 Wisconsin 
  Lawyer
Wisconsin 
  Lawyer
  Vol. 81, No. 10, October 
2008
In order 07-11, the Wisconsin 
Supreme Court has created a rule governing the discretionary transfer of 
cases to tribal court, effective Jan. 1, 2009. On Nov. 
	18, the supreme court will hold public hearings on order 08-03 
regarding a WisTAF petition seeking an interest comparability rule for 
IOLTA accounts; and order 
	08-07 regarding a Board of Bar Examiners petition relating to admitting 
lawyers on proof of practice elsewhere.
Transfer of Cases to Tribal Court
 In the matter of the petition to create a rule governing the 
discretionary transfer of cases to tribal court
Order 07-11 
On July 24, 2007, A. John Voelker,1 
Director of State Courts, on behalf of the 
	State-Tribal Justice Forum,2 petitioned the 
court to create a rule governing the 
	discretionary transfer of cases to tribal court, pursuant to the 
court's rulemaking authority 
	under Wis. Stat. § 751.12. On Oct. 1, 2007, the 
court issued an order scheduling the 
	petition for a public hearing on Jan. 8, 2008.
 On Oct. 31, 2007, the Clerk of the Supreme Court issued a letter to 
34 agencies 
	and organizations potentially having an interest in the petition to 
solicit comment 
	and offer the opportunity to appear in person at the public hearing. 
The court 
	received comments from several recipients of this letter and others, 
all writing in favor of 
	the proposed rule: (1) Honorable James R. Habeck, Circuit Court for 
Menominee and 
	Shawano counties (Nov. 5, 2007); (2) Jerry P. Lang, District Court 
Administrator, 
	Fourth Judicial District (Dec. 6, 2007); (3) Honorable Leland 
Wigg-Ninham, President, 
	Wisconsin Tribal Judges Association (Dec. 7, 2007); (4) Attorney Paul 
Stenzel (Dec. 7, 2007); 
	(5) James Botsford, Indian Law Office Director, Wisconsin Judicare Inc. 
(Dec. 10, 2007); 
	(6) Honorable Eugene L. White-Fish, Chief Judge, Forest County 
Potawatomi Tribal Court 
	(Dec. 10, 2007); (7) Winnifred L. Thomas, Chief Judicial Officer, 
Oneida Tribal 
	Judicial System (Dec. 11, 2007); (8) Honorable Gerald Ptacek, Chief 
Judge, Circuit Court 
	of Racine County, on behalf of the Committee of Chief Judges (Dec. 17, 
2007); (9) Thomas 
	J. Basting Sr., President, State Bar of Wisconsin (Jan. 3, 2008); and 
(10) John S. 
	Swimmer, Chairman, Indian Law Section, State Bar of Wisconsin (Jan. 3, 
2008). No comment 
	was received opposing the petition.
 At the hearing at 9:30 a.m. on Jan. 8, 2008, the petition was 
presented to the 
	court by Honorable James Mohr, LacCourte Orielles Tribal Court, 
Chairperson, 
	State-Tribal Justice Forum. Judge Mohr testified in favor of the 
petition and responded to 
	questions posed by individual justices. Six other individuals testified 
in favor of the 
	petition and were questioned: (1) Honorable Eugene White-Fish, Forest 
County Potowatomi 
	Tribal Court; (2) Honorable John Anderson, Bayfield County Circuit 
Court; (3) 
	Representative Gary Sherman, member of Legislative Council Special 
Committee on State-Tribal 
	Relations; (4) Attorney Kenneth J. Artis, Black River Falls, Wis.; (5) 
Honorable Stanley 
	Webster, Oneida Tribal Judicial System; and (6) Huma Ahsan, Deputy 
Director, Great Lakes 
	Indian Law Center, University of Wisconsin Law School and former Chief 
Justice of 
	Turtle Mountain Court of Appeals, Bellacourt, North Dakota. No 
individual or representative 
	of any group testified in opposition to the petition.
 Following the hearing, the court held an open administrative 
conference to discuss 
	the petition. After discussion, the court voted to request further 
comment on three 
	issues raised during the court's discussion of the petition: First, 
under what circumstances 
	is jurisdiction concurrent between tribal and state courts or exclusive 
in tribal or 
	state court? Second, is there a right under the United States or 
Wisconsin constitution 
	to have a case heard in state court rather than tribal court? Third, 
how does the 
	proposed rule impact the application of Wis. Stat. § 806.245 
(full faith and credit)? On Jan. 
	11, 2008, the Clerk issued a letter to agencies and organizations with 
a potential 
	interest in the petition requesting that comments on these issues be 
submitted to the court.
 The court received three responses to its request. On February 15, 
2008, the 
	State-Tribal Justice Forum, writing to help the court "move 
forward with this historic 
	rule," provided a seven-page single-spaced discussion of the 
current legal status, case 
	law, and history of the jurisdictional and constitutional issues raised 
by the court, 
	with two substantive attachments. The first attachment was a tribal 
court directory _ 
	a court-by-court index of Wisconsin's tribal courts, including the 
names of the 
	judges, prosecutors, and tribal attorneys, the court's source of power, 
the areas of 
	subject matter and personal jurisdiction, and tribal membership 
criteria. The second 
	attachment was a United States Department of Justice memorandum 
regarding Public Law 83-280, 
	which conferred jurisdiction on certain states, including Wisconsin, 
over most or all 
	of Indian country within their borders. On Feb. 15, 2008, the Great 
Lakes Indian Law 
	Center filed a 29-page single-spaced report "to assist the court 
with building a solid 
	legal foundation for the proposed rule" and focusing on "the 
interplay between the State 
	court and the Tribal court justice systems located in Wisconsin." 
On Feb. 22, 2008, 
	the Department of Justice provided an 11-page single-spaced examination 
of 
	the jurisdictional and constitutional issues raised by the court, 
including 
	recommendations for revision to resolve these issues.
 In response to these comments, the Clerk prepared a revised draft of 
the proposed 
	rule and, on March 5, 2008, provided it to the three commenting 
parties. On March 11, 
	2008, the State-Tribal Justice Forum responded with further suggestions 
and comments. On 
	March 18, 2008, the Department of Justice provided further comments. On 
April 2, 
	2008, Representative Terry Musser, Chair of the Joint Legislative 
Council's Special 
	Committee on State-Tribal Relations, submitted an 11-page single-spaced 
memorandum from 
	the Wisconsin Legislative Council containing technical comments about 
the original 
	and revised drafts of the proposed rule. Representative Musser 
indicated that the 
	Special Committee has not taken a position on the petition.
 On April 15, 2008, the court discussed the proposed rule and the 
commentary at 
	its open administrative conference. The court voted on specific changes 
to the proposed 
	rule and examined the possibility of adapting an existing statute, Wis. 
Stat. § 801.63, 
	to accommodate the transfer of cases from state court to tribal court 
as an alternative 
	to the creation of a new rule. The court charged the Clerk with the 
task of 
	drafting alternative versions of the rule: (1) a redraft of the 
proposed rule Wis. Stat. 
	§ 801.54 incorporating changes discussed and voted upon by 
the court, and (2) a draft of 
	Wis. Stat. § 801.63 revised to include transfers to tribal 
court. At the court's request, 
	on May 29, 2008, the Clerk submitted these drafts to Justice Crooks, 
who, upon 
	reviewing these materials, determined that a revision of Wis. Stat. 
§ 801.63 was not a 
	feasible mechanism for transfer of cases to tribal court.
 On June 24, 2008, the court received a comment on the proposed rule 
from Attorney 
	Meg Vergeront on behalf of the Village of Hobart, asking that the court 
not approve 
	the proposed rule in its current form and instead schedule a public 
hearing so that 
	certain issues could be explored. On June 25, 2008, the court discussed 
Attorney 
	Vergeront's comment and the alternative drafts at an open 
administrative conference. 
	After discussion, the court voted to adopt the petition, as modified. 
Justice 
	Roggensack dissented from the adoption of the petition; Justice Prosser 
and Justice Ziegler 
	have joined in the dissent. Finally, the court ruled that the effective 
date of this 
	rule shall be Jan. 1, 2009, and that the court will review the 
operation of this rule in 
	two years from the effective date.
 Therefore, 
 IT IS ORDERED that effective Jan. 1, 2009:
 Section 1. 801.54 of the statutes is created to read:
801.54 Discretionary transfer of civil actions to tribal 
court. 
(1) Scope. In a civil action where a circuit court 
and a court or judicial system of 
	a federally recognized American Indian tribe or band in Wisconsin 
("tribal court") 
	have concurrent jurisdiction, this rule authorizes the circuit court, 
in its discretion, 
	to transfer the action to the tribal court when transfer is warranted 
under the factors 
	set forth in sub. (2). This rule does not apply to any action in which 
controlling 
	law grants exclusive jurisdiction to either the circuit court or the 
tribal court.
 (2) Discretionary transfer. When a civil action is brought in 
the circuit court 
	of any county of this state, and when, under the laws of the United 
States, a tribal 
	court has concurrent jurisdiction of the matter in controversy, the 
circuit court may, on 
	its own motion or the motion of any party and after notice and hearing 
on the record on 
	the issue of the transfer, cause such action to be transferred to the 
tribal court. 
	The circuit court must first make a threshold determination that 
concurrent 
	jurisdiction exists. If concurrent jurisdiction is found to exist, 
unless all parties stipulate 
	to the transfer, in the exercise of its discretion the circuit court 
shall consider 
	all relevant factors, including but not limited to:
 (a) Whether issues in the action require interpretation of the 
tribe's laws, 
	including the tribe's constitution, statutes, bylaws, ordinances, 
resolutions, or case law.
 (b) Whether the action involves traditional or cultural matters of 
the tribe.
 (c) Whether the action is one in which the tribe is a party, or 
whether 
	tribal sovereignty, jurisdiction, or territory is an issue in the 
action.
 (d) The tribal membership status of the parties.
 (e) Where the claim arises.
 (f) Whether the parties have by contract chosen a forum or the law 
to be applied 
	in the event of a dispute.
 (g) The timing of any motion to transfer, taking into account the 
parties' and 
	court's expenditure of time and resources, and compliance with any 
applicable provisions of 
	the circuit court's scheduling orders.
 (h) The court in which the action can be decided most expeditiously.
 (i) The institutional and administrative interests of each court.
 (j) The relative burdens on the parties, including cost, access to 
and 
	admissibility of evidence, and matters of process, practice, and 
procedure, including where the 
	action will be heard and decided most promptly.
 (k) Any other factors having substantial bearing upon the selection 
of a 
	convenient, reasonable and fair place of trial.
 (3) Stay of proceeding in circuit 
	court. When a circuit court transfers an action to tribal court under 
this rule, the circuit court shall enter an order to stay 
	further proceedings on the action in circuit court. Jurisdiction of the 
circuit court 
	continues over the parties to a proceeding in which a stay has been 
ordered under this 
	section until a period of 5 years has elapsed since the last order 
affecting the stay 
	was entered in the court. At any time during which jurisdiction of the 
court continues 
	over the parties to the proceedings, the court may, on motion and 
notice to the 
	parties, subsequently modify the stay order and take any further action 
in the proceeding as 
	the interests of justice require. When jurisdiction of the court over 
the parties and 
	the proceeding terminates by reason of the lapse of 5 years following 
the last court 
	order in the action, the clerk of the court in which the stay was 
granted shall without 
	notice enter an order dismissing the action.
 (4) Appeals. The decision of a circuit court to transfer an 
action to tribal 
	court may be appealed as a matter of right under s. 808.03(1).
 (5) Effect of transfer. When a circuit court orders the 
transfer of an action 
	to tribal court under this rule, the circuit court shall retain the 
circuit court 
	filing fee and shall transmit to the tribal court a copy of all circuit 
court records in 
	the action.
 (6) Powers, rights and obligations 
	unaffected. Nothing in this rule is intended to alter, diminish, or 
expand the jurisdiction of the circuit courts or any tribal 
	court, the sovereignty of the state or any federally recognized 
American Indian tribe or 
	band, or the rights or obligations of parties under state, tribal, or 
federal law.
 Section 2. The following Comment to Wis. Stat. 
§ 801.54 is not adopted, but will 
	be published and may be consulted for guidance in interpreting and 
applying the statute:
COMMENT: The purpose of this rule is to enable circuit courts 
to transfer civil 
	actions to tribal courts in Wisconsin as efficiently as possible where 
appropriate. 
	In considering the factors under sub. (2), the circuit court shall give 
particular 
	weight to the constitutional rights of the litigants and their rights 
to assert all 
	available claims and defenses.
 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the circuit courts, tribal courts, 
litigants, and 
	attorneys affected by this rule shall advise the court, in writing, 
regarding their experience 
	of this rule on or before Jan. 1, 2011. 
 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that notice of creation of Wis. Stat. 
§ 801.54 be given by 
	a single publication of a copy of this order and the dissent thereto in 
the official 
	state newspaper and in an official publication of the State Bar of 
Wisconsin.
 Dated at Madison, Wis., this 31st day of July, 2008.
By the court:
	David R. Schanker, 
	Clerk of Supreme Court
¶1 PATIENCE DRAKE ROGGENSACK, J. (dissenting). Four 
Wisconsin Supreme Court 
	justices, who constitute a majority of this court today, legislate to 
create a rule by 
	which circuit courts may transfer jurisdiction of pending civil cases 
from Wisconsin 
	circuit courts to any tribal court in Wisconsin, even when the 
litigants object to the 
	transfer. I write in dissent because: (1) Rule 801.54 is inadequate and 
misleading in regard 
	to addressing tribal court concurrent subject matter jurisdiction, 
which jurisdiction 
	is extremely limited in scope when nonmembers are parties to the 
action; (2) Rule 
	801.54 impermissibly alters the substantive rights of tribal members, 
as well as 
	nonmembers, contrary to the provisions of Wis. Stat. 
§ 751.12(1) 
	(2005-06),3 which limits the court's 
rule-making power; (3) Rule 801.54 undermines federal and state 
	constitutional and statutory rights of litigants; and (4) a majority of 
the court has pushed this 
	rule-change through before the end of the 2007-08 term of the court, 
even though the 
	court has been presented with no 
		information about the substantive rights and civil 
	procedures that are available in tribal courts.
I. BACKGROUND
 ¶2 Tribal courts provide meaningful dispute resolution to many 
tribal members 
	in courts that have well-grounded appreciations for the traditions so 
important to 
	tribal justice. The Rule that the court implements today does not 
detract from 
	their significant contributions. 
 ¶3 However, today the court legislates through rule-making in 
response to 
	Rules Petition 07-11. In so doing, four justices who constitute a 
majority of the 
	court empower Wisconsin circuit courts to transfer pending civil 
actions to tribal 
	courts, even when parties object to being subject to tribal court 
jurisdiction. The 
	majority pushes forward under Rule 801.54, even though the conduct that 
forms the basis for 
	the action may not have occurred on tribal land; even though all 
parties are not 
	tribal members; even though this court has been provided no information 
about how the 
	various tribal courts operate; and even though the United States 
Supreme Court in Plains Commerce Bank v. Long Family Land & 
Cattle 
		Co., 554 U.S. __, 128 S. Ct. 2709 
	(2008),4 appears to have narrowed the 
occasions when tribal courts have concurrent subject 
	matter jurisdiction in civil matters.5 Why 
has a majority of this court pushed this rule 
	change through notwithstanding the inadequacy of the information 
provided to the court? I 
	do not know, but I suspect there is a reason that is not apparent from 
the 
	materials submitted and considered by the court in open conference. 
Time will tell.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Concurrent Jurisdiction
 ¶4 Rule 801.54, created by a majority of the court, requires 
that before a 
	circuit court may transfer jurisdiction of a pending matter to a tribal 
court, the circuit 
	court must determine that the tribal court has concurrent subject 
matter 
	jurisdiction.6 Because Rule 801.54 is very 
broad, on its face it has the potential to be applied 
	to non-tribal as well as tribal members for conduct that occurs off as 
well as on 
	tribal land. 
 ¶5 Under "Public Law 280," Wisconsin courts have 
subject matter jurisdiction 
	over civil actions that arise on tribal land between tribal members, or 
where a tribal 
	member is a party.7 Public Law 280 expands 
the scope of Wisconsin courts' jurisdiction 
	into subject matters that in some states are handled by federal courts, 
but Public Law 
	280 does not address the subject matter jurisdiction of tribal courts. 
Tribal court 
	subject matter jurisdiction is established by other federal laws and 
United States Supreme 
	Court precedent. Nat'l Farmers Union Ins. Cos. v. Crow Tribe of 
		Indians, 471 U.S. 845, 851-52 (1985). Stated otherwise, 
"whether a tribal court has adjudicative authority 
	over nonmembers is a federal question"; it is not decided under 
state law or tribal law. See Plains Commerce Bank, 128 
S. Ct. at 2716 (citing Iowa Mut. Ins. Co. v. LaPlante, 480 
U.S. 9, 15 (1987)). 
 ¶6 The United States Supreme Court has explained that tribal 
court 
	concurrent jurisdiction is extremely limited when non-tribal members 
are among the parties to 
	an action. Montana v. United States, 450 U.S. 544, 565-66 
(1981). The Court recently 
	has affirmed that tribal court jurisdiction over nonmembers for conduct 
that occurs 
	off tribal land is almost nonexistent, having been upheld on only one 
occasion. Plains Commerce Bank, 128 S. Ct. at 2722. The 
Court has also said, "[T]ribes do not, as 
	a general matter, possess authority over non-Indians who come within 
their borders: 
	`[T]he inherent sovereign powers of an Indian tribe do not extend to 
the activities 
	of nonmembers of the tribe.'" Id. at 2718-19 (quoting 
Montana, 450 U.S. at 565).
 ¶7 Even when nonmember conduct occurs on tribal land, the 
general rule is that 
	tribes lack subject matter jurisdiction over nonmembers. 
Montana, 450 U.S. at 565. Tribes 
	"may" have concurrent subject matter jurisdiction over 
nonmembers: (1) to "regulate 
 
	the activities of nonmembers who enter consensual relationships with 
the tribe or 
	its members, through commercial dealing, contracts, leases, or other 
arrangements," and 
	(2) to regulate nonmember conduct that "threatens or has some 
direct effect on the 
	political integrity, the economic security, or the health or welfare of 
the tribe." Id. at 565-66. But as the Court's discussion of 
Montana in Plains Commerce Bank shows, the 
	exceptions to the lack of subject matter jurisdiction are not to be 
broadly interpreted, 
	but rather, they are extremely limited. Plains Commerce 
		Bank, 128 S. Ct. at 2720.
 ¶8 In Plains Commerce Bank, tribal members (the Longs) 
sued a nonmember 
	(Plains Commerce Bank) in tribal court, alleging that the bank 
discriminated against them 
	when it sold property. Id. at 2715. The Longs further alleged 
that the property sales 
	had arisen directly from their preexisting commercial relationship with 
the bank, 
	and accordingly, the sales fell within the first Montana 
exception to the general rule that tribes lack jurisdiction over 
nonmembers. Id. at 2715-16. The tribal jury awarded $750,000 in 
damages. Id. at 2716. The bank then brought a declaratory 
judgment action 
	in federal court asserting that the tribal court lacked subject matter 
jurisdiction 
	to adjudicate the claims, and therefore, the judgment was void. 
Id. 
 ¶9 The Supreme Court agreed with the bank. The Court began by 
explaining that 
	the sovereign powers of tribes are limited by virtue of the tribes' 
"incorporation into 
	the American republic."8 Id. at 
2719. In so incorporating, the tribes generally lost 
	the right to govern persons coming within tribal territory except for 
tribal 
	members.9 Id. 
 ¶10 In any attempt to exert jurisdiction over nonmembers, 
"[t]he burden rests on 
	the tribe to establish one of the exceptions to Montana's 
general rule" that precludes jurisdiction over nonmembers. 
Id. at 2720. The burden of proof rests with the tribe 
	to establish concurrent jurisdiction in tribal courts because of the 
general rule 
	that tribal courts do not have jurisdiction over nonmembers. Rule 
801.54 is in conflict 
	with that requirement of federal law because under Rule 801.54(2), a 
circuit court 
	can transfer a case to tribal court on its own motion. Therefore, the 
tribe would not be 
	a moving party who carries the burden explained by the United States 
Supreme Court 
	in Plains Commerce Bank. The circuit courts of Wisconsin cannot 
make a 
	discretionary transfer to tribal courts, sua sponte, and still comply 
with this aspect of federal 
	law because meeting that tribal burden is one prerequisite for the 
exercise of 
	subject matter jurisdiction by tribal courts. 
 ¶11 Notwithstanding the directive of the United States Supreme 
Court that the 
	tribe has the burden of establishing that it has concurrent 
jurisdiction with the 
	circuit court, the stated purpose of Rule 801.54 is "to enable 
circuit courts to transfer 
	civil actions to tribal courts in Wisconsin as efficiently as possible 
where 
	appropriate." Comment to Rule 801.54. "Where 
appropriate" is determined by the factors set out in 
	sub. (2) of the Rule, which factors appear to presume that there is 
concurrent 
		jurisdiction in tribal court. This apparent presumption is 
contrary to federal law, which holds 
	that as a general rule tribes have no jurisdiction over nonmembers. 
Plains Commerce Bank, 128 S. Ct. at 2719. By implying that 
the factors set out in sub. (2) should be the focus 
	of a circuit court's decision-making, Rule 801.54 is misleading and has 
	significant potential to cause a circuit court to transfer a pending 
case to tribal court when 
	the tribal court has no subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the 
claims and 
	defenses made. 
 ¶12 The Supreme Court also has explained that "a tribe's 
adjudicative 
	jurisdiction does not exceed its legislative jurisdiction." 
Id. at 2720. This is an important principle because if a tribe 
could not pass a law that bound the conduct and the 
	parties whose claims and defenses a tribal court attempts to 
adjudicate, then the tribal 
	court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over those claims and 
	defenses.10 Id. 
 ¶13 It is not a simple matter for a circuit court to determine 
whether a case 
	fits within one of the two very narrow Montana exceptions to the 
tribal courts' lack 
	of subject matter jurisdiction over nonmembers. Rule 801.54 is 
completely inadequate 
	in addressing this major obstacle to the exercise of tribal court 
jurisdiction 
	over nonmembers; yet, it is a critical decision that must be made 
before any such action 
	may be heard in tribal court. This is so because the contention that a 
court lacked 
	subject matter jurisdiction may be raised at any time, even after 
judgment. See Arbaugh v. Y&H Corp., 546 U.S. 500, 506-07 
(2006); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(c)(3). 
	Furthermore, subject matter jurisdiction cannot be created by waiver or 
consent. See United States v. Hazlewood, 526 F.3d 862, 864 (5th 
Cir. 2008). The majority gives the circuit courts 
	no financial resources and no legal guidelines to assist with this 
weighty legal task. 
 ¶14 At the open administrative conference on June 25, 2008, the 
majority appeared 
	to take comfort in Rule 801.54(4), which provides that decisions 
transferring cases 
	to tribal court are appealable as of 
	right.11 However, an appeal is small 
comfort 
	to litigants who are already overburdened with legal fees; and it 
provides no guidance 
	to the circuit courts on the critical issue of whether there is 
concurrent tribal 
	court subject matter jurisdiction.
B. Wisconsin Stat. § 751.12(1)
 ¶15 This court's power to legislate, which we label as 
"rule-making," is derived 
	from Wis. Stat. § 751.12(1), which provides in relevant part:
 "The state supreme court shall, by rules promulgated by it from 
time to time, 
	regulate pleading, practice, and procedure in judicial proceedings in 
all courts, for 
	the purposes of simplifying the same and of promoting the speedy 
determination of 
	litigation upon its merits. The rules shall not abridge, enlarge, or 
modify the substantive 
		rights of any litigant." (Emphasis added.)
 ¶16     Prior to the creation of Rule 801.54, all litigants who 
satisfied the 
	statutory provisions for jurisdiction in Wisconsin courts had a 
statutory right to 
	avail themselves of the Wisconsin court system. See Wis. Stat. 
§ 801.04. The open 
	courthouse doors of Wisconsin provide a significant, substantive right 
for tribal as well as 
	non-tribal litigants. However, when Rule 801.54 goes into effect, the 
courthouse doors 
	of Wisconsin may be closed to some litigants, both tribal members and 
nonmembers. 
	This change in the substantive rights of litigants is contrary to the 
express provisions 
	of Wis. Stat. § 751.12(1), which provides that any 
"rule" this court creates "shall 
	not abridge, enlarge, or modify the substantive rights of any 
litigant." 
 ¶17 Black's Law Dictionary's definition of 
"substantive law" supports my 
	conclusion that the right to litigate in the courts of Wisconsin is a 
substantive right. Black's defines substantive law as: 
 "The part of the law that creates, defines, and regulates the 
rights, duties, 
	and powers of parties
. `So far as the administration of justice 
is concerned with 
	the application of remedies to violated rights, we may say that the 
substantive law 
	defines the remedy and the right, while the law of procedure defines 
the modes and conditions 
	of the application of the one to the other.'" 
 Black's Law Dictionary 1470 (8th ed. 2004) (quoting John 
Salmond, Jurisprudence 476 (Glanville L. Williams ed., 10th ed. 
1947)). The power to litigate and the duty 
	to defend actions brought in Wisconsin courts fit squarely within 
Black's definition of substantive rights.
 ¶18 Furthermore, Rule 801.54 is contrary to our obligation to 
uphold the 
	constitutions of the United States and the State of Wisconsin. As the 
United States Supreme Court 
	has held, the United States Constitution is not binding on tribal 
courts. Talton v. Mayes, 163 U.S. 376, 382-83 (1896). However, 
litigants in Wisconsin courts are protected by 
	the United States Constitution and the Wisconsin Constitution. See 
Dep't of Admin. v. WERC, 90 Wis. 2d 426, 434-35, 280 N.W.2d 150 
(1979). The constitutions provide the 
	framework in which the courts of the state of Wisconsin are obligated 
to operate. See State v. Cockrell, 2007 WI App 217, ¶34 
n.10, 306 Wis. 2d 52, 741 N.W.2d 267. That 
	constitutional framework includes the United States Constitution's Bill 
of Rights and the 
	Wisconsin Constitution's Declaration of Rights. Helgeland v. Wis. 
Municipalities, 2008 WI 9, 
	¶13, 307 Wis. 2d 1, 745 N.W.2d 1. However, as separate sovereigns 
antedating 
	the Constitution, Indian tribes have "historically been regarded 
as unconstrained by 
	those [federal] constitutional provisions framed specifically as 
limitations on federal 
	or state authority." Santa Clara Pueblo v. 
		Martinez, 436 U.S. 49, 56 (1978).
C. Lack of Information and Failure to Heed Concerns
 ¶19 I also am deeply troubled by the majority's willingness to 
create Rule 801.54 
	when this court has engaged in no fact-finding to determine the 
procedures available in 
	the tribal courts of Wisconsin and has ignored the concerns expressed 
by others over 
	the Rule's adoption. Further troubling is that, in adopting Rule 
801.54, the court has 
	not adhered to the usual procedure for drafting and adopting court 
rules. 
 ¶20     First, a majority of the court rushes ahead to create 
Rule 801.54 even though 
	the court has not been provided with descriptions from the Wisconsin 
tribes about 
	the procedures employed in the various tribal courts in Wisconsin. 
Although the majority 
	is correct in its assertion that it received several responses to 
Petition 07-11, not 
	one of those responses provided information about the procedures by 
which each of 
	the various tribal courts operate. For example, the court has not been 
presented 
	information that provides when, or if, a litigant may have a jury 
	trial.12 The court has not been presented 
information that shows whether each tribe has a written code of laws or 
	a constitution and if those exist, what provisions they contain. The 
court has not 
	been presented with information about what types of evidence may be 
introduced during 
	a trial. The court has not been presented with the educational or 
experiential 
	backgrounds of the persons who serve as tribal court judges. The list 
of what the court has 
	not investigated goes on and on. 
 ¶21     At the open conferences on Petition 07-11, I repeatedly 
requested that the 
	court require that the tribes provide specific information about how 
the court of each 
	tribe operates, before the court voted on Petition 07-11. However, a 
majority of the 
	court determined that its lack of information about tribal courts' 
procedures should 
	not prevent it from adopting Rule 801.54. I do not understand the 
majority's willingness 
	to create a law that sends Wisconsin litigants into tribal courts when 
the majority 
	lacks knowledge about the operation of those courts and over which 
courts this court has 
	no control or power of judicial review. This seems to me an abdication 
of the 
	court's obligation to protect the constitutional and statutory rights 
of litigants who 
	have chosen to file actions in Wisconsin circuit courts.
 ¶22 Second, the majority has ignored the responses of those who 
were opposed to 
	the creation of Rule 801.54 based on the Rule's failure to guarantee 
individual rights. 
	For example, Attorney Meg Vergeront, who wrote on behalf of the Village 
of Hobart, 
	expressed concern that while Article I, Section 5 of the Wisconsin 
Constitution preserves 
	the right to trial by jury in all cases at law if the right to a jury 
trial existed at 
	the time the Constitution was adopted, there is no provision in Rule 
801.54 to 
	guarantee this right in tribal courts. 
 ¶23 In addition, the Wisconsin Department of Justice's comments 
on Petition 07-11 
	have been largely ignored. On February 22, 2008, the Department of 
Justice addressed 
	its concerns about, "Under what circumstances is jurisdiction 
concurrent between tribal 
	and state courts or exclusive in tribal or state court?" Rule 
801.54 does not attempt 
	to address this important and complicated question. See my 
discussion above in ¶¶4-14.
 ¶24 The Wisconsin Department of Justice also addressed whether 
there was "a 
	right under the United States or Wisconsin Constitution to have a case 
heard in state 
	court rather than tribal court?" The Department of Justice pointed 
out that a "state may 
	not arbitrarily restrict or deny access to its courts, nor may it limit 
such access 
	where that access is necessary for the exercise of fundamental 
constitutional rights." 
	The majority ignores this concern as well because it has been provided 
with no 
	information about what, if any, constitutional rights are available in 
tribal 
	courts.13 I am dismayed that the court 
appears not to have given due regard to the concerns 
	expressed by Attorney Vergeront, the Department of Justice and others 
who have pointed out 
	the inadequacies of Rule 801.54, and instead, appears to have heeded 
only those who 
	support the law the majority creates. 
 ¶25 Finally, the procedures employed in adopting Rule 801.54 
deviated from our 
	usual procedures for rule adoption. Petition 07-11 was drafted by the 
Director of 
	State Courts, not the State-Tribal Justice Forum, and Rule 801.54 was 
created by the 
	court's own redrafting of the rule proposed in Petition 07-11 through 
the efforts of the 
	Clerk of the Supreme Court. Neither of these actions comports with our 
usual procedure 
	for rule adoption. And lastly, Rule 801.54 was created even though 
there was no showing 
	that there was any need to send those who chose to litigate in circuit 
court to tribal court.
III. CONCLUSION
 ¶26 I write in dissent because: (1) Rule 801.54 is inadequate 
and misleading in 
	regard to addressing tribal court concurrent subject matter 
jurisdiction, which jurisdiction 
	is extremely limited in scope when nonmembers are parties to the 
action; (2) Rule 
	801.54 impermissibly alters the substantive rights of tribal members, 
as well as 
	nonmembers, contrary to the provisions of Wis. Stat. 
§ 751.12(1), which limits the court's 
	rule-making power; (3) Rule 801.54 undermines federal and state 
constitutional and 
	statutory rights of litigants; and (4) a majority of the court has 
pushed this rule-change 
	through before the end of the 2007-08 term of the court, even though 
the court has 
	been presented with no information about the substantive rights 
and civil procedures that 
	are available in tribal courts.
 ¶27 I am authorized to state that Justices DAVID T. PROSSER and 
ANNETTE 
	KINGSLAND ZIEGLER join in this dissent.
Endnotes 
Interest on IOLTA Accounts 
In the matter of amendment of SCR 20:1.15 Safekeeping property; trust 
accounts and fiduciary accounts
Order 08-03
On March 12, 2008, the Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation (WisTAF) 
Board of 
	Directors petitioned this court to amend Supreme Court Rule 20:1.15, 
relating to interest paid 
	on IOLTA (Interest on Lawyers Trust Accounts) accounts. On Aug. 22, 
2008, WisTAF Board 
	of Directors filed an amended petition. WisTAF requests the court adopt 
an 
	interest comparability rule for IOLTA accounts. Petitioner's proposed 
amendments would 
	require attorneys to hold IOLTA accounts at financial institutions that 
pay those accounts 
	the highest interest rate generally available at that institution to 
other customers 
	when IOLTA accounts meet the same account qualifications.
 IT IS ORDERED that a public hearing on the amended petition shall be 
held in 
	the Supreme Court Room in the State Capitol, Madison, Wis., on Tuesday, 
Nov. 18, 2008, 
	at 9:30 a.m.
 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the court's conference in the matter 
shall be held 
	promptly following the public hearing.
 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the appendices filed with the amended 
petition, 
	namely Appendix A (proposed changes to relevant portions of Supreme 
Court Rule 
	20:1.15), Appendix B (proposed changes in context of entire Supreme 
Court Rule 20:1.15), 
	and Appendix C (summary of proposed revisions), shall be made available 
on the Web site 
	of the Wisconsin Supreme Court under "Opinions and rules," 
"Supreme Court," "Rules," 
	"View rules orders and pending petitions and petitions," 
"Petitions and audio of 
	public hearings," at http://wicourts.gov. 
 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that notice of the hearing be given by a 
single publication of 
	a copy of this order and of the amended petition in the official state 
newspaper and in 
	an official publication of the State Bar of Wisconsin not more than 60 
days nor less 
	than 30 days before the date of the hearing.
 Dated at Madison, Wis., this 28th day of August, 2008.
By the court:
	David R. Schanker, 
	Clerk of Supreme Court
Amended Petition
Background: For about two years, the Wisconsin Trust 
Account Foundation, 
	Inc. ("WisTAF") has explored the possibility of developing a 
comparable interest rule so 
	that IOLTA (Interest on Lawyers Trust Accounts) accounts are treated 
equitably by 
	earning interest comparable to that earned by similarly situated 
non-IOLTA bank customers. 
	In August 2007, WisTAF formed a Comparable Interest Committee to 
develop a 
	comparable interest rule change. In the rule development process, the 
committee 
	received substantial input from the Office of Lawyer Regulation. The 
committee has met twice 
	with the Wisconsin Bankers Association ("WBA") seeking its 
input. Lisa Roys, Public 
	Affairs Director of the State Bar of Wisconsin, joined the meetings 
with the WBA. The 
	committee has presented its proposed rule change to the State Bar of 
Wisconsin's Board 
	of Governors, which unanimously voted to support the proposed 
comparable interest 
	petition and trust account rule changes. In drafting the proposed rule 
change, WisTAF 
	utilized American Bar Association resources to develop the proposed 
rule language.
 In October 2007, WisTAF hired experienced and qualified independent 
consultants 
	to perform a feasibility study to determine the impact an interest rate 
comparability 
	rule would have on Wisconsin IOLTA accounts. The study estimated that 
under an IOLTA 
	interest rate comparability rule, WisTAF would realize a net remittance 
of up to $2,400,000 
	more per year above present IOLTA revenue. This estimate assumed a 
Federal Funds Rate 
	of 4.75%. A supplemental report (in February 2008) from the consultants 
indicated 
	an estimated net remittance revenue of up to $1,300,000 above present 
IOLTA revenue at 
	a Federal Funds Rate of 3.00%. At the present Federal Funds Target rate 
of 2.00%, 
	a smaller increase is likely but as rates recover, the increases over 
past revenue 
	will grow. Other states report their revenue no longer falls as low as 
it did 
	before comparability even at the lowest part of the interest rate 
cycle.
 An updated rule is also necessary to be consistent with the recent 
United 
	States Supreme Court decision on the legality of IOLTA. In Brown v. 
Legal Foundation of Washington, 538 U.S. 216, 123 S. Ct. 1406 
(2003), the court defined IOLTA accounts 
	as those that may only contain funds which cannot earn income for the 
benefit of the 
	client or 3rd party in excess of the costs to secure that income.
General Comments: The attached rule proposal, Appendix A, 
presents proposed 
	deletions in strikethroughs and additions in underlines to relevant 
sections of the trust 
	account rule. Appendix B presents the proposed changes within the 
context of the entire 
	trust account rule. Also attached are lists that provide synopses of 
the proposed changes. 
	The first list, Appendix C, contains descriptions of specific proposed 
revisions. The 
	second list, Appendix D, contains general substantive changes.
DISCUSSION: In WisTAF's 18-year history, it has granted more 
than $26,000,000 
	to agencies providing civil legal services to low income people. While 
these funds 
	help thousands of people every year receive legal representation to 
help with basic 
	life necessities, many thousands more go without any civil legal 
assistance.
 In fact, only about 12% of Wisconsin's low-income residents' civil 
legal 
	assistance needs are being met satisfactorily, according to Bridging 
the Justice Gap: 
	Wisconsin's Unmet Legal Needs, a study released in March 2007 by the 
Access to Justice 
	Committee, State Bar of Wisconsin. The study also found that closing 
the gap in meeting the 
	civil legal needs of people who are eligible for legal services 
programs but are turned 
	away because of lack of funding would require an additional $16,000,000 
per year for 
	direct civil legal services.
 It is important to update IOLTA account interest requirements 
because the 
	banking landscape has changed since those requirements were written 
well over 20 years 
	ago. Since WisTAF began, some banks have not treated lawyers' trust 
accounts 
	("IOLTA accounts") in the same manner as other accounts with 
similar balances. 
	Generally, lawyers' trust accounts have been treated as a group, 
regardless of principal 
	balance size. Today, an interest-bearing checking (NOW) account often 
may no longer be the 
	best or only option for an IOLTA account. To benefit from changes in 
the banking 
	landscape, updating the IOLTA rule is necessary to allow IOLTA accounts 
to be treated equitably 
	by earning rates comparable to what banks pay their similarly-situated 
non-IOLTA customers.
 Without the rule changes proposed in this petition, interest rates 
for many 
	larger IOLTA accounts will remain artificially low. Representatives 
from the Wisconsin 
	Bankers Association assert that the smaller IOLTA trust accounts are 
earning interest 
	rates similar to those earned by non-IOLTA customers in the same bank. 
Because IOLTA 
	accounts with larger balances have been treated the same as other 
smaller IOLTA accounts, 
	they have not been considered eligible to use alternate revenue 
generating vehicles to earn 
	a higher rate of interest similar to that earned by non-IOLTA customers 
with 
	higher balances. The trust account rule changes proposed by this 
petition would allow 
	IOLTA accounts to be treated in the same fashion as non-IOLTA accounts 
that earn higher 
	rates of interest. The majority of IOLTA accounts with smaller balances 
would not change 
	their current interest rate or revenue generation. Those IOLTA accounts 
with larger 
	balances, however, would likely generate greater revenue through use of 
alternate 
	investment vehicles.1
 It is a matter of fairness that IOLTA accounts be paid the highest 
interest rate 
	or dividend generally available at a bank to its other customers when 
IOLTA accounts 
	meet the same minimum balance or other qualifications. Twenty 
	states2 have incorporated an interest rate 
comparability provision into their IOLTA Supreme Court rule, statute, 
	or regulatory guideline. Most states that have adopted interest rate 
comparability 
	have seen impressive increases in IOLTA revenue. For example, with the 
implementation of 
	its comparability rule, Florida's IOLTA income grew by 298% from June 
2004 to June 2006.
 The proposed rule changes will predominantly affect IOLTA accounts 
with 
	larger balances. These accounts often qualify for higher yield products 
that offer 
	higher rates, but the current trust account rule does not contain 
language allowing 
	IOLTA accounts to be placed in higher yield products with the 
appropriate safety 
	protections. As stated before, IOLTA accounts with smaller balances 
already typically 
	receive business checking account interest rates that are comparable to 
what banks pay 
	their customers with similar account balance sizes. 
 To offer financial institutions flexibility and maximum choice in 
complying 
	with comparability requirements, the proposed rule changes provide a 
variety of choices 
	for account options. The option of converting or establishing an IOLTA 
account in a 
	higher yield product is offered in all of the states that have 
comparability rules, however, 
	no bank has chosen to convert or establish an account as a higher yield 
product. 
	Instead, banks have chosen to emulate interest rates of higher yield 
products. Even so, 
	the higher yield product must be one of the options for IOLTA accounts, 
or, 
	consequently, IOLTA accounts would not be compared to higher yield 
products. In addition, 
	because establishing and maintaining higher yield products often takes 
additional 
	bank resources, the proposed rule changes allow for the usual sweep 
fees charged to 
	customers with the higher rate products as well as an IOLTA 
administrative fee approved by WisTAF. 
 Comparability requirements regulate where lawyers place IOLTA 
accounts, but do 
	not regulate the banking industry. Under the proposed rule change, 
lawyers would be 
	required to place IOLTA accounts in participating institutions that 
meet interest 
	rate comparability and related IOLTA account requirements. Banks are 
not required to 
	offer IOLTA accounts; doing so is completely voluntary.
 Comparability requirements do not require banks to offer a product 
for IOLTA 
	accounts that they do not already offer their other customers. 
Presumably, these other 
	products are profitable or banks would not offer them to their 
customers. 
 Comparability requirements do not compare rates among banks or set 
specific 
	rates. Rather, each bank sets rates for its own customers based on 
factors a bank 
	normally considers in setting rates. Comparability simply requires that 
an IOLTA account 
	receive the highest interest rate or dividend that other non-IOLTA 
customers receive if 
	the IOLTA account meets the same eligibility or other requirements. 
 Under the comparability requirements, attorneys will not need to do 
	anything differently in managing their IOLTA accounts than they do now. 
There are only 
	two situations where an attorney's or law firm's IOLTA account could be 
affected: (1) A 
	bank decides to place the IOLTA account in a sweep account in which 
case the attorney or 
	law firm would need to sign two documents, provided by WisTAF, allowing 
for the 
	investment transaction to occur; or (2) A bank chooses not to comply 
with the trust 
	account requirements established in SCR 20:1.15, requiring an attorney 
to move his or her 
	IOLTA account to a participating institution. WisTAF is unaware of 
either situation 
	happening in any of the other states that have adopted comparability 
language because banks 
	have chosen to emulate product rates rather than establish IOLTA 
accounts in sweep 
	products, and banks have not refused to comply with comparability 
requirements. 
 Interest rate comparability is important because it achieves 
fairness with 
	other similarly situated non-IOLTA bank customers. WisTAF believes that 
interest 
	rate comparability will significantly enhance the revenue paid on IOLTA 
accounts 
	thereby generating substantially more revenue for civil legal services 
for low-income people 
	in Wisconsin. Interest rate comparability should not affect financial 
	institutions' profitability since they already price the products 
allowed in the proposed 
	rule amendments and routinely offered to their other customers to be 
profitable.
KEY PROPOSALS: Many of the proposed changes to the trust 
account rule involve 
	updating language. There are no changes regarding how attorneys manage 
IOLTA accounts. The 
	most substantive change in the rule concerns IOLTA interest rate 
requirements under 
	a collected new subsection titled "(cm)." The following is a 
synopsis of the 
	proposed changes to SCR 20:1.15, "Safekeeping property; trust 
accounts and fiduciary accounts." 
 SCR 20:1.15(a)(7) Definitions. This proposal amends the 
existing definition of 
	"IOLTA account" to incorporate proposed trust account rule 
references and to clarify that 
	IOLTA accounts are trust accounts subject to SCR 20:1.15. 
 SCR 20:1.15(a)(7m) Definitions. "IOLTA participating 
institution" is a new 
	definition that clarifies the difference between financial institutions 
that choose to offer 
	IOLTA products to their attorney customers and financial institutions 
offering other 
	trust account or fiduciary products. "IOLTA participating 
institution" means a 
	financial institution that has voluntarily chosen to offer IOLTA 
accounts and which is 
	certified by WisTAF as meeting the IOLTA account requirements of SCR 
20:1.15(cm) and has 
	also assured WisTAF that it has complied with the overdraft 
notification requirements of 
	SCR 20:1.15(h).
 SCR 20:1.15(a)(11) Definitions. The definition of WisTAF has 
been added for ease 
	of reference.
 SCR 20:1.15(c)(1) IOLTA accounts. This proposal amends the 
existing definition 
	of IOLTA so that it is consistent with the definition in Brown v. 
Legal Foundation of Washington, 538 U.S. 216, 123 S. Ct. 1406 
(2003): An IOLTA account may only 
	contain funds which cannot earn income for the benefit of the client or 
3rd party in excess 
	of the costs to secure that income.
 SCR 20: 1.15(cm) Interest on Lawyer Trust Account (IOLTA) 
	requirements. This is a new provision that incorporates existing 
language and new information on where 
	IOLTA accounts may be placed, necessary insurance and safety 
requirements, income 
	requirements (including comparable interest requirements), allowable 
reasonable fees on 
	IOLTA accounts, and remittance and reporting requirements. 
 SCR 20:1.15(d) Prompt notice and delivery of trust property; (e) 
	Operational requirements for trust accounts; and (f) Record-keeping 
requirements for trust 
	accounts. This proposal amends existing titles and terms to provide 
clarity regarding which 
	trust accounts are subject to the provisions contained within these 
sections.
 Under the proposed rule changes, attorneys will continue to be 
required to 
	instruct their financial institutions to comply with the provisions of 
the rule for any 
	IOLTA account that the bank establishes for the attorney or law firm. 
These new 
	provisions require attorneys to hold IOLTA accounts in banks that 
comply with the trust 
	account rule, including comparability requirements. Banks that comply 
are called 
	"IOLTA participating institutions." WisTAF will identify 
whether a bank is in compliance 
	with the rule and will publish on its web site a list of IOLTA 
participating 
	institutions that comply with the IOLTA account requirements and 
overdraft notice requirements. 
	A bank can become an IOLTA participating institution at any time.
 These new provisions also allow for appropriate safety and security 
	protections, including language to ensure that, if used, repurchase 
agreements and money market 
	funds meet safety parameters based on government securities and that 
open-end money 
	market funds have a minimum level of asset protection. Expanded 
language on interest 
	and dividend requirements provide that IOLTA accounts must bear the 
highest rate or 
	dividend generally available to non-IOLTA customers when the IOLTA 
account meets the same 
	minimum balance or other eligibility requirements. In determining the 
highest rate or 
	dividend available, banks cannot discriminate between IOLTA accounts 
and accounts of 
	non-IOLTA customers. The new language will also require that IOLTA 
participating 
	financial institutions be in compliance with the overdraft agreement 
requirements of 
	SCR 20:1.15(h).
 To comply with the comparability requirements, the rule offers banks 
three 
	account options. The first option allows financial institutions to 
actually establish the 
	IOLTA account as the qualifying higher rate product, such as a 
repurchase 
	agreement3 or an open-end money market 
	fund.4 In lieu of establishing a 
comparable high yield product, 
	a second option is for a bank to pay a comparable rate on the IOLTA 
checking account. 
	In states with comparability rules, most banks have chosen this option. 
A third 
	option allows a bank to pay a benchmark rate, which is a fixed 
percentage of the Federal 
	Funds Rate based on data showing what percentage would be close to 
comparable rates net 
	of fees for Wisconsin banks.5 An 
additional option is available for banks that wish to 
	pay IOLTA interest rates higher than the comparable or benchmark level. 
Banks which agree 
	to pay a set rate negotiated with WisTAF over a fixed period of time 
that is above 
	their comparable rate will receive recognition from WisTAF for 
voluntarily going above 
	and beyond the requirement of the rule.
 A new provision lists the reasonable fees allowed to be deducted 
from IOLTA 
	account interest and states that these fees may not be taken from 
interest or dividends of 
	other IOLTA accounts. The fees cannot be assessed against or deducted 
from the principal 
	of any IOLTA account. Lawyers are responsible for any other fees banks 
charge on 
	the account.
IMPLEMENTATION AND MANAGEMENT OF A COMPARABILITY PROGRAM: 
Currently, there are 230 financial institutions participating in 
Wisconsin's IOLTA program. If the 
	trust account rule is amended to provide for comparable interest on 
IOLTA accounts, 
	a certification process and a monitoring plan will be necessary to 
assist 
	financial institutions that wish to offer IOLTA accounts in complying 
with the amended 
	rule. Implementing rate comparability will not be possible without 
clear, fair guidelines 
	that ensure financial institutions currently participating in the IOLTA 
program 
	have sufficient time to comply with changes to the trust account rule.
 WisTAF will identify whether a financial institution is a 
participating 
	institution, and consequently eligible for lawyers to hold IOLTA 
accounts there, based on 
	the institution's compliance with SCR 20:1.15 IOLTA provisions. Each 
bank will 
	choose between a safe harbor certification benchmark rate of 70 percent 
of the Federal 
	Funds Rate or an application certification and return the appropriate 
form and any 
	materials to WisTAF by a specified date. WisTAF will evaluate 
certification statements 
	and applications as they are received. 
 Financial institutions that submit a safe harbor certification 
statement will not 
	be subject to further review and the implementation process is complete 
once the 
	proposed benchmark rate is in effect and documented. Financial 
institutions that submit 
	an application for certification will provide designated information 
supporting 
	the application (including but not limited to rate sheets and product 
	descriptions). Financial institutions submitting an application for 
certification will receive 
	final approval after any required change has been implemented. 
Institutions receiving 
	final approval will be added on an ongoing basis to WisTAF's list of 
IOLTA certified 
	financial institutions, maintained on the WisTAF website.
 If the comparable interest rule language is approved, WisTAF is 
prepared to 
	implement comparable interest at the earliest possible date in a manner 
that allows 
	financial institutions currently holding IOLTA accounts to reasonably 
attain compliance. 
	WisTAF's implementation plan is based on successful implementation 
plans followed in 
	Michigan, Illinois, Texas and Maine.
 With the earliest possible effective date of Jan. 1, 2009, WisTAF 
would establish 
	a six-month grace period in which financial institutions that currently 
hold 
	IOLTA accounts could attain compliance. Current IOLTA participating 
institutions would 
	have until July 1, 2009 to come into compliance with the comparable 
interest 
	requirements. All financial institutions that enter the IOLTA program 
as new IOLTA 
	participating institutions (i.e., institutions that did not offer IOLTA 
accounts prior to Jan. 
	1, 2009) would be required to be compliant immediately. 
 Comparable interest rates would be effective as of April 1, 2009. 
	Institutions completing their compliance requirements and approved by 
WisTAF before April 1, 
	2009, would have no further deadlines to meet. Financial institutions 
completing 
	their compliance requirements between April 1, 2009 and July 1, 2009 
would be allowed 
	to retroactively submit, by July 1, 2009, the difference between their 
IOLTA rates prior 
	to April 1, 2009, and the April 1, 2009 adjusted compliance rates. The 
deadline 
	for applications to be sent to WisTAF would be June 1, 2009. In order 
to best 
	support financial institutions through the process of certification, 
WisTAF will complete 
	all certification reviews in a prompt and timely manner.
 Alternately, if comparability rate language were made effective as 
of July 1, 
	2009, WisTAF would conduct the certification process between the time 
the rule language 
	was approved and July 1, 2009 so that all currently participating IOLTA 
	financial institutions would be certified and compliant on the 
effective date.
 This foregoing implementation plan could be modified to accommodate 
a 
	later implementation date, if needed.
 Once the initial certification process has been implemented, WisTAF 
will establish 
	a monitoring program adaptable to factors such as financial institution 
size, the 
	average principal balance of IOLTA deposits held, and the fluctuation 
of the economy. 
	These factors will be used to determine whether a financial institution 
should be monitored 
	on a monthly, quarterly or annual basis, or to monitor financial 
	institutions' implementation of new rates as the Federal Funds Rate 
changes. Any 
	discrepancies discovered between stated interest rates and the amounts 
of funds that are received 
	by WisTAF would be promptly addressed with the financial institution 
involved.
 Once a financial institution has been certified to hold IOLTA 
accounts, WisTAF 
	will decertify that financial institution only if repeated and 
documented attempts to 
	resolve any compliance issue(s) are not successful. At that time, the 
financial institution 
	will receive written notice of its decertified status and attorneys 
holding accounts at 
	the decertified financial institution would be notified that the 
institution no longer is 
	in compliance with the trust account rule and they will need to move 
their IOLTA 
	accounts to certified participating institutions. If the decertified 
financial 
	institution subsequently reapplies for certification and can 
demonstrate compliance with the 
	IOLTA provisions of the trust account rule, WisTAF will re-certify the 
institution. To 
	date, no other comparable interest state has had to decertify a 
financial institution for 
	non-compliance.
CONCLUSION: The Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation 
respectfully requests approval 
	of the proposed rule changes to ensure that comparable interest is paid 
on all 
	IOLTA accounts.
 Attached to this Petition are the proposed amendments to SCR 
20:1.15.
Respectfully submitted, this 21st day of August, 2008.
John Bermingham, President,
	Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation Inc.
De Ette Tomlinson, Executive Director
	Wisconsin Trust Account Foundation Inc.
Endnotes
Top of Page  
Admitting Lawyers on Proof of Practice 
Elsewhere	
In the matter of amendment to Supreme Court Rule SCR 40.05 relating to 
admitting lawyers upon proof of practice elsewhere
Order 08-07 
On April 1, 2008, the Board of Bar Examiners, by its director, John 
E. 
	Kosobucki, petitioned this court to amend Supreme Court Rule 40.05, 
relating to admitting 
	lawyers upon proof of practice elsewhere. On July 24, 2008, an amended 
petition was filed 
	in this matter to show a marked version of the proposed amendments to 
SCR 40.05. 
 IT IS ORDERED that a public hearing on the amended petition shall be 
held in 
	the Supreme Court Room in the State Capitol, Madison, Wis., on Tuesday, 
Nov. 18, 2008, 
	at 9:30 a.m. 
 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the court's conference in the matter 
shall be held 
	promptly following the public hearing.
 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that notice of the hearing be given by a 
single publication of 
	a copy of this order and of the amended petition in the official state 
newspaper and in 
	an official publication of the State Bar of Wisconsin not more than 60 
days nor less 
	than 30 days before the date of the hearing.
 Dated at Madison, Wis., this 28th day of August, 2008.
By the court:
	David R. Schanker, 
	Clerk of Supreme Court
Amended Petition
The Board of Bar Examiners, by its director John E. Kosobucki, 
petitions the 
	Supreme Court of Wisconsin for orders amending Supreme Court Rule 
40.05, relating to 
	admitting lawyers to the Wisconsin bar upon proof of practice 
elsewhere, by deleting 
	SCR 40.05(1)(c), (1m), (5) and (6), and by amending SCR 40.05(1)(b) and 
(2). If the 
	Court issues these orders, SCR 40.05 will read as follows:
PROPOSED AMENDMENT:
SCR 40.05 Legal competence requirement: Proof of practice 
elsewhere.
 (1) An applicant shall satisfy the legal competence requirement by 
presenting to 
	the clerk certification of the board that the applicant has provided 
all of the following: 
 (a) Proof of admission to practice law by a court of last resort in 
any other state 
	or territory or the District of Columbia. 
 (b) Proof that the applicant has been primarily 
actively and 
	substantially engaged in the active practice of 
law in the courts of the United States or another state 
	or territory or the District of Columbia for 3 
five years within the last 5 seven years 
prior to filing application for admission. 
 
(c) If any state, territory or the District of Columbia practice in 
which is proposed
to satisfy the requirement of sub. (b) has, as of the date of 
the filing of 
	the application, requirements for bar admission in that jurisdiction on 
the basis 
	of practice in Wisconsin other than those set forth in subs. (a) and 
(b), proof that 
	the applicant has satisfied those requirements of that state, territory 
or the District 
	of Columbia.
 (1m) Eligibility for admission under this rule shall be 
limited as follows:
 (a) An applicant who proposes to satisfy sub. (1)(b) by 
practice in a 
	jurisdiction that does not grant bar admission to attorneys licensed in 
Wisconsin on the basis 
	of practice in Wisconsin shall not be eligible for admission on proof 
of 
	practice elsewhere.
 (b) An applicant who proposes to satisfy sub. (1)(b) by 
practice in a 
	jurisdiction that does not grant bar admission on the basis of practice 
to attorneys licensed 
	in Wisconsin under SCR 40.03 shall not be eligible for admission on 
proof of 
	practice elsewhere.
 (2) Legal service as corporate counsel or trust officer, or 
lawfully before the courts or administrative agencies of the United 
States or of another state or 
	territory or the District of Columbia, if conducted in 
compliance with the rules of a state or territory or of the 
District of Columbia where the applicant was admitted to 
	practice law, may be deemed to be the practice of law for the purposes 
of sub. (1)(b) and (c) this section. 
 (3) The following activities, whether or not conducted in a state 
where the 
	applicant was admitted to practice law, may be deemed to be the 
practice of law for the 
	purposes of sub. (1)(b): and 
		(c):
 (a) Service as a judge of a court of record of the United States, 
any state 
	or territory or the District of Columbia. 
 (b) Legal service with any local or state government or with the 
federal government. 
 (c) Legal service in the armed forces of the United States. 
 (d) Teaching in any law school approved by the American bar 
association. 
 (4) An applicant who has failed the Wisconsin bar examination shall 
not be 
	eligible for admission on proof of practice elsewhere. 
 (6) An applicant who satisfies sub. (1)(b) by legal service 
in the U.S. armed 
	forces is not subject to the limitations under sub. (1)(c).
JUSTIFICATION
Wisconsin welcomes competent lawyers from twenty states and the 
District of 
	Columbia upon proof that they have practiced elsewhere. Lawyers from 
other states and 
	territories are not eligible for admission here unless they first pass 
the Wisconsin 
	bar examination. This disparate treatment of foreign lawyers, required 
by SCR 
	40.05(1m), depends not on their competence or their usefulness to 
Wisconsin consumers of 
	legal services, but on whether their home jurisdictions admit Wisconsin 
lawyers 
	without examination.
 Nor are lawyers from those twenty-one favored jurisdictions all 
treated equally. 
	Under SCR 40.05(1)(c), lawyers from jurisdictions with requirements 
different from 
	Wisconsin's for admission on proof of practice elsewhere must satisfy 
their own state's terms 
	as well as Wisconsin's if they are to be admitted here without 
examination.
 SCR 40.05(1m) and (1)(c) should be repealed because Wisconsin 
consumers of 
	legal services are better served when there are no artificial barriers 
to the admission 
	of capable lawyers. If competent lawyers from California or Ohio 
(states that do not 
	admit foreign lawyers without examination) are welcomed here on the 
same basis as those 
	from Illinois and Indiana (states that do), Wisconsin residents will 
have wider choices 
	when they need legal services.
 The petitioner therefore asks the Court to repeal SCR 40.05(1)(c) 
and (1m). 
	SCR 40.05(6) should also be repealed because it is unnecessary if SCR 
40.05(1)(c) 
	is repealed. 
 The other proposed amendments to SCR 40.05 are of less moment. 
Requiring 
	foreign lawyers to practice for five years (instead of three) before 
being admitted 
	without examination here might better assure the applicants' 
competence. All the 
	other recommended changes to SCR 40.05 are deemed to be insubstantial, 
and intended solely 
	to clarify what constitutes a foreign practice of law.
 Dated this 31st day of March, 2008.
Respectfully submitted,
John E. Kosobucki, Director, Board of Bar Examiners 
Top of Page 
Wisconsin 
Lawyer