Wisconsin Code § 704.29

Recovery of rent and damages by landlord; mitigation
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(1) SCOPE OF SECTION. If a tenant unjustifiably removes from the premises prior to the effective date for termination of the tenant’s tenancy and defaults in payment of rent, or if
the tenant is removed for failure to pay rent or any other breach of
a lease, the landlord can recover rent and damages except
amounts which the landlord could mitigate in accordance with
this section, unless the landlord has expressly agreed to accept a
surrender of the premises and end the tenant’s liability. Except as
the context may indicate otherwise, this section applies to the liability of a tenant under a lease, a periodic tenant, or an assignee of
either.
(2) MEASURE OF RECOVERY. (a) In this subsection, “reasonable efforts” mean those steps that the landlord would have taken
to rent the premises if they had been vacated in due course, provided that those steps are in accordance with local rental practice
for similar properties.
(b) In any claim against a tenant for rent and damages, or for
either, the amount of recovery is reduced by the net rent obtainable by reasonable efforts to rerent the premises. In the absence
of proof that greater net rent is obtainable by reasonable efforts to
rerent the premises, the tenant is credited with rent actually received under a rerental agreement minus expenses incurred as a
reasonable incident of acts under sub. (4), including a fair proportion of any cost of remodeling or other capital improvements. In
any case the landlord can recover, in addition to rent and other elements of damage, all reasonable expenses of listing and advertising incurred in rerenting and attempting to rerent, except as
taken into account in computing the net rent under the preceding
sentence. If the landlord has used the premises as part of reasonable efforts to rerent, under sub. (4) (c), the tenant is credited with
the reasonable value of the use of the premises, which is presumed to be equal to the rent recoverable from the defendant unless the landlord proves otherwise. If the landlord has other similar premises for rent and receives an offer from a prospective tenant not obtained by the defendant, it is reasonable for the landlord
to rent the other premises for the landlord’s own account in preference to those vacated by the defaulting tenant.
(3) BURDEN OF PROOF. The landlord must allege and prove
that the landlord has made efforts to comply with this section.
The tenant has the burden of proving that the efforts of the landlord were not reasonable, that the landlord’s refusal of any offer
to rent the premises or a part thereof was not reasonable, that any
terms and conditions upon which the landlord has in fact rerented
were not reasonable, and that any temporary use by the landlord
was not part of reasonable efforts to mitigate in accordance with
sub. (4) (c); the tenant also has the burden of proving the amount
that could have been obtained by reasonable efforts to mitigate by
rerenting.
(4) ACTS PRIVILEGED IN MITIGATION OF RENT OR DAMAGES.
The following acts by the landlord do not defeat the landlord’s
right to recover rent and damages and do not constitute an acceptance of surrender of the premises:
(a) Entry, with or without notice, for the purpose of inspecting, preserving, repairing, remodeling and showing the premises;
(b) Rerenting the premises or a part thereof, with or without
notice, with rent applied against the damages caused by the original tenant and in reduction of rent accruing under the original
lease;
(c) Use of the premises by the landlord until such time as
rerenting at a reasonable rent is practical, not to exceed one year,
if the landlord gives prompt written notice to the tenant that the
landlord is using the premises pursuant to this section and that the
landlord will credit the tenant with the reasonable value of the
use of the premises to the landlord for such a period;
(d) Any other act which is reasonably subject to interpretation
as being in mitigation of rent or damages and which does not unequivocally demonstrate an intent to release the defaulting tenant.

‹ 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.