Court Opinion

ID: 3497884
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:05:23.311935+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:05:05.775062
License: Public Domain

The bill herein was filed to quiet title to certain land in the county of Macomb. The title asserted by plaintiff was based upon alleged adverse possession for 15 years immediately preceding commencement of suit. From an adverse decree plaintiff took an appeal.
A 10-acre parcel of land was subdivided and the plat thereof recorded. Several lots therein were sold to various persons and the record titles thereto are now in defendants. In 1907, the owner of the subdivision conveyed to plaintiff "all the unsold lots" therein. The subdivision was unimproved. Two deeds were given plaintiff; in the first deed lots, according to the plat, were described and none of the lots of defendants were included. In the second deed the premises were described as "all the unsold lots" and, therefore, did not in fact include any of the lots claimed by defendants. Plaintiff had no color of title to defendants' lots. Such, however, was not necessary if he claimed ownership and held by adverse possession for 15 years.
For several years following 1907, plaintiff rented the premises, inclusive of defendants' lots, to others for the raising of tillable crops. Then, about 1917, *Page 143 
the land was seeded, and for a period the hay raised thereon was sold by plaintiff and cut by others. Then the seeding ran out, weeds appeared and the premises were used for a ball ground. The tilling and cropping of the land from 1907 to about 1917 openly evidenced acts of possession, indicating claim of ownership sufficient to warn the owners of lots of hostile claim. The weakness of plaintiff's case is in the last few years of the period necessary to give him title. Owners of lots upon which hay grew, in common with adjoining premises, were not warned of any element of adverse possession by the mere fact of its harvesting by others. They might treat it as an annual trespass of benefit to the lots. Some of the defendants kept an eye on their lots during and after the year 1919, and saw nothing indicating adverse assertion of ownership by any one.
Upon due consideration of the evidence, we are constrained to hold that plaintiff failed to establish continuous, visible, hostile acts constituting a disseizin of defendants during the last 5 years of the 15-year period. The claimed possessory acts, during such period, were at most of a character disclosing a mere trespass, not indicative of claim of ownership, and, if noticed by defendants, could well have been looked upon with indifference. The land owned by plaintiff and defendants was all an unfenced common, unimproved, and, for five years before suit, carried but the usual characteristics of uncultivated land awaiting market in an undeveloped subdivision.
In the circuit the bill was taken as confessed by the defendant Carrie A. Anderson under jurisdiction obtained by publication of an order for her appearance, and the decree deprived her of title to a lot. *Page 144 
After decree Carrie A. Anderson appeared and petitioned the circuit court to be heard in accordance with sections 12656, 12657, 3 Comp. Laws 1915. The case being here on appeal, Carrie A. Anderson moved this court to direct the original record to be returned to the circuit and set up the need thereof in considering her petition in the circuit. Upon filing this opinion the original record goes back to the circuit.
The decree in the circuit is affirmed, with costs against plaintiff, but without prejudice to the granting of relief to Carrie A. Anderson in the circuit.
FEAD, C.J., and NORTH, FELLOWS, CLARK, McDONALD, POTTER, and SHARPE, JJ., concurred.