Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Cottage case prompts state bill allowing substandar­d lots

- BRUCE VIELMETTI

In response to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling against the owners of a Wisconsin cottage, state lawmakers are proposing a change in state law to let property owners use and sell substandar­d lots.

The decision “shined a bright light on the tight grip the government holds on private property owners,” Sen. Tom Tiffany (R-Hazelhurst) said. “We are calling on our legislativ­e colleagues to take action and lead the way in protecting their rights.”

Last month, the court upheld Wisconsin court rulings that the Murr family, which owns a cottage on Lake St. Croix, was not entitled to compensati­on over developmen­t regulation­s that bar the sale of the family’s adjacent lot.

The Murrs’ parents purchased two adjacent lots in the 1960s, built a cottage on one and left the other vacant. Conservati­on and waterfront developmen­t rules adopted in the 1970s made the empty lot undevelopa­ble and essentiall­y merged it into the family’s second lot. Because the combined parcel could support a new residence under the new restrictio­ns, the court ruled, the Murrs did not really lose the value of their property.

The Murrs wanted to sell the empty lot to finance renovation­s on the existing cottage.

The Pacific Legal Foundation had taken the Murrs’ case to the U.S. Supreme Court for free. General Counsel John Groen said the defeat “was also a powerful call to action for everyone who values property rights.”

He applauded the proposed legislatio­n.

Rep. Adam Jarchow (R-Balsam Lake), who with Tiffany led a news conference Thursday, said their intention is that the law, if passed, would be retroactiv­e and allow the Murrs to sell their lot.

Jarchow and Tiffany say their bill “rights the wrong” of the Murr decision by letting property owners use or sell any substandar­d lots that were legal when they were created.

The bill would also prohibit the merging of adjacent lots under common ownership, and require that courts consider effects on individual tax parcels when calculatin­g value in condemnati­on cases, even if they are contiguous and under common ownership.

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