West Michigan Dock & Market Corp. v. Lakeland Investments

534 N.W.2d 212, 210 Mich. App. 505
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 1995
DocketDocket 164082
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 534 N.W.2d 212 (West Michigan Dock & Market Corp. v. Lakeland Investments) 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
West Michigan Dock & Market Corp. v. Lakeland Investments, 534 N.W.2d 212, 210 Mich. App. 505 (Mich. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Mackenzie, P.J.

This case involves a dispute over the ownership of, and rights to, a boat slip. Defendants, the owners of a parcel of property that is the site of a marine contracting business (hereafter Lakeland or defendant), appeal as of right from an opinion and order in favor of plaintiff. Plaintiff cross appeals from the same order. We affirm.

Plaintiff and defendant own adjacent waterfront industrial properties on Muskegon Lake. Each parcel includes a pier that extends outward into the lake. These two piers are separated by approximately 390 feet of water that forms a fully navigable boat slip. The pier on plaintiffs property comprises the eastern side of the slip; the shoreline portion of plaintiffs property comprises the southern end of the slip. Defendant’s pier is on the western side of the slip, while Muskegon Lake is at the open, northern end. Another boat slip is located on the other side of defendant’s pier; defendant indicates that it controls thirty feet of that slip._

*508 Defendant and its predecessors have used the west forty feet of the subject boat slip for the dockage of their business vessels, including tugboats and various barges employed in the marine contracting industry, for a total of approximately sixty years. That practice proved acceptable until 1989, when defendant leased its property to a marina and made improvements to its pier that extended into the boat slip. The controversy temporarily ended when the marina went bankrupt. It was revived in 1991, however, when defendant moored a World War II vintage submarine in the slip as a public museum.

Although the submarine was moved elsewhere the following year, the parties proceeded with this action to quiet title. Plaintiff claimed that the entire bottom land of the slip was within the boundaries of its property, precluding defendant from any long-term dockage of its vessels in the slip. Defendant claimed alternatively that the bottom land was owned by the State of Michigan, that it owned the bottom land to the center line of the slip, or that it had acquired the west forty feet of the slip by adverse possession.

Upon cross motions for summary disposition, the trial court determined as a matter of law that the boundary between the parties’ parcels is the western shore of the boat slip, so that plaintiff is the owner of the entire bottom land of the boat slip. The court further determined as a matter of law that Lakeland had not acquired ownership of a portion of the slip by adverse possession. Finally, the court determined that Lakeland, as a riparian owner on Muskegon Lake, had the right to reasonable use of the waters of the boat slip, and that reasonable riparian use was a question of fact requiring a trial.

Following a bench trial, the court entered an *509 opinion and order allowing Lakeland to load and unload boats and ships in the slip, but prohibiting it from anchoring vessels to the slip’s lake bed and from docking vessels for more than one week without plaintiffs permission. Additionally, to the extent that defendant’s improvements to its dock encroached on plaintiffs property, the court allowed defendant to keep the improvements in place upon payment of $5,000 to plaintiff within sixty days; in the absence of such payment, the encroachment was ordered removed at defendant’s expense. The court also determined that plaintiff was not entitled to damages for defendant’s past use of the slip and that neither party was entitled to costs or fees.

In two related arguments on appeal, defendant first contends that the trial court erred in determining that plaintiff owns the bottom land of the boat slip. Specifically, defendant contends that because the State of Michigan owns the bottom land of the Great Lakes and Muskegon Lake is part of the Lake Michigan, plaintiff has no ownership in the bottom land of the slip and defendant is entitled to share the navigable water space in the slip with all other riparian owners on the lake. We disagree and find no error in the trial court’s conclusion that plaintiff owned the slip.

While title to lands covered by the Great Lakes belongs to the state, Flanders Industries, Inc v Michigan, 203 Mich App 15, 27; 512 NW2d 328 (1993), the owner of property bounded by an inland watercourse owns the bottom land of the lake or stream to the centerline. Theis v Howland, 424 Mich 282, 288, n 2; 380 NW2d 463 (1985); Gregory v LaFaive, 172 Mich App 354, 361-362; 431 NW2d 511 (1988). Testimony before the trial court in this case established that Muskegon Lake meets the definition of "inland lake” as set forth in the *510 Inland Lakes and Streams Act, MCL 281.952(f); MSA 11.475(2)(f). Further, our Supreme Court confirmed in Rice v Ruddiman, 10 Mich 125, 135-138, 143-146 (1862), that Muskegon Lake is not part of Lake Michigan. Defendant failed to present evidence in the trial court concerning why widening the mouth of Muskegon Lake would alter the status of the lake or make the Rice decision inapplicable here. We therefore conclude that the trial court did not err in treating Muskegon Lake as an inland lake rather than part of the Great Lakes.

Defendant next claims that, if plaintiff has an ownership interest in the bottom land of the slip as part of an inland lake, then the trial court erred in determining the location of plaintiff’s western riparian boundary. The claim is also without merit.

As previously noted, the title of a riparian land owner extends to the middle line of an inland lake. Gregory, supra, pp 361-362. To establish riparian boundaries on an oblong lake affected by accretion, such as Muskegon Lake, a line is drawn from the point where the property line met the original lakeshore to a median center line of the lake as nearly perpendicular as possible. Id., pp 362-363.

In this case, surveyor Ralph Van Riper testified that he examined the deed describing plaintiff’s property, established the parcel’s parameters, and extended a line from the water’s edge at right angles to the center of the lake. This was consistent with the method set forth in Gregory, supra. After performing the necessary measurements, Van Riper concluded that the entire boat slip was situated within plaintiff’s property description. He also checked plaintiff’s western property line against defendant’s adjacent eastern property line, defined in its deed as "North 38 degrees 32 min *511 utes West,” and determined that the lines were common. Defendant’s surveyor, Steve Vallier, did not testify that a different riparian line existed or that Van Riper’s calculations were incorrect. On the basis of this evidence, we decline to disturb the trial court’s findings concerning the location of plaintiffs western riparian boundary or its characterization of the parties’ common property line as "the Easterly boundary of Defendants’ property.”

Defendant also contends that the trial court erred in ruling before trial that defendant had no property interest in the west forty feet of the boat slip by means of adverse possession, prescriptive easement, or acquiescence and that the court compounded this error by precluding defendant from presenting evidence to support these claims at trial.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

20251118_C370104_46_370104.Opn.Pdf
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2025
Joseph C Finch v. Maurice Gennari
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2025
20231130_C363651_33_363651.Opn.Pdf
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2023
Anthony L Woodmansee v. William Schmidt
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2022
Lorain M Smith v. Andrea Baker
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2021
Charles C Truscon Jr v. John E Schultz
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2020
William Kraus v. Michael Link
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2020
Sharon Kay v. Covert P Kelley
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2019
Walter Wendling v. Wildcat Club
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2019
Troy 888 LLC v. Summit Wilshire LLC
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2018
Mark Stuebner v. Michael G Righter
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2017
William E Marcus Trust v. Chad Apap
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2017
Janice a Moses v. James O'Neill
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2016
Sally Kranz v. Roger D Terrill
Michigan Court of Appeals, 2015

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
534 N.W.2d 212, 210 Mich. App. 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-michigan-dock-market-corp-v-lakeland-investments-michctapp-1995.