Wisconsin Lawyer
Vol. 78, No. 8, August
2005
Punitive Damages Against a Drunk Driver
In a recent case, the
Wisconsin Supreme Court determined that punitive damages may be
available against drunk drivers who cause injury while engaged in
aggravated conduct that disregards the rights of the plaintiff. Sound
straightforward? Guess again.
by Dustin T. Woehl & James
M. Ryan
driver dialing a cell phone runs a stop sign, smashes into
another car, and severely injures its passengers. No reasonable
defendant would seriously contest liability. If damages are not at
issue, the passengers should be able to quickly settle their claims and
be compensated for their injuries. However, if the defendant was drunk,
a wildcard surfaces: punitive damages. Cases that otherwise would settle
will be strenuously litigated if the plaintiffs and defendants have
widely divergent estimations of the chance that punitive damages will be
awarded. While most insurance policies do not cover punitive damages,
the danger of protracted litigation becomes more acute if the defendant
is able to pay a punitive damage award, through insurance or
otherwise.1 Unfortunately, parties in
any given drunk driving case will seldom agree on whether punitive
damages are likely to be awarded, and the problem runs deeper than
optimism on either side. Rather, the inability to agree is due, in large
part, to a lack of clarity in the law governing the availability of
punitive damages. This confusion was introduced in 1995 when the
Wisconsin Legislature codified the availability of punitive damages as
part of a broader tort reform package. Section 895.85(3) of the
Wisconsin Statutes makes punitive damages available in situations in
which "evidence is submitted showing that the defendant acted
maliciously toward the plaintiff or in an intentional disregard of the
rights of the plaintiff."
|
Dustin T.
Woehl, Pennsylvania 2000 cum laude, is an associate in Kasdorf,
Lewis & Swietlik's Milwaukee office, where he practices in civil
litigation. He was an editor of the University of Pennsylvania's
Journal of Labor and Employment Law.
|
James M. Ryan, Marquette 1985, is a shareholder in the
Milwaukee office of Kasdorf, Lewis & Swietlik. He practices in civil
litigation with a focus on insurance and personal injury defense and has
handled numerous cases involving punitive damages and drunk driving.
. |
|
For the next 10 years, lower courts struggled to determine whether
defendants who cause accidents while driving drunk have acted "in an
intentional disregard of the rights of the plaintiff." In Wischer v.
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries America Inc. and Strenke v.
Hogner, the Wisconsin Supreme Court recently addressed the standard
for punitive damages. In these companion cases, the court held that a
defendant acts in the intentional disregard of the rights of the
plaintiff when the defendant "acts with a purpose to disregard the
plaintiff's rights, or is aware that his or her acts are substantially
certain to result in the plaintiff's rights being disregarded."2 The court refused to fashion a bright-line rule
that driving while intoxicated is always an intentional disregard of the
plaintiff's rights. Rather, the court indicated that the issue must be
addressed on a case-by-case basis. It held that conduct is an
intentional disregard of the plaintiff's rights when the conduct is a
deliberate act that actually disregards the plaintiff's rights and is
sufficiently aggravated to warrant punishment. It remains to be seen
whether this newly articulated standard will help parties to effectively
gauge the likelihood that punitive damages will be available in any
given case. After tracing the evolution of the punitive damages
standard, this article addresses several issues that must be addressed
in applying the current standard.
Punitive Damages for Drunk Driving Under the Common Law
Before 1995, the award of punitive damages in Wisconsin was governed
by the common law. Punitive damages were available for "outrageous"
conduct that was either malicious or "in wanton, willful, or reckless
disregard of the plaintiff's rights."3 Thus
punitive damages were allowed for conduct when "the defendant knows, or
should have reason to know, not only that his conduct creates an
unreasonable risk of harm, but also that there is a strong probability,
although not a substantial certainty, that the harm will result but,
nevertheless, he proceeds with his conduct in reckless or conscious
disregard of the consequences."4 In drunk
driving cases, punitive damages were available when there was evidence
that the defendant's intoxication contributed to the accident.5
Enactment of Wis. Stat. Section 895.85
The legislature enacted Wis. Stat. section 895.85(3) in 1995 as part
of a sweeping tort reform package. This statute provides that punitive
damages are available "if evidence is submitted showing that the
defendant acted maliciously toward the plaintiff or in an intentional
disregard of the rights of the plaintiff." It is the "intentional
disregard" part of the standard that has proved troublesome.
Commentators and courts agree that the legislature intended section
895.85 to narrow the availability of punitive damages.6 However, in describing the level of intent
necessary for punitive damages, the legislature inexplicably used a
phrase that had no established meaning in Wisconsin jurisprudence:
"intentional disregard."7 Courts therefore
struggled to interpret what effect section 895.85 would have on the
availability of punitive damages.
Trial Courts' Interpretation of Section 895.85
Trial courts struggled to apply section 895.85 to drunk driving cases
and reached varying results. Some courts found that drinking and driving
is an "intentional disregard" of the plaintiff's rights because the
driver deliberately engages in dangerous conduct that jeopardizes the
safety of other drivers. These decisions typically focused on the
defendant's level of intoxication and history of drunk driving.
Other courts held that the particular defendant's intoxication was
insufficient to show that the defendant acted in the intentional
disregard of the plaintiff's rights. These decisions typically relied on
Wisconsin Model Civil Jury Instruction 1707.1, which provides, in
pertinent part: "A person acts in an intentional disregard of the rights
of the plaintiff if the person acts with a purpose to disregard the
plaintiff's rights, or is aware that his or her acts are practically
certain to result in the plaintiff's rights being disregarded." Reading
"plaintiff's rights being disregarded" as synonymous with "plaintiff
being injured," these decisions concluded that evidence of drinking and
driving, without more, does not show that the defendant was actually
aware that the conduct was "practically certain" to injure the
plaintiff.8
Appellate Decisions Bring Little Clarity
Prior to the recent decisions in Wischer v. Mitsubishi
Heavy Industries America Inc.9 and
Strenke v. Hogner,10 Wisconsin
appellate courts had only touched on the 1995 punitive damages statute.
The court of appeals' most thorough interpretation of section 895.85
came in its 2003 decision in Wischer, 11 which the Wisconsin Supreme Court reversed in
2005.
Wischer involved the collapse of the "Big Blue" construction
crane at Milwaukee's Miller Park stadium. The plaintiffs, the estates of
workers killed in the accident, sought punitive damages based on the
decision to lift a section of the stadium roof despite strong winds.
They argued that the decision to proceed with the lift was in
intentional disregard of the workers' rights because 1) it was an
intentional act that 2) resulted in the disregard of the plaintiffs'
rights. The jury returned a compensatory damages award of $5.25 million
and a punitive damages award of $94 million.
The court of appeals held that "the phrase `intentional disregard of
the rights of the plaintiff' in Wis. Stat. § 895.85(3) can only be
reasonably interpreted to require either a purpose by a defendant to
cause injury to the plaintiffs or knowledge that the defendant's conduct
was practically certain to cause the accident or injury to the
plaintiffs."12 The plaintiffs conceded that
there was no evidence that the defendants knew or had reason to know
that their conduct would cause the harm. The court of appeals thus
reversed the award of punitive damages.
The court reasoned that the plaintiffs' interpretation would actually
expand the availability of punitive damages beyond that available before
the enactment of section 895.85(3). The court cited Loveridge v.
Chartier, which overturned a punitive damages award against a man
who had unintentionally infected a woman with genital herpes. Under the
common law, punitive damages could only be recovered if "the defendant
knows or should have reason to know not only that his conduct creates an
unreasonable risk of harm but also that there is a strong probability,
although not a substantial certainty, that the harm will result but,
nevertheless, he proceeds with his conduct in reckless or conscious
disregard of the consequences."13 In
Loveridge, the court found no evidence that the defendant knew or
had reason to know that his conduct created an unreasonable and strong
probability of harm. Punitive damages therefore were not appropriate.
Under the Wischer plaintiffs' interpretation of section
895.85(3), punitive damages would have been available in
Love-ridge because the defendant engaged in intentional conduct
that resulted in the plaintiff's rights being disregarded.
The Supreme Court Weighs In
The court of appeals' decision in Wischer was the prevailing
interpretation of section 895.85(3) until two recent Wisconsin Supreme
Court decisions. In Strenke v. Hogner, the supreme court
addressed the application of section 895.85(3) to drunk driving.14 In a companion case, the court reversed the
court of appeals' decision in Wischer.15 Even after these decisions, questions remain
regarding the availability of punitive damages in drunk driving
cases.
Strenke involved an automobile accident caused by the
defendant's drunk driving. The accident occurred as the defendant, Levi
Hogner, was driving from one tavern to another tavern and turned his
vehicle in front of the plaintiff's oncoming vehicle.16 Hogner's blood alcohol level after the accident
was .269 percent. Strenke was injured, after which he sued Hogner, and
was awarded $225,000 in punitive damages, which Hogner appealed. The
court of appeals certified the case to the Wisconsin Supreme Court.
The court held that punitive damages are available under section
895.85 if a defendant "acts with a purpose to disregard the plaintiff's
rights, or is aware that his or her acts are substantially certain to
result in the plaintiff's rights being disregarded."17 This articulation mirrors that in the model Jury
Instruction, Wis. JI-Civil 1707.1. The court also held that the
defendant's conduct need not be directed at the specific plaintiff
seeking punitive damages in order for the plaintiff to recover under the
statute.
In Strenke, the court rejected the court of appeals'
conclusion in Wischer that conduct "intentionally disregards" the
plaintiff's rights when the defendant either aims to injure the
plaintiff or knows that his or her conduct is practically certain to
injure the plaintiff. The supreme court concluded that, because section
895.85 mentions "intentional disregard of the rights of the plaintiff,"
but does not mention "injury," the defendant need not intend to injure
the plaintiff, but need only intend to disregard the plaintiff's
rights.
The court supported this distinction by comparing the language of
section 895.85 with the common law standard for punitive damages. Under
the common law, punitive damages were available for conduct that was in
"wanton, willful, or reckless" disregard of the plaintiff's rights.
Under section 895.85, the disregard of rights must now be intentional.
According to the court, under both the common law and the statute's
plain language, the focus is on a disregard of the "rights" of the
plaintiff, not on injury to the plaintiff. The court noted that nothing
in the statute or its legislative history indicates that the legislature
intended to depart from the common law and tie the availability of
punitive damages to the likelihood that the defendant's conduct might
injure the plaintiff.18 Rather, the court
concluded "that the legislature intended to require an increased level
of consciousness and deliberateness at which the defendant must
disregard the plaintiff's rights in order to be subject to punitive
damages."19
Strenke's Three-part Test
The supreme court set three requirements to determine when a
defendant "acts with a purpose to disregard the plaintiff's rights, or
is aware that his or her acts are substantially certain to result in the
plaintiff's rights being disregarded." First, the conduct must be
deliberate. Second, "the act or conduct must actually disregard the
rights of the plaintiff, whether it be a right to safety, health or
life, a property right, or some other right."20 Third, "the act or conduct must be sufficiently
aggravated to warrant punishment by punitive damages."21
The court concluded that the defendant's drunk driving satisfied all
three requirements. First, the court noted that Hogner's conduct was
deliberate because he was not forced to drink or drive.22 The court did not specify whether this element
is meant to reflect the requirement for "the increased level of
consciousness and deliberateness at which the defendant must disregard
the plaintiff's rights in order to be subject to punitive damages."
Instead, this element appears to be a civil version of the criminal
law's "intentional act" requirement, which reflects the common-sense
notion that one should not be punished for conduct that was forced or
coerced. As the court of appeals in Wischer noted, reckless or
negligent conduct, including dialing a cell phone while driving, is also
"deliberate" or "intentional" in this sense. This requirement of
deliberate conduct therefore does not seem to reflect an increased level
of consciousness when compared to the behavior necessary to meet the
common law standard for punitive damages. Nor will this requirement
differentiate conduct that is worthy of punishment from conduct that is
simply negligent.
The court held that the second requirement was met because the "act
of drinking and driving disregarded Strenke's right to safety in using
the highway with other motorists in sober command of their
vehicles."23 This second requirement seems
to be an actual injury requirement, phrased in terms of disregarding
rights instead of causing injury. This requirement also lacks any
reference to the defendant's awareness. Instead, it requires only that
the conduct actually disregard the plaintiff's rights. This focus on the
results of the conduct rather than on the defendant's state of mind
suggests that the court does not intend the second requirement to
capture "the increased level of consciousness and deliberateness at
which the defendant must disregard the plaintiff's rights in order to be
subject to punitive damages."
The Strenke decision does not fully explore what it means for
conduct to "disregard the rights" of another. In this case, the right
that was disregarded was "Strenke's right to safety in using the highway
with other motorists in sober command of their vehicles."24 One interpretation of this is that Strenke's
right to safety was disregarded when it was violated _ that is, when he
was injured. As Justice Wilcox's concurring opinion notes, this
interpretation is supported by the common law convention of using the
phrase "disregard rights" as shorthand for "injure" or "harm" in the
broadest sense as meaning any violation of a right.
However, this interpretation runs counter to the court's separation
of these two concepts. As phrased by the court, the right at issue is
more than the right to be free from an actual harm or injury; it is
apparently the right to be free from the very risk that a right will be
violated, free from the very risk of harm or injury. A defendant
disregards the plaintiff's rights, then, by engaging in conduct that
puts the plaintiff at risk of having a right violated.
Under this reasoning, the probability that the risk will materialize
and that the plaintiff's rights will be violated does not seem to factor
in. This is a direct result of the court's rejection of an "intent to
injure" requirement. Under the court's analysis, it does not matter
whether the actual injury was substantially certain, was probable, or
was just possible as a result of the defendant's conduct. Strenke's
right to be free from having drunk drivers on the road with him is
equally disregarded regardless of whether any of those drunk drivers
ever harms him and regardless of how intoxicated the other drivers are.
In fact, Strenke's rights apparently are violated even if he never
becomes aware that he shared the road with a drunk driver.
In a concurring opinion in Wischer, Justice Roggensack
described the risk at issue as "the right of the ironworkers not to be
subjected to conditions at the time of the lift that were substantially
certain to result in injury to them."25
This interpretation would reintroduce the link between the defendant's
conduct and the probability of harm to the plaintiff, a link the
majority in Wischer and Strenke rejected.
Last, the court concluded that Hogner's conduct was "sufficiently
aggravated" to warrant punitive damages because he had four prior
convictions and was very intoxicated. This is a fairly all-encompassing
requirement. As Justice Wilcox pointed out in his concurring opinion to
Strenke, "this `added requirement' is entirely illusory, as it is
§ 895.85 that describes the level of aggravation sufficient to
warrant punitive damages in the first place."26 In Wischer, Justice Wilcox charged that
"[t]he majority in this case and in Strenke ... has written a
duly enacted law of this state out of existence."27 Furthermore, the conduct involved in
Strenke was so egregious that, without detailed analysis or
discussion, the court concluded it was sufficiently aggravated to
warrant punitive damages. Thus, the decision does not offer guidance as
to what other conduct might be sufficiently aggravated to justify the
imposition of punitive damages.
It is not readily apparent exactly how "the increased level of
consciousness and deliberateness at which the defendant must disregard
the plaintiff's rights in order to be subject to punitive damages" fits
into the picture. The court indicated that this increased level of
consciousness is the key difference between the test for punitive
damages under the common law and under section 895.85. However, the
three-part test the court articulated could be read as actually shifting
the emphasis away from the defendant's mental state.
For example, the court held that punitive damages are warranted if a
defendant is "aware that his or her acts are substantially certain to
result in the plaintiff's rights being disregarded." What does it mean
to say that a defendant's conduct can be substantially certain to
"result in a disregard" of the plaintiff's rights? The court did not
discuss what it means to "disregard" rights. The Strenke decision
refers variously to conduct disregarding the plaintiff's rights or
conduct "resulting in" the plaintiff's rights being disregarded. Both
variations seem to be shorthand for saying that, by choosing to engage
in certain conduct, the defendant disregards the plaintiff's rights.
Thus, this "disregard" is something the defendant does. It is
therefore difficult to understand what it means to require a defendant
to be aware that his or her conduct is substantially certain to result
in the plaintiff's rights being disregarded. The defendant either
regards or disregards the plaintiff's rights. It happens, by definition,
precisely when the defendant engages in deliberate conduct. The only
uncertainty, the only thing that can be substantially certain to occur
as a result of the defendant's conduct, is an actual violation of the
plaintiff's rights _ that is, actual harm or injury.
Thus, it seems more intuitive to focus on the defendant's awareness
of the likelihood that his or her conduct will result in the plaintiff's
rights actually being violated. Under this approach, which the court of
appeals adopted in Wischer, punitive damages would be available
when the defendant knows that his or her conduct is substantially
certain to harm the plaintiff, but engages in the conduct anyway. The
more likely it is that harm will result from the conduct, the more
reprehensible the defendant's decision to engage in the conduct. When
the defendant ignores a probability, though not a substantial certainty,
that his or her action will result in harm to the plaintiff's rights,
the conduct evidences a reckless disregard for those rights, which was
the standard for punitive damages under the common law. When the
defendant knows the harm is substantially certain to follow the conduct,
the defendant can be said to have intentionally disregarded the
plaintiff's rights.
The court also considered whether the defendant's conduct needs to be
directed at the specific plaintiff. The statute provides that "[t]he
plaintiff may receive punitive damages if evidence is submitted showing
that the defendant acted maliciously toward the plaintiff or in
an intentional disregard of the rights of the plaintiff."28 Under the statute's plain language, then, it
would appear that the defendant's conduct needs to be directed at the
plaintiff rather than to the world at large or at a class of people,
such as all drivers on the road. This was the conclusion reached by
Judge Rudolph Randa in a case in the Eastern District of
Wisconsin.29 Judge Randa looked to the
statutory language, including its definition of "plaintiff" as "the
party seeking to recover punitive damages" and held that "[t]he thing
which must be practically certain is not harm in the abstract, or even
harm to a certain class of people (e.g., other drivers on the road), but
harm to the plaintiff."30
The Strenke court, however, concluded that the defendant's
conduct need not be directed at the specific plaintiff. The court noted
that if the conduct needed to be directed at a specific plaintiff, then
punitive damages would not be available for a wide variety of bad
conduct, including conduct in the product liability context, because
manufacturers would not know which particular consumer would be harmed
by a product even if they might know that some consumer would almost
certainly be harmed. The court concluded that the legislature did not
intend to so dramatically change the standard for punitive damages, and
therefore the court held that the conduct need not be directed at the
specific plaintiff.
Is the Availability of Punitive Damages Narrower than
Under the Common Law?
In Strenke, the court acknowledged that the legislature
intended to make punitive damages more difficult to obtain than they
were under the common law and noted that some conduct that would have
warranted punitive damages under the common law will not warrant
punitive damages under the court's interpretation of section
895.85.31
At the very least, punitive damages should be unavailable now if they
would have been unavailable under the common law. Using Loveridge
as an example, the court of appeals in Wischer argued that
punitive damages actually would be easier to obtain under the
plaintiff's interpretation of section 895.85 than they were under the
common law. The supreme court's interpretation of section 895.85 yields
mixed results in this regard. The court's initial interpretation of
section 895.85 is that punitive damages are available when a defendant
"acts with a purpose to disregard the plaintiff's rights, or is aware
that his or her acts are substantially certain to result in the
plaintiff's rights being disregarded." Under this test, punitive damages
would not be available under Loveridge's facts. The court's
interpretation of section 895.85 seems to require, at a minimum, that
the defendant recognize that his or her conduct is risky. The defendant
in Loveridge did not suspect that his conduct might infect the
plaintiff _ thus he was not aware that his conduct was "substantially
certain to result in the rights of the plaintiff being disregarded."
The same result can be reached under the court's three-part test
under the "aggravation" requirement. The other two requirements would
allow punitive damages. The sexual conduct was deliberate. Just as
Hogner was not forced to drink, the defendant in Loveridge was
not forced to engage in sexual conduct with the plaintiff. The
plaintiff's right to physical health and safety was disregarded. Was the
defendant's conduct aggravated enough to warrant punitive damages?
Probably not, for the very reason that punitive damages were not
available under the common law _ that is, the defendant didn't know or
have reason to know that his conduct was likely to harm the plaintiff.
It is arguable that conduct that would not have merited punitive damages
under the common law is, per se, not aggravated enough to warrant
punitive damages under section 895.85. Under this interpretation,
section 895.85 would always be at least as strict as the common law
test.
But will punitive damages be more difficult to obtain now than under
the common law? For example, what is the implication of the court's
interpretation of section 895.85 for a driver who runs a stop sign while
dialing a phone? Can it be said that the driver was aware that dialing
the cell phone was substantially certain to "result in the plaintiff's
rights being disregarded"? If a plaintiff has a right to safety on the
highway with other drivers in sober control of their vehicles, surely
that right equally applies to anything that might affect the management
and control of those vehicles, whether it is something as egregious as
drinking and driving or something more mundane such as dialing a cell
phone, drinking a cup of coffee, or speeding. Further, the driver would
probably know that using a cell phone while driving is substantially
certain to result in the disregard of the safety rights of other drivers
_ that is, to put them at risk. Punitive damages therefore seem
appropriate for a broad range of conduct under the court's
interpretation of section 895.85.
Applying the three-part test could yield the same result. The conduct
was deliberate _ nobody forced the defendant to dial and drive. The
conduct resulted in the disregard of the plaintiff's right to safety. Is
the conduct "aggravated" enough? It is hard to say because the court
does not provide much guidance for determining when conduct is
sufficiently aggravated to warrant punitive damages. As Justice Wilcox
pointed out, this vagueness has serious due process implications because
it does not give defendants advance warning of what conduct could result
in punishment.32
If the three-part test articulated by the court can disallow punitive
damages for this type of conduct, it would be under the aggravation
element. The appropriate aggravating factors might include the obvious
danger of dialing and driving, the defendant's previous accidents, and
other factors. Punitive damages would not have been available under the
common law unless the driver knew or had reason to know that engaging in
the distracting conduct created "a strong probability, although not a
substantial certainty, that the harm will result." If this cannot be
shown, it is unlikely that the conduct is sufficiently aggravated to
warrant punitive damages under section 895.85.
Conclusion
Under the recent Strenke decision, punitive damages will be
available whenever a defendant engages in aggravated conduct that is
intended to disregard the plaintiff's rights or that the defendant knows
is substantially certain to result in the plaintiff's rights being
disregarded. However, the court has not specified exactly what it means
for a plaintiff's rights to be disregarded and has not expanded on what
qualifies as sufficient aggravation to warrant punitive damages. Nor is
it entirely evident that punitive damages are more difficult to obtain
now than they were under the common law. It seems that a reasonable
interpretation of Strenke is that punitive damages are available
whenever a defendant knowingly causes a risk of harm if the trial court
finds the defendant's conduct sufficiently reprehensible. As a result of
this broad discretion, it is unlikely that the punitive damages question
will be answered before trial or that parties in any given case will be
able to predict whether punitive damages will be available.
Endnotes
1Brown v. Maxey, 124 Wis. 2d
426, 369 N.W.2d 677 (1985).
2Wischer v. Mitsubishi Heavy
Indus. Am. Inc., 2005 WI 26, __Wis. 2d __, 694 N.W. 2d 320;
Strenke, 2005 WI 25, ¶ 13, __ Wis. 2d __, 694 N.W.2d
296.
3Wis. JI-Civil 1707 (citing
Brown v. Maxey, 124 Wis. 2d 426, 369 N.W.2d 677 (1985)).
4James D. Ghiardi & John J.
Kircher, Punitive Damages Law and Practice, Ch. 5, sec. 5.01
(cited with approval in Brown v. Maxey, 124 Wis. 2d 426, 369
N.W.2d 677 (1985)).
5Lievrouw v. Roth, 157 Wis.
2d 332, 342, 459 N.W.2d 850 (Ct. App. 1990) (holding "driving while
under the influence of an intoxicant will support an award of punitive
damages in an appropriate case").
6Wis. JI-Civil 1707.1 cmt. 2 (1995)
(noting "section 895.85(3) was clearly intended to be more narrow than
the case law standard").
7Wischer v. Mitsubishi Heavy
Indus. Am. Inc., 2003 WI App 202, ¶ 39, 267 Wis. 2d 638, 673
N.W.2d 303.
8See, e.g., Kannenberg v.
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., No. 02-CV-001065 (Wis. Cir. Ct.
Milwaukee County Feb. 6, 2003).
92005 WI 26, __ Wis. 2d __, 694
N.W.2d 320, rev'g & remanding 2003 WI App 202, 267 Wis. 2d
638, 673 N.W.2d 303.
102005 WI 25, __ Wis. 2d __, 694
NW.2d 296.
112003 WI App 202, 267 Wis. 2d
638, 673 N.W.2d 303, rev'd & remanded, 2005 WI 26, __ Wis. 2d
__, 694 N.W.2d 320.
12Id. ¶ 5.
13Loveridge v. Chartier,
161 Wis. 2d 150, 468 N.W.2d 146 (1990) (quoted in Wischer, 2003
WI App 202, ¶ 42, 267 Wis. 2d 638).
14Strenke, 2005 WI 25, __
Wis. 2d __, 694 N.W.2d 296.
15Wischer v. Mitsubishi Heavy
Indus. Am. Inc., 2005 WI 26, __ Wis. 2d __, 694 N.W.2d 320.
16Strenke, 2005 WI 25,
¶¶ 4-8, __ Wis. 2d __.
17Id. ¶ 3.
18Id. ¶ 29.
19Id. ¶ 34.
20Id. ¶ 38.
21Id.
22Id. ¶ 55.
23Id.
24Id. ¶ 56.
25Wischer, 2005 WI 26,
¶ 71, __ Wis. 2d __ (Roggensack, J., concurring).
26Strenke, 2005 WI 25,
¶ 98, __ Wis. 2d __ (Wilcox, J., concurring).
27Wischer, 2005 WI 26,
¶ 79, __ Wis. 2d __ (Wilcox, J., dissenting).
28Wis. Stat. § 895.85(3)
(emphasis added).
29Boomsma v. Star Transp.
Inc., 202 F. Supp. 2d 869, 881 (E.D. Wis. 2002).
30Id.
31Strenke, 2005 WI 25,
¶ 22, __ Wis. 2d __ (legislature intended to make it harder to
recover punitive damages); id. ¶ 39 (some cases that would
qualify for punitive damages under common law will no longer
qualify).
32Id. ¶ 99 (Wilcox,
J., concurring) (majority's reference to disregard of rights in the
abstract raises constitutional questions when rights are not
defined).
Wisconsin Lawyer