Supreme court will address conflict between federal law and
Wisconsin’s pro hac vice rules
Sept. 27, 2011 –
The Wisconsin Supreme Court will examine whether federal law preempts
Wisconsin’s pro hac vice rules when it comes to a U.S. Department of Justice attorney appearing in
the state’s courts without a Wisconsin license.
The case, Nickel v. U.S.A., is one of eight cases recently
accepted for review. The supreme court will also determine whether
annualized interest rates in excess of 1000 percent per year for a
short-term loan are per se unconscionable under the Wisconsin Consumer
Act, and whether court commissioners have the power to issue warrants,
among other issues.
Nickel v. USA, 2011AP987
The issue arises from an underlying dispute involving a Wisconsin
insurance company, Ambac Assurance, which received $700 million in
tentative federal income tax refunds from its parent company in New
York. The parent suffered large losses insuring risky mortgage debt.
With approval from the Wisconsin Insurance Commissioner, Ambac’s
troubled policies were allocated to a segregated account to be
rehabilitated by the Dane County Circuit Court. Ambac also allocated the
tax liability amount to the segregated account.
Ambac was severally liable to pay the tentative $700 million refund if
erroneously obtained. But a Dane County Circuit Court injunction
prohibited the Internal Revenue Service from collecting.
The United States filed a notice of appeal, signed by an attorney from
the tax division of the U.S. Department of Justice
(DOJ) not licensed to practice law in Wisconsin.
The appeals court granted the Wisconsin Insurance Commissioner’s
a motion to dismiss, concluding that Wis. Stat. section 802.05(1)
requires all filings in the Wisconsin state courts to be signed by an
attorney admitted to practice law in Wisconsin, and non-resident
attorneys must appear under the sponsorship of a Wisconsin attorney
under SCRs 10.03(4) and 23.02(2).
The U.S. argues that federal law preempts any state
law or regulation that precludes DOJ attorneys from appearing in state
court. Specifically, 28 U.S.C. section 517 provides that a DOJ attorneys
“may be sent by the attorney general to any state or district in
the United States to attend to the interests of the United States”
in a suit pending in state court.
Payday Loan Store of WI v. Mount,
2010AP208
Jessica Mount entered in multiple contracts with Payday Loan Store
(Payday Loans) for short-term personal loans at annualized interest
rates that varied from 446 to 1,338 percent.
When Mount defaulted, Payday Loans filed a small claims action, and
Mount counter-claimed for violations of the Wisconsin Consumer Act, Wis.
Stat section 425.107. The circuit court granted summary judgment to
Mount, concluding the loans were unconscionable.
Payday loans appealed, and the appeals court certified the case to the
supreme court. Payday Loans argues that no interest rate is per se
unconscionable under the WCA because there is no limit on finance
charges.
Other cases for review
Whether court commissioners have the power to issue warrants under the
Wisconsin Constitution is the subject of review in State v.
Williams, 2010AP1551. Specifically, the
appeals court certified
the case to the supreme court to determine if the state constitution
precludes the legislature from granting judicial powers to court
commissioners.
In Fon du Lac Co. v. Helen E.F.,
2010AP2061, the supreme court will examine whether a person who
has Alzheimer’s or similar dementia may be found to have a mental
illness for purposes of Wis. Stat. ch. 51 involuntary commitments.
Virtually every county in the state has filed proceedings under ch. 51
seeking the involuntary commitment of persons with dementia who exhibit
attributes of mental illness in the form of a treatable mood or
psychotic disorder.
The appeals court ruled that that Helen E.F., who suffers from
Alzheimer’s disease, was not a proper subject for detainment or
treatment under ch. 51. The county argues that the court of
appeals’ decision will have far reaching implications on the
liability of nursing homes that don’t have access to in-patient
psychiatric treatment to address aggressive behavior.
In Aurora Consolidated Heathcare v. Labor and Industry
Review Board, 2010AP208, the supreme
court will examine whether worker’s compensation statutes require
LIRC to allow an opportunity for cross-examination or rebuttal of an
independent medical examiner.
The appeals court asked the supreme court to clarify an apparent case
law conflict concerning the “collateral source rule” in
Orlowski v. State Farm, 2009AP2848.
Specifically, the court will examine whether a plaintiff may recover
from her insurer the reasonable value of the medical treatments she
received or the lesser amounts actually paid by the insurer, the
underinsured motorist, and his insurer.
In Zwiefelhofer v. Town of Cooks Valley,
2010AP2398, the supreme court will examine the factors that distinguish
a zoning ordinance from an ordinance enacted under a town’s
general police powers. A decision by the supreme court could help
establish the test for determining whether a town ordinance constitutes
a zoning ordinance that must be approved by the county board before it
becomes valid under Wis. Stat. section 60.62(3).
And in the consolidated cases of State v.
Gilbert, 2010AP594, and State v.
Hunt, 2010AP1155, the supreme court will examine whether
the state may bring a Wis. Stat. ch. 980 commitment petition to judgment
when the subject of the petition is still in custody.
- Derived from full
summaries posted on the Wisconsin Court System’s
website.