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Baurer v. Sokoloff

Supreme Court of Wisconsin
Feb 15, 1949
254 Wis. 273 (Wis. 1949)

Opinion

January 19, 1949. —

February 15, 1949.

APPEAL from an order of the municipal court of Kenosha county: EDWARD J. RUETZ, Judge. Affirmed.

The cause was submitted for the appellants on the brief of Lepp Phillips of Kenosha, and for the respondents on the brief Cavanaugh, Stephenson, Mittelstaed Sheldon of Kenosha.


Under date of December 22, 1947, John E. Baurer and Meredith Kathleen Baurer, his wife, filed a petition in the municipal court of Kenosha county to vacate portions of a plat of certain lands in the town of Pleasant Prairie, Kenosha county, Wisconsin. Notice of said application was duly published, posted, and served as required by statute. The plat had been recorded in the office of the register of deeds on October 5, 1921. On July 13, 1948, the court entered an order vacating portions of the plat as prayed for in the application. Appellants, who are the owners of real estate within the subdivision, appeal from this order.

In 1921 John N. Penny and others caused certain lands in the town of Pleasant Prairie, Kenosha county, Wisconsin, to be surveyed, subdivided, and mapped, and a plat thereof to be recorded. This plat shows a hundred-foot road designated thereon as "private" running in an easterly direction. In 1926 a twenty-foot concrete strip running approximately in the center of the one-hundred-foot road was constructed by the original owners of the subdivision. This road was the only legal means of entrance and exit to the subdivision.

In May, 1921, Penny, the original owner, started the erection of a dwelling house entirely within the limits of the one-hundred-foot road and on the northerly side of the twenty-foot strip upon which the concrete roadway was later constructed. The house was completed in October, 1921, and has been occupied since that time. The house was located at the westerly edge of the subdivision where the road designated as "private" entered the subdivision from a public highway known as "Sheridan road." The original plat contained the following provision:

"Party of the second part to have a perpetual easement in conjunction with the other owners of lots in said plat, to ingress and egress over the private rights of way designated on said plat and known as Chiwaukee terrace and Lake Shore drive."

Chiwaukee terrace is the name given to the road running in an easterly direction into the subdivision from Sheridan road.

In 1932 the Northwestern Loan Trust Company, a corporation, Kenosha, Wisconsin, started proceedings to foreclose a mortgage it held on the premises described in the application herein and other lands. The Northwestern Loan Trust Company purchased the real estate covered by its mortgage at the foreclosure sale and received a sheriff's deed thereto October 29, 1934.

Naoma F. Penny purchased the premises described in the petition herein from the Northwestern Loan Trust Company. On August 16, 1947, Naoma F. Penny and her husband, John N. Penny, conveyed by warranty deed to the applicants, a tract of land two hundred seventy-five feet east and west and one hundred eighty-five feet north and south, the west line being the center of Sheridan road and the south line being the south line of the one-hundred-foot strip.

Baurer and wife commenced this proceeding under the provisions of secs. 236.17 and 236.18, Stats. 1947, to vacate that portion of the plat described in their deed with the exception of the twenty-foot strip surfaced with concrete.

Other facts will be stated in the opinion.


The appellants ask to have the order of the trial court dismissed for the following reasons: (1) That the entire one-hundred-foot strip of the Chiwaukee road is a public highway because of public use; (2) that the Chiwaukee road is a public highway by dedication and acceptance by the town board of Pleasant Prairie: (3) vacation of any part thereof should be denied because a perpetual easement to the entire one-hundred-foot width of the road was created and the applicants are estopped from denying its existence; and (4) that the trial court committed an abuse of discretion in its order.

As to the first contention, the trial court found that the public acquired no rights by user except over the twenty-foot concrete strip. This finding is in accord with the record.

As to the second contention, there was never any dedication of Chiwaukee road as a public highway, nor has there ever been any legal acceptance thereof by the town board of Pleasant Prairie. On April 20, 1945, an application was filed with the town clerk of said town to have Chiwaukee terrace designated and maintained as a public highway. On August 10, 1945, which was more than ten days after the filing of the application, the town board, by resolution, accepted the road to maintain as other town roads. The application on its face does not appear to be signed by six or more freeholders residing within the limits of such plat, as required by sec. 80.38, Stats.

As to the third contention, the recording of the plat and conveyance of lots by the owner with reference to the plat constituted the granting of an easement to the purchasers of lots within the subdivision to ingress and egress over said private roadway in common with other lot owners, and the original proprietors and their grantees are estopped to deny the legal existence of such rights of ingress and egress. Kennedy v. Barnish (1943), 244 Wis. 137, 11 N.W.2d 682; Maas v. Schwaab (1944), 246 Wis. 102, 16 N.W.2d 380. The trial court recognized the easement in its order and preserved the same over the twenty-foot concrete strip.

This was a proceeding under secs. 236.17 and 236.18, Stats. This statute was construed and applied in In re Vacation of Plat of Garden City (1936), 221 Wis. 134, 266 N.W. 202. The lands in question were platted in 1921, at which time the power of the court to vacate plats was substantially the same as in 1947. Secs. 2265 and 2266, Stats. 1921. As those statutes were in effect when the land was platted and when the objectors and their predecessors in title purchased their lots, they are imported as a matter of law into their contracts of purchase, and all of the relative rights and obligations of the parties are subject to the provisions of those statutes, including the manner and conditions under which the portion of the plat involved herein may be vacated. Under the statutes, the only limit upon the court's authority to vacate a portion of the plat is the following:

". . . except such parts thereof as have been dedicated to and accepted by the public for use as a street or highway or as streets or highways." Sec. 236.17, Stats.

The dwelling house situated within the limits of Chiwaukee road as outlined on the plat was there when the plat was completed and recorded. It was visible to all purchasers of lots within the subdivision. The record does not disclose that any objection has ever been raised by anyone to the maintenance of the buildings within the one-hundred-foot strip. We can find no abuse of discretion on the part of the court.

By the Court. — Order affirmed.


It is conceded in this case that the circuit court has power to vacate a plat or any part thereof except such parts thereof as have been dedicated to and accepted by the public for public use. It is also conceded that this is a discretionary power and that the court's determination will only be reversed for a clear abuse of discretion.

I deem it also to be established that the roadway in question was never dedicated or offered as a public way, road, highway, or street. It was, however, an easement granted to lot owners in the subdivision to use the roadway as a means of ingress or egress. I am willing to concede without laboring the point that such portions of the one-hundred-foot strip as lie to the north of the concrete driveway and which are occupied by buildings of the plaintiffs could within the discretion of the trial court be lifted out of the highway as originally platted by vacation of the plat as to it. I can discover no fact which would justify vacating the south 27.6 feet of the highway. This strip is not necessary for plaintiffs' buildings. It is appropriate and necessary for access to other portions of the plat and, since plaintiffs hold under those who originally platted the premises, it appears to me that they have created a servitude in favor of persons who have purchased in reliance on the plat and that the court ought not without reason vacate this strip as a private entrance to the platted property. It appears to me that the vacating of this strip and the cutting of the private entrance to the plat to 20.13 feet was an abuse of discretion.


Summaries of

Baurer v. Sokoloff

Supreme Court of Wisconsin
Feb 15, 1949
254 Wis. 273 (Wis. 1949)
Case details for

Baurer v. Sokoloff

Case Details

Full title:IN RE VACATING PLAT OF CHIWAUKEE: BAURER and wife, Respondents, vs…

Court:Supreme Court of Wisconsin

Date published: Feb 15, 1949

Citations

254 Wis. 273 (Wis. 1949)
36 N.W.2d 61

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