Vol. 71, No. 7,
July 1998
Court of Appeals Digest
By Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof. Thomas
J. Hammer
| Contracts | Criminal
Law | Criminal Procedure | Family Law |
| Insurance | Jury Trials
| Municipal Law | Open Meetings Law |
| Open Records | Taxation | Torts |
Jury
Trials
Jury Selection - Striking Minority Jurors - Timeliness of Batson
Objection
State v. Jones, No.
97-1002-CR (filed 14 April 1998) (ordered published 27 May 1998)
The defendant, an African-American, was charged with robbery. A jury
trial was scheduled and the parties and the court conducted voir dire of
prospective jurors. After completing the questioning of the panel, the state
peremptorily struck a Hispanic juror and two African-American jurors. After
each side had exercised all of its peremptory strikes, the trial court asked
whether the 14 remaining jurors were the jurors the parties had selected
for the case. The defendant, through his counsel, answered affirmatively.
The jury was sworn and the remaining members of the venire were excused.
The defendant's attorney then objected to the peremptory challenges made
by the state of the three minority jurors, claiming that they were racially
motivated in violation of Batson v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79 (1986),
and, therefore, a new jury panel should be selected. The trial court disagreed
and the case proceeded to trial. The defendant was convicted.
The critical issue on appeal was whether the defendant had timely objected
to the state's striking of the minority jurors. In a decision authored by
Judge Wedemeyer, the court of appeals concluded that the defendant's Batson
objection, made after the jury was sworn, came too late. It held that a
defendant must make any Batson objection prior to the time the jury
is sworn. If the objection is not made until after that time, the issue
is waived.
In footnote the court observed that even if the defendant had made a
timely objection, it would have been difficult, if not impossible, for the
appellate court to review the merits of his claim because he failed to ensure
that voir dire was recorded. The record documenting the questions and answers
posed during jury selection is essential to any meaningful review of the
Batson issue.
Municipal
Law
Fire and Police Commissions - Appeals of Disciplinary Actions
Younglove v. City of Oak Creek
Fire and Police Commission, No. 97-1522-FT (filed 31 March 1998)
(ordered published 29 April 1998)
Following disciplinary proceedings the Oak Creek Police and Fire Commission
discharged Younglove from his job as chief of police in that community.
He appealed his discharge to the circuit court pursuant to Wis. Stat. section
62.13(5)(i). In this statutory appeal, the circuit court affirmed the police
and fire commission. [Note: This was not a review of the commission's decision
by writ of certiorari.]
Younglove appealed the circuit court's affirmance to the court of appeals.
The critical issue then became whether the court of appeals had jurisdiction
to consider Younglove's appeal. The statute cited above provides that, if
the order of the police and fire commission is sustained by the circuit
court, "it shall be final and conclusive." Relying on this language,
the court of appeals, in a decision authored by Judge Fine, concluded that
it had no jurisdiction over Younglove's appeal. The Legislature has explicitly
deprived appellate courts of jurisdiction to review orders issued by the
circuit court when the latter considers appeals from police and fire commission
orders under section 62.13(5)(i) and its predecessors. The Legislature has
made the circuit court's decision on this kind of statutory appeal final
- irrespective of whether an appellate court believes that decision to be
right or wrong.
The court of appeals' decision also addressed the standard of review
to be applied by the circuit court in a statutory appeal under section 62.13(5)(i).
The statute provides that "the question to be determined by the [circuit]
court shall be: upon the evidence [before the Board of Police and Fire Commissioners]
is there just cause, as described under para. (em), to sustain the charges
against the accused?" This requires the circuit court to ensure that
the board's decision is supported by the evidence that the board found credible.
The circuit court is not empowered to take evidence. Rather, if additional
evidence or other material is needed, the circuit court is directed by statute
to remand to the board for that purpose. The statute requires the circuit
court to give deference to the board's findings and credibility determinations
in deciding whether upon the evidence before the board there was just cause
under the criteria specified in the statute to sustain the charges against
the officer. The statute does not call for the circuit court to ignore credibility
determinations made by the board which heard and saw the witnesses live,
in favor of a de novo review of a transcript of the board's proceedings.
Judge Wedemeyer filed a dissenting opinion.
Open
Meetings Law
Personnel Decisions - Dismissals - Evidentiary Hearings
State of Wisconsin ex rel. Epping
v. City of Neillsville Common Council, No. 97-0403 (filed 2 April
1998) (ordered published 27 May 1998)
Epping attacked his dismissal as the city's director of public works.
He claimed that a violation of the open meetings law occurred when the personnel
committee and the common council met in a closed session. When it reconvened
in an open session, the common council approved a motion terminating Epping
who was then given a letter of termination. The circuit court found that
no open meetings violation occurred.
The court of appeals affirmed in a decision written by Judge Dykman.
Under Wis. Stat. section 19.85(1)(b) a public entity can hold a closed session
to consider someone's dismissal only if the employee was given actual notice
of any evidentiary hearing and of any meeting at which final action might
be taken. "Thus, if no evidentiary hearing or final action took place
during the closed sessions, Epping was not entitled to actual notice of
the meetings." Although the personnel committee and the common council
"discussed" Epping's job performance and status during the closed
session, this did not convert the meeting into an "evidentiary hearing"
because no testimony was taken or evidence admitted. Nor did the record
reflect that "final action" was taken during the closed session.
Open
Records
Personnel Files - Requesters - Notice to "Targets" - Venue
Klein v. Wisconsin Resource
Center, No. 97-0679 (filed 1 April 1998) (ordered published 27 May
1998)
Two individuals committed under Chapter 980 (the Sexual Predator Act)
to the Wisconsin Resource Center (WRC) filed a request for the personnel
file of Marcia Klein, a WRC employee. The trial court denied the request.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Snyder, affirmed.
First, the two men were proper "requesters" as defined in Wis.
Stat. section 19.32. Despite their involuntary commitment to WRC for treatment,
they were not "incarcerated persons" and therefore ineligible
to make such requests under the statute. Second, Klein's challenge to the
release of her personnel file was proper. The reasoning of prior case law
"permits a state employee who is the 'target' of a request for personnel
records to challenge a record custodian's decision to release such information."
The court also spelled out the procedures that attend when requests like
these are made: The employer must balance the public's interest in open
records against the competing factors set forth in the statute; in the event
that disclosure is ordered, "the individual whose privacy interests
are affected must be notified and given an opportunity to appeal the decision."
Based on the record in this case, the court of appeals agreed that the denial
was appropriate.
Finally, venue was proper in Winnebago County. Although the WRC inmates
could have brought a mandamus action in Dane County, Klein - the "target"
- was permitted to seek circuit court review in Winnebago County. In short,
such actions are not limited to Dane County.
Taxation
Sales Tax - Tax on Sale of Flexible Time-shares
Telemark Development, Inc. v.
Department of Revenue, No. 97-3133 (filed 30 April 1998)
(ordered published 27 May 1998)
This case involved a time-share condominium development that is part
of a large resort complex in northern Wisconsin. Telemark Development Inc.
sells one-week time share units in the condominiums to purchasers via land
contracts and deeds conveying a fee simple interest in the units.
Two types of time-share arrangements are available at the resort. Under
the Telemark Interval Owners Association's rules, the year is divided into
two periods: "guaranteed use periods," comprising weeks 7, 8,
26, 27, and 52, and "flexible use periods," consisting of all
other weeks of the year. Those who purchase "guaranteed" weeks
are assured occupancy in a specific condominium during the week or weeks
specified in their deeds or contracts. Purchasers of flexible time-shares,
however, have no guaranteed occupancy periods and no specified condominium
units. They must reserve a unit in advance on a "first come - first
serve" basis and, if they fail to reserve a unit in a timely manner,
they may lose use of the project for that year.
Telemark does not hold a sales tax seller's permit and did not collect
sales taxes on any of its sales of the flexible time-shares. The
Department of Revenue assessed delinquent sales taxes against Telemark on
its sales of the flexible time-shares and the Tax Appeals Commission confirmed
the assessment, concluding that the sale of flexible time-shares is taxable
under Wis. Stat. section 77.52(2)(a)1. The circuit court affirmed, as did
the court of appeals.
Section 77.52(2)(a)1 taxes the furnishing of rooms or lodging to transients
that are available to the public, including those sold as time-shares, "if
the use of the ... lodging is not fixed at the time of sale as to the starting
day or the lodging unit." In a decision authored by Chief Judge Eich,
the court concluded that the Tax Appeals Commission's decision in this case
was entitled to due-weight deference, and it affirmed that decision to impose
the sales tax on the sale of the flexible time-shares as a reasonable interpretation
and application of the law.
Telemark also raised two constitutional claims. It argued that section
77.52(2)(a)1, as applied to its sales of flexible time-shares, violates
the "uniformity clause" of Wisconsin Constitution, Article VIII,
section 1, which states that "the rule of taxation shall be uniform."
This argument was rejected by the court of appeals because the uniformity
clause is limited to property taxes as opposed to transactional taxes such
as those imposed on income or sales. The tax at issue in this case was imposed
on the sale of time-shares - not on the property. The court also rejected
Telemark's equal protection challenge to the statute, concluding that Telemark
had not established beyond a reasonable doubt that the Legislature's decision
to tax the sale of flexible time-shares, while not taxing the sale of guaranteed
time-shares, results in the type of invidious discrimination the equal protection
clause is designed to protect against.
Torts
Medical Treatment - Use of FDA "Approved"
Drugs/Devices for "Unapproved" Purposes - Hospital Liability
Staudt v. Froedtert Memorial
Lutheran Hospital, Nos. 97-0192 and 97-0194 (filed 17 March 1998)
(ordered published 29 April 1998)
This litigation arose out of the use of surgical screws by the plaintiffs'
respective physicians to treat the plaintiffs' back problems. Neither of
the plaintiffs was enrolled in a clinical investigation of the screws' efficacy
or safety. They claim that they were injured as a result of the operations,
and brought these actions against the hospitals where the surgeries
were performed - not against their physicians or the manufacturer of the
screws.
The plaintiffs' claims were predicated on what they contended was a violation
of the hospitals' duties to them: to tell them that the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) had not approved the screws for the specific procedures for which
they were used; to warn them of the risks inherent in the use of the screws;
and to ensure that they were enrolled in a clinical investigative trial
before the screws would be used in the surgeries. They conceded that the
legal viability of these claims depended upon their contention that use
of the screws in their surgeries violated the federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic
Act, as amended by the Medical Device Amendments of 1976.
On summary judgment the circuit court dismissed the claims, holding that
the hospitals were not liable to the plaintiffs because physicians have
the right, within the exercise of their medical judgment and discretion,
to use a medical device for purposes that have not been approved by the
FDA as long as the FDA has approved use of the medical device for some purpose.
In a decision authored by Judge Fine, the court of appeals agreed. Said
the court, once a drug or device has been approved for any purpose, physicians
may use that drug or device for purposes that have not been approved.
Although hospitals must give certain information to those of their patients
participating in clinical investigations of "off-label" uses of
medical devices, the hospital need not give this information to patients
who are not part of such an investigation, even though their physicians
are treating them with the device in an identical "unapproved"
way. Moreover, the duty to get informed consent from a patient rests with
the physician and not the hospital.
The appellate court recognized that the overriding issue in this case
was whether medical decisions on how to treat patients will be made by those
patients' physicians who are, of course, subject to liability if they commit
malpractice, or whether additional layers of review should be interposed
between patient and physician. The plaintiffs were able to cite no statute,
regulation, or court decision that prevents a physician in the course of
his or her medical practice from using an approved drug or medical device
for an "unapproved" purpose. Until Congress changes the law to
prohibit the "unapproved" use of drugs or medical devices that
are approved for some purposes, or until the Legislature of this state -
if consistent with the supremacy of federal law - alters the current calculus
with respect to the use of drugs and medical devices, responsibility for
the plaintiffs' alleged injuries as a result of their spinal operations
does not lie with the hospitals in which the surgeries were performed.
Chiropractic Malpractice - Medical Problems
Goldstein v. Janusz Chiropractic
Clinics S.C., No. 97-0326 (filed 21 April 1998) (ordered published
27 May 1998)
The plaintiffs brought this wrongful death action against the chiropractors
who had treated a patient who later died of lung cancer. They alleged that
under Kerkman v. Hintz, 418 N.W.2d 795 (1988), the chiropractor had
a duty to recognize a lung mass as an "abnormality" and inform
the patient that it was not treatable through chiropractic means. The circuit
court granted summary judgment to the defendants.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Curley, affirmed
and explained Kerkman's ramifications. First, under Kerkman,
chiropractors are not obligated to distinguish between a "medical problem"
and a "chiropractic problem"; rather, they have a duty to simply
determine whether the patient can be treated by chiropractic means. Second,
chiropractors are not under an obligation to refer a patient to a medical
doctor for treatment; rather, the chiropractor need only inform the patient
that the ailment is not treatable through chiropractic means. In this case
the plaintiffs claimed that the defendant chiropractors should have recognized
that a lung mass near the spine was an "abnormality." The court
of appeals rejected this argument, however, because as a matter of law it
implied that the chiropractors should have recognized a "medical problem,"
which runs counter to Kerkman. In short, the court of appeals interprets
Kerkman as holding that "chiropractors do not have a duty to
'recognize medical problems.'" Moreover, "it is beyond the scope
of chiropractic practice to treat lung conditions, and chiropractors are
certainly not licensed to diagnose or treat lung cancer."
Prof. Daniel D. Blinka and Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
invite comments and questions about the digests. They can be reached at
the Marquette University Law School, 1103 W. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee,
WI 53233, (414) 288-7090.
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