Supreme Court Digest
By Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
This column summarizes all decisions 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.
Criminal Procedure
Resentencing - Relevant Information
State v. Carter, No.
94-2001-CR (filed 19 March 1997)
The defendant was convicted of false imprisonment while armed. He was
originally sentenced to five years in prison but the prosecutor agreed
to a "resentencing" because the judge had relied upon a flawed
psychological report. At the resentencing the defendant offered "new
information" relating to events (for example, an offer of employment)
that occurred after the original sentencing. At the resentencing, the
trial judge refused to consider the new information. The court of
appeals affirmed.
The supreme court, in an opinion written by Chief Justice Abrahamson,
reversed. The court held that "a circuit court should, in imposing a
sentence at a resentencing proceeding, consider all information relevant
about a defendant, including information about events and circumstances
either that the sentencing court was unaware of at the initial
sentencing or that occurred after the initial sentencing." The court
refused to distinguish resentencing following an invalid conviction and
resentencing solely to correct an invalid sentence: "The role of the
sentencing court is the same regardless of the procedural history
leading to the resentencing."
The majority opinion extensively discusses the case law and should be
carefully reviewed by criminal practitioners. Several cases were limited
to their facts. In particular, the supreme court overruled State v.
Solles, 169 Wis. 2d 566 (Ct. App. 1992).
Justice Steinmetz dissented, joined by Justices Wilcox and
Crooks.
Work-release Probationers - Failure to Return
to the County Jail - Liability for Escape
State v. Rosenburg, No.
95-1760-CR (filed 20 March 1997)
The defendant was a probationer on work-release from the county jail.
He failed to return to jail and, as a result, was charged and convicted
of escape, contrary to section 946.42 of the Wisconsin Statutes
(1993-94).
The defendant appealed the escape conviction, relying on State v.
Schaller, 70 Wis. 2d 107, 233 N.W.2d 416 (1975), which held that a
probationer confined in a county jail as a condition of probation could
not be convicted of escape for failure to return from work release. The
state responded to this position by contending that certain amendments
to the escape statute enacted by the Legislature in 1983 had the effect
of overruling Schaller and, hence, brought the defendant's
failure to return to jail within the purview of the escape statute.
A unanimous supreme court, in an opinion authored by Justice
Bablitch, disagreed with the state's argument and reversed the
conviction. The court concluded that the 1993 amendments to the
probation statute did not affect the escape statute in any way relevant
to this case and, therefore, Schaller governs the escape
statute that was in effect when the defendant committed the act for
which he was charged and convicted of escape.
In footnote the court observed that the defendant was charged and
convicted under the version of section 946.42 that appeared in the
1993-94 edition of the Wisconsin Statutes. The escape statute was
amended in 1996 but, because the question was not before the court, it
declined to rule on the impact of the 1996 amendments on the continuing
vitality of the Schaller decision.
Family Law/Appellate Procedure
Divorce - Military Retirement Pay - Property Division - Calculation
of Child Support - Appellate Procedure - Power of the Court of Appeals
to Overrule, Modify or Withdraw Language From One of Its Published
Opinions
Cook v. Cook, No. 95-1963
(filed 19 March 1997)
Persons who serve in the armed forces for a specified period,
generally 20 years, are entitled to receive military retirement pay upon
leaving the service. The retirement pay is not available as a lump sum;
it is taxable as income and terminates on the death of the retiree. A
retiree is entitled to military retirement pay even if he or she takes a
post-retirement job, except that military retirement pay temporarily
ceases if the retiree returns to active duty.
This case presented the supreme court with important questions about
military retirement pay arising in the context of divorce, the division
of property and the setting of child support. The court first confronted
whether military retirement pay is property for purposes of property
division upon divorce. In a unanimous decision authored by Chief Justice
Abrahamson, the court concluded that, unless otherwise excluded by law,
military retirement pay must be considered as property for purposes of
property division.
Second, the court confronted whether, if military retirement pay is
divided in the property division, the noncustodial spouse's share of the
military retirement pay be considered part of that spouse's gross income
for the purpose of calculating his or her child support obligation. The
supreme court concluded that military retirement pay may be considered
as income for purposes of calculating child support. In so holding, the
court rejected the retiree's argument that if his military retirement
pay is subject to property division, then any portion awarded to him
should not be considered as income for purposes of calculating the
amount of child support he is to pay.
Another critical issue the court addressed in this case concerns
appellate procedure and whether the Wisconsin Court of Appeals may
overrule, modify or withdraw language from one of its published
decisions. The supreme court concluded that the court of appeals does
not have this power.
In reaching this conclusion, the supreme court indicated that four
principles are clear: the court of appeals is a unitary court; published
opinions of the court of appeals are precedential; litigants, lawyers
and circuit courts should be able to rely upon precedent; and law
development and law defining rest primarily with the supreme court.
Adhering to these principles the supreme court concluded that the
constitution and statutes must be read to provide that only the supreme
court, the highest court in the state, has the power to overrule, modify
or withdraw language from a published opinion of the court of appeals.
In that way one court, not several, is the unifying law defining and law
development court.
But the supreme court observed that the court of appeals is not
powerless if it concludes that a prior decision of the court of appeals
or supreme court is erroneous. It may signal its disfavor to the
litigants, lawyers and the supreme court by certifying the appeal to the
supreme court, explaining that it believes a prior case was wrongly
decided. Alternatively, the court of appeals may decide the appeal,
adhering to a prior case but stating its belief that the prior case was
wrongly decided.
For all of these reasons the supreme court concluded that the court
of appeals may not overrule, modify or withdraw language from a
previously published decision of the court of appeals.
Insurance
Subrogation - Settlements
Ives v. Coopertools, No.
95-0932 (filed 28 Feb. 1997)
The question before the supreme court was whether a subrogated
insurer is entitled to reimbursement on its lien when the injured
plaintiffs settle with the alleged tortfeasor before trial for an amount
less than their total damages. The supreme court held that the court of
appeals erred by holding that "there must be a determination of [the
plaintiff's] contributory negligence, if any, before the question of
reimbursement to [the insurer] can be considered." Ives v.
Coopertools, 197 Wis. 2d 937, 541 N.W.2d 247 (Ct. App. 1995). The
supreme court was, however, evenly divided on the reasons for this
conclusion. Chief Justice Abrahamson, Justice Bablitch and Justice Geske
would vote to affirm the "made whole" rule announced in Garrity v.
Rural Mutual Ins. Co., 77 Wis. 2d 537 (1977), but would overrule
Sorge v. National Car Rental System Inc., 182 Wis.2d 52 (1994)
(which focuses on what the injured plaintiff lost, not on what he can
legally receive). Justices Steinmetz, Wilcox, and Crooks concluded that,
"in the case of a settlement before trial, the circuit court should
assess the subrogated insurer's rights of recovery at a rate equal to
the percentage of the plaintiff's recovery in relation to his or her
gross damages." Justice Bradley did not participate.
The supreme court's decision affirmed the circuit court's order. The
court of appeals' decision could not stand because the court unanimously
agreed that it did not state the law in Wisconsin. Neither Justice
Geske's concurring opinion nor Justice Steinmetz's concurring opinion
have precedential value.
Torts
Municipal Liability - Damage Cap - Waiver - Discretionary
Immunity
Anderson v. City of Milwaukee, Nos. 94-1030 and 94-2162 (filed 28 Feb. 1997)
Section 893.80(3) of the Wisconsin Statutes provides in pertinent
part that "the amount recoverable by any person for any damages,
injuries or death in any action founded on tort against any ...
governmental subdivision ... and against their officers, officials,
agents or employees for acts done in their official capacity or in the
course of their agency or employment ... shall not exceed $50,000."
In this case the supreme court addressed the issue of whether the
municipal defendant had waived, by omission, the $50,000 liability
damage limitation specified in the preceding statute when it failed to
plead it as an affirmative defense in its answer and failed to raise it
in motions after verdict. In a unanimous decision authored by Justice
Crooks, the court held that the damage limitation of section 893.80(3)
cannot be impliedly waived by failing to raise it in an answer, during
trial or in a post-verdict motion, because this would undermine the
statute's purposes, which are to protect the public treasury and enable
public entities to conduct fiscal planning, while also protecting the
public interest in compensating injured parties. The damage limitation
is not an affirmative defense that is deemed waived if not raised in a
responsive pleading or by motion. However, the damage limitation may be
expressly waived under circumstances that satisfy the purposes of this
statute, that is, protecting the public treasury and allowing for fiscal
planning.
The court also considered the issue of whether the discretionary
immunity defense under section 893.80(4) of the Wisconsin Statutes may
be waived by omission. Section 893.80(4) provides in pertinent part that
"no suit may be brought against any ... governmental subdivision ... or
against its officers, officials, agents or employees for acts done in
the exercise of legislative, quasi-legislative, judicial or
quasi-judicial functions." The supreme court concluded that the
discretionary immunity specified in this statute may be waived by
omission. Discretionary immunity is an affirmative defense that is
deemed waived if it is not raised in a responsive pleading or by
motion.
Worker's Compensation
Worker's Compensation Act - Exclusive Remedy -
Injury Within Course of Employment - Injury Arising
From Course of Employment
Weiss v. City of Milwaukee,
No. 94-0171 (filed 4 March 1997)
Weiss was hired by the City of Milwaukee, which required her to
provide her address and phone number to the payroll department. When
providing this information, she advised the payroll department that she
had an abusive former husband and wanted her address and phone number
kept confidential. A city clerk advised her that the established policy
guaranteed the confidentiality of this information. By way of a ruse,
the former husband called the city payroll department and obtained
Weiss's address and phone number. He later called Weiss, telling her
that he had this information and threatening to kill her and her two
children.
Weiss sued the city in a common law action alleging negligent
infliction of emotional distress based upon the city's disclosure of her
address and phone number. The city moved to dismiss on two grounds: 1)
under the Open Records Law, it had no duty to keep the information
confidential; and 2) the Worker's Compensation Act (WCA) provided an
exclusive remedy. Wis. Stat. 102.01-.89 (1991-92). The circuit court
dismissed the action on the first ground. The court of appeals affirmed,
but adopted the second ground; namely, the WCA provided the exclusive
remedy.
The supreme court, in an opinion written by Justice Bradley,
affirmed. The court held that Weiss's injuries were covered by the WCA
and that the exclusive remedy provision precluded her common law
action.
Weiss argued that receiving a personal phone call at work did not
meet the WCA's requirement that the injury occur while "performing
service growing out of and incidental to ... her employment." Under a
liberal construction of the WCA, "an employee acts within the course of
employment when he or she is otherwise within the time and space limits
of employment, and briefly turns away from his or her work to tend to
matters 'necessary or convenient to his [or her] own personal wealth or
comfort.'" The "brief personal telephone call" fell within this rule; it
did not evince an intent to "abandon the job temporarily." The court
also rejected Weiss's argument that because she was injured by a
nonemployee for purely personal reasons, the injury did not arise from
her employment. The "conditions of Weiss's employment facilitated her
eventual injury" even if the employment did not create the conditions.
Weiss provided her address and phone number only because city employment
rules required her to do so.
Wisconsin Lawyer