Sunderman v. Warnken

29 N.W.2d 496, 251 Wis. 471, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 398
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 29 N.W.2d 496 (Sunderman v. Warnken) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sunderman v. Warnken, 29 N.W.2d 496, 251 Wis. 471, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 398 (Wis. 1947).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

Because of other matters stated in plaintiffs’ complaint in connection with their allegations charging wrongful and illegal entry by defendants of a second-floor apartment leased to plaintiffs in a building owned by the defendants Warnken, all of the defendants moved to have plaintiffs make their complaint more definite and certain. That *473 motion was granted by the court in an order in which it stated,—

“Therefore on the statement, admission and election of plaintiffs’ counsel, it is hereby found that the complaint of the plaintiffs stands solely on a cause of action for damages for wrongful and illegal entry and does not seek to state any cause of action for conspiracy. . . .”

Thereupon, in answer to solely said cause of action, plaintiffs’ allegations charging wrongful and illegal entry were denied in an answer filed by Francis L. Deppisch, a police officer, and also in a joint answer filed by Olga and Helen Warn-ken and Michael Hoepfi, defendants.

The material facts on this appeal are as follows. In 1944 the Warnkens inherited the property on which there was an old two-story building out of repair, the second-floor apartment of which was leased and occupied by plaintiffs, and the first-floor apartment by another tenant. There was a separate front-door entrance for each apartment, but for the joint use of the occupants of both apartments there was only one rear-door entrance from which there was a stairway to the kitchen door of the upper apartment. During the Warnkens’ ownership prior to September 5, 1945, plaintiffs and also neighbors had made complaints to the Milwaukee city health department that there were conditions detrimental to health and safety in the building, including the plaintiffs’ apartment and portions of the basement and attic used by them. ' Upon the health department’s inspection of the premises pursuant to said complaints ánd upon its thereupon issuing orders in respect to remedying of said conditions by the Warnkens, they requested leave of plaintiffs to see the condition of the premises occupied by plaintiffs, but they were refused access thereto by plaintiffs. Upon the Warnkens being again so notified and ordered by the health department, the latter suggested to Olga Warnken that she have a city police officer accompany her to *474 plaintiffs’ apartment, as she was afraid to go there alone and had been advised against doing so by a contractor who had similar trouble with plaintiffs. The health department then arranged to have her meet a police officer at a designated street corner, and also arranged with the police-department to have police officer Francis L. Deppisch meet her there, and she asked her seventy-five-year-old uncle, Michael Hoepfl, to accompany her. Upon the three defendants entering the unlocked rear-door entrance of the building about 1:30 p. m. on September 5, 1945, and going up the’ rear stairway to plaintiffs’ apartment, the officer rapped at the rear door thereof, which was locked. Plaintiffs were away at their places of employment, and there was in the apartment only Dietrich Behling, who is a brother-in-law of the plaintiff, Lillian Sun-derman, and who resided with the plaintiffs as a member of their household. He was seventy-eight years of age and somewhat deformed, and usually stayed in his room with instructions by plaintiffs not to open the door. Upon the officer rapping louder, Behling asked, “What is upand the officer replied “It is the police.”

As to what then happened there is some conflict between the testimony of defendants and that of Behling. He testified Officer Deppisch ordered him to unbolt a latch on the inside of the door and to open the door; that he told the officer he was not to open the door when plaintiffs were not at home, but that he was afraid and did open it on the officer’s order; and that the latter, Olga Warnken and Hoepfl went through the apartment and then left, and the officer again locked the door. On the other hand, they testified they did not enter through the upstairs rear door of the apartment, but that Behling told them to go around the front way and enter there; that there the officer unlocked, with his own house door key, the front entrance door and they then walked up the front stairway to the upper apartment, the front door of which was not locked, and was opened by Behling; and that they then entered the first room and looked around it, and through its doors looked *475 into the other rooms of the apartment. Plaintiffs contend defendants’ testimony that they entered through only the front door is inconsistent with an allegation in the officer’s pleading, which plaintiffs claim can be construed to constitute an admission that he entered by the rear door of the apartment because there are, — in connection with his allegation in relation to that door, “that the door was not opened,” — the allegations that he “admits that he used a key to unlock the door and entered the house of the plaintiffs but further alleges that he used a key to unlock the door with the consent of an occupant of the home and entered the house only after haying received permission from the occupant.” From the context of the last-quoted allegations and the preceding allegation that the upper rear door was not opened, it is obvious that the later allegations were solely in relation to the unlocking by the officer of the lower front entrance door at the foot of the stairway leading up to the front door of plaintiffs’ apartment.

While said defendants were in the apartment or the premises, none of them made any search, or disturbed, or attempted to seize anything therein. No force, threat, or disturbance accompanied their call, and there was a clear, definite, and truthful reason given for the purpose thereof and the presence of the police officer. - They were calm; they were there solely to observe and determine whether and what was necessary to remedy the alleged unsafe or unsanitary conditions complained of; and it was only for that purpose that the condition of the premises was inspected by solely visual act and inoffensive observation, without any malicious motive or intent. And there was no injury or damage whatever as the result of their presence or conduct to plaintiffs or Behling or their rights to the exclusive use and enjoyment of the premises. In view of those undisputed facts and circumstances it was of no material consequence upon the legal questions determinative of the cause of action, whether, as Behling testified, he answered the officer’s request to be allowed to enter through the rear door, by stating that he had po key, and that he testified that *476 the officer used his own key. According to Behling’s own testimony such entrance would become possible only upon his releasing a bolt or latch which, if not released by him, would have prevented any entry by defendants. They denied that they entered that rear door. And when they went, as they and likewise Behling testified, tO' the front door and up the front' stairway to the upper hall, the door to plaintiffs’ apartment was opened for them by Behling; and the police officer used his own key to open the lower front door, which was pursuant to Behling’s statement to enter in that way. As Judge Gei-IRZ rightly stated, in his decision granting defendants’ motion for a directed verdict,—

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 N.W.2d 496, 251 Wis. 471, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunderman-v-warnken-wis-1947.