Jack Morley v. Township of Bangor

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 2019
Docket340636
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jack Morley v. Township of Bangor (Jack Morley v. Township of Bangor) 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
Jack Morley v. Township of Bangor, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

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

JACK MORLEY, UNPUBLISHED April 25, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 340636 Bay Circuit Court TOWNSHIP OF BANGOR, LC No. 14-003743-CZ

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: STEPHENS, P.J., and GLEICHER and BOONSTRA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Jack Morley filed suit against Bangor Township, complaining that the township’s activities on a parcel dedicated to park uses altered the natural flow of surface water toward the Kawkawlin River and caused flooding on his neighboring land. The circuit court dismissed Morley’s trespass-nuisance claim on governmental immunity grounds and his takings claim for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The circuit court failed to recognize that at the time Morley filed his action, MCL 600.5821(2) only applied to “[a]ctions brought by any municipal corporations,” and not to actions brought by private citizens against municipalities. The court thereby erroneously determined that Morley could not state a viable takings claim. However, the circuit court properly dismissed Morley’s takings claim on an alternate ground—that it was not filed within the statute of limitations. The court also failed to recognize that a governmental agency may be sued for equitable relief from a trespass nuisance. We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

In 1993, Morley purchased a 106.5-acre irregularly shaped parcel of vacant land in Bangor Township for $1. To the north of Morley’s property is “Bay Side Park,” a 26-acre irregularly shaped parcel dedicated to Bangor Township for use as a park. Both parcels are within the Kawkawlin River watershed, but are separated from the river by a swath of riverfront homes and a roadway.

-1- Morley began to farm his land but quickly discovered that much of his property was low lying and waterlogged; 92.3 acres have been designated as wetland. He started filling it in, but the United States Army Corp of Engineers (USACOE) advised him that the area was protected and ordered Morley to stop this activity. In 1994, Morley sought “After-The-Fact” permission for his work. The USACOE ordered Morley to return the land to its previous condition within 30 days and to pay a fine, both of which Morley did. A 1997 inspection revealed that the wetlands were recovering according to plan and the USACOE notified Morley that it would stop monitoring the site.

Different activities took place in the park to the north. In 1978, the township began allowing the USACOE to use the park as a dump site for sand and silt, also known as “spoils,” periodically dredged from the Kawkawlin River. In approximately 1996, the township went further, digging a pit for the spoils and erecting berms to distinguish the area. In 1999, a newly elected township supervisor expressed concern about the legality of using the park as a spoils dump site and asked the city attorney to investigate. On September 17, 1999, the city attorney responded that the spoils dump site was not permitted under the language of the land dedication. The township board of trustees voted to level the site on November 9, 1999. The next day, the city hired a contractor “[t]o provide a dozer and operator for leveling the berms around the Kawkawlin River Dredge Disposal Site and finish grading to achieve positive drainage to the Frank Jean County Drain.” The former town supervisor, who had negotiated the 1996 project, wrote a letter “express[ing] [his] extreme disappointment” with the turn of events. The township’s December 13, 1999 response indicated that the park had already been “return[ed] to a ‘level playing field’ both physically and philosophically.”

Morley contends, however, that the township continued to bring in material and grade the land. He accuses the township of crossing the properties’ boundary line with the spoils it spread. In an affidavit, Morley attested that township maintenance man, Joe Zielinski, approached him on August 3, 2016, and reported that he had slowly moved soil and yard waste across the property line over the past 10 years.1 At the township supervisor’s direction, Zielinski stated that he had also exacerbated Morley’s drainage problems by “level[ing] the hill and reduc[ing] the slope on the Park property.” Morley presented the affidavit of a professional surveyor, Kevin Pomaville, who prepared a topographical survey of the park and north end of Morley’s property. Pomaville noted 12 acres of “raised elevations” in the park. This was a larger elevated area than anticipated in Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) and USACOE permits and the elevations were greater than permitted.

Professional engineer Timothy Lapham reviewed the survey and aerial photographs of the area in the public record. Lapham attested that he visited the area and observed “indications . . . that fill was added in Park Property . . . and also moved to the south to cross” onto Morley’s land. Lapham also reviewed an undated, hand-drawn Bay County Drain Commission map recording the natural flow of water. The map showed that water historically

1 At a later hearing, the township argued that Zielinski’s statements as reported by Morley were inadmissible hearsay, and emphasized that Morley never sought to depose Zielinski.

-2- flowed from Morley’s property across the park. Lapham noted his observations that the natural flow of water “ha[d] been altered by the placement of spoils or alteration of land” on the park and actually had been “reverse[d] . . . such that water in the Park would be diverted towards” Morley’s land.

The MDEQ, on the other hand, observed that Morley was again engaging in illegal terraforming in the regulated wetlands in 2007. Morley apparently ignored the MDEQ’s notice and was cited by the USACOE as well in October 2008. On November 19, 2009, the MDEQ notified Morley that it inspected his property and found that he had engaged in illegal fill activity on 4.1 acres of protected wetland. The MDEQ ultimately filed suit against Morley, securing a judgment requiring Morley to return the wetlands to their former condition and avoid future violations, and imposing a $30,000 fine. This Court affirmed that judgment in Dep’t of Environmental Quality v Morley, 314 Mich App 306; 885 NW2d 892 (2015).

Dissatisfied with his lot, Morley filed suit against the township in 2014, claiming that the township’s regrading of the park raised its elevation and prevented the natural flow of water from Morley’s land across the park toward the Kawkawlin River. In this regard, Morley asserted that he possessed “a prescriptive flowage easement by the topography.” Morley called the condition a “nuisance” and accused the township of taking his property through the “invasion of water and sediments.” He sought indemnification as well as abatement of the issue.

The township sought summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(7), (8), and (10). The township contended that it was engaged in a governmental function (storing materials removed from the river to prevent flooding) and was therefore immune from liability. The township asserted that there is no nuisance or indemnification exception to governmental immunity. Moreover, the township claimed, Morley had caused his own damages by repeatedly violating wetland protection laws. And the township contended that Morley’s takings claim was either not yet ripe for judicial review or was barred by the statute of limitations. The claim was not yet ripe because Morley had not availed himself of extrajudicial procedures to secure just compensation for his alleged loss.

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Jack Morley v. Township of Bangor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jack-morley-v-township-of-bangor-michctapp-2019.