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Updated on July 29, 2008
Wisconsin REALTOR®  - Legal Matters Articles
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Wisconsin REALTOR® 
September 2000 
Volume 16, Number 12

  Best of the Legal Hotline

By Debbi Conrad & Tracy Rucka 

The following questions pertaining to office management issues were recently asked of the Legal Hotline:

Q. What policies and procedures must be followed by an agent who is leaving his or her current company and opening a new office? The agent has a broker’s license and intends to have sales agents working in the new office. 
A. The agent may contact the Department of Regulation and Licensing (DRL) (call 608-266-5511 or write to the State Of Wisconsin, Department of Regulation and Licensing, PO Box 8935, Madison, WI 53708 - 8935) for the forms needed to terminate the agent’s affiliation with the current broker/employer, to open and register a new real estate trust account, and to transfer the licenses of other agents to the new company. 

The agent should review the Wisconsin Administrative Code provisions and state statutes which provide the regulatory structure for real estate practice. A copy of the book containing the real estate statutes and regulations may be ordered from the DRL - see http://drl.wi.gov/index.htm for more information.

Excerpts may be found on the WRA Web site in the Legal section.

Many issues are addressed in Wis. Admin. Code Chapters RL 17 (broker supervision), 18 (trust accounts), and 24 (advertising, disclosures, and other transactional rules). The agent may work with legal counsel to address issues such as the appropriate choice of business entity, tax issues, formulating a business plan, error and omissions insurance, and an office policy and procedure manual.

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Q. When are brokers required to have an office policy manual? 
A. Wis. Admin. Code § RL 17.08 requires a broker/employer to provide all licensed agents and employees (including independent contractors) with a written statement of the office’s policies and procedures for handling leases, listing contracts, offers to purchase and other transactional documents. 

Beyond these DRL requirements, the broker may adopt and include additional policies and procedures in the office manual including, but not limited to, discrimination, harassment, office hours, individual property purchases, multiple representation, disclosures, lead-based paint, conflict resolution, Internet policy, compensation, etc. An office policy manual will clearly set forth the rights and responsibilities of the broker/employer and the agents, and will help to avoid disputes by anticipating them and providing the practices and procedures necessary to eliminate their causes. The WRA’s Office Policy Manual Guide (6th Edition) can help brokers write and update their office policy manual. 

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Q. Are broker/employers required to enter into an independent contractor agreement with their agents? 
A. A broker/employer is not required to enter into an independent contractor agreement to formalize commission fees and rates. Prudent practice, however, would dictate a written agreement as evidence of the agreement in the event that a dispute later arises, for example, when an agent leaves an office with pending transactions. A written agreement that is signed when the business relationship is commenced will alleviate disputes upon termination of the relationship. 

The relationship between the broker and his or her salespersons can be either an independent contractor relationship or an employer/employee relationship. Independent contractors, in turn, can be either common-law independent contractors or statutory independent contractors. The determination of whether an individual is an employee or independent contractor is important for several reasons. Federal and state income tax is generally withheld from wages paid to employees, but not from compensation paid to independent contractors. The employee/independent contractor status also determines Social Security and Medicare payments, federal and Wisconsin unemployment compensation, Wisconsin worker’s compensation, tax on self-employment income, and the deductibility of business expenses (see Legal Update 97.12 for further discussion of these issues).

Broker/employers can use independent contractor written agreements, such as the WRA Real Estate Independent Contractor Agreement, to qualify their licensed salespersons as statutory independent contractors for federal and Wisconsin tax purposes. The agreement should specify that the agent will not be treated as an employee for federal tax purposes, and substantially all of the agent’s compensation should be commissions earned for providing real estate services. If there is no written agreement between the broker/employer and the salespersons, brokers/companies must observe the more restrictive common-law test to qualify their salespersons for independent contractor status for Wisconsin tax purposes.

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Q. A real estate broker employs several agents who, in turn, employ unlicensed personal assistants. The broker provides worker’s compensation insurance for all agents and all personal assistants. Can the broker require that all agents who employ personal assistants pay the broker back for the costs of the worker’s compensation insurance attributable to the personal assistants?
A. No. Wis. Stat. § 102.16(3) provides that no employer may solicit, receive, or collect any money from an employee or any other person (including real estate licensees and assistants), or make any direct or indirect deduction from their wages for the purpose of discharging any workers compensation liability or recovering workers compensation premiums that the employer has paid. The Department of Workforce Development has the jurisdiction to order the employer to reimburse the employee for any premiums deducted from wages. Likewise, no agreement by an employee to waive the right to any compensation for the purpose of covering workers compensation insurance premiums is valid.

Every independent contractor real estate agent is classified as an employee for purposes of worker’s compensation, subject to one exception: Independent contractors who maintain a separate business with their own separate office, equipment and materials, their own federal ID number, and meet the other criteria stated in Wis. Stat. § 102.07(8) are not treated as employees. See page 4 of Legal Update 97.12 for further discussion of this exemption. Thus, the broker-employer generally must maintain worker’s compensation insurance for all employees and all independent contractor agents who do not meet the criteria for the exception. 

In addition, Wis. Stat. § 102.07(4) provides that all helpers and assistants of employees may also be classified as employees for purposes of worker’s compensation, provided they are employed with the knowledge of the employer. Broker/employers are generally responsible for maintaining worker’s compensation insurance for all personal assistants employed by the broker’s agents, particularly if all payroll/bookkeeping functions are centralized with the broker/employer. If, on the other hand, an agent acts independently in employing an unlicensed assistant and personally handles all payroll matters, the agent is considered to be the employer and would be responsible for providing worker’s compensation coverage for the assistant.

Every employer subject to the Wisconsin Worker’s Compensation Act must have worker’s compensation insurance with an insurance company authorized to write worker’s compensation insurance in Wisconsin. An employer becomes subject to the Wisconsin Worker’s Compensation Act when:
  1. The employer usually employs three or more persons full or part-time for services performed in Wisconsin. This employer needs insurance immediately; or
  2. The employer has one or more full-time or part-time employees and has paid gross combined wages of $500 or more in any calendar quarter for work done in Wisconsin. This employer must have insurance by the tenth day of the first month of the next calendar quarter.

For more information, contact
Department of Workforce Development’s (DWD) Worker’s Compensation Division
P.O. Box 7901
Madison, WI 53707-7901
Phone: 608-266-1340 (Main Number)
Fax: 608-267-0394
www.dwd.state.wi.us

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Q. An agent has an accepted offer to purchase and is concerned about receiving a commission if he leaves his current office prior to the closing of the transaction. The agent has a verbal agreement with the current broker, but nothing in writing. What are agent’s options?
A. Wisconsin real estate statutes and administrative rules do not address commission policies between a broker/employer and a real estate agent. Rather, the entitlement to a commission in this situation depends upon the verbal or written agreements between the broker and the agent (i.e., independent contractor agreement, company policy and procedures manual, etc.). Although verbal commission agreements can be binding, the agent may have difficulty proving the terms of an oral agreement. If the commission agreement is verbal and written agreements do not address the issue, the prior actions of the broker in similar situations and the prevailing practice in the industry would be factors the court may consider if the matter went to court. 

If the agent leaves the company prior to collecting his commission and if the broker does not pay the commission, the agent will need to enforce the provisions of his agreement with the broker. The agent can attempt to have the dispute arbitrated at the local Board, provided the now-previous broker agrees to arbitrate. This would be considered a voluntary arbitration under Article 17 of the Code of Ethics. If the former broker refuses to arbitrate, the salesperson can bring separate actions in small claims court for each commission due.

To prevent these issues, a well-drafted independent contractor agreement will minimize conflicts. An agent in this situation may be referred to legal counsel to advise on commission issues.

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On-Line Publications


  Case Law Update

By Debbi Conrad

The following cases were recently decided by the Wisconsin Court of Appeals:

Baierl v. McTaggart (Ct. App. August 8, 2000, No. 98-3329).
Landlord/Tenant Law: Doctrine of Severability Applied to Leases.

In this landlord-tenant dispute, the lease consisted of a two-page residential lease plus several addenda, one consisting of twenty-seven paragraphs. The following language appeared in paragraph 17 of the long addendum:

"In the event that [the landlord] shall be obliged to commence legal action in order to enforce the terms and conditions of any portion of this lease and amendment, the tenant shall be liable to [the landlord] for all [the landlord’s] costs, disbursements and expenses incurred including, without limitation, reasonable attorney fees incurred."

Wis. Admin. Code § ATCP 134.08(3) provides that no rental agreement may "Require payment, by the tenant, of attorney’s fees or costs incurred by the landlord in any legal action or dispute arising under the rental agreement. This does not prevent the recovery of costs or attorney’s fees by a landlord or tenant pursuant to a court order under ch. 799 or 814, Stats." The court found that paragraph 17 was in violation of this rule.

The lease term was from August 1, 1996, to July 31, 1997. In a letter dated November 29, 1996, the tenants notified the landlord that they were terminating the lease effective February 1, 1997. The landlord unsuccessfully tried to re-rent the apartment, and then withheld the security deposit for unpaid rent and sued the tenants to enforce the lease terms. The landlord never implemented the paragraph 17 provision, and only sought the minimal attorney fees authorized in the statutes.

The tenants alleged that the entire lease was void because Wis. Admin. Code §ATCP 134.08(3) prohibited the paragraph 17 attorney’s fees provision. The trial court agreed and awarded the tenants double damages - twice the $1,790 security deposit less some expenses.

On appeal to the Wisconsin Court of Appeals, the landlord argued that, per the holding in the Simenstad v. Hagen case, the prohibited clause should have been severed from the lease because it was a non-essential clause which could be severed without defeating the primary purpose of the parties’ agreement. In other words, the lease should be read as if the illegal provision has been deleted or voided, leaving the balance of the lease in place. The Simenstad doctrine of severability, however, had never before been applied to a lease under Wisconsin case law.

The Court of Appeals noted that the landlord never attempted to enforce the illegal provision, and only requested only limited attorney fees. No statute forbade the severance of the clause from the lease and severing paragraph 17 from the lease did not defeat the primary purpose - to spell out the rights and duties between the landlord and tenant for the renting of the apartment. Furthermore, it was the tenants who breached the lease. The court observed, "Not only were the tenants relieved of the duty to pay rent for the lease term, but they were paid double their security deposit and reimbursed all of their attorney fees. The tenants have obtained a windfall for what was, indisputedly, their breach of the lease. Conversely, the landlord was not compensated for the many months that the apartment went vacant, nor did he recover any of his expenses in cleaning the apartment and in attempting to re-rent it." Thus, the court held that the prohibited paragraph 17 provision was severed from the lease and the rest of the lease was to be enforced, including the security deposit withholding provisions.

The dissenting judge noted that the "trend and philosophy [of the case law] is that the inclusion ... of contract provisions which are directly prohibited by Consumer Protection Statutes results in the voiding of the entire contract." Consumer protection laws like Chapter ATCP 134 allow tenants to recover double damages and attorney fees to encourages them to bring legal actions to enforce their rights. When tenants enforces their individual rights, this serves to enforce the public’s rights overall. This obviously deters landlords from illegal conduct when they know that tenants can sue them for double damages plus attorneys fees. The dissenting judge indicated that the court’s holding undermined these consumer protection mechanisms.

The dissenting judge concluded that "Under the majority’s interpretation, Wis. Admin. Code § ATCP 134.08 now reads, between the lines: ATTENTION LANDLORDS: DO NOT REQUIRE TENANTS TO PAY YOUR ATTORNEYS’ FEES OR COSTS IN ANY LEGAL ACTION OR DISPUTE. HOWEVER, IF YOU DO, YOU PROBABLY WILL GET AWAY WITH IT. BUT IF YOUR TENANT REALIZES THE REQUIREMENT IS UNLAWFUL, AND IF YOUR TENANT IS ABLE TO GO TO COURT TO CHALLENGE IT, YOU WILL NOT BE ALLOWED TO ENFORCE THE UNLAWFUL REQUIREMENT. BUT DO NOT WORRY. ALTHOUGH YOU WILL NOT BE ALLOWED TO ENFORCE THE UNLAWFUL REQUIREMENT, YOU WILL SUFFER NO OTHER CONSEQUENCES."

  If this case is not appealed to the Wisconsin Supreme Court and overturned, it will stand for the proposition that an illegal lease provision (under Chapter ATCP 134 or the landlord/tenant law) may be severed and not enforced, while the balance of the lease remains in place. But the circumstances will have to be right. If the landlord attempts to enforce the illegal provision or if it is the landlord who is breaching the lease, a court may still void the lease and charge the landlord double damages plus attorney’s fees. 


Kampinen v. Bierman (Ct. App. July 18, 2000, No 99-3226). Easement Law: Easement Inadequately Described & Not in Chain of Title is Unenforceable.

Landowner K’s deed to a back lot and a lake lot included the following language: "Together with an easement for access purposes from State Highway 17 southerly over the existing driveway located on the back lot partitioned and conveyed to Marie Rotter and said easement to extend easterly over the N. 20 feet of the frontage lot partitioned and conveyed to Marie Rotter to the front lot above described of grantee."

This language purports to grant K an easement across the back of Rotter’s lake lot. The quitclaim deed to Rotter makes no mention of any reservation of the easement nor does Rotter’s deed conveying her two lots to Landowner B. 

K first sued B, contending that B wrongfully interfered with the use of her easement by blocking the driveway. K claimed that the easement was described in her deed and therefore was within the chain of title. The trial court agreed and found for K. B appealed to the Wisconsin Court of Appeals.

B argued that K’s deed failed to adequately describe the easement as required by Wis. Stat. § 706.02(1), which requires that a deed must identify the land conveyed with reasonable certainty. The court concluded that the reference to Rotter’s deed and the terms "back lot" and "frontage lot" were not sufficiently definite to adequately describe the location of the easement. The description assumes that the only deed to Rotter was a partition deed and that the lot that bordered the lake was a "frontage" lot. 

B also was a purchaser for value without notice of the easement. A purchaser for value without notice takes title free of any adverse claim dependent upon a document not recorded with the register of deeds in the purchaser’s chain of title. A document in within the chain of title for a parcel if it is discoverable when the title company searches the documents recorded at the register of deeds to look for all documents in the history of the parcel, based upon the legal description. The court found that K’s deed was outside B’s chain of title because B did not take title from K and mention of the easement was not made in Bs’ deed from Rotter or in earlier deeds to Rotter or Rotter’s predecessors in title. 

The court concluded that K’s deed’s reference to Rotter’s deed is not sufficiently definite to allow the easement to be discoverable by reasonable search of the public records. Because the legal description was inadequate, K’s deed did not give sufficient notice of her claimed easement interest. There was no actual or visible use of the easement. Accordingly, B is a purchaser for value without notice and takes title free of K’s easement claim based on K’s deed. 

  The creation of an easement over Lot B in a deed to A is insufficient unless the easement is also at least mentioned in the chain of title for Lot B. Any purchasers of Lot B must be able to search the chain of title to Lot B and find evidence of the easement appearing within the last 30 years. For further discussion of easements, see Legal Update 00.08.

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On-Line Publications


  Review the Current Drafts of the DRL Forms Council

By Rick Staff

Current drafts of the forms the DRL Forms Council is revising are currently posted on the WRA web site. Currently drafts of business, residential listing for lease and timeshare forms are available for review. Contact Rick Staff at the WRA with your comments.

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On-Line Publications


  Deduction for Brokers? Conference Meals Limited to 50%

By Rick Staff

The IRS has ruled that the deduction for food and beverages provided by a brokerage firm to its independent contractor brokers at annual conferences is limited to 50 percent. The facts considered by the IRS were as follows:

A brokerage firm holds six regional and national sales and education conferences each year to promote its products and services and to provide required continuing education for its brokers. To facilitate its scheduling and to facilitate networking among the brokers, the firm paid for meals and cocktail parties at those conferences. The brokerage firm knew the identity of each representative and the number of guests attending each conference and spent between $109 and $709 per representative at each conference.

An employer is permitted to deduct the entire (reasonable) cost of such expenses for its employees, however, the brokers were independent contractors - not employees. Therefore, the deduction is subject to the 50 percent limitation.

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