Supreme Court Digest
By Prof. Daniel D. Blinka &
Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
| Appellate Procedure | Civil
Procedure | Constitutional Law | Consumer
Law |
| Criminal Procedure | Motor Vehicle
Law | Open Records Law | Sexual
Predator Law |
| Torts | Trials
| Worker's Compensation |
Appellate Procedure
Stipulations - Vacatur - Published Decisions
Mason Shoe Mfg. Co. v. Firstar
Bank, No. 97-2053 (filed 29 June 1999)
Based on the parties' joint stipulation for dismissal
and vacatur on all issues involved in this litigation, the supreme
court ordered the case dismissed with prejudice and summarily
vacated the decisions of the court of appeals and the circuit
court. See Mason
Shoe Mfg. Co. v. Firstar Bank Eau Claire, 217 Wis. 2d
715 (Ct. App. 1998).
Justice Wilcox did not participate. Justice Bradley, joined
by Chief Justice Abrahamson, dissented from that part of the
order vacating a published decision by the court of appeals.
The dissenters argued that this action is without precedent and
violates public policy.
Civil Procedure
Amended Complaint - Service on Defaulting Party
Ness v. Digital Dial Communications
Inc., No. 96-3436 (filed 7 July 1999)
This garnishment case presented the issue of whether a defendant
who defaults before an amended complaint is filed loses the right
to cure its default by answering the amended complaint. In a
unanimous decision authored by Justice Crooks, the supreme court
concluded that a defaulting party cannot answer an amended complaint,
thereby attempting to cure its default, when the party is already
in default when the amended complaint is filed.
A party in default for failing to answer forfeits its due
process right to notice of further pleadings. Since a defaulting
party has through inaction lost its right to notice of further
pleadings, a plaintiff is not required to serve the defaulting
party with an amended complaint. See Wis. Stat. §
801.14(1). Similarly, a defaulting party loses the right
to answer the amended complaint and revive its defense. Essentially,
in those circumstances, the defaulting party halts the action
at the time of the original complaint. The amended complaint
supersedes the original as to any other party except the defaulting
party. Because the amended complaint does not supersede the original
complaint with regard to the defaulting party, the latter does
not receive a new window in which to file an answer to the amended
complaint.
The court noted that section 801.14(1) requires a plaintiff
to serve even a defaulting defendant with an amended complaint
when the amended complaint contains "new or additional claims
for relief." However, that provision did not apply in this
case because the amended complaint did not present new or additional
claims. It merely involved a technical change.
Justice Steinmetz did not participate in this decision.
Frivolous Actions - Toxic Torts - Causal Nexus
Jandrt v. Jerome Foods Inc.,
No. 98-0885 (filed 7 July 1999)
The plaintiffs, children with birth defects, sued the food
processing plant (JFI) where their mothers worked, alleging negligence
and violations of the Safe Place Statute. The children asserted
that their mothers were exposed to toxic chemicals (for example,
ammonia) while working at the plant. In the complaint the plaintiffs
alleged that, "upon information and belief, said physical
defects were caused in utero by the exposure of their mothers
to poisonous chemicals emitted from one of the aforesaid food
processing machines." A medical expert had recommended that
the plaintiffs conduct limited formal discovery of JFI to learn
more about the mothers' chemical exposure. JFI produced
200,000 documents that were "reviewed" over two days.
Nine months after commencing the suit, the plaintiffs' law
firm (the "Previant firm") voluntarily dismissed the
action when it appeared that causation could be established only
through an expensive, time consuming epidemiological study.
After the circuit court granted the motion to dismiss, JFI
moved for sanctions against the Previant firm alleging that it
had commenced and continued a "frivolous action." The
circuit court found that the Previant firm had filed and continued
the lawsuit even though the causation claim lacked any reasonable
basis in law or fact. On certification from the court of appeals,
the supreme court, in a decision written by Justice Steinmetz,
affirmed in part and reversed in part.
As to the first issue, the supreme court held that the action
was not frivolous when filed. The filing of an alleged
frivolous claim is controlled by section
802.05 of the Wisconsin Statutes, which requires the pleader
to make "three warranties":
- The pleading was not "interposed" for any improper
purpose.
- The pleading is "well grounded in fact," based
on the signer's "best" knowledge, information,
and belief.
- The signer conducted a "reasonable inquiry" and
so on.
The action was not frivolous when filed in light of the Previant
firm's knowledge at the time of filing and the tight time
deadline it was under to commence the action before the law changed
on joint and several liability.
But as to the second issue, the court held that the Previant
firm had continued a frivolous claim as of the date of
its second request for documents, "following which it made
no further investigation into causation, and in response to which
JFI began to accumulate substantial fees and costs defending
itself against the action." See Wis. Stat. §
814.025. "[T]he cornerstone of this conclusion rests
in this: 1) causation - the causal connection between any
amount of a chemical used at JFI and the plaintiffs' birth
defects - was the critical element of the plaintiffs'
claims; 2) following the filing of the complaint, for nine months
the Previant firm did nothing [sic] to try to establish this
causation."
Justice Bradley, joined by Chief Justice Abrahamson, dissented.
Constitutional Law
Governmental Takings of Property -
Temporary Regulatory Takings
Eberle v. Dane County Board
of Adjustment, No. 97-2869 (filed 7 July 1999)
The plaintiffs are real estate developers who own a tract
of land in Dane County. After securing the approval of the county,
they recorded a certified survey map dividing the land into two
parcels. Effective with the recording of the certified survey
map, the zoning of the parcels was changed to classifications
that would permit residential uses.
Prior to this rezoning, the lots could be accessed from either
of two public roads, Coray Lane and Timber Lane. However, as
a condition of the rezoning, the county (at the request of the
Town of Verona where the land was located) imposed a requirement
that access to one of the lots occur from Timber Lane. This requirement
eliminated the possibility of accessing that lot (and, due to
the layout of the parcel, the other lot as well) from Coray Lane.
By recording the certified survey map, the plaintiffs effectively
agreed to this access restriction.
The plaintiffs thereafter petitioned the Dane County Board
of Adjustment for a special exception permit allegedly required
by a Dane County ordinance to build a driveway connecting the
lots to Timber Lane. The board denied the permit after finding
that the proposed driveway would cross a wetland and was not
permitted by Dane County ordinances applicable to wetland zoning
districts. Without this permit there could be no legal construction
of any driveway to the lots. On certiorari review the circuit
court reversed the board's decision and ordered it to issue
the special exception permit, a decision that the court of appeals
affirmed and which was not appealed to the supreme court.
The issue before the supreme court was whether the circuit
court properly dismissed the plaintiffs' other claims in
which they contended that the board's denial of the permit
deprived them of a legal means of access to their property and
thus constituted an unconstitutional temporary regulatory taking
under the federal constitution and article I, section 13 of the
Wisconsin
Constitution.
In a majority decision authored by Justice Crooks, the supreme
court held that the plaintiffs have stated a valid temporary
regulatory taking claim under the Wisconsin Constitution. The
constitution provides that the property of no person shall be
taken for public use without just compensation. A taking can
occur absent physical invasion only where there is a legally
imposed restriction upon the use of property. Takings that do
not involve physical invasions of land are called "regulatory
takings." Such takings are now well established in Wisconsin
law. The rule applied by Wisconsin and the federal courts is
that a regulation or government action must deny the landowner
all or substantially all practical uses of property in order
to be considered a taking for which compensation is required.
Both the Wisconsin Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme Court have
recognized that just compensation is constitutionally required
for temporary regulatory takings that continue for only a temporary
period of time.
The supreme court was satisfied that the plaintiffs have stated
a valid claim for a temporary regulatory taking under the Wisconsin
Constitution. The plaintiffs' claim that the board's
improper denial of the special exception permit temporarily deprived
them of the ability to access their property by way of Timber
Lane, the only legal means of access. Certainly, under the circumstances
of this case, a complete lack of legal access to a piece of land
constitutes a deprivation of all or substantially all practical
uses of that land. In footnote the court observed that any regulatory
taking claim asserted by the plaintiffs would have to be for
the temporary deprivation of use that occurred during the period
in which the permit denial was in effect.
In the course of this opinion the supreme court overruled
those portions of Reel Enterprises v. City of La Crosse,
146 Wis. 2d 662, 431 N.W.2d 743 (Ct. App. 1988), which suggest
that a decision by a governmental entity that is reversed by
a court is not a legally imposed restriction that could be cognizable
as a taking.
Finally, given its decision that the plaintiffs may pursue
their claim under the Wisconsin Constitution, the supreme court
held that their federal claims under 42
U.S.C. section 1983 are not ripe for review. The Fifth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution proscribes takings without
just compensation and no constitutional violation occurs until
just compensation has been denied. If a state provides an adequate
procedure for seeking just compensation, the property owner cannot
claim a violation of the Just Compensation Clause until it has
used the procedure and been denied just compensation. As a matter
of fact, the plaintiffs conceded in their brief before the supreme
court that their claims of temporary regulatory takings under
the federal constitution would not be ripe if they are allowed
to pursue their claim under the Wisconsin Constitution.
Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a dissenting opinion.
Consumer Law
Consumer Credit Transactions - Wisconsin Consumer Act
-
Attorney Fees - Prevailing Parties
Community Credit Plan Inc.
v. Johnson, Nos. 97-0574-77, 97-0735 and 97-1101-02 (filed
9 July 1999)
Several customers purchased vehicles in consumer credit transactions
financed by Community Credit Plan Inc., whose office is in Waukesha
County. The transactions did not occur in Milwaukee County, nor
did any of the customers live or store any vehicle involved in
a transaction in Milwaukee County. When each of these loans went
into default, Community commenced small claims replevin actions
in Milwaukee County against each customer to recover the vehicles
that had secured the consumer credit transactions. None of the
customers appeared in court, and default judgments in replevin
authorizing repossession were entered against each customer by
the Milwaukee County small claims court. After the repossession
and sale of the vehicles had occurred, the customers brought
a motion to vacate their respective judgments and to dismiss
the replevin actions for lack of jurisdiction on the grounds
of improper venue. See Wis. Stat. §
421.401(2)(b). The circuit court granted the motions to vacate
and then granted Community's oral motions to dismiss the
actions without prejudice. The circuit court further determined
that the customers were not entitled to attorney fees pursuant
to Wis. Stat. section
425.308.
The customers appealed the denial of attorney fees under the
Wisconsin Consumer Act. The court of appeals reversed, concluding
that the customers prevailed in the circuit court and therefore
were entitled to attorney fees under the WCA. The appellate court
used a two-prong test to reach this conclusion: whether there
was a significant benefit in the litigation to the plaintiffs
and whether there was a violation of the WCA by the defendant.
Because the customers received a "significant benefit"
from the dismissal of the default judgments, and because the
creditor had in fact violated the WCA by prosecuting the actions
in Milwaukee County in violation of the venue provisions of the
WCA, the court of appeals held that the customers prevailed and
were therefore entitled to attorney fees.
In a majority decision authored by Justice Steinmetz, the
supreme court affirmed the court of appeals. It reached this
conclusion by adopting the reasoning and decision of the court
of appeals summarized above.
Justice Wilcox filed a dissenting opinion.
Consumer Credit Transactions - Wisconsin Consumer Act
-
Improper Venue - Nonjudicial Enforcement of Judgments -
Attorney Fees
Kett v. Community Credit
Plan Inc., Nos. 97-3620, 97-3626 and 98-0092 (filed 9
July 1999)
This case involved three actions against Community Credit
Plan Inc. for damages for alleged violations of the Wisconsin
Consumer Act. It arose from earlier replevin actions that Community
Credit brought in Milwaukee County Circuit Court against these
customers to recover their vehicles that were collateral for
loans. Community Credit obtained default replevin judgments in
these actions, but the Milwaukee County Circuit Court later vacated
the judgments because the actions were commenced in Milwaukee
County Circuit Court in violation of the venue provisions of
the WCA; the actions were dismissed. After the Milwaukee County
Circuit Court entered the default replevin judgments but before
it vacated those judgments, Community Credit took possession
of the customers' vehicles by nonjudicial recovery. In these
actions the customers are seeking damages from Community Credit
for wrongfully taking possession of the vehicles and for other
practices prohibited by the WCA.
The first issue considered by the supreme court was whether
Community Credit's taking possession of the vehicles by
nonjudicial recovery pursuant to the default replevin judgments
entered by the Milwaukee County Circuit Court in violation of
the venue provisions of the Wisconsin Consumer Act violated Wis.
Stat. section
425.206. In a majority decision authored by Chief Justice
Abrahamson, the supreme court concluded that the default replevin
judgments on which Community Credit relied for possession of
the collateral by nonjudicial recovery were invalid at the time
of entry for purposes of section 425.206(1)(b) because Community
Credit had not commenced the replevin actions in a county of
proper venue. [Section 425.206(1)(b) provides that a merchant
may not take possession of collateral or goods subject to a consumer
lease in this state by means other than legal process except
when judgment for the merchant has been entered in a proceeding
for recovery of collateral or leased goods under section 425.205.]
By taking possession of collateral by nonjudicial recovery without
a valid judgment (the judgment being invalid because of improper
venue), Community Credit was, as a matter of law, subject to
the penalty provision of section 425.305.
The second issue considered by the supreme court was whether
Community Credit engaged in prohibited practices in violation
of section
427.104(1)(h) and (j). Put another way, did Community Credit
engage in conduct that could reasonably be expected to threaten
or harass the customers or persons related to the customers or
claim, or attempt or threaten to enforce a right with knowledge
or reason to know that the right did not exist. When this matter
was before the court of appeals, it concluded that Community
Credit had engaged in prohibited debt collection practices as
a matter of law by attempting to enforce a right it had reason
to know did not exist. Before the supreme court Community Credit
set forth no reason that persuaded the supreme court that the
court of appeals erred in this regard.
Finally, the supreme court considered whether the customers
are entitled to reasonable attorney fees under section 425.308,
which provides that if the consumer prevails in an action arising
from a consumer transaction, the customer shall recover a reasonable
amount for attorney fees. The supreme court agreed with the court
of appeals that these cases should be remanded to the circuit
court for determination of reasonable attorney fees under section
425.308.
Justice Wilcox filed a dissenting opinion that was joined
by justices Crooks and Prosser.
Criminal Procedure
Sentencing - Admission of Victim's Criminal Record
State v. Spears,
No. 97-0536-CR (filed 7 July 1999)
Victim Young robbed the defendant, taking her purse. A bystander
chased Young, beat him, and successfully retrieved the purse.
After the purse was returned to the defendant, the defendant
took a car and chased Young, who was on foot. The defendant hit
Young propelling him into the street. The defendant then drove
off, but moments later returned to the scene and ran directly
over Young where he lay in the street. Young died shortly thereafter
from the injuries he sustained from twice being hit by the car
the defendant was driving.
Pursuant to a plea agreement the defendant was convicted of
second-degree intentional homicide. At sentencing members of
Young's family cast doubts upon the defendant's version
of the events, questioning whether Young physically assaulted
the defendant during the robbery. Family members portrayed the
deceased as a good-hearted person whose death at the hands of
the defendant required that she be given a harsh sentence.
In anticipation of the sentencing hearing, defense counsel
prepared a sentencing memorandum to which he attached a copy
of the victim's criminal record. That record revealed that
the victim had been arrested on 18 separate occasions between
1984 and 1993 and that he was convicted of burglary on at least
three occasions and was once convicted of robbery. [This record
was characterized by the supreme court as revealing a history
of violent crimes.]
The prosecutor objected to the use of the victim's criminal
record at sentencing, contending that it was not relevant. The
circuit court declined to formally strike the record, but agreed
with the prosecutor that "the specific prior record of the
victim was not relevant at all to these proceedings."
The single issue before the supreme court was whether the
circuit court in sentencing the defendant erroneously exercised
its discretion when it ruled that the victim's criminal
record was irrelevant to its sentencing determination. In a majority
decision authored by Justice Steinmetz, the court held that the
evidence of the victim's criminal record was relevant to
the defendant's sentence because it supported the defendant's
view of the crime for which she was convicted. The criminal record
should have been considered in assessing whether the deceased's
assault on the defendant was likely to have been physical or
nonphysical because that would reflect upon the deceased's
conduct and character on the night of the defendant's crime
and, perhaps, may have had some effect on the sentence the defendant
received.
In sum, the court concluded that where a victim's criminal
record supports a defendant's version of a crime, the gravity
of which crime is a sentencing factor, it should be admitted
as evidence at the defendant's sentencing hearing. Of course,
once such evidence is admitted, the weight to be given it at
sentencing is within the circuit court's discretion.
Justice Bablitch filed a concurring opinion.
Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a dissenting opinion that was
joined by justices Bradley and Prosser. Justice Prosser filed
his own separate dissent.
Motor Vehicle Law
OWI - Implied Consent - Constructive Refusal -
No Duty to Advise Defendant That Right to Counsel
Is Inapplicable in the Implied Consent Context
State v. Reitter,
No. 98-0915 (filed 29 June 1999)
After the defendant was arrested for OWI, he was transported
to the patrol station for administration of an IntoxilyzerTM
test. The officer read to him the standard "Informing the
Accused" form, which outlines the implied consent obligation
to take a chemical test and specifies the penalty if the driver
refuses to submit to testing. The defendant reacted to the reading
of the form by stating repeatedly that he wished to call his
attorney. The officer did not respond directly to this request
but instead explained that under the implied consent law, the
defendant had agreed to submit to the test and that a refusal
would result in the revocation of his driving privilege. In five
exchanges the defendant repeatedly insisted upon the right to
counsel and the officer repeatedly warned him about the nature
of the implied consent law and the consequences of refusal. Although
the record does not indicate whether the defendant communicated
a verbal refusal to submit to the test, he became uncooperative
and grew belligerent. Ultimately the officer determined that
the repeated requests for counsel would be deemed a refusal and
initiated an implied consent case against the defendant. The
circuit court ruled that because the right to counsel does not
apply in the implied consent setting, the defendant unlawfully
refused to submit to a chemical test.
The issue before the supreme court was whether a police officer
is required to advise a custodial defendant, charged with operating
a motor vehicle while intoxicated, that the right to counsel
does not apply to the administration of a chemical test under
the Wisconsin implied consent statute. A related question, whether
the due process clause of the Wisconsin Constitution imposes
an affirmative duty upon police officers to advise defendants
that the right to counsel does not attach to the implied consent
statute, was also raised by the defendant.
In a unanimous decision authored by Justice Prosser, the supreme
court held that officers are under no affirmative duty to advise
defendants that the right to counsel does not apply in the implied
consent setting. The court further held that because the implied
consent statute operates independently from the general statute
reflecting the Sixth Amendment right to counsel (see Wis.
Stat. §
946.75), no tension between the two statutes caused a violation
of the defendant's due process rights.
In its opinion the court declined to impose duties beyond
those created by the Legislature with regard to advising those
under arrest for OWI about the implied consent law. However,
the court indicated a preference that "every officer respond
to defendants in a manner that is both direct and polite. Good
practice should lead professional, courteous officers to advise
insistent defendants that the right to counsel does not apply
to chemical tests. Where a driver repeatedly asks to speak with
an attorney, it would be courteous and simple for the officer
to correct the accused's mistaken assumptions. ... We
see no harm in allowing the officer to state briefly that the
right to counsel does not attach to the implied consent setting."
In footnote the court observed that the record was unclear
as to whether the defendant had been advised of his Miranda
rights prior to the repeated requests for counsel described above.
The court indicated that it was not deciding whether this case
would have come out differently had the defendant been given
those warnings. This footnote was attached to text in which the
court discussed the fact that a minority of jurisdictions apply
a "confusion doctrine" to situations in which the defendant
might be misled by the interplay between Miranda rights
(which include the right to counsel) and the lack of right to
counsel under the implied consent law. In this case the defendant
did not rely on a confusion theory and, said the court, even
if it were to extend the "confusion doctrine" to Wisconsin,
this would not be the case in which to do so.
Open Records Law
Public Employee Personnel Records -
De Novo Judicial Review of Decision to Release Records
Milwaukee Teachers'
Ass'n v. Milwaukee Board of Sch. Directors, No.
97-0308 (filed 8 July 1999)
In Woznicki v. Erickson,
202 Wis. 2d 178, 549 N.W.2d 699 (1996), the supreme court held
that the personnel records of public employees are subject to
the open records law. The case involved records in the custody
of the district attorney. The court also held that the district
attorney cannot release the records of one whose interests in
privacy and reputation would be impacted by that release without
first notifying that individual and allowing him or her a reasonable
amount of time to appeal the decision to the circuit court.
The central issue in this case was whether the de novo judicial
review recognized in Woznicki as being implicit in the
open records law is available when the public records custodian
is not the district attorney. This case involved an open records
request for personnel records of school district employees that
were in the custody of the school district. In a majority decision
authored by Justice Crooks, the supreme court held that the de
novo judicial review recognized in Woznicki applies in
all cases in which a record custodian decides to disclose information
implicating the privacy and/or reputational interests of an individual
public employee, regardless of the identity of the record custodian.
Justice Bablitch agreed with the majority and wrote a concurring
opinion for the sole purpose of addressing the dissent, which
concurrence was joined by justices Steinmetz, Wilcox, and Crooks.
Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a dissenting opinion that was
joined by Justice Bradley. Justice Prosser also dissented.
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