Vol. 78, No. 5, May
2005
Court of Appeals Digest
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.
by Prof. Daniel D. Blinka & Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
Civil Procedure
Offers to Settle - Fair Evaluation - "Reasonable"
Offers
Mews v.
Beaster, 2005 WI App 53 (filed 16 Feb. 2005) (ordered published
24 March 2005)
This lawsuit arose out of an accident in which Beaster's vehicle rear
ended a vehicle being driven by Mews. Mews and her brother, a passenger
in her car, were injured. They sued Beaster for compensatory and
punitive damages. Mews' mother, who claimed loss of society and
companionship, also sued Beaster. On Oct. 6 Beaster served separate
statutory offers of judgment on all three plaintiffs. None of the offers
were accepted by Oct. 20, the statutory deadline. On that same date the
trial court (again) denied Beaster's motion to dismiss the punitive
damages claim, but the court allowed bifurcation of the compensatory and
punitive damages claims. A jury later awarded compensatory but not
punitive damages to the plaintiffs.
After trial, Beaster moved for costs pursuant to Wis. Stat. section
807.01(1), which provides that if a plaintiff does not accept an offer
of judgment and does not then recover a more favorable judgment, the
defendant shall recover costs. The trial court denied the motion, ruling
that the plaintiffs could not have fully and fairly evaluated the offers
of judgment until they knew whether the punitive damages claim was going
to trial.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Brown, reversed.
"[T]he plaintiffs knew that Beaster was offering to settle the `entire'
claim for a certain amount. Whether punitive damages were eventually
going to be part of the case or not, the offer was clear: Beaster would
pay `X' dollars to resolve the whole claim" (¶ 11).
"The law in Wisconsin is such that we will condemn only those offers
of settlement that unreasonably force settlements. Here, given
the fact that both parties had the same information, were equally unsure
about what might occur with regard to the motion for reconsideration and
were equally capable of factoring this uncertainty into their
risk-benefit analyses, there was nothing unreasonable about the offer or
the timing of it" (¶ 12) (citation omitted).
"Were we to rule in the plaintiffs' favor, we would be doing a
disservice to the offer-to-settle statutes that were designed to `force'
settlements so long as the force is reasonable. Because any pending
motions would likely bear on the decision whether to accept or reject an
offer, the entire process would be rendered meaningless in innumerable
cases. Motions to strike testimony, motions in limine, motions to
dismiss and motions for summary judgment, to name a few, all could be
used to thwart a clear, valid offer to settle a case. We can envision a
scenario where any attorney on the receiving end of an offer of judgment
who wanted to avoid the consequences of the offer could file a motion
within the ten days that would place the outcome of the action in some
state of uncertainty, thereby placing the attorney and the client in a
position where they could not fully and fairly evaluate the offer. We
cannot countenance such a result" (¶ 13).
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Criminal Procedure
Bond Deposits - Application to Payment of Court Costs -
Pre-sentence Incarceration Credit in Lieu of Costs
State v.
Baker, 2005 WI App 45 (filed 17 Feb. 2005) (ordered published 24
March 2005)
The defendant was convicted of numerous charges, including violating
a domestic abuse injunction, bail jumping, and selling fake
identification cards. He was assessed costs under Wis. Stat. sections
814.61(1)(a), 814.60(1), and 973.045. The state asked the circuit court
to order that the $500 bond that had been posted by the defendant's
father be applied to the court costs, arguing that Wis. Stat. section
969.02(6) mandated this result. The circuit court declined to apply the
bond to the court costs and permitted its return to the father. The
court instead ordered that costs be satisfied by pre-sentence jail
incarceration, applying six days of incarceration at a rate of $100 per
day to satisfy the costs. The state appealed. In a decision authored by
Judge Dykman, the court of appeals reversed.
Section 969.02(2) authorizes a court to require a defendant charged
with a misdemeanor to either execute an appearance bond with sufficient
solvent sureties or deposit cash in lieu thereof. Section 969.02(6)
provides that "when a judgment for a fine or costs or both is entered in
a prosecution in which a deposit has been made in accordance with sub.
(2), the balance of such deposit, after deduction of the bond costs,
shall be applied to the payment of the judgment." The court of appeals
concluded that the plain language of this statute required the circuit
court to order the application of the balance of any bond deposit toward
the satisfaction of court costs.
The defendant argued that "implicit findings" of indigency justified
the waiver of his court costs, and he urged the appellate court to
uphold the circuit court's ruling on indigency grounds pursuant to
section 814.29(1). The court of appeals said that this statute
guarantees access to the courts for the indigent in civil proceedings
and may or may not apply to at least some costs in criminal proceedings
through section 972.11(1) (see ¶ 10). The court then
rejected the defendant's argument. "Whether sec. 814.29(1) provides a
basis to waive court costs ordered at judgment in a criminal proceeding
is not an issue that is properly before us today. The circuit court did
not waive [the defendant's] costs - it ordered them satisfied
through credit for jail incarceration time" (¶ 10).
Lastly, the appellate court considered the power of the circuit court
to order that court costs be satisfied by pre-sentence incarceration in
jail. It concluded that none of the statutes under which costs were
assessed provides the court with authority to waive the costs or to
order them satisfied by other means. Accordingly, the court of appeals
held that the circuit court erred when it applied pre-sentence
incarceration time toward satisfaction of the defendant's court
costs.
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Family Law
Termination of Parental Rights Proceedings - Application of
Preclusion Doctrines - Judicial Substitution
Brown
County Dep't of Human Servs. v. Terrance M., 2005 WI
App 57 (filed 23 Feb. 2005) (ordered published 24 March 2005)
This case presented the court of appeals with two principal issues:
1) whether issue and claim preclusion doctrines can be applied in
successive termination of parental rights (TPR) cases; and 2) whether
the respondent was entitled to judicial substitution.
Under the doctrine of claim preclusion, a final judgment in an action
is conclusive in all subsequent actions between the same parties or
their privies as to all matters that were litigated or might have been
litigated in the earlier action. Under the doctrine of issue preclusion,
a judgment in an action forecloses relitigation in a subsequent action
of factual or legal issues that were actually litigated and decided in
the earlier action.
In a decision authored by Judge Hoover, the court concluded that
claim and issue preclusion may be utilized in TPR proceedings
(see ¶ 7). (The court noted, however, that because the
interests of children are involved in a custody proceeding, claim
preclusion should not be as strictly applied in TPR cases as it is in
other cases (see ¶ 9).)
With regard to the judicial substitution issue, the circuit court had
ruled that the respondent's substitution request was untimely because it
was not filed before the "hearing of any preliminary contested matters"
under Wis. Stat. section 801.58. The respondent contended that the
applicable statute is Wis. Stat. section 48.29, which allows a request
for substitution "either before or during the plea hearing... ." The
appellate court agreed with the respondent and held that he was entitled
to judicial substitution because his request was timely under section
48.29 (see ¶¶ 11-13).
Divorce - Marital Estate - Government Pension with Spendthrift
Provision
Waln v.
Waln, 2005 WI App 54 (filed 23 Feb. 2005) (ordered published 24
March 2005)
The petitioner, Larry Waln, worked for the Milwaukee Police
Department for many years. He left the department in 1996 and began
receiving duty disability payments. When he turns 63 in 2007, his duty
disability payments will end, and his pension payments will begin. In
2003, after 26 years of marriage, Larry and his wife, Barbara, were
divorced. At the time of the divorce, the value of Larry's pension was
more than $360,000. Barbara sought half of the monthly pension payment,
when and if it is paid, as well as an order directing Larry to elect the
50 percent joint survivor annuity pension payout option and name Barbara
the beneficiary. The court was barred from directly dividing the pension
by a statutory spendthrift provision, Wis. Stat. section 62.63(4). The
circuit court thus found that Larry's pension was not subject to
property division. It also declined to order the payout election and
beneficiary designation requested by Barbara. Barbara appealed, and the
court of appeals, in a decision authored by Judge Peterson,
reversed.
Wisconsin courts usually characterize a pension as property instead
of as income and either divide the pension or divide other marital
assets to effect a de facto pension division. However, the appellate
court recognized that there is little case law interpreting how the
statutory spendthrift provision governing government pensions affects
the court's power to equitably divide marital assets at divorce. The
court of appeals concluded that, though the spendthrift provision bars a
court from directly dividing the pension, it does not bar a court's
discretionary authority to consider the pension when dividing the
marital estate.
"The pension is still a marital asset accumulated during the course
of the marriage. Even when a court cannot divide a pension through a
domestic relations order, the court retains broad discretion in dividing
a pension plan between the parties. The court has the discretionary
authority to order the employee spouse to make a specific payout
election or enter other orders in the event a selection is made which
runs counter to the non-employee spouse's interests. Therefore, the
spendthrift provision, while barring a direct order dividing the
pension, does not completely usurp the court's ability to effectuate an
equitable division of the parties' assets, including the pension"
(¶ 17) (internal quotes and citations omitted).
Because the circuit court erroneously concluded that the spendthrift
provision left it no discretion to consider the pension when dividing
the marital estate, the appellate court reversed with directions to the
circuit court to consider the pension.
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Insurance
UM Coverage - "Complete Operation" Doctrine
Austin-White v.
Young, 2005 WI App 52 (filed 1 Feb. 2005) (ordered published 24
March 2005)
Austin-White was injured while assisting Young with some landscaping.
Young had removed the tailgate of an inoperable dump truck and placed it
on his Bobcat, and he intended to put the tailgate on the flatbed of his
nearby pickup truck. While Young was driving the Bobcat, the tailgate
fell and struck Austin-White's leg, injuring him. At the time of the
accident, Austin-White was standing near Young's pickup truck waiting
for Young to drive him home. Young's vehicles were uninsured, so
Austin-White sought coverage under uninsured motorist (UM) coverage
issued to Austin-White's parents by AMI. The circuit court determined
that Young was liable for Austin-White's injuries but granted AMI's
motion to dismiss on the coverage issues. Austin-White appealed.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Hoover, affirmed
in part and reversed in part. The parties agreed that Young's pickup
truck was an "uninsured vehicle" but disputed whether it was "in use"
when Austin-White was injured. The court held that the pickup truck was
"in use."
"[T]he question is whether Young's use of the Bobcat to lift the
tailgate was a part of loading the pickup truck and was a reasonably
consistent use of the truck. We answer both parts of that question
affirmatively" (¶ 12). "Using a pickup truck, flatbed or otherwise,
to transport cargo is part of the truck's inherent nature. The bed
portion of a truck is not intended for passengers, meaning
transportation of cargo, including scrap metal, is the very purpose of
the design" (¶ 13).
"We are satisfied that this case is controlled by precedent applying
the `complete operation' doctrine... . It is undisputed that Young was
in the process of moving the tailgate onto the flatbed of the pickup
truck. To do this, he needed to transport the gate from its original
location. That he used the Bobcat is irrelevant-it was simply a
necessary, preparatory act preceding his setting the gate on the
flatbed. The pickup truck is a covered vehicle under the AMI policy,
[Austin-White's] injuries occurred while Young was in the `complete
operation' of loading the pickup, and the loading is a covered use.
Therefore, [Austin-White] is covered under the uninsured motorist
provisions of the policy" (¶¶ 14-15).
Nonetheless, Austin-White was not covered under AMI's medical payment
provision. Succinctly stated, Austin-White neither was "struck by" a
motor vehicle nor was an "occupant" of the pickup truck when injured.
"He was not in the truck, upon the truck, or getting into, onto, out of,
or off of the truck" (¶ 18).
UIM Coverage - "Underinsured"
Praefke
v. Sentry Ins. Co., 2005 WI
App 50 (filed 28 Dec. 2005) (ordered published 24 March 2005)
Praefke was seriously injured in an accident in which another driver
was negligent. He incurred medical bills in excess of $400,000. The
tortfeasor's vehicle was covered by a policy with a $100,000 combined
single liability limit. The entire limit was paid out, with most of the
money going to Praefke. Praefke's vehicle was covered by a policy with
Sentry that included underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage of $100,000
per person and $300,000 per accident. The trial court ruled that the
tortfeasor's vehicle was not "underinsured" within the meaning of
Sentry's policy and also that Sentry's reducing clause was not
"contextually ambiguous."
The court of appeals, in an opinion authored by Judge Wedemeyer,
affirmed. "A review of the Praefkes' insurance policy reveals that this
case involves the newer, more modern view of UIM coverage as the policy
refers to limits comparison, rather than damages.
Accordingly, the Praefkes' reasonable expectation should be that the UIM
coverage will apply only if the tortfeasor's liability limit is
less than the $100,000 in UIM coverage provided in the Sentry
policy they purchased" (¶ 11). Under the Sentry policy's language,
"the court must apply the limit of the liability policy to the
limit of the UIM coverage purchased" (¶ 13). Because the
amounts were the same, the tortfeasor's vehicle was not "underinsured."
The court was not persuaded that the "combined single limit" of $100,000
on the tortfeasor's vehicle was "different" than Praefke's "$300,000 UIM
coverage per accident" (¶ 15).
UM Coverage - Not Ambiguous
Myers v.
General Casualty Co., 2005 WI App 49 (filed 2 Feb. 2005)
(ordered published 24 March 2005)
Myers was injured in an accident caused by an uninsured motorist.
Because Myers was working when the accident occurred, he received more
than $213,000 in worker's compensation benefits. Myers claimed that he
also was entitled to $100,000 in uninsured motorist (UM) coverage under
his own policy issued by General Casualty. The policy contained a
reducing clause, and so the insurer denied the claim. The circuit court
ruled that the reducing clause was valid and was not contextually
ambiguous.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Nettesheim,
affirmed. First, the court held that the reducing clause complied with
Wis. Stat. section 632.32(5)(i), despite Myers' contentions to the
contrary. The statute does not mandate any "magic language," and the
reducing clause need not "mirror the language of the statute" (¶
12). Second, the court held that the reducing clause was not
contextually ambiguous. The court noted that "published case law
concerning contextual ambiguity" heretofore "has been limited to
underinsured motorist [UIM] provisions"(¶ 17). Acknowledging the
differences between UIM and UM coverage, the court saw "no reason why
the principles governing contextual ambiguity in a UIM reducing clause
setting should not also apply in a UM reducing clause setting" (¶
18).
The court then reviewed the policy's provisions, including its title
page, which advised the insured to "read [the] policy carefully," and
the index, which "correctly refers the insured to the reducing clause in
the primary policy in an orderly, direct and understandable fashion"
(¶ 22). "In summary, we conclude that there is nothing in General
Casualty's primary policy which would befuddle a reasonable insured in
his or her attempt to locate and understand the limits of the policy's
UM coverage, including the reducing effect of any past or future
worker's compensation payments. In tracing the route that a reasonable
insured would have had to take to arrive at General Casualty's UM
reducing clause, we encounter no inconsistent or misleading provisions
which might produce an objectively reasonable alternative meaning of the
policy. We conclude that the UM reducing clause in General Casualty's
policy is not contextually ambiguous and is therefore enforceable"
(¶ 26) (citations omitted).
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Property
Partition - Warranty Deed - Equitable Reimbursement
O'Connell v.
O'Connell, 2005 WI App 51 (filed 1 Feb. 2005) (ordered published
24 March 2005)
Two brothers and their wives had since 1951 owned a parcel of land,
in which each couple had an undivided half interest. In 1994 the owners
signed a warranty deed that conveyed a one-half interest in the property
to one brother, Gerald, and his wife (Gerald) and a one-quarter interest
to Gerald's brother's two sons (the nephews). Gerald claimed to have
made substantial improvements to the property prior to the 1994 deed.
When a dispute arose over tree-cutting revenues in 1999, Gerald sought
partition of the property and reimbursement for past improvements. The
parties stipulated to the partition, the property was sold, and Gerald
sought reimbursement of nearly $50,000. Following a hearing, the circuit
court denied Gerald reimbursement for improvements made before the
warranty deed was executed in 1994, but it granted reimbursement for
improvements made after the deed was signed. Gerald appealed.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Cane, reversed.
According to the court, the "critical issue" was "whether Wis. Stat.
§ 706.10(5) and the warranty deed in question extinguish the access
to equity in a partition action authorized by Wis. Stat. § 842.02"
(¶ 10). Neither the statute nor the warranty deed itself could "cut
off Gerald's equitable claim ... unless an inchoate, potential cause of
action in equity constitutes an encumbrance" (¶ 11). "Wisconsin
courts have long recognized a distinction between an interest that
attaches to property and a right recognized in courts to assert an
equitable claim" (¶ 12). "Unlike a mortgage or ordinary lien, the
right codified in Wis. Stat. § 842.02 does not therefore attach to
the property nor does it automatically diminish its value" (¶
13).
Nor did Gerald's potential claim fall within the category of
"equitable liens," namely, a "debt, duty, or obligation owing by one
person to another" at the time of the 1994 warranty deed. Indeed, until
the "unity of possession was dissolved" in 1994, Gerald could not have
asked for reimbursement (¶¶ 14-15). "Wisconsin's law of
partition expressly authorizes circuit courts in equity to order
compensation by one party to another when a partition does not equalize
the positions of the parties. Gerald argues for compensation on exactly
that ground. He claims the half-share in the proceeds of the sale his
half ownership would ordinarily entitle him to is inadequate because
expenses borne only by him increased the property's value" (¶ 17).
The court also rejected the nephews' argument that the doctrine of
laches also foreclosed Gerald's claim (see ¶ 19).
Addressing the award of attorney fees to the parties, the court
remanded the matter because the record was incomplete and there were a
number of issues for the trial court to consider.
Construction Liens - Bonds - Releases
Hunzinger Constr.
Co. v. SCS of Wis. Inc., 2005 WI
App 47 (filed 23 Feb. 2005) (ordered published 24 March 2005)
The sole issue before the court was "whether Demco Wisconsin, ... as
property owner, is entitled to dismissal from a lien foreclosure action
initiated by SCS of Wisconsin, Inc." The court of appeals, in an opinion
authored by Judge Anderson, affirmed the trial court's order dismissing
Demco, "because the property was released from the lien by the bond
... pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 779.08 (2003-04) and no personal
judgment can otherwise be rendered against Demco" (¶ 1).
Although Wis. Stat. section 779.08 "plainly states that the lien
foreclosure action shall continue as if the interested parties had not
furnished a release bond, this does not mean, as SCS contends, that the
owner of the property subject to the lien must remain a party to the
action. First, the language SCS cites in support of its argument cannot
be read in isolation. When read in its entirety, the statute expressly
provides that if a bond is properly filed and deposited and the lien
claimant does not take exception to the bond within the allowed time,
the lien attaches to the security bond, the amount adjudged due in the
foreclosure proceeding is satisfied out of the security bond and `the
property described in the lien claim shall thenceforth be entirely
free of the lien and shall in no way be involved in subsequent
proceedings'" (¶ 10) (citation omitted).
"By its plain language, the patent purpose of the release bond
procedure found in Wis. Stat. § 779.08 is to allow a property owner
whose property is the subject of a construction lien or a general
contractor, acting on the owner's behalf, to substitute a bond for the
property. It provides a means by which, before a final determination of
the lien claimant's rights and without prejudice to those rights, the
property may be freed of the lien, so that it may be sold, developed or
used as security for a loan. The procedure thus protects both the
property owner by allowing the bond to substitute for the land as the
object to which the lien attaches and the claimant by providing an
alternate source of recovery on the claim of lien" (¶ 11). On the
facts of record, then, Demco was properly dismissed from the
lawsuit.
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Torts
Architects - Standard of Care
Kerry
Inc. v. Angus-Young Assocs. Inc., 2005 WI App 42 (filed 24 Feb.
2005) (ordered published 24 March 2005)
Kerry Inc. brought claims for breach of contract, professional
negligence, and misrepresentation against an architectural firm,
Angus-Young Associates Inc. Several parties appealed the circuit court's
order granting summary judgment in favor of Angus-Young. The court of
appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Deininger, reversed because
material issues of fact existed about whether Angus-Young had fulfilled
the requisite standard of care.
Before it purchased a building near a river, Kerry Inc. retained an
engineering firm (Rust) that inspected the property and issued a report.
Kerry later retained Angus-Young to perform architectural services as
part of a renovation, and Kerry provided Angus-Young with Rust's report.
After work began, workers discovered serious and expensive problems with
the building's foundation. Kerry alleged that it would not have
undertaken the renovation had it known of the foundation problem before
work began. Kerry sued Angus-Young on a variety of claims, which
alleged, in effect, that Angus-Young had failed to properly review
Rust's report and failed to determine the renovation's true cost. Rust
cross-claimed for contribution and indemnification against
Angus-Young.
Case law lead the court to hold that "Angus-Young cannot claim to
have been absolved by its contract from its duty to exercise `due
architectural care' in performing services for Kerry - that duty
pre-existed the parties' contract and attached itself to all activities
Angus-Young performed in fulfilling its contract with Kerry relating to
the renovation project"(¶ 10).
Nor was the court persuaded that Angus-Young had contractually
limited the scope of its services. Unlike claims in several cited
decisions, Kerry's claim "does not involve an alleged duty to oversee
construction methods or worksite safety. The defect that allegedly
caused Kerry to suffer a loss involved the building under renovation
itself, not an adjacent area. Kerry does not claim that Angus-Young was
contractually obligated to perform its own structural inspection of the
building foundation, but that, in the exercise of due architectural
care, it should have recognized the inadequacy of the Rust report to
serve as a basis for its preparation of plans for the renovation of the
building. Because the report says nothing about the building's
foundation below the water line and is silent with respect to whether
the underwater features were inspected, Kerry claims that Angus-Young
should have called for a more extensive inspection before it performed
its contracted service of planning the renovation work to be done on the
building. We agree with Kerry that the parties' contract does not
preclude such a claim"(¶¶ 14-15).
After listing the pertinent contract provisions, the court held that
"the foregoing provisions required Angus-Young to devise and furnish
Kerry with plans and specifications that would result in Kerry obtaining
a safe and suitable building to house its business" (¶ 16).
Moreover, Kerry submitted sufficient evidence on these claims to
withstand summary judgment.
The court also addressed Kerry's misrepresentation claims. Although
these too were found sufficient to withstand summary judgment, there was
some "question whether Kerry's misrepresentation claims add anything to
its ability to recover the damages it seeks from Angus-Young" on the
claim for the breached standard of care (¶ 22).
Punitive Damages - Jury Instructions
Schwigel
v. Kohlmann, 2005 WI App 44 (filed 23 Feb. 2005) (ordered
published 24 March 2005)
This case arose out of a failed business relationship between two
tool makers. An earlier appeal resulted in an order for retrial. On
retrial the jury awarded the plaintiff approximately $250,000 on various
contract-related claims, $12,000 for conversion, and $375,000 in
punitive damages. The trial judge answered 16 of 18 special verdict
questions and left the jury with only two issues relating to damages.
(The scope of the retrial was limited to damages.) The defendants
appealed.
The court of appeals, in an opinion authored by Judge Snyder,
affirmed despite an error in the jury instructions. "Neither the jury
instructions nor the verdict form itself advised the jury that punitive
damages are not to be awarded for the breach of contract and must be
determined based only upon Kohlmann's conduct in relation to the
conversion claim. By such omission, the trial court failed to fully and
fairly inform the jury of the rules of law applicable to the case"
(¶ 10). The error was, however, harmless because the "jury heard
and considered the same evidence of outrageous conduct that would have
been presented had the breach of contract compensation issue been
severed and tried independently" (¶ 12). Nothing in the original
remand order suggested that the case had to be heard in a "contextual
vacuum" (¶ 13).
The court also held that the evidence clearly supported the jury's
punitive damages determination. The defendant conceded that "he acted
with malice in converting" plaintiff's tool-making related property, but
he pointed to a number of factors that allegedly undermined the award,
especially the 30:1 ratio between the punitive damages award ($375,000)
and the conversion award ($12,000). "The United States Supreme Court has
observed that larger punitive damages awards may be constitutional where
`a particularly egregious act has resulted in only a small amount of
economic damages.' In the context presented here, Kohlmann's profoundly
egregious conduct was disproportionate to the relatively small amount of
economic loss incurred by Schwigel. Accordingly, a comparison of the
punitive damages award to the compensatory damages award does not defeat
the jury's verdict" (¶ 22). Moreover, the court was unpersuaded
that the amount of the punitive damages award should be somehow related
to the amount of "the penalty that would have been available in a
comparable criminal charge" (¶ 23). Finally, the court held that
the evidence also fully supported the jury's award of compensatory
damages (see ¶¶ 25-28).
Slip and Fall - Icy Public Sidewalk - Liability of Owner of
Abutting Land
Holschbach v.
Washington Park Manor, 2005 WI App 55 (filed 23 Feb. 2005)
(ordered published 24 March 2005)
The plaintiff slipped, fell, and injured himself on an icy public
sidewalk abutting property containing an apartment complex that the
defendant owned and operated. The icy patch had formed as a result of
runoff from the defendant's property. A downspout running from the roof
of the apartment building to the ground directed drainage away from the
building and toward the sidewalk, because of the natural grade of the
land. A local ordinance arguably required that the downspout instead be
connected to the city storm sewer system. The plaintiff commenced a
negligence cause of action, which was dismissed by the circuit court on
summary judgment.
In a decision authored by Judge Brown, the court of appeals affirmed.
As described by the appellate court, this case involved an issue that
has arisen numerous times in Wisconsin case law, namely, whether an
injured plaintiff who has slipped and fallen on an icy public sidewalk
may sue the owner of the property abutting the walk for not alleviating
the icy condition. Said the court, "the law is that when a properly
working downspout built in the ordinary and usual manner discharges
water upon the property and such water finds its way to the public
sidewalk because of the natural slope and topography of the land, the
resulting runoff onto the sidewalk is a natural condition for which the
property owner incurs no liability. Such are the facts of this case..."
(¶ 1). This result does not change merely because a city ordinance
may have required the defendant to connect the downspout to the city
storm sewer system (see ¶ 22).
A defendant may, however, incur liability for artificial
accumulations. Thus, when a property owner by negligent omission, for
example, by failing to properly repair a drainage system, allows water
to accumulate in a place where a person would expect to find only a
normal amount of water, then an artificial condition exists. Case law
recognizes that the presence of a design system is crucial to a
slip-and-fall plaintiff's case: something made with human labor must be
defective, and the runoff must result from that defect. When a properly
working downspout constructed in the ordinary and usual way discharges
water onto land and such water flows to the sidewalk merely by virtue of
the natural and ordinary layout of the land, no design system exists
(see ¶ 17).
The icy condition of the sidewalk in front of the defendant's
property resulted from a natural accumulation of water. Accordingly, the
appellate court held that the defendant was not liable for that
condition.
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