Wisconsin Code § 254.595

Property violating codes or health orders
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(1) If real property is in violation of those provisions of a municipal building code that concern health or safety, the city, village,
or town in which the property is located may commence an action
to declare the property a nuisance. If real property is in violation
of an order or a regulation of the local board of health, the city,
village, or town in which the property is located may commence
an action to declare the property a human health hazard. A tenant
or class of tenants of property that is in violation of the municipal
building code or of an order or regulation of the local board of
health or any other person or class of persons whose health,
safety or property interests are or would be adversely affected by
property that is in violation of the municipal building code or of
an order or regulation of the local board of health may file a petition with the clerk of the city, village, or town requesting the governing body to commence an action to declare the property a nuisance or human health hazard. If the governing body refuses or
fails to commence an action within 20 days after the filing of the
petition, a tenant, class of tenants, other person or other class of
persons may commence the action directly upon the filing of security for court costs. The court before which the action of the
case is commenced shall exercise jurisdiction in rem or quasi in
rem over the property and the owner of record of the property, if
known, and all other persons of record holding or claiming any
interest in the property shall be made parties defendant and service of process may be had upon them as provided by law. Any
change of ownership after the commencement of the action shall
not affect the jurisdiction of the court over the property. At the
time that the action is commenced, the municipality or other parties plaintiff shall file a lis pendens. If the court finds that a violation exists, it shall adjudge the property a nuisance or human
health hazard and the entry of judgment shall be a lien upon the
premises.
(2) A property owner or any person of record holding or
claiming any interest in the property shall have 60 days after entry
of judgment to eliminate the violation. If, within 60 days after
entry of judgment under sub. (1), an owner of the property
presents evidence satisfactory to the court, upon hearing, that the
violation has been eliminated, the court shall set aside the judgment. It may not be a defense to this action that the owner of
record of the property is a different person, partnership or corporate entity than the owner of record of the property on the date
that the action was commenced or thereafter if a lis pendens has
been filed prior to the change of ownership. No hearing under
this subsection may be held until notice has been given to the municipality and all the plaintiffs advising them of their right to appear. If the judgment is not so set aside within 60 days after entry
of judgment, the court shall appoint a disinterested person to act
as receiver of the property for the purpose of abating the nuisance
or human health hazard.
(3) (a) Any receiver appointed under sub. (2) shall collect all
rents and profits accruing from the property, pay all costs of management, including all general and special real estate taxes or assessments and interest payments on first mortgages on the property, and make any repairs necessary to meet the standards required by the building code or the order or regulation of the local
board of health. The receiver may, with the approval of the circuit
court, borrow money against and encumber the property as security for the money, in the amounts necessary to meet the
standards.
(b) At the request of and with the approval of the owner, the
receiver may sell the property at a price equal to at least the appraisal value plus the cost of any repairs made under this section
for which the selling owner is or will become liable. The receiver
shall apply moneys received from the sale of the property to pay
all debts due on the property in the order set by law, and shall pay
over any balance with the approval of the court, to the selling
owner.
(4) The receiver appointed under this section shall have a
lien, for the expenses necessarily incurred to abate the nuisance
or in the execution of the order, upon the premises upon or in respect of which the work required by the order has been done or

expenses incurred. The municipality that sought the order declaring the property to be a nuisance or human health hazard may
also recover its expenses and the expenses of the receiver under
subs. (3) (a) and (5), to the extent that the expenses are not reimbursed under s. 632.103 (2) from funds withheld from an insurance settlement, by maintaining an action against the property
owner under s. 74.53.
(5) The court shall set the fees and bond of the receiver, and
may discharge the receiver when the court deems appropriate.
(6) Nothing in this section relieves the owner of any property
for which a receiver has been appointed from any civil or criminal
responsibility or liability otherwise imposed by law, except that
the receiver shall be civilly and criminally responsible and liable
for all matters and acts directly under his or her authority or performed by him or her or at his or her direction.
(7) This section shall not apply to owner-occupied one or 2family dwellings.
(8) The commencement of an action by a tenant under this
section is not just cause for eviction.

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