Town of Wilson v. City of Sheboygan ( 2020 )


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    2020 WI 16
    SUPREME COURT            OF    WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:              2018AP2162
    COMPLETE TITLE:        Town of Wilson,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    City of Sheboygan,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    ON BYPASS FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OPINION FILED:         February 14, 2020
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:         September 19, 2019
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:              Circuit
    COUNTY:             Sheboygan
    JUDGE:              Daniel J. Borowski
    JUSTICES:
    DALLET, J., delivered the majority opinion for a unanimous Court
    with respect to Parts I., III.C., and III.D., and the majority
    opinion of the Court with respect to Parts II., III.A., III.B.,
    and IV., in which ROGGENSACK, C.J., ANN WALSH BRADLEY, ZIEGLER,
    and HAGEDORN, JJ., joined. REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J., filed a
    concurring opinion, in which KELLY, J., joined. HAGEDORN, J.,
    filed a concurring opinion.
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    For the plaintiff-appellant, there were briefs filed (in the
    court of appeals) by Michael D. Huitink and Sorrentino Burkert
    Risch LLC, Brookfield.        There was an oral argument by Michael D.
    Huitink.
    For the defendant-respondent, there was a brief filed (in the
    court   of   appeals)    by   H.    Stanley   Riffle   and   Municipal   Law   &
    Litigation Group, S.C., Waukesha.             There was an oral argument by
    H. Stanley Riffle.
    For amicus Wisconsin Towns Association, a brief was filed by
    Joseph Ruth, Shawano.
    For joint amici League of Wisconsin Municipalities and NAIOP
    – Wisconsin there was a brief filed by Julie M. Gay and Law Office
    of Julie M. Gay, Waukesha, Thomas D. Larson, Madison, and Claire
    Silverman, Madison.
    2
    
    2020 WI 16
                                                               NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.    2018AP2162
    (L.C. No.   2017CV490)
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                       :              IN SUPREME COURT
    Town of Wilson,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    FILED
    v.                                                    FEB 14, 2020
    City of Sheboygan,                                              Sheila T. Reiff
    Clerk of Supreme Court
    Defendant-Respondent.
    DALLET, J., delivered the majority opinion for a unanimous Court
    with respect to Parts I., III.C., and III.D., and the majority
    opinion of the Court with respect to Parts II., III.A., III.B.,
    and IV., in which ROGGENSACK, C.J., ANN WALSH BRADLEY, ZIEGLER,
    and HAGEDORN, JJ., joined. REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J., filed a
    concurring opinion, in which KELLY, J., joined. HAGEDORN, J., filed
    a concurring opinion.
    APPEAL from an order of the Circuit Court for Sheboygan
    County, Daniel J. Borowski, Judge.     Affirmed.
    ¶1    REBECCA FRANK DALLET, J.      Kohler Company sought to
    convert 247 acres of land located in the Town of Wilson into a
    world championship golf course.     After determining that the golf
    course development would not come to fruition if the land remained
    within the Town's boundaries, Kohler successfully petitioned for
    annexation to the City of Sheboygan.    In response, the Town filed
    No.    2018AP2162
    a declaratory judgment action alleging that the annexation was
    "arbitrary, capricious, non-contiguous, an abuse of discretion,
    and otherwise procedurally and substantively non-compliant with
    [the City's] annexation authority under Chapter 66, Wis. Stats,
    and existing Wisconsin case[]law."             The City moved for partial
    summary judgment regarding the annexation petition's compliance
    with       the   population    certification   requirement        in   Wis.   Stat.
    § 66.0217(5)(a) (2017-18), which was granted.1                  The circuit court
    ultimately        conducted    a   bench   trial   and    concluded      that   the
    annexation satisfied the statutory contiguity requirement and the
    "rule of reason."2         The circuit court further concluded that the
    annexation petition fully satisfied the procedural requirements of
    § 66.0217.         Consequently, the circuit court dismissed the action
    in full.
    ¶2        On bypass3 from the court of appeals, the Town asks us
    to review whether:            (1) the annexation satisfies the statutory
    contiguity requirement; (2) the annexation satisfies the rule of
    reason; (3) the annexation petition strictly complied with the
    signature requirements in Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(3); and (4) the
    annexation         petition    strictly    complied      with    the     population
    certification requirement in § 66.0217(5)(a).                   We conclude that
    All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    1
    the 2017-18 version unless otherwise indicated.
    Judge Daniel J. Borowski of the Sheboygan County Circuit
    2
    Court presided.
    The Town's petition to bypass was filed pursuant to Wis.
    3
    Stat. § (Rule) 809.60.
    2
    No.   2018AP2162
    the annexation is contiguous and satisfies the rule of reason.                 We
    also conclude that the annexation petition strictly complied with
    §§ 66.0217(3) and (5)(a).         Therefore, we affirm the circuit court.
    I.    FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE
    ¶3     For nearly 80 years Kohler has owned 247 acres of
    undeveloped land abutting Lake Michigan located within the Town's
    boundaries.       In March 2014, Kohler submitted an application with
    the Town for a conditional use permit to develop the land into a
    world championship golf course.           After Kohler's plan went public,
    there was immediate opposition to the proposed development by the
    Town's     citizens.       The   opposition     centered     on   environmental
    concerns, deforestation, and perceived impacts to residential
    wells.     By 2015, three of the five members of the Town Board were
    known to oppose the development, decreasing the likelihood that
    Kohler's application would be approved.
    ¶4     Due to unfolding Town Board opposition and concerns
    about the Town's ability to provide adequate water and fire
    services to the proposed development,4 Kohler approached the City
    about the possibility of annexing its property and adjacent lands.
    The   City     was   interested     in   Kohler's    proposal      as   it   "had
    historically targeted the lands within the annexation, including
    the   Kohler      Land,   for   future   City   expansion,    development     and
    4Kohler was concerned that the Town's inability to provide a
    municipal water source would negatively impact the golf course
    development based on: (1) insufficient water for the golf course
    operations; (2) exposure to well damage claims from neighboring
    landowners; and (3) a potentially inadequate water source for the
    Town's volunteer fire department in the event of a fire.
    3
    No.   2018AP2162
    economic growth as a part of the City's 2011 Comprehensive Plan."
    The City was also facing a substantial need for housing, which was
    stunting economic growth.          Annexation would allow the City to
    immediately address its housing needs by developing the land
    adjacent to Kohler's property.            It was a mutually beneficial
    arrangement for Kohler and the City:         annexation was a means for
    Kohler to achieve its goal of developing its land into a golf
    course and for the City to achieve its goal of economic growth.
    ¶5     Kohler independently designed the boundaries of the
    territory subject to the proposed annexation, without the City's
    assistance.     To increase its size and shape, Kohler included a
    large amount of state land in its proposal.        Kohler also purchased
    several of the properties located within the territory.           Pursuant
    to Kohler's design, the border between the City and the first
    parcel of the territory spans approximately 650 feet in width.
    The territory proceeds in a southeasterly direction and varies in
    size from 1,450 feet wide at certain points to 190 feet wide before
    expanding to the proposed golf course development.          The map of the
    annexation is attached as an appendix to this opinion.
    ¶6     Kohler initiated the annexation process in April 2017 by
    publishing a notice in the Sheboygan Press and sending a "Request
    for   Annexation    Review"   to    the   Department   of   Administration
    ("DOA").     Kohler then circulated a "Petition for Annexation by
    One-Half Approval" (the "Petition") in accordance with Wis. Stat.
    § 66.0217(3)(a).5     The Petition stated that its purpose was to
    5   Wisconsin Stat. § 66.0217(3)(a)1. provides:
    4
    No.   2018AP2162
    "make City of Sheboygan services available to the territory and to
    ready the territory for development consistent with the City of
    Sheboygan's 2011 Comprehensive Plan."   According to the Petition,
    the population of the territory subject to the proposed annexation
    included six adults and three children.      Kohler obtained five
    signatures for the Petition from owners representing over one-half
    of the real property in assessed value within the territory, as
    required by § 66.0217(3)(a)1.b.6
    ¶7   DOA issued a nonbinding recommendation in favor of the
    annexation and found it in the "public interest," as defined in
    Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(6)(c).7   DOA determined that the annexation
    (a) Direct annexation by one-half approval. A petition
    for direct annexation may be filed with the city or
    village clerk if it has been signed by either of the
    following:
    1. A number of qualified electors residing in the
    territory subject to the proposed annexation equal to at
    least the majority of votes cast for governor in the
    territory at the last gubernatorial election, and either
    of the following:
    a. The owners of one-half of the land in area within
    the territory.
    b. The owners of one-half of the real property in
    assessed value within the territory.
    6 The parties stipulated that five signatures would be a
    majority of qualified electors.
    7 DOA has a mandatory role to play in annexations "within a
    county having a population of 50,000 or more."        Wis. Stat.
    § 66.0217(6)(a).   Section 66.0217(6)(c) states that the "public
    interest" is determined after considering:
    1. Whether the governmental services, including zoning,
    to be supplied to the territory could clearly be better
    5
    No.   2018AP2162
    was contiguous to the City "via a quarter-quarter sized parcel of
    city-owned territory approximately 650-feet wide."
    ¶8   Shortly thereafter, the City's Common Council adopted
    two ordinances:       one annexing the territory      included in the
    Petition and another zoning the land as suburban residential.
    Additionally,   the    Common   Council    approved   a   pre-annexation
    agreement between Kohler and the City.8
    ¶9   The Town filed suit against the City in the circuit court
    and moved for a temporary injunction, which was denied.               The
    parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment regarding the
    validity of the annexation pursuant to Wis. Stat. ch. 66 and the
    rule of reason.   The circuit court denied summary judgment based
    on   disputed   issues   of     material   fact   regarding     statutory
    supplied by the town or by some other village or city
    whose boundaries are contiguous to the territory
    proposed for annexation which files with the circuit
    court a certified copy of a resolution adopted by a two-
    thirds vote of the elected members of the governing body
    indicating a willingness to annex the territory upon
    receiving an otherwise valid petition for the annexation
    of the territory.
    2. The shape of the proposed annexation and the
    homogeneity of the territory with the annexing village
    or city and any other contiguous village or city.
    8 As the circuit court noted, the pre-annexation agreement
    reflected the "mutual interest between Kohler and the City in the
    proposed annexation" and was negotiated between City officials and
    Kohler before Kohler filed the Petition. The agreement established
    mutual obligations of the City and Kohler as it related to the
    proposed annexation. For example, the City agreed to extend water
    utility to the golf course property, as well as provide police,
    fire, and emergency services to the property. Kohler agreed to,
    among other things, utilize the City's municipal water service for
    all improvements on the property within three years of development.
    6
    No.   2018AP2162
    contiguity, the rule of reason, and the Petition's compliance with
    the procedural requirements set forth in Wis. Stat. § 66.0217.
    The circuit court subsequently granted the City's partial motion
    for summary judgment as to the Petition's compliance with the
    population certification requirement in § 66.0217(5)(a).9 The case
    proceeded to a bench trial.     The trial centered on the Town's claim
    that the annexation was not contiguous and violated the rule of
    reason.
    ¶10   In November 2018, the circuit court issued a written
    decision   concluding   that:     (1)   the   annexation   satisfied   the
    statutory contiguity requirement in Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(3); (2)
    the annexation did not violate the rule of reason; and (3) the
    Petition fully complied with the procedural requirements set forth
    in § 66.0217.10    Accordingly, the circuit court dismissed the
    Town's declaratory judgment action in full.         The Town petitioned
    this court to bypass the court of appeals, which we granted.
    II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶11   The legislature has conferred broad authority on cities
    and villages to annex unincorporated lands under Chapter 66 of the
    9 The City, with the circuit court's permission, filed a
    subsequent motion for partial summary judgment on this issue.
    10The circuit court "incorporate[d] by reference" its May
    2018 written decision on the City's motion for partial summary
    judgment and noted that the Town did not raise any new issues at
    trial regarding whether the Petition complied with the procedural
    requirements of Wis. Stat. § 66.0217.      It concluded that the
    Petition   "complied   with   the   procedural   requirements   of
    § 66.0217 . . . [and it] was properly noticed and included the
    signatures of five of the six qualified electors and the owners of
    91% of the territory measured by assessed value."
    7
    No.    2018AP2162
    Wisconsin Statutes.       See Town of Pleasant Prairie v. City of
    Kenosha,     
    75 Wis. 2d 322
    ,    326-27,   
    249 N.W.2d 581
       (1977).
    Annexation ordinances have long enjoyed a presumption of validity.
    Id.; see also Town of Lafayette v. City of Chippewa Falls, 
    70 Wis. 2d 610
    , 618, 
    235 N.W.2d 435
    (1975).          A party challenging an
    annexation    ordinance   bears   the   burden     of   overcoming    this
    presumption by demonstrating that the circuit court's findings are
    contrary to the great weight and clear preponderance of the
    evidence.    Town of Waukechon v. City of Shawano, 
    53 Wis. 2d 593
    ,
    596, 
    193 N.W.2d 661
    (1972).
    ¶12    In order to resolve the Town's contention that the
    annexation is not contiguous and that the Petition failed to comply
    with the procedural requirements set forth in Wis. Stat. § 66.0217,
    we engage in statutory interpretation.       Statutory interpretation
    is a question of law that we review de novo.         Horizon Bank, Nat'l
    Ass'n v. Marshalls Point Retreat LLC, 
    2018 WI 19
    , ¶28, 
    380 Wis. 2d 60
    , 
    908 N.W.2d 797
    .
    ¶13    We also review the circuit court's application of the
    rule of reason, a doctrine designed to determine whether the power
    delegated to cities and villages under Chapter 66 has been abused
    under the facts and circumstances of a given case.          See Town of
    Pleasant 
    Prairie, 75 Wis. 2d at 326-27
    .      To pass muster under the
    rule of reason, an annexation must satisfy three requirements:
    (1) exclusions and irregularities in boundary lines must
    not be the result of arbitrariness; (2) some reasonable
    present or demonstrable future need for the annexed
    property must be shown; and (3) no other factors must
    exist which would constitute an abuse of discretion on
    the part of the municipality.
    8
    No.    2018AP2162
    Town of Menasha v. City of Menasha, 
    170 Wis. 2d 181
    , 189, 
    488 N.W.2d 104
    (Ct. App. 1992).   A failure to satisfy any one of the
    prongs renders an annexation arbitrary, capricious, and invalid.
    Town of 
    Lafayette, 70 Wis. 2d at 625
    .
    ¶14   We accept the circuit court's factual determinations
    regarding the rule of reason unless they are clearly erroneous.
    Town of Baraboo v. Village of West Baraboo, 
    2005 WI App 96
    , ¶19,
    
    283 Wis. 2d 479
    , 
    699 N.W.2d 610
    .     "Whether the undisputed facts
    meet the legal standards of the rule of reason presents a question
    of law, which we review de novo . . . ."    
    Id. ¶15 Lastly,
    we review the circuit court's grant of summary
    judgment as to the Petition's compliance with the population
    certification requirement in Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(5)(a) using the
    same methodology as the circuit court.      Green Spring Farms v.
    Kersten, 
    136 Wis. 2d 304
    , 314-15, 
    401 N.W.2d 816
    (1987).      Summary
    judgment shall be granted where the record demonstrates "that there
    is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving
    party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law."       Wis. Stat.
    § 802.08(2).
    III.   ANALYSIS
    ¶16   We first address the Town's claim that the annexation
    does not meet the statutory contiguity requirement, as set forth
    in Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(3) and interpreted by this court in Mt.
    Pleasant I and its progeny.   Town of Mt. Pleasant, Racine Cty. v.
    City of Racine, Racine Cty., 
    24 Wis. 2d 41
    , 
    127 N.W.2d 757
    (1964)
    ("Mt. Pleasant I").    We next discuss the rule of reason and
    determine whether it voids the annexation at issue in this case.
    9
    No.   2018AP2162
    Finally, we consider the Town's procedural challenges to the
    Petition       as   they     relate       to    the    signature     requirement      in
    § 66.0217(3)        and    the   population         certification     requirement     in
    § 66.0217(5)(a).
    A.     Contiguity
    ¶17       The Town asserts that the annexed territory is not
    contiguous to the City and therefore the annexation ordinance
    should    be    invalidated.            Wisconsin     Stat.    §   66.0217(3)   allows
    property owners to annex territory that is "contiguous to a city
    or village."11       (Emphasis added.)          "Contiguous" should be construed
    according to its "common and approved usage unless a different
    definition has been designated by the statutes."                     State v. Curiel,
    
    227 Wis. 2d 389
    , 404, 
    597 N.W.2d 697
    (1999); see also Wis. Stat.
    § 990.01(1).        The term "contiguous" is not defined in Chapter 66
    of the Wisconsin Statutes.
    ¶18       To   determine     the     definition      of   "contiguous"     as   it
    relates to Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(3), we look to the substantial
    amount    of    case      law    that    addresses      the    term's    meaning     and
    application.        "Although finding a single, precise definition of
    'contiguous' is difficult, one may discern a trend in Wisconsin's
    courts to require at minimum some significant degree of physical
    contact between the properties in question."                       Town of Delavan v.
    11Along with the statutory contiguity requirement, Wis. Stat.
    § 66.0217 outlines the procedures related to preparation, notice,
    circulation, and filing of such petitions. Direct annexation by
    one-half approval, the procedure followed by Kohler, requires
    strict compliance.   § 66.0217(3); see Town of Burke v. City of
    Madison, 
    225 Wis. 2d 615
    , 625, 
    593 N.W.2d 822
    (Ct. App. 1999).
    10
    No.   2018AP2162
    City of Delavan, 
    176 Wis. 2d 516
    , 528, 
    500 N.W.2d 268
    (1993)
    (emphasis added) (citing City of Waukesha v. Salbashian, 
    128 Wis. 2d 334
    ,      352   n.5,   
    382 N.W.2d 52
      (1986))   (referencing       one
    dictionary definition of contiguous:             "touching along boundaries
    often for considerable distances" but stating that "[f]or the
    purposes of this decision, we define contiguous as touching or
    adjoining."); Town of 
    Waukechon, 53 Wis. 2d at 597
    (describing the
    proposed annexation as "contiguous to the city for its entire 575-
    foot width").      We recognize that each case is fact-specific, and
    therefore    we   decline      to   define   contiguity   using    a    numerical
    threshold.
    ¶19    We have rejected the adoption of a broader definition of
    contiguous that includes territory near to, but not actually
    touching, a municipality.            See Town of 
    Delavan, 176 Wis. 2d at 528-29
    (declining the City's request to adopt "a broader definition
    of 'contiguous' that includes territory near to, but not actually
    touching, the annexing municipality," as it would "place distant
    lakeshore property owners at risk of being annexed by neighboring
    municipalities").        However, we acknowledge that there can be
    situations where contiguous "does not always mean the land must be
    touching."     Town of Lyons v. City of Lake Geneva, 
    56 Wis. 2d 331
    ,
    336, 
    202 N.W.2d 228
    (1972).            For example, in Town of Lyons, we
    determined that a 23-foot public road separating the City limits
    from the boundary of the annexed land was "close enough to the
    city limits to be contiguous" because "a public road should not
    destroy the concept of 'contiguous' regardless of ownership." Id.;
    see also Town of 
    Delavan, 176 Wis. 2d at 530
    (recognizing that a
    11
    No.    2018AP2162
    1.5-acre parcel of land separated from the land sought to be
    annexed by 400 feet of water was not contiguous, but that the
    "trivial   lack    of    contiguity      [was]     insufficient     to     void   the
    annexation" given the "unique facts of th[e] particular case").
    ¶20   The    Town   presents       side-by-side    maps   to    support      its
    assertion that the annexation in this case is "virtually identical"
    to the annexation invalidated in Mt. Pleasant I, 
    24 Wis. 2d 41
    .
    In Mt. Pleasant I, a private party sought to connect its land to
    the Racine city limits by a corridor approximately 1,705 feet long,
    varying in width from approximately 152 to 306 feet.                      
    Id. at 43.
    The land physically touched the Racine city limits only at the
    southwest corner by a 153-foot-wide corridor.              
    Id. at 43-44.
             The
    Mt. Pleasant I court focused its discussion of contiguity on the
    validity   of     "corridor"      or    "strip"    annexations,      intended      by
    developers to attach land to a city to obtain services, but which
    "in reality are no more than isolated areas connected by means of
    a technical strip a few feet wide."               
    Id. at 45-46.
    ¶21   Because of the lack of Wisconsin authority regarding the
    validity of these annexations, the Mt. Pleasant I court looked to
    out-of-state authority for guidance.              
    Id. at 45.
      Four of the five
    out-of-state     cases    cited    in    Mt.   Pleasant    I   involved       voided
    annexations with a border of less than 100 feet between the
    annexing municipality and the annexed territory.                  See Potvin v.
    Village of Chubbuck, 
    284 P.2d 414
    , 415 (Idaho 1955) (corridor strip
    was five feet wide); Clark v. Holt, 
    237 S.W.2d 483
    , 484 (Ark. 1951)
    (border was 50 feet wide); State ex rel. Danielson v. Village of
    Mound, 
    48 N.W.2d 855
    , 858-59 (Minn. 1951) ("100-foot wide railroad
    12
    No.   2018AP2162
    right of way which extends about five-eighths of a mile"); State
    ex rel. Fatzer v. Kansas City, 
    222 P.2d 714
    , 720 (Kan. 1950) (of
    the land annexed, "only 82 feet touches the city limits of Kansas
    City").12
    ¶22    Here, unlike in Mt. Pleasant I, the annexed territory
    shares a common boundary with the City of 650 feet, which is more
    than only a "technical strip a few feet wide."13     The degree of
    physical contact between the City and the territory is over four
    times that of the border connecting the City with the annexed
    territory in Mt. Pleasant I and involves a significant degree of
    physical contact between the properties.    See Town of 
    Waukechon, 53 Wis. 2d at 597
    ("The Town of Waukechon attempts to analogize
    [Mt. Pleasant I] with the instant action.    We see no similarity
    between the cases.     The area of proposed annexation herein is
    rectangular and is contiguous to the city for its entire 575-foot
    width."); see also Town of 
    Lyons, 56 Wis. 2d at 336
    ("In the Mt.
    Pleasant Case, we held land was not contiguous because only a small
    part of it touched the city.")    Based on the facts of this case,
    12The fifth case, People ex rel. Village of Worth v. Ihde,
    
    177 N.E.2d 313
    (Ill. 1961), involved annexation to a highway which
    also likely involved a border of less than 100 feet.
    13The City, DOA, and the circuit court all cited Mt. Pleasant
    II in their discussion of contiguity, despite the fact that the
    contiguity of the annexation was not at issue in that case. Town
    of Mt. Pleasant v. City of Racine, 
    28 Wis. 2d 519
    , 524, 
    137 N.W.2d 656
    (1965) ("Mt. Pleasant II") ("Respondent does not attack
    the ordinance on the ground that the territory lacks sufficient
    contiguity as was done in the first Mt. Pleasant v. Racine Case.").
    13
    No.    2018AP2162
    we conclude that the annexation satisfies the statutory contiguity
    requirement in Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(3).
    ¶23    We observe that when the Mt. Pleasant I court stated
    that it relied upon "application thereto of the rule of reason" to
    reach its conclusion regarding statutory 
    contiguity, 24 Wis. 2d at 47
    ,   it    blurred    the    statutory    contiguity   and   rule    of   reason
    analyses.       This    has    caused   confusion   and   conflation       of   the
    statutory contiguity requirement with the first prong of the rule
    of reason.     See, e.g., Town of 
    Waukechon, 53 Wis. 2d at 597
    .                 We
    clarify that contiguity is a legislative mandate discrete from the
    first prong of the judicially created rule of reason, which is
    described in detail below.
    B. The Rule of Reason
    ¶24    The rule of reason is a "judicially-created doctrine
    courts have applied to assess the validity of annexations," in
    addition to statutory requirements.             Town of Lincoln v. City of
    Whitehall, 
    2019 WI 37
    , ¶15 n.10, 
    386 Wis. 2d 354
    , 
    925 N.W.2d 520
    .
    The rule, also referred to as "the test of reason," has been traced
    back to the 1880s.       See Smith v. Sherry, 
    50 Wis. 210
    , 
    6 N.W. 561
    ,
    564 (1880); see also Town of Fond du Lac v. City of Fond du Lac,
    
    22 Wis. 2d 533
    , 541, 
    126 N.W.2d 201
    (1964) (applying the rule of
    reason that was "first announced in Smith v. Sherry").                Wisconsin
    courts have applied the rule of reason in annexation cases for
    over 50 years14 to serve as a check on whether a municipality has
    See, e.g., Town of Lincoln v. City of Whitehall, 
    2019 WI 14
    37, ¶15 n.10, 
    386 Wis. 2d 354
    , 
    925 N.W.2d 520
    ; Town of Delavan v.
    City of Delavan, 
    176 Wis. 2d 516
    , 528, 
    500 N.W.2d 268
    (1993); Town
    of Pleasant Prairie v. City of Kenosha, 
    75 Wis. 2d 322
    , 327, 249
    14
    No.   2018AP2162
    abused its powers of annexation.      Town of 
    Delavan, 176 Wis. 2d at 538
    . The analysis continues to play a role in Wisconsin annexation
    jurisprudence.15
    ¶25    An annexation satisfies the rule of reason when three
    requirements are met.     First, exclusions and irregularities in
    boundaries must not be the result of arbitrariness.           Town of
    Pleasant 
    Prairie, 75 Wis. 2d at 327
    .        Second, some reasonable
    present or demonstrable future need for the annexed property must
    be shown.    
    Id. Finally, no
    other factors must exist which would
    N.W.2d 581 (1977); Town of Lafayette v. City of Chippewa Falls, 
    70 Wis. 2d 610
    , 625, 
    235 N.W.2d 435
    (1975); Town of Center v. City of
    Appleton, 
    70 Wis. 2d 666
    , 668 n.4, 
    235 N.W.2d 504
    (1975); Town of
    Waukesha v. City of Waukesha, 
    58 Wis. 2d 525
    , 532, 
    206 N.W.2d 585
    (1973).
    15 Justice Rebecca Grassl Bradley's concurrence would sua
    sponte abolish the rule of reason, despite the parties' request
    that the rule remain intact.    Justice Rebecca Grassl Bradley's
    concurrence, ¶51. It is not up to us to make or develop arguments
    on behalf of the parties. See Industrial Risk Insurers v. American
    Eng'g Testing, Inc., 
    2009 WI App 62
    , ¶25, 
    318 Wis. 2d 148
    , 
    769 N.W.2d 82
    ("[W]e will not abandon our neutrality to develop
    arguments."); State v. Pettit, 
    171 Wis. 2d 627
    , 647, 
    492 N.W.2d 633
    (Ct. App. 1992) ("We cannot serve as both advocate and
    judge."); see also Yorgan v. Durkin, 
    2006 WI 60
    , ¶13 n.4, 
    290 Wis. 2d 671
    , 
    715 N.W.2d 160
    ("The proper procedure is to have an
    issue raised, briefed, and argued by the parties before deciding
    it.").
    When asked at oral argument about the value of the rule of
    reason, the City's attorney responded, "the rule of reason protects
    against very, very far out circumstances," and "if we do away with
    the rule of reason there is no check" on such circumstances. The
    City's attorney further commented: "I've thought through this a
    lot . . . I've done municipal law for forty years and I think it
    would be a bad thing to do away with the rule of reason."
    15
    No.    2018AP2162
    constitute     an    abuse    of    discretion.            
    Id. We analyze
          each
    requirement in turn.
    1.      Arbitrariness
    ¶26    The    first    prong    of     the       rule    of    reason      prohibits
    exclusions and irregularities in boundary lines as a result of
    arbitrariness. 
    Id. We have
    long recognized that "[w]here property
    owners initiate direct annexation, we do not think the municipality
    may be charged with arbitrary action in the drawing of the boundary
    lines."      Town     of   
    Lyons, 56 Wis. 2d at 338
    .        The    choice    of
    boundaries is generally within the discretion of the private party
    petitioners.        See Town of Pleasant 
    Prairie, 75 Wis. 2d at 342
    .
    ¶27    However, there are two exceptions when boundary lines
    drawn by private party petitioners may be considered impermissibly
    arbitrary.      The first is when the municipality is the "'real
    controlling influence'" in selecting the boundaries.                               Town of
    Baraboo, 
    283 Wis. 2d 479
    , ¶24 (quoted source omitted).                             In that
    situation, "the municipality may be charged with any arbitrariness
    in   the    boundaries      even    though       the    property      owners      are     the
    petitioners."         Town   of     Lincoln,       
    386 Wis. 2d 354
    ,          ¶15   n.11.
    "'Influencing' the proceedings, in this context, means more than
    providing mere technical assistance or recommendations to the
    petition    signers . . . rather,           it     means      conduct      by    which    the
    annexing     authority      dominates      the     petitioners        so    as    to     have
    effectively selected the boundaries."                    Town of Menasha, 
    170 Wis. 2d
    at 192.          In other words, a court may determine there is
    arbitrariness when the annexing municipality acts as a "'puppeteer
    and the petitioners [are it's] puppets dancing on a municipal
    16
    No.    2018AP2162
    string.'"     Town of Lincoln, 
    386 Wis. 2d 354
    , ¶15 n.11 (quoting
    Town of Waukesha v. City of Waukesha, 
    58 Wis. 2d 525
    , 530, 
    206 N.W.2d 585
    (1973)).
    ¶28    Boundaries   drawn   by    a   private   party   may     also   be
    considered impermissibly arbitrary when the territory subject to
    the proposed annexation is an "exceptional" shape.                 See, e.g.,
    Town of Pleasant 
    Prairie, 75 Wis. 2d at 342
    ("Where the boundaries
    of an otherwise unexceptionable direct annexation are fixed by
    petitioners . . . without the exercise of undue influence by the
    annexing city or village, we see no reason why the petitioners may
    not determine those boundaries so as to insure the annexation's
    success.")(emphasis added); see also Town of Medary v. City of La
    Crosse, 
    88 Wis. 2d 101
    , 115-16, 
    277 N.W.2d 310
    (Ct. App. 1979)
    ("The rule of reason may, however, be applied to invalidate an
    annexation where the annexation may result in 'gerrymandered' or
    'crazy quilt' municipal boundaries, even when the annexation is
    initiated by a private landowner who sets the boundaries."); Town
    of Menasha, 
    170 Wis. 2d
    at 191 & n.3 ("There are some circumstances
    in which the shape of an annexed parcel's boundaries are so
    'irregular'    in   shape,   that      shape   alone——apart        from     any
    consideration of whether the city was acting as a petitioner——can
    serve to invalidate the annexation ordinance.").         Wisconsin courts
    have recognized that "there is authority for the proposition that
    a court may examine the boundaries of an annexation if it has an
    irregular shape even though the boundaries are determined by the
    17
    No.   2018AP2162
    property owners."   Town of Campbell v. City of La Crosse, 2003 WI
    App 247, ¶26, 
    268 Wis. 2d 253
    , 
    673 N.W.2d 696
    .16
    ¶29   However, this second exception is limited to the most
    egregious situations, not mere irregularities in shape, or arm-
    like extensions.    See Town of Baraboo, 
    283 Wis. 2d 479
    , ¶¶22-23
    16 In 1977, this court in Town of Pleasant 
    Prairie, 75 Wis. 2d at 342
    , restated the principle from Mt. Pleasant I that boundaries
    drawn by private party petitioners can be scrutinized for
    arbitrariness, but only where the annexed area is an "exceptional
    shape." Two years later, in Town of Medary v. City of La Crosse,
    
    88 Wis. 2d 101
    , 
    277 N.W.2d 310
    (Ct. App. 1979) and subsequently in
    Town of Menasha v. City of Menasha, 
    170 Wis. 2d 181
    , 
    488 N.W.2d 104
    (Ct. App. 1992), the court of appeals repeated this standard. In
    Town of Campbell, the court of appeals relied upon "the analysis
    in Town of Pleasant Prairie" to conclude that the general shape of
    an annexation was not open to challenge in an owner-initiated
    annexation. Town of Campbell v. City of La Crosse, 
    2003 WI App 247
    , ¶¶26-27, 
    268 Wis. 2d 253
    , 
    673 N.W.2d 696
    . However, as noted
    above, Town of Pleasant Prairie allows for such scrutiny where the
    annexed area is an "exceptional shape."
    In subsequent cases, the court of appeals analyzed the shape
    of the boundaries drawn by a private party, while also continuing
    to call on this court to clarify the exception, see, e.g., Town of
    Baraboo v. Village of West Baraboo, 
    2005 WI App 96
    , ¶23 & n.5, 
    283 Wis. 2d 479
    , 
    699 N.W.2d 610
    (calling on the court to clarify this
    issue, yet concluding the shape of the annexation was not "of a
    kind that removes it from the 'general rule' that owner-petitioned
    annexations should not be invalidated under the first component of
    the rule of reason" because "[i]t is not a shoestring or balloon
    on a stick annexation whereby the Village has relied solely on
    highway right-of-way to 'capture' a distant prized parcel . . .");
    see also Town of Lincoln v. City of Whitehall, 
    2018 WI App 33
    , ¶39
    n.7, 
    382 Wis. 2d 112
    , 
    912 N.W.2d 403
    (reversed and remanded on
    other grounds) ("[W]e renew our call for the supreme court to
    clarify the law in this area.").
    We now answer the court of appeals' numerous calls for
    clarification and reiterate      that private party initiated
    annexations that are an "exceptional" shape may be reviewed by a
    court under the first prong of the rule of reason.
    18
    No.   2018AP2162
    (reasoning that "although it produces an arm-like extension of the
    northern municipal boundary . . . [it] does not violate the first
    component of the rule of reason"); see also Town of 
    Medary, 88 Wis. 2d at 117
    ("While the shape of the annexation is somewhat
    irregular, the irregularity is partly necessitated because of the
    irregularity of the La Crosse city limits along the joint boundary
    of   the    city . . . [this]   is   not   the   extreme   crazy-quilt   or
    shoestring annexation disapproved in Mt. Pleasant.")
    ¶30    In this case, as to the first exception, the circuit
    court found that "[t]here is absolutely no evidence in the record
    supporting any claim that the City selected the boundaries for the
    Kohler annexation."     Instead, the record shows that Kohler alone
    selected the territory to be included in the Petition, prepared
    the annexation map, and drew the boundary lines. The circuit court
    found that "the City had no input or involvement whatsoever in
    determining the boundaries for the annexation."17             The circuit
    court's factual findings regarding the lack of proof are sufficient
    and legally support the conclusion that the City did not act as a
    "controlling influence" that orchestrated the annexation.
    ¶31    As to the second exception, this annexation is not an
    exceptional shape.     The boundaries in this case are not the type
    The Town asserts that the City's involvement in presenting
    17
    Kohler's annexation proposal to the Common Council and in preparing
    a pre-annexation agreement equates to influence or control. We
    agree with the circuit court that the City merely provided
    technical assistance which does not rise to the level of
    "dominat[ing] the petitioners so as to have effectively selected
    the boundaries." Town of Menasha, 
    170 Wis. 2d
    at 192.
    19
    No.    2018AP2162
    of   exceptional   "gerrymandered"    or   "crazy   quilt"    boundaries
    disapproved of in Mt. Pleasant I.          See Town of Baraboo, 
    283 Wis. 2d 479
    , ¶¶22-23 (distinguishing the annexation at issue from
    a "shoestring" or "balloon on a stick" annexation whereby the
    Village sought to "'capture' a distant prized parcel").              The
    territory is 1,450 feet wide at certain points, which is almost
    five times the widest dimension in the Mt. Pleasant I annexation.
    Additionally, the configuration is also far more substantial in
    its dimensions than the isolated rural area that was connected by
    a technical strip in Mt. Pleasant I.       We agree with the circuit
    court that "[t]he overall shape and appearance of the Kohler
    annexation is [] not so arbitrary or unreasonable that it can or
    should be invalidated."
    ¶32    Based on the circuit court's findings of fact, which are
    supported by ample evidence, we conclude that the boundary lines
    are not impermissibly arbitrary under the first prong of the rule
    of reason.
    2.     Reasonable Present or Future Demonstrable Need
    ¶33    Under the second prong of the rule of reason, we assess
    whether there is "some reasonable present or demonstrable future
    need for the annexed territory."       Town of Pleasant 
    Prairie, 75 Wis. 2d at 334
    .     "To sustain the validity of an annexation the
    annexing municipality need not have a pressing, imperative need
    for the territory.      A showing of a reasonable need for the
    20
    No.   2018AP2162
    annexation will be sufficient to sustain annexation."                        
    Id. at 335.18
    ¶34      This court has considered a number of factors when
    determining the needs of the annexing municipality including:
    "'(1)     A   substantial    increase      in    population;   (2)     a   need   for
    additional area for construction of homes . . . ; (3) a need for
    additional land area to accommodate the present or reasonably
    anticipated      future     growth    of   the    municipality; . . . (4)         the
    extension of police, fire, sanitary protection or other municipal
    services . . . .'"        Town of Sugar Creek v. City of Elkhorn, 
    231 Wis. 2d 473
    , 482, 
    605 N.W.2d 274
    (Ct. App. 1999) (quoting Town of
    
    Lafayette, 70 Wis. 2d at 626
    ); see also Town of Pleasant 
    Prairie, 75 Wis. 2d at 335-36
    .          This list is not exhaustive as there are
    other factors which courts may deem relevant depending upon the
    particular facts of each case.
    ¶35      When the petition is initiated by a private party, as in
    the instant case, the court must also consider the petitioner's
    desire to be located in a particular municipality.                   Town of Sugar
    
    Creek, 231 Wis. 2d at 483
    .           We have consistently given great weight
    to the desire of property owners to seek annexation in pursuit of
    18A court's assessment of whether there is a reasonable need
    for the annexation is not an independent evaluation of the best
    interest of the parties. Town of Lyons v. City of Lake Geneva, 
    56 Wis. 2d 331
    , 338, 
    202 N.W.2d 228
    (1972); see also Town of 
    Medary, 88 Wis. 2d at 122-23
    (reasoning that a municipality "is in no
    position to negotiate or pick and choose" when a petition is
    presented because the statute "does not make any provision for a
    city to annex only that portion of territory . . . for which it
    has a need. It must annex all of the territory or none of it.").
    21
    No.   2018AP2162
    their own perceived best interests.          See Town of Pleasant 
    Prairie, 75 Wis. 2d at 329
    ; see also Town of 
    Waukesha, 58 Wis. 2d at 533
    (reasoning that the wishes of a private party petitioning for
    annexation "are relevant as well as the need of the municipality
    to annex"); Town of Campbell, 
    268 Wis. 2d 253
    , ¶31 (observing that
    in past decisions we have "consider[ed] the needs of the annexed
    territory along with the needs of the annexing municipality in
    concluding that the need component is met").                  When considering a
    property owner's desire to annex property, we incorporate other
    factors like "the applicable zoning ordinances, development goals,
    and available services into its determination of need."                  Town of
    
    Delavan, 176 Wis. 2d at 539
    .
    ¶36    The circuit court made detailed findings in its written
    decision    regarding    the   City's      need   and    Kohler's    desire    for
    annexation.    In determining whether the City showed a present or
    demonstrable future need for the annexed territory, the circuit
    court observed that "[t]he most obvious example is in the expansion
    of residential housing . . . .          Annexation further provides the
    City with the ability to achieve its long term economic planning
    and goals."    See Town of 
    Lyons, 56 Wis. 2d at 338
    (recognizing a
    city's reasonable need for land which could be zoned residential).
    The City had planned for years to develop and expand and Kohler's
    proposal provided the opportunity to do so. See Town of 
    Waukechon, 53 Wis. 2d at 599
    (recognizing that "the city has a comprehensive
    city plan which calls for residential development to the south of
    the city").     Therefore, the circuit court concluded that the
    "City's    desire   to   effect   a   reasonable        and   orderly   plan   for
    22
    No.    2018AP2162
    municipal expansion, development and economic growth satisfy the
    need requirement under the rule of reason."
    ¶37 The circuit court also detailed the reasons Kohler wanted
    its property to be annexed to the City:              to overcome the Town
    Board's opposition to the intended golf course development and to
    assure that the golf course would receive a sufficient source of
    water.       The circuit court described Kohler's predicament with the
    Town as follows:      "the Town Board members historically opposed the
    golf    course    development   . . .    [and]   . . . Kohler      reasonably
    believed that [the Town Board] would not take a different approach
    when it came time to . . . vote on Kohler's application for a
    conditional use permit."
    ¶38    The circuit court further weighed Kohler's concern that
    the Town is incapable of providing water for the golf course
    development.      Kohler had determined that it would benefit from the
    availability of the City's municipal water source because it
    "ensured that there would be sufficient water available" for all
    of the buildings constructed in conjunction with the golf course.
    The availability of municipal water for the City's full-time fire
    department       additionally   "provided   Kohler    with    better     fire
    protection . . . than the Town's volunteer fire department."              The
    circuit court's factual findings on the City's needs and Kohler's
    desires for the annexation are amply supported by the evidence and
    therefore we conclude that the second prong of the rule of reason
    is satisfied.
    3.    Other Factors That Constitute an Abuse of Discretion
    23
    No.      2018AP2162
    ¶39       Finally, we consider whether there are other factors
    that would constitute an abuse of discretion under the third prong
    of the rule of reason.             Town of Pleasant 
    Prairie, 75 Wis. 2d at 327
    . Under this prong, we "consider evidence that the municipality
    abused its discretion for reasons other than those considered under
    the first two components."             Town of Campbell, 
    268 Wis. 2d 253
    ,
    ¶37.
    ¶40       The Town asserts that the City abused its discretion by
    simply rubber-stamping the annexation and agreeing to support the
    golf course development "simply to get more money."                 The circuit
    court found, however, that "none of the facts or reasons given by
    the Town show the City abused its discretion in enacting the
    ordinance.         Initially, many of the alleged 'bad acts' which the
    Town identifies are taken out of context and unsupported by the
    factual         record."19   The    record    includes   evidence   of    lengthy
    Some of these "facts" considered by the circuit court
    19
    include:
        Sheboygan's employees began lobbying for this golf
    course development even before it knew what other
    properties would be included in the annexation
    (i.e., support the golf course regardless of any
    other issues or needs);
        Sheboygan allowed Kohler to write and even dictate
    the advocacy position for the golf course, both to
    its officials and the DOA;
        Sheboygan knew this plan was "controversial" and
    could not be supported by references to its
    Comprehensive Plan, and asked Kohler to provide
    justifications for it;
        Sheboygan had no concern about ripping this land
    use conditional use permit decision away from the
    24
    No.    2018AP2162
    deliberations by City officials regarding the annexation, which
    supports     the      circuit     court's          finding        that         "City
    officials . . . conducted a thorough analysis of the petition
    before recommending it to the Common Council for adoption."                      The
    City's actions were aimed at effectuating the annexation requested
    by Kohler and were consistent with Kohler's expressed desire to
    develop its land into a world championship golf course.                          See
    Sanitary Dist. No. 4-Town of Brookfield v. City of Brookfield,
    
    2009 WI App 47
    , ¶21, 
    317 Wis. 2d 532
    , 
    767 N.W.2d 316
    ("The City's
    actions . . . were always consistent with, and in furtherance of,
    the   property   owner's    expressed    desire.      The    property      owners
    initiated the annexation proceeding and were assisted by the City
    to accomplish that intent.").           The circuit court's findings of
    fact are amply supported by the evidence and therefore we conclude
    that the Town failed to demonstrate any abuse of discretion under
    the third prong of the rule of reason.               We conclude that the
    annexation satisfies all three prongs of the rule of reason.
    C.   Signature Requirement
    ¶41   The Town asserts that because the territory included a
    large amount of state and city-owned land with no assessed value,
    the   Petition     failed   to   afford     property     owners         with    the
    representative power to veto a proposed annexation as intended by
    Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(3)(a)1.
    Town and    residents   that     surround       the    subject
    parcel.
    25
    No.     2018AP2162
    ¶42   Wisconsin Stat. § 66.0217(3)(a)1. provides, in relevant
    part:
    (a) Direct annexation by one-half approval. A petition
    for direct annexation may be filed with the city or
    village clerk if it has been signed by either of the
    following:
    1. A number of qualified electors residing in the
    territory subject to the proposed annexation equal
    to at least the majority of votes cast for governor
    in the territory at the last gubernatorial
    election, and either of the following:
    a. The owners of one-half of the land in area
    within the territory.
    b. The owners of one-half of the real property
    in assessed value20 within the territory.
    (Emphasis added.)
    ¶43   The    Town   acknowledges     that,   pursuant   to     Wis.    Stat.
    § 66.0217(3)(a)1.b., non-assessed state and city-owned parcels of
    land are excluded in calculating the amount of signatures required
    to approve annexation.         The Town concedes that the Petition
    included signatures for over one-half of the owners of real
    property in assessed value within the territory, and thus comports
    with the plain language of § 66.0217(3)(a)1.b.           See State ex rel.
    Kalal v. Circuit Court for Dane Cty., 
    2004 WI 58
    , ¶45, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    ,     
    681 N.W.2d 110
      ("[W]e   have   repeatedly       held    that
    statutory interpretation 'begins with the language of the statute.
    20"Assessed value," as defined by Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(1)(a),
    is "the value for general tax purposes as shown on the tax roll
    for the year next preceding the filing of any petition for
    annexation."
    26
    No.    2018AP2162
    If the meaning of the statute is plain, we ordinarily stop the
    inquiry.'" (quoted source omitted)).
    ¶44   The Town asserts, however, that the City circumvented
    the intent of Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(3)(a)1. when it failed to
    include hundreds of acres of non-assessed state and city-owned
    property to determine the signature requirement.                The Town argues
    that where the proposed annexation includes a large amount of non-
    assessed land, as in the instant case, the petitioner should be
    forced to calculate the number of signatures needed by units of
    acreage pursuant to § 66.0217(3)(a)1.a.               According to the Town,
    the   omission      of   State-owned     parcels      from    the     calculation
    "artificially weighs against the rights of those representing the
    petitioned    territory     to   voice      their    choice    for    or     against
    initiation of annexation proceeding."               The Town admits that this
    is a "new, novel, issue of law" but argues that the omission of
    the state and city-owned land otherwise defeats the purpose of
    § 66.0217(3).
    ¶45   The Town's argument that a petitioner should be required
    to use one method of calculation over another is a policy argument
    and has no support in the statutory language.                 See Flynn v. DOA,
    
    216 Wis. 2d 521
    , 529, 
    576 N.W.2d 245
    (1998) ("It is for the
    legislature to make policy choices, ours to judge them based not
    on our preference but on legal principles . . . .").                          It is
    undisputed that the Petition included the signatures of the owners
    of 91 percent of the territory measured by assessed value, thus
    complying    with    the   requirements       set     forth    in     Wis.    Stat.
    27
    No.    2018AP2162
    § 66.0217(3)(a)1.a.          We   therefore       conclude    that    the    Petition
    complied with § 66.0217(3)(a)1.
    D.     Population Certification Requirement
    ¶46    Finally, the Town asserts that the Petition failed to
    certify    the    population      count   in     accordance    with    Wis.     Stat.
    § 66.0217(5)(a), which provides:
    The petition shall also specify the population of the
    territory. In this paragraph, "population" means the
    population of the territory as shown by the last federal
    census, by any subsequent population estimate certified
    as acceptable by the department or by an actual count
    certified as acceptable by the department.
    (Emphasis added.)
    ¶47    At the circuit court, the Town asserted that DOA failed
    to issue a certification of Kohler's population count, "either by
    written affirmation or otherwise."               The circuit court granted the
    City's partial summary judgment motion on the issue, concluding
    that the "undisputed facts in the present case demonstrate that
    Kohler's petition complied with the population requirement in Wis.
    Stat. § 66.0217(5)(a)."           The circuit court relied in part on two
    affidavits submitted by DOA employee Erich Schmidtke.                       Schmidtke
    conducted the review of the Petition and averred that by accepting
    the petition for a public interest review, DOA "certified" or
    confirmed that the Petition satisfied this requirement.
    ¶48    Schmidtke explained that when there is no federal census
    information, DOA employs a multi-step process to "certify as
    acceptable"       the    population       estimate     or     actual       population
    incorporated within a petition.                This process includes obtaining
    population information from (1) the annexation petition; (2) the
    28
    No.   2018AP2162
    "Request for Annexation Review" form; and (3) an "Annexation Review
    Questionnaire" that the annexing city or village and the annexee
    town file with DOA.     Schmidtke stated that he relied on population
    information in the Request for Annexation Review form and the
    petition document,21 and noted that the City and Town also included
    population information in their Annexation Review Questionnaires.
    After "finding that the population requirement . . . was complied
    with, the Department accepted the petition for its review."            Based
    on Schmidtke's averments, the circuit court found that Schmidtke
    "completed the 'process' in which the DOA engages in order to
    certify    as   'acceptable'   the   population   specified    in   Kohler's
    petition."
    ¶49    As determined by the circuit court, the Town failed to
    raise a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether DOA
    "certified as acceptable" the population in the Petition based on
    its review.      As the circuit court correctly noted, Wis. Stat.
    § 66.0217(5)(a) does not explicitly require DOA to engage in any
    formal, specific process or to audit the population information in
    order to certify a population estimate or actual population count.
    Since it remains undisputed that Schmidtke, on behalf of DOA,
    reviewed the population in the Petition and averred that he
    21In his affidavits, Schmidtke stated that he reviewed the
    Petition for population information; however, it appears that DOA
    never received a copy of the Petition. The Town is correct that
    DOA received only the Notice of Intention to Circulate an
    Annexation Petition, the Request for Annexation Review, and the
    Annexation Review Questionnaire.
    29
    No.   2018AP2162
    certified it as acceptable, we uphold the circuit court's grant of
    partial summary judgment on this issue.
    IV.   CONCLUSION
    ¶50   We conclude that the annexation meets the statutory
    contiguity requirement in Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(3) and satisfies
    the rule of reason. We further conclude that the Petition complied
    with the signature and certification requirements set forth in
    §§ 66.0217(3) and (5)(a).    Therefore, we affirm the circuit court.
    By the Court.—The decision of the circuit court is affirmed.
    30
    No.   2018AP2162
    1
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    ¶51    REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J.       (concurring).       I agree with
    the majority that the annexation of Kohler's land to the City of
    Sheboygan    satisfies    the   contiguity   requirement    of    Wis.   Stat.
    § 66.0217(3) (2017-18).1        I also agree the annexation petition
    complied     with   the    signature     requirement   of        Wis.    Stat.
    § 66.0217(3)(a)1 and the Department "certified as acceptable" the
    population specified in the petition as required under Wis. Stat.
    § 66.0217(5)(a) (2017-18).2       I write separately, however, because
    the majority perpetuates the "rule of reason," a judicially created
    doctrine not found in the statutory text.3         I would overturn Town
    of Mt. Pleasant v. City of Racine4 ("Mt. Pleasant I")——the case
    1 All subsequent references to Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(3) are to
    the 2017-18 version unless otherwise indicated.
    2   I join parts I, III.C, and III.D of the majority opinion.
    3 See, e.g., Town of Fond du Lac v. City of Fond du Lac, 
    22 Wis. 2d 533
    , 541, 
    126 N.W.2d 201
    (1964) (discussing the origin of
    the principle in cases); Richard W. Cutler, Characteristics of
    Land Required for Incorporation or Expansion of a Municipality,
    
    1958 Wis. L
    . Rev. 6, 27–29 (1958) (crediting the rule of reason's
    origin to a 1957 Wisconsin Supreme Court case); Clayton P.
    Gillette, Expropriation and Institutional Design in State and
    Local Government Law, 
    80 Va. L
    . Rev. 625, 681 (1994) (discussing
    Mt. Pleasant I and referring to the "judicially created 'rule of
    reason'"); Stephen L. Knowles, Comment, The Rule of Reason in
    Wisconsin Annexations, 
    1972 Wis. L
    . Rev. 1125, 1146 (1972) (calling
    the rule of reason a "judicial doctrine"); Walter K. Johnson, The
    Wisconsin Experience with State-Level Review of Municipal
    Incorporations, Consolidations, and Annexations, 
    1965 Wis. L
    . Rev.
    462, 474 (1965) (referring to it as the "judicially created 'rule
    of reason'"); Robert D. Zeinemann, Overlooked Linkages Between
    Municipal Incorporation and Annexation Laws: An In-Depth Look at
    Wisconsin's Experience, 39 Urb. Law. 257, 285 (2007) (describing
    the rule of reason as "made by the courts"); majority op., ¶24
    ("The rule of reason is a 'judicially created doctrine[.]'").
    4 Town of Mt. Pleasant v. City of Racine ("Mt. Pleasant I"),
    
    24 Wis. 2d 41
    , 
    127 N.W.2d 757
    (1964).
    1
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    responsible for grafting the rule of reason onto the statutory
    contiguity requirement for annexation——and abolish the rule of
    reason because the judiciary invaded the exclusive authority of
    the legislature by rewriting the annexation statute to its liking.
    It is "the province and duty of the judicial department to say
    what the law is[,]" and not what we think it should be.                      Marbury
    v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137, 177 (1803).                  The legislature
    conditioned annexations on contiguity, procedural requirements,
    and nothing more.      This court lacks any authority to modify, tweak
    or supplement the legislature's work.
    I
    ¶52   Continuing to apply a judicial doctrine so consistently
    criticized for confusing judges and litigants alike in its meaning
    and application intractably ensconces in our jurisprudence even
    those cases widely recognized to be wrongly decided.                          "While
    adhering     to    precedent   is   an    important     doctrine      for    lending
    stability to the law, not every decision deserves stare decisis
    effect.      After all, the purpose of stare decisis 'is to make us
    say that what is false under proper analysis must nonetheless be
    held to be true, all in the interest of stability.'"                        State v.
    Grandberry, 
    2018 WI 29
    , ¶86, 
    380 Wis. 2d 541
    , 
    910 N.W.2d 214
    (Rebecca Grassl Bradley, J., dissenting) (quoting Antonin Scalia,
    A Matter of Interpretation:              Federal Courts and the Law 138-40
    (1997)).       Besides   eternalizing         bad    law,   sustaining      judicial
    rewriting     of    statutes   sanctions       judicial     usurpation       of   the
    legislative       function.      "Reflexively        cloaking   every       judicial
    opinion with the adornment of stare decisis threatens the rule of
    law,    particularly      when      applied     to     interpretations        wholly
    2
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    unsupported by the statute's text."                   Manitowoc Co., Inc.        v.
    Lanning, 
    2018 WI 6
    , ¶81 n.5, 
    379 Wis. 2d 189
    , 
    906 N.W.2d 130
    (Rebecca Grassl Bradley, J., concurring).
    ¶53    This court has long recognized that multiple factors
    warrant jettisoning wrongly decided precedent:
    (1) Changes or developments in the law have undermined
    the rationale behind a decision; (2) there is a need to
    make a decision correspond to newly ascertained facts;
    (3) there is a showing that the precedent has become
    detrimental to coherence and consistency in the law; (4)
    the prior decision is "unsound in principle;" or (5) the
    prior decision is "unworkable in practice."
    Bartholomew v. Wis. Patients Comp. Fund & Compcare Health Ins.
    Corp., 
    2006 WI 91
    , ¶33, 
    293 Wis. 2d 38
    , 
    717 N.W.2d 216
    (footnote
    omitted).      "The principle of stare decisis does not compel us to
    adhere to erroneous precedents or refuse to correct our own
    mistakes."     State v. Outagamie Cty. Bd. of Adjustment, 
    2001 WI 78
    ,
    ¶31, 
    244 Wis. 2d 613
    , 
    628 N.W.2d 376
    .                In determining whether to
    uphold a prior case's statutory interpretation, "[i]t is well to
    keep in mind just how thoroughly [an earlier decision] rewrote the
    statute it purported to construe."             Johnson v. Transp. Agency, 
    480 U.S. 616
    , 670 (1987) (Scalia, J., dissenting).                  In adopting the
    rule of reason, Mt. Pleasant I transformed a single word into a
    thorny three-part test requiring judges to inject their subjective
    whim   into    the   analysis    rather       than   applying   their    objective
    judgment.
    ¶54    The first two prongs of the rule ask whether boundaries
    are    "arbitrar[y],"    or     there   is     a   "reasonable"   need    for   the
    property.      See Town of Lafayette v. City of Chippewa Falls, 
    70 Wis. 2d 610
    , 625, 
    235 N.W.2d 435
    (1975).              Drawing the line between
    3
    No.    2018AP2162.rgb
    what    is     rational    or    arbitrary,         and   what    is     reasonable      or
    unreasonable, inherently depends on the subjective beliefs of a
    reviewing judge.          It is no wonder why, almost 70 years after the
    creation of the doctrine, nobody knows how it applies or what it
    prohibits.         Regrettably but not surprisingly, the doctrine has
    spawned decades of cases from which no decipherable principle of
    law may be discerned.           See Stephen L. Knowles, Comment, The Rule
    of Reason in Wisconsin Annexations, 
    1972 Wis. L
    . Rev. 1125, 1140
    (1972) ("[The rule of reason's] use leads to confusion and invites
    litigation."); Robert D. Zeinemann, Overlooked Linkages Between
    Municipal Incorporation and Annexation Laws:                     An In-Depth Look at
    Wisconsin's Experience, 39 Urb. Law. 257, 315-16 (2007) (stating
    that today's rule of reason "is a confusing set of ad hoc and
    oftentimes conflicting opinions" and its jurisprudence is akin to
    "muddy waters").
    ¶55     When revisiting a judicial opinion like Mt. Pleasant I,
    which overrode the policy choices of the people's representatives
    in favor of the court's preferences, "courts of last resort are
    duty-bound to correct the prior court's error."                         Manitowoc Co.,
    Inc.,    
    379 Wis. 2d 189
    ,    ¶81   n.5     (Rebecca     Grassl          Bradley,   J.,
    concurring); see also Gamble v. United States, 
    139 S. Ct. 1960
    ,
    1989 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring) ("[W]e should not invoke stare
    decisis to uphold precedents that are demonstrably erroneous.").
    As the court recently recognized, "[w]e do more damage to the rule
    of     law   by     obstinately     refusing         to   admit    errors,         thereby
    perpetuating        injustice,      than       by     overturning        an      erroneous
    decision."        State v. Roberson, 
    2019 WI 102
    , ¶49, 
    389 Wis. 2d 190
    ,
    
    935 N.W.2d 813
    (quoting Johnson Controls, Inc. v. Emp'rs Ins. of
    4
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    Wausau, 
    2003 WI 108
    , ¶100, 
    264 Wis. 2d 60
    , 
    665 N.W.2d 257
    ).                "If
    the precedent is bad, let it be overruled by all means, or let the
    legislature regulate the matter by statute."           Francis Lieber, On
    Civil Liberty and Self-Government 211 (Theodore D. Woolsey ed., 3d
    ed. 1883).     With respect to      annexation, the legislature            had
    regulated the matter by statute but that didn't stop the judiciary
    from stepping in to tamper with the legislature's policy choices
    in order to advance its own.             This court should disavow its
    decades-old    interference   with       the    legislature's       exclusive
    prerogative to write laws.
    II
    ¶56   In Mt. Pleasant I, the court purported to address whether
    the annexation by the City of Racine of property located in the
    Town of Mt. Pleasant "was void because the area proposed to be
    annexed [was] not contiguous to the city of Racine within the
    requirements of sec. 66.021(2)(a)[.]"            Town of Mt. Pleasant v.
    City of Racine, 
    24 Wis. 2d 41
    , 45, 
    127 N.W.2d 757
    (1964).                  The
    land at issue in Mt. Pleasant I was 145 acres total, including a
    corridor roughly "1,705 feet long, and varying in width from
    approximately 306 feet to 152 feet."           
    Id. at 43.
       At the end of
    this corridor, 153 feet of the annexed area touched the City of
    Racine.    
    Id. at 44.
      On appeal, the court considered whether the
    proposed   annexation   satisfied       the    statutory    requirement     of
    contiguity.   
    Id. at 45.
      At the time of Mt. Pleasant I, Wis. Stat.
    § 66.021(2)(a) (1961-62)5 contained one substantive requirement
    5 All subsequent references to Wis. Stat. § 66.021(2) are to
    the 1961-62 version unless otherwise noted.
    5
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    for annexation:          contiguity.6        The statutory provision at issue
    between the parties in this case retains this sole substantive
    requirement.7
    ¶57       The Mt. Pleasant I majority neglected to analyze the
    statutory meaning of "contiguous," a deficit to which the majority
    in   this       case   alludes   but   nevertheless          declines     to   rectify.
    Majority        op.,   ¶20.      Instead      of     developing     the   meaning     of
    "contiguous" under the annexation statute, the majority elects to
    distinguish the annexed territory in Mt. Pleasant I from the
    annexed property in this case, based upon the "significant degree
    of physical contact between the properties."                      Majority op., ¶22
    (citation omitted). I agree with the majority's conclusion; giving
    the word its plain meaning, Kohler's property is "contiguous" to
    the City of Sheboygan.            See Contiguous, Black's Law Dictionary
    (11th     ed.    2019)   ("Touching     at       a   point   or   along   a    boundary;
    ADJOINING").
    6   In 1964 the statute provided:
    Methods of annexation. Territory contiguous to any city
    or village may be annexed thereto in the following ways:
    (a)Direct Annexation. . . .
    Wis. Stat. § 66.021(2) (emphasis added).
    7   Wisconsin Stat. § 66.0217(3) provides:
    Other   methods  of   annexation.      Subject  to   ss.
    66.0301(6)(d) and 66.0307(7), and except as provided in
    sub. (14), territory contiguous to a city or village may
    be annexed to the city or village in the following
    ways:
    (a)Direct annexation by one-half approval. . . .
    (emphasis added).
    6
    No.       2018AP2162.rgb
    ¶58     In    this     case,    the    majority     acknowledges            "[t]he     Mt.
    Pleasant I court focused its discussion of contiguity on the
    validity of 'corridor' or 'strip' annexations," which Mt. Pleasant
    I described as "isolated areas connected by means of a technical
    strip a few feet wide."            Mt. Pleasant 
    I, 24 Wis. 2d at 46
    ; majority
    op., ¶20.          Somewhat ironically, Mt. Pleasant I's concern over
    shoestring or gerrymander annexations was completely untethered to
    the statutory contiguity requirement.                   In lieu of ascertaining the
    meaning of "contiguous" under the annexation statute, that court
    supplanted the statutory language altogether in favor of the
    judicially-invented           "test     of    reason."          Mt.    Pleasant        
    I, 24 Wis. 2d at 45
    –46.      While        the    legislature        imposed        but     one
    substantive         requirement——contiguity——the                judiciary           fashioned
    three components on which it would condition its approval of an
    annexation:        "(1) Exclusions and irregularities in boundary lines
    must not be the result of arbitrariness; (2) some reasonable
    present or demonstrable future need for the annexed property must
    be   shown;    and     (3)    no     other    factors     must    exist      which         would
    constitute     an     abuse    of     discretion."         Town       of    
    Lafayette, 70 Wis. 2d at 625
    (footnote omitted).                       By inquiring whether the
    boundary lines were "reasonable in the sense that they were not
    fixed arbitrarily, capriciously, or in the abuse of discretion[,]"
    the Mt. Pleasant I court abandoned the statutory text altogether,
    instead       proclaiming            that     "[s]hoestring            or        gerrymander
    annexation[s]" do not coincide with legislative "intent" as the
    court somehow divined it.                   Mt. Pleasant 
    I, 24 Wis. 2d at 46
    .
    Without any pretense of ascertaining the meaning of "contiguous"
    under   the    annexation          statute,       the   court   held,       in    conclusory
    7
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    fashion, that under the extra-textual "rule of reason . . . the
    annexation of the area in question does not meet the statutory
    requirement of contiguity."          
    Id. at 47.
    ¶59   Mt. Pleasant I's determination that the boundary lines
    of the proposed annexation were not "reasonable," i.e., were "fixed
    arbitrarily, capriciously, or in the abuse of discretion[,]" has
    no bearing on whether annexed property is contiguous.                       Boundary
    lines    could     be     "fixed   arbitrarily"         and    unreasonable,      and
    nevertheless be "contiguous" under the annexation statute.                    Rather
    than    applying    the    sole    criterion      for   a     lawful    annexation——
    contiguity——the         Mt.    Pleasant       I   court       instead     introduced
    considerations it found pertinent under its policy predilections,
    but were in fact extraneous to the statutory language.                       See Mt.
    Pleasant 
    I, 24 Wis. 2d at 47
    (Wilkie, J., dissenting) (citing
    § 66.021(2)) ("The majority has engrafted onto the statute the
    additional requirement that a proposed annexation is subject to
    review under the 'rule of reason' to determine whether the proposed
    boundary lines are 'reasonable in the sense that they were not
    fixed arbitrarily, capriciously, or in abuse of discretion.'"
    (footnote omitted)).          In doing so, the court crossed the judicial
    boundary of declaring what the law says and intruded on the
    legislature's prerogative to proclaim what the law should be.
    ¶60   Grounded in the premise that judges know better than the
    people's representatives, the rule of reason displays judicial
    arrogance at its worst.            See Clayton P. Gillette, Expropriation
    and Institutional Design in State and Local Government Law, 
    80 Va. L
    . Rev. 625, 681–82 (1994) (noting that implicit in Mt. Pleasant
    I's rationale is "that judicial intervention could provide a more
    8
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    accurate decision about the propriety of particular annexations");
    Laurie Reynolds, Rethinking Municipal Annexation Powers, 24 Urb.
    Law. 247, 295 n.185 (1992) ("The . . . rule of reason . . . allows
    wide-ranging judicial inquiry to evaluate the policy decisions
    behind the municipality's annexation."             (citation omitted)).        The
    rule of reason represents a relic of a by-gone era, reflecting the
    long-discredited notion that it was the duty of jurists to "do
    justice."8
    ¶61     Mt.   Pleasant   I   also       violated   a   cardinal   canon   of
    statutory interpretation by adding words (and a lot of them) to
    the statutory text.       "Under the omitted-case canon of statutory
    interpretation, '[n]othing is to be added to what the text states
    or reasonably implies (casus omissus pro omisso habendus est).
    That is, a matter not covered is to be treated as not covered.'"
    Enbridge Energy Co., Inc. v. Dane Cty., 
    2019 WI 78
    , ¶23, 
    387 Wis. 2d 687
    , 
    929 N.W.2d 572
    (quoting State ex. rel. Lopez-Quintero
    v. Dittman, 
    2019 WI 58
    , ¶18, 
    387 Wis. 2d 50
    , 
    928 N.W.2d 480
    ); see
    also Wisconsin Ass'n of State Prosecutors v. WERC, 
    2018 WI 17
    ,
    ¶45, 
    380 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    907 N.W.2d 425
    ("Nothing is to be added to
    what the text states or reasonably implies[.]"                (quoting Antonin
    Scalia & Brian Garner, Reading Law:              The Interpretation of Legal
    Texts 93 (2012))); Dawson v. Town of Jackson, 
    2011 WI 77
    , ¶42, 
    336 Wis. 2d 318
    , 
    801 N.W.2d 316
    ("We decline to read into the statute
    8 Reportedly, Judge Learned Hand once implored Justice Oliver
    Wendell Holmes to "Do Justice!" As the story goes, Justice Holmes
    responded, "That is not my job.      My job is to play the game
    according to the rules."      See Michael Herz, "Do Justice!":
    Variations of a Thrice-Told Tale, 
    82 Va. L
    . Rev. 111, 111 (1996)
    (citing Learned Hand, A Personal Confession, in The Spirit of
    Liberty 302, 306–07 (Irving Dilliard ed., 3d ed. 1960)).
    9
    No.    2018AP2162.rgb
    words the legislature did not see fit to write."                            (citation
    omitted)).
    ¶62   The majority in this case does not attempt to dispute
    the   existence       of   statutory    contiguity     (under         its    "common,
    ordinary, and accepted meaning")9 in Mt. Pleasant I, nor can it
    identify any language in Wis. Stat. § 66.021(2) even impliedly
    suggesting that the annexation must satisfy the rule of reason,
    nor can it connect the plain meaning of "contiguous" to any element
    of the rule of reason.          See § 66.021(2); majority op., ¶¶20-22
    (discussing      Mt. Pleasant I's 153 foot border, which the Mt.
    Pleasant court held insufficient to meet the statutory contiguity
    requirement, while acknowledging the persuasive authority on which
    it relied set the line at 100 feet).                At least the majority in
    this case acknowledges "that when the Mt. Pleasant I court stated
    that it relied upon 'application thereto of the rule of reason' to
    reach its conclusion regarding statutory contiguity . . . , it
    blurred the statutory contiguity and rule of reason analyses."
    Majority op., ¶23.         The majority also concedes that Mt. Pleasant
    I   did   not   actually    interpret     the   statute     but    instead     added
    additional hurdles proposed annexations must satisfy in order to
    survive judicial scrutiny:           "contiguity is a legislative mandate
    discrete from the first prong of the judicially created rule of
    reason[.]"      
    Id. ¶63 Just
    like its predecessor statute in 1964, Wis. Stat.
    § 66.0217(3)     requires     only     contiguity    for    annexations.          See
    § 66.0217(3).     Preventing         "[s]hoestring         or     gerrymander[ed]
    9State ex rel. Kalal v. Circuit Court for Dane Cty., 
    2004 WI 58
    , ¶45, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 110
    .
    10
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    annexations" is a policy matter for the Wisconsin Legislature to
    adopt, not this court.          Mt. Pleasant I blatantly disregarded the
    text of the annexation statute, remade the law to its liking, and
    should be overruled as both "unsound in principle" and "wrongly
    decided."    In this case, I would rely on the plain meaning of the
    annexation statute and consider only whether Kohler's property is
    contiguous to the City of Sheboygan——that is, "[t]ouching at a
    point or along a boundary; ADJOINING"; "neighbouring, in close
    proximity[]"; "touching, in contact; adjoining."                  Contiguous,
    Black's Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019); Contiguous, Oxford English
    Dictionary (6th ed. 1993).         It is.    The analysis ends there.
    III
    ¶64    The   "rule    of   reason"    does   not   enjoy   the    longevity
    suggested by the majority.         In a passing reference, the majority
    cites Smith v. Sherry, 
    50 Wis. 210
    , 
    6 N.W. 561
    (1880), as the
    rule's foundation.        See majority op., ¶24.        Not so.       In Town of
    Fond du Lac v. City of Fond du Lac, 
    22 Wis. 2d 533
    , 541, 
    126 N.W.2d 201
    (1964), the court erroneously declared the rule of
    reason to have been "first announced in                 Smith v. Sherry[.]"
    Sherry's holding did not create the rule of reason and earlier
    courts twisted its language in order to give the rule a misleading
    lineage.
    ¶65    In Sherry, the court considered the validity of the
    Village of Shawano's annexation of non-adjoining property over six
    miles away.       See 
    Sherry, 50 Wis. at 561
    .            The court held the
    annexation invalid pursuant to Article 11, Section 3 of the
    Wisconsin Constitution, which gives the legislature the power to
    organize cities and villages.               
    Sherry, 50 Wis. at 564
    .          The
    11
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    annexation was constitutionally invalid because the property was
    not "adjacent or contiguous" to the Village, not because of
    arbitrary boundary lines or an abuse of discretion.                       See 
    Sherry, 50 Wis. at 564
    .        The court interpreted cities and villages in
    Article 11, Section 3 to "impl[y] an assemblage of inhabitants
    living in the vicinity of each other and not separated by any other
    intervening civil division of the state."               
    Id. Because six
    miles
    separated the Village from the property in question, Sherry held
    "the territory so admitted to be included . . . is an abuse and
    violation     of   that    provision    of    section   3,     art.      11,   of   the
    constitution[.]"       
    Id. The court
    concluded by saying that it was
    imposing no constraints on the legislature in fixing boundaries
    for cities or villages, "so long as the territory of which [they
    are] composed is adjacent or contiguous[.]"                 
    Id. at 564-65.
    ¶66    Almost fifty years of academic scholarship and cases
    reveal the shaky foundation for the current three-pronged rule of
    reason.    Based solely on improper judicial policy making, the rule
    of   reason    has    no     foundation       in   Sherry     or    the     Wisconsin
    Constitution.        Sherry "has been infrequently cited in the past
    sixty years and misused when it was cited."              
    Zeinemann, supra
    ¶54,
    at 277 & n.145 (internal footnote omitted; footnote omitted)
    (explaining courts miscited Sherry for the basis of the current
    rule of reason).      Wisconsin courts have cited Sherry in annexation
    cases only twice since 1975.           For good reason.       "[T]oday's Rule of
    Reason bears little resemblance to the rule from Sherry" and
    "departs from Sherry."         
    Id. at 278
    (footnote omitted); see also
    
    Knowles, supra
    ¶54, at 1133 (discussing two weaknesses with the
    rule of reason's purported basis in the constitution).                      While the
    12
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    rule    of   reason    is    a   limitation     on     arbitrary      actions    by
    municipalities, the constitutional provision applied in Sherry is
    a "positive grant of power" allowing municipalities to govern
    themselves.     See Wis. Const. art. 11, § 3 ("Cities and villages
    organized pursuant to state law may determine[.]"); 
    Knowles, supra
    ¶54, at 1133 (discussing the same).
    ¶67   The expressed purpose for the judicial creation of the
    rule of reason was to effectuate a perceived legislative "intent"
    to prohibit certain annexations.           Mt. Pleasant 
    I, 24 Wis. 2d at 46
    (suggesting that a corridor annexation "does not coincide with
    legislative intent"); see also Richard W. Cutler, Characteristics
    of Land Required for Incorporation or Expansion of a Municipality,
    
    1958 Wis. L
    . Rev. 6, 29 (1958) ("Presumably the court interpreted
    the rule of reason as representing legislative intent."                  (footnote
    omitted)); 
    Knowles, supra
    ¶54, at 1139 ("The principal advantage
    of the rule of reason in the contiguity cases is that, at least in
    theory, it may be used to invalidate annexations allowed by the
    statutes but clearly contrary to legislative intent."). This court
    rightly discarded legislative "intent" as a permissible indicator
    of statutory meaning.        See State ex rel. Kalal v. Circuit Court
    for Dane Cty., 
    2004 WI 58
    , ¶44, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 110
    ("It is the enacted law, not the unenacted intent, that is binding
    on the public."); see also State v. Lopez, 
    2019 WI 101
    , ¶39, 
    389 Wis. 2d 156
    ,     
    936 N.W.2d 125
          (Rebecca     Grassl      Bradley,     J.,
    concurring) ("An interpretation based on what the legislature
    intended a statute to mean is improper.");                   Winebow, Inc. v.
    Capitol-Husting       Co.,   
    2018 WI 6
    0,   ¶40,   
    381 Wis. 2d 732
    ,       
    914 N.W.2d 631
         (Rebecca         Grassl       Bradley,       J.,      dissenting)
    13
    No.    2018AP2162.rgb
    ("[L]egislative intent behind enactment of a law . . . cannot
    govern statutory interpretation.               Rather, our analysis must focus
    on the statutory language itself[.]"); State v. Grandberry, 
    380 Wis. 2d 541
    , ¶55 (Kelly, J., concurring) ("[W]e give effect only
    to what the legislature does, not what it tried to do."                         (footnote
    omitted)).
    ¶68      Crafting judicial doctrines based on the collective
    intent   of    a   large    body    relies     on   the    false     premise      that    a
    deliberative       body    acts    with   a   single      purpose.        See    John    W.
    MacDonald, The Position of Statutory Construction in Present Day
    Law Practice, 3 Vand. L. Rev. 369, 371 (1950) ("[A]nyone who has
    ever dealt with the legislative process knows how conspicuously
    absent is a collective legislative intention."); see also Scalia
    & Garner, Reading 
    Law, supra
    ¶61, at 391-96 ("[C]ollective intent
    is pure fiction because dozens if not hundreds of legislators have
    their own subjective views on the minutiae of the bills they are
    voting on[.]"). Legislative intent is nothing more than a pretense
    to conceal what the court is actually doing——making law reflecting
    its own biases and policy predilections.                    See John F. Manning,
    Without the Pretense of Legislative Intent, 130 Harv. L. Rev. 2397,
    2400,    2406-07     (2017)       ("[L]egislative         intent     is     a    fiction,
    something      judges      invoke    to   elide     the     fact     that       they    are
    constructing rather than identifying a legislative decision.").
    "It is impossible to find the 'will,' 'design,' 'intent,' or
    'mind' . . . without making some value judgment about what should
    count as that legislature's intended decision and why."                           
    Id. at 2431
    (emphasis in original).              The only foundation upon which the
    14
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    rule of reason stands, legislative intent, collapsed long ago.10
    There is nothing left upon which the rule can, or should, stand.
    ¶69       Mt. Pleasant I was the first case to use the rule of
    reason    to    invalidate   an    annexation   for   lack    of   contiguity.
    
    Knowles, supra
    ¶54, at 1138.         Setting aside the impropriety of the
    court's action, Mt. Pleasant I failed to explain it.                See Walter
    K. Johnson, The Wisconsin Experience with State-Level Review of
    Municipal Incorporations, Consolidations, and Annexations, 
    1965 Wis. L
    . Rev. 462, 479 (1965).          Mt. Pleasant I neglects to explain
    why the annexation was arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of
    discretion, nor does it specify the court-proclaimed "lack of
    reason for the annexation shape."           Id.; see also Mt. Pleasant 
    I, 24 Wis. 2d at 45
    –47.         Instead, it substituted its own will for
    that of local officials.          
    Johnson, supra
    ¶69, at 479.
    ¶70       In this case, the majority elects to continue applying
    the rule of reason, but the rule's incurable flaws prevent the
    majority from contributing any clarity.               With respect to the
    arbitrariness prong of the test, the majority concludes the land
    at issue "is not an exceptional shape[,]" before declaring it is
    not similar to the "boundaries disapproved of in Mt. Pleasant I."
    Majority op., ¶31.        The aerial images provided by the Town of
    Wilson, however, show that the shape of the annexed property is
    almost identical to the annexation's shape in Mt. Pleasant I.
    10Even the great purposivists of their time, Henry Hart and
    Albert Sacks, dismissed the idea of discerning a collective
    legislative intent. See John F. Manning, Without the Pretense of
    Legislative Intent, 130 Harv. L. Rev. 2397, 2410 (2017) (citing
    Henry M. Hart, Jr. & Albert M. Sacks, The Legal Process 1374
    (William N. Eskridge, Jr. & Philip P. Frickey eds., Foundation
    Press 1994) (1958)).
    15
    No.    2018AP2162.rgb
    Parties will remain without any guidance in future annexation
    disputes.
    ¶71    The other requirements of the rule of reason suffer from
    the same infirmities.       Under the third prong, "no other factors
    must exist which would constitute an abuse of discretion."                  Town
    of Pleasant Prairie v. City of Kenosha, 
    75 Wis. 2d 322
    , 327, 
    249 N.W.2d 581
    (1977) (footnote omitted).         What factors rise to the
    level of an abuse of discretion? Prior decisions shed little light
    on this part of the inquiry.         The majority in this case defines
    the standard as encompassing "reasons other than those considered
    under the first two components."       Majority op., ¶39 (quoted source
    omitted).     Does this mean an annexation reflects an abuse of
    discretion   whenever   a   judge    identifies   any   other    reason     for
    rejecting    the   annexation   besides     arbitrariness       or   lack    of
    reasonable need?    See 
    Manning, supra
    ¶68, at 2400.
    ¶72    The rule of reason does not work because it is not a
    rule of law; it is a mechanism by which the judiciary exercises
    not its judgment but its will. The majority and Justice Hagedorn's
    concurrence both suggest the court acquiesce to the parties'
    requests to retain the rule of reason.       See majority op., ¶24 n.15.
    (noting the "parties' request that the rule remain intact[]");
    Justice Hagedorn's concurrence, ¶78 (with respect to "discarding
    the rule of reason . . . . the parties . . . expressly asked us
    not to do so.")      Litigants, of course, advocate for decisions
    benefitting their interests.        Judges, however, have an independent
    duty to say what the law is, regardless of what the parties may
    wish it to be. See Marbury, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) at 177. The majority
    mischaracterizes abolishing the rule of reason as "abandon[ing]
    16
    No.   2018AP2162.rgb
    our neutrality to develop arguments."                See majority op., ¶24 n.15
    (quoted source omitted).            Overturning a law the court had no
    authority to invent is not abandoning neutrality; it is our
    judicial role and our responsibility to ensure we exercise only
    judicial and not legislative power. See Marbury, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch)
    at 177.       If parties ask us to usurp the role of the legislature,
    we must decline.         The City's arguments in favor of retaining the
    rule of reason may be valid, but they are arguments properly made
    before the legislature, not the bench.                It "is the obligation of
    the    Judiciary . . . to      confine    itself      to    its    proper    role[.]"
    Koschkee      v.   Taylor,   
    2019 WI 76
    ,    ¶54,       
    387 Wis. 2d 552
    ,     
    929 N.W.2d 600
    (quoting City of Arlington v. F.C.C., 
    569 U.S. 290
    , 327
    (2013) (Roberts, C.J., dissenting)).                 The proper judicial role
    does    not    include    "reweigh[ing]        the    policy      choices     of   the
    legislature."       Mayo v. Wisconsin Injured Patients and Families
    Comp. Fund, 
    2018 WI 78
    , ¶¶26, 40, 
    383 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    914 N.W.2d 678
    .
    Because jurists are not policy makers, this court should apply the
    annexation law as enacted by the legislature and shed the rule of
    reason from the contiguity analysis.
    ¶73    The majority proposes the "proper procedure" would be to
    wait for the parties to raise the issue before deciding it.                        See
    majority op., ¶24 n.15 (quoted source omitted).                     The parties in
    this case did raise the rule of reason, asking us to apply it.                      If
    in the course of adjudicating a controversy, we discover we lack
    any authority to apply a law, we are duty-bound to say so.                         Cf.
    Trump v. Hawaii, 
    138 S. Ct. 2392
    , 2423 (2018) (abrogating Korematsu
    v. United States, 
    323 U.S. 214
    (1944), even though neither party
    sought it, but simply because the dissent's invocation "afford[ed]
    17
    No.     2018AP2162.rgb
    th[e] Court the opportunity to make express . . . Korematsu was
    gravely wrong the day it was decided . . . and . . . 'has no place
    in law[.]'" (quoted source omitted)). The essence of the judicial
    function is not to fashion law based on our policy preferences,
    but the "duty to correctly 'expound' it." Gamble v. United States,
    
    139 S. Ct. 1960
    , 1982 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring) (quoting
    Letter from J. Madison to N. Trist (Dec. 1831), in 9 The Writings
    of James Madison 477 (G. Hunt ed. 1910) (Writings of Madison));
    see also Gary Lawson, The Constitutional Case Against Precedent,
    17 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 23, 26 (1994) ("[A] vital part of the
    judicial   task   is   to   determine   whether   a   claimed     source   of
    law . . . may be inapplicable . . . because it conflicts with some
    hierarchically superior legal source.").      Just as the Constitution
    reigns supreme over statutory law, so too does statutory law trump
    judicial policy making.11       With respect to the rule of reason,
    "[w]e should get out of this area, where we have no right to be,
    and where we do neither ourselves nor the [state] any good by
    remaining."   Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pa. v. Casey, 
    505 U.S. 833
    , 1002 (1992) (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment in
    part and dissenting in part).           Because its creation reflects
    improper overreaching by the judiciary, we should abandon the rule
    of reason, regardless of the consequences.12
    11See Justice Hagedorn's concurrence, ¶¶76-77 (acknowledging
    the rule of reason is "judicial policy-making" and the "rule of
    judges" instead of the "rule of law[,]" but nevertheless applying
    it as "a fair statement and application of" the doctrine.
    12Justice Hagedorn's concurrence recommends a "full hearing
    on the merits of this important issue" in order to "ensure that we
    are not missing anything" and to identify "the consequences of our
    decision" before deciding whether to discard the rule of reason.
    Justice Hagedorn's concurrence, ¶78. Continuing to tread on the
    18
    No.    2018AP2162.rgb
    IV
    ¶74   I   agree   with    the    majority    in    concluding     that    the
    annexation of Kohler's property by the City of Sheboygan satisfied
    the contiguity requirement under Wis. Stat. § 66.0217(3). I cannot
    join the majority's analysis because its continued adherence to
    the rule of reason perpetuates a non-textual interpretation of our
    annexation     statute,   gives     life    to   the   antiquated     notion    of
    legislative     "intent,"     and    validates    judicial   policy      making.
    Because I would overturn Mt. Pleasant I, abolish the rule of
    reason, and determine contiguity based solely on the text of the
    annexation statute, I respectfully concur.
    ¶75   I am authorized to state that Justice DANIEL KELLY joins
    this concurrence.
    exclusive province of the legislature in the interests of prudence
    elevates the consequences of our decision making over the statutory
    text.   "But it is precisely because people differ over what is
    sensible and what is desirable that we elect those who will write
    our laws——and expect courts to observe what has been written."
    Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation
    of Legal Texts 22 (2012). When this court created the rule of
    reason, it observed what the legislature had written, decided it
    didn't like it, and replaced the statutory text with what the court
    deemed to be a preferable test. Regardless of the consequences,
    such an invasion of the legislative's prerogative should not stand.
    19
    No.   2018AP2162.bh
    ¶76   BRIAN HAGEDORN, J.   (concurring).   The majority opinion
    is a fair statement and application of the analytical framework
    our cases have announced.   That's the good news, and the reason I
    join the majority.   The bad news is that our cases are about as
    straightforward as a Halloween corn maze, and employ interpretive
    principles that should strike terror into everyone committed to
    the rule of law rather than the rule of judges.
    ¶77   In a tour de force, Justice Rebecca Grassl Bradley's
    concurrence lays out the manifold problems with the rule of reason.
    It reminds me of the two rules Justice Neil Gorsuch tells his law
    clerks.    The first rule is, "Don't make stuff up."       The second
    rule is, "When people beg, and say, 'Oh the consequences are so
    important,' and when they say, 'You're a terrible, terrible person
    if you don't,' just refer back to Rule No. 1."1      A casual read-
    through of our cases creating, modifying, and applying the rule of
    reason leads to the discomforting notion that the "legal test" the
    judiciary has superimposed onto annexation challenges is nothing
    more than a fancy-sounding façade for the real agenda:        judicial
    policy-making pretending to be law.
    ¶78   With that said, I have one bit of pause before officially
    saying so and discarding the rule of reason from our jurisprudence.
    Namely, the parties did not ask us to go there, and in oral
    argument, expressly asked us not to do so.      Eliminating the rule
    of reason would be a significant change in our doctrine.        Before
    taking this step, I believe we would be best served by adversarial
    1 https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-high-courts-rocky-
    mountain-originalist-11567792378.
    1
    No.   2018AP2162.bh
    briefing and argument.    A full hearing on the merits of this
    important issue would help ensure that we are not missing anything
    and that the consequences of our decision are fully fleshed out
    beforehand.   Therefore, I join the majority, but would welcome an
    opportunity to revisit the rule of reason.
    2
    No.   2018AP2162.bh
    1