I am hoping someone can help me before the next obvious step of hiring a lawyer. I am located in Michigan and my wife and I own a residential property to which the house was destroyed by fire and demolished. The city is now trying to make us destroy the pool (untouched by fire) because the house no longer exists. The pool meets all safety requirements and is not in use while the property is actually listed for sale. The city keeps referring to the accessory use code section of ordinance. There is nothing in the ordinance about having to destroy the accessory building (or pool in this instance, which falls under the same code) simply because the main no longer exists. Under their inferred ordinance they are using against us to have us destroy a perfectly good pool, they would also make anyone destroy an unattached garage or pole building simply because the main no longer exists.
They (the city) have 15k of our money tied up in escrow which should have been returned when the house was demolished (6 months ago), and they are threatening to use this money to destroy our pool if we do not. There are many reasons we do not want to destroy the pool but the big one is we had just spent $7k on a new liner, a week before this fire occurred and we do not recoup that money thru insurance. I find it doubly wasteful as it is wasting money to destroy something worth even more money.
Has anyone heard of anything similar? Where a city orders someone to destroy perfectly good buildings simply because the larger does not exist? This logic is laughable to me and I find it hard to think a judge would have someone destroy something worth many thousands simply because something worth even more thousands was destroyed by fire. But maybe I live in a world of to much common sense.
They (the city) have 15k of our money tied up in escrow which should have been returned when the house was demolished (6 months ago), and they are threatening to use this money to destroy our pool if we do not. There are many reasons we do not want to destroy the pool but the big one is we had just spent $7k on a new liner, a week before this fire occurred and we do not recoup that money thru insurance. I find it doubly wasteful as it is wasting money to destroy something worth even more money.
Has anyone heard of anything similar? Where a city orders someone to destroy perfectly good buildings simply because the larger does not exist? This logic is laughable to me and I find it hard to think a judge would have someone destroy something worth many thousands simply because something worth even more thousands was destroyed by fire. But maybe I live in a world of to much common sense.
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