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Vol. 73, No. 6, June 2000 |
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Court of Appeals Digest
by Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof. Thomas
J. Hammer
| Attorneys | Attorney Fees | Civil
Procedure |
| Criminal Law | Employment
Law | Family Law |
| Insurance | Medical Assistance
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| Prisoner Litigation | Torts
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Employment Law
LIRC - Compensable Injuries - Rejecting Experts'
Opinions
Kowalchuk v. LIRC,
2000 WI App 85 (filed 1 March 2000) (ordered published 26 April
2000)
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Snyder,
affirmed a circuit court's decision that in turn upheld
a Labor and Industry Review Commission (LIRC) determination that
the plaintiff had not sustained a compensable injury. The plaintiff
injured his back at work in 1993 and received some disability
compensation. He returned to work in 1994. In July 1996 the company
turned down his request to take off on a Saturday and go on vacation
the following week. When the plaintiff failed to report to work
that Saturday, the company terminated him that following Monday.
The very next day the plaintiff visited his doctor, who determined
that the plaintiff was "temporarily totally disabled."
The plaintiff eventually filed for worker's compensation.
After an evidentiary hearing the ALJ determined that the plaintiff
had sustained no compensable injury and thus his employer was
not responsible for medical expenses and temporary disability
after July 1996. He was found to be 25 percent permanently partially
disabled as a result of the original 1993 accident.
On appeal the crux of the plaintiff's argument was that
LIRC had improperly substituted its own opinion for the "uncontested"
diagnosis of his treating physicians. The case law, however,
allows LIRC to "reject an employee's expert evidence
where the employee has been questioned about the information
he or she provided his or her doctor." Here the information
the plaintiff gave to his doctor about his firing flatly conflicted
with the company's version. LIRC was entitled to believe
the company's witnesses and ignore the plaintiff's
story as less credible.
Family Law
Children - Parental Contact - Best Interest
Wolfe v. Wolfe,
2000 WI App 93 (filed 28 March 2000) (ordered published 26 April
2000)
A child's mother appealed the circuit court's determination
that her ex-husband could have contact with their son by mail.
The order provided that the husband's letters should be
mailed to his parents who would read them to the son. At the
time of the divorce the ex-husband was serving a prison sentence
for soliciting his ex-wife's murder.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Hoover,
affirmed. The mother argued that section 767.24(4) (1997-98)
of the Wisconsin Statutes requires that the father prove that
contact is in the child's best interest. Rejecting this
construction, the court held that section 767.24(4) "requires
the court to allocate periods of placement between the parents."
If one parent "seeks not to allocate, but rather to deny
all contact, that parent has the burden to prove the contact
endangers the child's physical, mental or emotional health."
In short, the mother's argument erroneously sought to reverse
the burden of proof, which remained on her to establish that
the ex-husband should have no contact.
Insurance
Extraterritorial Clauses - Bodily Injury Liability Coverage
West Bend Mutual
Ins. Co. v. Stegner, 2000 WI App. 91 (filed 16 March
2000) (ordered published 26 April 2000)
Mary Rasmussen died of injuries incurred when her car collided
with one operated by Stacy Stegner. Rasmussen's insurer,
West Bend, paid benefits to her estate and sought to recover
monies from Stegner and her insurer. Stegner was living in Florida
when she purchased a policy from Progressive Casualty. The trial
court ruled in Progressive's favor, finding it had no coverage
in this case.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Deininger,
affirmed. Had the accident occurred in Florida, the policy clearly
would have provided no coverage for Rasmussen. Both the policy
and Florida law provide only "personal injury protection"
that covers the operator, occupants, and pedestrians. West Bend
argued, however, that the policy's "extraterritorial
clause" triggered coverage because Wisconsin law allegedly
requires at least $25,000 in coverage for bodily injury liability,
a sum obviously greater than the "zero" limit on the
policy's face. The court of appeals disagreed with this
construction of Wisconsin law and the policy. The financial responsibility
provision in the extraterritorial clause operates only where
there is bodily injury liability coverage in the first place.
In other words, since Stegner had no such coverage to begin with,
the extraterritorial clause did not create it.
Medical Assistance
Eligibility - Divestment of Assets
Artac v. Wisconsin
Department of Health and Family Services, 2000 WI App
88 (filed 30 March 2000) (ordered published 26 April 2000)
In 1992 Artac deeded her home and property to an irrevocable
trust and named one Frieda Adams as trustee. Artac's daughter
was the beneficiary of the trust. Among the provisions of the
trust was one in which the grantor expressly reserved and retained
the right to live on and use the real property during the grantor's
lifetime. It also had a provision that if two physicians submitted
a written statement that the grantor was permanently incompetent,
the trustee may in her discretion terminate the trust and distribute
its assets pursuant to the terms of the trust.
In 1997 two doctors found Artac to be incompetent and the next
month the trustee deeded the property to the beneficiary. Four
days later the beneficiary (the grantor's daughter) applied
to the Clark County Department of Social Services for medical
assistance (MA) benefits for her mother. The county denied the
application because it concluded that the mother had divested
assets when the trustee transferred the trust property to the
beneficiary daughter.
The mother requested a fair hearing before the Division of
Hearings and Appeals regarding the denial of her application.
The hearing examiner concluded that the mother was ineligible
for medical assistance, explaining that an applicant cannot divest
assets in order to become eligible for MA benefits. The examiner
acknowledged that the trust itself was not subject to the divestment
rules because it was created before the "look-back period."
The circuit court affirmed the hearing examiner's decision
but the court of appeals, in a decision authored by Judge Dykman,
reversed.
Wis. Stat. section
49.453 prohibits a person from divesting assets so as to
become eligible for medical assistance benefits. The court of
appeals concluded that the hearing examiner erred in determining
that the mother had divested an asset within the applicable look-back
period. The mother's placement of her home and property
in the trust was not a divestment prohibited by the statute,
because it occurred more than 52 months before she applied for
MA benefits. The only question remaining was whether the mother
divested an asset by losing her reserved right to live on the
property when the trustee transferred the trust property to her
daughter in 1998. The court concluded that she did not. A trustee
acts on behalf of the beneficiary - not the grantor. Therefore,
in this case, the trustee acted on the daughter's behalf
when she distributed the trust property; that action was not
a divestment of an asset by the grantor as defined in the medical
assistance statutes.
Prisoner Litigation
Prisoner Litigation Reform Act - Inmates Confined in
Out-of-state Facilities - Filing Fees
State ex rel. Speener
v. Gudmanson, 2000 WI App 78 (filed 30 March 2000) (ordered
published 26 April 2000)
This case concerns the issue of whether a Wisconsin prisoner
who is serving a prison sentence in an out-of-state facility
rented by Wisconsin is subject to the filing fees established
in the Prisoner Litigation Reform Act.
Wis. Stat. section
814.29(1m), which was created by the Prisoner Litigation
Reform Act (1997 Wis. Act 133), requires a "prisoner"
to pay a filing fee from his or her trust fund account before
initiating certain kinds of appeals. For this purpose the statutes
define a "prisoner" as one who is "incarcerated,
imprisoned or otherwise detained in a correctional institution."
In a decision authored by Judge Dykman, the court of appeals
concluded that the petitioner, who is a Wisconsin inmate confined
at a county jail in Texas, is not incarcerated in a "correctional
institution" as that term is used in the Prisoner Litigation
Reform Act. Accordingly, he is not subject to the filing fee
requirement of that act. Instead, he is subject to Wis. Stat.
section
814.29(1) under which the court of appeals may order that
he be allowed to commence an appeal without paying the filing
fee if the appellate court finds that he is unable to pay the
fee because of poverty.
Torts
Sleeping Dogs - Liability Insurance - "Dog
Owner" Statute
Alwin v. State Farm
Fire and Casualty Co., 2000 WI App 92 (filed 28 March
2000) (ordered published 26 April 2000)
The Alwins attended a dinner party at their daughter's
home. JoAnn Alwin was injured when she tripped over the daughter's
sleeping dog. The Alwins claimed against their daughter's
homeowner's insurer, State Farm, which denied the claim.
The circuit court granted State Farm's motion to dismiss
a complaint brought against it. It ruled that "the dog bite
statute," section
174.02(1)(a), is inapplicable "where the dog did not
actively engage in any conduct but, rather, lay sleeping."
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Cane,
affirmed. First, the court observed that the statute is more
aptly named the "dog owner" rather than the "dog
bite" statute. It imposes strict liability on dog owners
for even "innocent behavior" by the dog that causes
injury. Case law firmly establishes, however, that three considerations
might blunt strict liability: public policy, comparative negligence,
and the rules of causation. On the record in this case the court
held that public policy precluded liability. Here the dog was
a "passive instrumentality." Imposing liability in
such a case would enter a field without a sensible or just stopping
point. Moreover, "to impose liability under the dog owner
statute for injuries arising solely from a sleeping dog would
effectively result in a pure penalty for dog ownership."
Dog Bites - Children - Contribution - Dog
Owner Statute - Child Labor Laws
Fire Ins. Exchange
v. Cincinnati Ins. Co., 2000 WI App 82 (filed 16 March
2000) (ordered published 26 April 2000)
A 12-year-old boy was injured by a dog while working as a
volunteer at a county humane society. The dog's owner's
insurer, Fire Insurance Exchange, paid the boy's family
about $40,000 in exchange for a release and an assignment of
the boy's claims. Fire Insurance brought this action against
the county humane society and its insurer seeking contribution
on three theories: 1) negligence; 2) strict liability under the
dog owner's statute, section
174.02; and 3), the humane society's liability under
the child labor laws, section
103.65 of the Wisconsin Statutes. The defendants denied the
claims and raised a release signed by the boy's mother as
an affirmative defense. The circuit court granted summary judgment
to the defendants and dismissed the complaint.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Roggensack,
reversed. Initially, the court addressed the basics of contribution,
which requires that 1) both parties must be tortfeasors, 2) both
parties must have common liability to the same person, and 3)
one party must have born an unequal portion of the common burden.
Although contribution normally arises in negligence cases, it
also applies in claims of strict liability. Finally, a settling
party is entitled to bring a contribution claim provided it can
show: 1) both parties were obligated to the payee; 2) the amount
paid was reasonable; and 3) the proportionate fault with negligent
tortfeasors or other apportionment method when negligence is
not the basis for mutual liability.
On this record the defendants completely failed to demonstrate
that they were entitled to summary judgment on the negligence
claim. The claim was therefore reinstated for trial on remand.
The court also reversed on the liability claim arising under
the dog owner statute. The humane society argued that under recent
case law the boy himself was a "statutory keeper" who
could not sue other statutory owners, including the dog's
"legal" owner. On this record the court could not,
however, determine whether the boy was a statutory keeper for
two reasons. First, there was simply insufficient evidence in
the record on this point. Second, it was alleged that the humane
society had violated child labor laws that might preclude such
a finding in any event, but the evidence on this point was equally
meager.
Lastly as to the dog owner statue, the court also concluded
that under prevailing case law "an owner may sue a keeper
for contribution when an innocent third party has been injured."
As to the claim under the child labor laws, the record also precluded
any dispositive ruling. In particular, it must be shown that
the boy's work was "dangerous or prejudicial"
within the meaning of section
103.65(1).
The final issue addressed by the court concerned the mother's
exculpatory release on her son's behalf. Again the court
reviewed the case law but could not resolve the issue because
of the record's inadequacy regarding the circumstances under
which she signed it.
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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