BACKGROUND
¶ 2 On February 16, 2016, the County enacted Ordinance #O-7-16 (the Ordinance), mandating the creation of a uniform addressing system in the County. According to the Ordinance, the County's intent in implementing this system was "to assign each location a unique address which will aid emergency personal [sic] in providing fire protection, emergency medical services, and law enforcement services; and meet other general locational needs such as delivery services of the public." The Ordinance stated the uniform addressing system would apply "to each road, home, business, farm, structure, or other establishments [sic] in the unincorporated areas of the County."
¶ 3 Consistent with the authority granted by the Ordinance, the County published a draft Uniform Addressing Implementation Plan (the Plan) on January 11, 2017. The Plan required all towns in the County to participate in the County's uniform addressing system. It asserted the County had "jurisdiction over addressing in unincorporated areas based on [ WIS. STAT. §] 59.54(4) and (4m)." Those subsections provide:
(4) RURAL NAMING OR NUMBERING SYSTEM . The board[3 ] may establish a rural naming or numbering system in towns for the purpose of aiding in fire protection, emergency services, and civil defense, and appropriate and expend money therefor, under which:
(a) Each rural road, home, business, farm or other establishment, may be assigned a name or number.
(b) The names or numbers may be displayed on uniform signs posted on rural roads and intersections, and at eachhome, business, farm or other establishment.
(4m) RURAL NAMING OR NUMBERING SYSTEM; TOWN COOPERATION . The rural naming or numbering system under sub. (4) may be carried out in cooperation with any town or towns in the county.
Sec. 59.54(4) and (4m).
¶ 4 The County subsequently notified Rib Mountain-a town located in the County-that it would be required to rename 61 of its 202 roads. In
¶ 5 On August 31, 2017, following briefing by Rib Mountain and the County, the circuit court issued a decision denying Rib Mountain's claims for declaratory and injunctive relief. The court agreed with the County that the term "rural" in WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4) and (4m) meant "unincorporated" and was not "intended as a way of excluding urban areas." As support for that conclusion, the court cited the plain language
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 6 This appeal requires us to interpret WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4) and (4m). Statutory interpretation presents a question of law that we review independently. Wisconsin Prof'l Police Ass'n v. WERC ,
¶ 7 When interpreting a statute, our objective "is to determine what the statute means so that it may be given its full, proper, and intended effect." State ex rel. Kalal v. Circuit Court for Dane Cty. ,
DISCUSSION
¶ 9 As an initial matter, the parties dispute whether the word "rural" in WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4) and (4m) actually limits a county's authority to implement a uniform addressing system. The County cites Liberty Grove , in which we stated the "only condition" on a county's authority to implement a road naming system under § 59.54(4) and (4m)"is that [the system] be related to fire protection, emergency services or civil defense." Liberty Grove ,
¶ 10 The County's reliance on Liberty Grove is misplaced. The issue in that case was whether a town had exclusive authority to name roads within its jurisdiction under WIS. STAT. § 60.23(17) (2003-04) and WIS. STAT. § 81.01(11) (2001-02), or whether the town's authority was instead subject to a county's power to
[A] town has initial authority to name town roads by virtue of WIS. STAT. § 81.01(11). However, the town's authority is subject to the county's discretionary authority, under WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4), to establish a road naming and numbering system for the specific purpose of aiding in fire protection, emergency services and civil defense. A county may cooperate with a town regarding road name changes. See WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4m). Ultimately, however, a county has authority to implement name changes, even if a town does not consent, when the name changes are made under the system pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 59.54.
Liberty Grove ,
¶ 11 When we stated in Liberty Grove that the "only condition" on a county's authority to rename roads was that its road naming system "be related to fire protection, emergency services or civil defense," we were simply responding to-and rejecting-Liberty Grove's argument that a county could only implement a road naming system under WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4)
¶ 12 The County next argues the word "rural" in WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4) and (4m) simply describes the type of naming or numbering system a county may implement and does not limit the locations where such a system can be imposed. Conversely, Rib Mountain argues the legislature's use of the word "rural" in § 59.54(4) and (4m) unambiguously demonstrates that it intended to restrict a county's naming and numbering authority to "rural" areas.
¶ 13 We agree with Rib Mountain. In both WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4) and (4m), the legislature described the naming or numbering system a county could impose as a "rural" naming or numbering system. While the County argues the adjective "rural" merely describes the type of naming or numbering system a county may impose, it does not explain what type of system a "rural" naming or numbering system would be, other than a naming or numbering system that applies in rural areas. The County does not suggest, for instance, that the legislature intended the term "rural" to describe the kinds of names or numbers a county's system may include. We are otherwise unaware of any type of system denominated as rural and, therefore, cannot discern any reasonable interpretation of the phrase "rural naming or numbering system" aside from a naming or numbering system that applies in rural areas. The County's argument therefore fails because, under the relevant statutory language, there is no real distinction between the type of naming or numbering system a county may implement and the locations where it may impose such a system; the two concepts are one and the same under the statute.
¶ 15 Having concluded the word "rural" in WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4) and (4m) limits a county's naming and
¶ 16 We reject the circuit court's interpretation because it renders the word "rural" in WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4) and (4m) surplusage. See Kalal ,
¶ 18 The dictionaries we have consulted generally define the adjective "rural" as describing something that is related to, or characteristic of, the country. For instance, one dictionary defines "rural" as "in, relating to, or characteristic of the countryside rather than the town." Rural , NEW OXFORD AMERICAN DICTIONARY (2001). Another dictionary similarly defines "rural" as "of or relating to the country, country people or life, or agriculture." Rural , WEBSTER'S NEW COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY (1977). A third defines "rural" as "of, relating to, associated with, or typical of the country." Rural , WEBSTER'S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY (1993).
¶ 19 "Country," in turn, is defined by one dictionary as "districts and small settlements outside large towns, cities, or the capital." Country , NEW OXFORD AMERICAN DICTIONARY (2001). Another dictionary states that "country" means both "an indefinite usu[ally] extended expanse of land" and "rural as distinguished from urban areas." Country , WEBSTER'S NEW COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY (1977). A third dictionary similarly defines "country" as both "an expanse of land of undefined but
¶ 20 Read together, these definitions establish that: (1) the term "rural" is used to describe things that are characteristic of, or related to, the "country"; and (2) the "country" encompasses places that are distinct from "urban" areas-i.e., areas with comparatively higher concentrations of people or buildings. Based on these definitions, we conclude the term "rural" in WIS. STAT. § 54.59(4) and (4m) denotes areas that are not urban.
¶ 21 The County argues our interpretation of WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4) and (4m) is no more than a "mechanistic comparison of words." It contends a plain meaning interpretation of those subsections should be "much more comprehensive than the dissection of word choice by a legislature in 1957." The County asserts our supreme court recently rejected this type of mechanistic "word analysis" in Wisconsin Carry, Inc. v. City of Madison ,
¶ 22 Wisconsin Carry involved a challenge to a rule promulgated by the City of Madison's Transit and Parking Commission, which prohibited passengers
¶ 23 On appeal, the City argued the plain language of WIS. STAT. § 66.0409(2) demonstrated that statute was inapplicable because the Commission was not a "political subdivision" and its rule prohibiting weapons was not an "ordinance" or "resolution." Wisconsin Carry ,
We must, however, keep in mind that this axiom [i.e., the plain meaning rule] does not reduce the judicial function to mechanically comparing the words of a statute to the name given a legislative enactment, or the body enacting it. We are not merely arbiters of word choice. If we were, we would need do nothing more than confirm that "rule" is a word different from "ordinance" and "resolution," and that "commission" is etymologically distinct from "city," "village," "town," and "county."
It is, instead, the "plain meaning" of a statute we must apply. We find that meaning in the statute's text, context, and structure: "[S]tatutory interpretation 'begins with the language of the statute.' ... [It] is interpreted in the context in which it is used; not in isolation but as part of a whole; in relationto the language of surrounding or closely-related statutes...." We examine the statute's contextualized words, put them into operation, and observe the results to ensure we do not arrive at an unreasonable or absurd conclusion.
¶ 24 The County argues the above quotation shows that a "plain meaning" analysis of a statute must go beyond a mere mechanistic examination of the legislature's word choices. While we do not dispute that proposition, as a general matter, we agree with Rib Mountain that the statutory language at issue in Wisconsin Carry was "fundamentally different" in character from the language at issue in this case. In Wisconsin Carry , the City asserted the plain language of WIS. STAT. § 66.0409(2) showed that the legislature did not intend that statute to apply to rules, as opposed to ordinances and regulations, because "if the legislature had intended to include 'rules' in the realm of prohibited legislative acts, it would have said so." Wisconsin Carry ,
law-making as comedy, with a hapless legislature chasing about a wily municipality as it first enacts anordinance on a forbidden subject, and then a policy, then a rule, then a standard, and on and on until one of them wearies of the pursuit or the other exhausts the thesaurus.
¶ 25 Our interpretation of the term "rural" in WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4) and (4m) does not lead to the same kind of absurd result that our supreme court cautioned against in Wisconsin Carry . The Wisconsin Carry court was concerned that, if it strictly interpreted the two types of legislative acts listed in WIS. STAT. § 66.0409(2) to exclude all other kinds of legislative acts, political subdivisions could evade the statute's effect simply by relabeling a legislative act as something other than an "ordinance" or "resolution." No such concerns are present in this case. As Rib Mountain notes, when drafting § 59.54(4) and (4m), the legislature was "not tasked with summarizing a category of actions for which there are essentially endless descriptions and in which it is reasonable to assume that a sample was intended to represent all possible descriptions." Wisconsin Carry 's admonition against courts becoming mechanistic arbiters of words in situations where it would be impossible for the legislature to list each pertinent term is therefore inapplicable here.
¶ 26 The County also argues our interpretation of WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4) and (4m) will produce absurd results, in that it will "set the stage for an absurd mosaic of ever-changing address grids" that will transform as populations "ebb and flow," resulting in a "decidedly non-uniform addressing system." However, as Rib Mountain correctly notes, even if we adopted the County's position-i.e., that the County has authority to implement a naming or numbering system in
¶ 27 In summary, we conclude the word "rural" in WIS. STAT. § 59.54(4) and (4m) restricts a county's authority to implement a naming or numbering system to "rural" areas within towns. We further conclude the statutory term "rural" is not synonymous with "unincorporated," but should instead be interpreted according to its ordinary and accepted meaning. Based on dictionary definitions, we conclude the ordinary and accepted meaning of the term "rural" refers to areas that are characterized by comparatively lower densities of people or buildings, or areas that are characteristic of, or related to, the country-in other words, areas that are not urban.
¶ 28 The County thus exceeded its authority by mandating the implementation of a uniform addressing
¶ 29 On remand, the County must demonstrate which portions of Rib Mountain, if any, qualify as "rural," according to the plain meaning of that term as set forth above. Rib Mountain suggests that, in order to make this determination, the County should use a map promulgated by the County's Metropolitan Planning Commission, entitled "Wausau MPO Planning Boundary," which labels certain areas of the County as "urban."
¶ 31 It is for this very reason that we do not endeavor to establish specific factors for determining
By the Court .-Judgment reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2015-16 version unless otherwise noted.
The Ordinance stated incorporated areas were exempt from its terms "unless otherwise indicated in any adopted intergovernmental agreement."
Referring to the county board of supervisors. See
In addition to the County, Rib Mountain's complaint named as defendants the Town of McMillan, the Town of Mosinee, the Town of Stettin, the Town of Texas, the Town of Wausau, and the Town of Weston. Rib Mountain asserted these towns were "necessary parties" because the County's Plan would require them to rename roads that were not rural, and, as such, their interests would be affected by the resolution of Rib Mountain's lawsuit. In the circuit court, the defendant towns either took no position on Rib Mountain's claims or joined the County's arguments. None of the defendant towns have participated in the instant appeal.
Liberty Grove Town Board v. Door County Board of Supervisors ,
Wisconsin Stat. § 59.54(4)(a) was previously numbered
The fact that "urban" is the antonym of "rural" further supports this conclusion. See Rural , Merriam-Webster Thesaurus (2005). Urban is commonly defined as: "of, relating to, characteristic of, or taking place in a city"; "constituting or including and centered on a city"; and "of, relating to, or concerned with an urban and specif[ically] a densely populated area." Urban , Webster's Third New International Dictionary (1993).
It appears undisputed that, at the time the parties submitted their briefs in this appeal, only two incorporated municipalities in the County had elected to participate in the County's uniform addressing system.
In a short argument at the end of its appellate brief, the County appears to contend that Rib Mountain is not entitled to declaratory or injunctive relief because it has "other legal remedy"-namely, it could "incorporate all or a portion of itself into a village," such that the incorporated territory would be exempt from operation of the Ordinance. The County cites no legal authority in support of this minimally developed argument, and we therefore decline to address it. See State v. Pettit ,
Rib Mountain clarifies in its reply brief that it does not contend the County is required to use the "Wausau MPO Planning Boundary" map in order to distinguish between rural and urban areas. It merely offers the map as one means of drawing that distinction.
Notably, in other statutes, the legislature has set forth specific population or population density thresholds for determining whether a particular area, municipality, or facility qualifies as "rural." See, e.g. ,
In the instant case, we have determined the County's chosen criterion-i.e., whether land was unincorporated-failed to limit the proposed uniform addressing system to rural areas, as required by the plain language of
