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Vol. 73, No. 5, May 2000 |
Court of Appeals Digest
by Prof. Daniel D. Blinka
& Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
Editor's Note: Each case summarized in the Court of
Appeals Digest includes its new public domain citation.
| Attorney Fees | Civil
Procedure | Criminal Law |
| Criminal Procedure | Employment
Law | Family Law |
| Insurance | Property
| Torts |
Attorney Fees
Settlements - Reasonableness - Contingent Fees
- Worker's Compensation
Meyer v. Michigan
Mutual Ins. Co., 2000 WI App 53 (filed 2 Feb. 2000) (ordered
published 22 March 2000)
The trial court entered a judgment approving a settlement
and distributing the proceeds in accordance with section
102.29(1), Statutes, of the Worker's Compensation Code.
The insurer appealed on the ground that the court had improperly
awarded a one-third contingent fee as part of the "reasonable
cost of collection" and failed to consider the appropriate
factors under SCR
20:1.5(a) (1999). The fee came to $333,333.33
The court of appeals, in a decision written by Judge Snyder,
affirmed on that issue. The trial court had considered more than
the bare existence of the contingent fee contract. It also weighed
the substantial hours spent on the case, the attorneys'
effort, the size of the claim, and the risk of failure. These
are factors embraced by SCR
20:1.5(a). Apart from the worker's compensation claim,
the dispute entailed pleading and discovery tied to a third-party
liability action plus several appeals.
The court reversed, however, based on the judge's err
in entering a $1 million judgment solely in the name of the plaintiff,
Meyer. Section
102.29(1) expressly requires that funds be distributed to
the employer or the employer's insurance carrier. Meyer's
judgment was limited to only that amount he was entitled to receive
under section
102.29(1). On this record, Meyer was entitled to only one-third
of the $666,000 that remained after deducting the collection
costs. The worker's compensation carrier was entitled to
the remaining $444,000 for the benefits it had paid.
Civil Procedure
Intervention - Wis. Stat. Section 803.09 - Status
of Intervenor vis-à-vis Other Parties to the Litigation
Kohler Co. v. Sogen
International Fund Inc., 2000 WI App 60 (filed 9 Feb.
2000) (ordered published 22 March 2000)
In this case the court of appeals considered what it deemed
an issue of first impression in Wisconsin: the status of an intervenor
in a civil action. Section
803.09 of the Wisconsin Statutes provides a mechanism whereby
anyone who claims "an interest relating to the property
or transaction ... of the action" and needs to protect
this interest by participating in the action shall be permitted
to intervene in the action. The statute applies in special proceedings
as well as in ordinary civil actions unless a special procedure
statute indicates to the contrary.
In a decision authored by Judge Anderson, the court of appeals
concluded that an intervenor's status after intervention
is the same as all other participants in the proceeding. It summarized
this status by relying upon a federal case that discusses intervention
under Fed. R. Civ. P. 24, which is essentially the same as Wis.
Stat. section
803.09. In Schneider v. Dumbarton Developers Inc.,
767 F.2d 1007, 1017 (D.C. Cir. 1985), the U.S. Court of Appeals
characterized the status of an intervenor as follows: "When
a party intervenes, it becomes a full participant in the lawsuit
and is treated just as if it were an original party. The intervenor
renders itself vulnerable to complete adjudication by the federal
court of the issues in litigation between the intervenor and
the adverse party. It is said to assume the risk that its position
will not prevail and that an order adverse to its interests will
be entered. As we said recently, 'The possibility that the
plaintiff will be able to obtain relief against the intervenor-defendant'
is part of the 'price' paid for intervention."
Criminal Law
Battery by Prisoner - Application to Person in Custody
on Probation Hold
State v. Fitzgerald,
2000 WI App 55 (filed 9 Feb. 2000) (ordered 22 March 2000)
The defendant was on probation for disorderly conduct. While
on probation, he failed to keep an appointment with his probation
agent and the agent issued an apprehension request directing
that he be taken into custody. After being taken into custody
on the apprehension request, the defendant bit the finger of
one of the officers involved, drawing blood. As a result, he
was charged with one count of battery by a prisoner contrary
to Wis. Stat. section
940.20(1).
Pursuant to this statute, "any prisoner confined to a
state prison or other state, county or municipal detention facility
who intentionally causes bodily harm to an officer, employee,
visitor or another inmate of such prison or institution, without
his or her consent, is guilty of a Class D felony." The
issue in this case was whether the defendant, as a probationer
in custody under a probation hold, was a "prisoner"
for purposes of this statute. In a decision authored by Judge
Nettesheim, the court of appeals concluded that he was.
Conspiracy and Attempt - Conviction of Multiple Inchoate
Crimes - Multiplicity
State v. Moffett
and State v. Denson,
2000 WI App 67 (filed 10 Feb. 2000) (ordered published 22 March
2000)
The defendants, together with a woman, planned to kill the
woman's husband. The plan was that the three of them would
furnish a gun to a person named "Zake," who was to
gain entry to the victim's house and murder him in his sleep.
However, instead of killing the intended victim, Zake only wounded
him.
The defendants were charged with conspiring to commit first-degree
intentional homicide under the inchoate conspiracy statute (Wis.
Stat. section
939.30) and with being parties to the crime of attempted
first-degree intentional homicide.
The defendants moved to dismiss the conspiracy charge, arguing
that Wis. Stat. section
939.72, which provides that no person may be convicted "for
conspiracy and ... as a party to the crime which is the objective
of the conspiracy," bars prosecution for both inchoate conspiracy
to commit murder and attempted murder. The circuit court agreed
and ordered the state to amend its information to drop one of
the charges.
The court of appeals reversed in a decision authored by Judge
Eich. The charges in this case involved two inchoate offenses:
conspiracy and attempt. Section
939.72 only bars simultaneous convictions for an inchoate
crime and a completed crime. Accordingly, the filing of the dual
charges in this case did not violate section
939.72.
The defendants also contended that the dual charges in this
case were multiplicitous. The appellate court rejected this contention
as well. Each of the two crimes requires proof of a fact for
conviction that the other does not. Further, there was no indication
that the Legislature has clearly intended that cumulative punishments
for these two offenses should be barred.
Criminal Procedure
Probation - Rejection of Probation in Midst of Probationary
Term
State v. McCready,
2000 WI App 68 (filed 23 Feb. 2000) (ordered published 22 March
2000)
After serving close to one year on probation, the defendant
moved the court to terminate probation. At the hearing, he appeared
with counsel. Counsel informed the court that he had tried to
discourage the defendant from refusing probation and had warned
the defendant of the risk of prison time. The court lifted the
defendant's probation and sentenced him to a prison term.
The issue before the court of appeals was whether a probationer
has the right to refuse probation - not only when it is
first imposed - but at any time while serving it. In a decision
authored by Judge Brown, the court of appeals concluded that
a defendant has the right to reject probation at any time during
the course of the probationary period.
Mandatory Release - Holding Inmate in Prison Beyond
Mandatory Release Date Unlawful
State ex rel. Olson
v. Litscher, 2000 WI App 61 (filed 16 Feb. 2000) (ordered
published 22 March 2000)
The defendant was in prison for sexual assault and reached
his mandatory release date. At that time the Department of Corrections
(DOC) had been unable to locate a residence for him. DOC thus
transferred him from the state prison in Oshkosh to the Kenosha
Correctional Center, a minimum-security state penal institution.
The defendant petitioned the circuit court for a writ of habeas
corpus, contending that his continued incarceration beyond his
statutorily mandated release date was an unlawful restraint of
his personal liberty. In a decision authored by Judge Brown,
the court of appeals agreed. There is nothing in either the Administrative
Code or the Wisconsin Statutes that authorizes DOC to detain
a person past his or her mandatory release date. Whether or not
a place has been found for an inmate, he or she must be released
on the mandatory release date.
Sentencing - Sentence "Consecutive to Revocation"
of Parole
State v. Cole,
2000 WI App 52 (filed 9 Feb. 2000) (ordered published 22 March
2000)
The defendant was convicted of theft and the court sentenced
him to three years in prison "consecutive to revocation."
At the time of the offense, conviction, and sentencing on the
theft charge, the defendant was on parole for another crime.
His parole was revoked shortly after the conviction and sentencing
on the theft offense.
The defendant claimed that the court was without authority
to impose consecutive sentences in this situation. Specifically,
he argued that because he was on parole and his parole had not
yet been revoked, he was not serving a sentence when the three-year
prison term "consecutive to revocation" was imposed
and the order requiring the theft sentence to be served consecutively
should be voided.
Wis. Stat. section
973.15(2)(a) provides that "the court may impose as
many sentences as there are convictions and may provide that
any such sentence be concurrent with or consecutive to any other
sentence imposed at the same time or previously." The appellate
court, in a decision authored by Judge Anderson, concluded that
this statute allowed the trial court to impose the consecutive
sentence on the theft conviction under the circumstances as described
above. In footnote, the court noted that if a sentence is ordered
to be served after revocation, there remains a possibility that
the parole may not be revoked. It urged circuit courts to consider
this contingency in their sentencing remarks when imposing such
a sentence. In this situation, the court could direct that in
the event that parole is not revoked, the sentence on the new
charge should commence forthwith.
Trials - Motions to Dismiss - Deferred Rulings
- Impeachment
State v. Scott,
200 WI App 51 (filed 29 Feb. 2000) (ordered published 22 March
2000)
The court of appeals, in a decision written by Judge Schudson,
affirmed the defendant's convictions for burglary and theft.
The defendant raised two issues. First, he argued that error
occurred when the trial judge deferred and later denied his motion
to dismiss at the close of the state's case-in-chief. Case
law saddles the defendant with a difficult choice where the trial
judge denies the defense's motion to dismiss at the close
of the state's case. The defense can elect to offer no evidence
whatsoever and thereby preserve the original motion, or it can
offer evidence but at the cost of having the appellate court
review the evidentiary sufficiency of the entire record.
In this case the judge exacerbated the defendant's dilemma
by deferring the ruling; thus, the defense had to elect whether
to offer evidence without knowing how the trial judge ruled on
the motion.
The court of appeals suggested that "when the defense
moves to dismiss at the close of the state's case,
the better practice is for trial courts to decide the motion
at the close of the state's case." (Emphasis
original.) If the judge defers, ordinarily the defense should
object to the deferral. The court of appeals agreed to the defense's
contention that in this case it should examine only evidence
presented by the state. Applying the standards governing the
review of circumstantial evidence, the court held that the evidence
was sufficient.
Second, at trial another man came forward and "confessed"
that he had committed the offenses and had enlisted the defendant's
unwitting assistance. To impeach the witness's credibility,
the state assailed his bias. Not only did the witness and the
defendant know one another, but the state also offered evidence
relating to the witness's parole eligibility date, which
strongly suggested that he had nothing to lose by claiming sole
responsibility. Case law amply supported this theory of impeachment.
Confessions - Miranda - Suppression Orders
- "Fruitless" Tree
State v. Yang,
2000 WI App 63 (filed 8 Feb. 2000) (ordered published 22 March
2000)
Yang was charged with numerous crimes arising out of a shooting
in Brown County. The trial court suppressed Yang's incriminating
statements and other evidence. The state appealed.
The court of appeals, in a decision written by Judge Hoover,
affirmed in part and reversed in part. While in custody Yang
made various incriminating statements without being properly
advised of his Miranda rights. He later made other incriminating
statements after being duly advised in accordance with Miranda.
The earlier Miranda violation did not fatally infect the
second set of statements. For suppression purposes, Miranda
is a "fruitless" tree. So long as the first statement
was voluntarily given - which it was - any Miranda
defect did not taint the second set of statements obtained in
compliance with Miranda.
More significantly, the court of appeals addressed whether
physical evidence (in this case, a gun) should be suppressed
as the fruit of an earlier Miranda violation. Examining
the case law, the court held that the "logical extension"
of prior cases "is that the 'fruit of the poisonous
tree' doctrine does not apply to physical evidence discovered
as the result of a statement obtained in violation of Miranda's
prophylactic rules, as opposed to a constitutional infringement."
(The court's holding "overrules" dicta in several
earlier cases that are cited in the opinion.) In short, a Miranda
violation results in the suppression of any statements made during
the course of that interrogation; later statements obtained
in compliance with Miranda as well as physical evidence
obtained as a result of the earlier (defective) statement are
not suppressed.
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