Plastow et al v. Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation
Filing
38
OPINION; Order to issue; signed by Judge Janet T. Neff (Judge Janet T. Neff, clb)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
SOUTHERN DIVISION
JAMES E. PLASTOW, JR. and
ISABELL JUNE PLASTOW,
Plaintiffs,
Case No. 1:10-cv-703
v.
HON. JANET T. NEFF
LAWYERS TITLE INSURANCE CORP.,
Defendant.
____________________________________/
OPINION
Plaintiffs James and Isabell Plastow, the insureds under a title insurance policy issued by
Defendant Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation, filed this diversity action, seeking a declaratory
judgment that Defendant was obligated to defend them against the claims asserted in an underlying
real property litigation and indemnify them from any losses or damages occasioned thereby under
the title insurance policy and further asserting a claim for breach of contract as a result of
Defendant’s failure to do so. Pending before the Court is Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary
Judgment (Dkt 24), to which Defendant filed a response (Dkt 29) and Plaintiffs filed a reply (Dkt
32). The parties have also since filed supplemental briefing (Dkts 35-37). Having fully considered
the written briefs, detailed stipulated statements of fact, and accompanying exhibits, the Court finds
that the relevant facts and arguments are adequately presented in these materials and that oral
argument would not aid the decisional process. See W.D. Mich. LCivR 7.2(d). For the following
reasons, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs’ motion is properly granted.
I. BACKGROUND
On January 30, 1980, Plaintiffs purchased a parcel of real property in Banks Township,
Antrim County, Michigan described as Lot # 1, White Pine Shores Subdivision (hereinafter, the
“Property”) (SMF1 ¶ 1). The plat of White Pines Shores subdivision was filed with the Antrim
County Register’s Office on September 9, 1955 at Liber 2 of Plats at page 83 (id. ¶ 2). It shows the
Property (i.e., Lot 1) as being the northernmost lot in the subdivision, depicts the Property’s north
and south boundaries as running in straight, essentially east-west lines for their entire length, and
identifies Lake Michigan as lying immediately west of and bordering the Property (id.). In addition,
the Description of Land Platted states, “The above description is intended to include all land to the
water’s edge of said Lake Michigan” (id.). Thus, per the Plat, the north and south boundaries of the
Property run to the water’s edge of Lake Michigan and Lake Michigan forms the west boundary of
the Property (id.). In this regard, the Property as described in the Plat included approximately 106
feet of beach and lake frontage (id.).
In conjunction with their acquisition of the Property, Plaintiffs obtained a Policy of Title
Insurance from Defendant (“the Policy”) (SMF ¶ 3). Schedule A of the Policy (1) establishes a
“Date of Policy” of December 18, 1979; (2) identifies Plaintiffs as the insureds; (3) characterizes
the estate or interest described and covered by the Policy as “Fee Simple”; and (4) describes the land
referred to in the Policy as, “Banks Township, Antrim County, Michigan, Lot 1, White Pine Shores,
according to the plat thereof as recorded in Liber 2 of Plats on page 83, Antrim County Records,
1
Plaintiffs’ Statement of Material Facts (Dkt 25-2), Defendant’s Counterstatement of Facts
(Dkt 30-2).
2
being a part of Sections 25 and 26, Town 32 North, Range 9 West” (id.). As originally issued, the
Policy provided Plaintiffs $25,000.00 in title insurance (id.).
The Policy provides:
SUBJECT TO THE EXCLUSIONS FROM COVERAGE, THE EXCEPTIONS
CONTAINED IN SCHEDULE B AND THE PROVISIONS OF THE
CONDITIONS AND STIPULATIONS HEREOF, LAWYERS TITLE INSURANCE
CORPORATION, a Virginia corporation, herein called the Company, insures, as of
Date of Policy shown in Schedule A, against loss or damage, not exceeding the
amount of insurance stated in Schedule A, and costs, attorneys’ fees and expenses
which the Company may become obligated to pay hereunder, sustained or incurred
by the insured by reason of:
1.
Title to the estate or interest described in Schedule A being vested
otherwise than as stated therein;
2.
Any defect in or lien or encumbrance on such title;
3.
Lack of a right of access to and from the land; or
4.
Unmarketability of such title.
(SMF ¶ 4). Schedule B of the Policy further provides, in pertinent part, that
[t]his Policy does not insure against loss or damages by reason of:
1.
Rights or claims of parties not shown of record.
2.
Unrecorded water, mineral and oil rights, unrecorded easements and claims
of easement, boundary line disputes not disclosed of record and any matters
which would be disclosed by an accurate survey and inspection of the
premises.
***
11.
Rights of the public and adjacent and abutting property owners in that portion
of the premises lying along Grand Traverse Bay.
(Id.)
3
In October 2007, Defendant issued a blank endorsement to Plaintiffs, amending Schedule
A of the Policy to increase the amount of title insurance stated therein to $500,000.00 (SMF ¶ 5).
Plaintiffs built a house on the Property in 1980-81 and used it as a summer cottage through 2006
(id.). Plaintiffs subsequently made the Property their primary residence and built a new house in
2006-07, occupying it in late July 2007 (id.). In conjunction with the planning and construction of
their new house, Plaintiffs caused a site plan survey of the Property to be prepared in December
2004 (id.). The 2004 site plan survey depicts the north and south boundaries of the Property as
extending to the west, in a straight, essentially east-west line, to the shore of Lake Michigan, thereby
encompassing the beach in front of and immediately west of the rest of the Property (id.). In this
regard, the 2004 site plan survey was consistent with other surveys of the Property with which
Plaintiffs were familiar, i.e., that the north and south boundaries extended to the west to the shore
of Lake Michigan and encompassed the beach in front of and immediately west of the rest of the
Property (id. ¶ 8).
Plaintiffs’ Property is bordered on the north by a common park for the residents of
Timberlane Terrace, a subdivision lying immediately north of White Pine Shores (SMF ¶ 9). The
Timberlane Terrace Plat was filed with the Antrim County Register’s Office on June 18, 1958 at
Liber 2 of Plats at page 95 (id. ¶ 10). Lots 37-46 and the lot identified as “Private Park” lie along
and abut the north boundary of Plaintiffs’ Property (id.). Depending on the location of the shore of
Lake Michigan at any given time, if the north boundary line of Plaintiffs’ Property is extended in
a straight line to the west to the shore, it cuts off the Timberlane Terrace Park’s beach access and
its access to the shore through the beach (id. ¶ 12). By the same token, if the northwest boundary
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line of the Timberlane Terrace Park is extended in a straight line to the southwest to the shore, it cuts
off Plaintiffs’ Property’s beach access and its access to the shore through the beach (id.).
Before 2007, Plaintiffs observed “sporadic” or “occasional” use of the beach in front of and
immediately west of the rest of the Property by people coming from Timberlane Terrace (SMF ¶ 13).
After Plaintiffs occupied their new house in the summer of 2007, there was a marked increase in the
use of this portion of the beach (i.e., the beach between the north and south boundaries of the
Property as extended to the shore of Lake Michigan) by people coming from Timberlane Terrace
(id. ¶ 14). According to Plaintiffs, individuals walked on a straight path down to the water (id.).
In response to these repeated incursions on what they understood and believed to be their property,
Plaintiffs caused a line of boulders to be placed immediately to the south of the Property’s north
boundary, out along the beach to a point just shy of the ordinary high water mark (id. ¶ 15). Despite
Plaintiffs’ efforts to delineate what they believed and understood to be the Property’s north
boundary, residents of Timberlane Terrace have continued to use the beach lying between the north
and south boundaries of the Property as extended to the shore of Lake Michigan (id. ¶ 16).
In early July 2008, on behalf of 41 Timberlane Terrace property owners, Rick Luther, a
Timberlane Terrace property owner, wrote Plaintiffs a letter, which provides the following:
Let me begin by stating that your actions of painting, grading to create a path across
our beach, and placing of boulders are at the least presumptuous. We have contacted
legal and riparian experts and they have concluded that the line you marked with
paint and boulders is not based on present Michigan and federal law.
The law is very clear in cases of relicted property and converging property lines. It
states clearly that the overriding concept for establishing property lines is
proportionality and equity. This concept has been reconfirmed in recent cases. To
accomplish fair and proportional boundaries, our experts advocate bisecting the
meander point that separates our plats. This would substantiate the approximate
lines we have used for the last 50 plus years. If you feel you need boulders to
delineate your property line please move them to that line.
5
(SMF ¶ 17). Luther’s letter was accompanied by a sketch depicting the proposed bisection of “the
meander point that separates our plats” (id. ¶ 18).
Upon receipt of Luther’s letter, Plaintiffs wrote Defendant a letter dated July 10, 2008,
requesting a defense and indemnification (SMF ¶¶ 19, 21). Plaintiffs sent another letter on July 16,
2008, providing Defendant with aerial photographs of the area in question and additional surveys
(id. ¶ 20). Defendant acknowledged receipt of Plaintiffs’ claim for a defense and indemnification,
advising that it was in the process of investigating the claim (id. ¶ 22).
On August 17, 2008, Plaintiffs communicated with Defendant again, through faxed
correspondence, stating:
I last spoke to you on 29 July 2008. Since that time my neighbors to the north have
become more aggressive in their encroachments on our property. This has resulted
in the necessity for me to retain counsel. It is my belief that I should have not had
to incur this expense and that these attorneys will only be doing the work that my
title company should be doing on our behalf. I have tried to contact you on 13, 14,
and 15 August with no results, hence this FAX. If you intend to deny me
representation then I ask you to set out the basis for your denial formally in order that
I may review the basis with my attorneys.
(SMF ¶ 23). Defendant did not respond (id.).
Shortly thereafter, Plaintiffs received correspondence from an attorney representing various
Timberlane Terrace property owners concerning the Timberlane Terrace Park (SMF ¶ 24). The
letter provided that “the property owners of Timberlane Terrace are concerned about the recent
actions on the beach area commonly used by members of Timberlane Terrace for the past 50 years.
In order to document the historical use of the beach in the record, my clients have filed an affidavit
affecting real property with the County Register of Deeds” (id.). A copy of the affidavit, executed
by more than 40 Timberlane Terrace property owners, accompanied the letter (id.). Through the
affidavit, the signatory Timberlane Terrace property owners described their purported use of the
6
Timberlane Terrace Park to access Lake Michigan and recreate on the beach in front of and
immediately west of the rest of the Property since 1958 (id.).
On August 29, 2008, Plaintiffs filed suit against all 87 Timberlane Terrace property owners
in the circuit court for the County of Antrim, Michigan: Plastow v. Randall, et al., No. 08-8408-CH
(SMF ¶ 26). Plaintiffs asserted claims against the property owners for quiet title, trespass, slander
of title, and quiet enjoyment, all seeking similar relief to the effect that Plaintiffs owned the beach
lying between the north and south boundaries of the Property as extended to the shore of Lake
Michigan, i.e., the beach in front of and immediately west of the rest of their Property (id.). In
support of these claims, Plaintiffs relied on the language of the White Pine Shores Plat, which called
for the Property to include “all land to the water’s edge of Lake Michigan,” and detailed the
extensive use of the beach by the Timberlane Terrace property owners over the preceding years (id.).
Approximately 25 of the named defendants in Plastow v. Randall asserted counterclaims
against Plaintiffs for quiet title, prescriptive easement, adverse possession, acquiescence, trespass
and quiet enjoyment (SMF ¶ 27). In support of their counterclaims, the Timberlane Terrace property
owners alleged the following:
9.
The Timberlane Terrace Park is a riparian property with frontage on Lake
Michigan.
10.
Since the creation of Timberlane Terrace in 1958, residents of the Plat have
been using Timberlane Terrace Park to access [L]ake Michigan and recreate
on the beach.
***
15.
The property boundaries and lot lines established by the Plat of Timberlane
Terrace include the disputed area within the boundaries of the Timberlane
Terrace Park.
***
7
44.
The placement of the rock/boulder line and the assertion of ownership over
a substantial portion of the disputed area by [Plaintiffs] is inconsistent with
and contrary to the boundaries of the Timberlane Terrace Park. . . .
(Id.).
On November 30, 2009, counsel for Plaintiffs in Plastow v. Randall resubmitted Plaintiffs’
claim for coverage under the Policy to Defendant, indicating that
[b]ased on my review of the Title Commitment, any denial of coverage is baseless.
Schedule B, Paragraph 11 of the Title Commitment states “Rights of the public and
adjacent and abutting property owners in that portion of the premises lying along
Grand Traverse Bay.” The adjoining property owners’ claim reaches far beyond the
property “directly abutting Grand Traverse Bay.” I believe the legal rights to the
property directly abutting Grand Traverse Bay have been clearly established by the
Michigan Supreme Court in Goeckel v. Glass, 473 Mich. 667. This is not an issue
in the present case. Again, there is no basis for a good faith denial of my clients’
claim. This is clearly an issue that their policy should cover. My client risks losing
substantial property that Lawyer’s originally insured. To date, my clients have spent
over $100,000.00 defending this action.
(SMF ¶ 29).
Defendant responded through correspondence dated December 15, 2009 (SMF ¶¶ 22, 30).
Acknowledging that it had the opportunity to consider the information previously submitted by
Plaintiffs and the additional materials supplied by counsel, Defendant denied Plaintiffs’ claim (id.
¶ 30). After citing the coverage exceptions set forth in the Policy, Defendant opined that the
[i]nformation contained in the submitted correspondence and pleadings stemming
from this matter clearly indicate that most, if not all, of the rights claimed by the
adjoining property owners to the above-referenced disputed portion of the Property
relate to the area lying along Grand Traverse Bay. Thus, all loss or damage
stemming from the assertion of these rights would be expressly excepted from
coverage pursuant to Exception #11 of Schedule B of your Client’s Policy.
Even assuming, arguendo, that these asserted rights and claims related to areas
outside Grand Traverse Bay, a review of your claim clearly indicates these matters
originally stem from a boundary line dispute resulting from claims under Riparian
Law that are not matters of public record, but that would have been disclosed by an
accurate survey and inspection of the affected area of the premises, not limited to the
8
area around Grand Traverse Bay. This is evidenced by the fact that the adjoining
landowners original claims as to the inaccuracy of the boundary line dispute invoked
the opinion of a riparian surveyor and did not reference issues that would be
contained in the public records. Thus, this attack on title would be specifically
excepted from coverage by Exception #2 of Schedule B of your Client’s Policy as
a boundary line dispute not disclosed of record and a matter which would be
disclosed by an accurate survey and inspection of the Property.
***
The above-stated Policy provisions establish that coverage is not afforded for any
matters arising in this Claim pursuant to the Conditions of your Client’s Policy for
reasons previously stated. Therefore, it remains the position of the Company that
coverage for this Claim is denied. Therefore, the Company will not provide
indemnification against loss or damage from matters raised in this Claim, nor will
the Company provide a defense for the matters raised in this Claim.
(Id.).
On July 22, 2010, the state court in Plastow v. Randall, issued a Decision and Order (SMF
¶ 31). The state court found that Plaintiffs’ Property and the Timberlane Terrace Park are riparian
properties (id. ¶ 32). The court determined that extending the section line between Plaintiffs’
Property and the Timberlane Terrace Park would eliminate the Park’s water access and would do
great injustice to certain parties in the litigation (id.). The state court appointed a surveyor,
determining to equitably apportion the disputed area to preserve riparian access to all waterfront
parcels of property (id.).
That same day, Plaintiffs filed this action against Defendant, seeking a declaratory judgment
that Defendant was obligated to defend and indemnify them against the claims asserted in Plastow
v. Randall and further asserting a claim for breach of contract as a result of Defendant’s failure to
do so. On September 24, 2010, the parties filed a joint request for a Pre-Motion Conference,
proposing to file cross-motions for summary judgment on the liability issues, reserving the issue of
damages (Dkt 6). The Court held a joint Pre-Motion Conference and Scheduling Conference on
9
November 30, 2010. This Court issued a briefing schedule on a motion for summary judgment from
Plaintiffs (Dkt 15) as well as a Case Management Order (Dkt 16). Following the completion of
discovery, the parties filed their motion papers (Dkts 24-33).
The parties have also since filed supplemental briefing, indicating that the surveyor
appointed by the state court completed a survey and map delineating the manner by which the
properties will be apportioned. Plaintiffs assert that the shape of their Property has changed in a
“profound manner” inasmuch as they “no longer own a single inch of the lakeshore they used to
own, their beach frontage having been shifted completely to the south of their old southern
boundary” (Dkt 35 at 6). Defendant emphasizes that the survey instead shows that Plaintiffs retain
nearly the same amount of frontage to which they asserted they were entitled (Dkt 36 at 2).
II. ANALYSIS
A. Motion Standard
A party may move for partial summary judgment, identifying the part of each claim on which
summary judgment is sought. FED. R. CIV. P. 56(a). Summary judgment is proper “if the movant
shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment
as a matter of law.” Id. The Court must view the evidence and draw all reasonable inferences in
favor of the nonmoving party. Slusher v. Carson, 540 F.3d 449, 453 (6th Cir. 2008); Harbin-Bey
v. Rutter, 420 F.3d 571, 575 (6th Cir. 2005). After reviewing the whole record, the Court must
determine “‘whether the evidence presents a sufficient disagreement to require submission to a jury
or whether it is so one-sided that one party must prevail as a matter of law.’” Booker v. Brown &
Williamson Tobacco Co., Inc., 879 F.2d 1304, 1310 (6th Cir. 1989) (quoting Anderson v. Liberty
Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 251-52 (1986)).
10
The party moving for summary judgment has the initial burden of showing that no genuine
issue of material fact exists. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986); Street v. J.C.
Bradford & Co., 886 F.2d 1472, 1479 (6th Cir. 1989). Once the moving party has made such a
showing, the burden is on the nonmoving party to demonstrate the existence of an issue to be
litigated at trial. Slusher, 540 F.3d at 453.
B. Discussion
The parties do not dispute that Michigan law governs the liability issues on which Plaintiffs
seek partial summary judgment (Pls. Mot, Dkt 25 at 12; Defs. Resp., Dkt 30 at 7). Under Michigan
law, interpretation of an insurance contract requires a two-step inquiry: first, a determination of
coverage according to the general insurance agreement, and second, a decision regarding whether
an exclusion applies to negate coverage. Auto-Owners Ins. Co. v. Harrington, 565 N.W.2d 839, 841
(Mich. 1997); Hastings Mut. Ins. Co. v. Safety King, Inc., 778 N.W.2d 275, 291 (Mich. Ct. App.
2009).
In Century Surety Co. v. Charron, 583 N.W.2d 486, 488 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998), the
Michigan Court of Appeals summarized the guidelines for interpreting insurance policies and
exclusionary clauses as the following:
An insurance policy is much the same as any other contract. It is an
agreement between the parties in which a court will determine what the agreement
was and effectuate the intent of the parties. Auto-Owners Ins Co v. Churchman, 440
Mich. 560, 566-567; 489 NW2d 431 (1992). When determining what the parties’
agreement is, the court should read the contract as a whole and give meaning to all
the terms contained the policy. The court must give the language contained in the
policy its plain and ordinary meaning so that technical and strained constructions are
avoided. Royce v. Citizens Ins. Co., 219 Mich. App. 537, 542; 557 NW2d 144
(1996). If an insurance contract sets forth definitions, the policy language must be
interpreted according to those definitions. Cavalier Mfg. Co. v. Employers Ins. of
Wausau (On Remand), 222 Mich. App. 89, 94; 564 NW2d 68 (1997). Where the
language of an insurance policy is clear and unambiguous, it must be enforced as
11
written. Courts must be careful not to read an ambiguity into a policy where none
exists. Moore v. First Security Casualty Co., 224 Mich. App. 370, 375; 568 NW2d
841 (1997).
Exclusionary clauses in insurance policies are strictly construed in favor of
the insured. Coverage under a policy is lost if any exclusion in the policy applies to
an insured’s particular claims. Clear and specific exclusions must be given effect
because an insurance company cannot be liable for a risk it did not assume.”
Churchman, supra at 567; Frankenmuth Mut. Ins. Co. v. Masters, [225 Mich. App.
51, 62; 570 NW2d 134 (1997), rev’d on other grounds 460 Mich. 105 (1999).]
1. Duty to Defend
Plaintiffs contend that the Policy required Defendant to defend them in Plastow v. Randall
and that Defendant breached the Policy by refusing to do so. Summarizing the law with respect to
an insurer’s duty to defend an insured, the Michigan Court of Appeals has indicated that the duty
of an insurer to defend its insured depends upon
the allegations in the complaint of the third party in his or her action against the
insured. The duty is not limited to meritorious suits and may even extend to actions
which are groundless, false, or fraudulent, so long as the allegations against the
insured even arguably come within the policy coverage. An insurer has a duty to
defend, despite theories of liability asserted against any insured which are not
covered under the policy, if there are any theories of recover that fall within the
policy. The duty to defend cannot be limited by the precise language of the
pleadings. The insurer has a duty to look behind the third party’s allegations to
analyze whether coverage is possible. In case of doubt as to whether or not the
complaint against the insured alleges a liability of the insurer under the policy, the
doubt must be resolved in the insured’s favor.
Detroit Edison Co. v. Michigan Mut. Ins. Co., 301 N.W.2d 832, 835 (Mich. Ct. App. 1981) (citations
omitted).
Defendant does not dispute that the Policy generally required it to defend Plaintiffs in title
matters. The issue with the duty-to-defend coverage in this case involves the second step of the
inquiry, whether any of the coverage exceptions set forth in Schedule B of the Policy negate the
coverage otherwise available under the general terms of the Policy. Specifically, Defendant relies
12
on two coverage exceptions set forth in Schedule B, above: Exception #2, excepting from coverage
“boundary line disputes not disclosed of record”; and Exception #11, excepting from coverage
“[r]ights of . . . adjacent and abutting property owners in that portion of the premises lying along
Grand Traverse Bay.”
Turning first to Exception #11, Plaintiffs argue that whether this exception applies to the
claims brought against them in Plastow v. Randall and, therefore, justifies Defendant’s refusal to
defend Plaintiffs, turns on the phrase “that portion of the premises lying along Grand Traverse Bay”
and, more precisely, on the word “along” (Dkt 25 at 15). According to Plaintiffs, because the claims
against them in Plastow v. Randall implicate their title to and ownership of much more than just the
west boundary of their Property, Exception #11 does not justify Defendant’s failure to defend
Plaintiffs (id.). Plaintiffs point out that from the initial Luther letter in early July 2008 through the
Affidavit in August 2008 and the counterclaims in September 2008, the Timberlane Terrace property
owners consistently sought to establish their title to and ownership of “a broad swath of the Property
lying east of Lake Michigan, between the north and south boundaries established by the White Pine
Shore Plat” (id. at 16).
Defendant argues that Exception #11 excepts coverage in this case because the disputed area
lies along Grand Traverse Bay (Dkt 30 at 9). Defendant argues that Plaintiffs’ narrow reading of
the exception would render the exception entirely void because there would be no reason to include
the exception in the Policy where the only property abutting the west boundary line is Grand
Traverse Bay (id.). Defendant points to the Affidavit, where the Disputed Area was described as
an area starting near the creek at the park’s northern property line and following the shore 75 feet
to the south (id. at 10).
13
Although clear and specific exclusions must be given effect, Exception #11 here does not
clearly or specifically exclude from the Policy’s duty-to-defend coverage the allegations by the
Timberlane Terrace property owners against Plaintiffs. The allegations by the Timberlane Terrace
property owners arguably come within the Policy coverage inasmuch as the counterclaims against
Plaintiffs (quiet title, prescriptive easement, adverse possession, acquiescence, trespass and quiet
enjoyment) concerned more than “that portion of the premises lying along Grand Traverse Bay.”
Defendant could have more clearly and specifically drafted the exception to exclude coverage, and
its failure to do so inures to Plaintiffs’ benefit, not Defendant’s benefit. See Cincinnati Ins. Co. v.
Zen Design Group, Ltd., 329 F.3d 546, 552 (10th Cir. 2003) (applying Michigan law and
concluding, “Any doubts as to the insurer’s liability must be resolved in favor of the insured.”). The
Court holds, as a matter of law, that the duty-to-defend coverage otherwise provided by the general
terms of the Policy was not negated by Exception #11 on these facts.
Turning next to Exception #2, Plaintiffs argue that whether this exception applies to exclude
the claims in Plastow v. Randall turns on whether the underlying litigation involved a “boundary
line dispute” and, if so, whether the boundary lines giving rise to the dispute were “not disclosed of
record” (Dkt 25 at 17). Plaintiffs assert that because the claim upon which the Timberlane Terrace
property owners have prevailed against Plaintiffs in Plastow v. Randall involved much more than
a boundary line dispute and the basis for that claim was, in fact, disclosed of record, Exception #2
does not justify Defendant’s failure to defend Plaintiffs (id.). Alternatively, Plaintiffs argue that
even if the claims asserted against Plaintiffs by the Timberlane Terrace property owners constitute
a “boundary line dispute,” the fact remains that it was a boundary line dispute disclosed of record,
rendering Defendant’s reliance on Exception #2 unwarranted (id. at 18).
14
Defendant argues that even assuming arguendo that the claims of Timberlane Terrace pertain
to “portions of the premises outside of Grand Traverse Bay,” such rights and claims are not shown
of record and are therefore excepted by Policy Exception #2 (Dkt 30 at 10). According to
Defendant, the rights and claims of Timberlane Terrace to the disputed area can be summarized in
two ways: (1) claims based on Timberlane Terrace’s historical use of the Disputed Area, and (2) the
extension of Timberlane Terrace Park’s boundary lines to the high water mark of Grand Traverse
Bay (id.). As evidence that the Timberlane Terrace claims were not based on something of record,
Defendant points to the fact that the Timberlane Terrace owners’ claims are based on adverse
possession and acquiescence theories for which riparian experts were retained (id. at 11).
Even assuming arguendo that the allegations in Plastow v. Randall amount to a boundary
dispute, the undisputed material facts demonstrate that the dispute was based on publicly disclosed
and recorded plats. The “Description of Land Platted” relevant to Plaintiffs’ Property states that the
description is “intended to include all land to the water’s edge of said Lake Michigan” (SMF ¶ 2).
Conversely, the Timberlane Terrace property owners alleged that “the property boundaries and lot
lines established by the Plat of Timberlane Terrace include the disputed area within the boundaries
of the Timberlane Terrace Park” (id. ¶ 27). As Plaintiffs argue in their Reply (Dkt 32 at 5-8), the
fact that the Timberlane Terrace property owners asserted theories of recovery against Plaintiffs in
Plastow v. Randall based on historical use does not relieve Defendant of its contractual obligation
to defend Plaintiffs. “It is well settled that ‘if the allegations of the underlying suit arguably fall
within the coverage of the policy, the insurer has a duty to defend its insured.’” Radenbaugh v.
Farm Bureau Gen. Ins. Co., 610 N.W.2d 272, 275 (Mich. Ct. App. 2000) (quoting Royce v. Citizens
Ins. Co., 557 N.W.2d 144, 147 (Mich. Ct. App. 1996)).
15
In sum, the claims asserted against Plaintiffs by the Timberlane Terrace property owners
were covered by the general terms of the Policy, and the coverage was not negated by the coverage
exceptions on which Defendant relies. The Court concludes, as a matter of law, that the Policy
required Defendant to defend Plaintiffs in Plastow v. Randall and that Defendant’s failure to do so
constituted a breach of the agreement.
2.
Duty to Indemnify
Plaintiffs further contend that the Policy required Defendant to indemnify them for any losses
they incurred as a result of the apportionment decision in Plastow v. Randall and that Defendant
breached the Policy by refusing to do so (Dkt 25 at 20). Plaintiffs argue that the claims upon which
the Timberlane Terrace property owners prevailed against Plaintiffs in Plastow v. Randall are
covered by the Policy and not subject to any coverage exception (id.). According to Plaintiffs,
because the state court determined that title to and ownership of that beach is actually vested in the
Timberlane Terrace property owners (through their joint ownership of the Timberlane Terrace Park),
not Plaintiffs, the size and shape of Plaintiffs’ Property will be substantially altered, with the
Property’s north and south boundaries shifting to the south and Plaintiffs’ beach and shore access
shifting to the south, with corresponding damages in the form of diminished property value and loss
of lake frontage accruing to Plaintiffs (id.).
Defendant did not separately address its contractual duty to indemnify. Defendant relies on
Exceptions #11 and #2 as excluding coverage under the Policy for both its duty to defend or
indemnify on these facts.
This Court previously concluded that the duty-to-defend coverage afforded Plaintiffs was
not negated by either exclusion, and Defendant offers no basis for reaching a contrary conclusion
16
regarding the duty-to-indemnify coverage of the Policy. Accordingly, the Court concludes, as a
matter of law, that the Policy also requires Defendant to indemnify Plaintiffs for the losses they
incurred in Plastow v. Randall and that Defendant’s failure to do so constituted a breach of the
agreement.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court determines that Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary
Judgment (Dkt 24) is granted. An Order will be entered consistent with this Opinion. Barring the
parties’ ability to stipulate to an amount of damages and reasonable attorney fees and related costs
incurred by Plaintiffs, a Final Pretrial Conference and Trial on these remaining issues will be
noticed.
/s/ Janet T. Neff
JANET T. NEFF
United States District Judge
20
DATED: December ___, 2011
17
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