Quotes
from Commission Members
Download Final Commission Report
Is Our Judiciary a Co-Equal Branch of Government?
Will the judiciary ever get past the need to remind the public
and the other two branches of government that it, too, is a co-equal
branch? Perhaps not. But a State Bar commission came up with ideas on
how to better get across the message.
By Dianne Molvig
On April 2, 1874, the state superintendent of public property, who
managed the capitol building, fired the Wisconsin Supreme Court's
janitor and hired a replacement. When the justices asked the
superintendent to reverse his decision in order to keep the former
employee, the superintendent refused.
The justices chose to take official action. Within two weeks they had
issued a decision, reading in part:
"It is a power inherent in every court of record, and especially
courts of last resort, to appoint such assistants . As a power judicial
and not executive or legislative in its nature, and one lodged in a
co-ordinate branch of the government separated and independent in its
sphere of action from the other branches, it seems to be under the
protection of the Constitution, and therefore a power which cannot be
taken from the court, and given to either the executive or legislative
departments, or to any officer of either of those departments." 1
Thus, the court got to keep its janitor. This case may seem trivial
by today's standards. But it wasn't the last time the court had to
resist attempts by other government branches to usurp judicial
authority. More recent examples include:
- Several years ago the Wisconsin Legislature passed a law prohibiting
judges from appointing lawyers to represent indigent parents at risk of
losing custody of their children in CHIPS proceedings. The Wisconsin
Supreme Court ruled that the law violated the federal and state
constitutions. 2
- In 1987 the Legislature took upon itself the authority to require
and regulate training for lawyers serving as guardians ad litem in
family court actions. The supreme court ruled against the law, stating
that it interfered with the court's superintending powers and violated
the separation of powers doctrine. 3
Not all reminders of the judicial branch's independence, however,
have come in the form of formal court decisions. When the Department of
Administration (DOA) wanted to take over the state courts' computer
system a couple of years ago, the supreme court had to point out to DOA,
an executive agency, that such a move would be a threat to separation of
powers. Therefore, the court graciously but firmly refused to comply.
Former Wisconsin Supreme Court Chief Justice Nathan Heffernan discussed
the matter in a summer 1995 interview in The Verdict, noting,
"I think that the main thing that the courts have to be worried about is
that they not be treated just as another bureaucracy . and that under
the Constitution they are independent of both the legislature and the
governor."
Heffernan's words ring back to what we all heard in grade school
civics lessons: Our government has three branches, each independent and
equal in stature to the others. History shows that concept needs to be
continually refreshed not only in the minds of the general public but in
the minds of members of the legislative and executive branches. Toward
that end, in 1995 State Bar immediate past president David Saichek
established the Commission on the Judiciary as a Co-equal Branch of
Government, which recently issued its
report and recommendations.
"My reason for appointing the commission," Saichek notes, "is that I
believe the people will be better served by three branches of government
that understand each other's functions and communicate with each other
in a friendly, cooperative way. I also had the perception that in some
cases the other branches have treated the courts like an agency of state
government. It's not an agency; it's a co-equal branch of
government."
"I think there's concern as to just where the judiciary stands,"
agrees Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Jon Wilcox, who cochaired the
commission with Saichek. "But this [commission study] also was an
opportunity to look inward at the operations of the judiciary, its
relations with the other branches and how well it is serving the
public."
A fresh look
The 33-member commission had two purposes:
1) to research the historical and current framework of the separation
of powers doctrine; and
2) to explore ways the courts can properly maintain their
independence while cooperating with other branches of government, toward
the goal of serving Wisconsin citizens with basic good government.
"What we tried to do," Saichek explains, "was take a fresh look at
the separation of powers doctrine as it exists today, because certain
changes have been made in that doctrine which now make cooperation among
the three branches of government a more realistic goal. I think that's
an advance in jurisprudence, in which Wisconsin is on the leading
edge."
At the outset, the commission realized its work had to have solid
footing in legal and constitutional history. Therefore, the commission
set up a research subcommittee, whose task was to create "the platform
from which the other subcommittees made their recommendations," says
Milwaukee attorney Walter Kelly, who cochaired the research subcommittee
with Gary Sherman, Port Wing attorney and State Bar past president.
The research subcommittee's section of the report drives home two key
points about the separation of powers doctrine. First, the doctrine
exists not to protect governmental turf, but to safeguard individual
liberty by diffusing power among three branches, rather than
concentrating it in one. Second, the Wisconsin Constitution is even more
specific in spelling out judicial powers than is the U.S. Constitution.
"Wisconsin's is a strong judicial branch constitution," Kelly points
out, "and that has been a developmental and evolutionary process over
the years."
That said, history also shows that the judiciary has on occasion
deferred to the other government branches, in the interests of
cooperation between branches and better government for the state's
citizens. "There's no effort by the judiciary in this state," Kelly
says, "to drive the other branches to the wall. Sometimes the court will
choose, even in an area where it has considerable power, to defer to
either the legislative or the executive branch or both. I would call
that a form of interbranch diplomacy."
"The trick," Kelly adds, "is to have that kind of diplomacy without
surrendering ultimate bottom-line power. For all the talk about
cooperation among branches, the final word on separation of powers
issues in Wisconsin clearly remains with the supreme court."
With such concepts as a framework, the other commission subcommittees
set to the task of drawing up recommendations in four areas: interbranch
relations, court-community collaboration, court accountability, and
funding and allocation of resources.
Interbranch relations
A certain tension between branches of government perhaps always will
exist. In fact, it may be a crucial ingredient in a system based upon
three branches keeping one another in check, assuring no one branch
exceeds or misuses its powers. Yet, cordiality and respect must exist
alongside interbranch scrutiny, or all of government suffers as
ultimately do its citizens.
The interbranch subcommittee looked at ways to "build the trust
level," says Regina Frank-Reece, commission member and director of the
Office of Management and Budget in the Division of Juvenile Corrections.
"I think we all realize that our work is interdependent, and that we can
have better government if we learn how to work together better."
Frank-Reece describes her subcommittee's recommendations as "very
commonsense sorts of things." But she adds, "in my experience - which
has always been in the executive branch - these just don't happen. One
of the challenges is: How do we improve communications?"
The subcommittee came up with the following possibilities:
1) Formal communications should be developed among the three
branches and all levels of government to foster better understanding of
their functions, needs and problems, including:
- presentation of the annual state of the judiciary speech directly to
the legislative and executive branches;
- orientation programs for new legislators and new judges that address
the roles and responsibilities of each other's branch;
- materials and information on the judicial branch to be included in
orientation programs for new legislators and in interbranch
conferences;
- materials and information on the legislative branch to be included
in orientation programs for new judges and in interbranch
conferences;
- expansion of the Judicial Ride-Along Program;
- interbranch conferences; and
- joint study committees and task forces.
Although diverse, the above suggestions all aim toward the same
result: improved understanding among the branches of what other branches
do - and why and how they do it.
Of these recommendations, one of the simplest to implement may be the
first on the list. Currently, the supreme court chief justice delivers
the "state of the judiciary" speech to judicial colleagues at the annual
Judicial Conference. The impact may be comparable to "preaching to the
choir."
"As it is now the [state of the judiciary] speech is printed and
circulated to members of the other branches," notes Linda Clifford,
Madison attorney and chair of the interbranch relations subcommittee.
"But there's nothing like being in the same room together and listening
to the speech. That would give it a higher profile than it gets
now."
Sharing information is an element running through all the above
recommendations. Another common thread is facilitating personal
connection to promote communication among branches. "All branches are
operated by people," Clifford says. "You can have tools to make
communication easier, or more routine or more expected. But it's people
who have to carry that out and do it with sincerity."
2) Informal communications, such as regular meetings and
discussion groups for branch leaders at the state, county and local
levels, should be encouraged and fostered to improve understanding of
the functions, needs and problems of each branch.
In addition to formal meetings and conferences, the subcommittee
cites the value of informal gatherings of members of different
government branches. "It can be as informal as having breakfast once a
month," Clifford explains, "without having any agenda - just talking
about ideas and getting to know people. That keeps the lines of
communication open. And it humanizes the issues."
Supreme Court Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson already has initiated
various efforts to informally bring together people from different
branches. Likewise, circuit court judges in some counties have made
efforts to build friendly relationships with their local government
officials. Still, some judges are wary, fearing that efforts to reach
out to other branches may be perceived as playing politics.
While the commission recognizes that as a valid concern, it also
emphasizes that this concern should not preclude advocating for the
judiciary. What's more, if friendly interaction is ongoing, it's far
less likely to be construed as politically motivated. "If we can
establish formal and informal relationships over time," Frank-Reece
points out, "and not just during the biennial budget process, then
everybody will be better served. It makes sense that if people are
talking to each other on a more frequent basis, there will be better
understanding of the judicial branch's needs and perspective."
3) Institutional mechanisms, such as judicial checklists,
judicial impact statements and joint reports, should be developed
cooperatively by the three branches of government to improve the process
of legislative drafting and to measure and report on the effect of
legislation on the court system.
The mechanisms mentioned here are tools for preventing problems.
Judicial checklists could help legislators draft a bill in a way that
averts legal conflicts down the road. Judicial impact statements, on the
other hand, come along later in the process. For instance, if the
Legislature passes a new "get tough on crime" law, a judicial impact
statement can assess: What will this law do to the courts? Will it
create new burdens the courts won't have the resources to handle? "We'd
like to give the Legislature more opportunity to think that through,"
Clifford points out. "Whether they choose to address that remains up to
them. This recommendation just does half the job."
Court-community collaboration
Better understanding of the judiciary among those in government is
but one piece of the puzzle. Equally important, the commission
emphasizes, is public awareness of the judicial branch. The workings of
the judiciary are mostly outside the public spotlight, except for
certain notorious trials. The upshot: The public's perception of the
courts often is either nonexistent or grossly skewed.
Court-community collaboration works both ways: It's vital to an
accurate public view of the judiciary and to the courts truly serving
their "customers," the citizens. "Lawyers are a critical part of this
process," says Mary Lynne Donohue, Sheboygan attorney and chair of the
court-community collaboration subcommittee. "The community can't do it
alone; the judiciary can't do it alone. Lawyers, out of honor for their
profession, are an important part of implementing these
recommendations." The recommendations include:
1) The State Bar of Wisconsin should support the Wisconsin
Supreme Court's community involvement projects, including its
"Volunteers in the Courts" project.
Noting Chief Justice Abrahamson's proactive stance in this area, the
subcommittee called upon Bar members to get actively involved in supreme
court projects.
2) The Local Bar Grant Committee should encourage local bar
efforts to make their courthouses user-friendly.
The State Bar funds small grants to local bar associations for public
education. The commission suggests funneling some of these funds into
projects that help people find their way through the court system.
Ultimately that leads to better understanding of the court's function in
society.
3) The State Bar's Law-related Education Committee and Videotape
Committee should develop a videotape and study materials to explain the
judicial system and its relationship to the other branches of government
for distribution to schools.
A well-done videotape could introduce a realistic image of the
judiciary at a young age and help bring students' civics lessons to
life.
4) The State Bar should increase its support for local bar
efforts to enhance community understanding of the judiciary's role as an
equal branch of government by:
- providing program information at the local bar leaders' conference;
and
- providing increased opportunity for bench/bar interaction at bar
conferences.
Local efforts are key to creating awareness of the judiciary. Through
informational and conference programs, the State Bar can support local
efforts.
5) The State Bar should continue its commitment to the work of
its Cable and Broadcast Committee, which is educating the public about
the role of lawyers and the judicial branch.
This project was launched last year by then president David Saichek.
The program "Law Talk" now is shown on Milwaukee
and Madison cable stations and soon will be broadcast statewide.
Court accountability
Proclaiming co-equal status is little more than talk if the judiciary
can't demonstrate it is effectively serving the people. "A lot of what
we have now is word-of-mouth stories, some true, some untrue," says
Patricia Heim, La Crosse attorney and chair of the court accountability
subcommittee. "It's hard to actually state with any certainty that a
court system has been reviewed and that it's performing to meet
standards. We wanted to come up with concrete measurements."
Some might argue that accountabilities for the judiciary already
abound: elections, codes of ethics, media scrutiny, to name a few. Why
does the commission feel compelled to add more? Heim contends that far
from being a burden on the judiciary, new accountabilities based upon
objective measures will be a boon to the courts' cause.
"I think there's potential merit," Heim says, "when the court needs
to go to the Legislature for additional monies for facilities, judges,
personnel and so on, to be able to say, 'We have objective measurements
and here's why we need such-and-such.'"
Currently, such negotiations mostly come down to looking at court
case-counts. But objective measurements would assess quality of the
system, providing "concrete evidence to show whether the system is
working or not working," Heim says. "That will take this process out of
the number-crunching and elevate it to another level. It also takes it
out of the realm of thinking of the judiciary as just another state
agency, where the emphasis is on the bottom line."
The recommendations are:
1) The supreme court should hold court commissioners to the same
standards of conduct, education, performance and reporting as the
judiciary.
Often citizens' only contact with the court system is with court
commissioners, who are not elected by the public. The commission
recommends that court commissioners be subject to regular and objective
evaluation, and that they pursue continuing judicial education. 4
2) The supreme court should create a task force on the Quality of
the Court System comprised of judges, attorneys, legislators and
citizens to consider a methodology for judicial assessment and
improvement using the Trial Court Performance Standards and Measurement
System.
Creating a measurement tool from scratch would involve years of work.
Fortunately, a project of the National Center for State Courts and the
Bureau of Justice Assistance of the U.S. Department of Justice has
already invested the time and effort. Their Trial Court Performance
Standards and Measurement System has been developed and tested in
several states. The commission suggests that some of the 68 standards in
the Measurement System be implemented in pilot projects in selected
judicial districts.
The commission also suggests that the task force explore whether
Total Quality Management (TQM), or certain aspects of this evaluation
system, are applicable in Wisconsin. TQM is being used by courts in
Minnesota, Connecticut, New Jersey, Maryland and Maine.
3) The Wisconsin Lawyer
editorial board should consider establishing a monthly
column about issues of concern to the bar and the judiciary, including
the functioning of the court system.
This column could be a forum for discussion of concerns about the
court system. "This would be a great way for either a judge or lawyer to
pose an issue or question and have a response from the other side," Heim
explains.
4) The judiciary should take a leadership role in educating the
public about the court system, including sponsorship of public forums
and participation in educational programs.
5) The judiciary should work cooperatively and proactively with
the media to educate the public about the effect of decisions by
legislative and executive branches on the judicial branch.
Recommendations 4 and 5 speak to the need for public education about
the judiciary - a need that surfaced in other portions of the
commission's report. These recommendations tie into accountability as
well. "I think education can only help," Heim says. "When people know
more about the court system, they feel more assured about it."
Funding and allocation of resources
Funding is a chicken-and-egg issue for the courts. Adequate funding
is an indicator that the other branches, and the public at large, value
the judiciary's role and deem it a co-equal branch. At the same time,
adequate funding is crucial if the judiciary is to function well enough
to earn co-equal stature in others' eyes.
The commission refrained from simply calling for more money for the
courts - although numerous stories of funding shortages surfaced in the
public hearings held in Green Bay, La Crosse, Wausau, Milwaukee and
Madison. Rather, the funding subcommittee undertook the gargantuan task
of better understanding the state budget process. It also suggested
steps to assure the courts get the funds they need. In addition to
recommending that the State Bar and the judiciary itself actively
educate the public and other branches of government about the courts'
needs, the commission recommended:
1) The State Bar should support the Wisconsin Supreme Court's
efforts to reallocate judges throughout the state based upon caseload
need.
This is not about massive reorganization, but simply states that when
circuit court judges' caseloads allow, they should step in to help other
districts having a caseload crunch. "When I sat as a judge in Waushara
County, each judge in that district had to take a certain number of
cases in another jurisdiction," notes Supreme Court Justice Jon Wilcox,
commission cochair. "I think that's a reasonable expectation. We need
that kind of flexibility because it allows optimum use of the
judiciary."
2) Judicial compensation should be taken out of the political
process by creation of a Judicial Compensation Commission comprised of
members of the public and of the three branches of government.
Until the commission is established, an Advisory Committee to the
Legislature's Joint Committee on Employment Relations on judicial
compensation should be established.
3) The supreme court should consider the advisability of
submitting its budget directly to the Legislature, in addition to
submitting it to the executive branch.
Recommendations 2 and 3 aim to drive home the key point of this
report: The judiciary is a co-equal branch. That point becomes clouded
by current practices in which judicial salary negotiations become
political haggling. And the judiciary budget is submitted to the
Legislature as part of the executive branch budget, further feeding the
perception that the court is just another state agency.
"As someone who worked in the state budget office and through my
interactions with folks in the Legislative Fiscal Bureau," says
commission member Frank-Reece, "my sense is that is sometimes how [the
judiciary] becomes perceived." Directly submitting the judiciary budget
to the Legislature instead would reinforce the message "that the
judiciary is a separate entity," Frank-Reece points out. "It would be
very symbolic."
Dianne Molvig operates Access
Information Service, a Madison research, writing and editing service.
She is a frequent contributor to area publications.
Endnotes
1In re Janitor of Supreme
Court, 35 Wis. 410 (1874).
2Joni B. v. State of Wisconsin, 202
Wis. 2d 1, 549 N.W.2d 411 (1996).
3State ex rel. Fiedler v.
Wisconsin Senate, 155 Wis. 2d 94, 454 N.W.2d 770 (1990).
4 For more on court commissioners,
see Expanding
the Use of Court Commissioners, 70 Wis. Law. 10 (Feb.
1997).
Wisconsin Lawyer