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Vol. 73, No. 6, June 2000 |
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'99 Significant Court Decisions
The costs for continuing a frivolous action should be determined
from the date that the firm served its second request for documents,
approximately six weeks after filing the complaint. After that
date, the firm made no further investigation into causation.
Meanwhile, the defendant continued to accumulate substantial
fees in responding to the document request. The court upheld
the amount of fees and costs awarded, except that it remanded
to the circuit court to subtract those fees and costs that were
incurred after the action was filed and prior to the law firm's
service of the second document requests.
Justice Bradley, joined by Chief Justice Abrahamson, dissented.
They argued that there was nothing to show what happened to transform
a meritorious case when filed to a frivolous claim only six weeks
thereafter. They concluded that independent review of the facts
demonstrated that the suit was not frivolous. In addition, the
dissent argued that the defendant implicitly agreed that the
action was not frivolous by expending nearly $1 million to defend.
It is incongruous for defendant to assert that it is reasonable
to spend that amount of money defending the action while at the
same time claiming that the action has no merit.4
(Editor's Note: Please see "The
Effect of Jandrt on Satellite Litigation" in the May
Wisconsin Lawyer.
Evidence
In Burnett v. Alt5 a treating physician
objected to answering questions calling for his expert opinion.
He maintained his refusal to answer the questions. The trial
court sanctioned the witness and his attorney. The supreme court
held that the witness was substantially justified in refusing
to answer questions calling for expert opinions when he had not
been engaged as an expert, and reversed the order imposing sanctions.
A question asks for expert testimony if it requires scientific,
technical, or other specialized knowledge that is not within
the range of ordinary training or intelligence. Expert testimony
calls upon persons of exceptional experience and qualifications
to give their opinion. The question that the treating physician
refused to answer, "No matter what the cause, a patient
with a history of term pregnancy and a gush of blood, that's
abnormal?" called for an expert opinion because whether
a history of term pregnancy is normal or abnormal can be answered
only in the meaningful and relevant way of a trained physician.
Having a right to refuse to provide testimony is a privilege.
To determine whether an expert has a legal privilege to refuse
to provide an expert opinion, there must be a statutory, rule,
or constitutional provision that expressly or implicitly provides
for a testimonial privilege for experts. Although there is no
such express provision, section 907.06(1)
of the Wisconsin Statutes provides that a judge may appoint any
expert witness agreed upon by the parties, and may appoint a
witness of the judge's own selection, but an expert witness
shall not be appointed by the judge "unless the expert witness
consents to act." If a court cannot compel an expert witness
to testify, it logically follows that a litigant should not be
able to compel an expert to testify. A witness's privilege
to refuse to provide expert testimony is inherent in Wis. Stat.
section 907.06(1).
Any other result would be inconsistent and fly in the face of
logic.
Justice Bradley and Chief Justice Abrahamson dissented. The
majority's discovery of an evidentiary privilege for experts
is previously unheard of in this state. The majority ignores
the requirement for express legal authority to create such an
evidentiary privilege. Wis. Stat. section 907.06(1)
is a slender reed upon which to place such great weight in creating
a privilege for expert witnesses. The statute says nothing about
a court compelling an expert to testify and absolutely nothing
about a party compelling an expert to testify. Furthermore, in
practice, the distinction between "transaction" testimony
and "expert" testimony is not always clear. These two
types of testimony will inevitably spill into the other and in
the process create an inseparable mixture. To unmix this mixture
will prove to be a difficult and inexact task. Here, the expert
testimony was requested of a treating physician. Even the jurisdictions
that have adopted an absolute privilege for experts have overwhelming
done so in cases where the expert was wholly unrelated to the
litigation.
In Milwaukee Teachers' Educ. Ass'n v. Bd. of
Sch. Directors6 the supreme court held that
a public employee was entitled to de novo judicial review in
all cases in which a record custodian decides to disclose information
from a public employee's personnel file implicating privacy
and/or reputational interests.
In a previous case,7 the court held that
where a person had been the subject of a criminal investigation
and where the requested records were in the custody of the district
attorney, the district attorney's decision to release the
records was subject to de novo review by the circuit court. This
de novo review is implicit in the open records law and is available
when the public records custodian is not a district attorney.
There is an important public interest in protecting persons'
privacy and reputations. The key to determining the status of
records under the open records law is the nature of the records,
not their location. Records containing personal information about
a school district employee implicate the same concerns of protection
of privacy and reputation whether those records are in the hands
of a school district or a district attorney.
In this case, the newspaper sought the names and school assignments
of persons discharged due to misdemeanor convictions. Release
of this information clearly would impact the privacy and reputations
of the plaintiffs. Two of the plaintiffs had only a single misdemeanor
conviction stemming from college incidents. Several of the convictions
preceded the plaintiffs' termination by more than 10 years.
Most of the plaintiffs had achieved satisfactory employment reviews.
Disclosure of the names and school assignments would permit plaintiffs
to be identified by family members, persons in the community,
coworkers, supervisors, and students. Such disclosure could harm
plaintiffs' personal relationships, tarnish their reputations,
and undermine their authority with students. The court remanded
the case to the circuit court to conduct a de novo review of
the decision to release the records, performing the balancing
test required by law.
Chief Justice Abrahamson and Justice Bradley dissented. This
case involves records containing information about a government
employee whose salary is paid with tax dollars. Government employees
are accountable to the public. The conduct of government employees
in their official duties is subject to public scrutiny. Although
the privacy and reputational interests of employees is important,
there must be a balance between privacy and open government.
When a records' custodian makes the balance, the employee
is not entitled to judicial review. A district attorney serving
as record custodian is distinguishable. Extending the notice
and judicial review processes to all custodians contravenes the
language, spirit, and purpose of the open records law. Providing
such review brushes aside the practical argument that providing
judicial review will result in impermissible delays. In this
case, more than two years have passed since the records custodian
decided to release the public records. No final decision will
be made until after the circuit court conducts its balancing
test on remand.
Justice Prosser also dissented without opinion.
In State v. Sprosty8 the supreme court
considered the issue of whether or not supervised release of
the defendant, who had been committed under the sexual predator
law, Wis. Stat. Chapter
980, could be avoided because of inadequate resources in
the community. Although Sprosty needed to continue to participate
in sex offender and substance abuse treatment programs, he could
benefit from such treatment on an outpatient basis while living
in the community under close supervision. The circuit court initially
ordered supervised release but then denied supervised release
because of inadequate resources.
Daniel W. Hildebrand is a member of DeWitt, Ross &
Stevens S.C., Madison. He is a former president of the Dane County
Bar Association and of the State Bar of Wisconsin. |
Although the circuit court may consider the availability of
facilities to house or to treat a sexual predator in its discretion
under Wis. Stat. section 980.08(4),
such consideration must be in keeping with the purpose of providing
the least restrictive means to accomplish the treatment of the
person while also protecting the public. This does not mean that
the circuit court can or should consider whether the available
facilities are willing to undertake the person's supervision
before ordering supervised release. The petition must be granted
unless the state proves by clear and convincing evidence that
the person is still a sexually violent person and that it is
still substantially probable that the person will engage in acts
of sexual violence if not confined in a secure mental health
unit or facility. Under Wis. Stat. section 980.08(5),
the circuit court has the authority to order a county department
or the Department of Health and Family Services to create whatever
programs or facilities are necessary to accommodate an order
for supervised release. The language of the statute is clear
and unambiguous, using the word "shall," which is equivalent
to mandatory. Wisconsin sexual predator law survived constitutional
challenge, in part, because the nature and duration of Chapter
980 commitments are to be reasonably related to the purposes
of those commitments. The case was remanded to the circuit court
to designate and order the development of a plan that provides
for Sprosty's supervised release and treatment in the community.
Endnotes
1 State
Farm Mut. Ins. Co. v. Ford Motor Co., 225 Wis. 2d 305,
592 N.W.2d 201 (1999).
2 See also, General
Cas. Co. v. Ford Motor Co., 225 Wis. 2d 353, 592
N.W.2d 198 (1999).
3 Jandrt
v. Jerome Foods Inc., 227 Wis. 2d 531, 597 N.W.2d 744
(1999).
4 See also Jandrt
v. Jerome Foods Inc., 230 Wis. 2d 246, 248, 604
N.W.2d 574 (1999) (Chief Justice Abrahamson and Justice Bradley
dissenting from denial of motion for reconsideration).
5 Burnett
v. Alt, 224 Wis. 2d 72, 589 N.W.2d 21 (1999).
6 Milwaukee
Teachers Educ. Ass'n v. Bd. of Sch. Directors, 227
Wis. 2d 779, 596 N.W.2d 403 (1999).
7 Woznicki
v. Erickson, 202 Wis. 2d 178, 549 N.W.2d 699 (1996).
8 State
v. Sprosty, 227 Wis. 2d 316, 592 N.W.2d 692 (1999).
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