Wisconsin
Lawyer
Vol. 81, No. 9, September
2008
Supreme Court Digest
This column summarizes
selected
published opinions of the Wisconsin Supreme Court (except those
involving lawyer or judicial discipline, which are digested elsewhere in
the magazine). 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
Appeals
Judicial Disqualification - Donations
Donohoo v. Action Wis.
Inc., 2008 WI 110
(filed 30 July 2008)
Earlier this term the supreme court decided the appeal in this
case by a 4-3
vote; Justice Butler voted in the majority. See
2008 WI 56. The appellant brought a motion to vacate the decision on
the grounds that Justice Butler: had accepted campaign
contributions from the opposing party without disclosing them, contrary
to a public pledge;
had also appeared at the group's fundraiser; and was endorsed by one of
the group's
attorneys.
The court denied the motion in a per curiam decision, in which
it held that
"disqualification by law" was not supported by the record. No
law compelled the disclosure
of campaign contributions, and the facts did not support a finding that
Butler had failed
to abide by his pledge. His attendance at the fundraiser comported with
the rules on
judicial ethics. Finally, the ethics rules do not prohibit judges from
soliciting and
accepting endorsements (see ¶ 23).
Attorneys
Fiduciary Duty - Conflicts
Berner Cheese Corp. v.
Krug, 2008 WI 95 (filed 15 July 2008)
Berner Cheese (Berner) claimed that a lawyer, Krug, violated the
fiduciary duty
he owed the company. The claim arose out of an underlying lawsuit that
settled when
Berner agreed to pay more than $1.3 million to a brokerage firm based
partly on conduct
that Krug had counseled. The settlement also released all claims against
Krug. The law
firm that represented Berner in the underlying lawsuit later sued Berner
to collect its
fees. Berner counterclaimed for malpractice against that law firm and
also filed a
third-party complaint against Krug alleging legal malpractice and breach
of fiduciary duty.
Essentially, Berner argued that Krug's limited role in the settlement,
which released him
from liability, constituted a business transaction between client and
counsel. The
circuit court dismissed the fiduciary claim before trial. At trial the
judge refused to
submit punitive damages claims to the jury, which found that Krug had
committed malpractice.
The damage award was, however, entirely offset by various deductions and
by Berner's
own contributory negligence. In an unpublished decision the court of
appeals affirmed.
The supreme court affirmed, in an opinion written by Justice
Roggensack. Berner
first claimed that Krug had violated his fiduciary duty by exerting
"undue influence" in
approving the underlying settlement, that is, the alleged "business
transaction." The
court concluded that because Krug was not involved in Berner's decision
to settle the
underlying case, for which Berner had other counsel, there was no
"reciprocal activity"
between Berner and Krug (see ¶ 51). Moreover, Krug had no
input into the settlement itself
(see ¶ 52). Thus, "although the settlement document may
have conferred a benefit on Krug,
there is no evidence that releasing Krug came at a cost to Berner, and
thereby affected
the parties reciprocally. Furthermore, although it is possible that some
finite value
could be attributed to the release of Krug, Berner has not presented any
evidence to show
what that value may be" (¶ 53). Accordingly, Berner failed to
show it was damaged in any
way by any alleged fiduciary breach (see ¶ 59). Finally, the
trial court properly
withheld punitive damages questions from the jury. "[N]o credible
evidence was presented to
show that Krug was aware that Berner's rights would be disregarded as a
result of his
legal advice. To the contrary, the evidence demonstrates that Krug
believed that Berner's
[conduct] was lawful" (¶ 70).
Justice Bradley concurred, joined by Chief Justice Abrahamson
and Justice Butler.
She stressed that the majority had narrowly construed the rule governing
"business
transactions" between lawyers and clients in ways that might affect
"future lawyer
discipline cases" (¶ 75).
Top of Page
Civil Procedure
Discovery - Contents of Discussions of Public Bodies in Closed
Meetings
Sands v. Whitnall Sch.
Dist., 2008 WI 89 (filed 11 July 2008)
The plaintiff was employed to run the Whitnall School District's
Gifted and
Talented Education Program. After two closed session meetings the school
board voted in an
open session not to renew Sands's contract. Sands subsequently filed a
lawsuit seeking
certain benefits that she claimed to be entitled to under Wis. Stat.
section 118.24 as a
school district "administrator."
In the course of discovery Sands served interrogatories asking
for the identities
of persons who spoke during the closed session deliberations about her
employment
contract and for the substance of their remarks during the closed
sessions. The school
district declined to answer, claiming that the information was
privileged under Wis. Stat.
section 19.85 and under a "deliberative process privilege"
(¶ 8). (Section 19.85(1)(c)
allows closed sessions for the purpose of "[c]onsidering
employment, promotion, compensation
or performance evaluation data of any public employee over which the
governmental body
has jurisdiction or exercises responsibility.")
The circuit court ruled in favor of Sands, concluding that the
school district
was required to provide the information requested in the interrogatories
(see ¶ 9). In a published decision the court of appeals
reversed.
See 2007 WI App 3. In a majority decision authored by Justice
Butler, the supreme court reversed the court of appeals.
The supreme court held that a privilege of nondisclosure is not
implicit in
section 19.85. Said the court, "[W]e conclude that allowing limited
exceptions to the open
meetings statute does not equate to creating an implicit evidentiary
privilege against
discovery requests. Wisconsin Stat. § 19.85 provides only that
some meetings may be
closed, not that their contents are privileged against discovery
requests under Wis.
Stat. § 804.01. In other words, `closed meeting' is not
synonymous with `a meeting that,
by definition, entails a privilege exempting its contents from
discovery.' Considering
the general presumptions of openness and access underlying both our
discovery and open
meetings statutes, there is no compelling justification for denying a
litigant's rights
to discovery regarding the substance of closed session discussions
pertaining to that
litigant. Therefore, we conclude that § 19.85 does not create
a privilege shielding
contents of closed meetings from discovery requests" (¶ 59).
The school district alternatively referred to the privilege it
sought as a
"deliberative process privilege [that] prohibits the compelled
disclosure of the Board's
discussions" (¶ 60). The supreme court responded that no such
deliberative process
privilege has ever been recognized by the Wisconsin courts, and it
declined the district's
suggestion that it create a new privilege (see
id.).
The majority concluded by noting that its decision "should
not be viewed as
undermining the ability of government bodies to conduct certain meetings
in closed session
where authorized statutorily. While discovery rights are broad and
paramount to our
justice system, they are not without limit. Wisconsin Stat.
§ 804.01(2)(a), setting forth
the scope of allowable discovery, provides that subjects of discovery
requests may object
to requests that are not relevant to the subject matter involved in the
pending
action. Section 804.01(3) provides additional protections in the form of
protective orders
in response to annoying, embarrassing, oppressive, unduly burdensome or
unduly
expensive discovery requests..."
(¶ 71). "In addition to issuing protective orders, courts
may consider motions to
seal the record, or may conduct in camera proceedings to ensure that the
information
requested is necessary to the litigant and does not exceed the scope of
allowable discovery"
(¶ 74). Lastly, "government bodies in Wisconsin that are
subject to discovery requests
related to closed meeting contents may similarly request courts to
increase their
supervision of the discovery process to ensure the protection of
sensitive information" (¶ 75).
Justice Prosser filed a dissenting opinion in which he concluded
that "there is
a qualified testimonial privilege inherent in Wis. Stat.
§ 19.85(1) that allows
governmental bodies and their employees to withhold the content of
pre-decisional,
deliberative discussions that take place during the body's properly held
closed sessions" (¶ 172).
Default Judgments - Denial of Jury Trial on Issue of Damages -
Hearing on
Punitive Damages
Rao v. WMA Securities
Inc., 2008 WI 73
(filed 27 June 2008)
Rao brought an action against WMA Securities, one of its
employees, and three
additional codefendants alleging that the employee unlawfully converted
hundreds of
thousands of dollars from an investment account that the plaintiff
maintained with WMA. This
appeal concerns only WMA (the defendant) because the action against the
other defendants
was otherwise resolved. The circuit court issued an order striking the
defendant's
pleadings and awarding judgment by default to the plaintiff as a
sanction for the defendant's
violation of discovery orders. The court ordered a hearing on damages
but denied the
defendant's request for a jury trial on this issue. It further denied
the plaintiff's
request for punitive damages. In an unpublished opinion the court of
appeals affirmed in part
and reversed in part.
The first issue before the supreme court was whether the circuit
court violated
the defendant's right to trial by jury under article I, section 5 of the
Wisconsin
Constitution when it denied the defendant's motion for a jury trial on
the issue of damages
after it ordered a judgment by default against the defendant
(see ¶ 4). In a majority decision authored by Chief Justice
Abrahamson, the court agreed with the defendant that the
article I, section 5 right of trial by jury extends to the issue of
damages
(see ¶ 17). The court also said, however, that the
constitution specifically provides that a party
may waive a trial by jury "in the manner prescribed by law."
Wis. Const. art. I, § 5.
The court concluded that "[a]lthough Wis. Stat. § (Rule)
806.02, governing default
judgments, does not explicitly address the question whether a
defendant's default constitutes
a waiver of the right of trial by jury on the issue of damages, the
clear implication
of the rule and the case law applying the rule is that by engaging in
conduct that
results in a default judgment the defendant has waived its right of
trial by jury in the
manner prescribed by Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 806.02, a rule of
pleading, practice, and procedure"
(¶ 39). "The case law further demonstrates that when default
judgment is rendered
pursuant to Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 804.12(2)(a), governing
sanctions for a violation of a
circuit court's discovery order, the procedure for deciding the issue of
damages lies within
the discretion of the circuit court" (¶ 41). Accordingly, the
circuit court did not err
when it denied the defendant's motion for a jury trial on the issue of
damages.
The supreme court next addressed the question whether the
circuit court erred in
denying the plaintiff's claim for punitive damages under Wis. Stat.
section 895.043(3).
The supreme court concluded that the circuit court must ordinarily make
inquiry beyond
the complaint to determine the merits of a punitive damages claim and
the amount of
punitive damages, if any, to be awarded; it must give the complaining
party an opportunity
to prove facts in support of the punitive damages claim in addition to
those alleged in
the complaint (see ¶ 65). The supreme court further held
that because the circuit court
erred by limiting its decision to the allegations of the complaint,
failing to review the
entire record, and failing to give the plaintiff an opportunity to
present evidence
to support his claim for punitive damages, the matter must be remanded
to the circuit
court to allow the latter an opportunity to exercise its discretion in
determining the
nature of the hearing and to determine whether punitive damages are
warranted
(see ¶¶ 78-79).
Justice Ziegler filed a concurring opinion. Justice Prosser
filed a dissent that
was joined in by Justice Roggensack.
Scheduling Orders - Summary Judgment
Hefty v.
Strickhouser, 2008 WI 96 (filed 15 July 2008)
The circuit court issued a scheduling order that included
reference to a local
court rule that required a response to a summary judgment motion by a
date other than one
provided by Wis. Stat. section 802.08(2). After the plaintiff failed to
respond by the
local rule's deadline, the court struck her response, dismissed her
complaint with
prejudice, and granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants. In
an unpublished decision
the court of appeals reversed on the ground that the circuit court's
departure from
section 802.08(2) was not necessary or appropriate.
The supreme court affirmed the court of appeals, albeit on
different grounds, in
an opinion authored by Justice Prosser. The supreme court addressed two
issues: "whether
the circuit court properly exercised its discretion when it: (1) issued
a scheduling
order with deadlines different from Wis. Stat. § 802.08(2)
without expressly indicating
its reasoning on the record; and (2) sanctioned Hefty for failing to
comply with the
scheduling order by striking her response, which ultimately resulted in
the dismissal of
her suit with prejudice and summary judgment to Strickhouser"
(¶ 4).
The opinion addresses the circuit court's authority with respect
to scheduling
conferences under section 802.10 and summary judgment procedures under
section 802.08.
The supreme court expressly withdrew language from an earlier decision
that required a
circuit court to explain on the record why it had deviated from the
deadlines set forth
in section 802.08(2) (see ¶ 50). It also held, however, that
the local rule on which
the scheduling order was based was itself void
(see ¶ 64). "Because the court's
scheduling order attempted to apply a void rule by attaching it to the
order, the scheduling
order's deadline for responding to a motion for summary judgment was
invalid" (¶ 65).
The supreme court stressed that the error implicated the
reliance on a void
local rule. The judge could have simply incorporated the same dates in
the scheduling
order itself, which was not done. "We have no reservations in
requiring that a response
time different from the response time in Wis. Stat.
§ 802.08(2) be specified in the
scheduling order, directly below the deadline for filing a motion for
summary judgment. This
requirement complies with a literal reading of Wis. Stat.
§ 802.08(2): `Unless
earlier times are specified in the scheduling order.' Placement of the
response time in the
text of the scheduling order gives the clearest possible notice to the
non-movant so that
the non-movant can seek relief from the scheduling order promptly if the
time to respond
is deemed inadequate. This placement avoids the necessity of the
non-movant poring over
an elaborate local rule to find three key words: `within 20 days.' This
placement also
severs the court's scheduling date from a local rule that may be
invalid" (¶ 67).
The court next turned to the appropriate sanctions for
violations of scheduling
orders. Here the circuit court abused its discretion because the
sanctions were
predicated on an "improper standard of law," namely, a
scheduling order based on a void local
rule (¶ 77).
Justice Ziegler dissented on the ground that she found no abuse
of discretion in
this case.
Defaults - Vacated - Summary Judgment
Larry v. Harris,
2008 WI 81 (filed 9 July 2008)
The plaintiff sued several police officers for conducting an
alleged unlawful
search of her home. The circuit court initially granted a default
judgment against one
officer who did not appear or otherwise answer the complaint. In a later
proceeding, the
court granted summary judgment in favor of another officer. The court
also found that these
two officers should be treated in the same manner; for this reason, it
sua sponte vacated
the default judgment against the first officer and granted summary
judgment in his favor
as well. The court of appeals affirmed. See
2007 WI App 132.
The supreme court, in an opinion written by Justice Roggensack,
reversed the court
of appeals. First, the circuit court properly vacated the default
judgment on
equity grounds. Case law and the text of Wis. Stat. section 806.07
permit courts to act
sua sponte in vacating judgments (see ¶ 24). "The
interests underlying § 806.07 parallel
the interests that we have held permit courts to act sua sponte. In
addition, we construe
the plain language of § 806.07 to permit a court to act sua
sponte under its authority" (¶ 25). The record also
demonstrated that the plaintiff had adequate notice and an
opportunity to be heard on whether the default judgment should be
vacated
(see ¶ 29).
The circuit court erred, however, when it granted summary
judgment "upon its
own motion" (¶ 38). "Unless a scheduling order specifies
otherwise, § 802.08(2) mandates
that a motion for summary judgment be served at least
20 days before a hearing on that motion. In raising and granting
summary judgment on its own motion, the circuit court did
not provide the parties 20 days' advance notice of its motion, as
required by § 802.08(2)"
(¶ 40). The majority opinion stressed that this was a narrow set of
circumstances and
the circuit court was not "hamstrung on remand" (¶ 44).
Put differently, the circuit
court may grant the officer summary judgment consistent with section
802.08(2).
Chief Justice Abrahamson concurred in the mandate but wrote
separately "because
the majority opinion erroneously concludes that the circuit court in the
instant case
gave the plaintiff notice of its action and the opportunity to be heard
when acting on its
own motion under Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 806.07" (¶ 47).
Justice Butler, concurring in part
and dissenting in part, contended that the circuit court erred by sua
sponte vacating
the default judgment (see ¶ 53).
Top of Page
Contracts
Economic Loss Doctrine - Residential Home Sales
Below v. Norton,
2008 WI 77 (filed 1 July 2008)
The plaintiff bought a home only to discover later that it had a
cracked sewer
line. She sued the seller on a variety of claims involving
misrepresentation. The circuit
court dismissed the complaint, ruling that the economic loss doctrine
(ELD) bars tort claims
in situations in which contract law provides the remedy. The court of
appeals affirmed
most of the rulings but held that the ELD did not bar the "false
advertising" claim
brought under Wis. Stat. section 100.18. See
2007 WI App 9.
The supreme court affirmed the court of appeals in a majority
opinion written by
Justice Crooks. It held "that the ELD does bar common-law claims
for intentional
misrepresentation that occur in the context of residential, or
noncommercial, real estate
transactions" (¶23). Economic
loss is defined as damages resulting from inadequate value
because the product is inferior and does not work for the general
purpose for which it
is sold (see ¶ 24). (Here the cracked sewer line rendered
the house inferior.) "Under
the protections afforded to real estate purchasers by Wis. Stat.
§ 709.02, purchasers
are protected by contract and, thus, by contractual remedies.
Accordingly, the ELD should
bar common-law claims for intentional misrepresentation that arise in
the context of
residential, or noncommercial, real estate transactions when, as here,
the damages sought
are purely economic. Clearly, purchasers have adequate contractual and
statutory remedies,
if needed" (¶ 38). The supreme court also held that the narrow
fraud in the inducement
exception to the ELD did not apply here
(see ¶ 39). Nonetheless, prior case law
established that the buyer may maintain her false advertising claim
under Wis. Stat. section
100.18, which allows recovery for her "pecuniary loss, together
with costs, including
reasonable attorney fees" (¶ 43).
Justice Bradley, joined by Chief Justice Abrahamson and Justice
Butler, dissented
on the ground that the "majority has taken a doctrine that
originally applied in a
very narrow context - commercial transactions for products under
warranty - and has now
used it to prevent homebuyers from recovering damages in tort caused by
the
misrepresentations of fraudulent sellers" (¶ 47). The
dissenters contended that the result amounted
to "judge-made doctrine" (¶ 48).
Top of Page
Criminal Law
Injury by Intoxicated Use of a Vehicle -
Material Impairment
State v.
Hubbard, 2008 WI 92 (filed 15 July 2008)
As a result of a car accident in which a young girl was
seriously injured, the
defendant was charged with the felony of causing injury by the
intoxicated use of a
vehicle, contrary to Wis. Stat. section 940.25 (1)(a). The state's
theory was that the
defendant caused the injury while driving under the influence of
prescription medication. At
trial the court instructed the jury that under the
influence means that the defendant's ability to operate a vehicle
was materially impaired because of consumption of a
prescription medication. The materially impaired standard is derived
from the definition of
under the influence of an intoxicant that is codified in the
Criminal Code.
See Wis. Stat. § 939.22(42).
During deliberations the jury sent the following note to the
court:
"Could the judge define `materially' impaired? Does this mean that
he was impaired enough to have an
effect on outcome? If not, what?" (¶ 13). Out of the presence
of the jury the court
heard arguments from counsel and considered whether to use language from
State v. Waalen, 130 Wis. 2d 18, 386 N.W.2d 47 (1986), in
responding to the jury's question. In
Waalen the supreme court stated that material impairment
"exists when a person is incapable of
driving safely, or is without proper control of all those faculties
necessary to
avoid danger to others" (¶ 14). The judge ultimately decided
not to use the
Waalen language to respond to the jury's question and instead
instructed the jury as follows: "Please
give all words not otherwise defined in the jury instructions their
ordinary meaning."
Among other things the judge observed that the jury's note put quotation
marks around the
word material - not the term materially
impaired (see ¶ 15). The jury thereafter returned
a guilty verdict.
In a published decision the court of appeals reversed.
See 2007 WI App 240. It concluded that "`the
Waalen language' defined `materially impaired' and that the
circuit court erroneously exercised its discretion when it declined to
instruct the jury on
the Waalen definition of `materially impaired'" (¶ 20).
In a majority decision authored by Justice Prosser, the supreme court
reversed the court of appeals.
The supreme court concluded that "the circuit court's
response to the jury's
request for clarification was not error. The term `materially impaired'
does not have a
technical or peculiar meaning in the law beyond the time-tested
explanations in standard jury
instructions; therefore, the circuit court's response to the jury was
not error,
comported with Wis. Stat. § 990.01 [providing that words and
phrases shall be construed
according to common and approved usage], and did not constitute an
erroneous exercise of
discretion" (¶ 59). In reaching this conclusion the supreme
court held that "the court of
appeals erred when it determined that this court's decision in Waalen
gave the statutory term `materially impaired' a `peculiar meaning in
the context of criminal charges,' and
that the jury should have been instructed accordingly" (¶ 58)
(citations omitted). Earlier
in the decision the supreme court characterized the Waalen
language as providing
"examples" of material impairment under section 939.22(42)
(see ¶ 47).
Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a concurring opinion that was
joined in by
Justice Bradley and Justice Butler. Justice Butler filed a separate
concurrence.
Top of Page
Criminal Procedure
Traffic Stops - Police Dog's Sniff of Exterior of Vehicle -
Prolongation
of Stop
State v. Arias,
2008 WI 84 (filed 9 July 2008)
A police officer stopped a vehicle driven by a minor
(Schillinger) after the
officer saw Arias enter the vehicle carrying beer. He approached the
car, explained
to Schillinger why he had stopped her, and then took her driver's
license back to his
squad car. The officer then returned to Schillinger's vehicle, where he
administered a
preliminary breath test to her to determine whether she had consumed
alcohol. The breath
test registered "zero." The officer then asked Schillinger if
there were any drugs in the
car. Schillinger replied "no." He then asked Schillinger if
she and Arias were
"carrying around anything with [them]." She again replied
"no." At this point the officer
returned to his squad car and released his police dog to perform a sniff
around the exterior
of Schillinger's vehicle. The state conceded that the officer did not
have a
reasonable suspicion of drug activity before the dog sniff. The time
that elapsed from the
officer's question about drugs to the completion of the sniff was 78
seconds. The dog sniff
concluded four minutes and 10 seconds after the officer stopped
Schillinger's vehicle.
As a result of what he perceived as the dog's positive alert on
the vehicle, the
officer instructed Arias to exit the vehicle and performed a pat-down
search of him.
After searching Arias, he instructed Schillinger to exit the vehicle,
and he performed a
pat-down search of her. He then searched Schillinger's car and found
cocaine and
a switchblade knife, both of which belonged to Arias.
In the prosecution that followed, Arias moved to suppress the
drugs and weapon.
The circuit court granted the motion. The state appealed the suppression
order, and the
court of appeals certified two questions to the supreme court: 1)
"whether, under the
Wisconsin Constitution, a dog sniff of a stopped vehicle is a
`search'"; and 2) "whether the
vehicle stop was unreasonably prolonged in duration by the officer's
controlled
substance investigation." In its certification, the court of
appeals explained: "Here, the
period of time to consider is the time consumed by the officer asking
drug questions and
preparing to release the dog, and then by the dog sniff itself. As we
set forth above,
the videotape shows that this period was approximately one minute and
eighteen seconds"
(¶ 2).
In a majority decision authored by Justice Roggensack, the
supreme court reversed
the circuit court decision suppressing the evidence. Responding to the
first certified
issue, the Wisconsin Supreme Court began by noting that the U.S. Supreme
Court has
determined that a dog sniff of the exterior of a vehicle is not a search
within the meaning of
the Fourth Amendment. See Illinois v.
Caballes, 543 U.S. 405, 410 (2005); see also
United States v. Place, 462 U.S. 696, 707 (1983). The Wisconsin
court then went on to
conclude that "because of the limited intrusion resulting from a
dog sniff for narcotics and
the personal interests that Article I, Section 11 were meant to protect,
we conclude that
a dog sniff around the outside perimeter of a vehicle located in a
public place is not
a search under the Wisconsin Constitution" (¶ 25).
As for the second certified question, relating to the
prolongation of the stop,
the court concluded that the amount of time by which the stop was
extended to conduct the
dog sniff was 78 seconds. It is true that, following the sniff, the
defendant was
detained for another 38 minutes before being arrested. "The 38
minutes that Schillinger and
Arias were detained following the dog sniff was occupied by [the
officer's] search of the
vehicle, his pat-down searches of Arias and Schillinger and the
activities flowing from
the vehicle search. It was those activities, not the dog sniff, that
extended the
detention by `approximately 38 minutes'" (¶ 27).
Focusing on the 78-second period attributable to the dog sniff,
the court concluded
as follows: "In sum, we observe that neither the Fourth Amendment
nor Article I, Section
11 of the Wisconsin Constitution prohibit all seizures. Only
unreasonable seizures are
violative of constitutional rights. In examining the reasonableness of
Arias's seizure,
we balance the public's interest in preventing the distribution of
illegal drugs, the
furtherance of that interest by the continued seizure of Schillinger's
vehicle and the
effect on Arias's liberty interest under the Fourth Amendment and
Article I, Section 11
of the Wisconsin Constitution. The incremental extension of time
expended in this stop
that was occasioned by the dog sniff was a brief 78 seconds. It was only
the 78 seconds of
the dog sniff that added to [the officer's] efficient efforts to confirm
or allay his
suspicions that led to the initial stop. This incremental liberty
intrusion does not
outweigh the public interest served by it; therefore, the incremental
intrusion occasioned by
the dog sniff satisfies our test for reasonableness. Accordingly, the
`controlled
substance investigation' comported with the strictures of the Fourth
Amendment of the United
States Constitution and Article I, Section 11 of the Wisconsin
Constitution" (¶ 47).
Justice Bradley filed a dissenting opinion that was joined in by
Chief
Justice Abrahamson and Justice Butler.
Search and Seizure - Protective Frisks
State v. Sumner,
2008 WI 94 (filed 15 July 2008)
Sheriff's deputies on patrol in Milwaukee observed Sumner commit a
traffic
violation by driving into a lane for oncoming traffic and forcing cars
in that lane to pull over
to avoid a collision. The deputies activated their squad car's
emergency lights and
stopped Sumner (the defendant). As the defendant was pulling over, one
of the deputies
observed the defendant reaching toward the passenger side of the
vehicle. Once stopped, the
defendant told the deputies his name and date of birth but was unable
to provide a
street address; he also said that he could not provide a driver's
license or identification
card to the officers.
The deputies had the defendant remain in his vehicle while a
computer check was
conducted on his license status. That check revealed that the
defendant's operating
privilege was suspended, and one of the deputies began writing a
ticket. After about 15
minutes, the deputies had the defendant exit his vehicle so that they
could get a
fingerprint for identification purposes. One of the deputies testified
that the defendant
"was sweating," "appeared very nervous," and
"kept going in his pockets" despite the
deputy's instructions "to keep his hands out" (¶¶
9-10). After the defendant reached into
his pockets a second or third time, the deputy decided to do a
pat-down search "for my
safety" (¶ 10). The frisk procedure resulted in the
discovery of heroin.
In the subsequent criminal prosecution the defendant moved to
suppress the
evidence discovered during the protective frisk, which motion was
denied by the circuit
court. After pleading guilty, the defendant appealed and the court of
appeals reversed the
circuit court, concluding that the deputy who frisked the defendant
did not have the
requisite reasonable suspicion that the defendant was armed and
dangerous
(see ¶ 2). In a unanimous decision authored by Justice
Prosser, the supreme court reversed the court
of appeals.
The court began its analysis by recounting that "[d]uring an
investigative stop,
an officer is authorized to conduct a [protective] search of the outer
clothing of a
person to determine whether the person is armed if the officer is able
to point to specific
and articulable facts which, taken together with rational inferences
from those facts,
reasonably warrant that intrusion" (¶ 21). "Our
protective search or `frisk'
jurisprudence has consistently emphasized that the totality of all
circumstances present and known
to the officer must be taken into account to assess the legality of
the procedure.
Naturally, some factors will be of greater import than others in the
reasonable suspicion
calculus in a particular case. Our cases
have first broken down
the reasonable
suspicion issue into an analysis of each primary factor present and
then concluded by viewing
these primary factors in the totality of circumstances" (¶
23).
Following this methodology, the court analyzed the particular
significance of
the defendant's unexplained reaching gesture while stopping his
vehicle, his nervous
demeanor, his placing of his hands into his pockets repeatedly despite
the officer's
admonitions to the contrary, and the officer's subjective fear for his
own safety. It
then viewed these primary factors in the totality of the
circumstances. Said the court,
"We conclude on these facts that an officer in [Deputy] Johnson's
position would possess
the objectively reasonable suspicion that Sumner was both armed and
dangerous. The time
of night [9 p.m.], Sumner's initial reaching gestures, the clutter in
the vehicle
[which could have been hiding a weapon], Sumner's lack of
identification and suspended
driver's license, Sumner's nervous demeanor, visible perspiration, and
other erratic behavior,
and the fact that Sumner repeatedly reached into his pockets after
being instructed not to
do so, all validate [Deputy] Johnson's reasonable suspicion that
Sumner was both armed
and dangerous under the totality of
circumstances" (¶ 55).
The court rejected the contention that Deputy Johnson's reasonable
suspicion was
obviated by the fact that 15 minutes passed between the time of the
stop, when Johnson
viewed Sumner's reaching gestures, and Johnson's protective search of
Sumner
(see ¶ 56). "An officer can be as much in danger at
the end of a traffic stop as at the
beginning. Under the circumstances present, Johnson's
reasonable belief that he was in danger grew as
time passed" (¶ 35). Nor did the court fault the deputies
for choosing not to order
Sumner from the vehicle immediately upon speaking with him.
"Police officers should be given the discretion to use their
professional judgment and experience to determine when it
is appropriate to order a suspect from a vehicle to diffuse a
potential safety threat.
The fact that the deputies chose not to do so immediately should not
discount the other
factors indicative of [Deputy] Johnson's reasonable suspicion to frisk
Sumner" (¶ 59).
Search and Seizure - Protective Sweep - Search Incident to Arrest
State v. Sanders,
2008 WI 85 (filed 9 July 2008)
The defendant pleaded guilty to a drug offense after the circuit
court denied
his motion to suppress evidence and statements as fruits of an illegal
search. The court
of appeals reversed. See 2007 WI App 174.
The supreme court affirmed the court of appeals, albeit on different
grounds, in
an opinion written by Chief Justice Abrahamson. Police officers chased
the defendant
into his home after he broke away despite their effort to
"detain" him in his backyard
during an animal cruelty investigation. The officers tracked him to
his bedroom, where they
took him into custody. One officer testified that he performed a brief
protective sweep of
the bedroom where the defendant had hidden. The officers removed the
defendant from
the house. A short time later, an officer returned to the bedroom and
discovered under a
bed a beef jerky container, which was found to contain drugs. The
court held that the
container's seizure and search was not justified by either the
protective sweep
doctrine (see ¶ 35) or as a search incident to a lawful
arrest
(see ¶ 52).
Justice Prosser, joined by Justice Roggensack and Justice Ziegler,
concurred, in
a lengthy opinion that examines the application of the "hot
pursuit" doctrine to the
home's entry by police, an issue that the majority declined to engage
on this record.
Justice Butler also concurred but took issue with Justice Prosser's
construction of the hot
pursuit doctrine.
Top of Page
Evidence
Hearsay - Documents - Affidavits
State v. Doss,
2008 WI 93 (filed 15 July 2008)
A jury convicted Doss of theft by a trustee for unlawfully retaining
funds from
her father's estate. The court of appeals reversed because the state
introduced crucial
bank records through affidavits by a records custodian. See
2007 WI App 208.
The supreme court reversed the court of appeals in a unanimous
decision written
by Justice Butler. The primary issues concerned the admissibility of
bank records via
affidavits pursuant to Wis. Stat. section 891.24. First, the court
held that section
891.24 does not require pretrial notice of an intent to rely on the
statute. In this case,
the state's three-day pretrial notice of an intent to introduce
Georgia bank records
provided a reasonable opportunity to inspect such records, especially
because the defendant
had been given copies seven months earlier and they were of her own
accounts. Second,
the records' introduction via affidavit did not violate the state or
federal
confrontation right. Case law establishes that these "business
records" themselves were
nontestimonial hearsay, so the unresolved issues involved the status
of the foundational affidavits.
The court held that "affidavits verifying nontestimonial bank
records in compliance with
Wis. Stat. § 891.24 are also nontestimonial. Such affidavits
are generally of a
different nature than inculpatory testimony against an accused
criminal defendant" (¶ 46).
The holding is in accord with federal case law
(see ¶ 55).
The court also rejected several other alleged errors, which, in
summary, involved
the sufficiency of evidence (termed "abundant" by the court
(¶ 63)), the introduction
of evidence involving a civil complaint, the state's alleged comment
on Doss's failure
to testify, and whether a new trial should be granted in the interest
of justice.
Top of Page
Insurance
Homeowners - Intentional Acts
J.G. v. Wangard,
2008 WI 99 (filed 16 July 2008)
The plaintiffs, a minor (J.G.) and her mother (R.G.), alleged that
Steven
Wangard sexually assaulted J.G. (then age 5) in Wangard's home in 2002
and 2003. Wangard
was later convicted of sexual assault. The plaintiffs' complaint
alleged that Wangard's
wife, Deborah, had negligently failed to prevent her husband from
sexually abusing the
child. Two different insurers provided homeowner's coverage for each
residence; the policies
are identical for purposes of this litigation
(see ¶10). The circuit court dismissed
the insurers on the ground that the policies' intentional acts
exclusion precluded
coverage for Deborah's alleged negligence. In an unpublished opinion
the court of appeals
affirmed.
The supreme court affirmed in an opinion authored by Justice
Prosser. "The
express language of the two homeowner's policies in question broadly
excludes from coverage `any damages arising out of an act
intended by any covered
person to cause personal injury or property
damage.' (Emphasis added.) Without considering whether Deborah's
negligent conduct was
itself `intentional,' as Jessica M.F. [209 Wis. 2d 42 (Ct. App.
1997)] might imply, it is
clear that J.G.'s and R.G.'s alleged damages arose out of
Steven's intentional wrongful conduct. For this reason, the exclusion
plainly bars coverage as to Steven and to
Deborah if, as is undisputed, J.G. and R.G.'s personal injury damages
arose out of
Steven's intentional sexual contact with J.G" (¶ 46). The
supreme court also followed the
reasoning of a court of appeals decision that held "that the
existence of a severability
clause does not change this analysis" (¶ 47). Deborah failed
to persuade the court that
its construction of the intentional acts exclusion undercut her
reasonable expectations
(see ¶ 56).
In sum, "The intentional acts exclusion in the Wangards'
homeowner's policies
excludes coverage for damages `arising out of an act intended by any
covered person to cause
personal injury.' Steven is a `covered person' under the Wangards'
policies, and J.G.'s
and R.G.'s injuries allegedly arose out of his intentional acts.
Deborah has no
reasonable expectation of coverage for damages arising out of Steven's
intentional sexual
contact with J.G.; therefore, the intentional acts exclusion in the
Wangards' homeowner's
policies applies and excludes coverage for the alleged negligence of
Deborah" (¶ 59).
Justice Bradley, joined by Chief Justice Abrahamson and Justice
Butler, dissented
in an opinion that emphasized the holding's limitation to sexual
assault cases and the
dissenters' disagreement with the majority's construction of the
severability clause.
Justice Butler filed a separate dissenting opinion (also joined in by
the Chief Justice
and Justice Bradley) that centered on the policy's ambiguity relative
to Deborah's
separate negligent acts.
Duty to Defend - Intentional Acts - Four-corners Rule
Sustache v. American
Family Mut. Ins. Co., 2008 WI 87 (filed 10 July
2008)
Sustache died during a drinking party after another person punched
him in the
face, causing Sustache to fall and strike his head. Sustache's family
sued various
persons including the party's host, the person who struck him, and
American Family, which
had issued homeowner's policies to two defendants. The circuit court
eventually granted
summary judgment in favor of American Family, ruling that it had no
duty to defend
because coverage was excluded as an intentional act. The court of
appeals affirmed. See 2007 WI App 144.
In an opinion written by Justice Prosser, the supreme court affirmed
the lower
courts. American Family had opted to provide a defense while reserving
its rights until the
coverage issue was resolved. Specifically, it had moved to stay
proceedings on
liability, moved for a hearing on coverage, and then sought summary
judgment
(see ¶ 25). "The four-corners rule is normally stated
as a rule in which the insurer's duty to defend is
determined `without resort to extrinsic facts or evidence.'" The
rule did not, however,
govern this situation. "Where the insurer has provided a defense
to its insured, a party
has provided extrinsic evidence to the court, and the court has
focused in a coverage hearing on whether the insured's policy
provides coverage for the plaintiff's claim, it cannot
be said that the proceedings are governed by the four-corners rule.
The insurer's duty
to continue to defend is contingent upon the court's determination
that the insured
has coverage if the plaintiff proves his case" (¶ 29).
The court held that the insurance policy did not cover the alleged
damages in
this case. "We conclude that no reasonable person would regard
the alleged intentional
battery perpetrated by Jeffrey against Sustache as an
`unexpected ... event,' or an
`unforeseen incident ... characterized by a lack of
intention,' or `an event ... occurring by
chance or arising from unknown or remote
causes.' Striking the words `without provocation'
from the complaint would not alter the essence of the complaint: that
Jeffrey
intentionally caused bodily harm to Sustache. Accordingly, we hold
that the Mathewses' policy does
not cover the plaintiffs' claims because Jeffrey's actions were not
accidental and, thus,
did not give rise to an `occurrence'" (¶ 56). Since the
defendants' actions were not
covered by the policy, the court did not reach the issues concerning
the policy's
intentional injury exclusion.
Justice Bradley concurred. She agreed with the majority that this
case did not
present the issue of whether there are exceptions to the four-corners
rule, but emphasized
that "in determining whether there is an accident, the focus
should be on the injury or
damages, not on whether the action that caused the damages was
intended" (¶ 69).
Duty to Defend - Intentional Acts
Liebovich v. Minnesota
Ins. Co., 2008 WI
75 (filed 1 July 2008)
When Liebovich built his lake home in violation of a setback
restriction, his
neighbors sued him. When his insurer, AIG, refused to defend him,
Liebovich sued AIG for
indemnification and breach of its duty to defend under a
private-client-group (PCG)
homeowner's policy it had issued. The circuit court granted summary
judgment in AIG's
favor. The court of appeals, however, reversed in part, on the ground
that AIG had a facial
duty to defend and should have sought a judicial determination of its
responsibilities
rather than unilaterally denying coverage and thereby flouting
well-established procedures. See 2007 WI App 28.
The supreme court affirmed (with modifications) the court of appeals
in an
opinion written by Justice Butler. The court's discussion primarily
focused on AIG's duty
to defend the claim. First, the neighbors' complaint alleged a covered
injury within
the meaning of the PCG policy, which provides "significantly
broader coverage" than
comparable provisions in commercial general liability (CGL) policies
(¶ 23). The opinion
analyzes the meaning of both personal
injury and occurrence within such policies. Second,
the court rejected AIG's contention that the neighbors' complaint
sought "general
equitable relief, not monetary damages." The
complaint's ad damnum clause specifically asked
for unspecified damages. "The complaint specifically alleges that
the Halls were aggrieved
by Liebovich's violation of the setback restriction, and that the
violation interfered
with the Halls' interests in and to their neighboring real property.
Because we have
concluded that the Halls' complaint sufficiently alleges injuries,
indicates that they
suffered actual damage or loss, and specifically requests a damage
award to compensate them
for such injuries and loss, we reject AIG's argument that the
complaint does not allege
damages for purposes of insurance coverage" (¶ 47). Finally,
the PCG policy's
intentional acts exclusion did not clearly foreclose coverage. The
court distinguished
between Liebovich's intent to build his house where he did, which
would not trigger the
exclusion, and an intent to harm his neighbors, which was not alleged
in the neighbors'
complaint (see ¶ 54).
The supreme court closed by reminding insurers of
"the preferred process for insureds to resolve
duty-to-defend disputes. As we have explained, it is well
established that
an insurer may request a bifurcated trial on the issue of coverage
while moving to
stay proceedings on the merits of the liability action until the issue
of coverage is
resolved. Newhouse, 176 Wis. 2d at 836 (citing Elliott,
169 Wis. 2d at 318). `When this procedure is followed,' we explained,
`the insurance company runs no risk of
breaching its duty to defend.' Newhouse, 176 Wis. 2d at 836. In
addition to the Elliott/Newhouse procedure, insurers may
raise the coverage issue in other ways, such as seeking a
declaratory ruling or agreeing to provide a defense under a
reservation of rights. See Baumann, 286 Wis. 2d 667, ¶ 8.
While these procedures are not absolute requirements, we
strongly encourage insurers wishing to contest liability coverage to
avail themselves of one
of these procedures rather than unilaterally refuse to defend. A
unilateral refusal to
defend without first attempting to seek judicial support for that
refusal can result
in otherwise avoidable expenses and efforts to litigants and courts,
deprive insureds
of their contracted-for protections, and estop insurers from being
able to further
challenge coverage" (¶ 55).
Direct Action - Insurer's Default
Estate of Otto v.
Physicians Ins. Co. of
Wis., 2008 WI 78 (filed 3 July 2008)
The plaintiffs brought a medical malpractice action against certain
health care
providers and their insurers, including defendant Physicians Insurance
Company of
Wisconsin (PIC). When it was learned that PIC had failed to answer the
complaint in a timely
manner, the plaintiffs moved for a default judgment, which the circuit
court granted
because PIC had failed to show excusable neglect. The circuit court
also ordered PIC to pay
the plaintiffs' damages. The court of appeals affirmed. See
2007 WI App 192.
The supreme court, in an opinion written by Chief Justice
Abrahamson, affirmed.
Whether PIC defaulted was not an issue (see ¶ 3). Instead,
the prime issue concerned the
ramifications of PIC's default, namely the following: "Did the
answer served timely by
PIC's codefendant insureds denying the liability of all defendants
inure to PIC's benefit so
as to preclude, as a matter of law, a judgment by default against PIC
for the
plaintiff's damages, notwithstanding PIC's acknowledged default?"
(¶ 11). PIC asserted that it
was entitled to a trial on the issue of its insured's causal
negligence and PIC's
corresponding liability. "In other words, PIC argues that the
effect of PIC's default is to
admit only its unconditional coverage for the codefendant
insureds" (¶ 12).
The court rejected PIC's contention based first on the court's
construction of
the direct action statute (Wis. Stat. § 632.24). "The text
of the direct action statute
contradicts PIC's assertion that PIC's liability is `completely
dependent on [its
insureds'] liability.' The statute expressly states that an insurer
may be liable `irrespective
of whether the liability is presently established or is contingent and
to become fixed
or certain by final judgment against the insured'" (¶ 34).
Case law "further
establishes that liability may be imposed `upon the insurer
irrespective of whether there is a
final judgment against the insured.' Indeed, under certain
circumstances, the insurer may
be subject to a judgment against it even when recovery against the
insured is precluded
by law" (¶ 36). Nor could PIC avoid liability through
default by pointing to its
insureds' own denial of negligence. This argument was foreclosed by
the default judgment
provisions of Wis. Stat. section 806.02 and the rules governing
pleadings. Finally, the court
was unpersuaded that any permutations of the "common
defense" doctrine or public policy
considerations permitted PIC to circumvent the implications of
default.
Justice Roggensack dissented, joined by Justice Prosser and Justice
Ziegler. The
dissent closely examined the history of the direct action statute and
argued it
imposes liability on insurance carriers only when it is shown that the
insured's negligent
conduct was the cause of the claimant's damages
(see ¶ 145).
Commercial General Liability Insurance Policy - Occurrences -
Property Damages
Stuart v. Weisflog's
Showroom Gallery
Inc., 2008 WI 86
(filed 10 July 2008)
The plaintiffs sued a home remodeler (WSGI) for damages incurred in
the design
and construction of their house. Earlier this term the supreme court
decided other
related issues in this litigation, ruling that "the circuit court
should not have required
the jury to apportion damages between misrepresentation and
negligence, that the
attorney fees calculation erroneously failed to apply the correct rule
of law, that neither
the economic loss doctrine nor any statutes of limitations bars the
negligence claims in
this case, and that there remain unresolved issues regarding the
personal liability of
Ronald Weisflog" (¶17). Stuart I, 2008 WI 22. This
case involves a separate appeal by the
insurer, American Family, which contested coverage under a commercial
general liability
(CGL) policy. In sum, the court held "the damages caused by
Weisflog and WSGI in this case
are not covered by the insurance policy because their
misrepresentations were not
accidental `occurrences' within the meaning of the policy, and because
property damage arising
out of their work is excluded from coverage" (¶ 4). Justice
Butler wrote the court's
lead opinion.
The court held that alleged "misrepresentation violations under
Wis. Admin. Code
§ ATCP 110.02" do not constitute "accidents" that
trigger coverage under a CGL policy
(¶ 23). This result followed from the volitional nature of such
ATCP misrepresentations
(see ¶ 28). American Family, however, raised additional
issues. First, the court
examined whether the damages in this case were "economic"
rather than "property" because
the plaintiffs contended that the "rule of concurrent risks"
"compel[ed] coverage due to
the negligence claims in this case" regardless of the ATCP
infractions (¶ 47). More
precisely, "Because the occurrence in this case could be
described either solely in terms
of misrepresentations, or more broadly, to include WSGI's negligence
in the relevant
chain of events, we assume that the rule of concurrent risks might
enable coverage due to
the existence of negligence, notwithstanding the fact that the
misrepresentations viewed
in isolation were not covered. Because the rule of concurrent risks
and the continuing
presence of negligence in this case may re-open the door of potential
coverage, we
assume that coverage could exist, or be excluded, on other
grounds" (¶ 51).
The court agreed with the plaintiffs that the
jury's award of $95,000 represented the property damage to their home
(see ¶ 53). It also rejected American Family's
contention that the "your product" business risk exclusion
precluded coverage, a position not
supported by case law. Nonetheless, coverage was precluded by the CGL
policy's "your
work" exclusions, which included representations about the
quality of the work done (¶ 66).
Justice Bradley, joined by Chief Justice Abrahamson, concurred but
wrote separately
to address the meaning of "volitional misrepresentations" as
explained in the
majority's opinion and to respond to the other concurrence by Justice
Roggensack, who was joined
by Justice Ziegler. Their concurrence joined only the majority's
"ultimate conclusion"
that excluded coverage for any damages found by the jury
(see ¶ 83).
Top of Page
Local Government
Bridges - County Aid
Town of Madison v. County
of Dane, 2008 WI 83 (filed 9 July 2008)
A town filed a petition with a county to help finance a bridge as
provided by
Wis. Stat. section 81.38. The county denied funding because the bridge
was not, when
constructed, on a "highway maintainable by the town," which
the statute required. Here
the bridge was built first and only later connected to a nearby
highway. A circuit
court granted summary judgment in favor of the town in the resulting
litigation. The court
of appeals affirmed. See 2007 WI App 177.
The supreme court reversed in a decision written by Justice Butler.
The issue
centered on the statutory phrase, "on a highway maintainable by
the town" (¶ 20). More
precisely, it focused on a "temporal restriction," namely,
whether the bridge must be connected
to the highway when built (¶ 22). Applying principles of
statutory construction, the
court looked to the "highway-focused" purpose that animates
the statute. In short, bridges
must be on existing highways in order to qualify for county funding
(see ¶ 37). "Whereas, under the Town's approach,
counties might be required to fund bridges even if their
eventual connection to highways will not transpire for years, or may
not ever occur, a
strict interpretation limiting funding requirements to bridges built
upon existing
highways provides the clearer guidance required for ensuring
predictability and certainty in
future cases. Reading the language `on a highway maintainable by the
town' literally is
in accord with our reading of Wisconsin's bridge aid statutes"
(¶ 35).
Chief Justice Abrahamson concurred in the mandate, underscoring that
the town
failed to comply with the literal statutory text and suggesting that
the law revision
committee reconsider the statute. Justice Roggensack dissented, joined
by Justice Prosser and
Justice Ziegler. The dissenters viewed the statutory phrase as
affecting only the type
of bridge and not affecting the timing of the bridge's connection to a
highway.
Top of Page
Open Meetings Law/Public Records Law
Quasi-governmental Corporations - Local Economic Development
Corporations
State v. Beaver Dam Area
Dev. Corp., 2008 WI 90 (filed 11 July 2008)
The Beaver Dam Area Development Corporation (BDADC) is a nonprofit
corporation
that was organized under Wisconsin law in 1997. It was not created by
any constitution,
statute, or ordinance, and the city of Beaver Dam did not through any
of its officers
incorporate BDADC. The bylaws of BDADC state that its exclusive
purpose is to engage in
economic development and business retention within the corporate
limits and lands that
could become part of the corporate limits of the city
(see ¶ 15). The question before the supreme court in this
case was whether the BDADC is a quasi-governmental corporation
that is subject to Wisconsin's Open Meetings and Public Records laws.
The Wisconsin Open Meetings and Public Records laws specifically
apply to
"quasi-governmental corporations" but neither defines the
term. In a majority decision
authored by Justice Bradley, the supreme court concluded that
"quasi-governmental corporations
are not limited to corporations created by acts of the government.
Rather, a
quasi-governmental corporation is a corporation that resembles a
governmental corporation" (¶ 44).
In determining the question of resemblance, a number of factors are
important in
assessing whether an entity is subject to the Open Meetings and Public
Records laws. "First
among these is finances. In determining whether entities are subject
to freedom of
information laws a `key factor in bringing such bodies within the
coverage of a state [freedom
of information] law nearly always is state funding of the
entity.' This view is echoed in many jurisdictions. Additional factors
include whether it serves a public
function, whether it appears to the public to be a government entity,
whether the entity is
subject to government control, and the degree of access that
government bodies have to the
entity's records" (¶ 62) (citation omitted). "[A]n
entity is a quasi-governmental
corporation if, based on the totality of the circumstances, it
resembles a governmental
corporation in function, effect, or status" (¶ 63).
Applying these principles, the court concluded that BDADC does
resemble a
governmental corporation (see id.). "A primary
consideration in reaching our conclusion is that
BDADC is funded exclusively by public tax dollars or interest on those
tax dollars.
Additionally, we consider that at the time the complaint was filed,
its office was located in
the City of Beaver Dam ... municipal building and it was listed on the
City website [with
its own web address] ... The City provided BDADC with clerical support
and all of its
office supplies, including paper, pencils, and postage. Under the
terms of an agreement, all
of BDADC's assets revert to the City if it ceased to exist. It is
obligated to open
its books for City inspection and it has to submit its annual
management plan to the
City. The mayor and another City official serve on its board of
directors. BDADC has no
clients other than the City. Its exclusive function is to promote
economic development in
and around the City, a function that prior to its creation had been
performed by the
City" (¶¶ 10-11).
The determination that BDADC is a quasi-governmental corporation
does not mean
that all its meetings are automatically open or that all its records
are immediately
disclosed to the public. Said the court, "There are several ways
in which economically
important information could be protected from disclosure for the
purposes of open meetings
and public records laws" (¶ 80). The opinion catalogues
multiple examples of those ways
(see ¶¶ 81-90).
This case arose because the state filed a complaint alleging that
the BDADC
violated the Open Meetings Law. With respect to the application of
this decision to those
meetings, the court gave its decision prospective effect only
"such that the defendants
in the present case are not subject to forfeitures for past violations
of the open
meetings laws and we decline to void any actions taken at
past meetings not open to the public"
(¶ 12). "Because we today announce a new test, applying that
test to past violations
would be inequitable and unduly unsettling" (¶ 100).
Justice Prosser filed a dissenting opinion that was joined in by
Justice Roggensack.
Justice Ziegler did not participate in this case.
Top of Page
Public Records Law
Mental Health Act - Treatment Records -Copies of Emergency
Detention Statements in Possession of Police
Watton v.
Hegerty, 2008 WI 74 (filed 1 July 2008)
Attorney Watton is counsel for the family and estate of a shooting
victim.
Sidney Kente Gray was charged in a criminal case related to the
shooting. In this action
Watton petitioned for a writ of mandamus to compel the production of
emergency detention
statements kept by the Milwaukee Police Department (MPD) relating to
instances before
the shooting in which the police put Gray in emergency detention
pursuant to Wis. Stat.
chapter 51 (the Mental Health Act). The circuit court denied the writ.
In a published
decision the court of appeals reversed the circuit court. See
2007 WI App 267. In a majority decision authored by Justice
Roggensack, the supreme court reversed the court of appeals.
The issue presented on appeal was whether, upon an open records
request to the
MPD, provisions of the Mental Health Act preclude disclosure of
duplicate copies of
statements of emergency detention that are in the possession of the
police department, absent
written informed consent or a court order. (A police officer may take
a person into
custody if the officer has reason to believe the person is mentally
ill, and it is
substantially probable that the person will cause physical harm.
See Wis. Stat. § 51.15(1). When
an officer takes a person into custody under such circumstances, the
officer fills out
and signs a statement of emergency detention related to the individual
and to the
circumstances the officer witnessed that justify taking the person
into custody. See Wis. Stat. § 51.15(4).)
The court's analysis of chapter 51 concluded that "statements
of emergency
detention are `treatment records.' The Mental Health Act specifically
exempts such records
from disclosure, designating them as `confidential and ... privileged
to the subject
individual.' Wis. Stat. § 51.30(4)" (¶ 27).
Nonetheless, Watton argued that the records he
seeks are not "treatment records" because they are not being
"maintained" by a "treatment
facility" or a "department" of the type listed in Wis.
Stat. section 51.30(1)(b).
Watton asserted that these records are maintained by the MPD. He
conceded that chapter 51
precludes him from obtaining the statements of emergency detention
that are physically
in the possession of a treatment facility. However, he contended that
chapter 51 does
not preclude him from obtaining statements of emergency detention in
the physical
possession of the police department. He reasoned that, although the
copies of statements of
emergency detention kept within the police department are duplicate
copies of the
statements maintained by the treatment facility, the original and its
duplicate do not warrant
the same treatment under the statutes (see ¶ 21).
The supreme court disagreed. Said the court, "The plain
language of ch. 51
coupled with our obligation to construe statutes to avoid absurd
results causes us to
conclude that copies of statements of emergency detention in the
possession of the police
department do not lose their classification as records `maintained' by
a treatment
facility. Accordingly, the copies of the statements of emergency
detention in the possession of
the police department continue to be `treatment records' exempt from
disclosure" (¶ 22).
Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a concurring opinion that was joined
in by
Justice Bradley.
Property Assessment Records - Data Collected and Maintained by
Independent
Contractor Assessors
WIREdata Inc. v. Village
of Sussex, 2008 WI 69 (filed 25 June 2008)
WIREdata Inc. is a wholly owned subsidiary of Multiple Listing
Service Inc. It
sought to obtain data regarding specific properties in various
municipalities for purposes
of making the information available to real estate brokers. The
municipalities had
contracted with private, independent contractor assessors to complete
their property
assessments. Under authority of the open records law WIREdata made
requests of the municipalities
and, except as to one of them, asked that the data be provided in an
"electronic/digital" format. Later it directly asked the
independent contractor assessors to provide
the records to the company in the format that was created and
maintained by those
independent contractor assessors in a computerized database (the
"enhanced" requests). Although
the data was not provided in the format requested in WIREdata's
enhanced requests, the
municipalities gave WIREdata access to the requested data using the
PDF format, which
complied with WIREdata's "initial" requests for the data
either in no specified format or in
an electronic/digital format (see ¶ 8). WIREdata was not
satisfied with the provision of
the relevant data using the PDF format. This mandamus action against
the municipalities
under the open records law followed.
The supreme court affirmed in part and reversed in part a published
decision of
the court of appeals. See 2007 WI App 22. In a lengthy opinion
authored by Justice
Crooks, the supreme court confronted multiple issues raised by the
parties. The first issue
was whether WIREdata properly commenced the mandamus actions against
the municipalities
under the open records law, pursuant to Wis. Stat.
section 19.37(1), given that the
municipalities had not denied WIREdata's requests for the records
before WIREdata filed the
mandamus actions (see ¶ 3). The court was "satisfied
that the municipalities, as the
authorities under the open records law, acted reasonably in the
present case. The open
records law, specifically Wis. Stat. § 19.35(4)(a), requires
an authority to either comply
with or deny a request `as soon as practicable.' Here, WIREdata filed
the mandamus
actions without first giving the municipalities an appropriate amount
of time to comply with
its requests, especially given all of the complex copyright and
licensing issues, and
given the large volume of data requested. Here, WIREdata threatened
[two of the
municipalities] with mandamus actions only four days after the
company's `initial' requests.
Furthermore, WIREdata filed the mandamus actions shortly thereafter
and despite the
communications WIREdata had received from the municipalities that they
were attempting to work
through the complex issues to provide the requested data.
Additionally, the record reflects
that the municipalities offered to provide WIREdata with paper copies
of the requested
information, which WIREdata turned down. As a result of the foregoing
discussion, we are
satisfied that the mandamus actions in the present case were filed
prematurely" (¶ 58).
Another issue was whether a municipality's independent contractor
assessor is an
authority under the Public Records Law, so that such an assessor is a
proper recipient of
a public records request. The court concluded that "a
municipality's independent
contractor assessor is not an authority under the open records law, so
that such an assessor is
not a proper recipient of an open records request" (¶ 73).
Said the court, "We are
satisfied that this statute clearly envisions a public or governmental
entity, not an
independent contractor hired by the public or governmental entity, as
being the
`authority' for purposes of the open records law" (¶ 75).
A third issue was whether a municipality may avoid liability under
the Public
Records Law by contracting with an independent contractor assessor for
the collection,
maintenance, and custody of its property assessment records and by
then directing any
requester of those records to contact such an assessor. The court held
that "the
municipalities here may not avoid liability under the open records law
by contracting with
independent contractor assessors for the collection, maintenance, and
custody of property
assessment records, and by then directing any requester of those
records to the independent
contractor assessors. As we noted previously, the municipalities here
are the authorities
for purposes of the open records law" (¶ 82).
The next issue was whether the municipalities complied with
WIREdata's initial public records requests, once they produced PDFs
with the requested information and gave
those files to WIREdata. On this issue the court concluded that
"despite the fact that the
PDF files did not have all of the characteristics that WIREdata wished
(that is,
WIREdata could not easily manipulate the data), the PDF files did
fulfill WIREdata's initial
requests as worded. In addition, the records requested were offered to
WIREdata, by
all three municipalities, in written form shortly after its requests
were made,
demonstrating good faith efforts to satisfy such requests
quickly" (¶ 96). The court did not
address whether the municipalities' responses satisfied
WIREdata's enhanced requests because WIREdata made those requests to
the independent contractor assessors - not to the
municipalities (as required by one of the earlier holdings in this
case)
(see ¶ 93). The supreme court disagreed with the court of
appeals' statement in this case that
requesters must be given access to an authority's electronic databases
to examine, extract
information from, or copy them (see ¶ 97).
Yet another issue was whether the fees charged to WIREdata were fees
that
complied with the Public Records Law. The court held that,
"because no fees were actually
charged to WIREdata for the information provided in the PDF format,
the municipalities did
not violate the open records law" (¶ 102). The court
continued, "Because we do not have
a sufficient record before us to determine what an appropriate fee
would have been for
the provision of `enhanced' data for all three municipalities, we will
not address that
issue further, except to note that nothing in this opinion should be
viewed as changing
or modifying our prior case law that an authority may charge fees only
as provided
under Wis. Stat. § 19.35(3)(a), fees that reflect the
actual, necessary, and direct costs
of providing the information. However, we agree with the comment in
the amicus brief of
the [Department of Justice] that an authority may charge a requester
for the
authority's actual costs in complying with the request, such as any
computer programming expenses
or any other related expenses. We reiterate that an authority may not
make a profit, but
an authority may recoup all of its actual costs" (¶ 107).
Lastly, the court held that "WIREdata's initial written
requests were not
insufficient as a matter of law as to time and subject matter"
(¶ 109).
Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a concurring opinion. Justice Butler
did not
participate in this case.
Top of Page
Taxation
Property Tax Assessments - Income Approach - Leased Property -
Above-market Rents
Walgreen Co. v. City of
Madison, 2008 WI 80 (filed 8 July 2008)
The Walgreen Co. (Walgreens) challenged the property tax assessments
on two of
its stores in the city of Madison. Both the circuit court and the
court of appeals (2007
WI App 153) upheld the city's assessments, and the supreme court
granted
Walgreens' petition for review. The appeal required the court to
determine the correct methodology for
assessing leased retail property for purposes of municipal taxation
when the leases
for such property contain monthly payments significantly above the
market rental rate in
part as a result of certain unique business and financing terms being
incorporated into
the contractual lease terms (see ¶ 18).
Both parties relied on the income approach to property assessment.
"The Property Assessment Manual explains that in
leased property scenarios, the income approach is
often the most reliable approach for property valuation, describing
the income approach
as estimating and then capitalizing the net rent a property subject
could
generate" (¶ 24). The parties differed in their
calculations, however, because the city used the
above-market rents being paid by Walgreens in its appraisals whereas
Walgreens' appraisals used market rents.
In a decision authored by Justice Butler, the supreme court
concluded that "this
case is governed by the clear language of Wis. Stat.
§ 70.32(1) requiring that real
property `shall be valued by the assessor in the manner specified in
the Wisconsin property
assessment manual,' and by the similarly clear provisions of the
Manual which, in
turn, require that `the assessor must use the market rent, not the
contract rent,' and
provide that `[a]ll of the information needed for the income approach
is either obtained or
verified by what the assessor finds in the marketplace'" (¶
82) (citations omitted). Said
the court, "The City Assessor in this case improperly failed to
apply the provisions of
the Property Assessment Manual requiring that income approach
assessments of the fair
market value of a fee simple interest must be based on market rate
rents rather than
contract rents, absent the existence of an encumbrance bringing the
leased fee value below
actual market rates. The circuit court and court of appeals similarly
erred in failing to
apply these well-established rules of property assessment, and in
affirming the
City's flawed assessment" (¶ 85).
Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a concurring opinion.
Sales and Use Tax - Custom Software Program - Level of Deference
to be
Accorded Decision of Wisconsin Tax Appeals Commission
Department of Revenue v.
Menasha Corp., 2008 WI 88 (filed 11 July 2008)
Menasha Corp. (Menasha) is a Wisconsin corporation with headquarters
in Neenah. It
has more than 5,700 employees and maintains 63 business locations in
20 states and
eight countries. In 1993, Menasha, in an effort to address
shortcomings in its systems,
hired an independent accounting firm to evaluate its business and
accounting software
systems. Menasha sought an application software system that would
accommodate its special
processing needs. It ultimately purchased the "R/3 System"
from SAP.
In a dispute between Menasha and the Wisconsin Department of Revenue
(DOR), the
Wisconsin Tax Appeals Commission (commission) concluded that the R/3
System was a
custom computer program under Wis. Admin. Code section Tax
11.71(1)(e) and thus was exempt
from sales and use tax. See Wis. Stat. § 77.51(20)
(2003-04). The DOR appealed that
decision to the Dane County Circuit Court. The circuit court reversed
the commission's
decision and concluded that the R/3 System was a noncustom software
program and thus was
taxable as tangible property. Menasha then appealed that decision to
the court of appeals.
The court of appeals reversed the circuit court's decision and
affirmed the
commission's initial decision that the R/3 System was custom and thus
exempt from sales and use
tax. See 2007 WI App 20. In a decision authored by Justice
Ziegler, the supreme court
affirmed the court of appeals.
This case posed the following significant question for the court:
What is the
proper level of deference that the supreme court should give to
commission decisions? The
court concluded that "the Commission's statutory interpretation
of Wis. Stat. § 77.51(20)
is entitled to due weight deference and that its rule interpretation
of Wis. Admin.
Code § Tax 11.71(1)(e) is entitled to controlling weight
deference. We further conclude
that when a DOR decision is appealed by the taxpayer to the
Commission, the Commission is
not required to give deference to the DOR's interpretation of Wis.
Admin. Code
§ Tax 11.71(1)(e) when deciding that appeal" (¶
3).
These conclusions were described by the court as having "great
import to the
average taxpayer in this state" (¶ 5). "More typically,
it is the individual taxpayer who seeks a fair and neutral
hearing before the Commission when that person believes that he or she
has been taxed
incorrectly by the DOR. If the Commission must defer to the DOR, the
average taxpayer does
not receive a fair hearing before a neutral tribunal. Although the
Commission is subject
to judicial review, the legislature specifically charged the
Commission as `the final
authority for hearing and determination of all questions of law and
fact' under the
tax code. We must not second guess that act of the legislature"
(id.).
Applying these principles the court held that the commission
reasonably concluded
that the R/3 System was a custom program and therefore not subject to
sales and use tax
(see ¶ 2). The description of a custom
program, which is provided in an administrative
rule (Wis. Admin. Code § Tax 11.71(1)(e)), includes seven
relevant factors. Applying
those factors the commission concluded that the R/3 system was a
custom program because of
the significant investment Menasha made in presale consultation and
analysis, testing,
training, written documentation, enhancement, and maintenance support,
and because it was
not a prewritten program (see ¶ 102).
The supreme court was likewise "persuaded by the initial cost,
the costs for
modifications, the presale consultations over the span of a few years,
the testing required
once installed, the requisite training, the requisite enhancement and
maintenance, and
that the R/3 System cannot be used until modified - in this case some
3,000 modifications.
As a result, we conclude that the Commission's conclusion that the R/3
System was custom
is reasonable. Accordingly, we will not substitute our judgment for
that of the
Commission" (¶ 103). In sum, the court concluded that
"when applying the controlling weight
deference standard to the Commission's interpretation of Wis. Admin.
Code § Tax 11.71(1)(e),
the Commission reasonably interpreted the rule and concluded that the
R/3 System was
custom" (¶ 108).
Justice Crooks filed a concurring opinion in which he joined the
majority opinion
but "[wrote] separately to emphasize that resolving the issue of
deference is key to a
correct decision in this case" (¶ 109). His concurrence was
joined in by Justice Prosser
and Justice Roggensack. Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a dissent that
was joined in by
Justice Bradley and Justice Butler. Justice Bradley filed a dissent
that was joined in
by Justice Butler.
Top of Page
Torts
Negligence - Negligent Failure to Warn -Former Employee's
Sexual Misconduct
Hornback v. Archdiocese
of Milwaukee, 2008 WI 98 (filed 16 July 2008)
The plaintiffs' complaint against the Archdiocese of Milwaukee
(Archdiocese) and
the Diocese of Madison (Diocese) alleged that the plaintiffs were
sexually abused by
Gary Kazmarek from 1968 to 1973, while Kazmarek taught at a school in
Louisville,
Kentucky. Kazmarek had previously taught at Catholic schools in the
Archdiocese and in the
Diocese. The plaintiffs claimed that both the Archdiocese and the
Diocese "knew or should
have known of Kazmarek's propensity for sexually abusing
children" and were negligent for failing to take certain steps to
prevent Kazmarek's future sexual abuse (¶ 2). In
oral argument before the supreme court, the plaintiffs specified that
their claims
included one that alleged a negligent failure to warn unforeseeable
third parties of
Kazmarek's propensity for sexual abuse (see
id.).
"A significant difference between the plaintiffs' claims
against the Archdiocese
and the Diocese is that the plaintiffs' complaint alleges that when
the sexual abuse of
students in Milwaukee was brought to the attention of the Archdiocese
of Milwaukee,
the Archdiocese promised two dozen of the victims' parents `that
Kazmarek would be sent to
a treatment center and that he would never have contact with children
again' and
`pleaded with parents to not report Kazmarek's crimes to the police.'
However, the complaint
alleges, instead of subsequently referring Kazmarek to the police or
alerting others
about the abuse, the Archdiocese simply told Kazmarek
`to leave Milwaukee quietly.' Similar claims were not alleged as to
the
Diocese" (¶ 3).
In a response to motions to dismiss brought by the Archdiocese and
the Diocese,
the circuit court dismissed the complaint as to both on statute of
limitation grounds. In
an unpublished opinion, the court of appeals affirmed the circuit
court order on the
same grounds.
The supreme court was equally divided on whether to affirm or
reverse the decision
of the court of appeals dismissing the plaintiffs' complaint against
the Archdiocese.
Justice Crooks, Justice Roggensack, and Justice Ziegler would have
affirmed; Chief
Justice Abrahamson and Justice Bradley and Justice Butler would have
reversed. Justice Prosser did not participate in the case.
Consequently, the supreme court affirmed the court
of appeals' decision to affirm the circuit court's dismissal of the
plaintiffs' claims against the Archdiocese
(see ¶ 5).
The supreme court did not reach the statute of limitation issue with
regard to
the case against the Diocese because, as discussed below, it held that
the plaintiffs
failed to articulate a claim upon which relief could be granted
(see ¶ 6). The complaint alleged that the Diocese
"knew or should have known of
Kazmarek's propensity for sexually abusing children and, despite this
knowledge, did not refer Kazmarek to the police or take
any other action to prevent Kazmarek from continuing his pattern of
sexually abusing
children." The complaint further alleged that the failure of the
Diocese to refer Kazmarek
to the police or to take "other action to prevent Kazmarek's
continuation of his pattern
of sexually abusing children" constitutes negligence, and that
the Diocese's negligent
conduct was a substantial factor in causing Kazmarek's sexual abuse of
and resulting
injuries to the plaintiffs (¶ 8). When these allegations are
viewed in conjunction with
the plaintiffs' clarification of their position at oral argument
before the supreme court
as described above, the supreme court concluded that "the
plaintiffs' negligence claim
is premised on an alleged failure to warn unforeseeable third parties,
including any
potential future employers of Kazmarek at dioceses and parochial
school systems everywhere
in the country, as well as parents of unforeseeable victims"
(¶ 27).
The Diocese argued that common law tort rules do not impose a duty
on employers
to seek out and disclose information to an employee's subsequent
employers or the public
at large concerning a former employee's history of misconduct or
antisocial behavior.
The Diocese contended that under the law of "negligent referral
or duty to warn," unless
an employer gives a favorable reference to a subsequent employer or
third party about
the former employee while withholding negative information, there is
no breach of duty
established by the employer's failure to seek out subsequent employers
and alert them to
prior negative history of the former employee
(see ¶ 28).
In a decision authored by Justice Butler the supreme court concluded
that "the
third party failure to warn claims recognized in this state do not
encompass the type of
failure to warn claimed by the plaintiffs" (¶ 32). Said the
court, "The
Diocese's mere knowledge of Kazmarek's past sexual abuse, or a
presumed knowledge of a continued sexual
propensity for abuse, is not enough to establish negligence.
Reasonable and ordinary
care does not require the Diocese to notify all potential subsequent
employers within
dioceses and parochial school systems across the country, along with
all parents of future
unforeseeable victims. Requiring such notification under these
circumstances would create
a vast obligation dramatically exceeding any approach to failure to
warn recognized
either in this state or in other jurisdictions" (¶ 34).
Accordingly, the court concluded that the plaintiffs' complaint
failed to allege
negligence (a duty of care and a breach thereof) sufficiently to
survive a motion to
dismiss. "Although the plaintiffs allege that the Diocese knew
that Kazmarek had a
propensity for sexual abuse, what is more pertinent is what the
plaintiffs did not allege.
They did not allege that the Diocese knew that Kazmarek was in
Kentucky, still teaching
children, or working for the Archdiocese in Louisville. They did not
allege any
knowledge that the children at the [school] in Louisville were in any
danger. They did not
allege that the Archdiocese of Louisville asked the Diocese for a
reference, that the
Diocese made a reference recommending Kazmarek, or that the Diocese
had any communication
whatsoever with the Archdiocese of Louisville regarding Kazmarek"
(¶ 46).
Finally, the court held that, even if a viable negligence claim had
been made,
"recovery against the Diocese would be precluded on the public
policy ground that
allowing recovery would send this court down a slippery slope with no
sensible or just
stopping point" (¶ 64).
Malpractice - Peer Review - Immunity
Rechsteiner v.
Hazelden, 2008 WI 97 (filed 16 July 2008)
Rechsteiner, a surgeon, worked for Spooner Health System, which
demanded he undergo
an alcohol assessment at Hazelden. Hazelden diagnosed Rechsteiner with
"alcohol
dependence," which in turn led to inpatient and outpatient
treatment. In light of later
information, Hazelden amended the diagnosis to mere "alcohol
abuse." He later sued Hazelden
and Spooner for damages, including lost wages. In subsequent
proceedings, the circuit
court denied the plaintiff's request for a continuance and granted
summary judgment to
the defendants on the ground that the peer review process afforded
immunity. The court
of appeals affirmed. See 2007 WI App 148.
The supreme court affirmed in an opinion authored by Justice
Prosser. Two issues
were procedural, record-intensive matters. The court found no abuse of
discretion in the
circuit court's denial of a continuance and affirmed the ruling that
the plaintiff failed
to raise an issue of material fact that obviated summary judgment.
Regarding the substantive issue, the court surveyed the basic
principles of
statutory immunity for alleged medical negligence and defamation in
the context of health care
peer review. It held "that Hazelden is eligible for immunity
under Wis. Stat. § 146.37
because it played an integral role in Spooner's medical peer review
process.
Hazelden's medical diagnosis of Dr. Rechsteiner is immune, even if its
diagnosis is deemed negligent,
because Hazelden's diagnosis was central to its requested evaluation.
If Dr.
Rechsteiner's complaint is viewed as focusing on Hazelden's treatment
of Dr. Rechsteiner, as opposed
to its diagnosis of Dr. Rechsteiner, the complaint cannot survive
summary
judgment" (¶ 71).
More precisely, the court addressed four questions, which are
summarized as
follows. "Question (1): Is Hazelden, a third-party addictionology
center, too removed from
the peer review process initiated by Spooner to be eligible for
immunity under Wis.
Stat. § 146.37? Answer (1): No. Hazelden is eligible
for immunity under Wis. Stat.
§ 146.37 because it played an integral role in Spooner's
medical peer review of Dr.
Rechsteiner. Question (2): Does Hazelden's diagnosis of Dr.
Rechsteiner during the medical peer
review process qualify for immunity, under Wis. Stat.
§ 146.37, even if its diagnosis is
deemed negligent? Answer (2): Yes. Hazelden's medical diagnosis of Dr.
Rechsteiner is
immune under Wis. Stat. § 146.37, even if the diagnosis is
deemed negligent, because
Hazelden's diagnosis was made in good faith and was central to a
requested evaluation of
Dr. Rechsteiner in peer review. Question (3): Does Hazelden's
treatment of Dr.
Rechsteiner, following its diagnosis of his medical condition, qualify
for immunity under Wis.
Stat. § 146.37? Answer (3): The court is not required to
decide whether treatment related
to the peer review process qualifies for immunity. If Dr.
Rechsteiner's complaint is
viewed as focusing on Hazelden's treatment of Dr. Rechsteiner, as
opposed to its diagnosis
of Dr. Rechsteiner, his complaint cannot survive a motion for summary
judgment on the
facts of this case. Question (4): Do the actions and statements of the
Spooner defendants
qualify for immunity under Wis. Stat. § 146.37? Answer (4):
Yes. The actions and words of
the Spooner defendants are immune under Wis. Stat. § 146.37
because they were part of
Dr. Rechsteiner's peer review and because the Spooner defendants were
presumed to be
acting in good faith" (¶ 102).
Top of Page
Wisconsin Lawyer