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Traps
in Making Claims Against Governments
Calls for Court of Appeals
Innovations
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Diane Molvig
operates Access Information Service, a Madison research, writing,
and editing service. She is a frequent contributor to area publications.
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Three survey statements on appellate
procedures and decisions drew high levels of agreement among respondents.
First, 64 percent felt the rules of appellate procedure
for Wisconsin cases are too complex and time-consuming - still a substantial
majority, but down from 70 percent in 1999. This year's average scores
for judges and lawyers tied at 4.7. "The rules are complex; I won't tell
you otherwise," Nettesheim says. "They can be confusing, even, at times,
to appellate judges." He notes that some rules have been reworked recently
to make them more comprehensible.
While Nettesheim concedes that procedures might be further simplified,
he suggests that the sentiments expressed in the survey stem from the
fact that many lawyers don't practice appellate law regularly. "When you
bump up against things that are foreign to you," he says, "you tend to
see them as complex and daunting. I dare say if you put the same question
to regular appellate practitioners, you might find a decidedly different
result."
What's more, daunting as some procedural rules may seem, they do serve
a purpose, Nettesheim contends. Rules assure that when a case reaches
the appeals court, everything is in order, the record has been properly
compiled, and the court has jurisdiction over the case. That prevents
technical or procedural questions from popping up later, when they might
distract judges from their paramount task of formulating an opinion.
New to this year's survey was a statement that read: "All opinions of
the court of appeals should be published and able to be cited as precedent."
Fifty-nine percent of respondents agreed. Much stronger agreement emerged
for another new survey statement addressing appellate decisions: "A party
should be allowed to cite an unpublished court of appeals opinion for
the persuasive value if a copy of the decision has been provided to the
opposing party." The latter statement evoked 72 percent agreement, with
lawyers favoring it more than judges (average scores of 5.1 and 4.6).
As for the first statement, publishing all court of appeals decisions
would be of questionable value, as Nettesheim sees it - a view he suspects
most of his appellate colleagues would share. "I say that for the simple
reason that some decisions issued by the court of appeals say nothing
new," he explains. "They simply rely on well-established law. So publishing
every decision would be largely a waste of time."
Instead, the appellate courts have a three-tiered system for sifting
out cases that merit publication. First, when a three-judge panel rules
on a case, it also decides if the decision should be published. Then,
once the decision is drafted and before it's released, those judges revisit
their publishing decision. Finally, a publication committee made up of
one court of appeals judge from each of the state's four appellate districts
reads all authored appellate opinions issued statewide each month and
again reviews the decision to publish or not.
Even with this multilevel scrutiny, cases can fall through the cracks,
Nettesheim concedes. Plus, people may disagree about the significance
of a case. He doubts, however, that the remedy is to publish all decisions.
Consider that lawyers and judges already feel buried as they try to keep
up with information. "If you would add to that pack of material the scores
and scores of unpublished cases that come out each month from the court
of appeals," Nettesheim says, "I suspect a lot of people would change
their minds in a hurry" about wanting all appellate decisions to be published.
Turning to the second survey statement on appellate decisions, Nettesheim
strongly agrees with the nearly three-fourths of survey respondents who
want to be able to cite an unpublished court of appeals opinion. Attorneys
benefit by being able to use the persuasive logic of unpublished opinions,
even though they're not binding, in arguing other cases. From a judge's
standpoint, "If I'm working on a case," Nettesheim says, "and a lawyer
tenders to me a helpful, well-reasoned appellate decision on the same
issue, I would like to have the benefit of that court's thinking. To me
that just makes eminent sense."
Incivility
Takes a Toll
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