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Vol. 73, No. 8, August 2000 |
Supreme Court Digest
by Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof. Thomas
J. Hammer
Note: Each case summarized in the Supreme Court Digest
includes its new public domain citation.
| Civil Procedure | Corporations
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| Criminal Law | Criminal Procedure
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| Debtor-creditor Law | Employment
Law |
| Family Law | Insurance
| Labor Law |
| Municipal Law | Torts
| Zoning |
Civil Procedure
Docketing Judgments - Actions Against County Clerk for
Failure to Docket at Proper Time - Statute of Limitations
South Milwaukee Savings Bank
v. Barrett, 2000 WI 48 (filed 9 June 2000)
Wis. Stat. section
806.10(3) provides that a clerk of circuit court who neglects
to docket a judgment "at the proper time" shall be
liable in damages to an injured party. A judgment is "docketed"
when the clerk places the information about the judgment in the
judgment docket. This is to be distinguished from "entry"
of a judgment that occurs when the judgment is filed in the office
of the clerk of court.
In this case, the supreme court considered the statute of
limitations for a claim brought under section
806.10(3). In a unanimous decision authored by Chief Justice
Abrahamson, the court concluded that the six-year statute of
limitations under section
893.93(1)(a) applies in these types of actions.
The court also considered what the statute means when it refers
to a clerk of circuit court neglecting to docket a judgment "at
the proper time." The court concluded that to neglect to
docket a judgment "at the proper time" means to neglect
to docket the judgment immediately upon entry of the judgment.
This is particularly significant in a race-notice jurisdiction
like Wisconsin, where prompt docketing of judgments is needed
to establish the proper priority of claims.
In this case, the clerk neglected to docket a judgment at
the proper time when the judgment was entered at approximately
3:30 p.m. on one day but was not docketed until 9 a.m. on the
following day.
Corporations
Mergers - Valuation of Dissenters' Shares -
Minority Discounts - Unfair Dealing
HMO-W Inc. v. SSM Health Care
System, 2000 WI 46 (filed 7 June 2000)
Wisconsin law allows a minority shareholder to dissent from
a fundamental corporate action, such as a merger, and to receive
the fair value of those minority shares. See Wis. Stat.
§180.1302(1).
If the shareholder expresses dissatisfaction with the payment
of shares offered by the corporate entity and complies with appropriate
procedures, a corporation may institute a special proceeding
and petition the court to make a binding determination as to
the fair value of the shares.
The first issue considered by the supreme court in this decision
was whether a minority discount may apply in determining the
fair value of a dissenter's shares. A "minority discount"
addresses the lack of control over a business entity on the theory
that noncontrolling shares of stock are not worth their proportionate
share of the firm's value because they lack voting power
to control corporate actions. In a unanimous decision authored
by Justice Bradley, the supreme court concluded that minority
discounts may not be applied to determine the fair value of dissenters'
shares in an appraisal proceeding. Application of a minority
discount in determining the fair value of dissenters' shares
frustrates the equitable purpose of protecting minority shareholders.
The court also considered whether a fair value determination
of a dissenter's shares may include consideration of unfair
dealing in the valuation of those shares. In this appraisal action
this issue was raised as an affirmative defense; the minority
shareholders did not plead breach of fiduciary duty nor did they
seek damages based on such a breach. The supreme court concluded
that a court determining the fair value of shares subject to
appraisal must consider "all relevant factors." These
factors may include evidence of unfair dealing affecting the
value of a dissenter's shares.
Justice Bablitch did not participate in this decision.
Special Litigation Committees - Independence
Einhorn v. Culea, 2000
WI 65 (filed 22 June 2000)
The circuit court dismissed the derivative shareholder action
brought by Einhorn, a minority shareholder and member of the
board of directors of Northern Labs. The circuit court ruled
that the threshold for determining whether a member of the special
litigation committee is independent within the meaning of Wis.
Stat. section180.0744 (1997-98) is "extremely low"
and found that the special litigation committee was independent.
The court of appeals affirmed the circuit court's judgment,
"concluding that the circuit court's assessment of
whether each member of the special litigation committee was independent
was based on facts supported by the record and was not clearly
erroneous."
The supreme court, in a decision written by Chief Justice
Abrahamson, reversed. The issue raised in the case "was
the proper interpretation and application of the standard set
forth in Wis. Stat. §180.0744 of whether a member of a special
litigation committee is independent." Thus, the issue on
appeal was not the likelihood that the derivative action would
succeed, but whether the derivative action should be dismissed
on the basis of the decision of the special litigation committee.
The supreme court held that both lower courts erred "in
declaring that the threshold established by the legislature in
§180.0744 in determining whether a member of a special litigation
committee is independent is 'extremely low.'"
Addressing an issue of first impression, the court also held
that "in deciding whether members of the special litigation
committee are independent, the circuit court should determine
whether, considering the totality of the circumstances, a reasonable
person in the position of the member of the special litigation
committee can base his or her decision on the merits of the issue
rather than on extraneous considerations or influences. In other
words, the test is whether a member of the committee has a relationship
with an individual defendant or the corporation that would reasonably
be expected to affect the member's judgment with respect
to the litigation at issue." The case was remanded for further
proceedings not inconsistent with the court's opinion.
Criminal Law
Exposing Minors to Harmful Materials Over the Internet -
Constitutionality of Wis. Stat. section 948.11(2)
State v. Weidner, 2000
WI 52 (filed 16 June 2000)
Wis. Stat. section
948.11(2)(a) provides that "whoever, with knowledge
of the nature of the material, sells, rents, exhibits, transfers
or loans to a child any harmful material [including representations
of sexually explicit conduct], with or without monetary consideration,
is guilty of a Class E felony." The statute does not require
the state to prove that the defendant knew the age of the person
receiving the harmful material. Rather, it codifies an affirmative
defense that places upon the defendant the burden of proving
that the defendant had reasonable cause to believe that the child
had attained the age of 18 years and the child exhibited to the
defendant a draft card, driver's license, birth certificate,
or other official or apparently official document purporting
to establish that the child had attained the age of 18 years.
In this case, the defendant used Internet technology to send
sexually explicit pictures to a minor. Though only 16 at the
time, the child who received these transmissions via a chatroom
informed the defendant that she was 17. All interaction between
the two occurred over the Internet and did not involve any face-to-face
contact.
The defendant was charged with several counts of violating
section
948.11(2). The circuit court dismissed the prosecution, reasoning
that because the statute shifts to the defendant the burden of
proving knowledge of the victim's age and the Internet does
not provide the requisite face-to-face contact to ascertain whether
the victim is a minor, the statute is unconstitutional.
In a unanimous decision authored by Justice Bradley, the supreme
court concluded that because the state does not bear the burden
of proving that the defendant knew the age of the minor, section
948.11(2) is unconstitutional in the context of the Internet
and other situations that do not involve face-to-face contact.
The statute essentially sets forth a strict liability offense
that deprives an individual of the opportunity to prove lack
of knowledge. Persons employing the Internet lack the means to
reasonably ascertain the age of the persons with whom they are
corresponding. There is an absence of both face-to-face contact
and a satisfactory degree of reliability. Thus, the statute renders
it virtually impossible for defendants as Internet users to meet
the burden of proving the affirmative defense described above.
Although the court's analysis centered exclusively on the
Internet, it indicated that its holding would apply equally to
mail, fax, and other situations devoid of face-to-face contact.
The court further concluded that the statute could not be salvaged
by judicial construction.
Videotaping Nudity - Constitutionality
State v. Stevenson,
2000 WI 71 (filed 28 June 2000)
Stevenson was convicted of two counts of making videotapes
of a nude person without her consent, contrary to Wis. Stat.
section
944.205(2)(a). The person depicted was Stevenson's ex-girlfriend.
He made the tapes by "peeping" through her windows
from various perches.
The supreme court reversed because the videotape statute was
unconstitutionally overbroad. Writing for the court, Justice
Bradley observed that "Stevenson's conduct of surreptitiously
videotaping his former girlfriend in the nude is abhorrent and
that such conduct is given no protection under the First
Amendment." Yet overbreadth analysis focuses on the
statute, not the defendant's conduct. The state conceded
that the statute was overbroad on its face because it "improperly
prohibits all visual expression of nudity without explicit consent,
including political satire and newsworthy images" (¶
21). It even includes reproductions of famous artworks. The court
was unable to construe the statute in such a way as to save its
constitutionality. To save it meant adding two elements that
would significantly alter the Legislature's original creation
- a "rewrite."
Justice Wilcox, joined by Justice Crooks, dissented on the
ground that a limiting construction was feasible.
Criminal Procedure
Six-Person Juries in Misdemeanor Cases - Unconstitutional
Statute - Waiver of Objection
State v. Huebner, 2000
WI 59 (filed 20 June 2000)
Wis. Stat. section 756.096(3)(am) (1995-96) provided that
a jury in misdemeanor cases shall consist of six persons. In
State v. Hansford, 219
Wis. 2d 226, 580 N.W.2d 171 (1998), the supreme court held this
statute unconstitutional as violating the jury trial guarantee
of article I, section 7 of the Wisconsin Constitution. [Note:
This statute has been repealed and reenacted in substantially
the same language at Wis. Stat. section 756.06(2)(am) (1997-98).]
At the time of the defendant's trial, the Hansford
appeal was pending before the supreme court. Nevertheless, the
defendant did not object to the use of a six-person jury in his
misdemeanor trial, and he was subsequently convicted.
The issue before the supreme court in this case was whether
a defendant who did not object to the use of a six-person jury
at his misdemeanor trial, as authorized by the statute cited
above, may obtain a new trial in reliance on the decision in
Hansford holding section 756.096(3)(am) unconstitutional.
Writing for three justices of the court, Justice Wilcox concluded
that the defendant is not entitled to a new trial. It is a fundamental
principle of appellate review that issues must be preserved at
the circuit court. Issues not preserved at that level, even alleged
constitutional errors, generally will not be considered on appeal.
The defendant forfeited his right to a 12-person jury when he
failed to object to the use of a six-person jury at his misdemeanor
trial.
The court also declined to exercise its discretionary power
to reverse the defendant's conviction. The defendant did
not establish that a miscarriage of justice occurred in his case
or that the real controversy was not tried. [Note: An earlier
claim by the defendant that he had received ineffective assistance
of counsel was abandoned and, on appeal, he asserted that trial
counsel's assistance was neither incompetent nor deficient.]
Justice Prosser filed a concurring opinion in which he joined
in the judgment to affirm the defendant's conviction but
wrote separately to argue that the statute authorizing six-person
juries in misdemeanor cases is constitutional and that the Hansford
decision should be overruled.
Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a dissenting opinion that was
joined by Justices Bradley and Sykes.
Search and Seizure - Warrantless Entry of Home -
Hot Pursuit - Exigent Circumstances - Attenuation Analysis
State v. Richter, 2000
WI 58 (filed 20 June 2000)
A sheriff's deputy responded to an early-morning dispatch
of a burglary in progress at a trailer park. The victim flagged
down the deputy as he arrived on the scene and told him that
someone had broken into her mobile home, and that she had seen
the intruder flee her trailer and enter another trailer across
the street. At that second trailer the deputy observed signs
of forced entry - a window screen was knocked out and lying
on the ground. The deputy shined his flashlight into the open
window and attracted the attention of two people who were sleeping
on the floor. They opened the door and identified a third person,
who was sleeping on the couch, as the owner of the trailer. The
deputy entered the trailer, woke the owner, told him what had
happened, and asked his permission to search the trailer for
the burglary suspect. Permission was granted and, during the
search, the deputy observed marijuana in plain view, which the
owner admitted was his.
The owner of the second trailer was charged with several drug
offenses and he moved to suppress the physical evidence and his
statements, claiming they were the product of an illegal entry
of his trailer. The circuit court granted the motion and the
court of appeals affirmed.
In a majority opinion authored by Justice Sykes, the supreme
court reversed. It concluded that the entry was justified by
exigent circumstances - specifically, the deputy's
"hot pursuit" of the burglary suspect and his need
to protect the safety of those inside the trailer.
The exigent circumstance of "hot pursuit" is established
where there is an immediate and continuous pursuit of a suspect
from the scene of a crime. The warrantless entry of the defendant's
trailer was justified by this exigent circumstance. The supreme
court rejected the implication in the court of appeals'
decision in this case that hot pursuit as a justification for
a warrantless home entry requires that the officer himself personally
observe the crime or the fleeing suspect. The supreme court did
not believe there is such a prerequisite. The exigency of an
officer's pursuit of a suspect may be just as great when
the officer is told of the crime and the whereabouts of a suspect
by an eyewitness just after its commission as when he observes
it himself. To allow a warrantless entry when an officer personally
observes a crime and pursues the suspect, but disallow it when
he immediately responds to an eyewitness report and pursues the
suspect would, said the court, be arbitrary.
The court also concluded that the warrantless entry was justified
by the exigency of a threat to the safety of the suspect or others.
The deputy reasonably believed that the intruder he was pursuing
posed a threat to the safety of the occupants of the second trailer.
It was the middle of the night. A stranger had just broken into
the first trailer, but was discovered and therefore abandoned
whatever crime he intended to commit in the first trailer, fleeing
into the trailer across the street. There were obvious signs
of forced entry there and it was reasonable to infer that the
suspect did not belong in the second trailer. There were people
sleeping inside that trailer at the time the intruder entered,
creating a situation fraught with potential for physical harm
if something was not done immediately to apprehend the suspect.
[In hindsight, there apparently was no threat to those inside
the second trailer, because the "intruder," in fact,
was a resident there. But hindsight does not apply to the exigency
analysis; a court only considers the circumstances known to the
officer at the time entry was made.]
Accordingly, the court concluded that the warrantless entry
of the defendant's trailer was justified based on the exigent
circumstances of hot pursuit and threat to safety and was therefore
reasonable under the Fourth
Amendment.
The court also concluded that, even if the entry had been
contrary to the Fourth Amendment, the defendant's consent
to enter was sufficiently attenuated from the entry to purge
any taint of illegality.
Chief Justice Abrahamson filed a dissenting opinion that was
joined by Justice Bradley.
Debtor-creditor Law
Judgment Liens - Homestead Exemption
Rumage v. Gullberg,
2000 WI 53 (filed 16 June 2000)
Under Wisconsin law, a debtor can shelter up to $40,000 of
homestead equity from the lien of a judgment creditor. When the
debtor's homestead equity is at or below the statutory maximum,
it is "fully exempt." The issue before the supreme
court in this case was whether a properly docketed judgment constitutes
a valid lien against fully exempt homestead property at the time
the property is sold.
The judgment-creditor argued that a docketed judgment is a
lien on homestead property owned by a judgment debtor; it is
only the value of the homestead up to the statutory maximum of
$40,000 that is exempt from a creditor's claim. He maintained
that a judgment lien can be removed from the homestead's
chain of title only through some judicial process such as a levy
of execution or a declaratory judgment. A private sale cannot
extinguish a judgment lien and the docketed judgment remains
a lien on the property.
The defendants contended that if the debtor's equity
in the homestead property at the time of sale is at or below
the $40,000 exempted by statute, then the homestead is fully
exempt and the judgment lien does not attach. As a result, a
fully exempt homestead can be transferred in a private sale unencumbered
by the judgment lien.
In a unanimous decision authored by Justice Bablitch, the
supreme court concluded that a judgment lien is not a valid lien
against fully exempt homestead property. If the debtor has less
than $40,000 in equity, then the homestead is fully exempt. The
debtor possesses no equity interest upon which the judgment can
be a lien. As a result, there is no lien, and accordingly, a
debtor-seller can give clear title to the purchaser of fully
exempt homestead property.
If the debtor's equity in the homestead exceeds the amount
sheltered by statute, there is surplus equity and the homestead
is "partially exempt." The supreme court concluded
that when a homestead is partially exempt, a docketed judgment
is a lien upon the debtor's equity in excess of the amount
sheltered by the statute. When the partially exempt property
is sold, this defect must be corrected in order for the seller
to give clear title.
Employment Law
Family Leave - Paid Sick Time - ERISA - Preemption
Aurora Medical Group v. Dept.
of Workforce Development, 2000 WI 70 (filed 27 June 2000)
A nurse requested family leave to adopt a child. Her employer
granted the leave but denied her additional request to substitute
paid sick time for unpaid family leave on the ground that she
was not ill. She was permitted to apply vacation and holiday/personal
time toward the leave. The nurse filed a complaint with the Department
of Workforce Development (DWD). An administrative law judge (ALJ)
ordered the employer to credit the nurse with about 30 hours
in vacation time that she used instead of her paid sick time.
The circuit court affirmed the ALJ. The court of appeals also
affirmed.
The supreme court, in a decision written by Justice Crooks,
affirmed the court of appeals. The court held that the employer
failed to show that section 514(a) of ERISA preempts Wisconsin's
Family and Medical Leave Act's (FMLA) "substitution
provision." More precisely, the employer "failed to
carry its burden of overcoming the presumption against preemption."
First, the employer "failed to establish that the substitution
provision 'relates to' employment benefit plans under
section 514(a) of ERISA." Second, it also failed to "show
a clear and manifest purpose by the Congress to pre-empt the
Wisconsin FMLA substitution provision." To the contrary,
it appears that Congress intended to protect more generous state-granted
family leave rights. Third, the employer failed "to show
how ERISA preemption of state-provided family leave rights would
not result in impairment of the federal FMLA in contravention
of section 514(d) of ERISA." (¶ 37)
Family Law
Divorce - Property Division - Power of Courts to
Construe Their Judgments
Washington v. Washington,
2000 WI 47 (filed 7 June 2000)
The husband in this divorce action is a federal employee who
anticipated retirement approximately 21 years from the date of
the divorce judgment. His federal pension plan was valued at
$50,000 at the time of divorce. Desiring to maintain an equal
property division of all property, the circuit court awarded
the wife $24,000 of the pension and awarded the husband $26,000.
The judgment made no mention of interest or appreciation on either
party's lump-sum share of the pension or when or how payment
of the federal pension was to be made. The wife will not get
her share under the divorce judgment until payments are made
to her ex-husband when he retires.
The parties disagree as to the correct construction of the
circuit court's division of the federal pension. The husband
maintains that at the time of his retirement his ex-wife would
receive her specified lump-sum share of the pension and that
he alone would receive any and all appreciation and interest
that accumulated on both spouses' shares. The wife argues
that she should receive appreciation and interest on her lump-sum
share of the pension and that her ex-husband should receive appreciation
and interest on his lump-sum share of the pension.
The wife filed a motion asking the circuit court to amend
the divorce judgment to award her appreciation and interest on
her lump-sum share of the pension. The circuit court denied the
motion, believing that Wis. Stat. section
767.32(1)(a) prohibits modifying or revising the provisions
of a judgment of divorce with respect to the final division of
property. The court of appeals affirmed. In a unanimous decision
authored by Chief Justice Abrahamson, the supreme court reversed
the court of appeals.
The issue before the supreme court was whether a circuit court
may construe its judgment and allocate appreciation and interest
on a lump-sum share of a pension awarded to a spouse (but not
payable immediately) when the final division of property in the
divorce judgment is silent about any such allocation. The supreme
court concluded that a circuit judge may construe the final division
of property in a divorce judgment and allocate appreciation and
interest on a pension when the divorce judgment is silent about
the allocation of appreciation and interest on a lump-sum share
awarded to a spouse but not payable immediately. The silence
about appreciation and interest makes the judgment ambiguous.
A circuit court's construction of the ambiguous final division
of the pension under these circumstances does not violate the
statute cited above. Although a circuit court may not revise
or modify the final division of property, it has the power to
effectuate its orders and do justice. A divorce judgment that
is clear on its face is not open to construction. However, if
it is ambiguous, construction is allowed.
The judgment described above was held to be ambiguous about
the allocation of appreciation and interest on the pension between
the date of the divorce and the distribution of the pension.
Accordingly, the supreme court concluded that the circuit judge
should determine the allocation on remand.
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