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Village of Brandon, WI
Fond Du Lac County
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Table of Contents
Table of Contents
[Adopted 12-14-1998 as Title 15, Ch. 4, of the 1998 Code]
A. 
Policy. There exist in the Village of Brandon structures, residential yards or vacant areas or combinations thereof which are, or may become, unhygienic, dilapidated or unsafe with respect to structural integrity, equipment or maintenance and as such constitute a menace to the health, safety and welfare of the public. Lack of maintenance and progressive deterioration of certain properties have the further effect of creating blighted area conditions and, if such conditions are not curtailed and removed, the expenditure of large amounts of public funds to correct and eliminate the same will be necessary. Timely regulation and restriction to contain and prevent blight is necessary thereby maintaining the desirability and amenities as well as property values of the neighborhoods in the Village.
B. 
Purpose. The purpose of this article is to protect public health, safety and welfare by establishing minimum property maintenance standards. This article does not replace or modify standards otherwise established by other portions of this Code for construction, repair, alteration or use of buildings. This article is meant to be remedial, and this article shall be liberally construed to effectuate the purposes stated herein. Violation of the minimum standards set forth in this article shall be deemed to be a public nuisance.
For purposes of this article, the following definitions shall be applicable:
ABANDONED DWELLING
A dwelling which is not occupied and which is not intended by the owner to be occupied within a reasonable period of time. A dwelling shall be presumed to be abandoned if it is unoccupied for a period of 12 consecutive months. Occupancy required hereunder shall be bona fide and not acquired for the sole purpose of defeating the abandonment of a dwelling.
ACCESSORY STRUCTURE
A structure, the use of which is incidental to that of the main building and which is attached thereto or located on the same premises.
BLIGHTED AREA
Any area (including a slum area) in which a majority of the structures are residential (or in which there is a predominance of buildings or improvements, whether residential or nonresidential) and which, by reason of dilapidation, deterioration, age or obsolescence, inadequate provision for ventilation, light, air, sanitation, or open spaces, high density of population and overcrowding, or the existence of conditions which endanger life or property by fire and other causes, or any combination of such factors, is conducive to all ill health, transmission of disease, infant morality, juvenile delinquency and crime, and is detrimental to the public health, safety, morals or welfare.
BUILDING
Any structure built for the support, shelter and enclosure of persons, animals, chattels, or movable property of any kind, and which is permanently affixed to the land, or connected to a utility, and includes those structures resting on runners, wheels, or similar supports.
DETERIORATION
The condition or appearance of a building or part thereof characterized by holes, breaks, rot, crumbling, cracking, peeling, rusting, or other evidence of physical decay, neglect, lack of maintenance or excessive use.
DILAPIDATED
Describes a building, structure or part thereof which is in a state or ruin or shabbiness resulting from neglect. The term implies a hazard to life or property.
DWELLING
Any enclosed space which is wholly or partly used or intended to be used for living or sleeping by human occupants.
NUISANCE
Any public nuisance known at common law or in equity jurisprudence or as provided by the statutes of the State of Wisconsin or the Village of Brandon Code.[1] Further a public nuisance is a thing, act, occupation, condition or use of property which shall continue for such length of time as to:
A. 
Substantially annoy, injure or endanger the comfort, health, repose or safety of the public; or
B. 
In any other way render the public insecure in life or in the use of property.
OCCUPANT
Any person living in, sleeping in or having actual possession of a building.
OWNER
Any person who, alone or jointly or severally with others, shall have:
A. 
Legal title to any premises, with or without accompanying actual possession thereof; or
B. 
Charge, care or control of any premises, as owner or agent of the owner, or an executor, administrator, trustee or guardian of the estate of the owner. Any such person thus representing the actual owner shall be bound to comply with the provisions of this article and of rules and regulations adopted pursuant thereto, to the same extent as if he were the owner.
PERSON
Any natural individual, firm, trust, partnership, association or corporation.
PREMISES
A platted lot or part thereof or unplatted lot or parcel of land or plot of land, either occupied or unoccupied by a dwelling or nondwelling structure, and includes any such building, accessory structure or other structure thereon.
REFUSE
All putrescible and nonputrescible solids (except body wastes), including garbage, rubbish, ashes and dead animals.
RUBBISH
Nonputrescible solid wastes (excluding ashes) consisting or either:
A. 
Combustible wastes such as paper, cardboard, plastic containers, yard clippings and wood; or
B. 
Noncombustible wastes such as tin cans, glass or crockery.
[1]
Editor's Note: See Ch. 349, Nuisances.
No owner or occupant shall accumulate or allow the accumulation outside of a building or accessory structure of waste matter, litter, refuse, rubbish, lumber, metal scraps, machine parts, discarded or nonfunctioning appliances, accessories, furniture or other material on such property which presents a blighted appearance on the property or which constitutes a nuisance or which tends to decrease the value of neighboring properties.
A. 
Minimum standards. No person shall occupy as owner-occupant or shall let or hold out to another for occupancy any dwelling or family unit, for the purpose of living therein, or own or be in control of any vacant dwelling or dwelling unit which is not safe, clean, sanitary, and fit for human occupancy and which does not comply with the particular requirements of the following subsections.
B. 
Foundations, exterior walls and roofs. No person shall be an owner or occupant of any premises which does not comply with the following requirements:
(1) 
Every exterior wall shall be free of deterioration, holes, breaks, and loose or rotting boards or timbers.
(2) 
Structures that require paint or stain should have paint or stain applied at regular intervals to exterior building surfaces. When the building has more than 30% deterioration of its finished surface on any wall, that wall shall be painted or stained. Such painting and staining shall be completed within 90 days from the date of the first application.
(3) 
All cornices, moldings, lintels, sills, oriel windows, and similar projections shall be kept in good repair and free from cracks and defects which make them hazardous or unsightly.
(4) 
Roof surfaces shall be tight and have no defects which admit water. All roof drainage systems shall be secured and hung properly.
(5) 
Chimneys, antennas, air vents, and other similar projections shall be structurally sound and in good repair. Such projections shall be secured properly, where applicable, to an exterior wall or exterior roof.
C. 
Grading and drainage of lots. Every yard, court, vent passageway, driveway, and other portion of the lot on which the building stands shall be graded and drained so as to prevent the accumulation of water on any such surface or on adjacent property. Driveways shall be maintained in good repair.
D. 
Accessory structures. All accessory structures shall be maintained in a state of good repair and vertical alignment. All exterior appurtenances or accessory structures which serve no useful purpose and are in a deteriorated or dilapidated condition, which are not economically repairable, shall be removed. Such structures include but shall not be limited to porches, terraces, entrance platforms, garages, driveways, carports, walls, fences and miscellaneous sheds.
E. 
Abandoned dwellings. The owner of any abandoned dwelling shall:
(1) 
Cause all services and utilities to be disconnected from or discontinued to said dwelling;
(2) 
Lock all exterior doors and windows of said dwelling;
(3) 
Maintain such dwelling so that its foundation, floors, windows, walls, doors, ceilings, roof, porches and stairs shall be reasonably weathertight, waterproof, rodentproof, structurally sound, and in good repair such that they comply with Subsection B; and
(4) 
Maintain the yard and accessory structures such that they comply with Subsections C and D.
F. 
Nuisances. The interior and exterior of vacant and abandoned dwellings shall be maintained in a nuisance-free condition.
A. 
Upon determination by the Village Building Inspector of a violation of this article, the Village shall notify the owner and, if different from the owner, the occupant of the premises of such violation.
B. 
The notice shall specify the nature of the violation, the required correction and a reasonable time, not to exceed 30 days, to correct the violation. The notice shall be served upon the person or persons named personally or by certified mail addressed, postage paid, to the last known address of such person or persons.
C. 
The person so notified shall have the right to appeal the decision of the Building Inspector to the Village Board within 30 days of the date of notice.
D. 
If, upon expiration of the time given for correction of a violation and time for any appeal thereof, such correction is not made, the Village Building Inspector shall file an action in the name of the Village in the Circuit Court for Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin, in accordance with the provisions of Ch. 823, Wis. Stats., as amended from time to time.
Nothing in this article shall be construed as prohibiting the abatement of public nuisances by the Village of Brandon or its officials in accordance with the laws of the State of Wisconsin or Village ordinances.
In addition to any other penalty imposed by this article for the erection, contrivance, creation, continuance or maintenance of a public nuisance, the cost of abating a public nuisance by the Village shall be collected as a debt from the owner, occupant or person causing, permitting or maintaining the nuisance, and if notice to abate the nuisance has been given to the owner, such cost shall be assessed against the real estate as a special charge.