This bill was filed June 9,1870, by Charles Pratt against George Lewis, Jacob Sebeck, and James J. McCormick, in the circuit court for the county of Bay in chancery, and the case was subsequently transferred by stipulation to the circuit court in chancery for Genesee county. The acts and proceedings which induced the suit belong to a controversy concerning the required locality upon the ground of the' east and west street or way, once called Cass street, but recently Twenty-second street, in that part of Bay City formerly called Portsmouth.
The way or easement was in actual use, and of course had as matter of fact, a present visibly defined location; and the defendants, Lewis and James J. McCormick, were lot owners on the north and the complainant, Charles Pratt, together with Charles S. Pratt, were lot owners opposite on the south, and the defendants claiming that the way or easement as thus practically located on the ground, was in truth its full width or thereabout, too far north, and that it consequently burdened without right, their lands, and abridged their lots, proceeded to fence up, encumber, and permanently appropriate that portion of the space so occupied as a street, extending the width of the lots.
Upon the other side it was claimed that the way or easement belonged rightly in the space which it occupied, and that the attempt to close it up or shift it was wrongful and specially injurious to complainants, and the bill was filed to abate the obstructions and restrain future acts -of nuisance.
*10July, 1870, the defendants Lewis and J ames J. McCormick, filed their joint answer upon oath.
January, 1872, Charles Pratt applied to have Charles S. Pratt, with his assent, made co-complainant, and the latter assented.
November, 1872, the defendant James J. McCormick died, and May 3d, 1873, his death was suggested, and the court made an order to revive, and to bring in his heirs and legal representatives.
October 10, 1873, Charles S. Pratt was made co-complainant, and November 2d, 1875, he died and his death was suggested.
July 8, 1876, an order was passed reviving the suit and introducing as parties complainant in the place of Charles S. Pratt, his widow, his heir-at-law, and the administrator of his estate.
The pleadings were allowed to be amended as far as necessary after these changes.
As to Sebeck, the will was taken as confessed.
Proofs having been taken, the case was heard upon the merits, and the court decreed in favor of complainants. All the defendants acquiesced except the defendant Lewis, who alone appealed.
First. The objection that the bill does not charge, or the proofs show, any injury or inconvenience to complainants beyond what the public suffers, cannot be allowed. The bill averred special injury but omitted to explain in what it consisted.
The answer expressly traversed this averment, and under the issue thereby made the parties went fully into proof, and it is plain that the want of certainty in the bill has caused no prejudice.
Greater certainty might have been insisted on but was not. Carew v. Johnston, 2 Scho. & Lef., 280.
The common formulary inserted in the answer to question the bill for want of equity, was not sufficient to raise the point as to the want of particularity sug? *11gested, and the objection was not open at tbe hearing. 1 Daniel Ch. Pr., 366 to 372 and 685 to 591; Devonsher v. Newenham, 2 Scho. & Lef., 199.
Tbe case established J)y tbe evidence under this issue was ample.
Tbe transaction is not one where nothing is involved beyond a mere impediment or obstacle to tbe legitimate enjoyment of a public road, and where no one suffers a greater direct inconvenience than another. Far from it. What is attempted is tbe complete appropriation of tbe site of tbe way by defendants to their own private use in perpetuity, and tbe entire exclusion of complainants from all enjoyment, and from all chance of egress and ingress on that side, except upon tbe condition of transferring tbe burden of tbe easement to their own premises. And this is not all; other kinds of detriment are involved. Tbe change of situation of complainant’s improvements and sites for improvements relatively to street accommodations and surrounding conditions, must cause special disturbance of complainant’s rights. Distance,‘room, aspect and eligibility are matters of much consideration in connection with actual neighboring environments. This feature of tbe case is plain. Conrad v. Smith, 32 Mich., 429; Benjamin v. Storr, L. R., 9 Com. P., 400: 10 Eng., 231; Spencer v. The London & Birmingham R. W. Co., 8 Sim., 193; Corning v. Lowerre, 6 Johns. Ch., 439; Frink v. Lawrence, 20 Conn., 117; Wilkes v. Hungerford Market Co., 2 Bing. N. C., 281; Soltau v. De Held, 9 E. L. & E., 104: 2 Sim., (N. S.,) 133.
Second. Tbe position that tbe city removed tbe easement from tbe actually'worked and traveled site some fifty feet south, cannot be maintained.
It appears by a great weight of evidence that tbe old location being that supported by complainants, agrees substantially with tbe site required by tbe scheme of Farmer’s map; that it was actually occupied very early as tbe true place, and for a short distance was in part fenced; that it was fully identified by several successive *12surveyors and staked out; that public money and highway labor were expended on it; that the authorities and •citizens recognized it and used it as the street in question, and that the location continued to have general ■acquiescence for more than ten years and down to about 1864, when one Huggins made a partial re-survey of a part of the old Portsmouth plat, and called in question the accuracy of the location of this and one or more •other streets.
Now it is plain that this easement or right of way called Cass street, had become established on the strip •of land; — in fact occupied and existed there in the sight of the public. It was proof for itself. It could not be dealt with as a float. It had become attached to the ground it covered. The circumstance of its being where it was demonstrated its right to be there. It could be ■surveyed in the place which had become appropriated by it and be described accordingly if thought necessary. But it was not capable of being shifted about by surveyors. The evidence is rather vague as to the real sense •of the proceedings by the city, and there are indications that the members of the common council were never very clear as to what was proper. It is entirely certain, however, that their acts were not based on the charter power to vacate, alter, and lay out streets, and were without force to effect any change of that kind. There seems to' have been no attempt to comply with that "branch of the charter (2 Sess. L. 1867, p. 377), and if the measures taken, such as they were, can be referred to the charter at all or to any other law, they must be referred to the provisions granting power to find and mark street boundaries, 2 Sess. L. 1867, p. 357, § 11; 2 Sess. L. 1869, p. 572, § 9, subdivision 29.
No other regulations having any possible application are discovered, and these certainly could afford no warrant for assuming to transfer the way to another place. Every survey and description made according to the true state of things, and the statute authorizes no other, would necessarily identify the easement where it had *13become fixed and in fact appeared; and the proceedings-, of the city cannot be construed as having the effect to remove it to new ground. The site remained unchanged.
Third. It does not appear to the court that it is open to defendant Lewis, who alone appeals, to question the validity of the order of revivor made after the death of defendant McCormick. He insists that the cause of action as against that party expired, and that the order to revive against McCormick’s heirs and legal representatives was consequently void.
They have not appealed against the decree. They do. not complain, but acquiesce, and no body else is entitled to object that they are charged with a defunct liability.
If the liability McCormick was under terminated at his death the suit was no longer affected by it, and there was nothing to hinder the prosecution of the case to. final decree against the appellant. Comp. L., § 5101.
The claim that William E. McCormick as administrator of Charles S. Pratt deceased, one of complainants,, had no interest and ought not to have been made a party on the death of Mr. Pratt, is not much pressed.. It possesses no importance. His presence in the record,, whether necessary or not, caused no prejudice to appellant, and does not appear to have been objected to. At-all events there is nothing in the fact of his being brought in and retained to require' any change in the decree, much less a reversal of it.
Fourth. My brethren think that the equity of complainants against the closing up or blocking the street where it now runs, is fully made out without regard to-block 231, and that the failure to prove ownership or possession of that block is quite unimportant.
What has been said disposes of all the points urged by appellant’s counsel, and the decree must be affirmed with costs.
Campbell, C. J. and Cooley, J. concurred. Marston,, J. did not sit in this case.