STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
MARLETTE AUTO WASH, LLC, UNPUBLISHED
May 10, 2016
Plaintiff/Counterdefendant-
Appellee,
v No. 326486
Sanilac Circuit Court
VAN DYKE SC PROPERTIES, LLC, LC No. 14-35490-CH
Defendant/Counterplaintiff-
Appellant.
Before: MURPHY, P.J., and CAVANAGH and RONAYNE KRAUSE, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Defendant appeals as of right a judgment granting plaintiff’s claim of prescriptive
easement and denying defendant’s counterclaim to quiet title and for damages. We affirm in
part, vacate in part, and remand for entry of a judgment in defendant’s favor on plaintiff’s claim
of prescriptive easement.
This case involves a property dispute between two adjacent businesses. Plaintiff owns
and operates a car wash business which it purchased in 2007 from a bank-mortgagee’s holding
company, GLCW, LLC, following foreclosure proceedings. Customers accessed the car wash by
an entrance located off M-53, as well as through the adjacent shopping center’s parking lot.
Defendant owns and operates the adjacent shopping center, which it purchased in 2013. The
principal of defendant, James Zyrowski, had been an original owner of the car wash. Shortly
after defendant purchased the shopping center, defendant requested that plaintiff contribute
towards parking lot maintenance, upkeep, and insurance because plaintiff’s customers, including
large commercial trucks, accessed the car wash from defendant’s parking lot. Plaintiff refused,
claiming to have an easement, and filed this lawsuit. Defendant filed a counterclaim to quiet title
and sought monetary damages for parking lot maintenance, upkeep, and insurance.
At the bench trial, plaintiff argued that it acquired a prescriptive easement, which
defendant denied. Defendant argued that it should prevail on its quiet title claim and was entitled
to damages arising from plaintiff’s use of its parking lot, which plaintiff denied. In its written
opinion issued after the bench trial, the trial court agreed with plaintiff, noting that Zyrowski had
an ownership interest in the car wash from 1989 until 2005, when it was sold to Lipka
Investments. Zyrowski admitted that when he owned the car wash, the parking lot—which was
-1-
owned by someone else at the time—was used to access the car wash. And when Zyrowski sold
the car wash, he told Lipka Investments that the parking lot was used to access the car wash.
Thus, the court held: “[P]laintiff has shown privity of estate by tacking on the possessory period
of their predecessors-in-interest to achieve the necessary 15 year period.” That is, as of 2005, the
car wash property had a prescriptive easement which permitted customers to access the car wash
from the shopping center’s parking lot. Accordingly, subsequent owners of the car wash, as a
matter of equity, should be entitled to the same use of the parking lot. Further, because
defendant failed to provide the requested discovery to plaintiff in support its claim for damages
at any time before the day of trial and such evidence had been excluded at trial, a judgment of no
cause of action would be entered on defendant’s counterclaim. A judgment was subsequently
entered consistent with the trial court’s opinion and this appeal followed.
Defendant argues that the trial court erred in granting plaintiff a prescriptive easement
which allowed plaintiff’s customers to use its parking lot to access the car wash because plaintiff
failed to establish privity of estate. We agree.
A trial court’s decision to grant a prescriptive easement is an equitable decision which is
reviewed de novo. Killips v Mannisto, 244 Mich App 256, 258; 624 NW2d 224 (2001). The
factual findings underlying this decision are reviewed for clear error. Blackhawk Dev Corp v
Village of Dexter, 473 Mich 33, 40; 700 NW2d 364 (2005).
“A prescriptive easement results from open, notorious, adverse, and continuous use of
another’s property for a period of 15 years.” Matthews v Dep’t Nat Resources, 288 Mich App
23, 37; 792 NW2d 40 (2010). The party seeking the easement bears the burden to demonstrate
entitlement by clear and cogent evidence. Id. The dispute here is whether plaintiff showed
continuous use of the parking lot property for a period of 15 years. Because plaintiff acquired
the property in 2007, plaintiff cannot establish that it continuously used the parking as access to
its car wash for 15 years. However, the element of continuous use can be established by
“tacking” on possessory periods of the party’s predecessor-in-interest if privity of estate is
shown. Killips, 244 Mich App at 258-259. “This privity may be shown in one of two ways, by
(1) including a description of the disputed acreage in the deed, or (2) an actual transfer or
conveyance of possession of the disputed acreage by parol statements made at the time of
conveyance.” Id. at 259 (citations omitted). This Court has held that there is an exception to the
second option in “limited circumstances where the tacking property owners are ‘well acquainted’
and there is clear and cogent evidence that the predecessors-in-interest ‘undoubtedly’ intended to
transfer their rights to their successors-in-interest.” Matthews, 288 Mich App at 41-42. That is,
this exception may apply when the conveyance is not “an arms-length, third-party transfer.” Id.
at 41.
Defendant argues that plaintiff was not entitled to tack on the possessory periods of its
predecessor-in-interest because plaintiff did not demonstrate privity of estate. We agree that
plaintiff was not in privity with its predecessor-in-interest, GLCW, LLC. First, plaintiff’s deed
did not contain a description of the disputed property. Second, there was no evidence that, at the
time of conveyance, plaintiff’s representative discussed an easement, use of defendant’s parking
lot, or even how customers accessed the car wash with a representative from GLCW, LLC. That
is, there was no actual transfer or conveyance of possession of the disputed area of the parking
lot by parol statements made at the time of conveyance. Similarly, the previous two transfers of
-2-
the car wash property did not meet the requirements for privity, i.e., from Lipka Investments to
Tri-County Bank and from Tri-County Bank to GLCW, LLC. And the exception outlined in
Matthews does not apply because plaintiff was not “well-acquainted” with GLCW, LLC; the
conveyance was “an arms-length, third-party transfer.” Matthews, 288 Mich App at 41.
Plaintiff argues, however, that previous owners of the car wash continuously used the
parking lot for the 15-year period, and thus a prescriptive easement vested in the property to the
benefit of all subsequent property owners regardless of the lack of privity. We disagree. It is
true that a prescriptive easement, like property acquired through adverse possession, vests when
the statutory period expires and not when the action is brought. See id. at 36. However, the
person claiming a prescriptive easement must acknowledge or act on the purported acquired
right; “the expiration of the period of limitation terminates the title of those who slept on their
rights and vests title in the party claiming adverse possession.” Gorte v Dep’t of Transp, 202
Mich App 161, 168; 507 NW2d 797 (1993) (emphasis added). It is undisputed that no previous
owner of the car wash asserted a claim of prescriptive easement with regard to defendant’s
property. As plaintiff notes in its brief, in Siegel v Renkiewicz, 373 Mich 421; 129 NW2d 876
(1964), our Supreme Court explained:
[I]t has long been the rule in Michigan that the statutory period of
possession or use[] necessary for obtaining title by adverse possession or
easement by prescription is not fulfilled by tacking successive periods of
possession or use[] enjoyed by different persons in the absence of privity between
those persons[,] established by inclusion by reference to the claimed property in
the instruments of conveyance or by parol references at time of conveyances. [Id.
at 425.]
And plaintiff fails to cite any legal authority in support of its argument that privity of
estate need not be shown after the 15-year statutory period is met at any time and by any
previous owner because the owner of the servient property automatically “loses his title when the
statute of limitation expires.” While a presumption of a prescriptive easement may arise when a
party shows that the use has been “in excess of the prescriptive period by many years,” Reed v
Soltys, 106 Mich App 341, 346; 308 NW2d 201 (1981), no such presumption arose in this case.
The car wash was built and originally owned by B & J Investment, a partnership of Zyrowski
and his father, and was opened for business in 1989. Plaintiff purchased the property in 2007.
Thus, even if defendant’s parking lot had been used to access the car wash without permission
and continuously, it had not been used “in excess of the prescriptive period by many years.” See
id.
To establish a prescriptive easement, the claimant must prove the element of continuous
use for 15 years. That element can be established by tacking—adding the claimant’s
predecessor’s period of use—if privity of estate is shown. Killips, 244 Mich App at 259. In this
case, no privity of estate was shown, i.e., there was no reference to the disputed property in the
instrument of conveyance and there was no parol reference to the disputed property at the time
the car wash property was conveyed to plaintiff. Thus, there was no evidence to support the trial
court’s holding that plaintiff acquired a prescriptive easement which permitted its customers to
access the car wash from defendant’s parking lot. Accordingly, the trial court’s judgment
granting plaintiff a prescriptive easement is vacated.
-3-
Next, defendant argues that the trial court erred when it refused to admit evidence of its
expenses to maintain the parking lot. A trial court’s ruling to admit or exclude evidence is
reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Barrett v Kirtland Community College, 245 Mich App 306,
325; 628 NW2d 63 (2001). “An abuse of discretion exists when the trial court’s decision falls
outside the range of principled outcomes.” Duray Dev, LLC v Perrin, 288 Mich App 143, 162;
792 NW2d 749 (2010).
The evidence at issue was testimony by James Zyrowski, defendant’s sole member,
addressing the issue of costs associated with maintaining defendant’s parking lot. During
discovery, plaintiff requested that defendant provide copies of any payments and records for
parking-lot expenses. Defendant responded by attaching a receipt for snow-plowing services for
$300. The trial court excluded the cited evidence because defendant did not provide this
information (other than the one receipt for snow-plow services) to plaintiff at any time during
discovery or prior to trial. Although defendant claims that it did provide evidence of damages in
its September 16, 2014 case evaluation summary and its October 21, 2014 settlement conference
summary, all defendant actually provided was a small chart of what it believed the parking-lot
expenses amounted to. Defendant never provided actual records of this information, as plaintiff
requested, and the little information it did provide was not done so until several months after
plaintiff’s March 17, 2014 request.
Under the circumstances presented here, it was reasonable for the trial court to conclude
that defendant did not seasonably amend its discovery response. MCR 2.302(E)(1)(b). MCR
2.302(E)(2) grants a trial court the authority to impose sanctions for failing to supplement,
including those sanctions stated in MCR 2.313(B)(2)(b), which allows a court to “prohibit[] the
party from introducing designated matters into evidence.” Under the circumstances, the trial
court’s decision to exclude the evidence was not outside the principled range of outcomes. See
Duray Dev, LLC, 288 Mich App at 162.
Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded for entry of judgment in defendant’s
favor on plaintiff’s claim of prescriptive easement. We do not retain jurisdiction.
/s/ William B. Murphy
/s/ Mark J. Cavanagh
/s/ Amy Ronayne Krause
-4-