LRB-2927/2
RPN:jld:jf
2001 - 2002 LEGISLATURE
October 29, 2001 - Introduced by Representatives Duff, Ladwig, Starzyk,
Gronemus, Gunderson, Krawczyk, Bies, McCormick, Jeskewitz, Turner,
Ainsworth, M. Lehman, Stone, Owens
and Lippert. Referred to Committee on
Urban and Local Affairs.
AB591,1,4 1An Act to renumber and amend 985.03 (2); to amend 985.01 (5), 985.03 (1)
2(c) and 985.14; to repeal and recreate 985.03 (1) (a); and to create 985.03 (3)
3of the statutes; relating to: the qualifications of newspapers permitted to
4publish legal notices.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
Under current law, a newspaper must meet certain qualifications to be eligible
to receive compensation for publishing legal notices. Currently, to receive that
compensation, a newspaper must have been published regularly and continuously
in the city, village, or town where published for at least two of the last five years. In
addition, the newspaper must have a paid circulation that is at least 50% of its
circulation and have actual subscribers of not less than 1,000 copies if in a 1st or 2nd
class city, or 300 copies if in a 3rd or 4th class city or in a village or town.
Under this bill, newspapers that have been in existence for at least two years
and are published and delivered, without requiring a subscription fee, to 75% of the
households and businesses in the newspaper's coverage area are also eligible to
receive compensation for publishing legal notices for cities, villages, and towns.
The bill also allows a 2nd, 3rd, or 4th class city, village, town, sewerage district,
drainage district, or county to designate a newspaper as the official newspaper for
publishing legal notices even if the newspaper does not meet the other statutory
requirements if the newspaper is published at least weekly and is determined, after
a public hearing, to give better notice to more people affected by the notice than a
newspaper that does meet the other statutory requirements.

Current law defines a "newspaper," for purposes of receiving compensation for
the publication of a legal notice, as a publication that appears at regular intervals
of at least once per week and that contains reports of recent happenings that are
designed to inform the general reader. This bill changes that definition to require
the publication to contain reports of recent happenings that are designed to inform
the general reader in at least four pages or 20% of the publication space, whichever
is greater. The bill requires the publication to meet this new standard in at least 33%
of the publication's issues in the six months immediately preceding the publication
of the notice.
For further information see the local fiscal estimate, which will be printed as
an appendix to this bill.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
AB591, s. 1 1Section 1. 985.01 (5) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB591,2,72 985.01 (5) A newspaper is "published" at the place from which its mailing
3permit is issued, except that if the place where the newspaper has its major
4concentration of circulation has no primary post office, then at the place it shall
5designate
that the newspaper designates as its place of publication in the affidavit
6certificate required by s. 985.03 (2), but no newspaper shall have more than one place
7of publication during the same period of time.
AB591, s. 2 8Section 2. 985.03 (1) (a) of the statutes is repealed and recreated to read:
AB591,2,119 985.03 (1) (a) Except as provided in sub. (3), no publisher of any newspaper in
10this state shall be awarded or be entitled to any compensation or fee for the
11publishing of any legal notice unless one of the following conditions are met:
AB591,2,1612 1. For at least 2 of the 5 years immediately before the date of the notice
13publication, the newspaper has been published regularly and continuously, has had
14a bona fide paid circulation that has constituted 50% or more of its circulation, and
15has had actual subscribers at each publication of not less than 1,000 copies in 1st and
162nd class cities, or 300 copies if in 3rd and 4th class cities, villages, or towns.
AB591,3,4
12. For at least 2 continuous years the newspaper has been in existence and has
2been published and delivered, without requiring a subscription fee, to at least 75%
3of the households and businesses in the newspaper's coverage area, which includes
4the city, village, or town that uses the newspaper to publish a legal notice.
AB591, s. 3 5Section 3. 985.03 (1) (c) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB591,3,166 985.03 (1) (c) A newspaper, under this chapter, is a publication appearing at
7regular intervals and at least once a week, containing at least 4 pages or 20% of the
8publication space, whichever is greater, of
reports of happenings of recent occurrence
9of a varied character, such as political, social, moral and religious subjects, designed
10to inform the general reader. The publication must meet this standard in the
11publication's coverage area in at least 33% of the publication's issues in the 6 months
12immediately preceding the publication of the notice.
The definition includes a daily
13newspaper published in a county having a population of 500,000 or more, devoted
14principally to business news and publishing of records, which has been designated
15by the courts of record of the county for publication of legal notices for a period of 6
16months or more.
AB591, s. 4 17Section 4. 985.03 (2) of the statutes is renumbered 985.03 (2) (a) and amended
18to read:
AB591,4,219 985.03 (2) (a) Any person charged with the duty of causing legal notices to be
20published, and who causes any legal notice, to be published in any newspaper not
21eligible to so publish under the requirements of sub. (1) or (3), or who fails to cause
22such legal notice to be published in any newspaper eligible under this section, may
23be fined not to exceed $100 for each offense. Each day in which a legal notice should
24have been but was not published as required by law shall constitute a separate

1offense hereunder. This penalty does not apply if the person also publishes the same
2legal notice in a newspaper eligible to publish a legal notice under sub. (1) or (3)
.
AB591,4,5 3(b) A newspaper, in order to be eligible to publish a legal notice under this
4section, shall also file a certificate with the county clerk stating that it qualifies
5under this section and stating its place of publication.
AB591, s. 5 6Section 5. 985.03 (3) of the statutes is created to read:
AB591,4,147 985.03 (3) Notwithstanding sub. (1), a 2nd, 3rd, or 4th class city, or a village,
8town, sewerage district, drainage district, or county may designate as an official
9newspaper for publishing legal notices any newspaper that is published at least once
10a week in the area where the city, village, town, sewerage district, drainage district,
11or county is located if the governing body of that political subdivision finds, after a
12public hearing, that the designated newspaper would generally give better notice to
13more persons affected by the notice than a newspaper qualified to publish a legal
14notice under sub. (1).
AB591, s. 6 15Section 6. 985.14 of the statutes is amended to read:
AB591,5,4 16985.14 Refusal to publish. When there is only one newspaper in a county and
17the publisher thereof refuses to publish a legal notice, such or if there is no
18newspaper in the county that is qualified to publish a legal notice under 985.03, the

19legal notice may be published in a newspaper printed in an adjoining county; and
20proof
. Proof by affidavit of the reason why such publication was made in an adjoining
21county shall accompany the proof of publication, or the order for publication, when
22any is necessary, may be made or amended by the court or judge so as to designate
23a newspaper in an adjoining county, upon affidavit showing the necessity therefor.
24Whenever a legal notice is required by law to be published in a newspaper in any
25county having a village or city situated partly in said that county and partly in an

1adjoining county where and there is no newspaper printed in such that village or city
2within the county first mentioned, but there is a newspaper published in such that
3village or city within such the adjoining county, such the notice may be published in
4such last mentioned that newspaper.
AB591,5,55 (End)
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