Wisconsin
Lawyer
Vol. 81, No. 12, December
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
Civil Procedure
Mandamus – Standing – Substitution of Counsel
State v. Zien,
2008 WI App 153 (filed 16 Sept. 2008) (ordered published 27 Oct.
2008)
While serving as Wisconsin attorney general in 2005, Peggy
Lautenschlager filed a mandamus action that sought to compel state
legislators to provide her office with drafts of legislation relating to
concealed weapons. The action was originally filed on behalf of the
state but Lautenschlager later filed an amended complaint in which she
added herself and her then deputy attorney general as plaintiffs, both
in their official capacities. The circuit court later dismissed the
state as a party. In the meantime, Lautenschlager lost her bid for
reelection, and a new attorney general, J.B. Van Hollen, was sworn into
office in January 2007 (see ¶ 14). In May 2007,
Lautenschlager filed a motion to substitute counsel, asking the court to
replace the attorney general with two private law firms, one of which
she works for. “The trial court denied Lautenschlager’s
motion, concluding that although she requested the public records in her
personal capacity, she filed the action for mandamus in her official
capacity as the attorney general. The trial court reasoned that when Van
Hollen took over as attorney general, control of the case transferred to
him” (¶ 16). The circuit court also denied
Lautenschlager’s motion to intervene as a party plaintiff
(see ¶ 17) and later granted summary judgment in favor of
the legislators (see ¶ 18).
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Kessler,
dismissed Lautenschlager’s appeal. It concluded that
“Lautenschlager, who was no longer the attorney general at the
time she moved to substitute counsel or when summary judgment was
granted, lacked standing to seek a substitution of counsel or to appeal
the judgment. We reach that conclusion because Lautenschlager filed the
mandamus action in her official capacity as attorney general pursuant to
Wis. Stat. § 19.37(1)(b), and not as a private citizen
pursuant to § 19.37(1)(a). The authority to direct the
litigation and appeal the judgment lies with the person holding the
office of attorney general, now J.B. Van Hollen, who chose not to appeal
the judgment. We further reject Lautenschlager’s argument that she
has standing to appeal the judgment as an ‘aggrieved party.’
Finally, we decline to consider Lautenschlager’s argument that
after she ceased to be attorney general, she should have been allowed to
convert this action to a § 19.37(1)(a) action, because that
issue is raised for the first time on appeal. We dismiss the
appeal” (¶ 2).
The issue of whether “a private citizen has a right to
direct, settle, compromise, appeal or substitute counsel in a case
brought by the attorney general pursuant to Wis. Stat. §
19.37(1)(b)” was one of “first impression” (¶
25). The court also addressed the “two distinct courses of
action” contemplated by section 19.37(1) when a record request is
denied (see ¶ 34).
Settlement Offers – Interest – Judgments
Morrison v.
Rankin, 2008 WI App 158 (filed 16 Sept. 2008) (ordered published
27 Oct. 2008)
Morrison brought a medical malpractice action against Rankin and
was awarded damages of more than $2 million. Rankin’s medical
malpractice insurer, Medical Protective, was responsible for its $1
million policy limit but had declined a $1 million pretrial settlement
offer, which left it responsible for interest and double taxable costs
under Wis. Stat. section 807.01(3)-(4). Morrison appealed from the
circuit court’s calculation of the interest amount.
The court of appeals affirmed in a decision authored by Judge
Brunner. “Morrison’s calculation of interest is inconsistent
with the plain language of Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4). That
statute makes no distinction between pre- and postjudgment interest. It
specifies that interest is calculated on a single amount, ‘the
amount recovered,’ over one period of time, ‘from the date
of the offer of settlement until the amount is paid.’ Wis. Stat.
§ 807.01(4). Morrison’s two-stage calculation of
interest, utilizing two time periods and two amounts recovered, cannot
be reconciled with the language of § 807.01(4)” (¶
10).
Morrison also argued that the circuit court inappropriately
modified the judgment in a way that defeated her calculation of
interest. “The problem with Morrison’s argument is that the
judgment does not state the amount on which interest after the judgment
is calculated. While Morrison contends interest should be calculated on
$2,737,909.37, nothing in the language of the judgment mandates that
amount over the verdict amount of $2,065,326.20, which was the amount on
which interest up to the time of judgment was calculated.
Morrison’s argument only demonstrates that the judgment was fairly
susceptible to more than one interpretation and was therefore ambiguous.
Because the judgment was ambiguous, the court did not err by clarifying
the judgment’s intended meaning” (¶¶ 18-19).
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Criminal Procedure
Sentencing – Ordering Defendant to Reimburse Person Who Posted
Forfeited Bail – Validity of Order as Restitution or as Condition of
Extended Supervision
State v. Agosto,
2008 WI App 149 (filed 23 Sept. 2008) (ordered published 27 Oct.
2008)
The defendant’s mother posted $50,000 bail for him in a
case involving sexual assault and interference with child custody. The
court ordered the bail forfeited when the defendant did not appear for a
court date. The defendant was subsequently convicted of several offenses
(including bail jumping) in different cases. In the sexual assault case
the court ordered the defendant to pay restitution to his mother for her
loss of the bail money (an amount subsequently reduced to $12,000 after
an ability-to-pay determination). The court later amended the judgment
to impose the reimbursement obligation as a condition of extended
supervision.
On appeal the defendant argued that the circuit court did not
have the authority to order him in the sexual assault case to reimburse
his mother for the forfeited bail, either as “restitution,”
as the circuit court originally designated it, or as a condition of his
extended supervision, as the circuit court later characterized it. In a
decision authored by Judge Fine, the court of appeals affirmed the
circuit court.
With regard to the original restitution order, the court of
appeals turned to the restitution statute, which provides that the
sentencing court shall order restitution “to any victim of a crime
considered at sentencing, unless the court finds substantial reason not
to do so and states the reasons on the record.” Wis. Stat. §
973.20(1r). A victim is “[a] person against whom a crime
has been committed.” Wis. Stat. § 950.02(4)(a)1. The
appellate court concluded that the defendant committed the crime of bail
jumping, his mother lost the bail money as a result of that crime, and
she was thus a victim of his having committed the bail jump. A court may
impose a restitution order if the beneficiary of the order is a person
against whom a crime has been committed and that crime is
“considered at sentencing,” even if the beneficiary is not
the victim of the crime (here, sexual assault and interference with
child custody) for which sentence is imposed). These conditions were
satisfied in this case and, accordingly, the circuit court did not err
in ordering restitution (see ¶¶ 8-9).
Alternatively, the court of appeals concluded that the
reimbursement to the defendant’s mother could be ordered as a
condition of the extended-supervision component of the bifurcated
sentence imposed for the sexual assault. “The parties agree[d]
that extended supervision is akin to probation and that unless a statute
requires otherwise a sentencing court may impose reasonable and
appropriate conditions of extended supervision just as the court may
impose reasonable and appropriate conditions of probation. Further,
conditions of probation may go beyond what is permissible for an order
of ‘restitution’” (¶ 11) (citations omitted).
Conditions of probation must “effectuate the objectives of
probation” by fostering the rehabilitation of the defendant and by
protecting the state and community interest. “The same
considerations apply when the conditions are appended to extended
supervision. Thus, ‘a condition of extended supervision need not
directly relate to the offense for which the defendant is convicted as
long as the condition is reasonably related to the dual purposes of
extended supervision’” (¶ 12) (citation omitted).
In this case the circuit court recognized that requiring the
defendant to make good on his debt to his mother would reinforce the
core aspects of rehabilitation – making the offender realize that
there are consequences to what he or she does. Among other things the
circuit judge noted that the defendant had shown no inclination to
follow court rules. Said the court of appeals, “To give [the
defendant] a free ride on the bail-jumping loss he caused his mother
would only reinforce his view that he is immune to the law’s
strictures. That would make a mockery of ‘rehabilitation’
and would also ill-serve the interests of our community” (¶
13).
Search and Seizure – Probation Search
State v. Jones,
2008 WI App 154 (filed 25 Sept. 2008) (ordered published 27 Oct.
2008)
The defendant was convicted of sex-related offenses and appealed
the denial of his motion to suppress evidence seized from his bedroom.
The court of appeals affirmed the order in a decision written by Judge
Bridge.
First, the court found that the warrantless search of the
defendant’s bedroom was a lawful probation search despite
participation by police officers. This issue presented a question of
constitutional fact, consisting of a mixed question of fact and law
(see ¶ 11). “Cooperation between a probation officer
and law enforcement does not transform a probation search into a police
search. Indeed, cooperation with law enforcement for the purpose of
preventing crime is a specific goal of probation supervision. A
probation search is also not transformed into a police search because
the information leading to the search was provided by law enforcement.
Nor is a probationary search transformed into a police search due to the
existence of a concurrent investigation. Similarly, the transfer of the
items seized to law enforcement following the search does not change the
nature of the search itself. The circuit court’s findings of
historical fact clearly indicate that Trimble [the probation agent] was
present at Jones’s residence in furtherance of her
responsibilities as his agent. Trimble, not the police, initiated the
search, and Trimble, not the police, conducted the search” (¶
15). Police officers were present solely for protective purposes
(see ¶ 16).
Second, the probation search was
reasonable. “Jones concedes that his admission that he had a
marijuana pipe in his bedroom ‘would arguably lead to a reasonable
suspicion that he had contraband in the room.’ He argues, however,
that this information did not contribute to Trimble’s decision to
search his bedroom. We reject Jones’s argument. As the circuit
court found, Trimble was told by Detective Pertzborn that Jones was
sexually involved with a fourteen-year-old girl and that Pertzborn had
knowledge of nude photographs of Jones and love notes from Jones to the
girl. Trimble testified that when she went to Jones’s home, she
understood there were probably nude photographs of the girl in his
possession. Further, Jones admitted that he had a marijuana pipe in the
room that he was trying to hide. Jones does not dispute these facts, and
we are satisfied that the court’s factual findings are not clearly
erroneous” (¶¶ 21-22). Finally, the use of a locksmith
to enter the locked bedroom did not violate administrative regulations
that prohibit forcible entries during probation searches because the
locksmith did not damage the door (see ¶ 27).
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Family Law
Child Custody – Physical Placement – Parent on Activity Duty in
Military – Nontransferability of Physical Placement Rights –
Stepparent Visitation
Lubinski v.
Lubinski, 2008 WI App 151 (filed 25 Sept. 2008) (ordered
published 27 Oct. 2008)
August Lubinski and Colleen O’Rourke were divorced in June
2000. Following their divorce, Lubinski and O’Rourke agreed to a
placement schedule for their son. The schedule, which was incorporated
in a court order, provided that O’Rourke had primary physical
placement of the son during the school year, and Lubinski had primary
physical placement of the son during the summer break.
Lubinski was ordered to report for active duty in the military in
June 2007. He expected to be overseas for at least one year. He met with
O’Rourke and requested that she comply with their placement order
during his absence, and she refused to do so. Lubinski then filed a
motion under Wis. Stat. sections 767.471 and 767.43 to enforce the
placement order between himself and O’Rourke. The motion sought an
injunction ordering O’Rourke to strictly comply with the placement
order while Lubinski was on active duty and sought visitation rights for
Lubinski’s current wife, Jenny Lubinski, under the same terms and
conditions granted to Lubinski under the placement order. Jenny Lubinski
filed her own petition requesting that she have the same visitation
rights as August Lubinski would have were he not on active duty.
O’Rourke opposed the motion and the petition, but the circuit
court granted both. In a decision authored by Judge Dykman, the court of
appeals reversed.
The first question before the appellate court was whether a
physical placement schedule may be enforced in the absence of the parent
awarded that placement. The court of appeals concluded that “the
trial court erred in ordering an injunction to enforce the physical
placement schedule in Lubinski’s absence because physical
placement rights are not transferable” (¶ 6). Lubinski argued
that he should be able to exercise his physical placement by having the
son stay with Jenny Lubinski under the terms of the physical placement
order while he is on active duty. Said the court, “The problem
with Lubinski’s argument is that, by definition, he cannot
exercise physical placement with [the son] while he is physically
absent. Rather, the question is whether Jenny Lubinski can exercise [her
husband’s] physical placement in [his] absence. We conclude that
she cannot” (¶ 11). August Lubinski, not Jenny Lubinski, has
the right to physical placement with the son, and “a parent cannot
delegate physical placement rights to another in his absence”
(¶ 12).
A second question on appeal was whether the circuit court’s
award of stepparent visitation to Jenny Lubinski under the same terms
and conditions as those of a parent’s physical placement schedule
was a proper exercise of discretion. The court of appeals held that the
circuit court “erred in awarding Jenny Lubinski visitation under
the terms of Lubinski’s physical placement schedule for two
reasons: (1) physical placement bestows rights associated with
legal custody, and Jenny Lubinski has no claim to physical placement or
legal custody in this case; and (2) O’Rourke has a liberty
interest in determining her child’s visitation schedule with
others, and there are no facts in this case justifying state
intervention with that right” (¶ 6).
Termination of Parental Rights – Pleas
Oneida County
Dep’t of Social Servs. v. Therese S., 2008 WI App 159 (filed 26
Sept. 2008) (ordered published 27 Oct. 2008)
Oneida County alleged that Therese S. had failed to assume
parental responsibility for her child and that the child needed
continuing protective services. At the fact-finding hearing, the court
was informed that Therese had a mental disability and lacked a high
school education and that she would plead no contest. The court
terminated Therese’s parental rights and later denied
Therese’s postdisposition motion.
The court of appeals, in a decision authored by Judge Peterson,
reversed and remanded for a determination of whether the plea might be
upheld despite the errors in the record. Specifically, the court held
that “in order for no contest pleas at the grounds stage to be
entered knowingly and intelligently, parents must understand that
acceptance of their plea will result in a finding of parental
unfitness” (¶ 10). “A finding of parental unfitness is
a direct, immediate, and fundamental consequence of entering a no
contest plea. That finding concludes the first step of the
termination process, where the burden is on the government and the
parent’s rights are paramount” (¶ 11). The record
failed to demonstrate an adequate colloquy between the court and Therese
on this issue (see ¶ 12).
The circuit court also failed to comply with Wis. Stat. section
48.422(7)(a), which requires that the judge discuss the potential
dispositions faced by the parent. “[A]t the very least, a court
must inform the parent that at the second step of the process, the court
will hear evidence related to the disposition and then will either
terminate the parent’s rights or dismiss the petition if the
evidence does not warrant termination. Additionally, we conclude that in
order for the court’s explanation of potential dispositions to be
meaningful to the parent, the parent must be informed of the statutory
standard the court will apply at the second stage. That is, the court
must inform the parent that ‘[t]he best interests of the child
shall be the prevailing factor considered by the court in determining
the disposition.’ Wis. Stat. § 48.426(2)” (¶
16). The court of appeals, however, expressly declined to “adopt
the extensive approach proffered by Therese, requiring courts to inform
parents in detail of all potential outcomes, including all alternatives
to termination” (¶ 17). Finally, these errors were not
harmless.
The court of appeals remanded the case for a hearing at which the
county will have the burden of proving that, despite the errors, Therese
understood the following when she pleaded no contest: “(1) she
would be found unfit to parent as a result of the plea, (2) the
potential dispositions specified under Wis. Stat. § 48.427,
and (3) that the dispositional decision would be governed by the
child’s best interests” (¶ 22).
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Motor Vehicle Law
OWI – Expert Opinion Regarding Defendant’s Blood Alcohol
Concentration at Time of Driving That is Based on Preliminary Breath
Test Result Not Admissible
State v.
Fischer, 2008 WI App 152 (filed 10 Sept. 2008) (ordered
published 27 Oct. 2008)
The defendant submitted to a preliminary breath test (PBT) after
he was stopped on suspicion of driving while under the influence of
intoxicants. Subsequent to his arrest for operating while intoxicated
(OWI), the defendant submitted to a blood draw at a local hospital. At
trial the defendant sought to admit the testimony of an expert, who
would have told the jury that he compared the blood test result with the
PBT result and, by doing so, could extrapolate a probable blood alcohol
concentration at the time the defendant was last seen operating his
vehicle (about 30 minutes before the PBT was administered.) The
defendant claimed that he was constitutionally entitled to present this
expert’s analysis as an integral part of his defense.
The circuit court refused to admit this testimony. It relied on
Wis. Stat. section 343.303, which provides that “[t]he result
of the preliminary breath screening test shall not be admissible in any
action or proceeding except to show probable cause for an arrest, if the
arrest is challenged, or to prove that a chemical test was properly
required or requested of a person under [the implied consent
law].” The jury found the defendant guilty and he appealed,
claiming that the circuit court’s reliance on the statute was
arbitrary and disproportionate to the statute’s purposes. The
court of appeals disagreed and, in an opinion authored by Chief Judge
Brown, affirmed the judgment of conviction.
The defendant argued that he had a Sixth Amendment right to
pre-sent the proffered evidence despite the provisions of section
343.303. In Rock v. Arkansas, 483 U.S. 44 (1987),
the U.S. Supreme Court held that a court may not rely on a statute
mechanistically but instead must employ a proportionality test, in which
the court balances a statute’s restrictions on the right to
present a defense against “the purposes [the restrictions] are
designed to serve.” The Wisconsin Supreme Court offered guidance
on how to apply this balancing test in State v. St. George, 2002
WI 50, 252 Wis. 2d 499, 643 N.W.2d 777. It is a two-part inquiry.
“First, the defendant must satisfy each
of the following four factors through an offer of proof: (1) The offered
testimony meets the standards of Wis. Stat. § 907.02 governing
admission of expert testimony; (2) The expert’s testimony must be
clearly relevant to a material issue in this case; (3) The expert
witness’s testimony is necessary to the defendant’s case;
(4) The probative value of the expert witness’s testimony
outweighs its prejudicial effect. If the defendant successfully
satisfies these four factors to establish a constitutional right to
present the proffered evidence, a court undertakes the second part of
the inquiry by determining whether the defendant’s right to
present a defense is nonetheless outweighed by the State’s
compelling interest to exclude the evidence” (¶¶
8-9).
In this case the court concluded that the
defendant satisfied the second and third factors above. With respect to
the two remaining factors, the appellate court said as follows:
“Section 907.02 asks whether the scientific or specialized
knowledge of the proposed expert will assist the trier of fact to
understand the evidence of a fact in issue. We are convinced that if the
underlying basis for the opinion is a result that cannot be tested for
accuracy at the time of the test, then it cannot assist the trier of
fact. Similarly, such an opinion has no probative value, but is an
opinion built much like a house of cards. If the foundation breaks down,
the house breaks down” (¶ 24).
The court’s concern about the PBT being the underlying
basis for the expert’s opinion was anchored in the
legislature’s decision that “PBT results are sufficient
information to determine only whether an officer has probable cause to
arrest. But, it appears that the legislature has also determined that
the results are not sufficiently reliable for jury consideration in
determining guilt or innocence” (¶ 13). A key factor
underlying the prohibition on admitting PBT results is the fact that
PBTs “are not tested for accuracy at the time the PBT is
administered” (¶ 1). Accordingly, the court concluded that
“the State’s interest in not allowing PBT evidence in the
courtroom in OWI trials is legitimate and overrides [the
defendant’s] interest in presenting [the expert’s]
testimony” (¶ 17).
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Probate Law
Inheritance by Person Who Assists Testator to Commit Suicide –
Wis. Stat. section 854.14
Lemmer v.
Schunk, 2008 WI App 157 (filed 25 Sept. 2008) (ordered published
27 Oct. 2008)
Section 854.14 of the Wisconsin Statutes prohibits a person
who “unlawful[ly] and intentional[ly] kill[s]” another
person from benefiting under the decedent’s will and other
instruments. The issue in this case was whether a person who assists a
testator to commit suicide is precluded under this statute from
inheriting property under the testator’s will. The circuit court
concluded that assisting the testator to commit suicide did not amount
to an “unlawful and intentional killing” under section
854.14.
In a decision authored by Judge Vergeront, the court of appeals
affirmed the decision of the circuit court and held that “unlawful
and intentional killing of the decedent” (as used in section
854.14) does not include assisting the decedent to commit suicide.
Relying on the dictionary definition of the word kill as meaning
“to deprive of life,” the court concluded that “[a]
person who assists another in voluntarily and intentionally taking his
or her own life is plainly not depriving the other of life. As the
assumed facts in this case illustrate, providing [the decedent] with a
loaded shotgun did not deprive him of his life: he deprived himself of
life by shooting himself with the shotgun” (¶ 13). The fact
that assisting another person to commit suicide is a crime (see
Wis. Stat. § 940.12) does not make a person who commits this crime
a killer within the meaning of section 854.14 (see ¶
15).
In sum the court of appeals concluded that “the circuit
court properly construed ‘unlawful and intentional killing’
in Wis. Stat. § 854.14 not to include assisting another to
commit suicide” (¶ 18).
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Torts
Safe-place Law – Special Verdict – Made-whole Doctrine
Szalacinski v.
Campbell, 2008 WI App 150 (filed 3 Sept. 2008) (ordered
published 27 Oct. 2008)
The plaintiffs were guests in the Grand Marquis hotel when a fire
broke out. The fire was caused by other guests’ negligent handling
of burning materials. The plaintiffs sued the other guests, who admitted
liability, and also sued the hotel under the safe-place statute. At
trial the special verdict asked only whether the hotel had been
negligent by failing to construct and maintain the premises as safe as
the nature of the premises reasonably permitted (see ¶ 19).
The jury found the hotel 50 percent negligent, the plaintiff 5 percent
negligent, and the two tortfeasor guests 45 percent negligent. The hotel
appealed.
The court of appeals reversed the judgment in an opinion written
by Judge Curley. The safe-place statute was the sole basis for liability
against the hotel. The court reviewed the basics of safe-place liability
and found that the evidence did not support the hotel’s liability
under a variety of theories, including the building’s
“compartmentalization,” the operation of its alarm system
and fire doors, and other alleged deficiencies. The discussion is
necessarily fact-intensive.
The court also held that the hotel’s insurer, American
Family, did not waive its cross-claim and that its recovery was not
limited by the made-whole doctrine. The waiver issue involved the
absence on the special verdict of any question about the hotel’s
contributory negligence (see ¶ 46). “The burden to put
forth evidence that Grand Marquis was contributorily negligent in this
regard was on the parties asserting it. In the absence of such evidence,
Grand Marquis was not required to prove the negative. In light of the
trial court orders that [the tortfeasor guests] were causally negligent,
if the Szalacinskis wanted the jury to attribute negligence to Grand
Marquis, they needed to submit a contributory negligence verdict
question for the court’s consideration and make the appropriate
arguments. See Wis. Stat. § 805.13(3) (2003-04). The
Szalacinskis’ failure to do so waived their argument that
liability was not established for Grand Marquis’ property
damages” (¶ 46). Statements by the insurer’s lawyer
while the jury deliberated did not undercut its contention that there
were no factual issues regarding the hotel’s negligence.
Nor did the made-whole doctrine affect the insurer’s cross
claim. “Here, American Family succeeded to the legal rights and
claims of its insured, Grand Marquis, and consequently, stepped into
Grand Marquis’ shoes to the extent it made payment as a result of
the fire. American Family is not subrogated to the rights of the
Szalacinskis; therefore, the made whole doctrine has no application as
between American Family Insurance and the Szalacinskis. Its application
would only be appropriate as to the Szalacinskis if their insurer sought
to recover in this action before they were made whole” (¶
52).
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Wisconsin Lawyer