1998 Significant Court Decisions
Highlights of the 1998 Wisconsin Supreme Court and Court of 
Appeals decisions.
By Daniel W. Hildebrand
 fter reviewing the Wisconsin Supreme Court and Court of Appeals 
decisions issued in 1998, the author has highlighted leading cases that 
are of public interest or that significantly impact Wisconsin lawyers 
and their practice of law.
fter reviewing the Wisconsin Supreme Court and Court of Appeals 
decisions issued in 1998, the author has highlighted leading cases that 
are of public interest or that significantly impact Wisconsin lawyers 
and their practice of law.
Constitutional Law
Jackson v. Benson,1 a highly publicized "school choice" case, upheld 
the constitutionality of the Amended Milwaukee Parental Choice Program 
(MPCP). The Amended MPCP made direct payments to parents who sent their 
children to sectarian schools. The parent was required to endorse the 
check for use of the private school.
 The court upheld this "school choice" program. 
The court held that the program did not violate the establishment clause 
of the First 
Amendment because it had a secular purpose, did not have the primary 
effect of advancing religion, and will not lead to excessive 
entanglement between the state and participating sectarian schools. The 
purpose of the program is to provide low-income parents with an 
opportunity to have their children educated outside the embattled 
Milwaukee public school system. Providing educational opportunities for 
children of poor families is unquestionably a state concern. The program 
does not have the primary effect of advancing religion. Indeed, state 
programs that are wholly neutral offer educational assistance without 
reference to religion. Amended MPCP provides a religious neutral benefit 
to eligible pupils and parents who participate - that is, the 
opportunity to choose educational opportunities parents deem best for 
their children.
The court upheld this "school choice" program. 
The court held that the program did not violate the establishment clause 
of the First 
Amendment because it had a secular purpose, did not have the primary 
effect of advancing religion, and will not lead to excessive 
entanglement between the state and participating sectarian schools. The 
purpose of the program is to provide low-income parents with an 
opportunity to have their children educated outside the embattled 
Milwaukee public school system. Providing educational opportunities for 
children of poor families is unquestionably a state concern. The program 
does not have the primary effect of advancing religion. Indeed, state 
programs that are wholly neutral offer educational assistance without 
reference to religion. Amended MPCP provides a religious neutral benefit 
to eligible pupils and parents who participate - that is, the 
opportunity to choose educational opportunities parents deem best for 
their children.
Finally, the program does not involve excessive entanglement between 
the state and religion. Under the program, the state need not and is not 
given the authority to impose any comprehensive, discriminating, and 
continuing state surveillance over participating sectarian private 
schools. Although participating schools are subject to performance, 
reporting, and auditing requirements, as well as to applicable 
nondiscrimination, health, and safety obligations, enforcement of these 
minimal standards does not create an excessive entanglement. This 
oversight already exists in that the Superintendent of Public 
Instruction currently monitors the quality of education at all sectarian 
private schools.
The court also upheld Amended MPCP under the "benefits clause" of 
article I, section 18 of the Wisconsin 
Constitution, which provides "nor shall any money be drawn from the 
treasury for the benefit of religious societies or religious or 
theological seminaries." This is Wisconsin's equivalent of the 
establishment clause. Both clauses are intended and operate to serve the 
same dual purpose of prohibiting the establishment of religion and 
protecting the free exercise of religion. Unlike the Wisconsin Court of 
Appeals, which focused on whether sectarian private schools were 
"religious seminaries" under article I, section 18, the issue 
is whether the aid provided by Amended MPCP is for the benefit of 
religious institutions. The question is not whether some benefit accrues 
to a religious institution, but whether the principal or primary effect 
of the program advances religion. In this context, public funds may be 
placed at the disposal of third parties as long as the program on its 
face is neutral between sectarian and nonsectarian alternatives, and the 
transmission of funds is guided by the independent decisions of third 
parties. Amended MPCP does not require a single student to attend class 
at a sectarian private school. A qualifying student only attends a 
sectarian private school under the program if a student's parent so 
chooses.
In Flynn v. Department of 
Administration2 the court 
upheld the validity of 1993 Wis. Act 16, section 9253 (the Act), 
which caused the lapse of $2,898,000 to the general fund of unexpended 
program revenues designated for court automation. These funds were 
derived from court filing fees and court automation fees previously 
provided by the Wisconsin Legislature. Plaintiffs challenged executive 
and legislative action in lapsing these funds as violating public policy 
grounded in the constitution, statutes, common law, public expectations, 
and the separation of powers doctrine.
Although noting that it emphatically disagreed with the public policy 
underlying the Act, the court refused to hold the Act unconstitutional. 
Article VII, sections 2 and 5 of the Wisconsin 
Constitution do not prohibit the Legislature from enacting 
legislation to reallocate previously appropriated funds. These 
provisions empower the Legislature, not the judiciary, to make policy 
decisions regarding taxing and spending. Cases that require appropriated 
funds be spent as appropriated are applicable to refusals of the 
executive branch to spend money that the Legislature appropriated. In 
this case, the Legislature changed the appropriation. It is the 
Legislature's role to determine whether to reallocate limited resources. 
Each legislative session may reassess the needs of the public and 
provide for the allocation of scarce public resources.
The Act did not violate the separation of powers doctrine. The Act 
involved "shared powers" of the Legislature and the judiciary. Although 
the judiciary has superintending power as broad and as necessary to 
ensure the due administration of justice, the judiciary is not vested 
with constitutional superintending authority over the legislative budget 
process or determinations. Under the shared powers doctrine, the statute 
cannot be held unconstitutional unless it unduly burdens or 
substantially interferes with the judiciary. Since unconstitutionality 
must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt, the fact that the Act had an 
adverse impact upon the courts is not, by itself, proof of an undue 
burden or substantial interference.
Attorney Fees
Gorton v. Hostak, Henzl & Bichler 
S.C.3 concerned the 
interpretation of a contingency fee agreement and a statutory award of 
reasonable attorney fees under Wis. Stat. section 100.18. 
The law firm contended that it was entitled to recover the statutory 
award of reasonable attorney fees in addition to the contingent fees 
based upon damages recovered in the underlying action. The contingent 
fee contract provided that the law firm was entitled to 40 percent of 
the gross amount of any recovery obtained after a lawsuit that involves 
an appeal. Gorton recovered $200,000 in damages. In addition, the court 
awarded $307,000 in reasonable attorney fees, making the total judgment 
$507,000. The law firm argued it was entitled to 40 percent of $200,000 
plus $307,000 awarded for reasonable attorney fees, for a total of 
$387,000. The court disagreed, holding that the entire judgment of 
$507,000 belonged to Gorton, and the law firm was entitled to 40 percent 
of that judgment, or $202,800.
Wis. Stat. section 100.18 
provides that any person suffering pecuniary loss shall recover such 
pecuniary loss, together with costs, including reasonable attorney fees. 
Under the statute, an award of reasonable attorney fees belongs to the 
client and not the attorney who represents the client. The terms of the 
contingent fee contract provided that the law firm would recover 40 
percent of the gross amount recovered. Therefore, the firm was not 
entitled to recover the attorney fees awarded by the court but only 40 
percent of those fees. The attorney who drafted the contract had the 
responsibility of drafting an unambiguous contract.
GAL Immunity
Paige K.B. v. Molepske4 held that there was an absolute privilege for a 
guardian ad litem (GAL) in child custody cases. The GAL was appointed to 
represent the best interests of three children during divorce and 
custody proceedings. During those proceedings, it was alleged that the 
father had sexually abused the children. Three psychologists were 
appointed to examine the children. The GAL petitioned the court for 
psychological testing based upon allegations by both parents of 
alcoholism, drug abuse, and abuse of the children. The GAL recommended 
that the court give custody of the children to their mother. 
Notwithstanding that recommendation, the court awarded the parents joint 
custody, granting the father primary physical placement. In doing so, 
the court found the testimony of one psychologist, who found no evidence 
of sexual abuse, more credible than the testimony of another 
psychologist, who thought there probably had been abuse.
 After the divorce, the children were placed in 
a foster home under a CHIPS petition alleging that the father had 
sexually abused them. He was formally charged and convicted of sexually 
assaulting the children. The court then transferred physical custody to 
the mother. The children claimed that the GAL was negligent.
After the divorce, the children were placed in 
a foster home under a CHIPS petition alleging that the father had 
sexually abused them. He was formally charged and convicted of sexually 
assaulting the children. The court then transferred physical custody to 
the mother. The children claimed that the GAL was negligent.
Wisconsin courts have recognized an absolute quasi-judicial immunity for 
those persons who perform functions that are intimately related to the 
judicial process. This immunity has been applied previously to 
witnesses, appointed pathologists, and a court-appointed psychologist. 
Wisconsin courts apply a functional analysis to determine whether such 
absolute immunity attaches to a particular defendant. Immunity is 
justified and defined by the functions it protects and serves, not by 
the person to whom it attaches. A GAL appointed by a circuit court to 
represent a child's best interests is a nonjudicial officer who performs 
acts intimately related to the judicial process. The GAL essentially 
functions as an agent or arm of the court, charged with the same 
standard that must ultimately govern the court's decision - that is, the 
best interests of the child.
Plaintiffs argued that unless GALs are held civilly liable, there 
will be no effective remedy available to the parties injured by 
negligent acts and omissions of GALs. In rejecting this argument, the 
court reasoned that GALs must be allowed to independently consider the 
facts of the case and advocate the child's best interests free from the 
threat of harassment or retaliatory litigation. Should immunity not be 
provided, there likely would be a decline in the number of attorneys 
willing to serve as GALs in child custody proceedings. In addition, fear 
of liability could warp the judgment of those GALs who are appointed 
toward appeasement of disappointed parents or children and away from 
protecting the child's best interests.
Economic Loss Doctrine
In Daanen & Janssen Inc. v. Cedarapids 
Inc.5 the court extended the 
economic loss doctrine to protect a manufacturer who was not in privity 
with the end user of a product. Cedarapids manufactured a component part 
to rock crushers called a "pit man." It manufactured and sold new 
crushing equipment and spare parts to distributors that then resell the 
products to quarry owners.
Daanen, a quarry owner, purchased from one of the distributors a pit 
man that failed. In the Distributor Agreement, Cedarapids provided a 
standard express warranty providing that it applied to the distributor's 
customers. Daanen was unaware of this warranty, and the distributor did 
not pass the warranty to Daanen. In addition, Daanen did not request or 
receive from the distributor a warranty on the replacement pit man. The 
invoice from the distributor stated that the distributor disclaimed all 
warranty and liability. After Daanen installed the replacement part in 
two of its crushers, the machines began to break down. These breakdowns 
eventually were attributed to manufacture and design problems in the pit 
man. Daanen claimed that Cedarapids was negligent and sold a defective 
product that caused more than $400,000 in damages. There was no 
allegation that the defective pit man caused personal injury or damage 
to property other than to the pit man itself.
The economic loss doctrine is a judicially created doctrine providing 
that a commercial purchaser of a product cannot recover from a 
manufacturer under tort theories of negligence or strict products 
liability where the damages are solely "economic" in nature. Application 
of economic loss doctrine to tort actions between commercial parties is 
based on three policies, none of which is affected by the presence or 
absence of privity between the parties:
- to maintain the fundamental distinction between tort and contract 
law;
- to protect commercial parties' freedom to allocate economic risk by 
contract; and
- to encourage the party best suited to assess the risk of economic 
loss, the commercial purchaser, to assume, allocate, or insure against 
that risk.
If, as here, only economic losses are caused to a commercial party, 
the policy arguments for imposing tort liability are considerably 
diminished. A manufacturer in a commercial relationship has no duty 
under either negligence or strict liability theories to prevent a 
product from injuring itself. Contract law is better suited for 
enforcing duties in the commercial arena because it permits the parties 
to specify the terms of their bargain and to protect themselves from 
commercial risk. The absence of privity of contract does not alter this 
conclusion.
The economic loss doctrine serves to protect commercial parties' 
freedom to contract. In situations where commercial parties have 
allocated their respective risks through contract, the economic loss 
doctrine teaches it is more appropriate to enforce that bargain than to 
allow an end run around the bargain through tort law. If manufacturers 
are held liable to remote commercial purchasers under tort theories for 
frustrated economic expectations, all manufacturers would effectively be 
prevented from negotiating their liability through the bargaining 
process. Commercial parties, presumably of equal bargaining power, are 
generally free to set the terms of their own agreement, including 
warranties, disclaimers, and limitations of remedies. Subject to 
requirements of good faith and unconscionability, a manufacturer can 
negotiate with its distributors and purchasers to disclaim or limit 
liability for economic losses.
When Daanen purchased the pit man from the distributor, it could have 
requested an express warranty that could have been enforced in a suit 
for breach of warranty. Daanen chose not to or failed to do so. The 
court assumed that the lack of a seller's or manufacturer's warranty was 
reflected in the purchase price. If Daanen were permitted to bypass its 
agreement and recover the economic losses in tort, the net effect would 
be to render the contract between Daanen and its distributor and the 
contract between Cedarapids and its distributor nullities, emasculating 
the law of contracts in the process.
|  | Daniel W. Hildebrand is a member of DeWitt, 
Ross & Stevens S.C., Madison. He is a former president of the Dane 
County Bar Association and of the State Bar of Wisconsin. | 
Resisting Unlawful Arrest
In State v. Hobson6 the court abolished prospectively the common law 
right to forcibly resist an unlawful arrest. The circuit court had 
previously determined that Beloit police officers lacked probable cause 
to arrest the mother of a 5-year-old boy after she refused to allow the 
officers to speak to her son about a stolen bicycle. When the officers 
decided to arrest the mother for obstruction, the mother resisted and 
struck one of the officers. This resulted in her arrest for an 
additional charge of battery to a police officer. On appeal, the state 
sought to abrogate the privilege to resist an unlawful arrest and to 
reverse the order dismissing the battery charge.
As early as the 17th Century, English common law recognized the right 
to forcibly resist an unlawful arrest. This right was based on 
recognition that action by an official exceeding lawful authority 
constituted a trespass and a provocation and could be resisted by 
physical force. Wisconsin courts, while mentioning the right to forcibly 
resist an unlawful arrest, have not had the opportunity to apply it to 
circumstances presented in this case.
The court concluded that public policy is best served by abrogating 
the common law privilege to use physical force to resist an unlawful 
arrest rather than continuing to recognize it. Case law in other states 
demonstrates a trend toward abrogation of this right. Legal and societal 
circumstances have changed dramatically since the inception of that 
right. In its early development, physical resistance was the only 
effective response to the problem of unlawful arrest. In those years, 
private citizens made most arrests, bail for felonies usually was 
unattainable, and years might pass before royal judges arrived for a 
jail delivery. Jail conditions were such that a prisoner had an 
excellent chance of dying of disease before trial. The common law right 
to forcibly resist unlawful arrest developed out of necessity in 
response to those circumstances.
Not only is forcible resistance now a substantially less effective 
response to an unlawful arrest, there are many safeguards and 
opportunities for redress. Individuals no longer languish for years in 
disease-ridden jails. Bail is available. Individuals are not detained 
indefinitely on dubious charges. Prompt arraignment and determination of 
probable cause are mandated. Violent self-help is anti-social and 
unacceptably dangerous. In the absence of unreasonable force, there 
should be no right to forcibly resist an unlawful arrest. When persons 
resist arrest, they endanger themselves, the arresting officers, and 
bystanders.
Chief Justice Abrahamson, concurring, argued that the privilege 
should be retained. Two justices would admit a very narrow exception to 
abrogation, allowing resistance if the individual reasonably believed 
that serious and substantial mental or physical health concerns of the 
individual or a member of his or her family are threatened in a way not 
susceptible of later cure in the courtroom.
Endnotes
1 Jackson v. Benson, 218 Wis. 2d 835, 
578 N.W.2d 602 (1998).
2 Flynn v. Dep't of Admin., 216 Wis. 2d 
521, 576 N.W.2d 245 (1998).
3 Gorton v. Hostak, Henzl & Bichler 
S.C., 217 Wis. 2d 493, 577 N.W.2d 617 (1998).
4 Paige K.B. v. Molepske, 219 Wis. 2d 
418, 580 N.W.2d 289 (1998).
5 Daanen & Janssen Inv. v. Cedarapids 
Inc., 216 Wis. 2d 395, 573 N.W.2d 842 (1998).
6 State v. Hobson, 218 Wis. 2d 350, 577 
N.W.2d 825 (1998).
Wisconsin Lawyer