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Vol. 73, No. 7, July 2000 |
Court of Appeals Digest
by Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof.
Thomas J. Hammer
Note: Each case summarized in the Court of Appeals
Digest includes its new public domain citation.
| Attorneys | Civil
Procedure |
| Criminal Procedure | Insurance
| Prisoner Litigation |
| Probate | Torts
| Trials |
Attorneys
Pro Hac Vice Admission - Revocation
Obey v. Halloin,
2000 WI App 99 (filed 18 April 2000) (ordered published 31 May
2000)
Attorney Ball was admitted pro hac vice to represent several
clients in pending cases. A separate and earlier appeal had already
upheld the revocation of Ball's pro hac vice admission
- in that case. Based on Ball's misconduct in that
other matter, the circuit court revoked his pro hac vice admission
in this case as well.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Hoover,
affirmed the revocation. SCR
10.03(4) (1998) gives circuit courts the discretion to revoke
pro hac vice admissions "for conduct in any Wisconsin
court that manifests incompetency or an unwillingness to abide
by the rules of professional conduct or the decorum of the court"
(¶ 2). Ball unsuccessfully argued to the effect that revocation
had to be predicated upon misconduct before the revoking court.
The court sharply distinguished Ball's privilege to practice
on a pro hac vice admission from that enjoyed by attorneys
licensed in Wisconsin. Under SCR
10.03(4) a court can withdraw pro hac vice admission
"for conduct that may fall short of that necessary for disciplinary
action" (¶ 11). On the record before it, the court
of appeals found no abuse of discretion.
Civil Procedure
Mandatory Arbitration - Injunctions - Federal Remedies
- Insurance
Appleton Papers Inc.
v. The Home Indemnity Co., 2000 WI App 104 (filed 4 April
2000) (ordered published 31 May 2000)
The defendant insurer, the Home Indemnity Co. (Home), appealed
an order enjoining it from pursuing both its federal district
court action to compel arbitration under the Federal Arbitration
Act (FAA) and the arbitration proceedings it had initiated against
the plaintiff. The dispute related to various deductibles and
retrospective premium agreements, all of which contained mandatory
arbitration clauses. The circuit court enjoined the defendant
(Home) from pursuing remedies under the FAA and, according to
the court of appeals, "implicitly relied on the McCarran-Ferguson
Act's grant of supremacy to state laws regulating the business
of insurance to 'reverse preempt' the FAA" (¶
1).
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Hoover,
reversed. In summary, the court held that the injunction was
improper because "the circuit court may not enjoin Home
from presenting to a federal court a question concerning the
application of a federal remedy. Wisconsin courts have no power
to limit, modify, or control the power of federal courts by enjoining
a litigant from pursuing an in personam action seeking remedies
in that court"
(¶ 3). The court further observed that "[b]ecause of
the potential application of McCarran-Ferguson to this case,
the federal court will necessarily determine the application
of Wisconsin laws regulating the business of insurance to the
arbitration clause. We therefore determine the validity of the
arbitration clauses under Wisconsin law. We reject Home's
various contentions that the deductible and retrospective premium
agreements are not governed by the insurance laws of this state.
We conclude that Wis. Stat. §
631.85 applies to the agreements and invalidates the arbitration
clauses" (¶ 4).
Criminal Procedure
Weapons - Return to Owner
State v. Perez,
2000 WI App 115 (filed 26 April 2000) (ordered published 31 May
2000)
Perez was convicted of carrying a concealed weapon. He had
driven his van into a ditch. When officers arrived, they observed
several firearms in the van. After his conviction, the trial
court granted his motion seeking the guns' return. The circuit
court ordered them returned to Perez.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Brown,
affirmed. Section
968.20(1m)(b) bars the return of dangerous weapons to a person
"who committed a crime involving the use" of the weapon.
The court held that "the mere fact that the firearm is with
a person is not enough" to preclude the weapon's return
(¶ 6). The opinion clarifies "the firearm's involvement
need not be active," as where a robber displays a gun without
putting it into "action or service" (¶ 7). In
this case Perez had done nothing of the sort. Had the legislature
seen fit, it could have barred the return of guns to those who
"use or possess" them.
Judge Nettesheim dissented on the ground that the legislature
intended to apply section
968.20(1m)(b) to persons convicted of carrying concealed
weapons.
Probation Revocation - Administrative Appeal -
Right to Counsel
State ex rel. Mentek
v. Schwarz, 2000 WI App 96 (filed 19 April 2000) (ordered
published 31 May 2000)
Following formal revocation proceedings, the defendant's
probation was revoked. He sought certiorari review of the revocation,
but his petition for the writ was dismissed because he failed
to exhaust his administrative appeal remedies prior to filing
the circuit court petition. In his appeal to the court of appeals,
he claimed that he was denied effective assistance of counsel
when his attorney decided not to seek an administrative appeal
of his probation revocation despite his request to do so.
In a majority decision authored by Judge Snyder, the court
of appeals concluded that the petitioner's ineffective assistance
of counsel claim must fail because neither state nor federal
constitutional law recognizes a right to effective assistance
of counsel on an appeal of a probation revocation. Constitutional
due process recognizes only a conditional guarantee of appointed
counsel during probation revocation hearings, determined on a
case-by-case basis. On administrative appeal, a probationer may
be assisted by counsel, but there is no due process right or
conditional right to appointed counsel or effective assistance
of counsel. Appointed counsel for the probation revocation stage
does not have a constitutional duty to ensure that the probationer's
administrative appeal is filed on time and in proper form. This
obligation falls to the probationer.
In this case the petitioner did not file a timely administrative
appeal, no appeal was recorded, and thus his administrative remedies
were not exhausted pursuant to Wis. Stat. section
801.02(7). As such, the circuit court's dismissal of
his petition for certiorari review was appropriate.
Judge Brown dissented.
Criminal Complaints - Attached Documents - Reliability
of Hearsay Sources
State v. Smaxwell,
2000 WI App 112 (filed 26 April 2000) (ordered published 31 May
2000)
The defendant was charged with a criminal violation of the
OWI statute. The facts supporting that charge were not specifically
contained in writing within the four corners of the criminal
complaint. Rather, an investigator for the district attorney's
office, who was not the arresting officer, swore under oath to
the truthfulness and reliability of an unsworn police incident
report prepared by the arresting officer. The unsworn incident
report was attached to the criminal complaint. The circuit court
dismissed the complaint because it did not use the legal term
"incorporated by reference" to meld the incident report
into the complaint.
In a decision authored by Judge Brown, the court of appeals
reversed. It found that the trial court's decision put form
over substance. The criminal complaint used the term "attached"
to refer to the police report, and this is basically the same
thing as saying that the incident report was "incorporated
by reference." To incorporate a document into a criminal
complaint, some statement in the body of the complaint must indicate
that another document is intended to be included in the complaint.
That was done here.
The defendant also argued that an investigating officer who
has no eyewitness knowledge of an incident cannot swear to the
truthfulness and reliability of an unsworn incident report prepared
by the arresting officer. The court of appeals held that an investigator
who is not an eyewitness can swear to the reliability and truthfulness
of the arresting officer's incident report where that report
is reliable.
A number of factors in this case indicate that the arresting
officer, whose incident report was relied upon, had personal
and observational reliability. The officer observed and participated
in the facts set forth in the police report and, as the courts
have previously held, information based on the personal observations
of police officers made while acting in their official capacity
is considered trustworthy. Further, the arresting officer had
personal and observational reliability because, even though he
did not swear to the truthfulness of the incident report under
oath, falsifying that report would have subjected him to felony
prosecution for misconduct in public office.
Finally, the arresting officer was reliable because the investigator
who swore to the complaint swore that he had an opportunity to
review the unsworn incident report and that such documents were
kept in the normal and ordinary course of police business. The
investigator also swore that he believed the document to be truthful
and reliable and that incident reports prepared by the arresting
officer had proven on numerous occasions in the past to be accurate
and reliable. In short, said the court, the investigating officer
was able to swear to the reliability of the arresting officer's
incident report because the arresting officer was a reliable
eyewitness.
Preliminary Hearings - State's Appeal Following
Dismissal
State v. Wilson,
2000 WI App 114 (filed 19 April 2000) (ordered published 31 May
2000)
The circuit court refused to bind the defendant over for trial
following a preliminary examination in his felony case. The state
appealed and the defendant moved to dismiss the appeal, arguing
that under Wis. Stat. section
974.05(1)(a), the state may not appeal as of right from a
dismissal at the preliminary examination but instead must seek
discretionary review before the court of appeals pursuant to
Wis. Stat. section
(Rule) 809.50.
In a per curiam decision the court of appeals concluded that
the circuit court's order dismissing the case was a final
order. Accordingly, it was appealable by the state as a matter
of right pursuant to section
974.05(1)(a).
Insurance
Motorcycles - Exclusions - Sponsorship Statute
Beerbohm v. State
Farm, 2000 WI App 105 (filed 20 April 2000) (ordered
published 31 May 2000)
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Dykman,
affirmed the trial court's grant of summary judgment to
an insurer. The trial court ruled that a policy excluding coverage
for motorcycles did not violate sections 632.32
and 344.33
of the Wisconsin Statutes, that the insurer did not acquire liability
as the insurer of the teenage driver's father under the
Wisconsin sponsorship statute, and that the insurer was not liable
under the policy's "newly-acquired vehicle clause."
First, the policy unambiguously excluded coverage for liability
arising out of the use of a motorcycle. Nor did the exclusion
contravene section
632.32(6), which does not list "motorcycles" as
a prohibited subject of exclusion. The court also rejected a
series of intricate arguments to the effect that the motorcycle
exclusion violated section
344.33, the financial responsibility law. In essence, the
plaintiff argued that "an automobile policy must comply
with Wis. Stat. §
344.33 even when the insured is not otherwise subject to
the financial responsibility laws" (¶ 14).
Second, the court agreed that the teenager's father remained
liable under the sponsorship statute, but it disagreed that the
insurer "must extend coverage for injuries caused by the
use of a motorcycle, when such coverage is contrary to the clear
language of its policy" (¶ 22). Prior case law did
not support this contention.
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