parcel was clearcut in 2006 or 2007 “right up to the
wire.” Langschwager testified that he talked to Walter Wendling about this and stated: “For
God’s sake, Walt. Get a survey. So we know. This dispute’s going to bubble into something
someday.” Plaintiffs also testified that the Wendlings put trails around the perimeter of both of
their parcels. On the southern side of each parcel, the trail was in the disputed area and was
within two to three feet of the wire in some areas. When Langschwager found out about the
trails he called the Wendlings and told “them what [he] thought.”

2
    Walter Wendling died during the course of the proceedings.

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         Finally, there were at least two disputes between the parties before this litigation
commenced. Beginning in November 1997, the Club, plaintiffs, and their predecessors
exchanged a number of letters regarding the placement of a proposed gas well and an access road
in the disputed area. Both parties asserted ownership of the land, and ultimately no wells were
placed in the area. In 2013, Krentz was hunting in the area when Langschwager killed a deer
that was north of the wire. Langschwager gave the deer to Krentz and according to Krentz, he
said, “I have no problem with you keeping the deer. I shot it on your land.” Langschwager
testified that Krentz was on the Club’s property, but Langschwager “wasn’t willing to perjure
[himself] and cross over onto his property,” so he let him keep the deer. Langschwager later sent
a letter to Krentz regarding this altercation and attached the 1997 Wade-Trim survey to the letter.

       Following the bench trial, the trial court found that plaintiffs failed to satisfy the elements
of adverse possession, but they had demonstrated that defendant acquiesced to the disputed
boundary line for the statutory period. The trial court based its finding on the length of time that
the wire had existed and the proximity of similar wires to the property line on the three other
boundaries of the Club’s property. The trial court found that Langschwager’s testimony that the
wire was only intended as a guide was not credible. Additionally, the trial court considered the
Club’s failure to take action against plaintiffs’ use of the disputed land after a survey demarcated
the boundary line in 1997. Therefore, the trial court quieted title in favor of plaintiffs.
Defendant appeals this ruling.

                                  II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

        “We review de novo actions to quiet title, as well as a trial court’s conclusions of law
following a bench trial. We review for clear error a trial court’s findings of fact during a bench
trial.” Waisanen v Superior Twp, 305 Mich App 719, 723; 854 NW2d 213 (2014) (citations
omitted). “A finding is clearly erroneous when, although there is evidence to support it, the
reviewing court on the entire record is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake
has been committed.” Walters v Snyder, 239 Mich App 453, 456; 608 NW2d 97 (2000) (Walters
II).

        “Determining whether a verdict is against the great weight of the evidence requires
review of the whole body of proofs. . . . [I]f there is conflicting evidence, the question of
credibility ordinarily should be left for the fact-finder.” Dawe v Bar-Levav & Assoc (On
Remand), 289 Mich App 380, 401; 808 NW2d 240 (2010).

                                          III. ANALYSIS

       Defendant argues that the trial court’s finding that it acquiesced to the location of the
disputed boundary line since 1997 was against the great weight of the evidence. We disagree.

       This Court has identified three theories of acquiescence to a disputed property line: “(1)
acquiescence for the statutory period, (2) acquiescence following a dispute and agreement, and
(3) acquiescence arising from intention to deed to a marked boundary.” Walters II, 239 Mich
App at 457. In this case, plaintiffs brought an action to quiet title to the disputed strip of
property under the theory of acquiescence to the boundary line for the statutory period. The
Revised Judicature Act of 1961 (RJA), MCL 600.101 et seq., provides that the limitations period

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for bringing an action to quiet title is 15 years. MCL 600.5801(4). Accordingly, an action to
quiet title under the theory of acquiescence “requires merely a showing that the parties
acquiesced in the line and treated the line as the boundary for” 15 years. Walters II, 239 Mich at
456 (quotation marks and citation omitted). Therefore, “where adjoining property owners
acquiesce to a boundary line for a period of at least fifteen years, that line becomes the actual
boundary line.” West Mich Dock & Market Corp v Lakeland Investments, 210 Mich App 505,
511; 534 NW2d 212 (1995). Plaintiffs alleged that defendant treated the fence line as the
boundary line for more than 15 years and failed to bring an action to prevent plaintiffs’ use of the
disputed area during that time. Thereby, plaintiffs argue, they acquired title to the disputed strip
of land by defendant’s acquiescence.

       The doctrine of acquiescence frequently applies “where adjoining property owners
mistakenly treat a boundary line, typically a fence, as the property line.” Walters II, 239 Mich
App at 458 (quotation marks, alterations, and citation omitted). The party who asserts that the
disputed boundary should become the true property line bears the burden of proving by a
preponderance of the evidence that the opposing party acquiesced to the disputed boundary.
Walters v Snyder, 225 Mich App 219, 223; 570 NW2d 301 (1997) (Walters I). While there is
not an explicit set of elements necessary to establish acquiescence, the key inquiry is “whether
the evidence presented establishes that the parties treated a particular boundary line as the
property line.” Walters II, 239 Mich App at 457, 458.

         In Killips v Mannisto, 244 Mich App 256, 258; 624 NW2d 224 (2001), this Court
considered a dispute over a portion of land that was used as the plaintiffs’ driveway but was
titled in the defendant’s name. The defendant did nothing to stop the plaintiffs from using the
land, “despite her belief that the original easement had terminated,” and although the defendant
used survey stakes to mark the actual boundary, the “stakes did not . . . interfere with [the]
plaintiffs’ use” of the driveway and the plaintiffs undertook maintenance of the disputed area.
Id. at 260, 261. Because the “defendant did nothing to stop [the] plaintiffs . . . from using the
driveway,” this Court concluded that the trial court did not err when it found that the plaintiffs
had obtained the property by acquiescence. Id.

         In this case, the Club similarly took no action to prevent plaintiffs from using the
disputed strip of land. Langschwager testified that he first knew of the wire “50 years ago” and
Keith Krentz stated that the wire was in place “in the late ‘80’s.” The record demonstrates that
since 1990, plaintiffs maintained the area between the survey line and the wire on each of their
respective parcels and hung the wire back up when it came down. The Club established that
there are survey stakes marking the property line along the northern edge of its parcel, which are
north of the wire. However, it is clear that these markers did not interfere with plaintiffs’ use of
the land. In the early 1990s, plaintiffs clearcut their parcels up to the wire, and they clearcut the
area again in 2006 or 2007. The Wendlings put trails in the disputed area on both of their parcels
in 2007, and Brian Wendling testified that there was a trail on the southern side of the wire that
had existed for 25 years. Langschwager testified that he did not do anything about these
instances other than calling “them up and [telling] them what [he] thought . . . .” He further
testified that the Club decided not to pursue any legal remedies after he discovered that plaintiffs
had clearcut up to the wire. In 1997, the survey by Wade-Trim established the true boundary
line, and in the same year, a Club member strung a new wire in the same place as the old one.

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As the trial court found, the Club “made an affirmative decision to do nothing, [and continued] to
allow the [p]laintiffs to occupy and use the property north of the fence line.”

       In Walters I and II, this Court considered the defendant’s claim that the plaintiff had
acquiesced to an apparent boundary marked “by a line of bushes and small trees” between the
properties that did not correspond to the platted boundary line. Walters I, 225 Mich App at 220-
221. The defendant demonstrated that the parties “treated the bush line as the approximate
property line,” because the defendant and his predecessors consistently mowed the grass up to,
and stacked firewood next to, the bushes, even though the bushes were beyond the true property
line. Walters II, 239 Mich App at 458 (quotation marks omitted). Additionally, “improvements
of some cost were made on the disputed property . . . .” Id. at 459. The plaintiff “testified that
he believed the bush line approximated the property line” and he was “surprise[d] when made
aware that the true boundary line was actually twelve feet south of the bush line . . . .” Id. at
459-460.

        This case differs from Walters I and II because the Club and at least some of its members
were aware that the wire was not the surveyed boundary line. As Langschwager testified, he
understood the wire to serve as a “guide” to warn members that they were close to the edge of
the property. However, the trial court found testimony that Montley strung a new wire in 1997
in the same place as the old wire “for the purpose of only establishing a guide wire [was] not
credible, especially in light of the fact that all other wires surrounding the Wildcat Club on the
east, west, and south are on the actual boundary.” Walters II emphasizes that the key inquiry is
whether the parties treated the wire as the boundary line. Walters II, 239 Mich App at 458. As
in Walters II, id. at 459, plaintiffs treated the disputed area as their own since 1990, by making
improvements including clearcutting and building trails in the area. While the Club and its
members also used the disputed strip of land for hunting small game and four wheeling, they
treated the area as belonging to the plaintiffs when, sometime between 1991 and 1993, the Club
declined to take any legal action to eject plaintiffs after discovering plaintiffs’ activities on the
land.

        In sum, leaving questions of credibility to the trial court as fact-finder, plaintiffs
demonstrated that they and the Club treated the wire as the property line. Plaintiffs established
the 15-year limitations period because they demonstrated that they clearcut the area in 1990,
defendant declined to pursue legal action when it discovered the clearcutting between 1991 and
1993, and defendant strung a new wire in the same place as the old wire in 1997. Therefore, the
trial court did not err when it found by a preponderance of the evidence that the Club had
acquiesced to the wire being the boundary line since 1997.

       Affirmed.

                                                              /s/ Brock A. Swartzle
                                                              /s/ Mark J. Cavanagh
                                                              /s/ Thomas C. Cameron

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