This is a review of an unpublished decision of the court of appeals, which affirmed an order of the circuit court for Dane County, Moria Krue- *588 ger, circuit judge. The circuit court concluded that an •annexation ordinance executed by the City of Madison violаted legislative intent by creating a new town island in the Town of Blooming Grove, contrary to sec. 66.021(15), Stats. (1991-92). 1 The court of appeals affirmed. On review in this court, the parties ask us to interpret the meaning of the last sentence in sec. 66.021(15) — "[a]fter December 2, 1973, no city оr village may, by annexation, create a town area which is completely surrounded by the city or village." We conclude that the sentence is unambiguous. It means that no city or village may annex land so that a town area is completely surrounded by the annexing city or village. Because the annexation ordinance in the present case did not create a town area completely surrounded by Madison in contravention of sec. 66.021(15), the decision of the court of appeals must be reversed.
The facts in this case are not in dispute. On June 16, 1992, the City of Madison annexed 187.5 acres of land from the Town of Blooming Grove. The circuit court noted that the annexation had the following effect: "The portion of Blooming Grove located south of the annexed area is surrounded on the north and west by the City of Madison, bordered by the Town of Cottage Grove to the east, the Village of McFarland to the southwest and the Town of Dunn to the south." The annexation is known as the Yahara Hills annexation because of its location near Yahara Hills Golf Course.
On June 24, 1992, two private businesses, thе Town of Blooming Grove and the Blooming Grove sanitary district that serves the annexed area (collectively, *589 Blooming Grove) brought suit against Madison, alleging a number of theories as to why the annexation was contrary to Wisconsin law.
On September 15, 1992, Blooming Grove filed a summary judgment motion requesting that the circuit court declare Madison's annexation ordinance invalid. The primary thrust of the motion was that the annexation ordinance violated sec. 66.021(15), Stats., as that statute was interpreted by the court of appeals in
Town of Sheboygan v. City of Sheboygan,
Section 66.021(15), STATS., provides in full:
*590 Annexation of Town Islands. Upon its own motion, a city or village by a two-thirds vote of the entirе membership of its governing body may enact an ordinance annexing territory which comprises a portion of a town or towns and which was completely surrounded by territory of the city or village on December 2, 1973. The ordinance shall include all surrounded town areas except those exempt by mutual agreement of all of the governing bodies involved. The annexation ordinance shall contain a description of the territory sufficiently accurate to determine its location, and the name of the town or tоwns from which such territory is detached. Upon enactment of the ordinance, the city or village clerk immediately shall file 5 certified copies of the ordinance in the office of the secretary of state, together with 5 copies of a scale map showing the boundaries of the territory annexed. The secretary of state shall forward 2 copies of the ordinance and scale map to the department of transportation, one copy to the department of revenue and onе copy to the department of administration. This subsection does not apply if the town island was created only by the annexation of a railroad right-of-way or drainage ditch. This subsection does not apply to land owned by a town government which has existing town gоvernment buildings located thereon. No town island may be annexed under this subsection if the island consists of over 65 acres or contains over 100 residents. After December 2, 1973, no city or village may, by annexation, create a town area which is completely surrounded by the city or village.
As noted above, it is the last sentence of sec. 66.021(15) that is at issue in the present case.
*591
Resolution of this case involves a question of statutory interpretation. Statutory interpretation and an application of the statute in question to a given set of facts are questions of law that this court reviews
de novo. Braatz v. LIRC,
The aim of all statutory interpretation is to discern the intent оf the legislature. In ascertaining a statute's meaning, our first inquiry is to the plain language of the statute. If the language of the statute clearly and unambiguously sets forth the legislative intent,-it is the duty of the court to apply that intent to the case at hand and not look beyond thе statutory language to ascertain its meaning.
Doe v. American Nat. Red Cross,
In the present case, Madison argues that sec. 66.021(15), Stats., is plain and unambiguous. Specifically, Madison asserts that the last sentence in sec. 66.021(15) clearly and unequivocally mandates that a city or village may not annex land so that a town area is completely surrounded by the annexing city or village. Blooming Grove, on the other hand, relying extensively on
Town of Sheboygan,
claims that the last sentence of sec. 66.021(15) is ambiguous and, therefore, resort to
*592
extrinsic aids is necessary in interpreting the statute.
See, e.g., Bartus v. DHSS,
A statute, or portion thereof, will be found to be ambiguous when it is capable of being understood by reasonably well-informed persons in either of two or more senses.
Cynthia E. v. La Crosse County Human Services Department,
Our review of the statutory provision at issue leads us to conclude that the statute's words clearly and unambiguously declare the lеgislature's intent — namely, that a city or a village may not annex land such that a town area is completely surrounded by
*593
the annexing city or village. We further conclude that the phrase "completely surrounded" should be construed according to common and approved usage. This can be easily accomplished by considering the definition of the respective words in an established dictionary.
See State v. Gilbert,
Our conсlusion on this issue is at odds with the court of appeals' decision in
Town of Sheboygan.
There, the court of appeals held that the relevant portion of sec. 66.021(15), STATS., was ambiguous "because of the operation of the statute to specific facts."
Town of Sheboygan,
Had the legislature desired the effect that the court of appeals intimates in
Town of Sheboygan,
it certainly could have drafted the statute as such. It did not, however, and it is not the function of this court to usurp the role of the legislature.
4
In sum, we conclude
*595
that the court of appeals was in error when it substituted "functional town island" for the phrase "a town area completely surrounded by the [annexing] city or village." We therefore overrule
Town of Sheboygan.
We also overrule
Town of Hallie v. City of Eau Claire,
Applying the statute to the facts at hand reveals that Madison did not completely surround the town area in question when it exercised its annexing power in the Yahara Hills annexation. On the contrary, the undisputed facts reveal that Madison only bounds the annexed town area on two sides. Two different towns and a village also bound the town area. This is simply not a situation where the annexed town area is "completely surrounded by the [annexing] city or village." As such, the court of appeals' decision that sec. 66.021(15), Stats., was violated by the Yahara Hills annexation must be reversed.
*596 By the Court. — The decision of the court of appeals is reversed.
Notes
Section 66.021(15), Stats. (1991-92), has been amended several times since this litigation was commenced. No amendment, however, altered the portion of the statute at issue in the present case.
The court of appeals explained that
Town of Sheboygan
was wrongly decided for two reasons. First, the court of appeals noted that this court had previously held that sec. 66.021(15), Stats., was clear and unambiguous on its face.
See Town of Blooming Grove v. City of Madison,
If we were to adopt the court of appeals' reading of sec. 66.021(15), Stats., we would necessarily be setting up a "slippery slope." On its face the result in Town of Sheboygan sеems relatively innocuous — Lake Michigan is clearly a barrier that most would think of as stalwart; so too Lake Winnebago or the Mississippi River. But what about Lake Mendota or Pewaukee Lake? What about an area designated as a wetland by the DNR? The slope gets even more slippery when one considers man-made barriers such as highways and roads. This line drawing might be appropriate had the legislature utilized words intending to convey that courts entertain a balancing approach when applying the statute tо various sets of facts. However, it did not do so, and any "tinkering" with the statute is more appropriately undertaken by the legislative branch.
Wisconsin courts have long recognized the separation of the legislative and judicial powers as mandated by the Wisconsin Constitution.
See, e.g., State ex rel. Badtke v. School Board of Joint Common School District No. 1, City of Ripon,
In
Town of Hattie,
the court of appeals utilized the rationale of
Town of Sheboygan
to extend sec. 66.021(15), STATS., to prohibit an annexing entity from crеating a "functional town island" with one of the boundaries being a man-made barrier, a no-access highway. The court explained: "The same factors [as in
Town of Sheboygan]
are at work. A portion of the town is, for all practical purposes, cut off from the remainder of the town for direct services."
Town of Hallie,
