Virginia Park Subdivision Association v. Pascal Brown

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 2019
Docket339808
StatusUnpublished

This text of Virginia Park Subdivision Association v. Pascal Brown (Virginia Park Subdivision Association v. Pascal Brown) 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
Virginia Park Subdivision Association v. Pascal Brown, (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

VIRGINIA PARK SUBDIVISION UNPUBLISHED ASSOCIATION, January 10, 2019

Plaintiff-Appellee,

and

CAROL D. HAIR, SEAN JACQUES, TALIA SAFARO, ROK IVEZAJ, MARIA IVEZAJ, LUIGI DEDA, AFERDITA DEDA, CHRISTOPHER D. YEZBICK, KIMBERLY I. YEZBICK, GEORGE IVEZAJ, JAMIE IVEZAJ, DAREN L. REED, JOYCE A. PILLSBURY, DAVID J. LUCCHETTI, MARK MATKOVICH, MARILYN E. MILLS, RUSSELL A. MCCLELLAND, KARINE MCCLELLAND, GREGORY C. COLEY, NAOMI COLEY, JOSHUA P. CRESWELL, GAIL CRESWELL, MICHAEL W. MAURER, EDWARD H. GILBERT, and FLORIN C. MOLDOVAN,

Plaintiffs-Counterdefendants- Appellees,

v No. 339762 Oakland Circuit Court PASCAL BROWN and MEGA MANAGEMENT LC No. 2017-157802-CH GROUP,

Defendants,

JOANNE BROWN also known as JOANNE GAINES, KATIE STILL, and BLAIR STILL, Defendants-Counterplaintiffs- Appellants,

JULIAN C. URSING and KIMBERLY D. URSING,

Defendants-Counterplaintiffs.

VIRGINIA PARK SUBDIVISION ASSOCIATION,

CAROL D. HAIR, SEAN JACQUES, TALIA SAFARO, ROK IVEZAJ, MARIA IVEZAJ, LUIGI DEDA, AFERDITA DEDA, CHRISTOPHER D. YEZBICK, KIMBERLY I. YEZBICK, GEORGE IVEZAJ, JAMIE IVEZAJ, DAREN L. REED, JOYCE A. PILLSBURY, DAVID J. LUCCHETTI, MARK MATKOVICH, MARILYN E. MILLS, RUSSELL A. MCCLELLAND, KARINE MCCLELLAND, GREGORY C. COLEY, NAOMI COLEY, JOSHUA P. CRESWELL, GAIL CRESWELL, MICHAEL W. MAURER, EDWARD H. GILBERT, and FLORIN C. MOLDOVAN,

v No. 339808 Oakland Circuit Court PASCAL BROWN and MEGA MANAGEMENT LC No. 2017-157802-CH GROUP,

JOANNE BROWN also known as JOANNE

-2- GAINES, KATIE STILL, and BLAIR STILL,

Defendants-Counterplaintiffs,

Defendants-Counterplaintiffs- Appellants.

Before: JANSEN, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and BORRELLO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

These consolidated appeals arise from a single case in the trial court involving a dispute over riparian1 rights. Defendants Joanne Brown,2 Katie Still, Blair Still, Julian Ursing, and Kimberly Ursing (collectively the front-lot owners)3 appeal as of right the trial court’s order (1) denying defendants’ motion for summary disposition, (2) declaring as a matter of law under MCR 2.116(I)(1) that all lot owners in the Virginia Park Subdivision have a use easement in the platted park but no riparian rights, and dismissing all remaining claims as moot. Docket No. 339762 concerns the appeal filed by Brown and the Stills, and Docket No. 339808 concerns the appeal filed by the Ursings. This Court consolidated both appeals.4 For the reasons set forth in

1 We acknowledge that the rights at issue in this case technically are littoral rights rather than riparian rights because the dispute involves land that abuts a lake rather than a river. See 2000 Baum Family Trust v Babel, 488 Mich 136, 138 n 1; 793 NW2d 633 (2010). However, we will nonetheless use the term “riparian” in this opinion because that term is often used to refer to both types of land. See id. 2 Joanne Brown is apparently also known as Joanne Gaines. 3 We have chosen to use the terms “front-lot owners” and “back-lot owners” in this opinion because it seems to be the most clear way to refer to these groups of owners and their respective proximity to the lake. However, we recognize that plaintiffs generally contest this characterization of subdivision lot owners. We clarify that we ascribe no legal significance to these characterizations and that our disposition of this appeal is based instead on the legal analysis that follows in this opinion. 4 Virginia Park Subdivision Ass’n v Brown, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered August 31, 2017 (Docket Nos. 339762 and 339808).

-3- this opinion, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

The individuals involved in this action are all owners of lots in the Virginia Park Subdivision, located in Oakland County. The subdivision was platted in 1917 and consists of 26 lots, a street, and a park that abuts Walled Lake. Lots 12 through 15 (the front lots) are separated from Walled Lake by the park. Brown owns lots 12 and 13, the Ursings own lot 14, and the Stills own lot 15. According to the plat, these lots all share their eastern boundary line with the western boundary line of the park, and the eastern edge of the park abuts Walled Lake. The remaining subdivision lots (the back lots) are located west of the front lots. All of the individual plaintiffs (collectively the back-lot owners) own back lots. The back lots are separated from Walled Lake by both the front lots and the park. None of the back lots border the park or the lake. The plat dedication provides that “the street and park as shown on said plat are hereby dedicated to the use of lot owners only.”

In 2017, a dispute developed between the front-lot owners and back-lot owners over the use of the park and, specifically, rights to install docks and moor boats. The front-lot owners maintained that they exclusively owned the riparian rights in the park and that the back-lot owners only had an easement permitting them to use the park for customary park purposes that did not include the right to install docks or moor watercraft overnight or seasonally.

Plaintiffs, which included the back-lot owners and the Virginia Park Subdivision Association,5 filed this lawsuit seeking (1) a declaratory judgment that all subdivision lot owners held equal and coextensive rights regarding the ownership and use of the park and (2) to quiet title in favor of all lot owners with a declaration that all lot owners held fee simple title to the park. Plaintiffs additionally asserted a trespass claim and a nuisance claim. Both of these claims were based plaintiffs’ allegations that Brown’s deck encroached onto the park, that the Stills had a driveway, patio, and well/planter that encroached onto the park, and that the Stills drove vehicles over the park to reach their driveway.

Brown and the Stills subsequently filed counterclaims against the back-lot owners. In Count I, Brown and the Stills sought a declaratory judgment that the back-lot owners only held an irrevocable easement in the park and that the front-lot owners held the underlying fee interest in the park and the exclusive ownership of the riparian rights. In Count II, they sought a judgment quieting title in favor of the front-lot owners, subject to the easement held by the back- lot owners. In Count III, they sought the ejectment of docks and watercraft of certain back-lot owners. In Count IV, they asserted a trespass claim based on the installation of docks and mooring of watercraft by certain back-lot owners. In Counts V and VI, Brown and the Stills asserted that the encroachments alleged by plaintiffs in their trespass and nuisance claims were

5 According to plaintiffs’ complaint, the Virginia Park Subdivision Association “is a voluntary, unincorporated association comprised of the owners of lots 1 through 11 and 16 through 26 of the Virginia Park Subdivision.”

-4- not actually encroachments, relying on claims of adverse possession, prescriptive easement, and acquiescence. In Count VII, Brown and the Stills sought a declaratory judgment that the Stills could continue to use their current driveway access route to their lot. The Ursings also raised four counterclaims similar to the first four counts raised by Brown and the Stills.

Brown and the Stills moved for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (C)(10) on all of the claims and counterclaims regarding park ownership, riparian rights, dock installation, and watercraft mooring.

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