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Vol. 72, No. 5, May 1999 |
Court of Appeals Digest
By Prof. Daniel D. Blinka
& Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
| Civil Procedure | Consumers|
Corporation Law |
| Criminal Law | Criminal Procedure
| Employee Benefits |
| Estate Planning | Medical
Assistance | Medical Records
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| Torts | Zoning
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Civil Procedure
Service of Process - Timeliness - Foreign Corporations
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Hague Convention
The Conservatorship
of Prom v. Sumitomo Rubber Industries Ltd., No. 98-0938
(filed 10 Feb. 1999) (ordered published 31 March 1999)
Craig Prom was horribly injured in a motorcycle accident.
His conservator brought suit against the defendant, SRI, claiming
that it had defectively manufactured a tire that caused the injuries.
Prom bought the motorcycle in Wisconsin. SRI had manufactured
the tire in Japan and sold it to Kawasaki, which placed it on
the motorcycle in Japan before the bike was shipped to Wisconsin.
Prom filed the first summons and complaint with the Secretary
of State on May 10, 1989, pursuant to section
180.847(4) of the Wisconsin Statutes. When SRI objected on
grounds of lack of personal jurisdiction, Prom filed an amended
summons and complaint on June 19, 1989, and attempted service
of the amended summons and complaint according to the Hague Convention.
The circuit court eventually dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Anderson,
affirmed. Prom failed to achieve service of process under the
Hague Convention. The court held that "art. 15 [of the convention]
governs default judgments and does not confer a six-month time
period for service of process on foreign defendants. Additionally,
we conclude that art. 10 does not permit service of process by
mail. Furthermore, without any evidence in the record that Prom
accompanied the mailing of the documents with publication, we
deem that service was insufficient per sec.
801.11(5)(b), Stats." Nor did service on the Secretary
of State confer personal jurisdiction. The record supported the
trial judge's determination that SRI did not "transact
business" in Wisconsin and therefore lacked sufficient contacts
to support jurisdiction according to section 180.847(4).
Consumers
Home Improvement Contracts - Consumer Loans - Assignees
Jackson v. DeWitt,
No. 98-0493 (filed 24 Feb. 1999) (ordered published 31 March
1999)
Jackson contracted with DeWitt to construct a lap pool. He
paid DeWitt $11,400 in cash and financed the remainder through
a Retail Installment Security Agreement (RISA). Associates Financial
Services Co. (Associates) provided DeWitt with the RISA forms.
DeWitt assigned the RISA to Associates after Jackson signed the
papers. Jackson paid off the RISA before the pool was completed.
When the pool leaked, Jackson had it removed and he brought
this action against Associates and DeWitt. Jackson alleged that
Associates (through DeWitt) violated Wis. Admin. Code chapter
ATCP 110 and that he was entitled to assert all valid claims
against Associates in seeking the return of his money.
The circuit court granted summary judgment in Associates'
favor. It ruled that the RISA was an "interlocking consumer
loan" subject to section
422.408 of the Wisconsin Statutes and Associates was liable
only for any amount still due. Since Jackson had paid the loan,
Associates was not liable. Finally, the judge found that the
RISA was not a negotiable instrument and thus Jackson could not
state a claim under ATCP 110.06.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Anderson,
reversed. Initially, it agreed with the circuit court that the
RISA was not a negotiable instrument because it contained a condition
(building a pool) other than the payment of money. The RISA's
nonnegotiability did not, however, dictate the result reached
by the trial judge.
"First, a commonsense reading of Wis. Adm. Code Sec.
ATCP 110.06 substantiates that the regulation covers home improvement
contracts and is not limited to negotiable instruments. Second,
public policy dictates that consumer protection statutes and
administrative rules must be read in pari materia to achieve
the goal of providing protection and remedies to consumers. Third,
[State v. Excel Management Servs. Inc., 111 Wis. 2d 479
(1983)] teaches that an assignee of a nonnegotiable home improvement
contract takes the contract 'subject to all claims and defenses
of the buyer or his successor in interest.'"
In short, Jackson's full payment of the loan prior to
discovering the contract breach did not impede his right to proceed
against the assignee, Associates.
Corporation Law
Direct Actions - Derivative Actions - SLCs -
Corporation's Best Interest
Einhorn v. Culea,
No. 97-3592 (filed 24 Feb. 1999) (ordered published 31 March
1999)
Einhorn was a director and minority shareholder (about 22
percent) in Northern Labs. In 1992 the corporation voted that
Culea, the majority shareholder and the president, should receive
a hefty "retroactive compensation bonus." In 1993 Einhorn
filed a direct action against Culea, alleging a willful breach
of fiduciary duties and self-dealing regarding the compensation
bonus, which had allegedly "diluted" Einhorn's
ownership percentage. Einhorn later amended the complaint to
state a derivative action at the direction of the circuit court.
After much wrangling, a special litigation committee (SLC)
was appointed and voted that continuation of the suit was not
in the corporation's best interest. The court held a seven-day
bench trial on the SLC's independence and found that the
committee was independent and had appealed the dismissal of his
derivative action.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Nettesheim,
affirmed. First, Einhorn's claim could be maintained only
as a derivative action, not a direct action. Einhorn's alleged
damages were "derivative of Culea's conduct against
the corporation," namely, Culea's alleged wrongful
misappropriation of corporate assets for personal use.
Second, the SLC's determination was lawful. The SLC's
creation was not "tainted" because its use was recommended
by the corporation's counsel. Although its creation "could
have been better documented," the totality of circumstances
showed that only "independent" directors voted on its
creation. The court next assessed the independence of the SLC
itself. Einhorn complained that the SLC consisted of Culea's
"friends or close business associates." Mere status
alone, however, did not demonstrate that the trial judge had
abused his discretion in finding that the committee, despite
its affinity to Culea, acted in good faith and independently
of Culea. The court also addressed the role of the corporation's
attorney in the SLC's creation and conduct, finding no impropriety.
Criminal Law
Interference With Child Custody - State Jurisdiction
When Concealment of Child Takes Place Out of State
State v. Inglin,
No. 97-3091-CR (filed 16 February 1999) (ordered published 31
March 1999)
Pursuant to a divorce judgment, the defendant and his ex-wife
had joint custody of their son. The son's "primary
physical placement" was with his mother and his "extensive
physical placement" was with the defendant. In 1995, when
the boy was 4 years old, the defendant and his ex-wife agreed
that the boy would go with his father for what was to have been
a 10-day camping trip to Colorado. Instead of taking the child
to Colorado, the defendant took him to Canada. In fact, as the
defendant conceded at the trial, soon after picking up the boy
for the camping trip, he decided to keep him permanently.
The evidence established that the defendant had made extensive
arrangements to accomplish that goal even before picking up his
son. Approximately two months later, Canadian law enforcement
authorities found the defendant and his son living in British
Columbia. The defendant was thereafter convicted, following a
jury trial, of violating two subsections of section
948.31 of the Wisconsin Statutes, which is the Interference
With Child Custody statute.
Section 948.31(1)(b) makes it a felony to intentionally cause
a child to leave, take a child away, or withhold a child for
more than 12 hours beyond the court-approved period of physical
placement or visitation period from a legal custodian with intent
to deprive the custodian of his or her custody rights without
the consent of the custodian. The defendant was charged with
the "withholding" violation, but through inadvertence
(as to which there was no objection by the parties), the court
instructed the jury on the "taking a child away" theory.
Thus, on appeal the court focused on whether the evidence was
sufficient to support the verdict on the "take away"
charge.
The defendant argued that the taking of the child was with
the mother's consent and therefore not a violation of the
statute. The state countered that, because the defendant deceived
his ex-wife about his intentions, and because the mother consented
only to the defendant taking the boy for a vacation, the deceit
prompted the mother's permission and thus the evidence was
sufficient to support the jury's "take away" verdict.
In a decision authored by Judge Schudson, the court of appeals
agreed. It reached this conclusion based upon the definition
of nonconsent found in section
939.22(48) of the Wisconsin Statutes, which provides among
other things that the term "without consent" includes
a consent given because the victim does not understand the nature
of the thing to which the victim consents, either by reason of
ignorance or a mistake of fact or of law other than criminal
law, or by reason of youth or defective mental condition, whether
permanent or temporary. In this case the mother consented to
the defendant taking away the boy only because of her understanding
that the boy was being taken on a brief camping trip to Colorado
after which he would be returned to her. The mother remained
in ignorance of the defendant's true intentions only because
of his deceit, and thus her agreement allowing the defendant
to take the boy away was "without consent."
The court cautioned that its opinion should not be read to
suggest that, in a dispute between two custodial parents, any
and every deviation from an agreed-upon visitation or vacation
plan would constitute a nonconsensual "taking away"
under the statute. After all, the statute provides that, to be
guilty of a violation, an offender must act "with intent
to deprive the other custodian of his or her custody rights."
Inevitably, countless occasions arise where one custodial parent,
responding to unanticipated circumstances, reasonably deviates
from agreed-upon plans without violating the criminal law. Here,
however, from the moment of his "taking away" the boy,
the defendant never intended to do what he had agreed to do:
He never intended to return the boy to his mother. Therefore,
although an offense like this one would more logically be prosecuted
on a "withholding" rather than a "taking away"
theory, the evidence was sufficient to support the conviction.
The statute also provides that it is a felony to "intentionally
conceal a child from the child's other parent." The
information charged that during the two-month period when the
boy was away, the defendant intentionally concealed the child
from his mother and identifies the location of the offense as
being Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. The defendant argued that
because it was uncontroverted that he and the boy were outside
the state of Wisconsin during the entire time charged in this
count, the concealment occurred wholly outside the state and
therefore Wisconsin lacked territorial jurisdiction over that
offense.
The appellate court disagreed. Section 939.03(1)(c) of the
Wisconsin Statutes provides that a person is subject to prosecution
and punishment under the law of Wisconsin if while out of this
state, the person does an act with intent that it cause in this
state a consequence set forth in a section defining a crime.
Every day the defendant kept the boy in Canada, he prevented
the boy's lawful return to his mother, and he made more
difficult the discovery of the boy by his mother. Therefore,
for purposes of jurisdictional analysis, the defendant's
concealment of the boy in Canada was inseparable from the consequences
of that concealment in Wisconsin. Therefore, as to this count,
the state had jurisdiction.
Criminal Procedure
Delayed Charging of Juvenile Offenders - Adult Court
Jurisdiction - Becker Hearings - Waiver by Guilty Plea
State v. Schroeder,
No. 98-1420 (filed 4 Feb. 1999) (ordered published 31 March 1999)
The defendant appealed from an order that denied his post-conviction
motion challenging his conviction and sentence on two charges
of sexual assault. The charges involved incidences occurring
before his 18th birthday, but the criminal complaint was not
filed until after he turned 18. [This case arose prior to changes
in the Juvenile Justice Code which, among other things, lowered
the pertinent ages for children subject to the code and to waiver
petitions.] The defendant pleaded guilty to both counts. He never
requested a hearing under State v. Becker, 74 Wis. 675,
247 N.W.2d 495 (1976), prior to entering his guilty pleas. At
a Becker hearing the state would have had to establish that it
did not intentionally delay the filing of the criminal complaint
until after the defendant's 18th birthday.
On appeal the defendant argued that the failure to hold a
Becker hearing affected the adult court's subject matter
jurisdiction and that this jurisdictional defect was not waived
even though he never requested such a hearing before entering
his pleas. In a decision authored by Judge Vergeront, the court
of appeals concluded that a Becker hearing addresses a potential
constitutional violation, not the court's subject matter
jurisdiction, and that the defendant waived the right to request
a Becker hearing when he entered his guilty pleas.
Restitution - Accident Victims - Releases -
Setoffs
State v. Walters,
No. 98-0828-CR (filed 25 Feb. 1999) (ordered published 31 March
1999)
When driving her car while intoxicated, Walters rear-ended
a vehicle driven by Olivas. Walters was charged with causing
injury by intoxicated user and related offenses. Her liability
insurer paid Olivas the $25,000 limit in exchange for a release
of all claims and damages. Walters was later convicted for causing
injury while intoxicated. At her sentencing hearing, the judge
determined that Olivas's release did not preclude restitution
in the criminal proceedings. The court found more than $40,000
in special damages, including medical expenses and lost wages.
The court also found that Walters had the ability to pay $24,000
in restitution and refused to set off this amount against the
release.
The court of appeals affirmed in an opinion written by Judge
Roggensack that interprets the restitution statutes in light
of the extant case law. First, the court held that on this record
the defense of "accord and satisfaction" did not preclude
the restitution order. A crime victim has no "independent
claim" for restitution that he or she can release. The remedy,
rather, belongs to the state.
The court also considered a second defense, "setoff."
Under the statutes a criminal court cannot order restitution
for "general damages"; rather, it is limited to special
damages proved in the record. Clearly, amounts paid as criminal
restitution can be set off against a later civil judgment, but
no appellate case has ever addressed the opposite scenario: the
setting off of civil damages against the criminal restitution
order. The court of appeals held that the "legislative objectives
will be best served by applying any setoff which a circuit court
determines is appropriate to the total amount of special damages
which the victim has sustained."
Moreover, the court imposed on the defendant the burden of
proving what part, if any, of the civil damages (here $25,000)
was made in payment for special damages and thus was entitled
to setoff in the criminal case. On this record the trial judge
refused to make a setoff because the testimony revealed "general
damages of an indeterminate amount," rendering it "unfair
to make a setoff of the $25,000 settlement entirely against Olivas's
special damages."
Search and Seizure - Warrantless Entry - Consent
- Exigent
Circumstances - Attenuation
State v. Richter,
No. 98-1332-CR (filed 23 Feb. 1999) (ordered published 31 March
1999)
The state appealed a pretrial order suppressing evidence collected
during the warrantless search of a trailer home. Police went
to the trailer park when a caller claimed that an intruder was
breaking into a trailer. The intruder was then observed running
toward the defendant's trailer. An officer awakened two
men who had been sleeping in the defendant's trailer. He
then entered the trailer and awoke the defendant who was sleeping
on a sofa. The defendant gave the officer permission to search
for the intruder. They later found the intruder as well as drugs
and drug paraphernalia linked to the defendant.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Myse,
affirmed the suppression order. First, the entry was illegal.
Police had no warrant to enter the trailer and the prosecution
failed to meet its burden showing exigent circumstances or a
"hot pursuit" justifying a warrantless entry. Upon
arriving at the scene, the officer learned that the suspected
"burglary" was no more than an "unlawful entry"
and involved no threat of harm. In short, the officer lacked
any reasonable belief that "a grave threat to the safety
of others existed." Moreover, the record failed to support
any tenable theory of "hot pursuit," the application
of the "emergency doctrine," or the "community
caretaker doctrine," the latter rule requiring a "total
divorce" from any pretense of criminal investigation.
The court next addressed whether the defendant's consent
was sufficiently attenuated from the illegal entry. The temporal
break between the illegal entry and the consent was virtually
nonexistent; the one immediately followed the other. Nor did
the intervening circumstances sufficiently "diminish the
unlawful nature" of the entry. The court observed that the
defendant was never told that the officer lacked a warrant or
that he did not have to consent to the search. Finally, although
this was hardly the most extreme example of official misconduct,
there being no force, tricks, or cajolery, it was nevertheless
"sufficiently purposeful" and thus failed to break
the link between the illegality and the seizure.
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