Harold R White v. Ottawa Shores Homeowners Association

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 2026
Docket373712
StatusUnpublished

This text of Harold R White v. Ottawa Shores Homeowners Association (Harold R White v. Ottawa Shores Homeowners Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harold R White v. Ottawa Shores Homeowners Association, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

HAROLD R WHITE and MARY PAT ABAIR UNPUBLISHED WHITE, March 13, 2026 10:41 AM Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v No. 373712 Monroe Circuit Court OTTAWA SHORES HOMEOWNERS LC No. 2024-147731-CH ASSOCIATION,

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and O’BRIEN and YOUNG, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiffs, Harold R. White and Mary Pat Abair White, appeal as of right the order granting defendant, the Ottawa Shores Homeowners Association (“OSHA”), summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8) (legal sufficiency). On appeal, plaintiffs argue the trial court erred in dismissing all of their claims against OSHA because plaintiffs possess a riparian easement within the Ottawa Shores Subdivision and own a dock for mooring boats accessible by that easement. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Because this appeal comes to us after dismissal under MCR 2.116(C)(8), our review of the record is limited to the pleadings alone, the factual allegations of which we must accept as true. El-Khalil v Oakwood Healthcare, Inc, 504 Mich 152, 160; 934 NW2d 665 (2019).

The subject of this appeal is a dock for mooring boats located in the waterbed adjacent to “Outlot D,” a riparian lot located in the Ottawa Shores Subdivision, a lakeshore community on the Ottawa River in Erie Township, Monroe County. Plaintiffs are the owners of Lots 124 and 125 in the Ottawa Shores Subdivision and use Outlot D.

-1- OSHA’s rules and regulations for use and development of the Outlots are contained in a Resolution.1 The Resolution created Outlot D for recreational use by the property owners of Ottawa Shores Subdivision lots 101 to 130, and lots 157 to 162. This recreational use is “subject to such rules and regulations as may be adopted” by OSHA. Article II of the Resolution also defines “recreational use” of the Outlots:

Sec. 1 The recreational use to which each Outlot and the riparian waters thereof are especially adaptable is declared to be the mooring of boats in the riparian waters thereof, and all other recreational purposes and uses thereof shall be subordinate thereto.

Article II, Section 2 states that storing boats or equipment, or parking cars on the upland of an Outlot, are not recreational uses and are prohibited. Article II, Section 5 states: “The assignment of mooring space at an Outlot shall at all times be subject to reassignment by [OSHA] according to the needs of each craft thereat.”

Regarding development on and improvement of the Outlots, Article III Section 1 of the Resolution states: “No structure shall be permitted on Outlots B, C or D excepting retaining walls, docks and mooring posts.” Article III Section 5 states: “The improvement of the Outlot shall be either for the common benefit or for a class benefit. . . . Docks and dock facilities shall be deemed to be for a class benefit.” The Resolution contains provisions in Article IV that state the cost of an improvement, where the improvement is for the benefit of a class, shall be borne by the members of the class:

Sec. 1 The cost of improvements made or to be made for the common benefit in each district and for the maintenance thereof shall be assessed against the “owner” of each lot benefitted thereby and such assessment shall be a lien upon such lot.

Sec. 2 Where the improvement is for the benefit of a class the cost thereof and for the maintenance thereof shall be assessed against the members of such class, as from time to time constituted, and in addition thereto each member thereof undertakes to pay and perform his share of the class project necessary at all times to provide like benefits for incoming members of such class. Such share shall be determined by the Association having due regard for adjustment made thereto. Said cost and undertaking shall be a lien upon said share and upon the lot of such shareholder.

Regarding possession of Outlots, Article V, Section 1 of the Resolution states: “The ‘owners’ of the lots which do not have water frontage are entitled as a group to possession of the Outlot for recreational purposes and all are equal in right and no member of the group has a right

1 On appeal, plaintiffs note that the Resolution is unsigned and undated. It appears from the record, and from plaintiffs’ first amended complaint, that the Resolution was drafted by the plattors of Ottawa Shores during the replat and extension in 1956. It is unclear whether the Resolution was ever recorded, which plaintiffs raise for the first time on appeal. Because both parties rely on the Resolution as the written source of their arguments, we do not question its validity.

-2- superior to any other member of the group or to any part of the Outlot.” Regarding transferability of the right to use the Outlots, Article V also states:

Sec. 5 No guest of any owner shall be upon the Outlot or any class project unless in company with such owner. Otherwise such person shall be deemed a trespasser.

Sec. 6 No Outlot benefits shall extend to a tenant of an “owner” except by substitution and except on the condition that such benefits may be terminated at any time by the Association for cause and further that such “owner” shall remain responsible for the acts and omissions of such tenant.

Finally, Article VII of the Resolution states: “These Rules and Regulations shall, to the extent therein provided, be a limitation upon the authority of the Board of Trustees to contract for and supervise the upkeep, improvement, repair, and maintenance of Outlots and to defray the cost thereof by special assessment upon the lots which do not have water frontage.”

Before plaintiffs acquired title to Lots 124 and 125, those lots were owned by Fred Abair, Mary Pat’s father, and Harold’s father-in-law. Abair owned a seaplane that needed to be moored during the summer season, so in 1976, he filed a request for a permit with the United States Army Core of Engineers (USACE)2 to construct a dock on the shore of Outlot D and attach a mooring buoy for the seaplane. The request was approved in 1976; Abair was authorized to “construct a ‘T’ shaped wood and steel pier extending 180 feet riverward from the existing shoreline in the Ottawa River.” Abair individually funded the construction of the dock on Outlot D, which he used for many years. The dock extended only approximately 65-75 feet from the shore of Outlot D.

According to plaintiffs, three more docks were installed on Outlot D and paid for by Ottawa Shores Subdivison lot owners, and like Abair’s permit, these permits were not applied for in the name of OSHA. One of them was applied for and paid for by Harold F. Mensing, Abair’s neighbor. When Mensing applied to the USACE to add a floating extension to the dock he paid for, the USACE approved the extension on the condition that Abair would not extend the dock he paid for any further than the approximately 65-75 foot structure that existed at the time of Mensing’s application. Mensing’s property is now owned by OSHA’s President Gregory Bixler, who has a mooring space on the dock Mensing paid for and extended.

In February 2019, plaintiffs sought to repair the dock Abair paid for and “restore” it “to its originally-permitted” 180 foot length. While removing sections of decking for replacement, plaintiffs were approached by Bixler, who indicated that the repairs would require a permit from the USACE, and that “it was a requirement that [OSHA] apply for permits on the Outlots . . . .”

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Bluebook (online)
Harold R White v. Ottawa Shores Homeowners Association, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harold-r-white-v-ottawa-shores-homeowners-association-michctapp-2026.