About The Wisconsin Statutes And Annotations
The statute files available on this
website contain the general statutes of Wisconsin, 2009-10, as updated through
2011 Wisconsin Act 39 and July 27, 2011,
except as noted below.
Statutory changes effective on or prior to September 1, 2011 are printed as if
currently in effect. Statutory changes effective after September 1, 2011 are designated by NOTES.
There are two separate statute databases at this website
that are produced using two different computer formats, NXT Site Director
and PDF, each of which has its own advantages and disadvantages. See
About NXT and PDF documents on this
site.
The statutes, reproduced at this website contain
annotations continuing those published in the Wisconsin Annotations 1970.
See also: About the Statutes Index,
About The Sections Affected Tables,
About Repealed and Renumbered Statutes,
About Cross References in the Statutes,
and About NXT and PDF Documents.
The NXT versions of the Wisconsin Constitution and
the Statutes and Annotations contain links from annotations to cited 1995
and newer Wisconsin Supreme Court and Court of Appeals opinions on the
Wisconsin Court System website.
Click on the underscored docket number following the
case citation to open a link to the case, in PDF format, to the Wisconsin
Court System website, e.g. Eternalist Foundation, Inc. v. City of
Platteville, 225 Wis. 2d 759, 593 N.W.2d 84 (Ct. App. 1999), 98-1944.
COVERAGE OF ANNOTATIONS: |
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Begin |
End |
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45 Wis. 2d 313 |
2011 WI 20 |
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2011 WI App 43 |
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58 Atty. Gen. 1 |
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81 Atty. Gen. (end) |
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OAG 8-10 |
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397 U.S. 1 |
563 U.S.___, (4-4-11) |
421 F.2d 1 |
641 F.3d (1-1-11) |
308 F Supp. 1 |
691 F. Supp. 2d (1-1-11) |
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53 Marquette Law Review |
94 Marquette Law Review (No. 1 2010) (MLR) |
1970 Wisconsin Law Review |
2011 Wisconsin Law Review (No. 1) (WLR) |
1970 Wisconsin Bar Bulletin (WBB) |
2011 Wisconsin Lawyer (April) (Wis. Law.)* |
*(Wisconsin Bar Bulletin was renamed Wisconsin Lawyer in
January, 1989)
About This Infobase
The Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations reproduced on this website are derived from the computer files used by the
Legislative Reference Bureau to produce the official Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations and are updated
approximately every 3 months to reflect the changes made by legislation enacted during the legislative session and to editorial notes and annotations .
As is the case with all electronic versions of the
statutes, the statutes on this web site cannot be certified under
s. 35.18, Wis. Stats. Only the printed
Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations can be certified. Certain tables and maps that are a part of the printed
Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations
are not included in the statute files reproduced on this website. Statute files updated after the passage of the 2007-08 biennial budget will not include
the updated tables at s. 20.005. Please consult the 2007 Acts for updated tables.
The following material, reproduced here for the
convenience of the user, is based on the Preface contained in the printed
Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations 2005-06. While the following material
contains references to the printed statute volumes, the documents referred
to are available on this website and the principles discussed are applicable
to the use of these electronic statutes in the same way they apply to the
printed statutes.
Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations 2007-08 consists of the Statutes of 1898 with the additions and amendments and less
the repeals made by the legislature and supreme court thereafter and annotations updated under
s. 35.23.
Section 35.18 directs that the Wisconsin Statutes be prepared after the
end of each regular session of the legislature, and that they contain "all
the general statutes in force." According to Legislative Joint Rule 53(1),
when an act or part of an act creates a statute section number, that action
indicates a legislative intent to make the section a part of the Wisconsin
Statutes. Conversely, when an act is not given a statute section number by
the legislature, the act is usually not printed in the Statutes, even though
it is a general law. For example, some general statutes relating to
Milwaukee county and city are omitted from the statutes.
The omission of a general statute from the Wisconsin
Statutes has no effect upon its validity. General statutes which are not
printed, and special, private and local laws are found in the volumes of the
Wisconsin Session Laws for the year of enactment. Acts of the legislature
are effective on passage, approval and publication under
s. 35.095 (3)
unless otherwise specified in the act.
The Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations may be purchased
from the Wisconsin Department of Administration, Document Sales and
Distribution Section, 202 South Thornton Ave., Madison, Wisconsin 53707-3037. Or telephone (608)266-3358.
WisLaw®, an electronic version of the Statutes
and Annotations and other Wisconsin law on CD-ROM, may be licensed from
Document Sales at the location listed above.
ANNOTATIONS
Wisconsin Statutes are annotated under authority of
s. 35.23. Section histories, interpretative notes, and notes relating to court decisions, attorney general's opinions, and published articles are printed following each
affected section of the statutes. A table showing the coverage of the annotations contained in these volumes, as well as notes
regarding errors and omissions and notes to decisions compiled after affected sections went to press, may be found in the
Addenda and Errata located at the end of Volume 5.
Prior to the publication of the 1971-72 statutes, annotations were printed in a separate book entitled Wisconsin Annotations,
the last edition of which is Wisconsin Annotations 1970. Annotations created since the 1970 edition of the Wisconsin
Annotations are not printed in a separate volume. Wisconsin Annotations 1970 may be purchased from the Document Sales and
Distribution Section at the location noted above.
WISCONSIN REVISION SYSTEM
The Wisconsin system of statutory revision is based on the continuous revision and biennial publication of the statutes.
The first four official editions of the statutes (1849, 1858, 1878, 1898) were complete (bulk) revisions. In 1911, the first
of the biennial volumes was published by the Revisor of Statutes under the present statute revision system. In 2008, the Revisor
of Statutes was eliminated and responsibility for revision of statutes was transferred to the Legislative Reference Bureau.
Under the current revision system, the general acts of the legislature for any biennial legislative session, together with
rules promulgated by the supreme court and included in the statutes under the authority of s. 751.12, are incorporated into
the previously existing body of the statutes, and the statutes are republished in their entirety.
Section 13.92 (1) (bm) 1. directs the Legislative Reference
Bureau "to formulate and prepare a definite plan for the order, classification, arrangement, printing and binding of the
statutes, and prepare and at each session of the legislature present bills to the law revision committee of the joint
legislative council containing such consolidation, revision and other matter relating to the statutes as time permits." When
errors or omissions are discovered in legislation or existing statutes, correction bills are prepared and submitted to the
legislature.
From time to time, changes in drafting style are implemented. Beginning in the 2001-02 biennial legislative session, the
serial comma began to be used in new legislation, e.g., "city, village, or town" rather than "city, village or town." As a
result, statutes affected after the style change include the serial comma and unaffected statutes do not. No substantive
effect is intended by the use or non-use of the serial comma.
When errors or omissions are discovered that cannot be corrected by enacting a correction bill before publication of the next
edition of the Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations, the Legislative Reference Bureau may print the correct language
within square brackets, [ ], followed by an explanatory note. The bracketed language is merely an editorial comment to assist
the reader; it is not the enacted law. Conversely, language that is erroneously enacted, e.g., a phrase that is mistakenly
repeated, may also appear in brackets, followed by a note. When a statutory enactment contains both errors that require language
to be inserted and language to be removed, both square brackets and curly brackets, { }, may be used to indicate the prospective
changes to the affected statute unit.
How to Use the Printed Volume:
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The numbering system.
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The table of contents.
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The index.
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Section histories.
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Notes.
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Implied amendments and repeals.
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Finding annotations for renumbered sections.
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Conversion tables of revised chapters.
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Finding present number of old sections.
1. THE NUMBERING SYSTEM
The principal unit of the statutes is the statute section.
Related statute sections are organized into chapters numbered
between 1 and 995. Each statute section is given a mixed decimal
section number consisting of a whole number that is the chapter
number and a decimal number that indicates the section's
location within the chapter. The decimal number consists of at
least two digits and may contain as many as five digits. In a
decimal system, 48.10 is the same as 48.100 and 48.100 follows
48.09, not 48.99. The decimal system allows the insertion of new
sections in any location. If it is necessary to add a new
section between 48.10 and 48.11, the new section can be numbered
48.105.
Statute sections may be subdivided into subsections, which may be further subdivided. Subsections are indicated by numbers
within parentheses: (1), (2), (3). Subsections are subdivided into paragraphs, which are indicated by letters within
parentheses: (a), (b), (c). Subdivisions of paragraphs are indicated by digits without parentheses followed by a period.
These subdivisions can be divided into paragraphs indicated by letters without parentheses followed by a period. If it is
necessary to insert a new statute subunit between two consecutively numbered subunits, it is done by introducing a
letter suffix, as (1e), (am), 1p., or as. Note the distinction between (3) (m), which is paragraph (m) of subsection (3), and
(3m), which is subsection (3m), and which may, in turn, be subdivided into lettered paragraphs including (3m) (m). Sections
60.61 and 66.0113 illustrate the use
of subdivisions and the further division of subdivisions into lettered paragraphs.
The following abbreviations are used in the Wisconsin
Statutes and Annotations when citing the various statute units:
Chapter, chapters: ch., chs.
Subchapter, subchapters: subch., subchs.
Section, sections: s., ss.
Subsection, subsections: sub., subs.
Paragraph, paragraphs: par., pars.
Subdivision, subdivisions: subd., subds.
Paragraphs of subdivisions are cited by the subdivision number
followed by the paragraph letter designation, as follows: subd.
1. a.
About This Infobase
2. USING THE TABLE OF CONTENTS
The table of contents shows all the statute chapter titles listed
numerically, grouped under subject-matter headings.
3. THE INDEX
The references in the index are to chapters, sections, or parts of sections of the statutes or to articles and sections of
the Wisconsin Constitution. A detailed description of the elements of the index precedes the index in Volume 5.
The index contained in Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations 2009-10 is based on the index contained in prior publications of
the Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations, as updated and revised by the staff of the Legislative Reference Bureau. The revision
and reorganization of the index is an ongoing process intended to modernize terminology and simplify use, and to eliminate
inconsistencies and fragmented treatment of subjects.
4. SECTION HISTORIES
The legislative history of every section
affected by legislative or Supreme Court action after 1970 appears in a note following the section. For example, "History:
1971 c. 46; 1983 a. 36, 386". This note shows that the sample section was affected by Chapter 46 of the Laws of 1971 and by
1983 Acts 36 and 386. Commencing with the 1983-84 legislative session, legislative enactments are entitled "acts" and are
shown in the history as "a." Prior to the 1983-84 session, legislative enactments were entitled "chapters" and are shown in
the history as "ch." Sections that have not been affected after the 1969 session have no history note. The history of
legislation affecting statute sections before 1971 may be found in Wisconsin Annotations 1970.
History notes do not indicate the specific treatment of the statute section by the act noted, such as whether the section
was amended or created. This can be determined by referring to the chapter or act in the Laws of Wisconsin or by consulting the
table of sections affected in that volume.
Section 13.92 (1) (bm) 2. authorizes the Legislative Reference
Bureau to renumber statute sections and to correct references to the renumbered section. The legislature occasionally creates two
statutes with the same statute number. For example, in the 2007-08 session, the legislature created two sections numbered
84.1024. The Legislative Reference Bureau renumbered the section created by Act 161 to be 84.1018. When the Legislative Reference
Bureau renumbers a provision under authority of s. 13.92 (1) (bm) 2., the renumbering takes effect immediately, but the change is
submitted to the legislature for validation in the next correction bill submitted to the legislature by the Legislative
Reference Bureau. A note explaining the renumbering is inserted by the Legislative Reference Bureau following the affected
statute unit, and the history note for the renumbered statute will initially include a reference to s. 13.92 (1) (bm) 2. When
the correction bill validating the renumbering is enacted, the explanatory note is removed and the reference to s. 13.92 (1) (bm)
2. in the history note is replaced by the act number of the correction bill.
Section 13.92 (1) (bm) 3. authorizes the Legislative Reference Bureau to substitute an actual date for a phrase such as "after
the effective date of this act." These changes are not cited in the history notes.
Section 751.12 authorizes the supreme court to make rules
modifying or suspending statutes relating to pleading, practice, and procedure. The legislative history for an affected section
contains a reference to the rule in the following form: "Sup. Ct. Order No. 00-02, 2001 WI 39, 240 Wis. 2d vi." The order
number (00-02) indicates the sequential order and year of issuance of the order, the public domain citation number (2001
WI 39) is a number assigned by the court when the order is issued by which the order can be officially cited, and the final
number (240 Wis. 2d vi) indicates the volume and page of the Wisconsin Reports in which the order is published. Histories
published prior to the publication of the order in the Wisconsin Reports will show the effective date and publication date of the
order, which is replaced with the Wisconsin Reports citation when it becomes available.
Nonstatutory Supreme Court Rules are published in Volume 5 of the Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations. Citations to these rules
in the Statutes are to the SCR number as shown in s. 990.08. See the reference to 40.15 in s. 19.01 (1).
5. NOTES
Statutory changes that are not effective at the time of publication are indicated by notes that follow the affected
statute provision.
Notes prepared by the Judicial Council or the Joint Legislative
Council that are published as a part of Wisconsin Acts, or
comments or notes included in Supreme Court Orders that aid in
the construction and interpretation of affected statutes, are
published in full in the Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations or
are referred to in notes following the affected statute section
directing the user to see the original act or order. These notes
follow the history note and precede other annotations.
Notes indicating cross-references to sections of the Wisconsin
administrative code that are authorized by or interpret the
statute are included in many statute sections.
6. IMPLIED AMENDMENTS AND REPEALS
The legislature often passes two or more acts in the same legislative session that treat the same provision of the
statutes. Section 13.92 (2) (i) provides that if 2 or more acts of a legislative session affect the same statutory unit without
taking cognizance of the effect thereon of the other acts and if the chief of the legislative reference bureau finds that there
is no mutual inconsistency in the changes made by each such act, the chief shall incorporate the changes made by each act into
the text of the statutory unit and document the incorporation in a note to the section.
If the same provision is amended by separate acts, and the amendments are not inconsistent the Legislative Reference Bureau
incorporates both acts and inserts a note in the Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations following the provision stating that the provision is printed as amended by both acts and as merged
by the Legislative Reference Bureau under s. 13.92 (2) (i). The Legislative Reference Bureau subsequently inserts in a
correction bill a provision validating the incorporation of the several acts into the affected provision and the note is removed
from the Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations upon enactment of the correction bill.
If the same provision is amended by separate acts, and the amendments are inconsistent, the last act governs; see Application of Bentine, 181 Wis. 579. In that case, or if there
is doubt or it would be impossible to incorporate both without rewriting the text, the Legislative Reference Bureau prints the
statute as amended by the last enacted act and calls attention to the prior amendment by a note after the provision. Section
35.095 (1) (a) defines "date of enactment" as "the day on which a bill becomes an act through approval by the governor, passage
over the governor's veto or failure of the governor to act on it or the day on which a portion of the bill that has been vetoed
in part is enacted over the governor's partial veto."
If the first action is a repeal and the second is an amendment, the general rule is that the repeal stands and the Legislative
Reference Bureau prints nothing unless the amendment can stand alone as a statement of policy. If the amending act is first,
and the repeal second, the intent to repeal is usually clear and again the Legislative Reference Bureau prints nothing.
7. FINDING ANNOTATIONS FOR RENUMBERED SECTIONS
In order to find the legislative history or other annotations for a statute section that has been renumbered, it may be
necessary to find the annotations under a former section. Section 29.974 provides an example. The history note to that
section includes the following notations: "1975 c. 365 s. 46; Stats. 1975 s. 29.995" and "1997 a. 248 s. 723; Stats. 1997 s.
29.974." These notations indicate that the section was renumbered to s. 29.995 by ch. 365, section 46, Laws of 1975 and
to s. 29.974 by 1997 Act 248, section 723. (When an act renumbers a statute section, the history note includes the act
section number, the new statute section number, and the biennial edition of the Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations in which the
new number first appears.) The number for the section prior to its renumbering by 1975 c. 365 can be found in section 46 of
Chapter 365 in the 1975 Laws of Wisconsin or by finding s. 29.995 in the table of sections affected, found in the back of
that volume. Both sources show that s. 29.995 was renumbered from s. 29.635. Annotations for section 29.635 created prior to
the 1970-71 legislative session are found in Wisconsin Annotations 1970.
A citation to a whole statute section number that does not appear in this edition of the Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations
may appear in the table of "Decimal-numbered Sections Renumbered or Repealed" showing that the section was renumbered or
repealed. This table is printed in the Appendix contained in Volume 5. A part of a statute section (subsection, paragraph,
etc.) that does not appear as a part of that statute section, may also have been renumbered or repealed, which may be
determined by consulting the entries for the statute section number in the table of sections affected printed in the Laws of
Wisconsin for the legislative session during which the affected statute part was removed from the statutes.
8. CONVERSION TABLES OF REVISED CHAPTERS
Legislative drafters have at times prepared conversion tables showing the relationship of current and former section numbers.
For revisions made prior to the 1971-72 legislative session, these tables can be found in Wisconsin Annotations 1970 and for
subsequent revisions, conversion tables are printed in these volumes, following the revised chapter. For example, see the
conversion table following chapter 551.
9. FINDING PRESENT NUMBER OF OLD SECTIONS
Prior to adopting the present decimal numbering system in the early 1900s, statute sections were numbered using consecutive
whole numbers. A comparative table of whole section numbers and decimal section numbers is contained in the Wisconsin
Annotations 1970, pages 2423 to 2453. This table was continued in the Appendix contained in editions of the Wisconsin Statutes
and Annotations published prior to the 2007-08 edition, but the table has not been modified since 1977 and has been removed from
the Wisconsin Statutes and Annotations 2007-08 due to page constraints.
We would appreciate hearing from any user of this website,
the Statutes on the WisLaw® CD-ROM or the printed
statutes in regard to any errors or any suggestions for
improvement. Legislative Reference Bureau, Suite 200, 1 East
Main Street, Madison, WI 53703-3233. (Telephone (608) 266-0341
Fax (608) 264-6948) Email:
Send Email to the Legislative Reference Bureau regarding
statutes
Bruce Hoesly: Revising Attorney
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