OPINION
Appellant township challenges the district court’s grant of summary judgment in respondents’ action to register title to an area of land that includes a portion of a beach. Appellant claims that the beach is public land. The district court concluded that appellant is estopped from claiming *506 that the beach is public land because in previous registration actions brought by adjoining landowners, appellant did not answer or defend against the actions. The district court also concluded that the beach was not dedicated to public use and that no prescriptive easement over the beach exists for the benefit of the public. Because we determine that collateral estoppel does not preclude appellant’s claims in this case and that genuine issues of material fact exist as to whether the beach was dedicated to the public and whether a prescriptive easement exists in favor of the public, we reverse and remand.
FACTS
This is an appeal from summary judgment granting the application of respondents Jerry J. and Nancy J. Barth (the Barths) to register title to Lot 18 and Lot 19 of Block 6 of Wacouta Beach as well as the land between those lots and Lake Pepin, which is part of a beach known as Sand Beach, located in Wacouta Township.
In 1920, the plat of Wacouta Beach located in Sections 31, 32, and 33, Township 113, Range 13, was filed for record by Edward Lidberg in Goodhue County. The plat includes private lots, Sand Beach, and a dedication of streets and alleys for public use. The plat does not include a dedication of Sand Beach for public use. In 1929, through a warranty deed that describes the property by metes and bounds, Lidberg transferred to Fred 0. Green and Carl 0. Gustafson all of Block 6, including that portion of Sand Beach adjacent to Block 6. The Barths assert that except for the land that Lidberg dedicated to the public for streets and alleys, Lidberg considered the land deeded to Green and Gus-tafson to be private. In 1950 and 1960, Jerry Barth’s grandparents acquired Lots 18 and 19, Block 6, respectively. The Barths claim that Jerry Barth’s grandparents used the disputed portion of Sand Beach adjoining their land in an actual, open, notorious, continuous, hostile, and exclusive manner under color of title for more than 15 years. 1 In 1982, the Barths acquired ownership of Lots 18 and 19, Block 6, from Jerry Barth’s grandparents, and they claim that they used the disputed portion of Sand Beach in an actual, open, notorious, continuous, hostile, and exclusive manner under color of title for more than 15 years.
In 2006, the Barths filed an application in Goodhue County to register title to Lots 18 and 19, Block 6, Wacouta Beach, describing the lots in terms that included the adjacent, disputed portion of Sand Beach. Appellant Wacouta Township (the township) filed an answer alleging that Sand Beach was public property through common-law dedication or constant public use giving rise to a prescriptive easement and alleging that the Barths did not obtain ownership of the disputed part of Sand Beach through adverse possession. In regard to the Barths’ adverse-possession claim, the township submitted two affidavits from landowners who stated that members of the public used the disputed portion of Sand Beach and that neither the Barths nor Jerry Barth’s grandparents ever posted the disputed area, placed barriers around it, or instructed people not to enter it.
The Barths moved for summary judgment, arguing in part that the township should be collaterally estopped from contesting the Barths’ claims because it had not answered or defended against three *507 previous claims involving the ownership of other portions of Sand Beach. The three previous claims involved: (1) Richard B. Culp, owner of Lot 12, Block 6, Wacouta Beach, who in 1989 sought to register title to land including Lot 12 and an adjacent portion of Sand Beach; (2) Marya O’Mal-ley, owner of Lots 9-13, Block 4, Wacouta Beach, who in 1998 sought to register title to land including Lots 9-13 and an adjacent portion of Sand Beach; and (3) Michael W. Stenwick and Judith A. Stenwick, owners of Lots 13-23, Block 5, Wacouta Beach, who in 2001 sought to register title to land including Lots 13-23 and an adjacent portion of Sand Beach. The township did not file answers in the previous actions, and default judgment was entered in favor of the landowners in each case. In the O’Malley registration action, the township adopted a specific resolution disclaiming any ownership, rights, or interest in the portion of Sand Beach at issue in that proceeding.
The township opposed the Barths’ motion for summary judgment, arguing in part that the Barths should be collaterally estopped from pursuing their registration claim against the township because when J. Thomas Wolner and Peggy Wolner, owners of Lots 8, 9, and 10, Block 6, Wacouta Beach, sought in 2005 to register title to their land along with an adjacent portion of Sand Beach, the township answered and defended against the registration action. Ultimately, the Wolners and the township reached a settlement whereby the Wolners withdrew their claims to the adjacent portion of Sand Beach. 2
The district court granted summary judgment to the Barths, concluding that the doctrine of collateral estoppel applies to preclude the township’s claims to the portion of Sand Beach at issue in this proceeding because the township did not raise any objection to the previous registration applications of landowners to other adjacent portions of Sand Beach. The district court also concluded that there is no statutory or common-law dedication to the public of Sand Beach, that no prescriptive easement existed over Sand Beach for the benefit of the public, and that the township had no “right, title, estate, interest in or lien on” Sand Beach. This appeal follows.
ISSUES
I. Did the district court err in applying collateral estoppel against the township?
II. Do genuine issues of material fact preclude summary judgment in favor of the Barths?
ANALYSIS
I.
Collateral estoppel, also known as issue preclusion, prohibits a party from relitigating issues that have been previously adjudicated.
Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore,
Whether the doctrine of collateral estoppel applies is a mixed question of law and fact and is reviewed de novo.
Falgren v. State, Bd. of Teaching,
Collateral estoppel bars the re-litigation of an issue when: (1) the issue is identical to one in a prior adjudication; (2) there was a final judgment on the merits in the prior proceeding; (3) the estopped party was a party or in privity with a party to the prior adjudication; and (4) the es-topped party was given a full and fair opportunity to be heard on the adjudicated issue.
Kaiser v. N. States Power Co.,
Collateral estoppel may be used defensively to prevent a plaintiff from asserting a previously litigated claim against the defendant or offensively to foreclose the defendant from relitigating an issue that it previously lost.
Parklane Hosiery,
In this case, the Barths seek to invoke non-mutual
3
offensive collateral es-toppel to foreclose the township from defending against the Barths’ land registration action. “A basic prerequisite to the application of collateral estoppel is that the issue now involved is identical to one previously litigated.”
Kaiser,
In this case, because the land sought to be registered by the Barths was not litigated in, determined by, or essential to any of the three previous actions upon which the Barths rely to invoke the use of collateral estoppel, the issues are not identical and collateral estoppel cannot be used against the township.
See Hofstad,
We are also unconvinced that the application of collateral estoppel in this case is fair to the township. In
In re Application of Baldwin,
the supreme court reviewed the vacation of a portion of Lake Street on the shore of Lake Minnetonka.
The township asserts that non-mutual offensive collateral estoppel should not apply against a governmental entity.
See A & H Vending,
II.
On appeal from summary judgment, a reviewing court must determine whether there are genuine issues of material fact and whether the district court erred in its application of the law.
State by Cooper v. French,
The district court granted summary judgment to the Barths on the township’s claim that the disputed portion of Sand Beach belongs to the public through a common-law dedication to the public. The district court concluded that there was no common-law dedication to the public “of the area designated on the plat as ‘Sand Beach.’ ”
“A common-law dedication is one accomplished otherwise than by a plat executed and recorded as required by statute.”
Flynn v. Beisel,
[Dedication rests upon intent and not upon prescription. It is the rule, laid down by this court, that, although there can be no dedication without the landowner’s intent, such requisite intent need not be express and in fact need not actually exist in the owner’s mind, but may be implied from acts and conduct of the owner which are unequivocally and convincingly indicative of dedication and upon which the public has a right to and does rely.
Flynn,
257 Minn, at 540,
Acceptance of a dedication may be shown by a user on the part of the public, as by travel, and where riparian rights are involved, devotion to public use, including various uses of recreational purposes such as sailing, rowing, fishing, bathing, skating, taking water for domestic, agricultural, and even city purposes, cutting ice and wood, hauling the same, and by other public purposes.
Flynn,
257 Minn, at 540,
In Dickinson, the supreme court affirmed a determination that a common-law dedication had occurred where the district court based its finding on a stipulation of the parties that
[f]or more than fifteen (15) years immediately prior to the construction of said building, said premises, and particularly the said strip of land so used as a driveway, has been openly, adversely, and continuously used by the defendant, his cotenants, predecessors in title, tenants, and by the public in general, as an alleyway or passageway with vehicles between Benson and Pacific avenues in the City of Willmar.
211 Minn, at 374,
Reasonable minds cannot but repel a suggestion that a resident owner knows nothing of a public use of property which is open, obvious and uninterrupted for more than 15 years. Under our decisions only long-continued, uninterrupted use by the public need be proved to establish the owner’s acquiescence from which the intention to dedicate is inferred,
id.
at 376,
Proof of some particular period of public use is not a prerequisite to dedication though the weight that will be attached to such public use as evidence of acquiescence will vary proportionally with its length. Ultimately, the conclusion is reached that the public accommodation *512 and private rights might be materially affected by an interruption of the enjoyment. Even subtracting the three years [that the public used part of the land as a parking lot referable to a lease held by the city and not to the dedication], there is enough of public use not referable to the lease to allow a strong inference of acquiescence and of prejudice to the public and defendant from interruption.
Id.
at 376,
Both parties in this case moved the district court for summary judgment. The township submitted a report from the examiner of titles in which the examiner opines that Lidberg “made and dedicated to the public the ‘Sand Beach’ area adjoining the Waterfront lots of Block 6 of Wac-outa Beach.” In a separate report, the examiner states that at the time of the application, the Barths were the record owners of Lots 18 and 19 only and their attempt to register the disputed portion of Sand Beach is an attempt to register “more land than they have received by deed.” While the Barths argue that Lid-berg deeded Sand Beach to private parties in 1929, which is inconsistent with dedicating Sand Beach to the public, the examiner asserts that Lidberg’s intention to deed this property in 1929 “is of no validity if contrary to his dedication to the public in 1920,” and also asserts that there is no chain of title from the 1929 deed to the Barths. The examiner of titles further opined that Block 6 is platted in a way that supports the conclusion that the portion of Sand Beach adjoining Block 6 was dedicated for public use. The report of the examiner of titles reasonably supports a conclusion that a common-law dedication of Sand Beach for public use occurred and, at the very least, raises a genuine issue of material fact regarding the existence of such a dedication. Summary judgment therefore was inappropriate.
See DLH,
The district court also granted summary judgment to the Barths on the township’s claim that the public has a prescriptive easement over the disputed portion of Sand Beach. A party seeking to establish a prescriptive easement must show that its use of the land “was hostile, actual, open, continuous, and exclusive” for 15 years.
McCuen v. McCarvel,
The township also argues that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether the Barths adversely possessed the disputed land. The district court did not reach a conclusion as to this issue, merely noting that the Barths claimed to have acquired the land through adverse possession. If the disputed portion of Sand Beach was public property at the time the Barths allegedly adversely possessed it, the Barths’ adverse possession claim must fail as a matter of law. See Minn.Stat. § 541.01 (2008) (providing that land “dedicated or appropriated to public use” cannot be acquired by adverse possession). But we leave this issue for the district court to consider on remand if necessary.
DECISION
Because (1) collateral estoppel does not apply to the township, the district court *513 erred in applying it against the township and prohibiting the township from asserting its defenses in this registration action, and (2) genuine issues of material fact exist as to whether the land was dedicated to the public and whether the public has a prescriptive easement over the land, we reverse and remand.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. In 1972, the Barths constructed a home on Lots 18 and 19, Block 6, and occupied it as their principal residence.
. This court exercised no jurisdiction over any of the previous registration actions referenced by the township and the Barths.
. Although the Barths, as adjoining landowners, were joined as defendants in the prior registration actions, they were not plaintiffs in the actions.
