The following terms as used in this chapter shall be construed as follows:
Any old, used or secondhand materials of any kind, including cloth, clothing, rags, bags, papers, rubbish, bottles, glassware, crockery, rubber, iron, brass, copper, other ferrous and nonferrous metals, furniture, fixtures, plumbing materials, waste materials, used motor vehicles or any of the parts thereof or any other article or thing which from its worn condition renders it practically useless for the purpose for which it was made and which is commonly classed as junk. See also § 84.31(2)(e), Wis. Stats.[1]
Includes a junk collector, junk dealer or junkyard.
Any person who collects, buys, gathers or sells junk.
A person who engages in, keeps, conducts or carries on a business for the buying or selling at retail or wholesale, dealing in, accumulating, gathering, collecting, delivering, keeping, sorting or piling in commercial quantities, whether temporarily, irregularly or continually, of junk, whether or not any building, structure, enclosure, yard or place therefor is maintained as a principal place of business.
The operator or owner of any junk business.
Any building, structure, enclosure, yard or place for keeping, storing, accumulating or piling in commercial quantities, whether temporarily, irregularly or continually, of any junk.