Rodney Kasubowski v. Ronald Misiak ( 2018 )


Menu:
  •                             STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    RODNEY KASUBOWSKI,                                                 UNPUBLISHED
    February 27, 2018
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v                                                                  No. 336274
    Presque Isle Circuit Court
    RONALD MISIAK, EVA B. PICHAN, THOMAS                               LC No. 15-003114-CH
    DEINEK, and JANE P. GARRETT,
    Defendants-Appellees,
    and
    JOAN MISIAK,
    Defendant.
    Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and FORT HOOD and O’BRIEN, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    This appeal concerns an easement two-track road running north from the northern
    terminus of Bolton Road to the southeast corner of plaintiff Rodney Kasubowski’s property and
    the southwest corner of property owned by defendants Thomas Deinek and Jane Garrett,1 and
    over property owned by Eva Pichan and Ronald Misiak. It is undisputed that Deinek has an
    express easement to use the two-track, which appears to have existed long before any witness in
    this matter was even born. It is also undisputed that the Deinek and Kasubowski properties are
    landlocked. Plaintiff appeals by right the trial court’s order of judgment following a bench trial
    and prior grant of partial summary disposition holding, respectively, that plaintiff had not
    established an easement by prescription to use the two-track and did not have an easement by
    necessity over the two-track. We affirm.
    Initially, however, we address an incidental procedural and related evidentiary issue.
    Defendant Eva Pichan did not personally attend the trial, and defendants’ counsel provided a
    1
    Deinek and Garrett are married; for convenience, however, strictly for convenience, we will
    refer only to Deinek.
    -1-
    note from her cardiologist, dated nine months previously, to the general effect that her physical
    presence was medically contraindicated. Eva’s youngest son, Lee Pichan, testified that he had a
    durable power of attorney for Eva, and that he had discussed the lawsuit with her that morning,
    and “her wishes with regard to this case” were “the same as before.” Plaintiff argues that the
    trial court should have held Eva in default and that the trial court improperly admitted hearsay
    statements from Eva through Lee. We disagree.
    We review for an abuse of discretion a trial court’s decision whether to default a party.
    Sturak v Ozomaro, 
    238 Mich App 549
    , 569 n 14; 606 NW2d 411 (1999), abrogated on other
    grounds as stated in Macomb Co Dep’t of Social Services v Westerman, 
    250 Mich App 372
    , 378;
    645 NW2d 710 (2002). We review preliminary questions of law de novo. ISB Sales Co v
    Dave’s Cakes, 
    258 Mich App 520
    , 526-527; 672 NW2d 181 (2003). “A trial court necessarily
    abuses its discretion when it makes an error of law.” Ronnisch Constr Group, Inc v Lofts on the
    Nine, LLC, 
    499 Mich 544
    , 552; 886 NW2d 113 (2016). The trial court’s decision whether to
    admit evidence is reviewed for an abuse of discretion, but preliminary legal determinations of
    admissibility are again reviewed de novo; it is necessarily an abuse of discretion to admit legally
    inadmissible evidence. People v Gursky, 
    486 Mich 596
    , 606; 786 NW2d 579 (2010).
    Regarding plaintiff’s contention that Eva should have been held in default, the only
    authority plaintiff cites, here or in the trial court, is MCR 2.603(B)(1)(d), which states, “If the
    default is entered for failure to appear for a scheduled trial, notice under this subrule is not
    required.” Plaintiff additionally points out that the trial court sent notices to parties stating that
    failure to appear may result in dismissal or default. However, both citations must be considered
    in context of the entirety of the court rule, which clearly explains that the grounds for a default
    are a failure “to plead or otherwise defend as provided by these rules.” MCR 2.603(A)(1).
    Consequently, “a party must not be defaulted if the party pleads or, as an alternative to filing a
    responsive pleading, otherwise defends the action.” Huntington Nat’l Bank v Ristich, 
    292 Mich App 376
    , 388; 808 NW2d 511 (2011). Furthermore, unless a court rule expressly states
    otherwise, an “appearance by an attorney for a party is deemed an appearance by the party.”
    MCR 2.117(B)(1). Notwithstanding plaintiff’s doubt as to Eva Pichan’s mental state, she was
    represented by counsel who appeared and defended the action.
    We note that plaintiff’s argument might have held some weight had Eva been subpoenaed
    to appear as a witness. In that case, her failure to appear without any prior notice,
    notwithstanding a medical infirmity that had been well-known for months previously, would
    have given plaintiff a good argument that he was entitled to some kind of sanction. However, as
    the above authority shows, it would still not be a sufficient basis for the extreme sanction of a
    default. In any event, nothing in the record suggests that plaintiff ever did subpoena Eva or seek
    to depose her, even though she was listed on plaintiff’s witness lists. Plaintiff’s protests of
    unawareness that any authority permits a party to not show up to trial in person is simply
    backwards: while it might as a practical matter be a bad idea, the court rules unambiguously
    permit a party’s attorney to appear in lieu of the party’s physical presence, absent a specific rule
    stating otherwise or, as noted, something in the nature of a subpoena.
    We have reviewed Lee’s testimony, and we are unable to discern any hearsay admitted
    over objection. His testimony concerning his mother largely consisted of his own personal
    observations and knowledge about her medical conditions and history. He was not permitted to
    -2-
    testify concerning his mother’s position and wishes in the matter because either the trial court
    sustained an objection to hearsay or defense counsel did not pursue the matter; all he stated was
    that “her wishes [] with regard to this case,” whatever they were, had not changed on the
    morning of the trial. Otherwise, he testified to his own personal observations of the two-track
    and substantive matters, to which no hearsay objections were made. We find no error in the trial
    court’s refusal to hold Eva Pichan in default or refusal to disallow Lee Pichan’s testimony.
    Plaintiff testified that he inherited his 40-acre parcel of property from his grandparents,
    Leo and Elizabeth Modrzynski, by being made a co-owner with them in 1984, when he was 19
    years old. At that time, Leo owned a contiguous parcel of property that included plaintiff’s
    parcel at the eastern end, but that also extended west all the way to a north-south public road
    called Miller Road. Prior to Leo’s acquisition of plaintiff’s parcel, it was owned by a
    predecessor in interest to Misiak, at roughly the same time Pichan’s predecessor owned her
    property and the Deinek’s property. Thus, the corner at the end of the easement actually bridged
    only two owners, diagonally. Misiak, whose memory of the easement dated back the furthest of
    any witness to the 1950’s, testified that there had been a “dilapidated” wooden gate to plaintiff’s
    parcel at that time, and he admitted that it was it was “a possibility” that if one were to clear out
    all the debris on the easement, one “would . . . find a roadbed leading into the Kasubowski
    property.” Nevertheless, in very broad strokes, although plaintiff’s witnesses testified that they
    made use of the easement to reach plaintiff’s parcel, there was unanimity that none of the various
    parties had ever encountered or observed each other on the easement. Additionally, plaintiff
    testified that most of the time, he and his guests accessed his property by going over what used to
    be the rest of Leo’s property, which was now owned by plaintiff’s mother, Betty Schellie,
    although that route was a difficult one.
    “We review the trial court’s findings of fact in a bench trial for clear error and conduct a
    review de novo of the court’s conclusions of law.” Chapdelaine v Sochocki, 
    247 Mich App 167
    ,
    169; 635 NW2d 339 (2001). “The extent of a party’s rights under an easement is a question of
    fact, and a trial court’s determination of those facts is reviewed for clear error,” but its ultimate
    “dispositional ruling on equitable matters,” such as whether equitable relief is proper under the
    facts as found, is reviewed de novo. Blackhawk Development Corp v Village of Dexter, 
    473 Mich 33
    , 40; 700 NW2d 364 (2005); McDonald v Farm Bureau Ins Co, 
    480 Mich 191
    , 197; 747
    NW2d 811 (2008).
    To obtain an easement by prescription, the claimant must show “use of another’s property
    that is open, notorious, adverse, and continuous for a period of fifteen years.” Mulcahy v
    Verhines, 
    276 Mich App 693
    , 699; 742 NW2d 393 (2007) (quotation omitted). Thus, an
    easement by prescription is, essentially, an easement obtained by the usage equivalent of adverse
    possession, with similar elements other than the requirement of exclusivity.2 Matthews v Nat
    2
    Such an easement can also arise if parties attempted to create an express easement and acted
    consistent therewith but did not comply with all of the requisite formalities. Mulcahy, 276 Mich
    App at 699-700. No such situation is presented here.
    -3-
    Resources Dep’t, 
    288 Mich App 23
    , 37; 792 NW2d 40 (2010). Each of the words used to
    describe an element is something of a term of art.
    Adversity, or hostility, requires no ill will or declarations of intent, but rather only the
    absence of permission or the infringement upon the property rights of another. Plymouth Canton
    Community Crier, Inc v Prose, 
    242 Mich App 676
    , 681; 619 NW2d 725 (2000). “Use of
    another’s property qualifies as adverse when made under a claim of right when no right exists.”
    
    Id.
     Generally, using the property of another with permission precludes a finding of adversity.
    Banach v Lawera, 
    330 Mich 436
    , 440-441; 47 NW2d 679 (1951). To be “continuous,” the use
    made of the property need not be literally continuous, but rather it must be used as frequently
    within the requisite period of time as needed and appropriate for “the nature and character of the
    right claimed.” von Meding v Strahl, 
    319 Mich 598
    , 613-614; 30 NW2d 363 (1948) (quotation
    omitted). Thus, it would be more accurate to describe the requisite use as consistent. Openness
    and notoriousness have been described as requiring “actual notice” on the part of the true
    property holder, but such notice is not the same as actual knowledge; rather, the claimant must
    use the property in such a way that the hostile nature of the adverse use would be readily
    apparent. Menter v First Baptist Church of Eaton Rapids, 
    159 Mich 21
    , 25; 
    123 NW 585
     (1909).
    In other words, the use must be discoverable by the true owner, not necessarily discovered, and
    not necessarily apparent to “passing stranger[s].” Whitaker v Erie Shooting Club, 
    102 Mich 454
    ,
    459; 
    60 NW 983
     (1894); Burns v Foster, 
    348 Mich 8
    , 15; 81 NW2d 386 (1957).
    We find defendant’s argument that Leo must surely have had permission to use the
    easement, despite absolutely no evidence thereof, to constitute a certain amount of boldness in
    light of their accusation that plaintiff is speculating. The uncontested evidence, which the trial
    court does not appear to have deemed incredible,3 nor does it appear to be so our review of the
    testimony, is that Leo Modrzynski believed he had a right to use the two-track that did not
    depend on the permission of anyone. Defendants argue that the record does not suggest why Leo
    believed he was entitled to use the easement, but what evidence there is, his use of terms like
    “right of way” and “section line road,” all indicate entitlement rather than grace. Defendants’
    argument that they lacked actual knowledge of plaintiff’s or Leo’s use of the easement does not
    establish that there was a lack of “actual notice.”
    Furthermore, the trial court made one clear factual error. It expressed the belief that Leo
    Modrzynski had quitclaimed the parcel at issue to plaintiff in 1984, thereby cutting off any
    possibility of continuing adverse use due to his transfer of interest. However, the testimony was
    clear that Leo made plaintiff a co-owner of the parcel, and in fact the 1984 deed in question
    reflects this. Leo’s interest in the property did not terminate until his death in 1990. The trial
    court’s factual finding that Leo transferred title in 1984 is simply wrong.
    Finally, we observe that Misiak, the only witness with any degree of clear recollection
    dating back to the 1950’s, and as a defendant who had every motive to testify otherwise,
    3
    Obviously, if the trial court had suggested that it was dubious of any witness’s credibility, this
    Court would be obligated to defer to the trial court. McGonegal v McGonegal, 
    46 Mich 66
    , 67; 
    8 NW 724
     (1881).
    -4-
    admitted, consistent with plaintiff’s testimony, that there had been a dilapidated and poorly
    constructed gate at the corner from the two-track to the Kasubowski property for as long as he
    could remember. He further tacitly admitted that he could not explain why a gate would be there
    other than for ingress and egress, and that it was at least “possible” that there was an old roadbed
    under the two-track. Interestingly, although not dispositively, public plat maps seem to show
    Bolton Road extending all the way to that corner in 1903 and 1930. The other witnesses who
    described the location all agreed that there was something there, even if only unidentifiable
    remains. A long line of case law indicates that the use of an alleged easement for a period of
    fifty or more years generates a presumption of adversity, although our Supreme Court clarified
    more recently that the presumption does not change the burden of proof. Widmayer v Leonard,
    
    422 Mich 280
    , 289-290; 373 NW2d 538 (1985).
    The clear error standard of review is deferential, but not infinitely so. To the extent the
    trial court found that Leo Modrzynski transferred his interest in the Kasubowski parcel prior to
    his death in 1990, and to the extent the trial court may have found that Modrzynski used the two-
    track under anything other than a claim of right, we are “definitely and firmly convinced that the
    trial court made a mistake.” Herald Co, Inc v Eastern Mich Univ Bd of Regents, 
    475 Mich 463
    ,
    472; 719 NW2d 19 (2006). The record unambiguously establishes the adversity element, and the
    trial court’s basis for finding the requisite prescriptive period unmet is wrong. However, the trial
    court nevertheless arrived at the correct result.
    Defendants make a significant point of their lack of actual knowledge that Leo made use
    of the two-track. As discussed, that is not dispositive per se. If it were, it would be impossible
    ever to obtain a prescriptive easement as against an absentee owner, which is clearly not the law.
    However, defendants are correct in noting that their lack of actual knowledge has significant
    bearing on whether Leo was ever there at all, or if he was, how often. The trial court’s doubt
    whether Leo (or plaintiff) used the route regularly simply because it was not the route they used
    most often is not a logical conclusion. There was testimony to the effect that much of the
    property in the area was used for seasonal hunting, and in the past it had been used for cattle
    farming or fields. Misiak and Deinek stated that they liked the isolation, and Misiak at least
    believed that any traffic was too much. It does not appear that infrequent visits, at least after the
    cattle were gone, would be out of character for the area. It would not be particularly surprising if
    encounters were rare events. The evidence shows that Leo’s use of the two-track was likely
    infrequent, but at least somewhat consistent.
    Nevertheless, Misiak indicated that he was in the area very frequently and had been since
    the 1950’s. His observations of the two-track included electronic monitoring equipment. The
    fact that Misiak did not observe Leo making use of the two-track, and later did not observe
    plaintiff doing so, strongly tends to show that whatever use was made was so infrequent that it
    would not rise above “its occasional use for his own convenience.” Menter, 159 Mich at 24.
    Additionally, while the trial court did not make any statements about witness credibility,
    Misiak’s testimony was the only testimony in the record from an actual party to the case that
    appeared, to the limited extent we can gauge such a thing from a transcript, entirely honest and
    trustworthy to us. Notably, Misiak was the only witness with a long, contiguous history, and he
    was the only witness who would have been in a good position to make ongoing observations of
    the two-track.
    -5-
    We further note that plaintiff’s own adverse use of the easement could not have
    commenced prior to 1984, when he became an owner of the property. Consequently, it could not
    have matured into a prescriptive easement until 1999. Meanwhile, there was considerable
    testimony that Deinek installed a large steel gate in the summer of 1993 and kept it locked.
    Plaintiff’s witnesses were inconsistent about the nature of the gate. While the trial court did not
    say so in so many words, it clearly believed the testimony of the witnesses who described the
    gate and that it was kept locked. This Court defers to the trial court’s assessment of witness
    credibility. McGonegal v McGonegal, 
    46 Mich 66
    , 67; 
    8 NW 724
     (1881). Consequently, we
    find no error in the trial court’s conclusion that any adverse use plaintiff made of the easement, if
    any, terminated prior to the running of the requisite fifteen year period.
    As noted, the burden of proof is on plaintiff to show each element of “entitlement to a
    prescriptive easement by clear and cogent evidence.” Matthews, 288 Mich App at 37. Plaintiff
    clearly did so as to adversity. Such evidence as there is regarding continuousness for the
    requisite term of years is at least uncontradicted, and the trial court’s reasoning for rejecting
    plaintiff’s proofs as to those elements is fatally flawed. However, while it would be expected
    that use of the two-track would not be frequent, the evidence here is that it was so infrequent that
    there is no way to conclude that plaintiff satisfied his burden of proof as to openness. The trial
    court only partially relied on the absence of any observations by witnesses, but to that extent it
    was correct. The trial court reached the correct ultimate conclusion: plaintiff did not satisfy his
    burden of proving that he or his predecessor in interest had established an easement by
    prescription.
    Plaintiff also argues that he should have an easement by necessity over the two-track and
    that the trial court erred in granting summary disposition in defendants’ favor on that argument.
    A grant or denial of summary disposition is reviewed de novo on the basis of the entire record to
    determine if the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Maiden v Rozwood, 
    461 Mich 109
    , 118; 597 NW2d 817 (1999). Although the trial court cited both MCR 2.116(C)(8)
    and MCR 2.116(C)(10), the trial court and the parties clearly argued facts beyond the pleadings.
    When reviewing a motion under MCR 2.116(C)(10), which tests the factual sufficiency of the
    complaint, this Court considers all evidence submitted by the parties in the light most favorable
    to the non-moving party and grants summary disposition only where the evidence fails to
    establish a genuine issue regarding any material fact. 
    Id. at 120
    .
    The evidence shows that defendant Misiak’s predecessor, Joseph Misiak, owned both the
    present-day Misiak parcel and the present-day Kasubowski parcel at the same time. At that time,
    the Kasubowski parcel had no legal means of access other than the easement or by traversing the
    Misiak parcel, presumably along the easement portion of the Misiak parcel. In broad strokes, an
    easement will be implied from necessity under such circumstances, “[w]here a conveyance
    deprives the landowner of access to its property . . . unless the parties clearly indicate a contrary
    intention.” Schumacher v Dep’t of Natural Resources, 
    275 Mich App 121
    , 130-131; 737 NW2d
    782 (2007). The deed from Joseph Misiak to Leo Modrzynski consists only of a description of
    the property. Consequently, all other things being equal, plaintiff is completely correct in stating
    that when Joseph Misiak sold the Kasubowski parcel to Modrzynski, the Kasubowski parcel
    would have been rendered landlocked and thus entitled to an easement by necessity.
    Furthermore, it is obvious that the only sane location of any such easement would be, at a
    -6-
    minimum, the Misiak side of the Bolton Road easement at issue here. Critically, however, all
    other things are not equal.
    An easement by necessity is not permanent: it ceases to exist when the necessity does.
    Waubun Beach Ass’n v Wilson, 
    274 Mich 598
    , 608-609; 
    265 NW 474
     (1936). Defendants
    accurately point out that exactly “how necessary” an easement must be to be “necessary enough”
    is open to some debate. Some case law has relied on a “reasonably necessary” standard,
    although reasonableness still mandated far more than mere inconvenience or expense, and was
    based on the presumed intent of the parties. Chapdelaine, 247 Mich App at 173; Schmidt v Eger,
    
    94 Mich App 728
    , 732-735; 289 NW2d 851 (1980). Other case law has held that strict necessity
    is the proper standard, further holding that opinions from this Court applying the lesser standard
    contravened binding precedent from our Supreme Court. Charles A Murray Trust v Futrell, 
    303 Mich App 28
    , 45-49; 840 NW2d 775 (2013). The latter standard would seem to hold that
    “necessity” means it is literally impossible to get from a public road to the property without
    either committing trespass or taking a helicopter. We have not discovered any cases addressing
    access requiring defiance of the laws of physics rather than the laws of real property, but it is
    fortunately unnecessary to consider such a hypothetical here.
    It is undisputed that when Leo Modrzynski purchased the Kasubowski parcel, the latter
    became part of a larger parcel of property that did in fact abut a public road. Even if specific
    access to any particular portion of a parcel was legally relevant—which it is not—mere difficulty
    in gaining that access does not constitute necessity. Charles A Murray Trust, 303 Mich App at
    55. In effect, plaintiff more-or-less correctly states that an easement by necessity would have
    been created by Misiak’s divestiture of the parcel. Furthermore plaintiff would be correct in
    asserting that an easement by necessity is not lost by mere nonuse thereof. Goodman v Brenner,
    
    219 Mich 55
    , 60; 
    188 NW 377
     (1922). However, that easement by necessity would have
    immediately been extinguished by Modrzynski’s receipt of the parcel. Waubun Beach, 
    274 Mich at 608-609
    . Plaintiff provides no argument or authority for the proposition that the
    extinguishment of an easement by necessity is anything other than permanent. Thus, while an
    easement by necessity over the two-track did technically exist for an instant, there is no basis for
    finding that it can be revived after its necessity ceased.
    However, plaintiff unambiguously does have an easement by necessity over the property
    now owned by his mother, Betty Schellie. The record is utterly unambiguous that when
    plaintiff’s acquired his present parcel, it was rendered landlocked by his grandfather, whose
    larger parcel, as noted, touches a public road. Because plaintiff’s grandfather is his grantor, this
    is precisely the situation in which “the grantor created a landlocked parcel in its grantee” and it is
    strictly impossible for plaintiff to get from a public road to his property otherwise. Schumacher,
    275 Mich App at 130. Because Schellie is not a party to this action, this Court cannot direct that
    an order to that effect be entered. However, plaintiff is clearly entitled to this easement.
    Additionally, although not strictly legally relevant, we believe this outcome actually
    favors plaintiff. Presuming plaintiff had been found to have gained a prescriptive easement over
    the two-track, that easement would have been limited to what use he made of it during the
    prescriptive period: essentially incidental use by himself and his family a few times a year, such
    that nobody ever even saw them do so. In other words, plaintiff could absolutely not use it as a
    regular driveway without overburdening it, and while the exact amount of use is somewhat
    -7-
    vague, he could not even switch from making primary use of the routes over the Schellie
    property to the two-track. Critically, however, even such a de minimus access over the two-track
    would be utterly fatal to any claim of necessity he has to traverse the Schellie property. By his
    own testimony, the Schellie property has always been his primary access route, which, under the
    circumstances, he presently has an unassailable right to continue. While it is possible that he
    could obtain an express easement from Schellie or a successor in interest, it is not guaranteed.
    Thus, for plaintiff to obtain a prescriptive easement to use the Bolton Road two-track may very
    well leave him with less access to his property.
    Affirmed.
    /s/ Amy Ronayne Krause
    /s/ Karen M. Fort Hood
    /s/ Colleen A. O'Brien
    -8-