Tag: Double Damages

Busy Fall Floor Session Anticipated

The first portion of the 2013-14 legislative session was very busy for the Wisconsin Civil Justice Council (WCJC). Numerous bills supported by WCJC received public hearings, passed the Assembly and now await action in the Senate. We fully expect the Senate to take up an pass several WCJC supported bills when the Legislature reconvenes this fall. Continue reading “Busy Fall Floor Session Anticipated”

Civil Justice Reforms Move Forward

Now that it has completed work on the 2013-15 budget bill, the Wisconsin Legislature will take a summer recess and will reconvene in September. Legislative committees will continue to hold public hearings and vote on individual bills.

For the Wisconsin Civil Justice Council (WCJC), the first portion of the 2013-14 legislative session has been very active and successful. Numerous bills supported by WCJC have received public hearings, passed the Assembly and await action in the Senate. We fully expect the Senate to pass these bills when the Legislature reconvenes in the fall.

Below is an update of bills of interest to WCJC. For more information on these bills, please visit WCJC’s website. Also, please contact Andy Cook or Bob Fassbender with any questions. Continue reading “Civil Justice Reforms Move Forward”

Lemon Law Reform Passes Assembly in Bi-Partisan Vote

The Wisconsin Assembly voted 88-8 to enact long-needed changes to Wisconsin’s Lemon Law. AB 200 makes several significant changes to Wisconsin’s law, as outlined in this memo from the Wisconsin Civil Justice Council and other supporters, but paramount is the elimination of the punitive double damages mandate. Continue reading “Lemon Law Reform Passes Assembly in Bi-Partisan Vote”

High Court Rules that Owners of Property Destroyed by a Forest Fire Are Entitled to Double Damages

In a 6-1 decision authored by Justice Annette Ziegler, the Wisconsin Supreme Court held that if an owner’s property is destroyed by a forest fire that is caused by negligence of another person, then the property owner automatically is entitled to double damages. Chief Justice Abrahamson, along with Justices Crooks, Prosser, Roggensack, and Gableman joined the majority. Justice Bradley dissented from the majority decision. The case is Heritage Farms v. Markel Ins. Co., 2012 WI 26.

Facts

The case involved a forest fire that extensively damaged nearby property owned by Heritage Farms, Inc. The fire started by the defendant was extinguished, but weeks later flared up and escaped the defendant’s property and entered onto Heritage Farms’ property.

Heritage Farms’ owners were awarded $568,422 in compensatory damages in a previous decision after it was determined that the defendant’s negligence led to the forest fire.  Heritage Farms then brought a separate motion against the defendant seeking double damages, along with costs for legal representation.

Decisions by the Trial Court and Court of Appeals

The issue before the trial court was whether Heritage Farms was automatically entitled to double damages, or whether the statute grants the court discretion when deciding whether to award double damages.

The statute states that an owner “whose property is injured or destroyed by forest fires, may recover, in a civil action, double the amount of damages suffered, if the fires occurred through willfulness, malice or negligence.” (Wis. Stat. § 26.21(1)).

The trial court held that the statute allowed the court to exercise discretion in deciding whether to award double damages. The trial court decided that the defendant’s conduct did not warrant punishment, and therefore did not grant Heritage Farms double damages.

The court of appeals upheld the lower court, ruling that the decision to award double damages under the statute is subject to the circuit court’s discretion. The court noted that the legislature used the permissive word “may” in the statute in describing the property owner’s right to recover double damages in the event that a forest fire result from willfulness, malice, or negligence.

Wisconsin Supreme Court Decision – Statute Mandates Double Damages

The Wisconsin Supreme Court reversed, holding that property owners are entitled to double damages. The court reasoned that, “once it is determined that the forest fire occurred through willfulness, malice, or negligence, the property owner is entitled to double damages as a matter of course.”

The court further held that their ruling should apply retroactively, not prospectively, thereby ensuring that Heritage Farms received the full double damages.

Interest on Judgments

The court further held that the plaintiff was entitled to interest on the double damages from the date of the jury’s verdict (October 13, 2006). At the time the lawsuit was brought, the interest on judgments was 12 percent.

The defendant argued that the 12 percent interest was unconstitutional because the high interest rate is so severe and so far removed from the national prime lending rate that it tends to “chill” defendants from properly defending their claims on appeal.

The court rejected this claim and said that the legislature was the proper branch of government to determine the proper interest rate. The court noted that the legislature this session in fact changed the interest on judgments from 12 percent to the federal reserve prime rate, plus one percent. This law, 2011 Wisconsin Act 69, was championed by the Wisconsin Civil Justice Council and was introduced by Gov. Walker as part of his numerous civil justice reforms.

Dissent

Justice Bradley dissented, arguing that the legislature did not intend that the award of double damages in these types of cases be mandatory. Instead, the legislature’s use of the word “may” signaled its intent that the courts are to exercise discretion when deciding whether to award double damages.