Meter, J.
In this action under the Subdivision Control Act, MCL 560.101
et
seq.; MSA 26.430(101)
et seq.,
plaintiffs appeal as of right from an order denying their request to vacate a portion of road next to their property. We affirm.
factual background
Plaintiffs’ property, located in the Whittington Park subdivision of Gerrish Township and Roscommon County, borders Higgins Lake on its northern edge. A road — Grand Boulevard — runs along the western edge of the property toward the lake. Grand Boulevard is approximately 505 feet long.
Although the lower segment (approximately 280 feet) of the road is paved, Grand Boulevard remains undeveloped from about the mid-point of plaintiff’s property to the shore of Higgins Lake.
In August 1996, plaintiffs filed a complaint in which they alleged, among other things, that although the entire length of Grand Boulevard was set forth in the 1903 plat of the Whittington Park subdivision and thereby offered to be dedicated for public use, no public entity had ever accepted the offer of dedication either formally (by resolution or ordinance) or informally (through public improvements or use) with respect to the undeveloped portion of the road. Plaintiffs thus argued that the undeveloped portion of the road should be vacated and that they should be given title to the land.
Following a bench trial, the trial court denied plaintiffs’ request to vacáte the northern portion of Grand Boulevard, indicating that (1) the offer of dedication had been formally accepted by the Roscommon County Road Commission under a 1940 McNitt resolution
that specifically referred to Grand Boulevard; (2) even though the 1940 McNitt resolution referred to Grand Boulevard as being only 472 feet long, the circumstances indicated that the road commission meant to accept the entire length of the road; (3) the span of thirty-seven years between the offer of dedication in 1903 and the acceptance in 1940 was not so long that the offer was presumed withdrawn, given the sparse population in the area and the corresponding lack of the need for quick acceptance; and (4) that even disregarding any formal acts of acceptance, the offer of dedication was nevertheless presumed accepted under MCL 560.255b; MSA 26.430(255b), which indicates that offers of dedication for public use shall be
presumed
accepted ten years after the plat is first recorded, as long as certain acts of withdrawal have not taken place.
dedication of land for a public purpose .
The general rule regarding the dedication of land for a public purpose was set forth by the Michigan Supreme Court in
Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce,
451 Mich 420, 424; 547 NW2d 870 (1996). As stated in
Kraus,
a valid dedication requires two elements: (1) a recorded plat clearly offering the land for public use
and (2) a subsequent acceptance of the offer by a public authority.
Id.
The acceptance must be timely, and it must be accomplished by a public act “ ‘either formally confirming or accepting the [offer of] dedication, and ordering the opening of such street, or by exercising authority over it, in some of the ordinary ways of improvement or regulation.’ ”
Id.,
quoting
Tillman v People,
12 Mich 401, 405 (1864). In the instant case, plaintiffs do not dispute that the disputed portion of Grand Boulevard was properly offered for public use in a recorded plat. Rather, they focus on element 2, arguing that a proper public authority did not timely accept the offer of dedication.
ACCEPTANCE BY THE TOWNSHIP
Plaintiffs first argue that the Roscommon County Road Commission could not have accepted the offer of dedication by way of the 1940 McNitt resolution because Gerrish Township did not initially accept the offer. They essentially argue that before a county could take over a road under the McNitt act in 1940, the road first must have been accepted as a township road. This argument presents a question of law. We review questions of law de novo.
In re Lafayette Towers,
200 Mich App 269, 273; 503 NW2d 740 (1993).
In support of their argument, plaintiffs cite
Salzer v State Treasurer,
48 Mich App 34, 39; 209 NW2d 849 (1973), in which this Court stated:
A county road commission has no power to incorporate a private street into the county road system. Therefore on retrial if the facts disclose Montgomery Boulevard [which had been offered for dedication in a recorded plat] was a private road by reason of the township’s failure to accept it,
the county road commission could not incorporate the boulevard into the county road system at any date. On the other hand in the event the facts disclose Montgomery Boulevard was accepted by the township and thereby became a public road, only then must it be ascertained whether the road commission’s resolution . . . was timely
We agree that this language supports plaintiffs’ position in the instant case, because there was no evidence that Gerrish Township had ever accepted Grand Boulevard as a public road. We conclude, however, that this language represents a misinterpretation of the law, and we therefore reject it.
As authority for the proposition that a road must first have been accepted by a township in order to be accepted by a county, the
Salzer
Court cited the McNitt act, 1931 PA 130. While it is true that the McNitt act referred to the taking over of
township roads
by counties, it also stated that “all dedicated
streets and alleys in recorded plats and outside of incorporated cities and villages shall be taken over and become county roads.” See former MCL 247.2; MSA 9.142 and 1931 PA 130, as amended by 1935 PA 132. Accordingly, the act provided for the taking over by a county of streets designated as public in recorded plats, without the requirement that the streets be first accepted by the township. Therefore, a county could accept a road as public under the McNitt act even if the relevant township had not pre
viously accepted it, as long as the road was offered for public use in a recorded plat.
Cf.
Missaukee Lakes Land Co v Missaukee Co Rd Comm,
333 Mich 372, 378; 53 NW2d 297 (1952) (private road that had not been offered for dedication in a recorded plat could not be taken over by county under the McNitt act), and see
Kraus v Gerrish Twp,
205 Mich App 25, 46; 517 NW2d 756 (1994), affirmed in part and remanded in part on other grounds 451 Mich 420; 547 NW2d 870 (1996) (distinguishing a “private” road from “a dedicated street or alley within the meaning of the McNitt act”). This conclusion accords with the Supreme Court’s
Kraus
opinion, in which the Court indicated that offers to dedicate could be accepted by a township
or
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Meter, J.
In this action under the Subdivision Control Act, MCL 560.101
et
seq.; MSA 26.430(101)
et seq.,
plaintiffs appeal as of right from an order denying their request to vacate a portion of road next to their property. We affirm.
factual background
Plaintiffs’ property, located in the Whittington Park subdivision of Gerrish Township and Roscommon County, borders Higgins Lake on its northern edge. A road — Grand Boulevard — runs along the western edge of the property toward the lake. Grand Boulevard is approximately 505 feet long.
Although the lower segment (approximately 280 feet) of the road is paved, Grand Boulevard remains undeveloped from about the mid-point of plaintiff’s property to the shore of Higgins Lake.
In August 1996, plaintiffs filed a complaint in which they alleged, among other things, that although the entire length of Grand Boulevard was set forth in the 1903 plat of the Whittington Park subdivision and thereby offered to be dedicated for public use, no public entity had ever accepted the offer of dedication either formally (by resolution or ordinance) or informally (through public improvements or use) with respect to the undeveloped portion of the road. Plaintiffs thus argued that the undeveloped portion of the road should be vacated and that they should be given title to the land.
Following a bench trial, the trial court denied plaintiffs’ request to vacáte the northern portion of Grand Boulevard, indicating that (1) the offer of dedication had been formally accepted by the Roscommon County Road Commission under a 1940 McNitt resolution
that specifically referred to Grand Boulevard; (2) even though the 1940 McNitt resolution referred to Grand Boulevard as being only 472 feet long, the circumstances indicated that the road commission meant to accept the entire length of the road; (3) the span of thirty-seven years between the offer of dedication in 1903 and the acceptance in 1940 was not so long that the offer was presumed withdrawn, given the sparse population in the area and the corresponding lack of the need for quick acceptance; and (4) that even disregarding any formal acts of acceptance, the offer of dedication was nevertheless presumed accepted under MCL 560.255b; MSA 26.430(255b), which indicates that offers of dedication for public use shall be
presumed
accepted ten years after the plat is first recorded, as long as certain acts of withdrawal have not taken place.
dedication of land for a public purpose .
The general rule regarding the dedication of land for a public purpose was set forth by the Michigan Supreme Court in
Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce,
451 Mich 420, 424; 547 NW2d 870 (1996). As stated in
Kraus,
a valid dedication requires two elements: (1) a recorded plat clearly offering the land for public use
and (2) a subsequent acceptance of the offer by a public authority.
Id.
The acceptance must be timely, and it must be accomplished by a public act “ ‘either formally confirming or accepting the [offer of] dedication, and ordering the opening of such street, or by exercising authority over it, in some of the ordinary ways of improvement or regulation.’ ”
Id.,
quoting
Tillman v People,
12 Mich 401, 405 (1864). In the instant case, plaintiffs do not dispute that the disputed portion of Grand Boulevard was properly offered for public use in a recorded plat. Rather, they focus on element 2, arguing that a proper public authority did not timely accept the offer of dedication.
ACCEPTANCE BY THE TOWNSHIP
Plaintiffs first argue that the Roscommon County Road Commission could not have accepted the offer of dedication by way of the 1940 McNitt resolution because Gerrish Township did not initially accept the offer. They essentially argue that before a county could take over a road under the McNitt act in 1940, the road first must have been accepted as a township road. This argument presents a question of law. We review questions of law de novo.
In re Lafayette Towers,
200 Mich App 269, 273; 503 NW2d 740 (1993).
In support of their argument, plaintiffs cite
Salzer v State Treasurer,
48 Mich App 34, 39; 209 NW2d 849 (1973), in which this Court stated:
A county road commission has no power to incorporate a private street into the county road system. Therefore on retrial if the facts disclose Montgomery Boulevard [which had been offered for dedication in a recorded plat] was a private road by reason of the township’s failure to accept it,
the county road commission could not incorporate the boulevard into the county road system at any date. On the other hand in the event the facts disclose Montgomery Boulevard was accepted by the township and thereby became a public road, only then must it be ascertained whether the road commission’s resolution . . . was timely
We agree that this language supports plaintiffs’ position in the instant case, because there was no evidence that Gerrish Township had ever accepted Grand Boulevard as a public road. We conclude, however, that this language represents a misinterpretation of the law, and we therefore reject it.
As authority for the proposition that a road must first have been accepted by a township in order to be accepted by a county, the
Salzer
Court cited the McNitt act, 1931 PA 130. While it is true that the McNitt act referred to the taking over of
township roads
by counties, it also stated that “all dedicated
streets and alleys in recorded plats and outside of incorporated cities and villages shall be taken over and become county roads.” See former MCL 247.2; MSA 9.142 and 1931 PA 130, as amended by 1935 PA 132. Accordingly, the act provided for the taking over by a county of streets designated as public in recorded plats, without the requirement that the streets be first accepted by the township. Therefore, a county could accept a road as public under the McNitt act even if the relevant township had not pre
viously accepted it, as long as the road was offered for public use in a recorded plat.
Cf.
Missaukee Lakes Land Co v Missaukee Co Rd Comm,
333 Mich 372, 378; 53 NW2d 297 (1952) (private road that had not been offered for dedication in a recorded plat could not be taken over by county under the McNitt act), and see
Kraus v Gerrish Twp,
205 Mich App 25, 46; 517 NW2d 756 (1994), affirmed in part and remanded in part on other grounds 451 Mich 420; 547 NW2d 870 (1996) (distinguishing a “private” road from “a dedicated street or alley within the meaning of the McNitt act”). This conclusion accords with the Supreme Court’s
Kraus
opinion, in which the Court indicated that offers to dedicate could be accepted by a township
or
county and in which the Court analyzed whether a county had sufficiently accepted several roads, even though there had been no acceptance of the roads by the relevant township.
Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, supra
at 424, 432-438. The relevant question in the instant case, therefore, is whether Roscommon County sufficiently accepted Grand Boulevard as a public road, even though there had been no prior acceptance by Gerrish Township.
ACCEPTANCE BY THE COUNTY
Plaintiffs argue that the Roscommon County Road Commission did not accept the offer of dedication, despite the 1940 McNitt resolution, because (1) a
McNitt resolution, by itself, is insufficient to establish acceptance, and there was no evidence of any informal acts of acceptance; (2) even if a McNitt resolution, alone, is sufficient to establish acceptance, the length of time between the offer and the resolution in the instant case caused the offer to lapse; and (3) even if a McNitt resolution, alone, is sufficient to establish acceptance, part of Grand Boulevard must nonetheless be vacated because the 1940 resolution referred to the road as being only 472 feet long, when the road, in actuality, is approximately 505 feet long.
We first address whether the 1940 McNitt resolution, which specified the length of Grand Boulevard as 472 feet, evidenced an intent to take over the entire length of the road. This issue concerns a factual finding, which we review for clear error. See
Vivian v Roscommon Co Bd of Comm’rs,
164 Mich App 234, 238; 416 NW2d 394 (1987), affd 433 Mich 511; 446 NW2d 161 (1989). “A finding is clearly erroneous when, although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire record is left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.”
Id.
at 238-239. After reviewing the record, we are not left with a definite and firm conviction that the trial court erred in concluding that the 1940 resolution purported to accept the entire length of Grand Boulevard. Defendant’s surveyor indicated that the measurement of 472 feet was likely made by a nontechnical person and that such a person could have obtained the 472 feet measurement by adding up the map dimensions on both sides of the road and dividing by two. The trial court accepted this potential explanation, noting that “the record [was] devoid of any logical explanation to explain the
[approximately thirty-three-foot] difference” between the length of the road as specified in the resolution and the length as determined by the surveyors. Indeed, the thirty-three-foot difference did not correspond to the unpaved portion of the road or to any other distinct portion of the road. Accordingly, the trial court did not clearly err in accepting the surveyor’s plausible explanation for the 472-foot figure and in concluding that the 1940 resolution purported to accept the entire length of Grand Boulevard.
The next logical inquiry is whether the 1940 McNitt resolution, by itself, could suffice to accept the offer of dedication. This inquiry involves a question of law. Again, we review questions of law de novo.
Lafayette Towers, supra
at 273. In
Rice v Clare Co Rd Comm,
346 Mich 658, 665-666; 78 NW2d 651 (1956), the Supreme Court held that a county resolution, by itself, constituted a valid acceptance of an offer to dedicate. However, in
Eyde Bros Development Co v Roscommon Co Bd of Rd Comm’rs,
161 Mich App 654, 665-666; 411 NW2d 814 (1987), abrogated by the Court of Appeals in
Kraus v Gerrish Twp, supra
at 44-47, this Court held that a McNitt resolution, alone, did
not
suffice to accept an offer of dedication and that there must be additional evidence of acceptance before a county could claim a road. Seven years later, in
Kraus v Gerrish Twp, supra
at 44-47, this Court, relying on
Rice, supra
at 665-666, rejected the holding in
Eyde
and held that a McNitt resolution, by itself, constituted sufficient acceptance. In
Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, supra
at 427-430, the Supreme Court modified this holding by indicating that a McNitt resolution cannot suffice to accept a road if it is a general resolution purporting to take over all dedicated
streets in a county, i.e., if it does not specifically identify the road to be accepted.
Id.
In a footnote, the
Kraus
Court stated:
Eyde
also involved a 1953 McNitt resolution that
did
refer to the specific subdivisions that contained the streets at issue. There, the plats were recorded in 1927 and 1944. The panel found that acceptance did not occur until the street was paved in 1962. However, the plaintiffs had done nothing to exclude the public from the platted street until one of them fenced off the unimproved end of it in 1980. Because the defendants would have prevailed whether or not the 1953 resolution was sufficient, we need not decide whether
Eyde
is valid with respect to McNitt resolutions that specified the relevant subdivision or street.
[Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, supra
at 429, n 5 (emphasis in original).]
This footnote evidences a wavering by the
Kraus
Court regarding whether a McNitt resolution that specifically identifies the road in question is sufficient evidence of a formal acceptance. We note, however, that the
Kraus
Court did not reject
Rice
but merely clarified its holding. Therefore,
Rice,
as clarified by
Kraus,
remains good law, and we are bound to follow it under the doctrine of stare decisis. Accordingly, despite the apparent reluctance of the
Kraus
Court to explicitly state that a McNitt resolution specifically identifying the street in question suffices to accept the street, we conclude that the current state of the law, until such time as the Supreme Court overrules
Rice,
is that such a resolution
does
suffice to accept the road. Indeed, the
Kraus
Court stated:
Therefore, it can logically follow from
Rice, [In re Vacation of] Cara Avenue
[350 Mich 283; 86 NW2d 319 (1957)], and
[In re Petition of] Bryant
[323 Mich 424; 35 NW2d 371 (1949)], that a McNitt resolution can only qualify as formal acceptance where it expressly identified a platted road or
the recorded plat in which the road in dispute was dedicated.
[Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, supra
at 429.]
Therefore, as long as a McNitt resolution expressly identifies the street in question, the resolution suffices as evidence of a formal acceptance of the street. In the instant case, the 1940 resolution specifically identified Grand Boulevard, and it therefore could suffice as evidence of a formal acceptance by the county. Accordingly, the trial court did not err in concluding that the county formally accepted Grand Boulevard by way of the resolution.
The next inquiry is whether the 1940 acceptance of the 1903 offer to dedicate was timely. The question of timeliness amounts to a factual determination by the trial court, because it depends on the circumstances of each individual case. See
Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, supra
at 427. Again, we review the court’s factual findings for clear error.
Vivian, supra
at 238. The Supreme Court addressed the issue of timeliness in
Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, supra
at 425-427, quoting the following language from
Wayne Co v Miller,
31 Mich 447, 449-450 (1875): “ ‘If the plat is only an offer to dedicate, the offer must be accepted or it may be withdrawn, and after any considerable lapse of time must be regarded as no longer open for acceptance, unless the circumstances are such as to make the offer continuous.’ ” The
Kraus
Court then
stated, “[W]e continue to adhere to the course expressed in
White v Smith,
37 Mich 291, 295-296 (1877): As long as the plat proprietor or his successor took no steps to withdraw the offer to dedicate, the offer will be treated as continuing.”
Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, supra
at 427. The Court indicated that withdrawal occurs “when the proprietors use the property in a way that is inconsistent with public ownership.”
Id.
at 431. The Court further noted that even if an offer is continuing, an acceptance may nevertheless be deemed untimely if a large number of years pass between the offer and the acceptance. It noted that a span of eighty-seven years between an offer and an acceptance had previously been considered too long for a valid acceptance, and it found an eighty-six-year delay similarly untimely.
Id.
at 427, 435.
Here, plaintiffs did not present any evidence of an attempt to withdraw the offer to dedicate Grand Boulevard before the county’s acceptance in 1940. Accordingly, under
Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, supra
at 425-427, the offer remained open at the time of the county’s acceptance. Moreover, the span of thirty-seven years between the offer and the acceptance was more in line with
Ackerman v Spring Lake Twp,
12 Mich App 498, 501; 163 NW2d 230 (1968) (twenty-six-year span not unreasonable), than with
Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, supra
at 435 (eighty-six-year span unreasonable), or
Marx v Dep’t of Commerce,
220 Mich App 66, 78-79; 558 NW2d 460 (1996) (sixty-eight-year span unreasonable). Accordingly, the county’s acceptance of Grand Boulevard was timely, and the trial court did not err in failing to vacate the road.
We note that an alternative basis for affirming the decision of the trial court with regard to the timeliness of the county’s acceptance is found in
Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, supra
at 441, in which the Supreme Court stated, “In light of the property owners’ thirty-year delay in challenging the road commissions’ assertions in the 1959 recorded affidavits, we need not decide whether a 1959 acceptance of a 1907 dedicated plat was timely.” The
Kraus
Court evidently considered the timeliness issue waived by the plaintiffs’ failure to challenge the acceptance during a thirty-year span. Here, plaintiffs did not file suit until 1996, fifty-six years after the 1940 acceptance of Grand Boulevard. Therefore, under
Kraus v Dep’t of Commerce, supra
at 441, they have waived the issue of timeliness.
Finally, plaintiffs argue that the statutory presumption of acceptance found in MCL 560.255b; MSA 26.430(255b) cannot be retroactively applied to this case. However, given our holding that the county accepted Grand Boulevard by way of the 1940 McNitt resolution, we need not address whether the statutory presumption of acceptance applied.
Affirmed.