ALFRED B. COOPER, SR., and
RHODA G. COOPER, Plaintiffs, v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Defendant.
NO. 89-114-CIV-4-H
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA, NEW BERN DIVISION
779 F. Supp. 833; 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS
18393; 92-1 U.S. Tax Cas. (CCH) P50,164; 69 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 584; 69
A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 584
December 19, 1991, Decided
December 26, 1991, Filed
CASE SUMMARY:
PROCEDURAL POSTURE: Plaintiff
taxpayers sued defendant United States (IRS) to recover taxes, penalties,
and interest after the IRS disallowed their refund claims. The refund
involved charitable deductions claimed by the taxpayers for the value of
shares of stock in a corporation conveyed by gift to a town in North
Carolina. The parties filed cross-motions for partial summary judgment.
OVERVIEW: The corporation
owned a strip of dry sand beach property. The town redeemed the stock for
a portion of that property. The IRS contended the property had been
dedicated to the town by the taxpayers when they had recorded a plat
showing the dry sand as an unmarked beach area. The court found that under
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 77-20, the dry sand area, the property lying above the
mean high water mark, could be privately owned. Pursuant to N.C. Const.
art. XIV, § 5, the state was empowered to acquire by purchase or gift
property necessary to conserve and protect the state's lands and waters
for the benefit of all its citizenry. This permitted the state to acquire
an interest in privately-owned property under the public trust doctrine.
The court rejected the IRS argument that the land had been previously
dedicated. Although the argument was not an affirmative defense, and could
be raised on a motion for summary judgment, the facts showed that there
had been no intent to convey the property to the town at the time the plat
was filed. The taxpayers continued to exercise control over the property
and to pay property taxes on it.
OUTCOME: The court granted
partial summary judgment in favor of the taxpayers on their claim for a
refund based on their gift to the town.
COUNSEL: [**1] LEE A. SPINKS,
POYNER & SPRUILL, 128 South Tyron Street, 1600 First Citizens Bank
Plaza, Charlotte, NC 28202, For Plaintiff
GERARD J. MENE, THOMAS
HOLDERNESS, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Tax Division, P. O. Box 227, Ben
Franklin Station, Washington, DC 20044, For Defendant
JUDGES: HOWARD
OPINIONBY: MALCOLM J. HOWARD
OPINION:
[*833] ORDER
This matter is before the
court on cross-motions for partial summary judgment on stipulated facts.
In this taxpayers' refund suit, the court is asked to determine whether
the plaintiffs enjoyed private ownership [*834] of a narrow strip of
"dry sand" beach property approximately 3200 feet long and 100
feet wide. The parties submitted exhaustive memoranda, and the State of
North Carolina filed a memorandum as amicus curiae. This matter is now
ripe for ruling.
The plaintiffs instituted this
action to recover taxes, penalties, and interest after their refund claims
submitted to the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service were denied.
The refund involves charitable deductions claimed by the plaintiffs for
the value of shares of stock in a corporation known as Atlantic Beach,
Inc., ("ABI") conveyed by gift to the Town of Atlantic Beach
(the "Town"). The Town immediately redeemed the stock [**2] for
a portion of the dry sand property owned by ABI. Upon audit and review,
the Internal Revenue Service disallowed a sizeable amount of the
deductions.
As this matter is before the
court on stipulated facts, the court hereby incorporates the parties'
factual stipulations submitted on September 13, 1991, and dispenses with a
detailed statement of the facts. The question before this court is whether
the strip of dry sand beach property was owned by ABI during the years
1982 through 1984, or was public or "public trust" property.
ABI acquired title to the
beach strip property by deed in fee simple in 1944. Over the years, ABI
conveyed various parcels of oceanfront property in the Town of Atlantic
Beach to the Town and other individuals. The strip of property in question
represented the remaining portion of ABI's extensive real estate holdings.
The parties agree that the strip of property lies landward of the mean
high water mark of the Atlantic Ocean and seaward of the frontal dune or
seawall. Property of this nature is termed "dry sand."
The defendant and amicus
curiae assert that the dry sand property involved in this matter is public
trust property held for the use and enjoyment [**3] of the general public.
Alternatively, the defendant contends that the plaintiffs dedicated the
dry sand property to the Town in 1938 when they recorded a plat showing
the dry sand as an unmarked beach area.
[HN1] Section 77-20 of the
North Carolina General Statutes provides "the seaward boundary of all
property within the State of North Carolina, not owned by the State, which
adjoins the ocean, is the mean high water mark." Thus, property lying
below the mean high water mark, the "wet sand," is in the public
domain, while property lying above the mean high water mark, the dry sand,
may be privately owned. n1
n1 See also [HN2] N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 146-6(a) (1990), which provides
if any land is, by any
process of nature . . . raised above the high watermark of any navigable
water, title thereto shall vest in the owner of that land which,
immediately prior to the raising of the land in question, directly
adjoined the navigable water. . . .
[HN3] Section 146-6(f)
further provides
notwithstanding the other
provisions of this section, the title to land in or immediately along
the Atlantic Ocean raised above the mean high water mark by publicly
financed projects which involve hydraulic dredging or other deposition
of spoil materials or sand vests in the State. Title to such lands
raised through projects that received no public funding vests in the
adjacent littoral proprietor. All such raised lands shall remain open to
the free use and enjoyment of the people of the State, consistent with
the public trust rights in ocean beaches, which rights are part of the
common heritage of the people of this State.
These provisions reiterate
the importance of the high water mark in determining the boundaries of
private ownership in property adjoining a beach or navigable body of
water.
[**4]
[HN4] Pursuant to Article XIV,
§ 5, of the North Carolina Constitution, the state is empowered to
"acquire by purchase or gift" property necessary to
"conserve and protect [the state's] lands and waters for the benefit
of all its citizenry." This ability to acquire property for the
dedication of public purposes arises under the doctrine of public trust.
n2 The North Carolina Constitution [*835] and the General Statutes
authorize the state, as guardian of the public trust, to acquire an
interest in privately-owned property by purchase, gift, dedication, or
some other means. See N.C. Const. art. V, § 5; N.C. Gen. Stat. § §
113-8, 113-34. As applied to beach property, the public trust doctrine
protects the public's right to freely use and enjoy state-owned property
-- the wet sand beach.
n2 [HN5] "Public trust
rights," as defined by statute, are
those rights held in trust
by the State for the use and benefit of the people of the State in
common. They are established by common law as interpreted by the courts
of this State. They include, but are not limited to, the right to
navigate, swim, hunt, fish, and enjoy all recreational activities in the
watercourses of the State and the right to freely use and enjoy the
State's ocean and estuarine beaches and public access to the beaches.
N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-45.1 (1991).
[**5]
[HN6] Public trust rights are
"established by common law as interpreted by the courts of this
State." N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-45.1 (1991). This court is not aware of
any decision by the courts of North Carolina creating a public trust right
in privately-owned dry sand as a means of accessing a public beach. The
parties directed this court's attention to only one state, New Jersey,
which has applied the public trust doctrine to preserve public access
across privately-owned dry sand beach in order to reach the foreshore. See
Matthews v. Bay Head Improv. Ass'n, 95 N.J. 306, 471 A.2d 355, cert.
denied, 469 U.S. 821, 83 L. Ed. 2d 39 , 105 S. Ct. 93 (1984).
The extent to which the public
trust doctrine applies to dry sand property in North Carolina is an
unsettled question. The North Carolina Supreme Court recently stated:
We note dicta in the Court of
Appeals opinion to the effect that the public trust doctrine will not
secure public access to a public beach across the land of a private
property owner. . . . As the statement was not necessary to the Court of
Appeals opinion, nor is it clear that in its unqualified form the
statement reflects the law of this state, we expressly [**6] disavow this
comment.
Concerned Citizens of
Brunswick County Taxpayers Ass'n v. State ex rel. Rhodes, 329 N.C. 37, ,
404 S.E.2d 677, 688 (1991) (citations omitted). Because the Supreme Court
failed to indicate what qualifications were necessary for the Court of
Appeals' comment to accurately reflect the law in North Carolina, the
extent to which the public trust doctrine applies in this case is unclear.
[HN7] In the absence of a
clear precedent from the North Carolina Supreme Court on the application
of the public trust doctrine, the court concludes that the nature of
plaintiffs' ownership is determined appropriately by statute. [HN8]
Private ownership in the dry sand is expressly established in N.C. Gen.
Stat. § 77-20. Such private ownership is limited by the state's power,
under the doctrine of public trust, to acquire an interest in the
property. This court finds no evidence that the state exercised its power
of eminent domain to acquire title, an easement, or any other interest in
the dry sand owned by the plaintiffs.
The defendant contends that
the plaintiffs made a dedication of the dry sand to the Town in 1938 by
recording a plat. The defendant [**7] raises this defense for the first
time on this motion for partial summary judgment and the plaintiff,
characterizing this defense as an avoidance or affirmative defense,
objects to its being raised at this time.
This action originated as, and remains,
a tax refund suit. The ultimate issue to be determined relates to the
valuation of the dry sand property which served as the basis for the
charitable contribution deduction. The parties do not dispute the fact
that the plaintiffs enjoyed some rights in the property. Accordingly, the
court finds that [HN9] the defense of dedication is not an affirmative
defense in this action and, accordingly, is not barred from being
introduced at this time by Rule 8(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure.
The plat recorded by the
plaintiffs in 1938 depicted various subdivided lots, an area designated
"beach," and an area designated "boardwalk." Although
the dry sand property that is the subject of this suit appeared on the
plat, it was without boundary or designation. The plaintiffs sold lots in
accordance with the plat, referencing the recorded plat in the deeds.
[HN10] The selling of lots with
reference to a plat having designated streets, parks, alleys, [**8] etc.,
may operate as a dedication of [*836] those designated areas for the
common use of the private landowners and, in some instances, the general
public. See Owens v. Elliott, 258 N.C. 314, 128 S.E.2d 583 (1962); Hinson
v. Smith, 89 N.C. App. 127, 365 S.E.2d 166, review denied, 323 N.C. 365,
373 S.E.2d 545 (1988); Whichard v. Oliver, 56 N.C. App 219, 287 S.E.2d 461
(1982). These cases involve specifically designated areas of a plat.
However, the dry sand in this case was not labeled or designated. Although
the North Carolina courts have not addressed the issue, several other
courts have found that an unlabeled space on a plat indicates a
reservation in the property owner rather than a dedication. See Witherall
v. Strane, 265 Ala. 218, 90 So.2d 251 (1956); Earle v. McCarty, 70 So.2d
314 (Fla. 1954); Dallas v. Leake, 300 S.W.2d 135 (Tex. Civ. App. 1957);
Miller v. Fowle, 92 Cal. App. 2d 409, 206 P.2d 1106 (1949).
[HN11] A dedication of land
requires both an offer and [**9] an acceptance. Blowing Rock v. Gregorie,
243 N.C. 364, 368, 90 S.E.2d 898, 901 (1956). The donor must intend to
make a dedication of land. Nicholas v. Salisbury Hardware & Furniture
Co., 248 N.C. 462, 468, 103 S.E.2d 837, 842 (1958). The donor's intent
must be clearly demonstrated by acts "unmistakable in their purpose
and decisive in their character." Id.
The plaintiffs, the alleged
donors, deny that a dedication of the dry sand was made. In support of
their denial, they draw attention to the fact that the Town has levied
back taxes on the beach strip property; that, in 1986, the Town sought an
easement from ABI to cross the beach strip; that ABI deeded portions of
the dry sand property to various adjoining lot owners throughout the years
to accommodate the rebuilding of sea walls; and that ABI has entered into
concessionaire agreements for the dry sand beach strip.
Based upon the facts before
it, the court finds insufficient evidence of a dedication either to
private purchasers or to the general public. The plaintiffs continued to
exercise control over the strip of dry sand and paid property taxes on the
property. [**10] The court expresses no opinion as to whether the private
purchasers of the lots acquired an easement over the dry sand. The only
question before this court is whether the plaintiffs possessed a
sufficient bundle of rights in the dry sand property to claim ownership.
This court finds in the affirmative.
For the reasons stated above,
the court concludes that the plaintiffs owned the strip of dry sand beach
property involved in this matter. The ultimate issue of valuation remains
before this court and nothing in this court's order today is intended to
reflect in any manner on that issue. By this order, the court decides only
that the plaintiffs, and not the State of North Carolina, the Town of
Atlantic Beach, or nearby residents, owned the strip of dry sand.
Accordingly, the court hereby
GRANTS plaintiffs' motion for partial summary judgment and DENIES
defendant's motion for partial summary judgment. The clerk is directed to
schedule this matter for pretrial and trial.
This the 19th day of December,
1991.
MALCOLM J. HOWARD
United States District Judge