Lauralynn Pighetti v. Estate of Dale N. Schmechel

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJune 23, 2026
Docket2025AP000151
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lauralynn Pighetti v. Estate of Dale N. Schmechel (Lauralynn Pighetti v. Estate of Dale N. Schmechel) 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
Lauralynn Pighetti v. Estate of Dale N. Schmechel, (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. June 23, 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. 2025AP151 Cir. Ct. No. 2022CV129

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT III

LAURALYNN PIGHETTI, TRUSTEE OF THE LAURALYNN ANN PIGHETTI LIVING AND ROBERT EUGENE PIGHETTI LIVING TRUST DATED 2/22/2017,

PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,

V.

ESTATE OF DALE N. SCHMECHEL AND BARBARA L. SCHMECHEL,

DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS.

APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Oconto County: JAY N. CONLEY, Judge. Affirmed.

Before Stark, P.J., Hruz, and Gill, JJ.

¶1 STARK, P.J. This case presents a dispute between neighboring landowners concerning the existence, location, and scope of an easement that appeared in the dominant estate’s chain of title but not in the servient estate’s chain of title. The Estate of Dale N. Schmechel and Barbara L. Schmechel (the No. 2025AP151

Schmechels) appeal from a circuit court order concluding, on partial summary judgment and after a trial to the court, that the Lauralynn Ann Pighetti Living and Robert Eugene Pighetti Living Trust dated 2/22/2017 (the Trust) has an express easement over a portion of the Schmechels’ property and that the Schmechels cannot take their property free of the easement because they had affirmative notice of the easement pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 706.09(2)(a) (2023-24).1 The court also adopted the location and scope of the easement as determined by a surveyor hired by the Trust. Alternatively, the court concluded that the Trust had established a prescriptive easement through decades of open, notorious, and adverse use, pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 893.28.

¶2 The Schmechels contend that the circuit court erred by finding an express easement on their property because the easement was not referenced in their property’s chain of title, a gate and a sign were insufficient to provide notice of the easement to the Schmechels under WIS. STAT. § 706.09(2)(a), and the Trust failed to meet its burden to demonstrate the location and scope of the easement and whether the easement was intended for vehicular use.

¶3 We affirm the conclusions of the circuit court with regard to the existence of an express easement, the fact that the Schmechels had notice of the easement, and the easement’s location and scope. The Trust has an express easement over the Schmechels’ property, and despite the easement not appearing in the Schmechels’ chain of title, the Schmechels had affirmative notice of the Trust’s easement by operation of WIS. STAT. § 706.09(2)(a). Therefore, they cannot avoid the Trust’s adverse claim.

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

2 No. 2025AP151

BACKGROUND

¶4 In 2006, Lauralynn Pighetti and her late husband, Robert Pighetti,2 purchased two adjoining parcels of real property on Peninsula Lane in Oconto County from Allen Prill and his wife, which the Pighettis later conveyed by quit claim deed to the Trust (the Trust property). The warranty deed conveying the Trust property contained explicit references to an easement across an adjacent property: “The above property having an Easement from Town Highway on an old logging road, known as Camp 2 Road, to that part of said description laying South of McCaslin Brook, to all heirs and assigns” and “a permanent 20 foot wide access from private Town Road to the above described land on the location of present Old Railroad Grade and reserving unto Ella Popp the right to walk over the said described land on said Old Railroad Grade.”

¶5 Based on the evidence in the record, these references to an easement have appeared consistently in the Trust property’s chain of title since 1977, and the prior and current property owners—Prill and the Pighettis, individually and as trustees, respectively—have used the easement. Prill testified during his deposition and averred in an affidavit that when he owned the Trust property, from 1991 to 2006, he used the easement “all the time,” and he “kept a camping trailer on the property just [s]outh of McCaslin Brook from April to November each year and used the easement … regularly.” Lauralynn testified that when she and her husband purchased the Trust property, there were no buildings on the property, and they “would use the [property to] camp.” She explained that they would have

2 For ease of reading, we will refer to Lauralynn and Robert collectively as the Pighettis, and, where appropriate, we will refer to Lauralynn by her first name.

3 No. 2025AP151

to go “over the easement, over [their] first piece of property and then onto the second” to camp “at the far side of the[ir] property,” and they used the easement “at least several times during the summer months.” The map reproduced below was created by Harry Smith, a surveyor with Northeast Surveying, Inc., who was hired by the Trust, and shows the approximate location of the easement.

¶6 There was also physical evidence of the easement on the land. According to Prill’s testimony and photographs in the record, there was a metal gate blocking traffic “to keep people from driving [onto the easement] … off the main road”—Peninsula Lane—over the Schmechel property because “[i]t was a boy scout camp entrance before.” Prill averred that when he first purchased the property, the entrance to the easement from Peninsula Lane was blocked with “a cable with a lock,” but “[a]t some point” in the early 1990s, he “was approached by Oconto County and told that, because a snowmobile operator had nearly been

4 No. 2025AP151

decapitated by running into a cable, they wanted [him] to install a gate,” which he did. He also installed a metal “No Trespassing” sign on the gate, and he carved his name into the sign with a knife. The gate, locked with a padlock, and the sign remained until the events that led to this case. Photographs of the gate and sign are reproduced below.

¶7 According to Prill, the easement was essential to his property given that “the only way to access” one of the parcels “was on the easement” because there “is a steep hill” with hemlock trees on it that one cannot drive up. Prill’s testimony was further supported by the surveyor’s affidavit. Smith noted in his affidavit that, based on his observations, “[t]he path from Peninsula Lane to the gate was obvious”; that “topography in the area was very steep, [so] there was a limited flat area between the gate and an opening in the woods on the [Trust] property that had clearly been used as a roadway”; and that “tire marks on the earth … directly in line with the gate on Peninsula Lane … made it easy to delineate the centerline of the easement.”

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¶8 In 2019, Barbara L. Schmechel and her late husband, Dale N. Schmechel,3 purchased real property, which bordered the Trust property and on which the easement was located, from Robert and Ruth Popp (the Popps) via a trustee’s deed (the Schmechel property).4 The Schmechels obtained a title commitment in connection with the purchase of the property, but neither the trustee’s deed nor the title commitment contained a reference to an easement in favor of a third party. The Popps also executed an affidavit stating that there were no unrecorded easements on the Schmechel property. However, Barbara testified that she was aware that the Popps had given a few neighbors a key to the gate blocking access to the easement. Despite this fact, Barbara averred that she “first learned” of the easement during a conversation with Lauralynn in July 2021.5

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Lauralynn Pighetti v. Estate of Dale N. Schmechel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lauralynn-pighetti-v-estate-of-dale-n-schmechel-wisctapp-2026.