COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND RELEASED April 9, 1996 |
NOTICE |
A party may file with the
Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of
Appeals. See § 808.10 and
Rule 809.62, Stats. |
This opinion is subject to
further editing. If published, the
official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. |
Nos. 94-1281
94-2012
STATE
OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF
APPEALS
DISTRICT I
CHRISTEN MICHAELA
SHANNON, a Minor,
by her Guardian ad
Litem,
Plaintiff,
v.
COMMERCIAL UNION
INSURANCE
COMPANIES, DONNA
SCHULTZ and
ESTATE OF STEVEN
SCHULTZ,
Defendants-Appellants,
JAMES P. SHANNON,
EDITH ANNE RACHEL
SHANNON,
UNITED SERVICES
AUTOMOBILE
ASSOCIATION, WEST
ALLIS
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL and
STATE
OF WISCONSIN
DEPARTMENT OF
HEALTH AND SOCIAL
SERVICES,
Defendants,
v.
PECK & CAREY,
S.C.,
Respondent.
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No. 94-2012
CHRISTEN MICHAELA
SHANNON,
a minor, by her
Guardian
ad Litem,
Plaintiff,
v.
UNITED SERVICES
AUTOMOBILE
ASSOCIATION,
Defendant-Respondent,
COMMERCIAL UNION
INSURANCE
COMPANIES, ESTATE OF
STEVEN SCHULTZ, DONNA
SCHULTZ,
WEST ALLIS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
and STATE OF WISCONSIN
DEPARTMENT
OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL
SERVICES,
Defendants,
JAMES P. SHANNON and
EDITH
ANNE RACHEL SHANNON,
Defendants-Appellants.
APPEAL from orders of
the circuit court for Milwaukee County:
MICHAEL P. SULLIVAN, Judge. Affirmed
in part; reversed in part.
Before Sullivan,
Schudson and Myse, JJ.
PER CURIAM. In appeal No. 94-1281, Commercial Union
Insurance Companies, Donna Schultz, and the Estate of Steven Schultz
(collectively, Commercial Union) appeal from an order of the circuit court
entered on May 17, 1994. The order
directed Commercial Union to pay Peck & Carey, S.C., post-judgment interest
on attorney fees approved in an order approving a minor's settlement. Consummation of the settlement and payment
of the attorney fees were delayed by an appeal from the order approving the
settlement. See Shannon v.
United Serv. Auto. Ass'n, No. 91-2456 (Wis. Ct. App. Feb. 22, 1994)
(unpublished per curiam). Essentially,
Commercial Union contends that the order approving a minor's settlement is not
a judgment under § 815.05(8), Stats.,
upon which post-judgment interest accrues.
Alternatively, Commercial Union contends that if the order was a
judgment under § 815.05(8), interest did not accrue while the prior appeal
was pending. We conclude that the order
approving a minor's settlement did not award Peck & Carey a judgment for
purposes of § 815.05(8), and we reverse the May 17, 1994, order.
In appeal No. 94-2012,
James P. Shannon and Edith Anne Rachel Shannon, as the natural parents and
guardians of Christen Michaela Shannon and as trustees of the Christen Michaela
Shannon Irrevocable Supplement Trust, appeal from an order limiting the
post-judgment interest payable to the trustees by United Services Automobile
Association. This order was entered on
July 15, 1994. The Shannons contend
that their daughter is entitled to additional post-judgment interest calculated
on an annuity payment or on the value to her of the entire settlement. We reject their claim because the order
approving a minor's settlement was not a judgment for purposes of
§ 815.05(8), Stats., and we
affirm the July 15, 1994, order.
I.
FACTS
This case had its
genesis in the near drowning of Christen Michaela Shannon in 1984. Peck & Carey represented the child in
the ensuing litigation, with attorney Harry F. Peck serving as her guardian ad
litem. In 1991, a settlement agreement
was submitted to the court for approval.
The settlement agreement provided, in part, that Commercial Union would
pay its $300,000 policy limits to the guardian ad litem to be paid over to Peck
& Carey for attorney fees. The
settlement agreement also provided that United Services would purchase an
annuity for the minor's benefit. The
annuity would provide for specified payments to the trustee in 1992, 1993, and
1994. Additional payments, to be used
primarily for medical expenses, would be payable commencing on the child's
eighteenth birthday. Eight such
payments were guaranteed with alternative payees identified in the event the
child did not survive to age twenty-six.
The circuit court
approved the settlement agreement over the objection of the parents, and they
appealed from the order. The parents
requested a stay of execution of the agreement pending appeal. Commercial Union and United Services joined
in the motion. The stay was
granted. This court affirmed the trial
court's order on February 22, 1994, and the Wisconsin Supreme Court denied a
petition for review.
After the court of
appeals' decision was released, Peck & Carey demanded payment of the
$300,000 for attorney fees, plus post-judgment interest at twelve percent per
annum pursuant to § 815.05(8), Stats. On a motion brought to enforce the demand,
the trial court concluded that the order approving a minor's settlement was a
final order that had the same effect as a judgment. The court ruled that post-judgment interest accrued from October
3, 1991, the date the order approving the minor's settlement was entered. The trial court also concluded that the
interest accrued to Peck & Carey.[1]
In a separate motion,
the parents also sought post-judgment interest from October 3, 1991, on the
face amount of the annuity to be purchased by United Services. The annuity was to fund the three annual
payments as well as the payments becoming due after the minor's eighteenth
birthday. The trial court held that
post-judgment interest only accrued on the past due payments and only from the
date the payments became due.
II. JURISDICTIONAL CHALLENGE
As a preliminary matter,
Peck & Carey raise a jurisdictional challenge to Commercial Union's
appeal. The firm contends that
Commercial Union is precluded from challenging the award of post-judgment
interest. Citing Ver Hagen v.
Gibbons, 55 Wis.2d 21, 25, 197 N.W.2d 752, 754 (1972), and Harris
v. Reivitz, 142 Wis.2d 82, 86, 417 N.W.2d 50, 52 (Ct. App. 1987), the
firm argues that by not objecting to post-judgment interest in the prior
appeal, Commercial Union waived its right to do so now.
The present appeal is
distinguishable from the authorities on which Peck & Carey relies. The order presently under review did not
result from a motion to reconsider, vacate, or modify the prior order. See id. Rather, the motion requested the trial court
to interpret the prior order "as is." Further, the claim to post-judgment interest was not made until
after the decision in the prior appeal was released when Peck & Carey
initiated the post-appeal motion to construe the prior order. The motion clearly raised a new issue. See Reivitz, 142 Wis.2d
at 88-89, 417 N.W.2d at 52-53.
Therefore, the present order granting the motion is appealable.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The issue common to both
appeals is whether the trial court correctly held that post-judgment interest
accrued on the order approving the minor's settlement. This requires us to construe the order and
apply relevant statutes to the order, particularly § 815.05(8), Stats., (post-judgment interest) and
§ 807.10(1), Stats.,
(provision authorizing approval of minor's settlement). A court order or judgment is interpreted in
the same manner as other written documents.
Jacobson v. Jacobson, 177 Wis.2d 539, 546, 502 N.W.2d 869,
873 (Ct. App. 1993). Construction of
the document is only allowed if it is ambiguous, and the determination of
whether it is ambiguous presents a question of law, which this court reviews de
novo. Id. at 547, 502
N.W.2d at 873.
Similarly, the
construction of a statute presents a question of law. De Bruin v. State, 140 Wis.2d 631, 635, 412
N.W.2d 130, 131 (Ct. App. 1987).
Statutory analysis begins with an examination of the language of the
statute to determine whether the language is clear or ambiguous. Id. Where the language is clear and has a plain meaning, no
construction is permitted; a court must give effect to the plain meaning. City of Milwaukee v. Lindner,
98 Wis.2d 624, 632, 297 N.W.2d 828, 832 (1980). We keep in mind, however, that we construe statutes to reach a
common sense meaning and to avoid unreasonable or absurd results. State v. Britzke, 108 Wis.2d
675, 681, 324 N.W.2d 289, 291 (Ct. App. 1982), aff'd, 110 Wis.2d 728,
329 N.W.2d 207 (1983).
Finally, it follows that
the application of a statute to an order or judgment, when it involves
interpretation of the statute or the order or judgment, also presents a
question of law. Therefore, in the
present appeals, we review the issues presented without deference to the trial
court's decision.
IV. ORDER APPROVING THE MINOR'S
SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT
After reciting the
parties' appearances, the order approving the minor's settlement ordered as
follows:
1. The minor's settlement, as set forth in
Exhibits A and B attached to this order, is approved for the reasons stated in
the court's oral decision rendered on September 6, 1991, and incorporated
herein.
2. The guardian ad litem is directed to do all
things necessary to consummate the minor's settlement.
3. The claims of the minor plaintiff, the State
of Wisconsin Department of Health and Social Services, and West Allis Memorial
Hospital are dismissed on the merits.
4. This
order does not affect the claims of James P. Shannon and Edith Ann Rachel Shannon.
Exhibit
A was the settlement agreement, and exhibit B set forth additional settlement
terms pertaining to West Allis Memorial Hospital, a subrogated health care
provider, and to West Allis Memorial Hospital Employee Health Protection Plan,
the Shannons' health insurance carrier.
As previously described,
the settlement agreement provided that United Services would purchase an
annuity naming the trustees as the beneficiary and that Commercial Union would
pay its policy limits to the guardian ad litem. The guardian ad litem would pay the latter to the minor's
attorneys for fees and disbursements.
In addition, the guardian ad litem, on behalf of the minor, and certain
subrogated health care providers would give Commercial Union and its insureds,
Donna Schultz and the Estate of Steven Schultz, complete releases. The settlement agreement provided that the
minor's personal injury action would be dismissed on the merits without
costs. The agreement was contingent on
a court decision that the guardian ad litem had the right to release claims
assigned to the minor by the Shannons and on court approval of the settlement.
V. COMMERCIAL UNION'S APPEAL OF MAY 17, 1994, ORDER
Essentially, Commercial
Union contends that the order approving the minor's settlement is not a
"judgment" upon which post-judgment interest accrues. Post-judgment interest is authorized by
§ 815.05(8), Stats. The statute provides that "every
execution upon a judgment for the recovery of money shall direct the collection
of interest at the rate of [twelve percent] per year on the amount recovered
from the date of the entry thereof until paid." "A judgment is the
determination of the action."
Section 806.01(1)(a), Stats. By case law, the statute allowing
post-judgment interest applies to all money judgments, including those
collected without execution. Burlington
N. R.R. v. City of Superior, 159 Wis.2d 434, 436-37 n.4, 464 N.W.2d
643, 644 n.4 (1991).
Commercial Union first
argues that the order approving the minor's settlement is not a judgment under
§ 815.05(8), Stats., because
the parties, the trial court, and the court of appeals all denominated the
document as an "order" and not as a judgment. For purposes of determining the
appealability of a document, the court of appeals is not bound by the label
used to identify the document. Town
of Fitchburg v. City of Madison, 98 Wis.2d 635, 647-48, 299 N.W.2d 199,
205 (1980). The court looks to the
document itself to determine its significance.
Id. The same
practice applies when determining whether a document is a judgment for purposes
of post-judgment interest. Accordingly,
we reject Commercial Union's argument that the title of the document controls.[2]
Commercial Union also
argues that § 807.10(1), Stats.,
the statute under which the trial court approved the minor's settlement, does not give the order the "same force
and effect as a judgment." Section
807.10(1) is part of the statute governing the approval of settlement
agreements involving minors.
Subsections (1) and (2) of the statute state:
(1) A compromise or settlement of an
action or proceeding to which a minor or mentally incompetent person is a party
may be made by the general guardian, if the guardian is represented by an
attorney, or the guardian ad litem with the approval of the court in which such
action or proceeding is pending.
(2)A
cause of action in favor of or against a minor or mentally incompetent person
may, without the commencement of an action thereon, be settled by the general
guardian, if the guardian is represented by an attorney, with the approval of
the court appointing the general guardian, or by the guardian ad litem with the
approval of any court of record. An
order approving a settlement or compromise under this subsection and directing
the consummation thereof shall have the same force and effect as a judgment of
the court.
Peck
& Carey argued, and the trial court agreed, that the final sentence in
subsection (2), which gave the order approving the minor's settlement the same
force and effect as a judgment, also applied to (1).
Whether an order
approving a minor's settlement entered in a pending lawsuit has the "same
force and effect as a judgment" presents a question of statutory
construction. Here, the language is
clear. Although the legislature
specifically gave an order the effect of a judgment when litigation was not
previously pending, it did not do so when the settlement occurred after
litigation was commenced. Ordinarily,
when a provision contained in one statute is omitted from a similar statute on
a related subject, it is an indication that the different treatment is
intentional. Kimberly-Clark Corp.
v. Public Serv. Comm'n, 110 Wis.2d 455, 463, 329 N.W.2d 143, 147
(1983).[3]
Further, the "same
force and effect of a judgment" language serves a necessary purpose in a
subsection 2 proceeding. The language
clearly gives such an order the effect of issue preclusion (collateral
estoppel) and claim preclusion (res judicata) against a minor and those
in privity with him or her. Restatement (Second) of Judgments ch. 1
intro. (1982). Without this effect, a
minor, upon reaching majority, could potentially relitigate a claim the
guardian ad litem and the defendants had resolved.
Similar language is
unnecessary when an order approving a minor's settlement is entered where a
lawsuit is pending. There, the
underlying matter will be disposed of either by a judgment of dismissal on the
merits or by an agreed judgment awarding the minor identified damages from
specified parties. In either event, the
judgment has preclusive effect.
An order approving a
minor's settlement entered when litigation is pending may be a judgment or
partial judgment for purposes of § 815.05(8), Stats., if such intent is clear from the circumstances existing
at the time of entry or the language of the order itself.[4] If the settlement requires the immediate
payment of money to an existing entity or person, the order may also contain
language granting a judgment for the agreed-upon sum. Even in the absence of such language, the circumstances may
support inferring that the intent is to subject any delay in the payment of the
amount due to post-judgment interest.
If amounts due under an agreed-upon settlement are actually paid at the
hearing or prior to entry of the order, the order could contain language
dismissing the complaint with prejudice.
Where the settlement agreement is complex or contemplates multiple
actions to finalize the settlement, the order may merely authorize the future
conduct. Later entry of a judgment
disposing of the litigation would then be necessary. In these circumstances, the intent that any part of the order be
a judgment pursuant to § 815.05(8), Stats.,
should probably not be inferred absent specific language indicating that it is.
Here the order approving
the minor's settlement dismissed the claims of the minor, the Wisconsin
Department of Health and Social Services, and West Allis Memorial
Hospital. The order is internally
inconsistent, however, because it also approved and incorporated the
settlement, which contemplated the payment of money, and the order directed the
guardian ad litem to "do all things necessary to consummate the minor's
settlement." Neither the settlement
agreement nor the order approving the minor's settlement contained a deadline
for completing the settlement, but immediate consummation was unlikely. After the settlement proposal was approved
and the order signed, a trust was to be established,[5]
United Services was to purchase an annuity policy, and releases were to be
prepared and executed. Additionally,
the settlement agreement was contingent on a court decision that the guardian
ad litem had the right to release claims assigned to the minor by the
Shannons. The Shannons vigorously
objected to the settlement, and the contingency was not finally resolved until
the supreme court denied their petition for review. Thus, we cannot conclude that the order approving the minor's
settlement was intended to be a judgment for purposes of § 815.05(8), Stats. Therefore, the payment from Commercial Union was not subject to
post-judgment interest. The order
entered May 17, 1994 is reversed.[6]
VI. THE
SHANNONS' APPEAL OF THE JULY 15, 1994 ORDER
In their appeal, the
Shannons' contend that the Christen Michaela Shannon Irrevocable Supplemental
Trust was entitled to post-judgment interest on the entire amount due from
United Services, with interest accruing from the date of the order approving
the minor settlement. The trial court
awarded interest only on the past due annual payments, and interest accrued
from the date the payments became due.[7] In particular, the Shannons seek
post-judgment interest either on the balance of the annuity payment or on the
value to the minor of the entire settlement.
The disposition of this
appeal is controlled by our discussion of the Commercial Union's appeal of the
May 17, 1994, order. The order
approving the minor's settlement was not intended to be a judgment for purposes
of § 815.05(8), Stats. Therefore, the trust was not entitled to
post-judgment interest, and the order of July 15, 1994, is affirmed.[8]
By the Court.—Orders
affirmed in part; reversed in part.
This opinion will not be
published. See Rule 809.23(1)(b)5, Stats.
[1] Because the Shannons claimed that any post-judgment interest accruing on the $300,000 belonged to the child, Commercial Union named them as respondents in the appeal. Additionally, the Shannons, as the natural parents and guardians of Christen Michaela Shannon, as well as trustees of the Christen Michaela Shannon Irrevocable Supplement Trust, filed a cross-appeal challenging the portion of the order awarding interest to Peck & Carey. By order dated May 25, 1995, this court dismissed the cross-appeal and the Shannons from the appeal. The court concluded that "neither [the daughter] nor her parents, acting on her behalf, have standing to participate in this appeal."
[2] Similarly, we reject Peck & Carey's argument that Commercial Union is estopped from challenging the post-judgment interest because, in the motion for a stay during the prior appeal, Commercial Union adopted United Services' identification of the prior order as having the "effect of a final judgment pursuant to Wis. Stats. 808.03(1)," Stats. The language Peck & Carey focuses on in United Services' motion papers was not made in reference to issues regarding post-judgment interest or the issuance of execution. The papers filed with the motion concentrated on the irreparable harm that would occur if the guardian ad litem acted under the order approving the minor settlement and the order was later reversed on appeal.
[3] Section 807.10(2), Stats., entered the statutes in 1949 as § 260.23(5). Mary A. Hohmann & James W. Dwyer, Guardians ad Litem in Wisconsin, 48 Marq. L. Rev. 445, 450-451 (1965). Section 807.10(1) had previously been adopted by supreme court order that established separate, but similar, sections for minors and for incompetent persons. Id. In 1949, the revisor proposed an act to consolidate, revise, and renumber the prior provisions. Id. During the legislative process the bill was amended to add present day § 807.10(2). Legislative Reference Bureau file for Laws of 1949, ch. 301. The materials from the legislative history do not contain any memoranda discussing the amendment. Id.
[4] The best evidence of intent, of course, would be for the trial court to specifically address the issue of post-judgment interest in the order itself. This is especially true where only part of the settlement is capable of immediate consummation.
[5] The record is not clear on when the trust was established. There is correspondence from the guardian ad litem in 1994 that indicates Peck & Carey was drafting the trust documents. There is also correspondence from the same time and also from Peck & Carey that the trust was formally known as the Christen Michaela Shannon Irrevocable Supplemental Trust, dated December 3, 1990.
[6] Furthermore, we can not conclude that the order approving the minor's settlement granted a judgment to Peck & Carey. First, Peck & Carey was not a party to the lawsuit. Additionally, the settlement agreement provided that Commercial Union would pay the face amount of its policy to the guardian ad litem as the representative of the minor. In turn, the guardian ad litem would pay Peck & Carey pursuant to the contract between the law firm and the minor's parents. Court authorization of the payment under the contract was only required because the payment came from the minor's funds.
[7] United Services has not appealed from the trial court's order; therefore, the correctness of this portion of the court's July 15, 1994, order is not before this court.
[8] Further, awarding post-judgment interest on deferred payments is contrary to the purpose of post-judgment interest. Post-judgment interest is awarded to compensate a plaintiff for the forbearance of the income-producing ability of money due. See Hauboldt v. Union Carbide Corp., 160 Wis.2d 662, 686, 467 N.W.2d 508, 517 (1991). Here, the minor's guardian ad litem agreed to the deferral of payments. Because the parties (except the Shannons) agreed that the funds would not be available for the minor's use until the payments were due, the minor was not denied the use of the money.