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Port Sheldon Beach Association v. Dept of Environmental Quality
328483
Mich. Ct. App.
Dec 13, 2016
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Background

  • Port Sheldon Beach Association owns three undeveloped parcels adjacent to Lake Michigan that the 1989 Atlas of Critical Dune Areas (incorporated into the SDPMA/NREPA) shows within a designated critical dune area (CDA).
  • The Association alleges substantial accretion since 1989 (shoreline moved lakeward ~150 feet) and sought to remove dune grass/groom the newly accreted land.
  • DEQ denied the work, treating the accreted land between the 1989 Atlas line and the current water’s edge as within the CDA.
  • The Association sued; the Court of Claims granted summary disposition for DEQ, holding the atlas line at the lakeward edge functions as a meander line (boundary = water’s edge), not a fixed upland boundary.
  • Association’s arguments included: the atlas designated boundaries were fixed when enacted; statutory mechanisms for boundary changes show Legislature expected fixed boundaries; and DEQ must show resource-specific justification to regulate newly accreted land.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Whether the lakeward line on the Port Sheldon map is a fixed boundary or a meander line Atlas lines are fixed as of 1989; accreted land outside that fixed line is not in the CDA The map line is a meander line; the CDA extends to the current water’s edge, so accreted land is within the CDA The map’s lakeward line is a meander line; the CDA boundary is the water’s edge (affirmed)
Whether statutory adjustment provisions show Legislature intended fixed atlas boundaries Presence of sections allowing map review/adjustment implies original lines were fixed and only changeable via statutory process These provisions authorize review/recommendation or limited extensions but do not alter that lines on the atlas at the water’s edge operate as meander lines Adjustment provisions do not negate that a line drawn at the shoreline operates as a meander line; statutory review does not prove original lines were fixed
Whether DEQ must independently justify regulation of accreted land as unique/fragile under CDA purposes DEQ must show the newly regulated land meets CDA’s protective rationale before asserting jurisdiction Legislature’s designation (map showing CDA to water’s edge) suffices; no separate showing required for areas the Legislature placed at water’s edge No additional resource-specific showing required when Legislature’s map places the area within the CDA
Whether DEQ’s public materials or mapping constitute misleading conduct or reliance by Association Association reasonably relied on static online depictions of atlas boundaries as fixed Online materials had disclaimers and only reproduced the 1989 atlas; they do not contradict the atlas or DEQ interpretation No reasonable detrimental reliance shown; public materials did not alter legal effect of atlas lines

Key Cases Cited

  • Mumaugh v. McCarley, 219 Mich. App. 641 (discussing meander line means water edge is true boundary)
  • Farabaugh v. Rhode, 305 Mich. 234 (meander line is descriptive, not a boundary)
  • Porter v. Selleck, 236 Mich. 655 (meander line does not fix upland boundary; water is true boundary)
  • Tomecek v. Bavas, 482 Mich. 484 (statutory/deed interpretation seeks grantor/legislative intent)
  • St. Clair County v. Lovingston, 90 U.S. 46 (survey showing river as boundary implies no vacant land between river and boundary)
  • Burleson v. Dep’t of Environmental Quality, 292 Mich. App. 544 (de novo review of agency statutory interpretation)
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Case Details

Case Name: Port Sheldon Beach Association v. Dept of Environmental Quality
Court Name: Michigan Court of Appeals
Date Published: Dec 13, 2016
Docket Number: 328483
Court Abbreviation: Mich. Ct. App.