Vol. 71, No. 4, April
1998
Court of Appeals Digest
By Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof. Thomas
J. Hammer
| Administrative Law | Civil Procedure | Commercial
Law |
| Contracts | Criminal
Law | Criminal Procedure | Employee
Benefits |
| Insurance | Municipal Law | Torts |
Insurance
UIM Coverage - Stacking - Business Policies
Reed v. General Casualty Co.,
No. 96-2371 (filed 23 Dec. 1998) (ordered published 25 Feb. 1998)
Douglas Reed was killed by a negligent driver who carried only $25,000
in liability coverage. Reed's car carried $500,000 in UIM coverage
under a business auto policy issued to Software Resources, a company for
which he worked and in which he held 10 percent of the stock. The coverage
also extended to four other vehicles. The plaintiffs (Mrs. Reed and her
two young children) sought to "stack" the UIM coverage on the
other vehicles. The trial judge ruled that Reed was not a named insured
but rather an "occupancy" insured and refused to permit stacking.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Wedemeyer, affirmed.
The court framed the issue as follows: "whether a corporate officer/director/shareholder
in a small corporation should be included under the definition of 'you'
or 'family member' as those terms are used in a business auto
insurance policy that identifies only the corporation as the 'named
insured' so that the officer/director/ shareholder would qualify as
a 'named insured' rather than an 'occupancy insured.'"
The court distinguished Carrington v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins.
Co., 169 Wis. 2d 211 (1992), based on its unique facts (a corporation
acting in loco parentis to children in its care) and differences in policy
language, which clarified that "coverage will extend to a family member
only if you [that is, the insured] are an individual."
Named Insureds - Coverage - Business Auto and Umbrella Coverage
Greene v. General Casualty Co.,
No. 96-2578 (filed 19 Nov. 1997) (ordered published 25 Feb. 1998)
Michael Riekkoff seriously injured three girls when his Ford Bronco jumped
a curb. Michael was working for a family business, Riekkoff Installation
Services Inc., at the time of the accident. Riekkoff Installation carried
a business auto policy and a comprehensive liability policy (umbrella) with
General Casualty under which it was the sole named insured. The circuit
court ruled that coverage existed for Michael under both policies.
The court of appeals, in a decision authored by Judge Anderson, affirmed.
First, the court concluded "that the business auto policy has been
modified to provide insurance to two named additional interests for any
auto that they may drive. The additional interest endorsement amends the
policy to include Michael within the class of insured persons. Michael
was added to the 'Who Is an Insured' provision which is another
class of insured persons in addition to the 'you' class, which
is the named insured, Riekkoff Installation." Moreover, "[w]hen
the named insured is a corporation, but the insurer knows that the covered
vehicles are owned by individuals and used by family members, section 632.32
[the omnibus statute] does not distinguish between the owner of the vehicle
and the named insured for purposes of determining coverage." The coverage
also extended to "any" vehicle driven by Michael. This construction
furthered the state's public policy that protects injured third parties,
especially where General Casualty accepted premiums knowing that the policy
covered "vehicles owned by the corporation's employees which were
also used for non-business purposes." Finally, since Michael qualified
as an insured under the business auto policy, he also was covered under
the umbrella policy.
Municipal
Law
Municipal Board of Review - Receipt of Advice from Municipal Attorney
- Due Process
Rite-Hite Corporation v. Brown
Deer Board of Review, No. 96-3178 (filed 9 Dec. 1997) (ordered published
25 Feb. 1998)
Rite-Hite Corporation appealed a judgment entered by the trial court
upholding, on certiorari review, a determination by the Village of Brown
Deer Board of Review sustaining a $4.1 million assessment of property owned
by plaintiff White and leased to Rite-Hite Corp. Among the issues on appeal
was whether Rite-Hite was denied due process because Brown Deer's village
attorney represented both the village and its Board of Review at the board
hearing.
In support of its position, Rite-Hite cited authorities for the proposition
that it is a violation of due process for a "decisionmaker" to
have "previously acted as counsel to any party in the same action or
proceeding." But these authorities, said Judge Fine for the court of
appeals, were not applicable in this case. First, the village attorney was
not a "decisionmaker" - the Board of Review was, and the
village attorney was not a member of the board. Second, the plaintiffs pointed
to no instance in the transcript where the village attorney's advice
to the board was anything other than impartial.
Members of Boards of Review generally are lay persons, without legal
or technical backgrounds. Giving the board access to legal advice on technical
and procedural matters advances rather than retards the goal of setting
a fair tax assessment. Thus, the Manual for Boards of Review published by
the Department of Revenue recognizes that the municipal attorney "should
act as counsel for the Board of Review," by, among other things, "advising
the board on legal matters." Accordingly, the plaintiffs were not denied
any statutory or due process rights by the village attorney acting as a
legal advisor to the board.
Torts
Recreational Immunity - Ice Fishing - "Property"
- "Occupier"
Doane v. Helenville Mutual Ins.
Co., No. 97-1420 (filed 29 Jan. 1998) (ordered published 25 Feb.
1998)
Ehle invited Doane to go ice fishing in his portable shanty. Ehle's
propane heater (lantern?) exploded and injured Doane. Doane sued Ehle and
his insurer, who claimed immunity under section 895.52 of the Wisconsin
Statutes, the recreational immunity statute. The circuit court granted summary
judgment to the defendants.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Roggensack, reversed.
No one disputed that Doane was engaged in recreational activity at the time
of the injury. Rather, the dispute centered on whether the portable shanty
on the frozen lake qualified as recreational property or Ehle was an "occupant"
of the lake. Although the shanty was a "structure," the court
concluded "that structures located completely on water and which are
not affixed to the lake bed or to the shore, are not located on real property,
and are therefore not themselves 'property' within the meaning
of the recreational immunity statute." Nor was Ehle an "occupier"
because "the shanty could be more fully analogized to a fishing boat
which is anchored for a time on a lake." One does not "occupy"
a lake by dropping anchor; rather, Ehle was a "user of the lake."
This column summarizes all decisions 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.
|