
Vol. 72, No. 10, October
1999
The Wisconsin Supreme Court and the Director of
State Courts Office moved out of the Capitol in mid-July to make way for
restoration and renovation of the Capitol's east wing. They are now at
119 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. on the capitol square, where they will
remain until 2001. The mailing address remains the same - P.O. Box 1688,
Madison, WI 53701-1688. All telephone and fax numbers and email
addresses are unchanged.
The Wisconsin State Law Library moved in mid-September. Because the library's temporary space - in the One East Main building on the capitol square - will not be ready until Nov. 1 at the earliest, temporary measures have been implemented:
In late April, state officials approved plans for a $35.8 million, eight-story justice center on the capitol square that will house the Law Library, Department of Justice, and other offices. Construction should be completed by August 2001.
If you were admitted to practice in an odd-numbered year, you should have received the 1998-99 CLE Form 1, the biennial continuing legal education reporting form. All active Wisconsin-licensed attorneys are required by SCR 31.03 to file this form with the Board of Bar Examiners (BBE). The filing deadline is Dec. 31, 1999. If you were admitted to practice in 1999, however, you will not need to report until 2001.
Be sure to verify your address on the form and contact Denise Dettor at the State Bar at (608) 250-6119 or (800) 444-9404, ext. 6119, if it is incorrect. In addition, be sure to provide all the requested information. The BBE audits the forms in the order received and will communicate directly with lawyers about incomplete or incorrect forms. If you do not report accurately, and must correct your form after the filing deadline, you will be assessed a $50 late fee. If you are concerned about whether the BBE received your CLE Form 1, the BBE's mailing also included a postcard that can be self-addressed, stamped, and sent to the BBE. The BBE will return the card showing the date on which your form was received.
To verify a course title, date, location, sponsor name, or credit amount, consult the Wisconsin Supreme Court Web site.
Despite threatening to veto Y2K liability legislation
approved by Congress, President Clinton signed compromise legislation
into law on July 20 (Public Law
106-37). The new law limits the liability of companies that do not
adequately address issues resulting from the Y2K computer problem.
In the final compromise, damage caps are set at $250,000 or three times compensatory damages, whichever is less, and apply to actions against businesses with fewer than 50 full-time employees and individuals with a net worth of $500,000 or less. In general, the new law also limits defendants' liability in a Y2K action to their proportional share of damages. In its goal of encouraging remediation over litigation, the new law also creates a "prelitigation notice" requirement for Y2K issues. The provision creates a grace period that prospective defendants can use to fix Y2K problems before a prospective plaintiff can proceed with litigation. The new law generally applies to Y2K actions brought after Jan. 1, 1999; for Y2K failures occurring before Jan. 1, 2003; or for Y2K failures that could occur or have allegedly caused harm or injury prior to Jan. 1, 2003.