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  • WisBar News
    October 05, 2011

    Supreme court hears arguments for, against civil Gideon

    Oct. 5, 2011 – The Wisconsin Supreme Court held a public hearing on a rules petition that would create a right to publicly funded counsel for indigent litigants in certain civil cases.

    Supreme court hears arguments for, against civil Gideon

    By the Government Relations Team, State Bar of Wisconsin

    Supreme Court hears arguments for, against   civil   Gideon Oct. 5, 2011 – The Wisconsin Supreme Court held a public hearing on a rules petition that would create a right to publicly funded counsel for indigent litigants in certain civil cases.

    The court took no immediate action following the public hearing yesterday (Oct. 4), but may take the petition up again on Oct. 17 at a previously scheduled open administrative conference.

    The concept advanced by the petition, commonly known as a civil Gideon, would provide that in certain civil actions, an indigent litigant (defined as below 200% of the federal poverty limit) would have an attorney appointed at public expense when needed to protect the litigant’s rights to “basic human needs, including sustenance, shelter, clothing, heat, medical care, safety and child custody and placement.”

    The petition was filed in September 2010 by attorney John F. Ebbott, the executive director of Legal Action of Wisconsin (LAW). Ebbott presented the petition to the court at the public hearing, supported by many other professionals in the legal aid community.

    Prior to the hearing, LAW submitted a list of 18 other proposed speakers for the hearing, many of whom made presentations to the court, including Ebbott and the following:

    • Hon. David Keck, Winnebago County court commissioner;
    • Hon. Mary E. Triggiano, Milwaukee County Circuit Court;
    • Hon. Michael McAlpine, Monroe County Circuit (retired);
    • Hon. Thomas Donegan, Milwaukee County Circuit Court;
    • Hon. Glenn Yamahiro, Milwaukee County Circuit Court;
    • Hon. James Gramling, Milwaukee Municipal Court (retired);
    • Justice Earl Johnson Jr., scholar in residence, Western Center on Law and Poverty;
    • Jim Brennan, president, State Bar of Wisconsin;
    • Michael Greco, past president, American Bar Association;
    • John Pollock, Public Justice Center;
    • John S. Skilton, past president, State Bar of Wisconsin;
    • Christopher Hanewicz, president, Wisconsin Equal Justice Fund;
    • Winston Ostrow, Godfrey & Kahn, Green Bay;
    • E. Michael McCann, Milwaukee County district attorney (retired);
    • Marsha Mansfield, Wisconsin Access to Justice Commission; and
    • Thomas Cannon, executive director, Milwaukee Legal Aid Society.

    Several other individuals and organizations also testified and/or filed written comments regarding the petition. Ebbott also filed an executive summary and a memorandum in support of the petition. The executive summary suggests that funding for such a program could come from counties (as in Dean appointments in the criminal justice system), with possible reimbursement by the state.

    State Bar supports concept in principle

    At its meeting on Sept. 23-24, 2011, the State Bar of Wisconsin’s Board of Governors (Board) voted to support the civil Gideon concept in principle without supporting or opposing any specific petition. State Bar President Jim Brennan presented the Board’s position to the court at the Oct. 4 public hearing.

    According to the Board’s position, “The State Bar of Wisconsin affirms the historic duty accorded to the Wisconsin Supreme Court by the Wisconsin Constitution to exercise ‘superintending and administrative authority over all courts,’ including its inherent supervisory power over the practice of law. The State Bar supports policies which encourage or enhance the quality and availability of legal services to the public, including persons unable to afford legal representation in civil cases.”

    In his remarks to the court, Brennan emphasized the State Bar’s history of supporting the right to counsel, as well as judiciary’s historic role in appointing counsel for indigent litigants. According to Brennan, the Wisconsin Supreme Court should reinvigorate this core judicial function, as part of its constitutional, superintending authority over the judiciary, to ensure that litigants in our courts are adequately represented in civil cases, on a case-by-case basis.

    State Bar support for right to counsel 

    Over the years, the State Bar Board has adopted several other public policy positions related to the subject matter of the petition. In September 1994, the Board stated that the State Bar “supports the exercise of inherent judicial power to appoint attorneys to assist the court in the fair administration of justice by service as counsel for parties, guardians ad litem and special prosecutors.”

    The Board has also long-supported “state general purpose revenue funding to provide civil legal assistance by lawyers to low-income citizens … [and] recognizes that legal needs of low-income individuals go largely unmet and that access to legal services removes obstacles for low-income individuals in obtaining and maintaining employment, health care and child care.”

    In July 2008, the State Bar petitioned the Supreme Court to create an Access to Justice Commission, which the court established in June 2009 “to develop and encourage means of expanding access to the civil justice system for unrepresented low income Wisconsin residents.” Pursuant to the 2009 order creating the commission, the State Bar agreed to fund commission staff for at least its first three years of existence.

    The Board also supported a 2010 petition seeking a judicial statement that the statutory hourly rate paid to private attorneys appointed by the State Public Defender (SPD) is “unreasonable” and sought an increase in the Supreme Court rate for court-appointed attorneys under SCR 81.02. The court denied that petition in July 2011. However, it did so while warning that without legislative action to increase the SPD hourly rate, Wisconsin faces the prospect of a constitutional crisis as the criminal justice system reaches the “breaking point.”

    U.S. Supreme Court weighs in

    On June 20, 2011, the U.S. Supreme Court decided in Turner v. Rogers et al., that the Constitution does not automatically require the provision of counsel at civil contempt proceedings to an indigent individual who is subject to a child support order, even if that individual faces incarceration of up to one year.

    Under Turner, courts do not necessarily need to appoint counsel in similar civil cases that implicate due process rights, but states must ensure that unrepresented litigants are protected with procedural safeguards, such as “adequate notice of the importance of ability to pay, fair opportunity to present, and to dispute, relevant information, and court findings.”

    While Turner does not require counsel in civil cases in which incarceration is a possible result (unless the proceedings are not “fundamentally fair”), it also does not appear to prevent states from deciding to fund civil legal services or even to require the appointment of counsel to indigent persons in certain civil cases.

    A video archive of the hearing is available on the Wisconsin Eye website. Continue to monitor WisBar.org and visit the State Bar’s Government Relations page for updated information on these issues.

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