Kirk Lewis v. Julie Bauer Burkholder

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJuly 24, 2025
Docket2024AP001821
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kirk Lewis v. Julie Bauer Burkholder (Kirk Lewis v. Julie Bauer Burkholder) 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
Kirk Lewis v. Julie Bauer Burkholder, (Wis. Ct. App. 2025).

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. July 24, 2025 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. 2024AP1821 Cir. Ct. No. 2023SC735

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT IV

KIRK LEWIS,

PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,

V.

JULIE BAUER BURKHOLDER AND JASON BURKHOLDER,

DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS.

APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Columbia County: TODD J. HEPLER, Judge. Reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings.

¶1 TAYLOR, J.1 Kirk Lewis (“Kirk”), as the personal representative of the Estate of Thomas Lewis, appeals a circuit court order dismissing Kirk’s 1 This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(a) (2023-24). All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2023-24 version. No. 2024AP1821

complaint for eviction and damages against Julie Burkholder and Jason Burkholder (collectively, “the Burkholders”) on the grounds that no tenancy existed and no landlord-tenant relationship was established between the parties to permit eviction pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 799.40(1).2 I conclude that the undisputed facts establish that the Burkholders were tenants at will. Accordingly, I reverse the decision of the circuit court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.3

BACKGROUND

¶2 The parties do not dispute the following material facts, which in part were established by uncontroverted evidence admitted in the eviction trial.4 In

2 Because the parties share surnames, for clarity and ease of reading, I use first names when referring to the parties individually. 3 This court has addressed other aspects of this case in two previous appeals. See Lewis v. Burkholder, No. 2023AP2244, unpublished slip op. (WI App Apr. 22, 2024) (reversing circuit court’s judgment of eviction and remanding for a trial and the taking of evidence); see also Lewis v. Burkholder, No. 2024AP677, unpublished slip op. (WI App July 19, 2024) (summary reversal of a judgment ordering that the Burkholders pay Kirk’s fees and costs). 4 Despite the undisputed material facts, the Burkholders assert in their appellate response brief that they contest Kirk’s statement of facts in his appellate briefing because of the various page numbers that appear on each page of Kirk’s appellate appendix. However, as Kirk notes in his reply brief, appellate parties are required by WIS. STAT. § 809.19(1)(d) to include only citations to the record in the statement of facts, with which Kirk complied. Accordingly, I reject all assertions made by the Burkholders concerning Kirk’s citation method.

The Burkholders’ confusion over the multiple page numbers that appear on each page of the parties’ appendices may be the result of several factors which I address here. First, when circuit court documents are efiled in the appellate record, an appellate header with the date and page number is added to the top of each page, which frequently differs from a document’s original page number in the circuit court record.

(continued)

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January 2019, the Burkholders entered into a written, one-year residential lease agreement with James Ness for a property located at 202 N. Main Street, in Lodi, Wisconsin (“the property”). Pursuant to the lease, the Burkholders rented the property from February 1, 2019, until January 31, 2020, and made monthly rent payments to Ness in the amount of $1,100. After the lease expired on January 31, 2020, the Burkholders continued to reside in the property and continued to make the same monthly rent payments.

¶3 In August 2020, following Ness’s death and in preparation for selling the property, Ness’s estate delivered an eviction notice to the Burkholders. In September 2020, Thomas Lewis (“Thomas”) purchased the property. Thomas was the long-term romantic partner of Julie Burkholder’s mother.5 Julie obtained Thomas’s durable power of attorney and facilitated the purchase of the property. The purchase agreement states that the “seller will rescind [the] 30 day notice to evict the tenants, which was given (hand delivered) to tenants [on] Aug 26, 2020” and that “[Thomas] acknowledges receipt of current lease that has expired and is

Second, the page numbers in each party’s appendix and in their briefing also differ from the efile appellate page number inserted in the header of each page because both parties here fail to comply with WIS. STAT. RULE 809.19(8)(bm), which addresses the pagination of appellate briefs. See RULE 809.19(8)(bm) (providing that, when paginating briefs, parties should use “Arabic numerals with sequential numbering starting at ‘1’ on the cover”). This rule has been amended, see S. CT. ORDER 20-07, 2021 WI 37, 397 Wis. 2d xiii (eff. July 1, 2021), and the reason for the amendment is that briefs are now electronically filed in PDF format, and are electronically stamped with page numbers when they are accepted for efiling. As our supreme court explained when it amended the rule, the new pagination requirements ensure that the numbers on each page of a brief “will match … the page header applied by the eFiling system, avoiding the confusion of having two different page numbers” on every page of a brief. Supreme Court Note, 2021, RULE 809.19. 5 Julie is referred to throughout the appellate record as “Jullie,” “Julie A. Bauer,” and “Julie A. Burkholder.”

3 No. 2024AP1821

on a month to month.”6 The expired lease stated that in the event of a voluntary or involuntary transfer of ownership of the premises, the “Landlord’s obligations under this lease are expressly released by Tenant. The new owner of the [property] shall be solely responsible for [the] Landlord’s obligations under this Contract.”

¶4 After Thomas purchased the property, the Burkholders continued to live in the property with Thomas’s permission, but did not make any rent payments. No lease agreement was ever entered into between Thomas and the Burkholders.

¶5 Thomas died in July 2021. Thomas’s adult son, Kirk, was appointed as the personal representative of Thomas’s estate (“the Estate”), and it was in this capacity that Kirk acted at all pertinent times here. Thomas’s will devised the property to Julie, subject to any and all liens, mortgages, and encumbrances. During the administration of the Estate, title to the property remained in Thomas’s name because Kirk was waiting for Julie to satisfy or refinance the outstanding mortgage on the property. When Julie did not make the mortgage payments on the property, the mortgage lender commenced a foreclosure action against the Estate in the Columbia County Circuit Court, which the Estate settled by making the outstanding payments.7 In March 2023, Kirk commenced a separate legal action 6 It appears that after the expiration of the written lease on January 31, 2020, the Burkholders became hold-over residential tenants pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 704.25(2)(b), which states: “If premises are leased … for any period primarily for private residential purposes, and the tenant holds over after expiration of the lease, the landlord may elect to hold the tenant on a month-to-month basis.” With some exceptions not applicable here, “[a] periodic tenancy arising under this section is upon the same terms and conditions as those of the original lease.” See § 704.25(3). 7 See Planet Home Lending LLC v. The Estate of Thomas J. Lewis, Columbia County Case No. 2022CV220.

4 No. 2024AP1821

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Bluebook (online)
Kirk Lewis v. Julie Bauer Burkholder, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirk-lewis-v-julie-bauer-burkholder-wisctapp-2025.