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Supreme Court Digest
By Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof. Thomas
J. Hammer
| Civil Procedure |
Family Law |
| Insurance | Torts |
Insurance
"Property Damages" - "CGL" Policies
- Business Losses
Wisconsin Label Corp. v. Northbrook
Property & Casualty Ins. Co., 2000 WI 26 (filed 21
March 2000)
A company mislabeled various products causing them to be sold
at less than half their intended value. The products' distributor
paid the retailers for their loss and then sought reimbursement
from the label company. The label company notified its insurer,
which denied the claim because no covered "property damage"
had occurred. In this lawsuit, the label company sued the insurer
and sought coverage. The circuit court ruled that the insurer
had no duty to defend or indemnify for the losses stemming from
the mislabeling. The court of appeals affirmed.
The supreme court, in a decision written by Justice Wilcox,
also affirmed. The insurer had issued a standard commercial general
liability or "CGL" policy. It protected the insured
against liability for damages caused by its own negligence. The
policy defined "property damage" as "'[p]hysical
injury to tangible property, including all resulting loss of
use of that property,' or '[l]oss of use of tangible
property that is not physically injured.'" In sum,
the policy covered damages resulting from "(1) physical
injury to tangible property, including all resulting loss of
use of that property, or (2) loss of use of tangible property
that is not physically injured."
The court rebuffed the insured's multiple arguments seeking
coverage. Clearly, the simple act of mislabeling did not physically
"damage" the products, and this foreclosed the argument
that the products had "diminished in value" as covered
by the policy. Wisconsin joins those courts holding "that
diminution in value caused by incorporation of a defective product
does not constitute 'property damage' under post-1973
[CGL] policies unless it is the result of 'physical injury'
or 'loss of use.'" Nor had the insured demonstrated
that a "loss of use" had occurred as a result of its
mislabeling. Charges stemming from the lost profits due to undercharging
and the cost of inspecting and relabeling did not constitute
"loss of use." Finally, this CGL policy did not cover
all species of "economic loss." Rather, coverage applied
"only when damages are because of 'physical injury
to tangible property' or 'loss of use of tangible property.'
The economic losses in this case did not result from either of
these types of damages."
Torts
Emergency Doctrine - Safety Statutes -
Management and Control - Subrogation - Appeals
Totsky v. Riteway Bus Service
Inc., 2000 WI 29 (filed 28 March 2000)
A bus skidded through an intersection on ice and hit another
car. The plaintiff, Totsky, sued the bus company and others.
A jury found that neither the bus driver nor Totsky was negligent.
In motions after verdict, the trial judge ruled that Totsky was
entitled to a directed verdict on negligence on several grounds.
First, the bus driver had violated a safety statute when she
skidded through the stop sign. Second, the emergency doctrine
did not excuse her negligence because the case did not present
an issue of management and control. Moreover, her own excessive
peed produced the emergency, rendering the emergency doctrine
inapplicable. In the alternative, the trial judge granted the
plaintiff a new trial because the verdict was against the weight
of the evidence.
The court of appeals reversed both rulings. It held that the
emergency doctrine applied to violations of safety statutes and
that credible evidence supported the doctrine's application
in this case. The court of appeals also held that the trial court
had improperly found that the bus driver was negligent based
on excessive speed.
The supreme court, in a decision written by Justice Crooks,
affirmed. First, the court addressed whether the emergency doctrine
applied to a violation of a safety statute (requiring vehicles
to stop at stop signs). Such violations constitute negligence
per se, but the emergency doctrine can excuse the conduct. The
court's construction was rooted in the case law, the restatement,
and "other leading authorities." Moreover, the statutory
language at issue - section
346.46 - also supported this view. Applying the law
to the facts of record, the emergency doctrine was properly before
the jury because "management and control is involved in
at least two of the duties pertaining to obeying a stop sign"
(¶ 39). For similar reasons, the circuit court also erred
in awarding a new trial. Finally, the circuit court erred by
granting a new trial based on the bus driver's speed on
icy roads. A reasonable jury could have concluded that her speed
was reasonable.
Second, the court addressed whether the subrogees have a duty
to separately petition the supreme court for review to preserve
their subrogation claims. In its summary holding, the court stated
that two of the subrogated parties were not required to file
separate petitions "because they stipulated to waive their
rights to participate at trial and agreed to be bound by the
judgment." But a third subrogee who refused to so stipulate
was required to file a petition to preserve its claim.
Justice Bablitch filed a separate concurring opinion. Justice
Bradley dissented, joined by Chief Justice Abrahamson and Justice
Prosser.
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.
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