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PUBLISHED OPINION

COURT OF APPEALS

DECISION

DATED AND FILED

NOTICE

May 6, 1999

This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports.

Marilyn L. Graves

Clerk, Court of Appeals

of Wisconsin

A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See § 808.10 and Rule 809.62, Stats.

No. 98-2884

STATE OF WISCONSIN

IN COURT OF APPEALS

DISTRICT IV

JoAnn Katzman, and William Katzman,

Plaintiffs-Respondents,

v.

State of Wisconsin Ethics Board, and

James E. Doyle, Attorney General

of the State of Wisconsin,

Defendants-Appellants.

BACKGROUND

Except as permitted in this subsection, [no lobbyist may] make a campaign contribution, as defined in s. 11.01(6), to a partisan elective state official for the purpose of promoting the official's election to any national, state or local office, or to a candidate for a partisan elective state office to be filled at the general election or a special election, or the official's or candidate's personal campaign committee. A campaign contribution to a partisan elective state official or candidate for partisan elective state office or his or her personal campaign committee may be made in the year of a candidate's election between June 1 and the day of the general election....

The period preceding an election during which lobbyists may contribute to candidates for partisan elective state offices is commonly referred to as "the window." The board has taken the position that a lobbyist's spouse is not barred from making political contributions outside the window "merely because the individual is married to a lobbyist." It has also advised, however, that "a lobbyist may not evade the restrictions of the lobbying law by making campaign contribution via a spouse."

QDo you do any work in any capacity other than, let's say, as a homemaker?

QHave you been affiliated with any political party?

QAnd which one is that?

QWere you a formal member of the party?

QOkay. Would you say that your political philosophy leans toward one party or the other at this time?

QHave you contributed to any --- party candidates since 1978?

QAnd is there a reason that maybe you've changed your philosophy since you left the party?

QHave you worked actively for any political campaigns in the last four years?

QWhat made you decide to contribute to that person at that time?

QHas your husband had any influence on you in any way in your decisions to either make or not make a political contribution to any candidate?

QWhy on that particular day did you choose, of all days, to give or transmit that contribution to --- if you could answer it?

QIs there any political issue that he was involved in that made you decide to contribute to him?

QAside from --- has anybody else in any way influenced your decision as far as who you would contribute to?

QOn what basis do you distinguish those [legislators] that you have contributed to and those that you haven't?

QHave you ever discussed your political philosophy with any other person besides your husband --- ?

The excerpts also show that a lobbyist was asked the following questions during a deposition:

QHas your wife ever discussed in your presence and in the presence of third parties her political philosophies?

QCan you give me a general summary of what she may have said?

Any investigation of the contributing spouse's political beliefs and practices is pointless and irrelevant. It makes no difference whatsoever what beliefs the contributor holds, nor what his or her contribution practices have been in the past. It makes no difference if the contributor's spouse advised, counseled or even ordered the contributor to make the contribution.

ANALYSIS

The Board's inability to define exactly what behavior of a lobbyist's spouse violates the law has lead them down a path fraught with constitutional peril, forcing individuals who are not even subject to the lobbying law to undergo coerced questioning about their political beliefs and practices.

The board has not argued that its statutory interpretation is entitled to deference from a reviewing court, and even if it were to have so argued, we would conclude that the interpretation it endorses is unreasonable.

CONCLUSION

1 The Ethics Board is charged with the responsibility of administering state laws regulating the conduct of lobbyists. See §13.685, Stats. The attorney general, "at the request of the board, may commence" civil actions to obtain forfeitures and license revocations for violations of lobbying regulations, and he or she may "upon information" commence criminal actions for violations for which criminal penalties are provided. See §13.69(8), Stats. We will refer to the defendants-appellants in this opinion, collectively, as "the board."

2 See §13.625(1)(c), Stats., which is quoted and discussed below in the text of this opinion.

3 JoAnn apparently made twenty-seven contributions to legislators before the window opened for the 1994 general election, only four during the window period, and another twelve after the window closed following the election. William made twenty-nine contributions, all during the window period. JoAnn's contributions were divided among eight Republican and fifteen Democratic legislators.

4 The board subsequently withdrew the first subpoena it had issued to JoAnn, but apparently then re-issued it and sought to depose her while this matter was pending in the trial court.

5 The transcripts in the record were redacted to delete the names of lobbyists, spouses, legislators and political parties. The redactions are indicated in our quotation by "---".

6 The trial court also concluded that the Katzmans' claims were "ripe for review and appropriate for declaratory relief." The board does not challenge this conclusion on appeal.

7 In 1996 Wis. Eth. Bd 5, the board adopts a definition of "furnish" from Webster's Third New International Dictionary (1986), "to provide or supply with what is needed, useful, or desirable," and notes that "Wisconsin courts have adopted that ordinary usage."

8 For example, the board makes the following argument:

The disclosure requirements that serve these compelling state interests are meaningless unless the authorities can investigate to determine whether the disclosures are truthful and accurate. The supreme court has held that voters and constituents are entitled to know who is giving money to candidates. They are entitled to know if and when a lobbyist is contributing to a candidate. If married lobbyists are exempt from that restriction because they can contribute in the spouse's name, neither the election laws nor the lobby laws can be enforced against any married lobbyist.

This argument presumes that a contribution made by a married person from marital funds is actually a disguised contribution from the person's spouse, and does not explain why such a contribution should not be deemed to be that of the person making it.

Similarly, the board accuses the Katzmans of "arguing that a lobbyist can conceal illegal conduct behind his or her marriage veil, because the constitution precludes investigation." Again, this rhetoric presumes that contributions made by a lobbyist's spouse from marital funds outside the window period constitutes illegal conduct but does not explain why this should be so.

9 It is true, as the board notes, that the Katzmans alleged in the trial court that the board's application of §13.625(1)(c), Stats., to married lobbyists and their spouses is unconstitutional on several grounds. The Katzmans have not cross-appealed the trial court's decision and order, and they do not renew these claims on appeal as an alternative ground upon which to sustain the trial court's order. The question before us is whether the trial court correctly interpreted the lobby law, in light of the relevant provisions of the campaign financing law and the marital property law. The Katzmans concede that the constitutional issues need not be reached if we uphold the trial court's interpretation, which we do.

10 See Invitations to Reception and Contributions in Community Property State, Federal Election Campaign Financing Guide (CCH) ¶5527 (Aug. 12, 1980) (AO 1980-67). The Wisconsin State Elections Board has adopted a similar policy: "Contributions received in the form of a check drawn on a joint checking account may be assumed to be from the signer of the check absent evidence to the contrary." Election Board Opinion 75-5 (Dec. 19, 1975).

11 "Legislative campaign committees" are operated by the partisan caucuses in the two houses of the Wisconsin Legislature. The four committees receive and expend funds to assist candidates and incumbents seeking election or re-election to the legislature. See §§11.01(12s) and 11.265, Stats.

12 Some of those interested in reforming campaign finance and related regulations have commented that the real problem with present laws and regulations does not stem from what is illegal, but from what is presently legal. It may well be that the evil the board maintains it is attempting to prevent with its current interpretation of §13.625(1)(c), Stats., will not be fully vanquished until the reliance of candidates on "special interest" campaign contributions is reduced or eliminated. Numerous proposals to accomplish that end are presently being debated at both the state and federal levels.