Vol. 70, No. 6, June
1997
Court of Appeals Digest
By Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
This column summarizes selected published opinions of the Wisconsin Court
of Appeals. 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.
Attorneys
Legal Malpractice - Criminal Practitioners-
Experts Necessary - Issue Preclusion
Pierce v. Colwell, No. 96-1075
(filed 5 March 1997; ordered published 29 April 1997)
The trial court dismissed a legal malpractice action against an attorney.
The complaint alleged that the lawyer negligently represented the plaintiff
in a criminal proceeding. The alleged negligence occurred when the lawyer
"failed" to object to the criminal court's "competency"
based upon an omission to read the information to him at the arraignment.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Nettesheim, affirmed
the grant of summary judgment. Under the facts of this case, the plaintiff
was obligated to present some expert testimony to sustain the claim of the
lawyer's negligence: A lay person could not be expected to understand how
negligence could arise from the failure to read an information at arraignment
where the defendant received a fair trial and was represented by counsel
at all stages. (The lawyer he sued represented him only at the sentencing,
not the arraignment.) Moreover, proceedings conducted after an "imperfect
arraignment" are not invalid absent prejudice.
Although the court affirmed on the summary judgment issue, it rejected
the argument that issue preclusion also blocked the plaintiff's malpractice
complaint. The arraignment issue had been rejected in a prior appeal in
the criminal case. But case law required criminal defendants to demonstrate
their claims by clear and convincing evidence. Since this civil case carried
only the ordinary preponderance burden (that is, a lower standard of proof),
issue preclusion did not apply.
Criminal Procedure
Peremptory Strikes - Gender Discrimination
State v. Jagodinsky, No. 96-2927-CR
(filed 26 March 1997; ordered published 29 April 1997)
The defendant was convicted of violating a harassment injunction regarding
his former girlfriend. During voir dire the prosecutor used all four peremptory
strikes to remove male jurors from the venire panel. The defendant's trial
counsel argued that the prosecutor was engaging in gender discrimination
but the trial judge overruled the objection.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Brown, reversed
and remanded. Prior case law establishes that the intentional "use"
of gender (or race) violates the right to an impartial jury under the Fourteenth
Amendment. The defendant established a prima facie case of gender discrimination:
The defendant was a male and the prosecutor used all of his challenges to
remove males from the panel. Once a prima facie case is shown, the burden
shifts to the prosecutor (in this case) to demonstrate a sufficient gender-neutral
explanation for his strikes. Relying upon Supreme Court decisions, the court
formulated the following rule: A lawyer "defending an allegation that
his or her peremptory strikes were used for discriminatory reasons must
offer something more than a bald, but otherwise credible, statement that
other nonprohibited factors were considered. Rather, he or she must demonstrate
how there is a nexus between these legitimate factors and the juror who
was struck." The prosecutor's explanation fell short of this standard.
Thus, the defendant was entitled to a new trial.
Insurance
Subrogation - UIM Coverage - Subrogation Disallowance
Kulekowskis v. Bankers Life and Cas.
Co., No. 96-0613 (filed 12 Feb. 1997; ordered published 29 April
1997)
The Kulekowskis's son was killed in a one-car accident. The driver's
insurer paid its limits. The Kulekowskis then sued their insurer, American
Family, based upon their UIM coverage. Bankers Life, the Kulekowskis's health-care
insurer, filed a subrogation claim based upon the payment of various medical
bills and expenses. The trial judge granted summary judgment in favor of
Bankers Life.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Snyder, affirmed.
Bankers Life had a clear contractual right of subrogation. Its policy provided
that the insurer had a right of reimbursement whether the insured collects
"through a lawsuit, settlement or otherwise." (Emphasis original.)
Next, the court considered American Family's subrogation exclusion clause.
Prior case law construing both UM and UIM coverage holds that "if the
insurer who is seeking subrogation has a policy which 'functionally recites'
the preservation of its subrogation rights without any time limitation,
such language will prevail over subrogation exclusion language in a conflicting
policy." In this case, the Bankers Life policy stated that the insured
was required to "take no action prejudicing such rights" and contained
no time limitation. The court rebuffed American Family's efforts to distinguish
the earlier cases.
Mental Health
Mental Health Act -"Patients Rights" Statute
Schaidler v. Mercy Medical Center,
No. 96-0645 (filed 19 March 1997; ordered published 29 April 1997)
The plaintiff sued a medical center after she was "admitted"
pursuant to an emergency detention order. The circuit court dismissed all
of her claims.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Snyder, affirmed
in part and reversed in part. Section 51.61 of the Wisconsin Statutes sets
forth the "Patients Rights" of mental health patients admitted
to a treatment facility. The trial judge ruled that the plaintiff failed
to establish a nexus between any statutory violation and some harm to her.
The court of appeals held that under section 51.61(7)(a) "a patient
whose rights have been violated and who has suffered damages as a result
may bring action."
Patients are entitled to $100 exemplary damages for each violation plus
recovery for any damages as may be proved along with costs and attorney
fees. But in the alternative, section 51.67(b) "provides for a cause
of action which does not require that a plaintiff suffer or be threatened
with actual damages; however, the plaintiff suing under this paragraph must
prove that the individual or institution 'willfully, knowingly and unlawfully'
violated this section." The defendant conceded certain "technical
violations" but the parties failed to focus on the distinction between
subsection (a) and (b) of section 51.67(7). The court remanded the case
for further proceedings on whether there is a factual dispute with respect
to a subsection (b) claim.
The court of appeals also addressed other issues under chapter 51 as
well as claims sounding in negligence and false imprisonment. These discussions
are case-specific and raise no novel questions of fact or law. |