City of Middleton v. The Office of Commissioner of Railroads

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 31, 2026
Docket2024AP002222
StatusUnpublished

This text of City of Middleton v. The Office of Commissioner of Railroads (City of Middleton v. The Office of Commissioner of Railroads) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Middleton v. The Office of Commissioner of Railroads, (Wis. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. March 31, 2026 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Samuel A. Christensen petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2024AP2222 Cir. Ct. No. 2024CV281

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT I

CITY OF MIDDLETON,

PETITIONER-RESPONDENT,

V.

THE OFFICE OF COMMISSIONER OF RAILROADS,

RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.

APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Dane County: RHONDA L. LANFORD, Judge. Reversed.

Before White, C.J., Colón, P.J., and Geenen, J.

¶1 GEENEN, J. The State of Wisconsin’s Office of Commissioner of Railroads (“OCR”) appeals the circuit court’s order concluding that the Aurora Street pedestrian railroad crossing in downtown Middleton is a “public” crossing No. 2024AP2222

under WIS. STAT. §§ 195.28 and 195.29 (2023-24).1 The circuit court’s order reversed OCR’s administrative determination that the crossing is private. The parties do not dispute that OCR can only regulate public railroad crossings under §§ 195.28 and 195.29, but they disagree on the status of the Aurora Street pedestrian railroad crossing. Thus, the issue on appeal is whether the pedestrian crossing is public. Whether the crossing is public largely depends on whether the privately-owned pedestrian footpaths (sometimes referred to as “approaches”) from both sides of the crossing are “public ways.”

¶2 The City of Middleton (the “City”) contends that the footpaths are a public “highway,” and therefore, the crossing is public by operation of a public access easement it claims to have obtained when it sold the land on which the footpaths rest to private developers in the 1980s. The City also asserts that the crossing is public due to actions taken involving the City’s zoning powers and because the crossing was “dedicated” as a public crossing. OCR maintains that the crossing is private because the public access easement contains restrictions on public use of the crossing and includes language allowing the private owners of the footpaths to revoke the easement at any time. OCR argues that the restrictions and conditions memorialized in the easement prevent the crossing from being public.

¶3 There is no dispute that the crossing was public when the City owned the footpaths to the crossing. However, the City fails to establish that the footpaths remained public after it sold the land on which the footpaths lay to private parties. We agree with OCR that the easement’s discretionary and

1 All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2023-24 version.

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unilateral termination language make the easement too indefinite for the footpaths to be considered a public way. Accordingly, we agree with OCR and reverse the circuit court’s order.

BACKGROUND

¶4 For many years, a railroad crossing at Aurora Street in downtown Middleton facilitated vehicular and pedestrian traffic across the railroad tracks. In 1981, the City sought to redevelop land in its downtown area for a commercial center. As a part of the plan, the portions of Aurora Street on either side of the railroad tracks were closed to vehicle traffic between Hubbard Avenue and Terrace Avenue. To promote access to the businesses, restaurants, and shops that might become located in this area, the plan contemplated maintaining a pedestrian footpath at the Aurora Street crossing despite the street closure. The plan also called for creating a new public crossing for both vehicles and pedestrians about one block away, where the tracks crossed Verona Street. The City petitioned OCR for approval of the new crossing and the changes at the Aurora Street crossing under WIS. STAT. §§ 195.28 and 195.29, and OCR approved the City’s plan.

¶5 When the City owned all of the property being developed, the City recorded its 1982 general development plan with the Dane County Register of Deeds. That plan, which was subject to annual review pursuant to its own terms, referenced a “permitted pedestrian crossing” and “pedestrian access” in the vicinity of the Aurora Street railroad crossing, specifically providing that a “permitted pedestrian crossing and utility easement within the Aurora Street [right-of-way] will be retained by the City,” and that the “Aurora Street [right-of- way] will be reduced to a 20’ easement and converted to pedestrian access and railroad crossing to connect the parking area south of the railroad tracks with the

3 No. 2024AP2222

commercial buildings.” Finally, it noted that “[t]here will be no public street circulation within the rezoned property.” While a 20-foot-wide utility easement was recorded separately from the plan, a separate pedestrian access easement was not, nor was any further explanation or description of the proposed pedestrian easement given. The area that purportedly designated a pedestrian easement extended between the parking lot and a building, not to the public streets. The pedestrian access system and internal public spaces were to be refined at the implementation phase of development.

¶6 The City subsequently sold the land on either side of the railroad crossing, including the land within the Aurora Street right-of-way, to private developers. The record contains no evidence of deed restrictions related to the preservation of public pedestrian access to the railroad crossing attached to the properties’ sales.

¶7 Following the land sales, the City’s 1987 implementation plan continued to claim a 20-foot easement with pedestrian access on either side of the railroad crossing. That same year, in collaboration with the then-rail operator, the City used public funds to construct pathways within the Aurora Street right-of- way on both sides of the railroad crossing. No additional public maintenance or improvements were performed between 1987 and 2020.

¶8 Subsequent site and development plans for which the successor owners of the property sought approval show the sites being designed with pathways that provide access to the crossing from the public streets to the north and south.

4 No. 2024AP2222

¶9 Pedestrians used the crossing from the 1980s through 2021, and the employees of businesses within the development used the crossing to get from parking lots located on one side of the tracks to their workplace on the other.

¶10 In 2020, the current railroad operator, Wisconsin & Southern Railroad, LLC (“Railroad”), contacted OCR and asked for a determination of whether the crossing was public or private. The Railroad explained that the land on either side of the crossing was privately owned and that there was no known easement to the City allowing public access to the crossing. On this information, OCR determined that the Aurora Street crossing “was converted from public to private by operation of law when Middleton sold the property [portions of the former Aurora Street on either side of the crossing] to a private developer.” Following this determination, OCR advised state agencies that it no longer had jurisdiction to order any improvements or upgrades to the crossing.

¶11 The City was not notified of the Railroad’s request or OCR’s determination, and the City did not have the opportunity to present evidence that the crossing was public before OCR made its decision. Several months later, when the City learned of OCR’s determination that the crossing was no longer public, the City sought to reverse the decision and asked OCR to conduct a new hearing on the crossing’s status.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
City of Middleton v. The Office of Commissioner of Railroads, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-middleton-v-the-office-of-commissioner-of-railroads-wisctapp-2026.