LRB-4341/1
RPN&PJK:jld&bjk:md
2009 - 2010 LEGISLATURE
March 9, 2010 - Introduced by Representatives Richards, Hubler, Turner,
Molepske Jr., Van Roy, Townsend, Smith, Gunderson, Petersen
and
Soletski, cosponsored by Senators Sullivan, Taylor, Plale, Jauch, Cowles
and Darling. Referred to Committee on State Affairs and Homeland Security.
AB821,1,8 1An Act to repeal 779.32 (3) (c); to amend 779.32 (2) (b), 779.32 (2) (c), 779.32
2(3) (intro.), 779.32 (4) (a) (intro.), 779.32 (4) (a) 1., 779.32 (4) (a) 2. a. and b.,
3779.32 (4) (b) (intro.), 779.32 (4) (b) 4., 779.32 (4) (c), 779.32 (4) (d), 779.32 (4m),
4779.32 (8) (a) 1., 779.32 (8) (a) 2., 779.32 (8) (c) 2., 840.11 (1) and 840.11 (2); to
5repeal and recreate
779.32 (8) (b) and 779.32 (9); and to create 706.085,
6779.32 (1) (d), 779.32 (2m), 779.32 (8) (am), 779.32 (10) and 779.32 (11) of the
7statutes; relating to: commercial real estate liens and recording a correction
8instrument and a lis pendens.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
Correction instruments
Current law provides a procedure whereby a court may, on satisfactory proof,
make an order correcting the description of real property in a recorded instrument
conveying the property. Current law also provides that correction instruments may
be recorded to make certain specified corrections to recorded plats or certified survey
maps. Although correcting an error in a previously recorded instrument conveying
real property by recording an affidavit making the correction but without court
action has been a common practice for many years, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals
determined in Smiljanic v. Niedermeyer, 2007 WI App 182, 737 N.W.2d 436, that
there is no statutory authority under current law for this method of correction.

This bill provides that an instrument (correction instrument) correcting
previously recorded instruments conveying real property may be executed,
generally, by a person with personal knowledge of the facts stated in the instrument
and recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county in which the previously
recorded instrument is recorded. A correction instrument may correct a legal
description; add to, correct, or clarify other information, such as names, dates, and
marital status; add an acknowledgment or authentication; or add the consent or
subordination of a mortgagee. The bill specifies what information a correction
instrument must include and provides that the record of the correction instrument
is prima facie evidence of the facts stated in the correction instrument; is presumed
to be true, subject to rebuttal; and constitutes record notice affecting the property's
chain of title to any purchaser of the property. The bill also validates correction
instruments that were recorded before the effective date of the bill.
Lis pendens
Current law provides that any person who applies to a court or municipal
governing body for laying out, widening, vacating, or extending a street, alley, or
other specified public place must file a notice of pendency of the application and that
failure to comply renders all proceedings based on the application void. The bill
instead requires the person making the application to submit a lis pendens to the
register of deeds for filing or recording and removes the provision that failure to
comply renders all proceedings based on the application void.
Current law provides that any final order or resolution based on the application
has no effect and is not notice unless a certified copy of the order or resolution
contains a full and accurate description of the property and is recorded in the office
of the register of deeds. The bill provides that the final order must instead contain
a legal description of the property and is not notice unless it is recorded in the office
of the register of deeds. The bill also removes a provision in current law that a
resolution or order that affects land but for which no application was made has no
effect and is not notice unless it is recorded.
Commercial real estate liens
This bill makes numerous changes in the process of obtaining and terminating
a commercial real estate lien, which is a lien on real property other than real property
that contains eight or fewer dwelling units, that is zoned for residential use but that
has no structures, or that is zoned for agriculture.
Currently, if a real estate broker (broker) earns a commission on the sale of
commercial real estate, the broker has a lien against the commercial real estate for
the unpaid amount of the commission. The bill expands the types of agreements that
may give rise to a commercial real estate lien to include an agreement between a
broker and a person that grants the broker the right to represent the person in the
lease of commercial real estate.
Under current law, to claim a lien against commercial real estate for an unpaid
commission, a broker must file or record a written notice of intent to claim the lien
at the office of the register of deeds for the county in which the commercial real estate
is located and deliver a copy of that notice to the person owing the commission. Under
this bill, to obtain a lien, the broker must send written notice to the person who owes

the commission of the right to claim the lien and record a written notice of interest
in the commercial real estate at the office of the register of deeds for the county in
which the commercial real estate is located.
Currently, the lien is perfected when a broker files a notice of lien in the office
of the register of deeds for the county in which the commercial real estate is located.
Under the bill, the lien is perfected when a broker records the lien in the office of the
register of deeds for the county in which the commercial real estate is located.
The bill changes the time period for perfecting a lien involving a written
commercial real estate list contract or buyer agency agreement from three days
before the conveyance documents are recorded with register of deeds to 30 days after
the conveyance documents are recorded with register of deeds.
Under current law, the broker is required to satisfy a commercial real estate
lien if the person owing a commission that is the subject of the lien pays an amount
equal to 125 percent of the commission owed into the trust account of the broker or
of an attorney who does not represent any party to the dispute, pending resolution
of the dispute. This bill adds a mutually agreed third party to those who can receive
and hold the money pending resolution of the dispute.
Current law provides that a commercial real estate lien is extinguished if an
action to enforce the lien is not commenced within two years after the lien is
perfected. Under this bill, a commercial real estate lien is extinguished if a new
notice of interest in the commercial real estate is not recorded in the office of the
register of deeds for the county in which the commercial real estate is located within
two years after the original notice of interest was recorded. Under the bill, a broker
may rescind a notice of interest by recording a notice in the office of the register of
deeds for the county in which the commercial real estate is located indicating that
he or she no longer claims an interest in the commercial real estate.
The bill requires a broker to record a notice rescinding a notice of interest in the
commercial real estate if the agreement that created the interest in the commercial
real estate is terminated or expires. In addition, under the bill, a broker may waive
the lien by signing a written waiver, but no action between any other persons may
invalidate the lien, other than the payment in full of the broker's commission.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
AB821, s. 1 1Section 1. 706.085 of the statutes is created to read:
AB821,3,5 2706.085 Correction instruments. (1) Entitled to be recorded; purposes.
3An instrument correcting a previously recorded conveyance shall be entitled to
4record in accordance with s. 706.05 in the office of the register of deeds of the county
5in which the conveyance is recorded and shall include one or more of the following:
AB821,4,5
1(a) The correction of a legal description, including a distance; angle; direction;
2bearing; chord; lot, block, unit, or building number or letter; appurtenant easement;
3section number; township name or number; municipality, county, or state name;
4range number or meridian; certified survey map number; or subdivision or
5condominium name.
AB821,4,76 (b) The addition, correction, or clarification of information other than a legal
7description, including any of the following information:
AB821,4,108 1. A party's name, including the spelling of the name; a first or middle name
9or initial; a name suffix, such as senior or junior; alternate names by which the party
10is known; or a description of an entity as a corporation, company, or similar identifier.
AB821,4,1111 2. A party's marital status.
AB821,4,1212 3. The date on which the conveyance was executed.
AB821,4,1313 4. Whether the property is a homestead.
AB821,4,1414 5. The tax parcel number.
AB821,4,1515 6. The identity of the drafter.
AB821,4,1616 7. The recording data for an instrument referenced in the conveyance.
AB821,4,1717 8. The nature and purpose of the conveyance.
AB821,4,1818 9. The title of the conveyance.
AB821,4,1919 10. Facts relating to the acknowledgment or authentication.
AB821,4,2020 (c) The addition of an acknowledgment or authentication.
AB821,4,2221 (d) The disclaimer by a grantee under a deed of that party's interest in the real
22property that is the subject of the deed.
AB821,4,2323 (e) The addition of a mortgagee's consent or subordination.
AB821,5,2 24(2) Execution requirements. (a) A correction instrument shall be
25acknowledged or authenticated in accordance with s. 706.06 or 706.07. It shall recite

1the document number of the conveyance, the names of the grantor and grantee, and,
2if given on the conveyance, the volume and page numbers.
AB821,5,133 (b) 1. Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph, a correction instrument
4that is executed after the effective date of this subdivision .... [LRB inserts date], may
5be executed by a person having personal knowledge of the circumstances of the
6conveyance and of the facts recited in the correction instrument, including the
7grantor, the grantee, the person who drafted the conveyance that is the subject of the
8correction instrument, or the person who acted as the settlement agent in the
9transaction that is the subject of the conveyance, and shall recite the basis for the
10person's personal knowledge. A correction instrument that was executed before the
11effective date of this subdivision .... [LRB inserts date], is not rendered ineffective by
12reason of the instrument's failure to recite that the maker had the knowledge or
13capacity required under this subdivision.
AB821,5,1514 2. A correction instrument that makes the correction under sub. (1) (e) shall be
15signed by the consenting party, or an heir, successor, or assignee of the party.
AB821,5,1716 3. A correction instrument that adds, removes, or replaces a divisible parcel in
17a conveyance shall be signed by the following persons:
AB821,5,1918 a. If the correction instrument supplies a lot, block, unit, or building number
19or letter that was omitted from a conveyance, by any party identified in subd. 1.
AB821,5,2120 b. If a parcel is being added to a conveyance that also correctly conveys other
21land, only by the grantor.
AB821,5,2322 c. If a parcel is being removed from a conveyance that also correctly conveys
23other land, only by the grantee.
AB821,6,3
1d. If a lot or unit number or letter is being corrected and the lot or unit
2incorrectly recited in the conveyance is also owned by the grantor, only by the
3grantee.
Loading...
Loading...