Wisconsin Code § 191.10

Certificate of necessity
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) ISSUANCE, FILING,
RECORDING, CONDEMNATION. If the office of the commissioner
of railroads finds that the proposed railroad would be a public
convenience and that a necessity requires its construction, the office of the commissioner of railroads shall enter an order to that
effect and issue to the applicant a certificate that public convenience and a necessity require the construction of the railroad as
proposed. The certificate shall be filed in the office of the department of financial institutions and the department of financial
institutions shall approve the map showing the route of the railroad. The applicant shall record the map certified by the office of
the commissioner of railroads in the office of the register of
deeds in each county in which the railroad shall be located. The
filing of the certificate with the department of financial institutions and the recording of the map, as above provided, are conditions precedent to the right of the applicant to institute condemnation proceedings.
(2) CERTIFICATE FOR PART OF LINE. Whenever it shall appear to the office that public convenience and a necessity do not
require the construction of the railroad as proposed in the application, but do require the construction of a part thereof, the office
may issue a certificate for the construction of such part of the railroad as public convenience and necessity require.
(3) REFUSAL OF CERTIFICATE; RENEWAL OF APPLICATION. If
the office shall determine that the proposed railroad is not a necessity or is not required by public convenience, the office shall
by order refuse to grant a certificate, stating the reasons for the refusal. The application may be renewed after 2 years from the date
of the refusal, but not sooner.

‹ Prev All Wisconsin sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.