The parties are neighbours involved in a boundary dispute over lakefront property.
The applicants claimed adverse possession over a portion of the respondent's lot, arguing they had openly and continuously used and improved the land for over ten years based on a mutual mistake about the property line.
Over several decades, the applicants dumped fill, graded a road to the shoreline, and constructed a substantial break wall and stairs on the disputed land.
The respondent sought a declaration of title based on a recent survey and claimed damages for trespass and restoration costs.
The Superior Court of Justice found that the applicants' use of the land was open, notorious, and continuous, and that the respondent's failure to object for over ten years indicated a mutual mistake.
The court granted the applicants' claim for adverse possession and dismissed the respondent's claim for damages.