![]() ![]() Waisanen filed a quiet title action as to the portion of the public road that included the break wall and the home, claiming title to the property by adverse possession or acquiescence. ![]() In 2008, the Township surveyed all of the lake access roadways and discovered that the break wall encroached 10 feet and the home addition encroached 3 feet onto the public road. Ten years later, Waisanen built an addition to his home on the property. In 1971, Ken Waisanen bought property that abutted a lake access road. Waisanen Family Trust v Superior Twp, 305 Mich App 719 (2014). School officials must proactively protect public property from “squatters.” The Michigan Court of Appeals recently ruled that the statutory protection from adverse possession or acquiescence claims applies only when the municipal corporation initiates a lawsuit to protect public property, and not as a defense to a claim brought against the municipal corporation.
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