|
Navigation |
Vol. 72, No. 6, June 1999 |
Previous
Page
Court of Appeals Digest
By Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof. Thomas
J. Hammer
| Civil Procedure
| Contracts |
| Criminal Law | Criminal
Procedure | Family Law |
| Insurance | Municipal Law |
Paternity |
| Open Records Law | Real Property |
Insurance
Exclusions - "Drive Other Car" - UM Coverage
Blazekovic v. City
of Milwaukee, No. 98-1821-FT (filed 23 March 1999) (ordered
published 21 April 1999)
The plaintiff was a firefighter who was injured when an uninsured
motorist struck her fire truck. She filed suit against her auto
insurers, American Family and American Standard, alleging that
she was entitled to uninsured motorist coverage. Both insurers
denied coverage based on identical exclusions governing "nonowned
emergency type automobiles." The trial court ruled that
the endorsement was invalid.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Curley,
affirmed. The court tracked case law that had struck down various
exclusions and the subsequent statutes that had effectively overturned
these cases. The court concluded "that while the legislature's
statutory amendments to sec.
632.32 loosened what was previously a complete ban against
'drive other car' exclusions, the amendments did not
make all 'drive other car' exclusions permissible."
In particular, these "drive other car" exclusions are
now valid in three limited instances: "(1) the vehicle is
owned by the named insured or the spouse of the named insured
or a relative living with the named insured; and (2) the vehicle
is not listed in the policy; and (3) the vehicle meets neither
the policy definition of a newly acquired vehicle nor the policy
definition of a replacement vehicle."
Municipal Law
Annexation - Challenge by Objecting Municipality -
Notice of Claim
Town of Burke v.
City of Madison, Nos. 98-0108 and 98-1362 (filed 11 March
1999) (ordered published 21 April 1999)
Owners and electors of certain properties located in the Town
of Burke filed petitions for direct annexation by the City of
Madison. The city responded with ordinances effecting the annexations.
The town filed actions for declaratory judgment seeking to invalidate
the annexations. The city filed timely responses and then moved
to dismiss because the town had not filed notices of claim against
the city pursuant to Wis. Stat.
section 893.80.
The issue before the court of appeals was whether a notice
of claim is required when a town files a lawsuit pursuant to
Wis. Stat. section
66.021 objecting to a city's annexation of the town's
land. In a decision authored by Judge Roggensack, the court concluded
that because the Town of Burke brought its claims pursuant to
a specific statutory scheme devised by the Legislature to effect
and to resolve objections to annexations in a timely fashion
and because the policies that underlie the notice of claims statute
would not be furthered by requiring that a notice of claim be
filed prior to the town's commencing suit, the town was
excused from complying with the notice of claims statute prior
to bringing suit to contest the validity of the annexations.
Zoning - Termination of Nonconforming Uses
Village of Menomonee
Falls v. Preuss, No. 98-0384 (filed 17 March 1999) (ordered
published 21 April 1999)
The Village of Menomonee Falls appealed from a judgment ordering
the defendant to remove a commercial addition to his residence,
but allowing him to continue to use the residence as such. The
defendant's residence is a nonconforming use because his
neighborhood is now zoned industrial. After he modified his use
by adding a commercial garage, the village requested that the
court terminate the entire use. The trial court refused to do
so, viewing the decision as discretionary.
The court of appeals, in a decision authored by Judge Brown,
disagreed. As a matter of law, when an owner of a nonconforming
use modifies that use, the municipality is entitled to terminate
the entire non-conforming use. See generally Waukesha County
v. Pewaukee Marina Inc., 187 Wis. 2d 18, 522 N.W.2d 536 (Ct.
App. 1994) (holding that a violation of the nonconforming use
by expansion or enlargement that changes the use invalidates
the legal nonconforming use as well as the illegal change).
In this case the defendant's property was exclusively
residential prior to the addition. He changed it to a mixed commercial/residential
establishment. This was a change in the nonconforming use. The
court of appeals therefore affirmed that part of the judgment
ordering the defendant to remove the commercial addition to his
property. It modified the circuit court's judgment so as
to terminate the defendant's residential nonconforming use
as well.
Notice of Claim - Complaint Based on Continuing Course
of Conduct
Probst v. Winnebago
County, No. 98-0451 (filed 17 March 1999) (ordered published
21 April 1999)
This appeal involves Wisconsin's notice of claim statute.
Section
893.80(1)(a) provides that, within 120 days after the happening
of the event giving rise to the claim, written notice of the
circumstances of the claim must be served on the "governmental
subdivision or agency and on the officer, official, agent or
employee." A notice of claim that complies with this statute
and a denial of the claim by the government are prerequisites
to the commencement of a circuit court action.
In this case the notice of claim filed against Winnebago County
by the plaintiffs did not allege any acts occurring within 120
days of the notice date. The plaintiffs argued that this is not
the standard and that the notice and subsequent complaint alleged
a continuing course of conduct by the county. However, the plaintiffs
cited no legal authority for the proposition that alleging an
on-going course of conduct without identifying a specific circumstance
or example of that conduct occurring within 120 days of the
notice of claim satisfies the requirements of the statute. Nor
could the court of appeals locate any such authority. Accordingly,
the court concluded that the notice of claim did not satisfy
the requirements of section 893.80.
Paternity
Personal Jurisdiction - UCCJA
Paula M.S. v. Neal
A.R., No. 98-1158 (filed 25 March 1999) (ordered published
21 April 1999)
In this paternity action, the court of appeals reversed the
circuit court's determination that it had personal jurisdiction
over the alleged father. Writing for the court, Judge Roggensack
concluded "that the UCCJA [the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction
Act], which may confer subject matter jurisdiction in custody
disputes, does not establish, in and of itself, a sufficient
statutory basis of personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant
in a paternity proceeding." The court was particularly concerned
with the child support implications that stem from a determination
of paternity. On this record the court held it lacked personal
jurisdiction over the putative father. The alleged father, a
Michigan resident, lacked the sufficient contacts required by
the due process clause. His sole links to Wisconsin consisted
of attending two funerals. He did not conduct any business nor
did he contact the mother or the child. The child was conceived
in Illinois and born in Minnesota.
Open Records Law
Challenge to Release of Records - Standards for Circuit
and Appellate Court Review
Kailin v. Rainwater,
No. 98-0870 (filed 31 March 1999) (ordered published 21 April
1999)
In Woznicki v. Erickson,
202 Wis. 2d 178, 549 N.W.2d 699 (1996), the Wisconsin Supreme
Court grafted onto the open records law a procedure whereby the
custodian of public records who has decided to release those
records must first notify the target of the release decision
and then allow the target a reasonable amount of time to appeal
the decision to the circuit court. Pursuant to Woznicki,
the role of the circuit court in this review process is two-pronged.
First, the court must determine if the custodian performed the
appropriate balancing test in deciding to release the records.
Second, if the custodian acted correctly, the circuit court must
then review de novo the decision of the custodian.
In this case the court of appeals, in a decision authored
by Judge Nettesheim, developed standards of review for the circuit
court and court of appeals in dealing with Woznicki-type
issues. [With regard to the first prong, case law already establishes
a de novo standard of review of the custodian's open records
decision.] With regard to the second prong of the circuit court's
review, the appellate court read Woznicki to mean that
the circuit court is required to conduct an independent review
akin to a trial de novo that permits the taking of additional
evidence beyond that which was before the records custodian.
This approach will also allow the target to present arguments
to the court that the records custodian did not consider.
With regard to the standard of review to be applied by the
court of appeals, the appellate court concluded that, as to the
custodian's decision, the law is clear that appellate courts
conduct their reviews under the de novo standard. And, as to
the circuit court's independent trial de novo review under
the second prong of Woznicki, review by the court of appeals
should be conducted under the usual standards applicable to a
trial conducted in the circuit court. Thus, the court of appeals
should apply the appropriate standard, depending on whether the
question at hand is one of fact, law, or discretion.
Real Property
Easements by Necessity - Ingress and Egress - Utilities
Richards v. Land
Star Group Inc., No. 98-1983 (filed 23 Feb. 1999) (ordered
published 31 March 1999)
In 1946 Peterson purchased property in Pierce County, which
the court referred to as parcels 1 and 2. In 1947 Peterson forfeited
parcel 1 to the county as a result of failing to pay real estate
taxes. At a public auction held that year, the county purchased
this parcel and later issued itself a tax deed for the property.
In 1963 the county conveyed parcel 1 to plaintiff Richards by
quitclaim deed which stated: the "grantor herein having
no ingress or egress privileges to said property."
Parcel 1 is approximately 34 acres in size, has no access
to a public road and, as a whole, is landlocked. No written easement
exists for access to parcel 1 from any public road. In this case,
among other things, the plaintiff requested an easement over
parcel 2 to access his property. The trial court granted the
plaintiff an easement of necessity for "ingress and egress"
but denied him the right to install utilities along the easement.
In a decision authored by Chief Judge Cane, the court of appeals
began its analysis by articulating certain definitions. An easement,
said the court, is an interest in land in possession of another.
It creates two distinct property interests: the dominant estate
and the servient estate. The dominant estate enjoys the privileges
an easement grants, while the servient estate permits the dominant
estate to exercise those privileges. To establish an easement
of necessity, the party seeking the easement has the burden to
prove: 1) common ownership or unity of title of the two parcels;
and 2) that the property is "landlocked," meaning that
a piece of land is surrounded by land belonging to other persons
so that it cannot be reached by a public roadway.
In this case the trial court granted to the plaintiff an easement
of necessity for "ingress and egress" to the property
but denied him the right to install utilities along the easement.
With regard to the latter, the court of appeals reversed. A way
of necessity is coextensive with reasonable needs, present and
future, of the dominant estate and varies with the necessity,
insofar as may be consistent with the full reasonable enjoyment
of the servient estate. In current times, the reasonable use
and enjoyment of property, at a minimum, requires utilities,
as long as it does not overburden the servient estate. Accordingly,
the appellate court reversed that portion of the judgment denying
utility installation and remanded to the circuit court for its
determination whether utility installation would overburden the
servient estate and, if not, to determine a reasonable method
for the installation of utilities.
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.
|