Kevin Decker v. Robert O'Connell

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 2026
Docket373692
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kevin Decker v. Robert O'Connell (Kevin Decker v. Robert O'Connell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kevin Decker v. Robert O'Connell, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

KEVIN DECKER and DENISE ANDERSON, UNPUBLISHED May 12, 2026 Plaintiffs-Appellees, 2:16 PM

v No. 373692 St. Clair Circuit Court ROBERT O’CONNELL, LC No. 22-001515-CZ

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: BORRELLO, P.J., and M. J. KELLY and ACKERMAN, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this action for adverse possession, acquiescence, and a prescriptive easement, defendant appeals as of right the trial court’s judgment quieting title to certain disputed areas of property and granting a prescriptive easement to plaintiffs, Kevin Decker and Denise Anderson, after a bench trial. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

This case involves the parties’ boundary dispute regarding their adjacent properties on Harsens Island in Clay Township, Michigan. Decker’s and defendant’s families had each owned their respective properties for over 100 years. Decker personally acquired his property in 1980 and lived there year-round with Anderson, his wife, since 2004, while defendant personally acquired his property in 1994 as a summer cottage.

The order of judgment in this case includes two survey diagrams that depict the property in dispute in this case. We include them below for ease of reference in this opinion. We will refer to the first survey as “Survey A” and the second as “Survey B.”

-1- -2- -3- Plaintiffs own Lot 135, containing the pole barn depicted in the northeast corner, and Lot 17, containing the house and deck partially depicted in the southwest portion of the survey. Defendant owns Lot 18 and the pole barn shown on that lot. Three areas are in dispute. First, is the long pie-shaped piece of property that is shaded on Survey A, running approximately north- south. Next, there is a triangular area in the northern corner of Lot 18 that is shaded on Survey B. Finally, there is another pie-shaped area running approximately east-west that is also shaded on Survey B.

With respect to the approximately north-south boundary line, Decker testified that he and his grandfather placed a wooden board in the ground in the late 1960s that was treated as the boundary line between the properties. At some point after 2004, Anderson planted flowers along the same line as the board to replace a section that had deteriorated. Decker testified that he maintained the property on his side of the delineated boundary line by fertilizing, weeding, and mowing the grass, and defendant never maintained or used that area. However, defendant testified that he never considered the board to be the actual boundary line.

Decker hired a contractor to build an outbuilding on Decker’s property in 2001. Decker also installed stepping stones for a path to the outbuilding, planted a flower bed in front of the outbuilding, and placed compost bins next to the flower bed. Plaintiffs used this path multiple times each day to go between the house and outbuilding. A drawing which the contractor prepared for a permit application indicated the outbuilding was 3 feet from the boundary line that now separated the parties’ outbuildings.1 In building the outbuilding and maintaining his property, Decker thought he was adhering to the “deeded lines.” Defendant testified that he “really didn’t care” that the stepping-stones “were cutting across the corner” of his property for plaintiffs to “go in and out of their shed.”

Defendant built a seawall on his property in 2006.2 As part of the permit application, defendant prepared a diagram that showed the deeded boundary line running straight from the seawall to plaintiffs’ outbuilding rather than following the line of the board that Decker considered to be the boundary line. Defendant determined the placement of the boundary line running approximately east-west by measuring from the seawall. In 2014, defendant built an outbuilding next to plaintiffs’ outbuilding. After talking to Decker, defendant “moved the building over toward [his] driveway further so that [Decker] would be able to look out his building[] . . . and look all the way to the channel.” According to plaintiffs, after flooding in 2019, defendant constructed a dike which lined up with the board and continued that line along the length of the property. Defendant testified that he did not intend for the dike to be the boundary line.

In addition to maintaining the flower bed, Decker fertilized and mowed the grass between the parties’ outbuildings, extending to approximately 10 feet from plaintiffs’ outbuilding. Decker testified that he believed the southern boundary line was 6 to 7 feet from his outbuilding. The two outbuildings were about 17 feet apart. Anderson used the area within 4 feet of plaintiffs’

1 Defendant’s outbuilding was built after Decker’s outbuilding. 2 Defendant said he deposited fill from an earlier seawall project on the northwest part of his property, within the area which the parties dispute.

-4- outbuilding to access the flower bed and compost bins. Defendant also mowed the grass between the outbuildings, but he did not mow on the other side of the board between his outbuilding and plaintiffs’ house. Decker “assumed” the board “was the boundary line and . . . mowed to it.” Defendant parked his van between the outbuildings for about a year at some point before plaintiffs added the flower bed. Defendant’s dogs also ran around the disputed area.

Before 2022, the parties had “off and on” conversations about the location of the boundary line. However, in 2022, defendant had his property surveyed because he wanted to install a fence. He then installed a fence “approximately 6 inches inside” the surveyed property line and spread gravel between the two outbuildings up to approximately three feet from plaintiffs’ outbuilding. The gravel covered some of plaintiffs’ stepping stones. Defendant also started storing a boat on the newly installed gravel. Decker testified that the fence and gravel went onto what he had considered his property according to his historic understanding of the boundary line. Defendant testified, however, that the board was angled and closer to his outbuilding than the actual boundary line. According to defendant, Decker offered to purchase the disputed area before defendant put up the fence.

Plaintiffs filed a complaint to quiet title, requesting the trial court award them title of the disputed area by adverse possession and acquiescence and award them a prescriptive easement. In their amended complaint, plaintiffs specifically requested “a prescriptive easement to continue use of the disputed property to access their outbuilding.”

A bench trial was held. In a written opinion and order, the trial court found, regarding the side-yard area between plaintiffs’ house and defendant’s outbuilding, that plaintiffs maintained the area without intending to claim property beyond the deeded line. Accordingly, the trial court ruled that plaintiffs did not establish title by adverse possession to the side-yard area but did establish title by acquiescence to the boundary line set by the board because the “evidence overwhelmingly shows the parties and their predecessors in interest have treated this line as the property line well beyond the statutory period of 15 years despite what their understandings may have been about the location of the deeded line.” This area is depicted as the shaded area in Survey A.

Regarding the pie-shaped area between the two outbuildings, depicted in Survey B, the trial court ruled that plaintiffs did not establish adverse possession since defendant also used the area by mowing the grass and parking his van in that location.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Kevin Decker v. Robert O'Connell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kevin-decker-v-robert-oconnell-michctapp-2026.