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Vol. 72, No. 7, July 1999 |
1998 Significant Court Decisions
Highlights of the 1998 Wisconsin Supreme Court and Court
of Appeals decisions.
By Daniel W. Hildebrand
fter
reviewing the Wisconsin Supreme Court and Court of Appeals decisions
issued in 1998, the author has highlighted leading cases that
are of public interest or that significantly impact Wisconsin
lawyers and their practice of law.
Constitutional Law
Jackson v. Benson,1 a highly publicized "school
choice" case, upheld the constitutionality of the Amended
Milwaukee Parental Choice Program (MPCP). The Amended MPCP made
direct payments to parents who sent their children to sectarian
schools. The parent was required to endorse the check for use
of the private school.
The
court upheld this "school choice" program. The court
held that the program did not violate the establishment clause
of the First
Amendment because it had a secular purpose, did not have
the primary effect of advancing religion, and will not lead to
excessive entanglement between the state and participating sectarian
schools. The purpose of the program is to provide low-income
parents with an opportunity to have their children educated outside
the embattled Milwaukee public school system. Providing educational
opportunities for children of poor families is unquestionably
a state concern. The program does not have the primary effect
of advancing religion. Indeed, state programs that are wholly
neutral offer educational assistance without reference to religion.
Amended MPCP provides a religious neutral benefit to eligible
pupils and parents who participate - that is, the opportunity
to choose educational opportunities parents deem best for their
children.
Finally, the program does not involve excessive entanglement
between the state and religion. Under the program, the state
need not and is not given the authority to impose any comprehensive,
discriminating, and continuing state surveillance over participating
sectarian private schools. Although participating schools are
subject to performance, reporting, and auditing requirements,
as well as to applicable nondiscrimination, health, and safety
obligations, enforcement of these minimal standards does not
create an excessive entanglement. This oversight already exists
in that the Superintendent of Public Instruction currently monitors
the quality of education at all sectarian private schools.
The court also upheld Amended MPCP under the "benefits
clause" of article I, section 18 of the Wisconsin
Constitution, which provides "nor shall any money be
drawn from the treasury for the benefit of religious societies
or religious or theological seminaries." This is Wisconsin's
equivalent of the establishment clause. Both clauses are intended
and operate to serve the same dual purpose of prohibiting the
establishment of religion and protecting the free exercise of
religion. Unlike the Wisconsin Court of Appeals, which focused
on whether sectarian private schools were "religious seminaries"
under article I, section 18, the issue is whether the
aid provided by Amended MPCP is for the benefit of religious
institutions. The question is not whether some benefit accrues
to a religious institution, but whether the principal or primary
effect of the program advances religion. In this context, public
funds may be placed at the disposal of third parties as long
as the program on its face is neutral between sectarian and nonsectarian
alternatives, and the transmission of funds is guided by the
independent decisions of third parties. Amended MPCP does not
require a single student to attend class at a sectarian private
school. A qualifying student only attends a sectarian private
school under the program if a student's parent so chooses.
In Flynn v. Department of Administration2 the court
upheld the validity of 1993 Wis. Act 16, section 9253 (the
Act), which caused the lapse of $2,898,000 to the general fund
of unexpended program revenues designated for court automation.
These funds were derived from court filing fees and court automation
fees previously provided by the Wisconsin Legislature. Plaintiffs
challenged executive and legislative action in lapsing these
funds as violating public policy grounded in the constitution,
statutes, common law, public expectations, and the separation
of powers doctrine.
Although noting that it emphatically disagreed with the public
policy underlying the Act, the court refused to hold the Act
unconstitutional. Article VII, sections 2 and 5 of the Wisconsin
Constitution do not prohibit the Legislature from enacting
legislation to reallocate previously appropriated funds. These
provisions empower the Legislature, not the judiciary, to make
policy decisions regarding taxing and spending. Cases that require
appropriated funds be spent as appropriated are applicable to
refusals of the executive branch to spend money that the Legislature
appropriated. In this case, the Legislature changed the appropriation.
It is the Legislature's role to determine whether to reallocate
limited resources. Each legislative session may reassess the
needs of the public and provide for the allocation of scarce
public resources.
The Act did not violate the separation of powers doctrine.
The Act involved "shared powers" of the Legislature
and the judiciary. Although the judiciary has superintending
power as broad and as necessary to ensure the due administration
of justice, the judiciary is not vested with constitutional superintending
authority over the legislative budget process or determinations.
Under the shared powers doctrine, the statute cannot be held
unconstitutional unless it unduly burdens or substantially interferes
with the judiciary. Since unconstitutionality must be proven
beyond a reasonable doubt, the fact that the Act had an adverse
impact upon the courts is not, by itself, proof of an undue burden
or substantial interference.
Attorney Fees
Gorton v. Hostak, Henzl & Bichler S.C.3 concerned
the interpretation of a contingency fee agreement and a statutory
award of reasonable attorney fees under Wis. Stat. section 100.18.
The law firm contended that it was entitled to recover the statutory
award of reasonable attorney fees in addition to the contingent
fees based upon damages recovered in the underlying action. The
contingent fee contract provided that the law firm was entitled
to 40 percent of the gross amount of any recovery obtained after
a lawsuit that involves an appeal. Gorton recovered $200,000
in damages. In addition, the court awarded $307,000 in reasonable
attorney fees, making the total judgment $507,000. The law firm
argued it was entitled to 40 percent of $200,000 plus $307,000
awarded for reasonable attorney fees, for a total of $387,000.
The court disagreed, holding that the entire judgment of $507,000
belonged to Gorton, and the law firm was entitled to 40 percent
of that judgment, or $202,800.
Wis. Stat. section 100.18
provides that any person suffering pecuniary loss shall recover
such pecuniary loss, together with costs, including reasonable
attorney fees. Under the statute, an award of reasonable attorney
fees belongs to the client and not the attorney who represents
the client. The terms of the contingent fee contract provided
that the law firm would recover 40 percent of the gross amount
recovered. Therefore, the firm was not entitled to recover the
attorney fees awarded by the court but only 40 percent of those
fees. The attorney who drafted the contract had the responsibility
of drafting an unambiguous contract.
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