Wisconsin
Lawyer
Vol. 81, No. 9, September
2008
Court of Appeals Digest
This column summarizes selected
published opinions of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals. 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.
by Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
Criminal Procedure
Guilty Pleas - Advising Defendant that Court Intends to Exceed
Sentencing Recommendation
State v.
Marinez, 2008 WI App 105 (filed 26 June 2008) (ordered published
30 July 2008)
The state charged Marinez with misdemeanor disorderly conduct
involving
domestic abuse. Marinez allegedly grabbed his wife, pushed her out of
their apartment, and
locked her out. The parties reached a plea agreement under which Marinez
would enter a
guilty plea in exchange for a joint sentencing recommendation of a $100
fine. The circuit
court accepted Marinez's plea and proceeded to sentencing. The judge
asked about
Marinez's record and was informed that Marinez had a criminal history,
including a battery,
and that he was currently facing felony charges involving the physical
abuse of a child.
The judge informed Marinez that she intended to exceed the plea
agreement
recommendation and "do something substantially different"
(¶ 4). The judge offered Marinez
the opportunity to withdraw his plea. The prosecutor objected, arguing
that the judge was
not permitted to give Marinez the option of withdrawing his plea. The
circuit court
overruled the objection. Marinez opted to withdraw his plea, and the
state petitioned for leave
to appeal the court's nonfinal order allowing plea withdrawal. The court
of appeals
granted leave to appeal and, in a decision authored by Judge Lundsten,
affirmed the
circuit court.
The issue on appeal was whether a trial judge is
prohibited from informing a defendant that the judge intends to
exceed a sentencing recommendation in a plea agreement
and offering the opportunity of plea withdrawal
(see ¶ 1). In State v. Williams, 2000 WI
78, 236 Wis. 2d 293, 613 N.W.2d 132, the supreme court refused to adopt
a new rule
mandating that judges follow this practice
(see ¶ 6). In the present case the court of
appeals declined to read Williams as prohibiting this practice
(see ¶ 12). It concluded that "trial judges may employ
this practice" (¶ 1), and in this case "the trial judge
properly informed Marinez of her intent to exceed the plea agreement and
that she properly
permitted him to withdraw his plea" (¶ 14).
Discovery - Validity of Court Order Mandating Disclosures Beyond
Those Required by Discovery Statutes
State v.
McClaren, 2008 WI App 118 (filed 19 June 2008) (ordered
published 30 July 2008)
The defendant was charged with aggravated battery, attempted
first-degree
intentional homicide, and first-degree reckless injury. The state
conceded that a factual basis
existed for the defendant to raise a claim of perfect self-defense. He
appealed the
circuit court's pretrial order requiring him to disclose, before trial,
a summary of the
evidence he intended to offer regarding what he believed to be the
violent character of the
victim (so-called McMorris evidence). In particular, the order
required disclosure of a
summary of all specific instances of the victim's violent conduct of
which the defendant
was aware and that he intended to introduce at trial, including
witnesses to the conduct
and the relevant dates and locations of the conduct
(see ¶ 1). In a decision authored by Judge Bridge, the court
of appeals reversed.
In State v. Miller, 35 Wis. 2d 454, 151 N.W.2d 157
(1967), which was decided
before Wisconsin's criminal discovery statute was enacted, the Wisconsin
Supreme Court
determined that there is no general right to discovery in criminal cases
except as provided
by statute (see ¶ 14). Since enactment of the criminal
discovery statute, the supreme
court has continued to adhere to the principle that the right to
discovery in criminal cases
is limited to that which is provided by statute
(see ¶ 15). The criminal discovery
statute (Wis. Stat. § 971.23) does not require a criminal defendant
to give pretrial notice
of any specific theory of defense that the defendant intends to present
at trial, other
than a notice of "alibi." See Wis. Stat.
§ 971.23(8). In addition, the discovery statute
does not require a defendant to divulge the details of his or her own
case. Accordingly,
the court of appeals held that the discovery statute does not require
the defendant in
this case to give pretrial notice of a claim of self-defense or of
intended
McMorris evidence to support such a claim
(see ¶ 18).
The appellate court also rejected the state's argument that the
circuit court's
order requiring pretrial disclosure of
McMorris evidence falls within the court's
authority under section 906.11 to "exercise reasonable control
over the mode and order of
interrogating witnesses and presenting evidence." Said the court,
"The general authority
to superintend a trial cannot be read to permit a court to require
pretrial discovery
that it would otherwise not be authorized to do under Wis. Stat. §
971.23 and the rule
in Miller" (¶ 23).
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Insurance
UIM - Reductions
Progressive N. Ins. Co.
v. Kirchoff, 2008 WI App 108 (filed 4 June 2008) (ordered
published 30 July 2008)
Kirchoff was injured in a car accident. The other driver's
insurer paid her
policy limits of $25,000. Kirchoff carried two underinsured motorist
(UIM) policies with
different insurers. Each insurer sought to reduce its exposure by the
$25,000. The
circuit court ruled that the two separate UIM insurers may only reduce
their respective
policy limits on a pro rata basis.
The court of appeals reversed in a decision written by Judge
Neubauer. "Under
Wis. Stat. § 632.32(5)(i), a policy may provide that the
uninsured or underinsured
limits shall be reduced by amounts `paid by or on behalf of any person
that may be legally
responsible for the bodily injury or death for which the payment is
made.' Applying
the statute, a motor vehicle insurance policy such as the Progressive
policy may contain
a reducing clause. The same is true for Farmers, Kirchoff's other
policy. Nothing in
the statutory language supports prorating a single liability payment
among multiple
applicable policies. There is neither an exception, nor any indication
that this statutory
authorization is limited or should be modified, when there is more than
one UIM policy
at issue. We cannot rewrite clear language to meet
Kirchoff's desired construction of it" (¶ 12).
Kirchoff unsuccessfully argued that she was entitled to a pro
rata reduction based
on case law and her reasonable expectations as an insured.
"Kirchoff purchased a
predetermined, fixed level of UIM recovery from two separate insurers:
$250,000 from
Progressive and $100,000 from Farmers. Each policy had a separate and
distinct limit of liability.
By allowing each insurer to enforce its reducing clause, thereby
reducing its liability
by the amount recovered from the tortfeasor, here $25,000, Kirchoff is
receiving what
she bargained for with each insurer under the reducing clause of each
insurer's
policy. Moreover, the reductions are authorized under Wis.
Stat. § 632.32(5)(i), which, under
[Welin v. American Family, 2006 WI 81], permits a policy to
reduce the limits of liability
under UIM coverage by amounts paid by the tortfeasor to the injured
insured
. Here, there is
no dispute that Kirchoff actually received the full amount paid by the
tortfeasor's
insurer" (¶ 21).
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Judiciary
Judicial Decision-making - Independent Research by Court
Camacho v. Trimble
Irrevocable Trust, 2008 WI App 112 (filed 18 June 2008) (ordered
published 30 July 2008)
The circuit court granted summary judgment to the plaintiffs in
this adverse
possession case, and the defendant, the Trimble Irrevocable Trust
(Trimble), appealed.
Among the defendant's claims on appeal was that in granting summary
judgment the circuit
court conducted independent research and did not give sufficient notice
to permit Trimble
to refute the case cited by the court and that the research was biased
on behalf of
the plaintiffs (see ¶ 4).
In a decision authored by Judge Anderson, the court of appeals
affirmed. Said
the court, "We are obliged to explain to Trimble how a circuit
court judge fulfills his
or her role in the adversarial system. A competent judge is not so naive
to believe
that briefs will always summarize the relevant facts and the applicable
law in an
accurate fashion. A competent judge uses the briefs as a starting line
and not the finish line
for his or her own independent research. Not only does a good judge
confirm that the
authorities cited actually support the legal propositions in the briefs,
a good judge also
makes sure that the authorities continue to represent a correct
statement of the law. A
member of the bench who fails to independently develop his or her own
legal rationale does so
at his or her own peril and the peril of the litigants" (¶ 7).
Trimble also argued that the circuit court erred in not timely
disclosing the
results of its independent research, presumably to provide Trimble with
time to refute the
case the court had found. The court of appeals conducted its own
independent research
and failed to find any authority to support Trimble's proposition that a
court must
timely disclose the results of its research and provide the parties an
opportunity to
refute those results. "The reason there is no authority to support
this proposition is that
the law provides many ways to challenge a court's reliance on cases
discovered during
research. For example, a party can file a motion for reconsideration,
Wis.
Stat. § 805.17(3), or initiate an appeal. Wis. Stat.
chs. 808 and 809" (¶ 9).
Lastly, Trimble contended that in conducting independent
research, the circuit
court abandoned its role as "a neutral arbiter of the
dispute." Said the appellate court
in response, "In our adversarial system, the role of the circuit
court is to decide who
wins and who loses. We do not have the benefit of the court's research
trail but we presume the court considered many cases that
discussed adverse possession and chose the case
it believed best represented the correct statement of the law. Selecting
the correct
statement of the law to apply to the facts is not showing preference for
one party over
the other; rather, it is the court fulfilling its duty" (¶ 10)
(footnote omitted).
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Juvenile Law
CHIPS Proceedings - Voluntary Dismissal
State ex rel. Kenneth S.
v. Circuit Ct. for Dane
County, 2008 WI App 120 (filed 26 June 2008) (ordered published
30 July 2008)
This was an original action for a supervisory writ. The parent
of a child who is
the subject of a child in need of protection or services (CHIPS)
petition sought an
order directing the circuit court to dismiss the CHIPS action pursuant
to a stipulation
signed by the assistant district attorney, counsel for both parents, and
the guardian ad
litem for the child. The parent contended that, because all
parties stipulated to
dismissal under Wis. Stat. section 805.04(1) (the voluntary
dismissal statute), the circuit
court had no authority to reject a dismissal. The circuit court
responded that
section 805.04(1) does not apply in a CHIPS proceeding under Wis.
Stat. chapter 48.
In a decision authored by Judge Vergeront, the court of appeals
denied the writ.
It concluded that the voluntary dismissal statute does not apply in a
CHIPS proceeding
(see ¶ 2). This is because it is different from and
inconsistent with section 48.24(4),
which the appellate court construed to mean "that a district
attorney may withdraw a
CHIPS petition only with the approval of the court"
(id.). Because the voluntary dismissal statute does not apply in
a CHIPS action, the circuit court "did not have a plain duty
to sign the dismissal order solely because the parties stipulated to a
dismissal" (¶ 26).
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Torts
Immunity - Government Contractors
Brown v. Mathy Const.
Co., 2008 WI App
114 (filed 26 June 2008) (ordered published
30 July 2008)
A woman and her daughter were killed when their car struck an
exposed bridge
abutment in a construction zone. Safety measures had been taken but
workers had yet to
install protective barriers on this stretch of road when the collision
occurred. The estate
sued Mathy, the contractor hired by the Department of Transportation
(DOT) to construct
the road. The circuit court ruled that Mathy was entitled to
governmental immunity
under Estate of Lyons v. CNA Insurance Co., 207 Wis. 2d 446, 558
N.W.2d 658 (Ct. App. 1996).
The court of appeals affirmed in an opinion written by Judge
Dykman. The court
held that Mathy's actions fell within the parameters of governmental
immunity. First, the
DOT (a government authority) approved reasonably precise guidelines.
"The question is
not whether DOT did or did not specify the amount of time the abutment
was to be
unprotected by a guardrail. This formulation of the issue ignores the
safety precautions that
were specified. That is, it makes no sense to isolate the sixty-day
timing specification
from the overall safety requirements. The question is not what other
safety precautions
might have been taken, but whether the safety requirements provided by
DOT were
reasonably precise specifications. The undisputed evidence demonstrates
that they were" (¶
11). Second, Mathy undisputedly conformed to those specifications.
Third, there were no
dangers known to Mathy but not to the DOT.
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Government Immunity - Ministerial Acts - Known Danger
Umansky v. ABC Ins.
Co., 2008 WI App 101 (filed 26 June 2008) (ordered published 30
July 2008)
Umansky, a camera operator, was killed when he fell from a
platform at Camp
Randall Stadium. The plaintiffs sued Fox, the stadium's director of
facilities, for
negligence. The circuit court awarded summary judgment in favor of Fox
based on governmental
immunity.
The court of appeals reversed in a decision written by Judge
Vergeront that
discussed immunity in light of both the ministerial-duty and the
known-danger exceptions. The
court made various rulings regarding the ministerial-duty exception,
which must ultimately
be determined on remand, but held that the known-danger exception did
not apply.
First, the court looked to the pleadings. As to the
ministerial-duty exception,
"The allegation of a failure to provide railings in violation of 29
C.F.R.
§ 1910.23(c)(1) does allege a specific act Fox failed to
perform, and this, the plaintiffs assert, is
the source of his ministerial duty" (¶ 25). (Wisconsin
administrative rules adopt this
OSHA provision and apply it to public employment and buildings.)
The court rejected numerous arguments to the effect that the
rule does not create
a ministerial duty. First, the principle of "nondelegability"
did not prevent a
suit against a state employee (Fox) (see ¶ 31). Second,
"the `law' that is asserted to be
the source of a ministerial duty need not specify the employee position
that is
responsible for the duty specified in the `law.' Accordingly, the fact
that the relevant statute
and regulations impose the duty for a safe place on the employer, not on
the employee
position that Fox holds, is not a basis for concluding he did not have a
ministerial duty
to comply with 29 C.F.R.
§ 1910.23(c)(1)" (¶ 42). Third, the generality of
Fox's job description with
respect to safety did
not preclude ministerial duties. Fourth, there is no "blanket
rule" to the effect that compliance with safety regulations is
invariably discretionary (¶ 46). Fifth, the
regulation imposed a duty to comply "at all times," not at
some specific time (¶ 47).
In sum, the complaint alleged a ministerial duty. "The
regulation on its face
therefore mandates a railing `on all open sides except where there is
entrance to a
ramp, stairway, or fixed ladder.'
The duty to have a railing
meeting the regulation's
requirements is imposed by law, it is absolute, certain and imperative,
and it
requires performance in a specified manner and upon specified conditions
that are not
dependent upon the exercise of judgment or discretion
. Finally,
the allegations that Fox was
`specifically responsible for the safety of the facility, including
compliance with the
state and federal regulations,' are sufficient to allege that Fox had a
ministerial duty
to comply with 29 C.F.R. § 1910.23(c)(1)" (¶ 48).
The court next turned to the summary judgment record and
concluded as
follows: "(1) Fox was responsible for compliance with state
and federal safety regulations
and this job responsibility is sufficient to impose on him the duty to
comply with 29
C.F.R. § 1910.23(c)(1) insofar as the regulation applies to
his
employer. (2) Given the height and structure of the platform
(including the upper and lower platforms) and at least
one open side, Fox had a ministerial duty to have a standard railing or
an alternative
as specified in 29 C.F.R. § 1910.23(c)(1) on the open side or
sides of the upper
platform, if Fox's employer was required by state law to comply with
this regulation as to
this platform" (¶ 66).
Finally, the known-danger exception to immunity did not apply.
"The height of
the platform and absence of a railing was evident to anyone on the
platform, and one
could use the platform without falling. It had been used for several
years by ABC Inc.
and other broadcasting companies. The known danger exception as applied
in the case law
has been reserved for situations that are more than unsafe, where the
danger is so severe
and so immediate that a specific and immediate response is demanded. The
undisputed
evidence here does not show that the unsafe platform presented this
degree of danger" (¶ 70).
Worker's Compensation - Exclusivity
Torres v.
Morales, 2008 WI App 113 (filed 18 June 2008) (ordered published
30 July 2008)
Torres lived and worked in Texas but traveled to Wisconsin for a
work-related
seminar. While in Wisconsin Torres was killed in a car accident; the car
was driven by his
coemployee. Torres's estate and family sued various defendants but the
circuit court
dismissed the complaint on the ground that the Wisconsin Worker's
Compensation Act (the
Act) provided the exclusive remedy for Torres's coworker's alleged
negligence.
The court of appeals affirmed in an opinion written by Chief
Judge Brown. The
Act's exclusivity provision barred Torres's claims. "The conditions
for
[w]orker's [c]ompensation liability are set out in Wis. Stat.
§ 102.03(1)(a)-(f). The parties
agree that Torres sustained an injury and that the injury occurred while
he was
`performing service growing out of and incidental to his or her
employment.'
See paras. (a), (c). There is no dispute that the conditions of
paras. (d), (e) and (f) are met. The
disagreement between the parties is over para. (b), the requirement that
`at the time of
the injury, both the employer and employee are subject to the provisions
of this
chapter.' The issue is whether an out-of-state employee and employer are
subject to the Act
when the employee is injured in Wisconsin in the course of his or her
employment" (¶ 6).
The Act's applicability was supported by the statute's language. And
while no case had
addressed "this exact factual pattern, the courts have nevertheless
stated that an
in-state injury in the course of employment will trigger worker's
compensation, regardless of
the employee's residency or the employer's place of business"
(¶ 9).
In sum, the court was "convinced that Wisconsin's worker's
compensation
jurisprudence clearly recognizes that an in-state injury in the course
of employment will give rise
to coverage under the Act. Further, purely as a matter of logic, we
question the
Estate's claim that no `employment relationship' existed between Torres
and his employer in
this state. Torres' employer sent Torres to Wisconsin as a part of his
work. Torres was
working for his employer when he was injured. In our view, when an
employee is working
in this state at the behest of his or her employer, that employee and
that employer have
an `employment relationship' in this state" (¶ 13).
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