the old grind
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2012
- Messages
- 4,412
- Location
- Mid-Michigan
- Tractor
- NH T-1520 HST, NH TC33DA HST, Case DX26 HST, .Terramite T5C, . NH L785
My ten+ came with the legacy of a somewhat unresolved property line dispute. Divided many decades ago (post-war IIRC) based on 'those tree lines' vs an actual survey, 700' of my shoreline 'out back' was actually on a neighbor's side, sorta giving him access/control. Unfortunately for him his house 'up front' was built 10' onto what was, by MI law, part of my turf despite the mixup and time he'd lived on it.
According to MI law, that his house had been built so long ago didn't matter. When he sued my stake's PO (and lost). The court said he would need expressed permission to even repair (roof, paint, etc) the part that was actually in my yard. 'Squatter's pipe-dream', yes. 'Squatters rights', no, having been decided in MI courts long ago. Being the great neighbor that he is I had no trouble negotiating/recording new boundaries based on the tree lines after all. Now he gets to keep his house up and I get to trap all the shoreline adjacent to his woods & orchard.
Every state has its own rules. Our township gave me (us) a big pat on the back for resolving the issue when I bought/settled. Guess they knew what sort of problem this would have been if it dragged on. Stake your claim now and assert your rights to keep it out of the courts.(!) If the neighbor doesn't like what you know is proper, let HIM pay for another survey and plant his own 'screen'. (what, .. he doesn't like minis????)
btw: I've had neighbors on the other sides mow & add parking areas (gravel) into my yard. The one that beefed loudest paid for a survey, duplicating the one from the lawsuit, and now has to scalp just his own yard vs a part of mine. I offered to sell him some more at $50/ sq ft but he wasn't very interested.
According to MI law, that his house had been built so long ago didn't matter. When he sued my stake's PO (and lost). The court said he would need expressed permission to even repair (roof, paint, etc) the part that was actually in my yard. 'Squatter's pipe-dream', yes. 'Squatters rights', no, having been decided in MI courts long ago. Being the great neighbor that he is I had no trouble negotiating/recording new boundaries based on the tree lines after all. Now he gets to keep his house up and I get to trap all the shoreline adjacent to his woods & orchard.
Every state has its own rules. Our township gave me (us) a big pat on the back for resolving the issue when I bought/settled. Guess they knew what sort of problem this would have been if it dragged on. Stake your claim now and assert your rights to keep it out of the courts.(!) If the neighbor doesn't like what you know is proper, let HIM pay for another survey and plant his own 'screen'. (what, .. he doesn't like minis????)
btw: I've had neighbors on the other sides mow & add parking areas (gravel) into my yard. The one that beefed loudest paid for a survey, duplicating the one from the lawsuit, and now has to scalp just his own yard vs a part of mine. I offered to sell him some more at $50/ sq ft but he wasn't very interested.