MacAtawa Park Association v. Va Properties LLC

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 13, 2026
Docket369641
StatusUnpublished

This text of MacAtawa Park Association v. Va Properties LLC (MacAtawa Park Association v. Va Properties LLC) 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
MacAtawa Park Association v. Va Properties LLC, (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

MACATAWA PARK ASSOCIATION, JOHN UNPUBLISHED GRONBERG, and JOEL KRISSOFF, April 13, 2026 10:53 AM Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v No. 369641 Ottawa Circuit Court VA PROPERTIES, LLC, DAVID VAN ANDEL, LC No. 22-006731-CH Trustee of the DAVID VAN ANDEL TRUST, and CAROL E. VAN ANDEL, Trustee of the CAROL E. VAN ANDEL TRUST,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: O’BRIEN, P.J., and FEENEY and WALLACE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiffs, the Macatawa Park Association (MPA),1 John Gronberg, and Joel Krissoff appeal as of right the trial court’s final judgment for defendants, VA Properties, LLC, and David and Carol Van Andel in their capacity as trustees for their respective trusts. Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred by granting partial summary disposition in favor of defendants and holding that plaintiffs had not established that they had a right to use private paths running through defendants’ properties. Plaintiffs Gronberg and Krissoff also argue that they had personally established prescriptive easements over the paths. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This case arises from a property dispute involving several rights of way in the land north of Macatawa Park, a summer resort community located on a peninsula between Lake Michigan and Lake Macatawa. In particular, plaintiffs claim that they have a right to use the private rights

1 Plaintiffs substituted former plaintiff the Macatawa Park Cottagers Association (MPCA) for MPA after MPCA merged into MPA and ceased to exist.

-1- of way known as Bay Road, North Walk, and Lakeside Way (collectively, the Paths), which are owned in whole or in part by defendants.

There are two main roads or walkways on the peninsula—Lakeside Road on the west side and Bay Road on the east side. They are connected by Interlake Walk. In 1985, the District Court for the Western District of Michigan entered an order vacating the section of Lakeside Road that extended into Heneveld’s Supervisor’s Plat No. 31 (HS31).2 The order established an alternate route, which was replatted as Lakeside Way. On the other side of the peninsula, the northernmost part of Bay Road leads to North Walk, which connects to a dock along the water’s edge. North Walk begins as a cemented path before turning to gravel and continuing west toward a lighthouse on the far northwestern corner of the peninsula. The gravel part of the path is owned by the United States.

The northernmost part of the peninsula where this gravel path is located came to be owned by the United States government in 1873. On August 8, 1873, property owners Henry and Anna Post conveyed a parcel of land abutting the Macatawa Channel to the United States to operate as a lifesaving station. On April 23, 1884, the United States was granted an additional parcel of land for the lifesaving station. The lifesaving station operated until about 1955.

The peninsula was first platted on May 16, 1888, creating Macatawa Park. The northern part of the peninsula was platted as part of Ottawa County, but the plat did not encompass the northernmost region of the peninsula along the Macatawa Channel, including the government’s property. The southern part of the peninsula was platted as part of Allegan County. Over the next couple decades, additional lands below the peninsula were platted as “additions” to Macatawa Park. These included the 1890 Lakeside Addition, the 1895 Chicago Addition, and the 1909 Macatawa Bay Addition. The only express dedication relating to the use of roadways in Macatawa Park comes from the 1909 Macatawa Bay Addition plat, which dedicated the roads therein “to the sole and only use of the lot owners.”

The northern region of the peninsula was not platted until April 19, 1935, in HS31. Later that year on August 10, 1935, Heneveld resubdivided land in the 1888 Macatawa Park plat. This version clearly showed Bay Road and Lakeside Road running to the southern border of HS31. When the 1985 court order vacated the northern end of Lakeside Road and created Lakeside Way, that area of HS31 was amended in 1986. That amended plat reflected that the northernmost part of Lakeside Road was vacated, and Lakeside Way split off from Lakeside Road at a 45-degree angle in a northwest direction. The disputed Paths in this case—Lakeside Way, North Walk, and the path connecting Bay Road to North Walk—are all located within HS31, as amended.

In 1943, our Supreme Court recognized that Macatawa property owners had an easement allowing them to use the private roads, streets, drives, alleys, and parks in Macatawa Park to access their properties. Unverzagt v Miller, 306 Mich 260, 262; 10 NW2d 849 (1943). This easement also allowed property owners to invite merchants and tradesmen to deliver groceries, milk, ice,

2 Van Andel v Park Twp, unpublished order of the United States District Court of the Western District of Michigan, entered July 16, 1985 (Case No. G-80-240 CA 6).

-2- and other goods “reasonably necessary and convenient to the proper enjoyment of the easement.” Id. at 266.

Plaintiffs alleged that defendants installed a temporary fence in 2015 to block the north end of Lakeside Way while they were constructing a new residence. After construction was completed, defendants refused to remove the fencing, and they also maintained a wall that blocked anyone from using Lakeside Way. Plaintiffs’ complaints regarding Bay Road and North Walk began in 2021. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, plaintiff MPCA, the Holland Harbor Lighthouse Historical Commission, and defendant VA Properties entered into an agreement to limit access to the lighthouse to Tuesdays and Thursdays. In the spring of 2020, the parties agreed to suspend the agreement and prevent access to the lighthouse because of concerns regarding high water levels and COVID-19 exposure. By the summer of 2021, however, VA Properties had not restored access. It maintained a guardhouse on Bay Road, and plaintiffs alleged that security personnel would physically confront and turn away anyone who tried to pass by the guardhouse heading toward North Walk. VA Properties also installed a red sawhorse barricade with a “No Trespassing” sign at the west end of North Walk.

MPCA (now MPA)—a nonprofit corporation formed to protect and serve the interests of cottage owners in Macatawa Park—as well as Gronberg and Krissoff, who were MPCA members and owned property south of HS31, brought this action as plaintiffs against defendants. Their complaint alleged, among other things, that plaintiffs were entitled to declaratory judgment that an easement granted all property owners in Macatawa Park a right to the recreational use of the Paths even if their property was south of HS31, and that plaintiffs Gronberg and Krissoff had each established a prescriptive easement for recreational use of the Paths. Plaintiffs later amended the complaint to add an alternative claim that the Macatawa Park property owners’ rights stemmed from a common-law private dedication of the rights of way within HS31 for the use of lot owners in plats south of HS31.

On September 21, 2022, plaintiffs moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) on the issues of declaratory judgment and common-law private dedication. Regarding the request for declaratory judgment, plaintiffs asserted that the original Macatawa Park developers envisioned the land within all the aforementioned plats—including HS31—as a single summer resort, and that understanding of the land had continued for the last 150 years.

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MacAtawa Park Association v. Va Properties LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macatawa-park-association-v-va-properties-llc-michctapp-2026.