Fink v. Municipality of Anchorage

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 2016
Docket7126 S-15614
StatusPublished

This text of Fink v. Municipality of Anchorage (Fink v. Municipality of Anchorage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fink v. Municipality of Anchorage, (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.us.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

MATTHEW FINK and DIANE ) WILKE, ) Supreme Court No. S-15614 ) Appellants, ) Superior Court No. 3AN-07-12346 CI ) v. ) OPINION ) MUNICIPALITY OF ANCHORAGE, ) No. 7126 – September 16, 2016 ) Appellee. ) _______________________________ )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Andrew Guidi, Judge.

Appearances: Michael T. Stehle, The Law Office of Michael Stehle, PC, Anchorage, for Appellants. James M. Gorski, Hughes Gorski Seedorf Odsen & Tervooren, LLC, Anchorage, Robert P. Owens, Assistant Municipal Attorney, and William D. Falsey, Municipal Attorney, Anchorage, for Appellee.

Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Fabe, Winfree, and Bolger, Justices. [Maassen, Justice, not participating.]

STOWERS, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION The dispute in this case concerns a narrow strip of land in the Turnagain area of Anchorage immediately west of Lyn Ary Park and bordering Knik Arm. The land is in the shape of a parallelogram; its long sides run in a northeasterly direction up Knik Arm and its short sides run north-south.1 The property was initially subdivided in May 1952 as part of Block K, Turnagain Heights Subdivision. As initially platted the northern subdivision boundary stopped just south of a 50-70 foot bluff. The bluff itself was just south of the mean high-tide line2 of Knik Arm; the land between the northern boundary of the lots and the mean high-tide line was not developable land. Appellants Matthew Fink and Diane Wilke (the lot owners) currently own four of the six lots at issue in this case. During the Good Friday Earthquake of 1964, the bluff face flattened out and slid northward into Knik Arm. This caused the existing land between the pre­ earthquake bluff face and the pre-earthquake mean high-tide line to become developable and created new land between the pre-earthquake mean high-tide line and the post- earthquake mean high-tide line. Despite the plats of the subdivision apparently indicating that their lots’ northern boundary is at the top of the pre-earthquake bluff face, the lot owners alleged that their property actually extends north to the pre-earthquake mean high-tide line. The parties do not dispute that the Municipality of Anchorage owns the new land between the pre-earthquake mean high-tide line and the post-earthquake mean high-tide line. The Municipality argued that the lot owners did not have a substantial interest in the disputed property and that the statute of limitations barred the lot owners’ claim. The superior court concluded that the lot owners failed to show a substantial

1 A diagram is attached as an Appendix. 2 The mean high-tide line along the south shore of Knik Arm created the original record for the northern boundary of the township and the property in dispute. The mean high-tide line is also known as the meander line.

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interest in the disputed parcel and that, even if the lot owners did have a substantial interest, the statute of limitations barred their claim. We affirm. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Facts In 1943 Lynn Ary conveyed to Marvin Marston by warranty deed a piece of property in what is now the Turnagain area of Anchorage. On its face, this conveyance does not appear to extend to the pre-earthquake mean high-tide line; the northern boundary appears to terminate at the top of a 50-70 foot bluff face, short of the mean high-tide line. In September 1946 Marston conveyed two deeds to Union Bank, one of which was a warranty deed conveying to Union Bank almost all of the 1943 conveyance from Ary to Marston except for a fifty foot strip of land on the western edge of the parcel.3 In June 1949 Ary conveyed to Marston via quitclaim deed the “Beachfront Deed,” described as “[a]ll my right, title and interest to the Beach and Waterfront lying in front of the 550 feet originally sold to [Marvin] Marston out of the west side waterfront of the Lynn Ary Homestead and adjoining the Simonson Homestead.” Marston recorded the Beachfront Deed in 1954, and he never conveyed the property to Union Bank. The ownership of the parcel described in the Beachfront Deed is at issue in this case. Over the years several plats of the area were created and recorded. Plat P-67, recorded in July 1947, was a topography of the land owned by Ary and Marston.

3 The parties disagreed at trial on the nature of the interest Marston conveyed to Union Bank in 1946. The court determined that Union Bank received only a security interest from Marston, as opposed to a fee interest, and the Municipality does not contest that finding on appeal.

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Plat P-67B was created in May 1948 and recorded in May 1952. A “Master Plan” for Turnagain Heights was created in April 1949. Plat P-67E was created in May 1952 and recorded in June of that year. Plat P-67E created a subdivision known as Block K, Turnagain Heights Subdivision. This subdivision essentially contains the land conveyed by Ary to Marston in 1943 and later from Marston to Union Bank in 1946. Each of the plats appears to indicate that the lots’ northern boundary is at the top of the bluff face. In September 1952 Union Bank conveyed via warranty deeds several lots in Block K, including Lots 2-5, the lots currently owned by Fink and Wilke. This deed was recorded on September 21, 1953. The lots changed hands a number of times over the years. In 1957 the owners of Lots 1-6 re-platted the lots as Lots 1A-6A in plat P-424. Marston owned Lots 1 and 2. The re-plat altered the internal boundary lines slightly, but it did not change the northernmost boundary. Plat P-424 is the current and official plat of the subdivision, and it is incorporated by reference into the deeds owned by Fink and Wilke. Fink purchased Lots 2A and 3A in 1991, and Wilke acquired Lot 5A in 2000 and Lot 4A in 2012. When Block K was initially platted in plat P-67E, the northern boundary of the lots appeared to terminate in the north at a steep, 50-70 foot bluff, with tidal mud flats below. The 1964 Good Friday Earthquake seriously damaged the entire Turnagain area and caused the bluff face at the northern edge of Block K to flatten and slide northward toward Knik Arm. This slide created developable land on the former bluff face and mud flats and also created new land between the pre-earthquake mean high-tide line and the post-earthquake mean high-tide line.

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In 1985-1986 the Municipality constructed the Tony Knowles Coastal Trail along the northern edge of the disputed property along the pre-earthquake mean high-tide line.4 The parties do not dispute that the Municipality owns the new land between the pre-earthquake mean high-tide line and the post-earthquake mean high-tide line; they only dispute whether the northern boundary of the disputed property terminated at the top of the bluff or at the pre-earthquake mean high-tide line at the base of the bluff. B. Proceedings The owners of Lots 2A-5A sued the Municipality seeking relief under the Earthslide Relief Act5 and to quiet title in the disputed property. Because those are both equitable claims, the lot owners did not request a jury trial. The Municipality answered the lot owners’ complaint, brought legal and equitable counterclaims, and asserted that the lot owners’ claims were barred by the statute of limitations; the Municipality also demanded a jury trial “on all issues so triable.”

4 Around this time the Municipality sought to obtain easements from landowners in order to build the trail, but it claimed that it was unsure about the ownership of the disputed property.

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Fink v. Municipality of Anchorage, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fink-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaska-2016.