Author: Hamilton

Poll: 9 out 10 Say Lawsuit Abuse Is a Problem

A recent poll conducted by the American Tort Reform Association and the grassroots Sick of Lawsuits released a national survey finding that a strong majority of people believe lawsuit abuse hurts economic growth, job creation, and U.S. competitiveness.

Below are a few specific findings from the poll:

  • 89 percent surveyed think that lawsuit abuse is a problem (34 percent say a “major problem,” 35 percent  say a “big problem,” and 21 percent say a “minor problem”). Only five percent say lawsuit abuse is not a problem at all.
  • 60 percent believe that the number of lawsuits filed against businesses has hurt the U.S. economy.
  • Nearly four of five surveyed (78 percent) believe there are too many lawsuits, with 8 percent thinking there are too few, and 3 percent who say there are about the right amount.

Click here to read the entire study.

Wisconsin’s Lawsuit Climate Ranking Increases Thanks to Tort Reforms Enacted in 2011-12

Wisconsin moved up seven spots, from No. 22 to No. 15, in the U.S. Chamber Institute for Legal Reform’s latest lawsuit climate study: 2012 State Liability Systems Survey, Lawsuit Climate: Ranking the States.[1] The survey of over 1100 corporate attorneys and executives focused on a number of criteria, including each state’s overall treatment of tort and contract litigation, treatment of class action lawsuits, damages, and judges’ impartiality.

“Thanks to the significant tort reforms enacted during last session by the Wisconsin Legislature and Gov. Scott Walker, Wisconsin’s litigation climate has improved and the state is a better place to do business,” said Bill G. Smith, President of the Wisconsin Civil Justice Council (WCJC) and Wisconsin Director of the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB).

The first bill introduced was comprehensive tort reform legislation, which eventually became 2011 Wisconsin Act 2. The legislation brought Wisconsin back into the mainstream and overturned a number of negative decisions issued by the Wisconsin Supreme Court in the 2005-06 term.

During Gov. Walker’s second special session in the fall of 2011, the Legislature enacted three more substantive tort reforms.[2] Continue reading “Wisconsin’s Lawsuit Climate Ranking Increases Thanks to Tort Reforms Enacted in 2011-12”

Justice Ziegler Recuses Herself from Prosser Case

Justice Ziegler is the latest Justice to decide to recuse herself from the case brought by the Wisconsin Judicial Commission against Justice David Prosser in response to the alleged altercation between Justice Ann Walsh Bradley and Justice Prosser.

Justice Patience Roggensack previously recused herself from the case, and Justice Prosser has indicated he would not hear the case. Therefore, if one more justice withdraws from the case, it is likely it will not go forward given that the Court needs four justices to have a quorum.

Justice Patrick Crooks has decided that he will sit on the case should it go forward. Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson, Justice Ann Walsh Bradley, and Justice Michael Gableman have not decided whether to sit on the case. However, many experts expect Justice Gableman will recuse himself, and therefore deny the Court a quorum.

WCJC Welcomes New Directors

At its annual meeting on June 29, 2012 the Wisconsin Civil Justice Council welcomed three new members to its board of directors: Bill Sepic, Bryce Tolefree, and Laurie Fischer.

Bill Sepic is President of the Wisconsin Automobile & Truck Dealers Association Inc. Sepic is replacing former WATDA representative Mary Ann Gerrard.

Bryce Tolefree, who is associate general counsel at American Family Mutual Insurance Co. and Past President of the Wisconsin Defense Counsel, will take over for Michael P. Crooks as WDC’s representative on the WCJC board.

Laurie Fischer, Executive Director of the Wisconsin Dairy Business Association, will join the board as a new member representing an additional sector of Wisconsin businesses interested in promoting fairness and equity in Wisconsin’s civil justice system.

Returning members of the board of directors include:

President – Bill G. Smith
State Director
National Federation of Independent Business

Vice-President – James Buchen, Esq.
Senior Vice President, Government Relations
Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce

Treasurer – Andrew Franken
President
Wisconsin Insurance Alliance

Secretary – Jerry Deschane
Executive Vice President
Wisconsin Builders Association

John Mielke
Director of Government Relations
Associated Builders & Contractors of Wisconsin

James Boullion
Director of Government Affairs
Associated General Contractors of Wisconsin, Inc.

Beata Kalies
Director of Government Relations
Electric Cooperatives

Gary Manke
Executive Vice President-CEO
Midwest Equipment Dealers Association

Nickolas George
President
Midwest Food Processors Association, Inc.

Eric Borgerding
Executive Vice President
Wisconsin Hospital Association

Mark Grapentine, Esq.
Senior Vice President, Government Relations
Wisconsin Medical Society

Thomas Howells
President
Wisconsin Motor Carriers Association

Matthew Hauser
President
Wisconsin Petroleum Marketers & Convenience Store Association

Edward Lump
President and CEO
Wisconsin Restaurant Association

Members of WCJC’s board of directors serve three year terms.

WCJC President Bill G. Smith, Vice-President James Buchen, Treasurer Andy Franken, and Secretary Jerry Deschane were elected to an additional one year term in their respective executive officer positions.

Wisconsin Supreme Court Upholds Lower Court Decision Involving Collateral Source Rule in Medical Malpractice Case

In Weborg v. Jenny, et al., 2012 WI 67, the Wisconsin Supreme Court upheld a court of appeals decision finding that the circuit court committed “harmless error” by admitting evidence of collateral source payments in a medical malpractice case.

The 5-2 decision authored by Justice Annette Ziegler, joined by Justices Patrick Crooks, Patience Roggensack, David Prosser, and Michael Gableman, determined that evidence of collateral source payments is admissible in medical malpractice cases only when the evidence is “relevant.” Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson and Justice Ann Walsh Bradley filed a joint dissenting and concurring opinion. Continue reading “Wisconsin Supreme Court Upholds Lower Court Decision Involving Collateral Source Rule in Medical Malpractice Case”

Supreme Court Deals a Blow to Pharmaceutical Companies; Enriches Private Plaintiff Attorneys Hired by State

The Wisconsin Supreme Court on Friday, June 22 issued a decision that will negatively affect pharmaceutical companies doing business in Wisconsin. In the process, the Court enriched outside plaintiff attorneys hired by the State by awarding large attorney fees.

The Court’s decision, State of Wisconsin v. Abbot Laboratories, et al., 2012 WI 62, is the latest in a number of cases pending in state and federal courts involving allegations that pharmaceutical companies reported inflated drug prices, causing states to overpay for Medicaid recipients’ prescription drugs.

In a 4-0 decision authored by Justice Michael Gableman and joined by Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson and Justices Patience Roggensack and Annette Ziegler, the Court upheld the lower court’s verdict finding the company in this specific case, Pharmacia Corporation, liable for violating Wisconsin’s Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA) and the Medicaid fraud statute. Justices Patrick Crooks, David Prosser, and Ann Walsh Bradley did not participate.

The decision is notable because in 2009 the Alabama Supreme Court overwhelmingly (8-1) rejected a similar lawsuit brought by Alabama Attorney General Troy King and the privately retained attorneys hired by the State.[i] Continue reading “Supreme Court Deals a Blow to Pharmaceutical Companies; Enriches Private Plaintiff Attorneys Hired by State”

Wisconsin Supreme Court Issues Bad Lemon Law Decision – Allows “Lemon Law King” to Obtain Huge Damages by Thwarting Refund Payment from Auto Manufacturer

In a troubling 6-1 decision, the Wisconsin Supreme Court awarded Attorney Vince Megna – the self-proclaimed “Lemon Law King” – a victory that allowed him and his client to walk away with over $700,000 in damages. This despite the fact that Megna and the owner acted in bad faith, therefore making it impossible for the manufacturer to provide a refund payment within the statutory 30-day deadline. The Court’s decision will make it easier for plaintiff attorneys to game the system and obtain large damage awards against auto manufacturers. The case is Marquez v. Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC, 2012 WI 57.

Facts of the Case and Background of Wisconsin Lemon Law

The facts involving the Supreme Court’s decision are important to understand how unfair and damaging the Court’s decision actually is to manufacturers. It is also important to provide a discussion of how Wisconsin’s Lemon Law operates.

The plaintiff, Marco Marquez, purchased a Mercedes-Benz E-series automobile that had mechanical problems triggering Wisconsin’s Lemon Law. Wisconsin law provides that “if a new motor vehicle does not conform to an applicable express warranty,” and the nonconformity is not cured after a “reasonable attempt to repair,” then the consumer may return the vehicle and elect to receive either: 1) a new comparable vehicle, or 2) a refund.[1]

If the auto manufacturer fails to provide a refund or replace the vehicle within 30 days, the law provides harsh penalties. For example, the owner is awarded “twice the amount of any pecuniary loss, together with costs, disbursements and reasonable attorney fees, and any equitable relief the court determines appropriate.”[2] “Pecuniary loss” includes the cost of the vehicle, which means that the plaintiff is awarded twice the cost of the vehicle. The plaintiff is also entitled to pre- and post-judgment interest, which can be large in cases like this that take years to wind through the court system.

After Mercedes-Benz was alerted that the car was a lemon, it began working with the owner and his attorney to provide the owner the proper remedy. Originally the owner sought a new vehicle, but instead of seeking a similar E-series he requested an S-series. Mercedes-Benz notified the owner that the 2007 S-series he requested had not yet been released to dealers, but told him that the company would work with him to get such a vehicle as soon as possible.

With just five days left remaining under the 30-day statutory deadline, the owner notified Mercedes-Benz that he changed his mind and instead of a new vehicle he wanted a refund. This was on the Wednesday (November 23, 2005) before Thanksgiving.

The Mercedes-Benz representative, Wade Messing, was not in the office either Thursday or Friday because of the Holiday, and instead traveled to Wisconsin on Monday, November 28 to issue the refund check to both the owner and his bank, which had issued a loan for the vehicle.

On November 28, Messing contacted the owner’s bank to obtain the auto loan payment information so he could issue the check, but the bank refused to provide the information citing privacy issues. The bank told Messing that if the owner called the bank and authorized the release of the information, it would provide the information to Messing.

Messing then contacted the owner and asked that he call the bank to provide the release. The owner told him he would do so and that he would call Messing back after he contacted the bank. However, the owner neither called the bank nor returned the call to Messing. The owner further withheld from Messing that he had given John Gray, the owner’s loan officer at the bank, permission to release the payout figure to Messing.

After not hearing from the owner, Messing called Attorney Megna, who conveniently was not in the office and could not be reached. Moreover, Megna’s office did not inform Messing that it had the payout number from the bank.

Because Messing did not have the requisite information to issue a refund check to both the owner and the bank, Mercedes-Benz did not issue a refund check to the owner within Wisconsin’s statutory 30-day statutory deadline. As a result, the owner’s attorney filed a lawsuit the next day alleging Mercedes-Benz violated Wisconsin’s Lemon Law.

The complaint was actually dated November 28, 2005, meaning that Attorney Megna was getting ready to seek the damages the very same day that he and his client were withholding information and failing to respond to Messing’s phone calls.

Lower Court Decisions

The case started in Waukesha County Circuit Court, where a judge ruled in favor of the owner. The case was appealed to the court of appeals, which reversed the lower court. The court of appeals held that a consumer who intentionally thwarts a manufacturer’s efforts to provide a refund within the 30-day statutory period cannot recover the Lemon Law’s stiff remedies. The court remanded the case back to the circuit court for the jury to determine whether the owner intentionally thwarted Mercedes-Benz’s attempt to provide a statutory refund within the 30-day period by failing to provide the requisite bank information.

On remand, the jury found in favor of Mercedes-Benz. The jury determined that the owner and his attorney, Megna, acted in bad faith by failing to call the bank so that Mercedes-Benz could access the bank account information.

The circuit court judge, however, overturned the jury’s verdict by issuing a directed verdict in favor of the owner. The judge determined there was no credible evidence that the owner (or his attorney) intentionally thwarted Mercedes-Benz’s efforts to provide a refund.

The case went straight to the Supreme Court, which affirmed the judge’s directed verdict in favor of the owner.

Wisconsin Supreme Court Decision

Authored by Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson, and joined by Justices Patrick Crooks, Ann Walsh Bradley, David Prosser, Annette Zielger, and Michael Gableman, the majority upheld the circuit court judge’s decision and swept aside the jury’s verdict.

Despite the overwhelming evidence pointing to the owner and his attorney acting in bad faith, the majority found that the “jury’s verdict impermissibly rest[ed] on ‘conjecture and speculation.’”

According to the majority decision, the “jury’s finding that on November 28 the consumer intentionally prevented Mercedes-Benz from complying with the Lemon Law was impermissibly speculative.” The majority further stated that the record contained no evidence of any such intentional conduct by the owner or his lawyer to bar the manufacturer from the Lemon Law’s remedies.

Justice Roggensack’s Dissenting Opinion

Justice Patience Roggensack wrote a separate dissenting opinion arguing that the Court should have upheld the jury’s verdict in favor of Mercedes-Benz. According to Justice Roggensack, there was “credible evidence to sustain the jury’s finding that [the owner] did not act in good faith in his dealings with Mercedes-Benz.”

Justice Roggensack cited to all the evidence in the record that proved that the owner was not acting in good faith when dealing with Mercedes-Benz’s representative, who attempted to provide the owner the refund within the statutory deadline. Justice Roggensack noted that the owner told Messing that he would call his bank to release the loan payment information, however, the owner neither called the bank nor called Messing back. Furthermore, the owner failed to tell Messing that the owner had given his loan officer, John Gray, permission to release the payout figure of his auto loan.

Moreover, Attorney Megna conveniently couldn’t be reached the very last day that the refund payment was due and never called Messing back. Megna’s paralegal also failed to tell the Mercedes-Benz representative that Megna’s law office had the payout number from the bank.

Despite all of the credible evidence demonstrating that the owner (and his attorney) did not act in good faith, the majority still upheld the lower court’s directed verdict and swept aside the jury’s verdict in favor of Mercedes-Benz.

Practical Effect of Decision for Automobile Manufacturers in Wisconsin

Justice Roggensack explained that he majority’s decision has effectively eliminated manufacturers’ affirmative defense when an owner has acted in bad faith by intentionally preventing the manufacturer from refunding the owner.

Under the majority’s reasoning, no affirmative defense of thwarting a refund will be allowed unless the manufacturer can prove that the owner had knowledge of the legal effect of his conduct on the statutory obligations that the Lemon Law places on the manufacturer.

For example, in its decision, the majority held that the manufacturer had to prove that the owner knew that the statutory remedies would be triggered if the manufacturer did not pay him the refund on or before November 28. That was the day that the Mercedes-Benz representative called the owner and tried to get the auto loan information. According to the dissent, if this is indeed the new standard, it will be all but impossible for manufacturers to prove the owner acted in bad faith because most automobile purchasers are not attorneys and do not have knowledge of the Lemon Law’s requirements and statutory deadlines.

Decision Allows Plaintiff Attorneys Ability to Game the System

The majority’s decision will make it that much easier for the Lemon Law King and his plaintiff attorney cohorts to use Wisconsin’s Lemon Law as a way to win huge damage awards by stringing out the 30-day statutory deadline requiring the manufacturer to provide a new car or refund.

That’s because under Wisconsin’s Lemon Law, an owner can elect to either seek a similar vehicle or a refund. As in this case, Attorney Megna will simply run out the clock by having his clients seek a vehicle that can’t be obtained within 30 days, and then tell the client at the last second to seek the full refund. Once the owner seeks the full refund, the owner (through his attorney’s advice) will make it next to impossible to get the payment issued and therefore trigger the huge damages.

In this case, the cost of vehicle was roughly $58,000. Had the owner acted in good faith and provided the manufacturer the correct bank loan information, the owner would have been given a check for the vehicle, plus other costs. However, by acting in bad faith and preventing the manufacturer from issuing the refund of the vehicle, the owner and the Lemon Law King will walk away with damages totaling over $700,000.

The Lemon Law King is pictured on his website with his fancy yellow Corvette complete with “LEMN LAW” license plates. Imagine how many more new shiny Corvettes Attorney Megna will be able to purchase with this outrageous damages award handed down by the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

In his free time the Lemon Law King (Attorney Megna) makes strange YouTube videos where he uses obscene language and gestures taunting the Governor.


[1] Wis. Stat. § 218.0171(2)(a)-(b).

[2] Wis. Stat. § 218. 0171(7).

Another Campaign Ad Falsely Claims Law Protecting Equal Pay for Women Repealed

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – May 17, 2012  

Contact Information — Bill G. Smith — (608) 255-6083/Andrew Cook – (608) 258-9506

Madison – The Greater Wisconsin Political Fund has released an ad targeting
Gov. Scott Walker that falsely alleges that he repealed a law making it “easier for corporations to pay women less money than men.”

Opponents of Senate Bill 202 (2011 Wisconsin Act 219), which repeals punitive and compensatory damages under the Wisconsin Fair Employment Act, continue to make this claim despite the fact that multiple non-partisan news organizations have rated such statements as “false” and “misleading”:

  • WISC-TV (Channel 3) reporter Jessica Arp labeled a similar ad by Mayor Tom Barrett as “misleading.”

Apparently opponents of Act 219 believe in the theory that if you say something enough times, it eventually becomes true and therefore you win the argument.

For more information about Act 219, visit Wisconsin Civil Justice Council’s website.

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