LAKESHORE HARBOUR TOWNHOUSES CONDOMINIUM v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedDecember 24, 2024
Docket22-902
StatusPublished

This text of LAKESHORE HARBOUR TOWNHOUSES CONDOMINIUM v. United States (LAKESHORE HARBOUR TOWNHOUSES CONDOMINIUM v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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LAKESHORE HARBOUR TOWNHOUSES CONDOMINIUM v. United States, (uscfc 2024).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims

LAKESHORE HARBOUR TOWNHOUSES CONDOMINIUM et al., Plaintiffs,

v. Consol. No. 22-902L (Filed December 24, 2024) THE UNITED STATES,

Defendant.

Michael J. Smith, Stewart, Wald & Smith, LLC, St. Louis, MO, for plaintiffs.

John K. Heise, Environment and Natural Resources Division, United States Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for defendant.

OPINION AND ORDER Granting the government’s motion for partial summary judgment and denying Lakeshore Harbour’s motion for partial summary judgment

SILFEN, Judge.

Lakeshore Harbour Townhouses Condominium, along with other plaintiffs, seeks compen-

sation from the United States for an alleged Fifth Amendment taking authorized by the National

Trails System Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1247(d). The plaintiffs argue that the government took parts of

their properties when it set aside a two-mile segment of former railroad in Muskegon, Michigan,

as a recreational trail.

Only Lakeshore Harbour’s claim is at issue in this motion. The discovery process revealed

a dispute over whether Lakeshore Harbour held title to its claimed segment of the rail corridor at

the time of the alleged taking. The parties filed cross-motions for partial summary judgment on

that question. The government argues that Lakeshore Harbour did not own the segment because

1 someone else—Cole’s Quality Foods—owned the segment and never sold it to Lakeshore Har-

bour. Lakeshore Harbour argues that Cole’s sold Lakeshore Harbour the segment. According to

Lakeshore Harbour, its parcel, as described in its deed, abuts the rail corridor, and under Michigan

law’s centerline presumption, when a party sells land abutting a corridor like a rail line, it pre-

sumptively also sells the land up to the centerline of that corridor.

Assuming the centerline presumption applies to railroads, the government has rebutted the

presumption here. Lakeshore Harbour has not established that it owned the segment of the rail

corridor abutting its property. The government has established that Lakeshore Harbour did not

own the segment. There is no genuine issue of material fact. The government is entitled to partial

summary judgment.

I. Background

In the late 1800s, a railroad company, the predecessor of CSX Transportation, Inc., ac-

quired an easement over a corridor of land in Muskegon, Michigan. ECF No. 20 at 2 [¶3]; ECF

No. 42 at 18, 20; ECF Nos. 42-11, 42-12; ECF No. 54 at 9 n.5.

In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Cole’s bought land on both sides of and encompassing

part of the rail corridor. ECF Nos. 54-7; 54-8; 54-10. Cole’s began to develop a marina condomin-

ium project on part of that land. ECF No. 54-16.

In 1990, Cole’s sold part of its property to Lakeshore Harbour. ECF No. 20 at 3 [¶6]; ECF

No. 42-13 at 7-95 (master deed). The relevant land is shown in the figure below, with the part that

was ultimately sold to Lakeshore Harbour outlined in blue and white. The land that Cole’s retained

for its marina condominium project is northwest of the rail corridor (to the left of the corridor in

the figure), while the land that Cole’s sold to Lakeshore Harbour is southeast of the rail corridor

(to the right of the corridor in the figure).

2 ECF No. 42-16 at 4; see ECF No. 42 at 12 (describing the image). The Lakeshore Harbour parcel

abuts land subject to the railroad easement. ECF No. 20 at 3 [¶6].

At the same time, Cole’s also granted utility easements over its property for the benefit of

Lakeshore Harbour’s parcel, and Cole’s sold a portion of its land to unrelated parties. ECF Nos.

54-12; 54-13; 54-14; 54-15; see also ECF No. 54-9.

In 1994, the parties agreed to an amended deed, which revised the size of the conveyance,

added an expansion property, and granted an additional utility easement for Lakeshore Harbour’s

benefit. ECF No. 42-14 at 2-12. The amended deed describes the boundaries of the updated parcel.

Id. It outlines the parcel with particular latitude and longitude lines, gives a precise area of 2.02

acres, and explains that the parcel extends “to the southeasterly right-of-way line of the CSX Rail-

road”:

That part of lot 6, block 581, of the revised plat of 1903 of the City of Muskegon as recorded in liber 3 of plats, on page 71, described as beginning at a point on the southwesterly line of lot 6 (also being the southwesterly line of block 581), that is 170.00 feet north 36º 16’ 55’’ west from the southeast corner of block 581; thence along the southwesterly line of lot 6, block 581, north 36º 16’ 55’’

3 west 188.87 feet to the southeasterly right-of-way line of the CSX Railroad; thence the following three (3) courses being along said right-of-way line, thence north 37º 21’ 45” east 120.00 feet; thence north 41º 56’ 11” east 150.48 feet; thence north 37º 21’ 45” east 38.32 feet; thence south 52º 40’ 01” east 73.01 feet; thence south 45º 22’ 51” east 235.04 feet; thence south 40º 57’ 59” west, parallel with and 50.00 feet northwesterly of the northwesterly right-of-way line of lakeshore drive, 146.50 feet to a point on a line that is 15 feet northeasterly of and parallel to the northeasterly line of lot 2, block 581; thence north 49º 02’ 01” west, along said line, 50.00 feet; thence south 40º 57’ 59” west 114.92 feet to the westerly corner of lot 3, block 581; thence north 49º 02’ 01” west 50.00 feet; thence south 52º 22’ 03” west 79.96 feet to the point of beginning. Con- taining 2.02 acres.

ECF No. 42-14 at 10. A map from the survey for the trail use agreement deed overlaid on top of

the image of the land is shown below, with descriptions of some of the lines from the deed.

ECF No. 42-16 at 6; see ECF No. 42 at 12 (describing the image).

In 1996, Cole’s also transferred a small part of its land northwest of the rail corridor to

Lakeshore Harbour, “to be used for a swimming pool.” ECF No. 46-1. The pool is shown in both

figures above, to the northwest, or left, of the rail corridor. The deed described the boundaries of

4 the property, part of which ran “parallel with and 33 feet Northwesterly of (measured perpendicu-

lar) the Northwesterly right of way line of the … Railroad.” Id. at 3. In other words, that parcel

had a boundary that neither included nor abutted the rail corridor.

In 2016, Cole’s took a mortgage out on its property, including part of block 581, southeast

of the rail corridor. ECF No. 54-17 at 2-3, 14-15. The mortgage excluded Lakeshore Harbour’s

parcel but included the land subject to the railroad easement. Id. at 14-15 (legal description of the

mortgage property excepting the “part of Lot 6, Block 581 … described as beginning at a point on

the Northeasterly line of Block 581 … to the Southwesterly line, 188.87 feet to the Southeasterly

right-of-way line of the CSX Railroad; thence North 37 degrees 21 minutes 45 seconds East, along

said right-of-way line, 120.00 feet, thence North 41 degrees 56 minutes 11 seconds East, 150.48

feet”). From at least 1997 through 2023, Cole’s was assessed for and paid semi-annual property

taxes on land that included the segment of the rail corridor subject to the railroad easement. ECF

No. 54-19.

In June 2022, the railroad filed a notice with the United States Surface Transportation

Board that it was going to abandon and discontinue service on a section of rail line that included

the parcel discussed above. ECF No. 42-1.

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