Supreme Court Digest
This column summarizes all decisions of the Wisconsin Supreme Court (except
those involving lawyer or judicial discipline, which are digested elsewhere
in the magazine). Profs. Daniel D. Blinka and Thomas J. Hammer invite comments
and questions about the digests. They can be reached at Marquette University
Law School, 1103 W. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53233, (414) 288-7090.
by Prof. Daniel D. Blinka &
Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
Criminal
Procedure
Terry Stops - Anonymous Tips - Automobile Frisks
State v. Williams, 2001 WI 21
(filed 13 March 2001)
This appeal was before the Wisconsin Supreme Court on remand from the
U.S. Supreme Court, which vacated the Wisconsin Supreme Court's prior
decision in this case (see State v. Williams, 225 Wis. 2d 159,
591 N.W.2d 823 (1999)) and remanded it for reconsideration in light of
Florida v. J.L., 120 S. Ct. 1375 (2000). [In J.L. the Supreme Court
held that an anonymous tip that a person is carrying a gun is not, without
more, sufficient to justify a police officer's stop and frisk of that
person. In that case the officers' suspicion that J.L. was carrying a
weapon arose not from their own observations, but solely from a call made
from an unknown location by an unknown caller. The tip lacked sufficient
indicia of reliability to provide the reasonable suspicion required to
make a stop pursuant to Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1 (1968).]
In this case Milwaukee police received an anonymous telephone call indicating
that someone was dealing drugs out of a blue and burgundy Bronco parked
in the caller's apartment building parking lot. Officers responded to
the call and, upon arrival at the scene four minutes after being dispatched,
observed a blue and burgundy Chevy Blazer with two occupants in the parking
lot that the caller had described. Without conducting any surveillance
or observing any drug activity, the officers approached the vehicle with
weapons drawn and ordered the defendant and his passenger out of the vehicle.
Prior to this they had observed that the defendant's right hand was out
of view, reaching down and behind the passenger front seat. A subsequent
protective search of the vehicle revealed the presence of marijuana and
cocaine. Thereafter the defendant was placed under arrest.
The first issue before the court was whether an anonymous tip containing
a contemporaneous report of drug trafficking, combined with independent
observations and corroboration of details from the tip, justified the
investigatory stop of the defendant. Writing for the court, Justice Crooks
concluded that, considering the totality of the circumstances, including
the indicia of reliability surrounding the anonymous tip and the police
officers' additional observations, the officers reasonably suspected that
criminal activity was afoot.
The court concluded that there were many distinctions between the anonymous
tip in this case and the tip in Florida v. J.L., supra, which indicated
that the tip in this case was reliable. First, instead of being a "bare-boned"
tip about a gun, as was the case in J.L., the anonymous tipster in this
case explained to the police operator how she knew about the activity
she was reporting: She was observing it. The tipster in J.L. was totally
unknown whereas the informant in this case identified her location by
address and indicated that it was the apartment building where she lived.
Even though she did not identify herself by name, she did provide self-identifying
information and, when an informant places his or her anonymity at risk,
the court felt it could consider this factor in weighing the reliability
of the tip. Further, the circuit court in this case found that the caller
was a "citizen informant," and the supreme court felt that citizens who
purport to have witnessed a crime are to be viewed as reliable and that
the police should be able to act accordingly, even though other indicia
of reliability have not yet been established.
Unlike J.L., there was an audio recording in this case of exactly what
the tipster reported to the police. The recording provides an opportunity,
though somewhat limited, to review the caller's veracity. Such review
could examine not only the content of the call but also the caller's tone
and delivery. The recording also would be of assistance in the event that
the police needed to find the anonymous caller.
The reliability of the anonymous tip in this case was further bolstered
by police corroboration of innocent, although significant, details of
the tip. And finally, unlike J.L., there were circumstances present in
this case that gave the officers additional reason to suspect that criminal
activity was afoot, including the defendant's hand being extended behind
the passenger's seat, a gesture that may have indicated he was either
reaching for a weapon or concealing evidence as he saw the officers approach.
For all of these reasons, the court concluded that the state met its burden
of showing that the investigatory stop of the defendant was justified
on the basis of reasonable suspicion.
The court further held that the protective search of the vehicle that
followed the stop was justified. Based upon the defendant's activity in
the vehicle as the officers approached, coupled with the fact that they
were responding to a drug complaint, led the court to conclude that the
officers reasonably suspected that they were in danger of physical injury
and that the circumstances warranted the protective search of the vehicle.
Justice Prosser filed a concurring opinion.
Justice Bablitch filed a dissent that was joined by Chief Justice Abrahamson
and Justice Bradley.
Terry Stops - Anonymous Tips
State v. Rutzinski, 2001 WI 22
(filed 20 March 2001)
Police received a call that a black pickup truck was being driven erratically.
The caller was driving in traffic with the truck and kept in contact with
the police dispatcher until after the truck was stopped. As a matter of
fact, when the officer pulled in behind the truck prior to stopping it,
the caller relayed to the dispatcher that the officer was following the
correct truck and that the caller was in the vehicle ahead of the truck.
Although the officer did not independently observe any signs of erratic
driving, he activated his emergency lights and conducted a traffic stop
of the black pickup. This led to the defendant being subsequently arrested
for OWI. [Note: The motorist who had reported the erratic driving also
pulled over when the officer initiated the stop. Although the motorist
did not speak with the arresting officer, he or she did speak with a police
supervisor at the scene. However, there is no record of the motorist's
name or other identification, or any indication of what was said between
the supervisor and the motorist.]
The defendant moved to suppress all evidence that flowed from the stop
of his truck, contending that the information in the motorist's call was
not sufficiently reliable to justify the stop and that the stop therefore
was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and
the equivalent provision of the Wisconsin Constitution. The circuit court
denied the suppression motion and the court of appeals affirmed.
In a majority decision authored by Justice Wilcox, the supreme court
also affirmed. It held that the tip in this case provided sufficient justification
for an investigative stop of the defendant. First, the tip contained sufficient
indicia of the informant's reliability. The information in the tip exposed
the informant to possible identification and, therefore, to possible arrest
if the tip proved false. The tip reported contemporaneous and verifiable
information regarding the defendant's alleged erratic driving, his location,
and his vehicle's description. Further, the officer verified many of the
details in the informant's tip before making the stop.
Secondly, the allegations in the tip could suggest to a reasonable police
officer that the defendant was driving while under the influence of an
intoxicant. This exigency, said the court, strongly weighs in favor of
immediate police investigation.
For the foregoing reasons, the court concluded that the stop did not
violate the Fourth Amendment or its Wisconsin counterpart.
Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a concurring opinion.
Probation Revocation - Review by Writ of Certiorari - Exhaustion of
Administrative Remedies
State ex rel. Mentek v. Schwarz,
2001 WI 32 (filed 4 April 2001)
The circuit court dismissed the petitioner's petition for a writ of
certiorari seeking review of an order issued by an administrative law
judge (ALJ) from the Division of Hearings and Appeals (DHA) revoking his
probation. The court held that he failed to exhaust his administrative
remedies prior to filing the petition as required by Wis. Stat. section
801.02(7). The court of appeals affirmed the circuit court, also concluding
that administrative remedies were not exhausted under the same statute.
The issue before the supreme court was whether the petitioner was required
to exhaust his administrative remedies under section 801.02(7) or any
other rule of law in order to petition the circuit court for a writ of
certiorari. [The administrative remedy that was available to him was an
appeal from the ALJ's decision revoking probation to the administrator
of DHA, which is part of the Department of Administration.] Writing for
the court, Chief Justice Abrahamson concluded that section 801.02(7) (1995-96)
(which has since been amended) does not apply to a petition for a writ
of certiorari seeking judicial review of a probation revocation by the
Department of Administration.
The court further held that this case fell within recognized exceptions
to the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies. While the law
is well established that judicial relief will be denied until parties
have exhausted administrative remedies, a court need not apply the exhaustion
doctrine in a rigid, unbending way. The supreme court concluded that the
petitioner's need for judicial review is substantial in that he has been
incarcerated under protest since 1997 and has made credible legal arguments
in his various pro se filings in the courts. Further, the Division of
Hearings and Appeals' interest in precluding the petitioner from litigation
is weak. Finally, the court believed that the public interest in the sound
administration of justice would suffer if it were to deny the petitioner
meaningful judicial review under the circumstances in this case. Those
circumstances included the petitioner's allegation that his attorney agreed
to file an administrative appeal following probation revocation and then,
after expiration of the time period for doing so, informed the petitioner
that such an appeal would not be filed.
Chief Justice Abrahamson also wrote a separate concurrence that was
joined by Justice Bradley.
Factual Basis for Guilty/No Contest Pleas - Felon in Possession of
a Firearm - Sufficiency of "Possession" Evidence
State v. Black, 2001 WI 31 (filed
5 April 2001)
Milwaukee police went to a residence to investigate a narcotics complaint.
They were admitted into the upper unit of the building and discovered
several bags of marijuana and a pistol under the mattress in a woman's
bedroom. That woman, who lived in the upper unit, was the defendant's
girlfriend. The defendant himself lived in the lower residence of the
building. Regarding the evidence recovered from the woman's unit, the
defendant admitted to the police that the marijuana was his and that he
had "handled" the pistol two days earlier, but did not know who owned
it. This admission was included in the criminal complaint.
The defendant was charged with possession with intent to deliver a controlled
substance and with possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. The defendant
pled no contest to these charges. After finding that the defendant had
entered his no contest pleas voluntarily and with full knowledge of the
nature of the charges and possible penalties, the court asked the parties
whether it could use the criminal complaint as a factual basis for the
plea. Both counsel responded in the affirmative. The defendant also indicated
that he had read the complaint and understood that the court was going
to use the facts in the complaint as the basis for the plea. The defendant
also had executed a standard plea questionnaire which included, among
other things, his acknowledgment that he had read the complaint and understood
the elements of the offense and their relationship to the facts in this
case and how the evidence established his guilt.
After sentencing, the defendant filed a post-conviction motion seeking
to withdraw his no contest plea to the firearm charge. The circuit court
denied the motion. In a split decision, the court of appeals reversed
the circuit court.
The supreme court, in a majority decision authored by Justice Wilcox,
reversed the court of appeals. The first issue confronted by the court
was whether the circuit judge conducted an appropriate "inquiry" under
Wis. Stat. section 971.08(1)(b) which provides that "before the court
accepts a plea of guilty or no contest, it shall ... make such inquiry as
satisfies it that the defendant in fact committed the crime charged."
The supreme court concluded that the circuit judge did so. It could find
no authority for the proposition that the statute requires a judge to
make a factual basis determination in one particular manner or prohibits
a judge from using the complaint for that purpose. Instead, the plain
language of the statute merely requires the circuit judge to make such
inquiry as satisfies the court that the defendant in fact committed the
crime charged. While a circuit court may look beyond the complaint to
the record during the factual basis inquiry, no authority requires a circuit
court to do so. If the facts set forth in the complaint meet the elements
of the crime charged, they may form the factual basis for a plea.
In this case the defendant entered a no contest plea. By so pleading,
he declined to exercise his right to put the state to its burden of proving
him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, but he did not admit unqualified
guilt. When a defendant enters a no contest plea, he or she is not required
to admit guilt to every charge, which is precisely the advantage of entering
a no contest plea instead of a guilty plea. Accordingly, the circuit court
need not ask the defendant to admit guilt to every charge. Even so, said
the majority, a no contest plea is an implied confession of guilt for
purposes of the case to support a judgment of conviction and in that respect
is equivalent to a plea of guilty ( 15). Accordingly, the defendant's
no contest plea, coupled with the guilty plea questionnaire and the colloquy
described above, was sufficient to support his conviction on the firearm
charge, as long as the facts set forth in the complaint met the elements
of the offense.
Turning to the facts of this case, the court also concluded that the
statement in the criminal complaint recounting the defendant's admission
that he "handled the pistol" satisfied the possession element of the crime
of felon in possession of a firearm. See Wis. Stat. § 941.29. In the context
of this offense, the term "possess" simply means that the defendant knowingly
had actual physical control of a firearm. The statute does not specify
what length of time a felon must possess the firearm in order to violate
the law. The allegation that the defendant "handled the pistol" was sufficient
to show possession because such action amounts to exercising actual physical
control over the firearm, even though it may have been only for a brief
time.
The majority rejected the "implicit thrust" of the defendant's argument
that the defendant did not touch the pistol with malicious intent. Instead,
he may only have handled it for a brief time and may have informed the
owner that she did not need it. The crime, however, precludes the defendant
from handling a firearm because of his status as a felon. His intention
in handling the weapon is irrelevant in determining whether he violated
the statute.
The court recognized that there are circumstances where a felon may
be able to assert one of the six privileges codified in Wis. Stat. section
939.45 by way of a defense. In fact, the defendant attempted to raise
section 939.45(6), which allows one who has committed a criminal act to
claim a defense when his or her conduct is privileged by the statutory
or common law of Wisconsin. However, said the majority, there is no statute
or case that the defendant can cite as privileging his handling of the
pistol contrary to the statute.
Justice Bradley filed a concurring opinion. Justice Bablitch filed a
dissent that was joined by Chief Justice Abrahamson.
Employment
Law
At-will Employees - Tort Action Against Employer for Misrepresentation
to Induce Continued Employment
Mackenzie v. Miller Brewing Co.,
2001 WI 23 (filed 20 March 2001)
The plaintiff was an at-will employee of Miller Brewing Co. He sued
his former employer in tort seeking damages for what he claimed was intentional
misrepresentation regarding the grade level of his position at the company,
which misrepresentation led him to continue his employment there. The
jury found in favor of the plaintiff and awarded compensatory and punitive
damages.
The court of appeals reversed. It concluded that under Tatge v. Chambers
& Owen Inc., 219 Wis. 2d 99, 579 N.W.2d 217 (1998), the plaintiff's
claim for intentional misrepresentation was not actionable in tort.
In a majority decision authored by Justice Wilcox, the supreme court
affirmed the court of appeals. The question before the court was whether
an at-will contract employee can maintain an action against his or her
employer in tort for intentional misrepresentation to induce continued
employment. The court concluded that those who are party to an at-will
contract must seek recourse in contract rather than tort law and that
it would be imprudent for the court to recognize the plaintiff's proposed
cause of action at this time. [Note: The plaintiff acknowledged his inability
to bring a contract cause of action against the employer.]
The employment-at-will doctrine is an established general tenet of workplace
relations in Wisconsin and the court has been reluctant to interpose the
judiciary between employees and employers. The court recalled its language
in Tatge that "no duty to refrain from misrepresentation exists independently
of the performance of the at-will employment contract" ( 15). Were the
tort of intentional misrepresentation to exist independently of the at-will
contract, it could subject employees and employers to liability. Because
such a cause of action would have a profound effect on potentially millions
of at-will employees, the court believed that the legislature - not the
judiciary - would be a more appropriate forum to address whether the at-will
doctrine should be so altered. Absent an applicable statute, the court
rejected the plaintiff's attempt to create a new tort within the contractual
relationship and emphasized the need to preserve the boundary between
tort law and contract law. Accordingly, it held that there is no cause
of action in Wisconsin for intentional misrepresentation to induce continued
employment.
Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a concurring opinion that was joined
by Justice Bablitch. Justice Crooks did not participate in this decision.
Sexually
Violent Persons
Failure to Conduct Examination of Mental Condition Within Six Months
After Initial Commitment - Remedy
State ex rel. Marberry v. Macht,
2001 WI 19 (filed 13 March 2001)
[EDITORS' NOTE: This case was before the supreme court on certification
from the court of appeals. The certified question was as follows: "Is
a person committed under Chapter 980 entitled to release from said commitment
when the Department of Health and Family Services neglects to conduct
a periodic examination of the committed person's mental condition within
six months after the initial commitment as mandated by Wis. Stat. § 980.07(1)?"]
The supreme court was equally divided on the resolution of this appeal.
Justices Wilcox, Crooks, and Sykes would affirm the decision of the circuit
court. Chief Justice Abrahamson and Justices Bablitch and Bradley would
issue an order requiring additional briefing of specific issues. Justice
Prosser did not participate.
Accordingly, the court vacated its decision to certify and remanded
the case for consideration by the court of appeals.
Torts
Underage Drinking - Immunity - "Providers" - Third Parties
Meier v. Champ's Sports Bar & Grill Inc.,
2001 WI 20 (filed 13 March 2001)
The plaintiff, Meier, age 19, along with two friends, ages 19 and 21,
spent the night drinking alcoholic beverages at a Champ's Sports Bar.
No personnel at Champs ever asked the boys for identification and none
of the three ever represented himself as of legal drinking age. The three
friends took turns "providing" alcohol for one another. Without dispute,
the boys were intoxicated when they left the bar and got into an automobile
driven by Meier's 19-year-old friend. Later the driver lost control, the
car careened down an embankment, and Meier was seriously and permanently
injured. In 1995 Meier filed suit against the driver, Champs, and the
bar's two owners. The circuit court granted summary judgment in defendants'
favor, concluding that they had immunity under Wis. Stat. section 125.035.
Hearing the case on bypass, the supreme court, in an opinion written
by Justice Bradley, affirmed. Because all defendants were generally immunized
by section 125.035(2), the main issue was whether Meier's claims fell
within an exception for "third parties" under section 125.035(4)(b). The
court held that "an individual who provides alcohol to an underage person
that is a substantial factor causing an accident cannot be considered
a third party under section 125.035(4)(b)" ( 17). Applying the "common
definition of third party," the court concluded that a "third party is
someone other than the underage drinker or a provider who provides alcohol
that is a substantial factor in causing the third party's injuries" (
24). Meier's provision of alcohol to the driver was a substantial factor
in the accident that later injured Meier. "An individual may not provide
injury-causing alcohol and also claim to be a third party in order to
take advantage of the exception to immunity in an action against another
provider" ( 25). This construction of the statute also advanced the legislative
goal of deterring persons like Meier who provide alcohol to underage persons
(the driver).
The court's holding also comported with the statute's legislative history.
The legislature drafted section 125.035 in response to several cases in
the mid-1980s. It was inappropriate to "strictly construe" section 125.035
because the statute was not in "derogation of the common law"; rather,
it "attempted to codify the common law as it existed in 1985" ( 34).
Finally, Meier argued that regardless of whether he "provided" some
alcohol for the group, he was an injured third party with respect to those
purchases made by his two friends. The court refused, however, to "subdivide
and nuance an evening of drinking into a dozen or so individual transactions
in a case such as this" ( 39).
Res Ipsa Loquitur - "Illness Without Forewarning"
Lambrecht v. Kaczmarczyk, 2001
WI 25 (filed 23 March 2001)
In February 1996 the defendant-driver's automobile was traveling westbound
on a straight and dry road when it collided with three other automobiles.
Two of the cars were traveling in the same direction as the defendant
and were in a right turn lane. The third vehicle, the plaintiff's, was
in the intersection where it was in the process of turning left across
the defendant's lane. The defendant's car rear-ended the first vehicle,
brushed the rear bumper of the second, and skidded across the divided
median where it struck plaintiff's vehicle.
Medical evidence established that the defendant died of a heart attack,
but experts disagreed about when it occurred. One doctor opined that it
occurred before the collision, but other medical experts testified that
it was impossible to determine when defendant suffered the heart attack.
The plaintiff filed a simple negligence claim against the defendant-driver's
estate and the trial court granted summary judgment to the defendants.
The circuit court ruled that "a res ipsa loquitur inference of negligence
was inapplicable because it is just as likely that an unforeseen illness
caused the collision as it is that negligence did" ( 18).
On certification from the court of appeals, the supreme court reversed
in an opinion written by Chief Justice Abrahamson. First, it held that
"the applicability of the res ipsa loquitur doctrine raised in the motion
for summary judgment is a question of law that this court determines independently
of the circuit court, benefiting from its analysis" ( 27). Second, the
pleadings and record demonstrated that plaintiff had made out a prima
facie case of negligence. This "extraordinary case" supported the relatively
unusual application of the res ipsa loquitur inference in an automobile
collision case. In particular, the defendant's car struck three cars,
two of which were moving in the same direction as the defendant-driver.
The plaintiff's vehicle was either stopped or just starting to move.
The third issue concerned whether defendants had established a defense
that defeated the plaintiff's negligence claim. This issue forced the
supreme court to confront two seemingly inconsistent lines of cases, one
relied upon by the defense and the other by the plaintiff, both of which
are extensively discussed. The court suggested that the two lines could
be distinguished "on the basis of the strength of the inference of negligence
that arises under the circumstances of the collision, that is, the likelihood
of the alleged tortfeasor's negligence is substantial enough to permit
the complainant's reliance on res ipsa loquitur even if evidence is offered
to negate the inference" ( 72). The facts of this case raised a "strong
inference of negligence" that "survives alongside evidence that the defendant-driver
suffered a heart attack sometime before, during, or after the collision"
( 76). Although expert testimony conflicted and the evidence raised competing
inferences, such issues were properly before the trier of fact.
Finally, the court observed that the defendants might prevail in two
ways. First, the jury might "decline to draw the permissible inference
of the defendant-driver's negligence arising from the facts of the collision
itself." Second, the defendants might carry their burden of persuasion
on the defense of "illness without forewarning" ( 87).
Justice Crooks, joined by Justices Wilcox and Sykes dissented on the
grounds that the majority's decision "effectively overruled precedent
established over the course of a century and not only undermined the res
ipsa loquitur doctrine, but also summary judgment methodology" ( 91).
Worker's
Compensation
Average Weekly Wage - Inclusion of Health Insurance Premiums
Theuer v. Labor and Industry Review Commission,
2001 WI 26 (filed 3 April 2001)
The plaintiff suffered a work-related injury while employed by defendant
Ganton Technologies Inc. At the time of his injury, he received an average
weekly salary of $506.86. His employer also contributed $77.14 each week
toward the plaintiff's health insurance. The plaintiff's labor agreement
provided that the employer would continue to pay the health insurance
premiums for 90 days when an employee was out of work due to a work-related
injury. Following expiration of the 90-day period, the plaintiff was no
longer covered by his employer's health insurance plan, though he had
the option of extending this coverage by paying premiums of $626.61 per
month.
The Department of Workforce Development excluded the cost of the health
insurance premiums in determining the plaintiff's average weekly wage,
from which his worker's compensation benefits were calculated. An administrative
law judge agreed, as did the Labor and Industry Review Commission (LIRC),
which found that under its longstanding interpretation of Wis. Stat. section
102.11(1)(e), only taxable compensation was to be included in the calculation
of an employee's average weekly wage. The circuit court affirmed the LIRC.
The court of appeals certified the case to the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
In a unanimous decision authored by Chief Justice Abrahamson, the supreme
court affirmed. The question before the court was whether LIRC properly
excluded health insurance premiums when calculating the plaintiff's average
weekly wage under the statute cited above for purposes of determining
disability benefits. The statute directs LIRC to include in earnings any
things of value that are received in addition to monetary earnings as
a part of the contract. LIRC interprets the statute to include those things
that are taxable and to exclude nontaxable fringe benefits such as meals
for cost, insurance, and retirement contributions.
Employing a great weight deference standard, the supreme court held
that LIRC's conclusion that health insurance premiums are not a thing
of value received in addition to monetary earnings as part of the wage
contract is a reasonable interpretation of the statute and, accordingly,
it affirmed the judgment of the circuit court affirming the decision of
the LIRC.
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