Vol. 70, No. 2, February 1997
Letters
The Wisconsin Lawyer welcomes letters to the
editor on any law-related subject, whether that subject has been a topic
of a Wisconsin Lawyer article. The magazine publishes as many letters in
each issue as space permits. Please limit letters to 500 words; letters
may need to be edited for length and clarity.
Letters responding to previously published letters and to others'
views should address the issues and not be a personal attack on others.
Letters endorsing political candidates cannot be accepted.
Please mail letters to "Letters to the Editor," Wisconsin Lawyer,
P.O. Box 7158, Madison, WI 53707-7158, fax them to (608) 257-5502, or
email them by clicking
here.
Slow down, you move too fast
Do we have to be lawyers 24 hours per day? Some of us apparently
think so, as indicated by the article "Wisconsin's Road Warriors Battle
Inefficiency" in the November Wisconsin Lawyer.
Cell phones, voice mail, modems, laptops. Access it, integrate it,
fax it and email it. Work in the office, work in the car, work at home.
Do it now, do it right away, do not wait. We are, after all,
lawyers.
Am I inefficient because I choose to listen to the radio rather than
to talk on a cell phone when I am in my car? Am I inefficient because
when I am at home, I choose to spend time with my family rather than
with the latest home office technology? If you think I am, slow down,
you move too fast. We lawyers are not so important that the world cannot
get along without us for more than a few hours each day.
Steven R. Schmitz
Waukesha
Don't attack institution just because you disagree
As a lawyer who serves in the Wisconsin State Senate and who has for
years endeavored to work with the State Bar of Wisconsin on pending
legislation, I was disappointed to read the comments of State Bar
President David Saichek in the December 1996 Wisconsin Lawyer.
I have always believed that the State Bar has a tough job in the
Legislature because of the diversity of the Bar's membership. It is
certainly possible to please one segment of the Bar in passing a law
while, at the same time, making another segment angry. There has been a
long tradition in the Legislature of Democrats and Republicans
recognizing the differences within the Bar on pending bills and
attempting to pass legislation that is good for all the people of
Wisconsin.
Coming from that tradition, the comments of David Saichek regarding
"junk" legislation are disconcerting and troublesome. It is obvious that
he doesn't like caps on damages. Very few bills we pass are universally
approved by all lawyers. But just because he disagrees doesn't mean he
should attack the institution of the Legislature. More troubling, he
should not be calling on the courts (in his capacity as president of our
State Bar) to overturn legislation even if it is not
unconstitutional.
David Saichek asserts that the medical malpractice caps and other
tort reforms enacted by the Legislature were enacted "without rational
basis." This statement is just plain false. As chair of the Senate
Judiciary Committee, I personally presided over the Senate's hearings on
these bills and heard all of the voluminous testimony, both pro and con.
Anyone with concerns is more than welcome to come to my office and
personally review the volumes of testimony that clearly demonstrate a
rational basis for these bills.
It is a sad day for all lawyers when the president of our own
association demeans and attacks the Legislature's work product as
"junk." Just as the practice of law needs additional respect, so does
the difficult but thorough process of legislative lawmaking.
Sen. Joanne B. Huelsman
Waukesha
Real access to health care is the issue
David Saichek's comments in his December "President's Perspective"
merit a response. Contrary to his assertion that the Legislature used
"junk" findings when it acknowledged the need for a cap on noneconomic
damages in medical malpractices cases, the Legislature considered the
all-too-real plight of Wisconsin citizens who do not have access to
health care, especially obstetric/gynecological services, in this state.
When the Legislature enacted tort reform, 16 Wisconsin locales lacked
access to any sort of pregnancy care because doctors could not afford
the insurance premiums, typically about $57,000 a year for Wisconsin
obstetricians. Certainly, if attorneys in this state were required to
pay $57,000 each year for their liability insurance, Mr. Saichek would
declare a crisis.
Wisconsin's tort reform law, 1995 Wis. Act 10, is modeled on the
California Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act. The California
reforms, including a $250,000 cap on noneconomic damages, have withstood
constitutional challenge (see Fein v. Permanente Medical Group, 695 P.2d
665 (1985), Roa v. Lodi Medical Group Inc., 211 Cal. Rptr. 77 (1985),
and American Bank & Trust Co. v. Community Hospital of Los Gatos -
Saratoga Inc., 683 P.2d 670 (1984)), and proponents of Act 10 remain
confident that the reforms contained therein will withstand
challenge.
Perhaps Mr. Saichek's underlying concern is the fact that some
plaintiffs' attorneys are losing money because of tort reform. A recent
investigation by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (Dec. 29, 1996)
concluded that the plaintiffs' bar has lost interest in representing
persons who may have been injured by a health-care provider because they
can no longer count on the inflated awards of yesterday. With refreshing
candor, some plaintiffs' lawyers readily admit that they cannot make
enough money to merit taking on cases that do not have the potential to
yield large awards. Mr. Saichek should have been as forthright in his
comments as the attorneys who spoke to the Journal Sentinel, and admit
that his opposition to the cap and other reforms contained in Act 10 is
not really based upon issues of constitutionality or a fundamental right
of access to the judicial process, but on the ability of the trial bar
to make a buck.
Mary Colleen Wilson
Madison
Remedial statistics 101
I found David Saichek's remarks about "junk legislative findings"
highly offensive. Of the three branches of government, the one least
schooled in applied mathematics and statistical inference is, beyond any
doubt whatsoever, the judiciary. This is really a shame, as we are hard
at the door of the 21st century and still have a judiciary that is
plodding along in the 18th.
I suggest that Mr. Saichek review my critique of
Martin v. Richards, 531 N.W.2d 70 (Wis. 1995), and then enroll himself
in a few remedial statistics classes. In the meantime, I will work on an
addition to "The Irrationality Pit" featuring his December column.
Chuck Anesi
Hudson
Witness to a testator's signature -- it's a good thing
Although I have been an overseas member of the State Bar for the past
nine years, I still receive and read the Wisconsin Lawyer. Thus, I was
delighted to find out about new section 853.16 of the Wisconsin Statutes
through William Slate's fine article in the October issue. The sample
clauses were very well done and should prove most useful.
I have several questions. In Figure 3, Memorandum Disposing of
Tangible Personal Property, Mr. Slate provides for a witness to the
testator's signature although none seems to be required under section
853.16. Frankly, I feel he is entirely right, as otherwise things are
wide open for forgeries. I believe that section 853.16 should require at
least one witness.
In any event, this seems to be another new statutory enactment
emanating from Wisconsin. Is this true or do similar provisions appear
in other states' statutes? If this verbiage does appear elsewhere, I
would be interested in any citations. As far as I know, nothing like
this appears among any European statutes.
Joseph J. Shutkin
Jerusalem, Israel
Kudos to Wisconsin Lawyer on timely topics
Congratulations on the December 1996 issue, a good example of the
magazine's recent success. With the Packers' success, your cover piece
on Ken Bowman could not be more timely, and David Simon's article on
English law was very interesting.
The Wisconsin Lawyer is attracting readership with engaging articles
and holding their attention for the technical information they should
get from a bar publication. Keep up the good work.
Michael B. Brennan
South Bend, Ind.
The Trial Lawyer's College provides
valuable experience
I encourage Wisconsin plaintiffs and criminal defense lawyers to
apply to the Trial Lawyer's College. The college is an intense
month-long program that teaches how to represent people in a meaningful
and successful manner. It is held in August at Gerry Spence's ranch in
the the high deserts and mountains of Wyoming. I am not writing on
behalf of the college or because it is in need of applicants. The
college will receive hundreds of applications and will accept only four
dozen students. I am writing because I attended the college, and it was
the most rewarding experience of my legal career. I want as many other
Wisconsin lawyers as possible to have the same experience.
The college is staffed by gifted lawyers who work one-on-one with
students. Gerry Spence also spends the entire month working with
students. The faculty donate their time to the college and rotate
through weekly. Some of the lawyers who will be teaching at the ranch
are Roy Black, Hon. G. Joseph Cardine, Judy Clarke, Morris Dees, Milton
Grimes, "Racehorse" Haynes, Nancy Hollander, Garvin Isaacs, Jim Jeans,
Rikki Klieman, Albert Krieger, Hon. Miles Lord, Paul Luvera, Terry
MacCarthy, Stephen Rench, Hon. Robert R. Rose, Jim Shellow, John Tierney
and Bill Trine.
Look for more information about the college in the most recent
edition of the Champion or Trial magazines. Or, please call me at (608)
263-1699 or contact the Trial Lawyer's College directly at (307)
739-1870. Applications are due March 15, so don't delay.
Bernie Cantorna
Madison