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Vol. 73, No. 3, March 2000 |
Previous
Page
Court of Appeals Digest
by Prof. Daniel D. Blinka
& Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
| Administrative Law
| Civil Procedure | Criminal
Procedure |
| Domestic Abuse | Employment
Law | Family Law |
| Insurance | Lemon
Law | Medical Assistance |
| Taxation | Torts | Trials |
Lemon Law
Damages - Personal Injuries - Amended Complaint
Gosse v. Navistar
Int'l Transport. Corp., 2000 WI App 8 (filed 9 Dec. 1999)
(ordered published 19 Jan. 2000)
The plaintiff leased a truck and later complained that it
vibrated excessively. He later sued for personal injuries and
other damages under the Lemon Law. The trial court ruled that
the Lemon Law does not permit damages for personal injuries and
it also refused plaintiff's request to amend the complaint for
a third time.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Dykman,
affirmed. First, the court found that the words "any damages"
in Wis. Stat. section
218.015(7) are ambiguous. It held, however, that construing
damages to include personal injuries would contravene the Lemon
Law's purpose because it "was enacted to give consumers
a means by which to ensure that a newly purchased vehicle would
conform to its warranty." The plaintiff could have asserted
a separate claim under "another law" to recover damages
for personal injuries.
As to the second issue, the court upheld the trial judge's
refusal to permit a third amendment of the complaint stating
such a separate personal injury claim. The motion came more than
22 months after the filing of the original complaint and only
two weeks before trial. The judge noted that the plaintiff could
have stated an alternative claim in the original complaint. (A
third issue relating to the form of the verdict is record-intensive
and does not raise any novel legal issues.)
Medical Assistance
Spousal Impoverishment - Counting One Spouse's IRA as an
Asset in Determining the Other Spouse's Eligibility for Medical
Assistance
Keip v. Wisconsin
Department of Health and Family Services, 2000 WI App
13 (filed 23 Dec. 1999) (ordered published 19 Jan. 2000)
The appellant wife retired in September 1996 and rolled her
employee pension into an IRA. The next year she began the medical
assistance (MA) application process on her husband's behalf.
She learned, however, that the Department of Health and Family
Services intended to count her IRA as an asset in determining
her husband's eligibility for MA and that the inclusion of the
IRA would render him ineligible.
The couple requested a "fair hearing" before the
Division of Hearings and Appeals in order to challenge the denial
of MA. The hearing examiner concluded that the IRA should not
have been included as a resource in determining the husband's
MA eligibility. The department's final decision, however, concluded
that, under the "spousal impoverishment provisions"
of federal law (42 U.S.C. § 1396r-5 (1994)), the IRA was
correctly determined to be a countable resource in determining
the husband's MA eligibility. The circuit court affirmed.
The court of appeals, in a decision authored by Judge Deininger,
reversed. It concluded that the department erred in interpreting
the federal "spousal impoverishment" provisions to
require the inclusion of a community spouse's IRA as an asset
when determining the MA eligibility of her institutionalized
spouse.
Taxation
Wisconsin Income Tax - Taxing Menominee Indian Who Lives
on and Derives Income from Oneida Indian Reservation
La Rock v. Wisconsin
Department of Revenue, 2000 WI App 24 (filed 28 Dec.
1999) (ordered published 19 Jan. 2000)
The petitioner resides in Wisconsin on land that is part of
the Oneida Reservation and is employed by the Oneida tribe on
the Oneida reservation. She is a member of the Menominee Indian
tribe of Wisconsin. She married an Oneida Indian, with whom she
had four children. She is now divorced from her husband. Her
children are enrolled members of the Oneida tribe; she is not.
On these facts the issue before the court of appeals was whether
the petitioner is exempt from Wisconsin's income tax. The circuit
court affirmed a decision of the Wisconsin Tax Appeals Commission,
which held that Wisconsin may impose an income tax on her because,
although an Indian, she is not a member of the Oneida tribe on
whose land she resides and from whom she derives income.
On appeal the appellant argued that she is exempt from Wisconsin's
income tax based on her status as an Indian living in and deriving
income from sources in Indian country. In a decision authored
by Judge Hoover, the court of appeals disagreed. It held that
McClanahan v. Arizona, 411 U.S. 164 (1973), exempts from
taxation only Indians who reside on and derive income from their
own tribe's land. No act of Congress, treaty, state statute,
or agreement with any tribe impairs Wisconsin's right to impose
an income tax on enrolled members of a federally recognized Indian
tribe who live and work on a reservation of another tribe.
Torts
Statute of Limitations - Optometrists - "Medical"
Care - Affidavits by Attorneys
Webb v. Ocularra
Holding Inc., 2000 WI App 25 (filed 28 Dec. 1999) (ordered
published 19 Jan. 2000)
The plaintiffs sued an optometrist who allegedly failed to
note an abnormal test result while examining the husband, and
thus neglected to refer him to a medical specialist. The husband
alleged that his headaches and blurred vision were related to
a brain tumor that should have been detected earlier. The trial
court dismissed the claim because the medical malpractice statute
of limitation had expired, thus barring the action.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Curley,
affirmed. First, the plaintiffs argued that the husband's claim
was governed by the statute of limitations in Wis. Stat. section
893.54, not the medical malpractice statute of limitations
at section
893.55. The plaintiffs' most compelling argument was that
"optometrists" are not listed as "mandatory participants"
or even as "optional participants" in Wis. Stat. chapter
655, which governs "medical" malpractice claims.
Recent case law, however, undercut this contention. The courts
have construed chapter
655 to embrace podiatrists, dentists, and chiropractors who
provide "medical care." Hence, optometrists also are
swept within chapter
655.
Second, under the medical malpractice statute the action was
time barred. Case law established that the statute began to run
on the date of plaintiff's one-and-only eye examination by the
defendant; in short, the "date of negligence and the date
of the injury were the same." ¶20. Since the plaintiffs failed to commence the suit within three
years of that date, their only recourse was under the discovery
rule, Wis. Stat. section
893.55(1)(b). The record revealed, however, that the plaintiff
discussed the optometrist's alleged negligence with the neurosurgeon
back in 1995, the day he learned about the tumor. The conversation
would not have occurred unless the plaintiff "clearly harbored
suspicions about the care rendered." Thus, the discovery
statute expired at the end of 1996, before this suit was filed.
Third, the court of appeals also agreed that the plaintiff
failed to file adequate affidavits to prove the optometrist's
negligence. Specifically, the plaintiff's attorney filed an affidavit
reciting the opinion of a medical expert that the optometrist
had acted negligently. The attorney's affidavit lacked "personal
knowledge" and hence consisted of inadmissible testimony
that was stricken for summary judgment purposes.
Trials
Jury Bias - Child Witness Videotapes
State v. Jimmie R.R.,
2000 WI App 5 (filed 8 Dec. 1999) (ordered published 19 Jan.
2000)
The court of appeals affirmed Jimmie's convictions for sexual
assault and incest involving a 5-year-old girl. Judge Nettesheim
applied the juror-bias analysis recently prescribed by the supreme
court in State v. Faucher and also took the opportunity to elaborate
upon it. The court emphasized that subjective bias turns on the
juror's demeanor and thus is a determination that ordinarily
is best left to the trial judge. Objective bias requires: "(1)
some direct or personal connection between the challenged juror
and some important aspect of the case, or (2) a firmly held negative
predisposition by the juror regarding the justice system that
precludes the juror from fairly and impartially deciding the
case."
On the record, the court upheld the trial judge's determination
that the juror was not biased under either the objective or the
subjective test. The court of appeals also remarked upon the
"steady stream" of juror bias cases flowing before
it. During voir dire lawyers are permitted to ask jurors leading
questions which often yield "contradictory" responses
depending upon which side asks the question. On appeal each side
dutifully and predictably points to the answers that support
its position. Thus, it is all the more "appropriate"
for the appellate court to defer to the trial court, which is
in a "better position to assess the prospective juror's
credibility and honesty."
The second issue concerned the admissibility of a videotaped
statement under Wis. Stat. section
908.08, which requires that a child have an "understanding
that false statements are punishable and the importance of telling
the truth." The court held that both concepts - the truth
is important and lies will be punished - are interrelated and
that most reasonable children would associate the one with the
other. Viewing the videotape for itself, the court of appeals
was satisfied that the child had made the appropriate connection.
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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