2009 WI 81
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Supreme Court of |
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Case No.: |
2006AP3003 |
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Complete Title: |
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American Family Mutual Insurance Company, Plaintiff-Appellant, David Ronaldson, Involuntary-Plaintiff, v. David Golke, Joseph Golke, Charles Golke, Golke Brothers Roofing and Siding LLC and Indiana Insurance Company, Defendants-Respondents, Ellington Mutual Insurance Company, Intervenor-Defendant. |
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ON CERTIFICATION FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS |
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Opinion Filed: |
July 15, 2009 |
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Submitted on Briefs: |
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Oral Argument: |
December 2, 2008
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Source of Appeal: |
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Court: |
Circuit |
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County: |
Waupaca |
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Judge: |
Raymond S. Huber
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Justices: |
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Concurred: |
ABRAHAMSON, C.J., concurs (opinion filed). BRADLEY, J., joins concurrence. |
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Dissented: |
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Not Participating: |
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Attorneys: |
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For the plaintiff-appellant there were briefs by Charles W. Kramer, Monte E. Weiss, and Deutch & Weiss, LLC,
For the defendants-respondents, Joseph Golke, Charles
Golke, and Golke Brothers Roofing and Siding, LLC, there was a brief filed by Michael P. Konz, Erik L. Fuehrer, and Gabert, Williams, Konz & Lawrynk, LLP,
For the defendants-respondents, David Golke and Indiana
Insurance Company, there was a brief by Peter
M. Farb and Law Offices of Thomas P.
Stilp,
An amicus curiae brief was filed by Ryan L. Woody, Gary L. Wickert, and Matthiesen,
An amicus curiae brief was filed by
2009
WI 81
notice
This opinion is subject to further editing and modification. The final version will appear in the bound volume of the official reports.
APPEAL from an order and a judgment of the Circuit
Court for
¶1 MICHAEL J. GABLEMAN, J. This is an appeal pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 809.61 (2007-08)[1] in which American Family Insurance Co. ("American Family") seeks review of the judgment of dismissal entered by the Circuit Court for Waupaca County, Raymond S. Huber, Judge.
¶2 American Family brought a cause of action against three brothers——David, Joseph, and Charles
Golke, Golke Brothers Roofing
and Siding LLC, and Indiana Insurance Co. ("Indiana Insurance")[2]
for damages alleged to have arisen from negligent roof repairs. American Family claimed that the Golkes'
negligent roof repair caused a fire that damaged a home owned by its insured,
the Ronaldsons. The circuit court found
that American Family had failed to preserve any portion of the pertinent roof
or chimney sections when it knew or should have known that litigation was likely. The circuit court further found that American
Family did not give the Golkes sufficient notice of a claim against them or of
the impending destruction of the fire scene.
Concluding that this amounted to improper destruction of evidence, or
"spoliation," the circuit court dismissed American Family's suit as a
sanction for spoliation and entered judgments in favor of all defendants.
¶3 American
Family appealed, and the court of appeals certified two questions to us. First, under what circumstances may evidence
crucial to a potential legal claim be destroyed? Second, what notice must be given to a civil
litigant before such evidence is destroyed?
The certification by the court of appeals also discussed the proper
standard for imposing the sanction of dismissal for spoliation.
¶4 We therefore address the following issues: (1) When does a party or potential litigant discharge its duty to preserve evidence relevant to a potential legal claim; (2) Can sufficient notice be effectuated by the mailing of a letter via first-class mail; and (3) When is dismissal an appropriate sanction for spoliation of evidence?
¶5 We conclude that the duty to preserve relevant evidence is discharged when a party or potential litigant with a legitimate reason to destroy evidence provides reasonable notice of a possible claim, the basis for that claim, the existence of evidence relevant to the claim, and a reasonable opportunity to inspect that evidence. We further hold that such notice can be properly effectuated by mailing a letter via first-class mail. We also affirm that dismissal is an appropriate sanction for spoliation of evidence only if a party acts egregiously——that is, in a conscious effort to affect the outcome of litigation or in flagrant, knowing disregard of the judicial process. Applying the law to the facts of this case, we conclude that as a matter of law, Joseph and Charles Golke received the March 13, 2000, letter, and that American Family provided the Golkes with reasonable and sufficient notice, thereby discharging its duty to preserve the evidence from the fire. The circuit court therefore erroneously exercised its discretion when it dismissed American Family's suit. Because American Family discharged its duty to preserve evidence and no sanctions are appropriate, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court for trial on the merits.
I. FACTS
¶6 On February 13, 2000, fire damaged a home owned by David and Lori Ronaldson. The home was insured by American Family, which appointed a field examiner, Albert Hlavachek, and a fire origin and cause expert, Todd Haltaufderheid, to handle the case. On February 14, 2000, they inspected the home and concluded that the fire began near a metal chimney that extended through the roof. After further investigation, Haltaufderheid discovered that the three Golke brothers——David, Joseph, and Charles——had performed roof repairs on the Ronaldson home in 1994.
¶7 When the Golke brothers performed construction on the Ronaldson's home, they were all working together in one partnership. This partnership was insured by Indiana Insurance until 1997 when the partnership dissolved. After the partnership dissolved, David Golke continued to perform construction work as a sole proprietor and retained Indiana Insurance as his insurance provider. Joseph and Charles Golke formed a new partnership, later transformed into a limited liability company, which was insured by Ellington Mutual Insurance.
¶8 On February 22, 2000, Haltaufderheid met with Charles Golke at Joseph and Charles Golke's business address. During that meeting, Haltaufderheid confirmed that the construction work on the Ronaldson home was performed by the Golkes. Haltaufderheid later concluded that their actions had reduced the clearance between the chimney and the wood underlying the roof, and that this reduced clearance allowed the hot chimney to heat the surrounding wood to the point of ignition, leading to the fire that damaged the home. American Family determined that repair was not possible, and that the home would have to be demolished and rebuilt.
¶9 On March 13, 2000, Hlavachek, the American Family field examiner, mailed letters to the Golkes after he learned of their involvement with the roof construction.[3] One copy was mailed to David Golke; the other copy was mailed to Joseph and Charles Golke at their business address. This correspondence was sent via United States Postal Service first-class mail, not certified mail. The letter stated the date of the loss (3/13/2000), the name of the insureds (the Ronaldsons), the address of the home, that the loss of property resulted from fire, and that the amount of loss was pending. The body of the letter stated in full as follows:
This letter is to put you and your roofing company on notice for the fire damage that occurred on the above date of loss. Our investigation determined that you were negligent for work performed on our insured's property at the above loss location.
If you have a liability insurance carrier, please forward this letter to them and we will handle these matters directly with them. If you do not have a liability insurance carrier, we will expect you to pay for the repairs/replacement. The amount of repairs/replacement at this time is pending.
To provide adequate time for yourself or your liability carrier to conduct a proper investigation, any destruction of the fire damaged building will not take place until April 1, 2000.
¶10 David Golke admitted receiving this letter, which he forwarded to his insurer, Indiana Insurance. Indiana Insurance sent a response letter to American Family on March 17, 2000, acknowledging the potential claim but denying coverage.[4] On March 23, 2000, American Family replied to both Indiana Insurance and David Golke by letter recommending that they investigate the fire scene if they so desired because American Family was "planning demolition to begin on April 1, 2000."
¶11 American Family did not receive any response to the March 13, 2000, letter from Joseph or Charles Golke or any insurer on their behalf. Though not denying receipt, Joseph and Charles Golke claimed not to recall receiving the March 13, 2000, letter. Charles Golke testified at trial that he and Joseph Golke had experienced some difficulty in securing accurate and reliable mail service at their business address.
¶12 On April 6, 2000, Hlavachek sent a second letter, this time via United States Postal Service certified mail, with copies being sent to both David Golke, and Joseph and Charles Golke at their business address. This second letter also stated the date of the loss, the name of the insureds, the address of the home, that the loss of property resulted from fire, and that the amount of loss was pending. The body of the letter provided:
This is our second request for insurance information concerning your liability regarding the above loss.
All losses must be reported to your insurance company on a timely basis. Failure to do so may result in denial of your coverages due to your failure to meet policy conditions.
You will need to contact your current insurance carrier and have them contact us as soon as possible.
¶13 Both David and Joseph Golke admitted that they received copies of
the second letter. At trial, Joseph
Golke initially claimed not to recall receiving the second letter, but when
confronted with his signature on the delivery receipt, admitted that he
received it on April 7, 2000. Charles
Golke also admitted receiving that letter.
Charles Golke called Hlavachek in response to the letter on April 8,
2000, leaving a message for him.
Hlavachek returned Charles Golke's message that same day at 5:37 p.m.,
but there was no answer, and Hlavachek did not leave a message.
¶14 None of the three Golke brothers, the limited liability roofing company, the insurers, or anyone else on their behalf contacted American Family to arrange for inspection of the burned home, nor did anyone (or any defendant) request an extension of the inspection period. American Family's adjuster testified that he "definitely" would have granted an extension if so requested.
¶15 Although American Family's first letter stated that demolition of the home would occur on April 1, 2000, the demolition and rebuilding did not begin until sometime after April 11, 2000.[5] Neither American Family nor its experts preserved any physical evidence of the roof, chimney, or any other part of the fire scene. The Golkes urge that American Family's failure to preserve physical evidence, such as the chimney and surrounding roof sheathing, fell short of applicable fire investigation industry standards as articulated in the National Fire Protection Association's Publication 921 and the American Society for Testing and Materials' publication E 1188-95——both of which state that fire inspectors should preserve physical evidence from a fire scene.[6] American Family, however, did retain many photographs and drawings of the fire scene produced by its experts who inspected the home before its demolition. American Family shared these materials with the Golkes and their fire experts during discovery.
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶16 Despite additional attempted contacts, American Family heard nothing from the Golkes and brought suit on March 14, 2003, against David, Joseph, and Charles Golke, Golke Brothers Roofing and Siding LLC, and Indiana Insurance for damages arising from the fire.[7] All defendants filed motions for an order dismissing American Family's claims for spoliation of evidence. The circuit court denied the motions and the case proceeded to a bench trial on the issues of spoliation and sufficiency of notice. At the conclusion of the evidentiary portion of the trial, the defendants renewed their motions, arguing that American Family's claims should be dismissed for spoliation. The circuit court then dismissed American Family's claims as a sanction for its failure to preserve any physical evidence.
¶17 American Family appealed, contending that the circuit court erred in dismissing its cause without first finding that American Family acted egregiously. American Family asserted that its actions were not egregious, and that dismissal of its cause was an erroneous exercise of discretion. Pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 809.61, the court of appeals certified the aforementioned questions to this court.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶18 Under
IV. DISCUSSION
¶19 Our initial task is to examine the questions addressed to us by the court of appeals. First, we discuss the standard for when a party or potential litigant discharges its duty to preserve relevant evidence. We conclude that this duty is discharged when a party or potential litigant with a legitimate reason to destroy evidence provides reasonable notice of a possible claim, the basis for that claim, the existence of evidence relevant to the claim, and reasonable opportunity to inspect that evidence prior to its destruction. Second, we address whether mailing a letter via first-class mail can constitute sufficient notice, answering the question in the affirmative. Third, we address when dismissal is an appropriate sanction for spoliation of evidence, concluding that dismissal is only appropriate if a party acts egregiously. After establishing the relevant legal standards, we apply them to the facts of this case and conclude that American Family had a legitimate reason to destroy evidence, and gave the Golkes reasonable and sufficient notice, thereby discharging its duty to preserve the evidence from the fire.
A.
¶20 The court of appeals first asked us to address the following: Under what circumstances may evidence crucial to a potential legal claim be destroyed? This question concerns when a party or potential litigant discharges its duty to preserve relevant evidence.
¶21 Every party or
potential litigant is duty-bound to preserve evidence essential to a claim that
will likely be litigated. Sentry Ins.
v. Royal Ins. Co. of Am., 196
¶22 In the case at bar, the parties dispute whether the general duty to preserve relevant evidence may be discharged, and if so, what a party or potential litigant must do to discharge that duty. David Golke (along with his insurer, Indiana Insurance) argues that evidence must be preserved until and unless all parties consent to its destruction. American Family asserts that a party or potential litigant's duty to preserve evidence is discharged once it has given notice and an opportunity to test or inspect the evidence. Joseph and Charles Golke (along with their partnership, Golke Brothers Roofing and Siding LLC) appear to agree with American Family that the duty to preserve evidence may be discharged with proper notice regarding the claim and the impending destruction of evidence.[8]
¶23 Though a question of first impression for this court, multiple jurisdictions have either directly or indirectly addressed the question of whether and under what preconditions a party or potential litigant may legitimately destroy relevant evidence. Several illustrative cases demonstrate a pattern.
¶24 In Allstate Ins. Co. v. Hamilton Beach/Proctor Silex, Inc.,
473 F.3d 450, 458 (2d Cir. 2007), the Second Circuit considered a subrogation[9]
claim for a home fire allegedly caused by a coffee maker. On the date of the fire, the insurer sent the
defendant product manufacturer a letter notifying it of the potential claim and
offering to preserve the fire scene for inspection.
¶25 The
¶26 In another case on point, a homeowner made one phone call to a car
dealer complaining that the car he bought from the dealer started on fire while
in his garage, causing his home to burn down.
Hoffman v. Ford Motor Co., 587 N.W.2d 66, 68 (Minn. Ct. App. 1998). The homeowner did not make any claim or
demand during his phone call, did not request or instruct the dealer to
undertake an investigation, and did not indicate how the fire started or whether
the car dealer or manufacturer may be liable.
¶27 The Hoffman court concluded that "to be sufficient in
content, a spoliation notice must reasonably notify the recipient of a breach
or a claim."
First, notice provides the seller a chance to correct any defect. Second, notice affords the seller an opportunity to prepare for negotiation and litigation. Third, notice provides the seller a safeguard against stale claims being asserted after it is too late for the manufacturer or seller to investigate them.
¶28 Numerous other courts have outlined or suggested similar principles.[10] These cases reveal a loose consensus grounded in the idea that a party or potential litigant may discharge its duty by giving the other side notice of a potential claim and a full and fair opportunity to inspect relevant evidence. We hold, therefore, that a party or potential litigant with a legitimate reason to destroy evidence[11] discharges its duty to preserve relevant evidence within its control by providing the opposing party or potential litigant: (1) reasonable notice of a possible claim; (2) the basis for that claim; (3) the existence of evidence relevant to the claim; and (4) reasonable opportunity to inspect that evidence.
¶29 The
specific method or frequency of such notice is less significant. Rather, the trial court must use its own
judgment, its own discretion, to determine whether the content of the
notice is sufficient in light of the totality of the circumstances. Relevant facts might include the length of
time evidence can be preserved, the ownership of the evidence, the prejudice
posed to possible adversaries by the destruction of the evidence, the form of
the notice, the sophistication of the parties, and the ability of the party in
possession of the evidence to bear the burden and expense of preserving it. This framework serves the judicial system's truth-seeking
function and effectively prevents parties from prematurely destroying
evidence. See Insurance Co. of
N. Am., 269
¶30 A
rule that does not allow a party or potential litigant to discharge its duty to
preserve evidence unless all other parties consent, as David Golke urges,[12]
is neither practical nor fair. Such a
rule would place the party in control of the evidence at the mercy of
its adversary who would be indirectly rewarded for withholding its consent to
destroy evidence. An adversary would have
no incentive to either inspect the evidence or grant its consent to the
destruction of evidence. This is to say
nothing of the unfairness to insureds who (like the homeowners in this case)
could be stuck in limbo while a court-endorsed and costly waiting game ensued
between the parties. We cannot endorse a
rule that encourages such brinkmanship.
B.
¶31 The second question the court of appeals certified to us is really a subset of the first: What notice must be given to a civil litigant before the evidence is destroyed? We have already answered the substance of this question, stating that notice sufficient to discharge the duty to preserve evidence requires: (1) reasonable notice of a possible claim; (2) the basis for that claim; (3) the existence of evidence relevant to the claim; and (4) reasonable opportunity to inspect that evidence.
¶32 We do wish to address one sub-point regarding notice that is particularly relevant under the facts of this case——whether notice can be effectuated via first-class mail, or whether some other method is required. This question is focused on the method of delivery of the notice, not the required content (which we have already addressed above). Joseph and Charles Golke argue that American Family has the burden to prove receipt of the March 13, 2000, letter, and that it did not meet this burden. Specifically, they assert that sufficient notice of this type must be either by personal service, as with a summons and complaint under Wis. Stat. § 801.11, or certified mail with a return receipt or reply required. American Family counters that first-class mail is a common and accepted form of notice throughout the law.
¶33 The legislature has long recognized that first-class mail service is an efficient mechanism that is reasonably calculated to provide actual notice of possible or pending litigation and effective alteration of substantive legal rights and interests. See, e.g., Wis. Stat. § 631.36(2)(b)-(c) (providing for cancellation of insurance policies ten days after notice is sent by first-class mail); Wis. Stat. § 968.04(3)(b)2 (providing for a person's arrest on a warrant issued if he fails to appear for court as directed in a summons served by mail); Wis. Stat. § 48.977(4)(c)2 (providing for notice of a hearing on a petition to appoint a guardian for a child to be sent to the child's parents and others by first-class mail); Wis. Stat. § 146.819(3)(a) (providing for the deletion or destruction of a patient's medical records 35 days after notice is sent by first-class mail).
¶34 Contrary to Joseph and Charles Golke's suggestion, even the
commencing of multimillion dollar lawsuits may be effectuated by sending the
summons and complaint via first-class mail if personal service is not
possible. See
¶35 Notice
by mail is usually considered complete not upon proof of receipt, but upon
mailing. See id. ("Service by mail is complete
upon mailing."); see also Wis. Stat. § 891.46 ("[n]otices . . . required or
authorized to be served by mail in judicial or administrative proceedings are presumed
to be served when deposited in the U.S. mail with properly affixed
evidence of prepaid postage."); Mansfield v. Smith, 88
Wis. 2d 575, 588, 277 N.W.2d 740 (1979) (discussing the
"mailbox rule," that acceptance of a contract is effective upon mailing,
and noting that "[m]ailing is sufficient to satisfy the legal requirements
imposed in the day-to-day conduct of business").
¶36 Accordingly,
evidence of mailing a letter raises a rebuttable presumption that the
addressee received the letter. See
State ex rel. Flores v. State, 183
¶37 In sum, notice can be effectuated by first-class mail, and evidence of mailing creates a presumption of receipt that may create an issue for the factfinder only by denial of receipt.
C.
¶38 Though not a certified question, the court of appeals addressed
additional questions to us regarding egregious conduct and spoliation
sanctions. We will address the question
of when a sanction of dismissal for spoliation is appropriate under
¶39 The decision to impose sanctions for improper spoliation of
relevant evidence is generally within the trial court's discretion.
¶40 In 1993, the court of appeals examined whether the circuit court
abused its discretion in dismissing a case after concluding that the claimant
intentionally destroyed evidence.
¶41 In 1995, however, the court of appeals took up a similar claim and
appeared to allow dismissal without a finding of egregious conduct. Sentry Ins., 196
¶42 We affirm that dismissal as a sanction for spoliation is
appropriate only when the party in control of the evidence acted egregiously in
destroying that evidence.
D.
¶43 In the interests of efficiency and finality, as well as to clarify
the standards we have established, we now apply the facts of the case to
determine whether the circuit court erroneously exercised its discretion in
dismissing American Family's case as a sanction for spoliation of evidence.
A circuit court properly exercises its discretion when it
examines the relevant facts, applies a proper standard of law, and uses a
demonstrably rational process to reach a conclusion that a reasonable judge
could reach.
¶44 We conclude that the circuit court applied an incorrect standard of law in dismissing American Family's claim because it did not make a finding of egregiousness before doing so. Moreover, we conclude that American Family's actions were not only not egregious, they were reasonable as a matter of law and so discharged its duty to preserve the evidence.
¶45 As outlined above, American Family was required to have a legitimate reason to destroy the evidence, and provide: (1) reasonable notice of a possible claim; (2) the basis for that claim; (3) the existence of evidence relevant to the claim; and (4) reasonable opportunity to inspect that evidence. Preliminarily, before addressing the sufficiency of the content of the notice, we must resolve whether notice was in fact given, and this requires us to examine whether Joseph and Charles Golke received the March 13, 2000, letter. Once this is established, we will examine the content of the notice under the above factors.
1. Did Joseph and Charles Golke Receive the March 13, 2000,
Letter?
¶46 American Family claims that it sent letters on both March 13, 2000, and April 6, 2000. One copy of each letter was sent to David Golke, and a second copy of each letter was sent to Joseph and Charles Golke at their business address. David Golke admits receiving both letters, and Joseph and Charles Golke admit receiving the April 6, 2000, letter. Joseph and Charles Golke, however, do not recall receiving the March 13, 2000, letter. As we shall see, the uncontroverted evidence demonstrates that, as a matter of law, Joseph and Charles Golke did receive the March 13, 2000, letter.
¶47 American Family's adjuster testified that he wrote the March 13, 2000, letter on his computer in his cubicle at American Family's office and placed it in his cubicle's outgoing mailbox. The adjuster's assistant was responsible for placing the letter in an envelope and placing postage on the envelope. On March 13, 2000, American Family's "routine, habit, and practice" was for an employee to check the adjuster's cubicle every hour during the work day and pick-up any outgoing mail. Outgoing mail was given to a mail delivery service at 3:00 p.m. or 3:30 p.m. The mail delivery service then delivered the outgoing mail to the post office for delivery of the mail to its ultimate destination.
¶48 Evidence of routine business practice is admissible for the
purposes of showing that a particular action was in conformity with habit or
routine practice. See
¶49 These facts are sufficient to raise a rebuttable presumption that
the March 13, 2000, letter was not only sent, but was received by Joseph and
Charles Golke. State ex rel. Flores,
183
¶50 This presumption of receipt can only be rebutted by credible
evidence of non-receipt, usually in the form of a denial that the letter was
received.
¶51 Joseph and Charles Golke argue that the letter should not be presumed received because they allegedly had some difficulties receiving mail at their business, there is no affidavit of mailing, and the letter was sent via first-class rather than certified mail. None of these constitute a denial or credible evidence of non-receipt, and are therefore not enough to overcome the presumption of receipt. We therefore apply the law to the unrebutted facts and presume that Joseph and Charles Golke received American Family's letter dated March 13, 2000. Because notice was provided, we must examine whether the notice was sufficient to discharge American Family's duty to preserve the evidence.
2. Did American Family Discharge Its Duty to Preserve the
Fire Scene Evidence?
¶52 In order to discharge its duty to preserve the evidence from the fire scene, American Family was required to have a legitimate reason to destroy evidence, and provide: (1) reasonable notice of a possible claim; (2) the basis for that claim; (3) the existence of evidence relevant to the claim; and (4) reasonable opportunity to inspect that evidence.
¶53 The March 13, 2000, letter, which David and (as we concluded above) Joseph and Charles Golke received, informed the Golkes that a fire occurred at a specific home on a specific date, and that the Golke brothers' negligent work at that home was believed to be the cause of the fire. The letter instructed the Golkes to forward the letter to their insurers, and advised that American Family expected either the Golkes or their insurers, if applicable, to pay for the repairs to or replacement of the home. The letter concluded by offering the Golkes or their insurers an opportunity to conduct "a proper investigation" of the fire scene. It stated that destruction of the fire damaged building would be delayed until April 1, 2000, to allow for this inspection.
¶54 The April 6, 2000, letter to the Golkes stated that it was the second notice regarding the Golkes' liability for the fire damage at a specifically identified house. It also instructed the Golkes to quickly have their insurers contact American Family so that the Golkes would have coverage available to pay for the losses for which American Family was holding them liable.
¶55 American Family also had additional correspondence with David Golke, who responded to the March 13, 2000, letter. American Family sent David Golke and Indiana Insurance a letter on March 23, 2000, that, among other things, recommended an investigation of the fire scene because of the planned demolition on April 1, 2000.
¶56 Both the March 13 and April 6 letters provided reasonable notice of a possible claim and the basis for that claim. American Family expected the Golkes or their insurer to pay for the damages arising from their allegedly negligent work performed on a specific house, which allegedly caused a fire on a specific date at that house. The March 13, 2000, letter to both, and the March 23, 2000, letter to David Golke, explicitly noted the existence of relevant evidence, and provided ample time for the Golkes to inspect or schedule an inspection of the evidence before its destruction. The April 1, 2000, deadline was in fact extended by at least ten days before demolition and rebuilding commenced, and according to American Family, "definitely" would have been extended upon request.[18]
¶57 We note that American Family did not own the home in question here. The family that did own the home should not be expected to wait indefinitely for the Golkes to inspect the home, particularly when the Golkes made no efforts to inspect or test the fire scene when presented with the opportunity to do so. American Family was placed in a difficult spot because of the Golkes' unresponsiveness, and it had a legitimate reason to destroy the home[19] and acted reasonably under the circumstances.
¶58 Under the facts of this case, we conclude that American Family's March 13, 2000, letter, March 23, 2000, letter to David Golke and his insurer, and to a lesser degree the letter sent on April 6, 2000, provided sufficient notice and an opportunity to inspect the relevant evidence so as to discharge its duty to preserve the evidence. We therefore conclude that American Family's actions were reasonable, and therefore no sanctions for spoliation were appropriate as a matter of law. Thus, the circuit court erroneously exercised its discretion in sanctioning American Family for spoliation.
V. CONCLUSION
¶59 We conclude that the duty to preserve relevant evidence is discharged when a party or potential litigant with a legitimate reason to destroy evidence provides reasonable notice of a possible claim, the basis for that claim, the existence of evidence relevant to the claim, and a reasonable opportunity to inspect that evidence. We further hold that such notice can be properly effectuated by mailing a letter via first-class mail. We also affirm that dismissal is an appropriate sanction for spoliation of evidence only if a party acts egregiously——that is, in a conscious effort to affect the outcome of litigation or in flagrant, knowing disregard of the judicial process. Applying the law to the facts of this case, we conclude that as a matter of law, Joseph and Charles Golke received the March 13, 2000, letter, and that American Family provided the Golkes with reasonable and sufficient notice, thereby discharging its duty to preserve the evidence from the fire. The circuit court therefore erroneously exercised its discretion when it dismissed American Family's suit. Because American Family discharged its duty to preserve evidence and no sanctions are appropriate, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court for trial on the merits.
By the Court.—The judgments of the circuit court are reversed, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
¶60 SHIRLEY S. ABRAHAMSON, C.J. (concurring). The
majority opinion concludes that American Family's actions in razing the
fire-damaged house "were reasonable as a matter of law and so discharged
[American Family's] duty to preserve evidence,"[20]
such that no sanction is appropriate.
Not so!
¶61 The
record supports the circuit court's findings of fact and discretionary
determination that American Family violated its duty to preserve evidence and
may be sanctioned. Because American
Family's conduct was not egregious, that is, because the conduct was not a
conscious attempt to affect the outcome of the litigation or a flagrant knowing
disregard of the judicial process, the circuit court erred in imposing the
sanction of dismissing American Family's claim.
But on its findings of fact and this record the circuit court could have
imposed another sanction. I would
remand to determine whether any sanction other than the sanction of dismissal
is appropriate.[21]
¶62 American
Family's theory in the circuit court was that the Golkes, when doing work on
the house's roof, negligently moved the chimney too close to combustible
materials on the roof, which eventually caught fire. American Family, however, did not save any
of the physical evidence relevant to its theory about the cause and origin of
the fire and to its theory that the Golkes (as opposed to the original home
builder) were responsible for creating a dangerous condition on the roof.
¶63 The
circuit court found as a matter of fact that important parts of the fire scene
"could [have] been easily preserved, could have been removed and could
[have] been available for inspection and testing." The circuit court accepted the defense
expert's testimony that American Family should have saved the chimney assembly,
the fireplace, the "doghouse" (a part of the roof), roof decking and
joists, and part of the interior chase, all of which would have fit easily in a
garage stall. The circuit court also
accepted the testimony of American Family's fire scene investigator, who
testified that he could have preserved critical parts of the roof in a 10x10
foot area,[22]
that he felt photographs were sufficient to document his findings about the cause
and origin of the fire, and that he more than likely would handle the fire
scene investigation differently if he were to conduct it today.
¶64 The
circuit court found American Family's photographs inadequate. It accepted the defense expert's testimony
that the photographs did not permit an inference as to where the fire
originated because the photographs were all of very small areas on or in the
house, with no "medium view or overall view photographs of those same
areas to place them in relation to the fire scene in general."
¶65 The
circuit court also determined, after conducting a bench hearing with all
evidence presented, that American Family's failure to preserve evidence caused
significant prejudice to the Golkes. The
circuit court concluded that American Family had "destroyed what is the
crucial evidence that is important for the defendants to be able to evaluate
the claim and to prepare and present a defense." The circuit court accepted the defense
expert's testimony that due to the complete destruction of physical evidence,
he could not form opinions about either the cause or the origin of the fire.
¶66 Having
reviewed the evidence and made its findings, the circuit court ultimately determined
that American Family's failure to preserve crucial evidence from the fire scene
"is a clear case of spoliation every bit as bad" as the conduct that
has warranted sanctions in other cases.
The circuit court's determination that American Family violated its duty
to preserve relevant evidence clearly was reasonable and is supported by the
circuit court's findings of fact and evidence in the record.
¶67 The
majority opinion properly acknowledges that "the ability of the party in
possession of the evidence to bear the burden and expense of preserving
it" is a relevant factor in the spoliation analysis.[23] Nevertheless, the majority opinion ignores
the circuit court's finding of fact that American Family could have preserved
crucial evidence from the fire scene with minimal burden or expense.
¶68 The
majority opinion also acknowledges that a party or potential litigant requires
"a legitimate reason to destroy evidence."[24]
The majority opinion does not explain——because it cannot explain——what
legitimate reason American Family had for destroying every piece of evidence
from the fire scene in the present case.
¶69 In
short, the majority opinion turns a blind eye to the circuit court's findings
of fact and discretionary determination that American Family acted unreasonably
in failing to preserve any part of the fire scene, including the parts of the
house that American Family's expert knew or should have known to be highly
relevant to American Family's claim against the Golkes and to the Golkes'
defense.
¶70 This
court should uphold the circuit court's discretionary decision to sanction
American Family for failing to act reasonably in preserving evidence.
¶71 Although
dismissal is not the appropriate sanction in the present case, the circuit
court nevertheless may impose a lesser sanction for American Family's failure to preserve any
part of the house. A circuit court has
"a broad canvas upon which to paint in determining what sanctions are
necessary" in a spoliation case.[25] Courts have excluded evidence,[26]
imposed a monetary sanction,[27]
or allowed "the trier of fact . . . to draw an inference from the intentional spoliation of evidence that
the destroyed evidence would have been unfavorable to the party that destroyed
it."[28]
¶72 The majority opinion does a disservice to
the parties and to the law by ignoring American Family's failure to retain any
part of the house as evidence. This is
the main defect in the decision. Other
parts of the majority opinion, however, deserve closer attention as well.
¶73 First,
contrary to the majority opinion's holding at ¶58, a reasonable judge could conclude that American Family
did not give the Golkes a reasonable opportunity to inspect the evidence in the
present case before it was destroyed.
American Family's March 13, 2000, letter to the Golkes stated that the
house would be demolished on April 1, 2000——just 19 days after the letter was
written.[29] The letter did not suggest that the April 1
deadline was flexible, although American Family's claims adjustor testified
after the fact that he would have granted an extension upon request. During the 19 days between March 13 and April
1, the Golkes needed to contact and work things out with their insurers, to
find and retain a fire scene investigator, and to make arrangements for the
investigation. A lot to expect from the
owners of a local roofing outfit![30]
¶74 Moreover,
American Family ended up giving David Golke as few as nine days to retain a
fire scene investigator and conduct the investigation. Upon receiving American Family's March 13
letter, David Golke did exactly what the letter told him to do: He promptly
forwarded the letter to his insurance carrier.[31] David Golke did not know that he, rather than
his insurance carrier, would be responsible for dealing with American Family
until he received a second letter from American Family, dated March 23, 2000,
informing him that his insurance carrier had denied coverage. The March 23 letter reiterated that the house
would be demolished on April 1, 2000.
¶75 The
majority opinion apparently concludes that as a matter of law it is reasonable
to give a small businessman nine days to locate and hire an expert witness
before losing the opportunity to inspect evidence that is critically relevant
to a potential lawsuit against him. See
majority op., ¶56 (stating that the March 23 letter to David Golke
"provided ample time . . . to inspect or schedule an
inspection of the evidence before its destruction"). I do not find the majority opinion persuasive
on this point.
¶76 Perhaps
sensing that a reasonable judge could take issue with American Family's narrow
timetable, the majority opinion hedges its bets by declaring that the Golkes
had an extra 10 days to inspect the fire scene because demolition of the house
"did not begin until sometime after April 11, 2000."[32] The majority opinion, however, decides an
issue of fact that the circuit court left undecided. The circuit court stated that it
"never heard testimony or official evidence as to the razed date" and
"[did not] know what date the home was actually razed."[33]
¶77 Even
assuming that American Family waited an additional ten days to demolish the
house, this delay would not show that American Family's conduct was reasonable as
a matter of law. American Family never
told the Golkes that they had an extended period of time during which to
inspect the fire scene. A letter that
American Family sent to the Golkes on April 6, 2000, requested insurance
information and neither stated nor implied that the fire scene was still
intact or that the Golkes might still have an opportunity to inspect it.[34] American Family also failed to provide this
information after Charles Golke called American Family on April 7 and left a
message in reply to the April 6 letter.
American Family's claims adjustor testified that he returned Charles
Golke's call after business hours, got no answer, and then made no further
attempt to contact any of the Golkes until October 2000.
¶78 Second, the majority opinion fails to make clear that the method of notifying interested persons of the impending destruction of evidence depends on the circumstances of the case. In some circumstances first-class mail might be fine. In others, not.
¶79 Although the majority opinion relies upon statutes permitting notice to be made via first-class mail to justify the use of first-class mail in the present case,[35] the legislature does not always deem first-class mail an appropriate method of providing notice. Indeed, a computer search of the Wisconsin Statutes reveals that the phrase "certified mail" appears in 167 sections of the statutes, the phrase "registered mail" appears in 104 sections of the statutes, and the phrase "first-class mail" appears in only 18 sections.[36]
¶80 I am uncomfortable with any language in the majority opinion intimating that first-class mail is sufficient in all cases.
¶81 In any event I suggest it is wiser for a person who must give notice to use a method that provides written evidence that he or she actually did give the notice and that the recipient actually did receive the notice. Without such written proof a dispute may arise about notice, and the notifier, the recipient, and the courts will be faced with a set of presumptions that evolved in a different era and might not be realistic in the technologically-advanced 21st century.
¶82 In sum, I would remand the
matter to the circuit court to exercise its discretion in determining whether a
sanction lesser than the sanction of dismissal should be imposed for American
Family's failure to retain any physical evidence from the fire scene in the
present case.
¶83 For
the reasons set forth, I write separately.
¶84 I am
authorized to state that Justice ANN WALSH BRADLEY joins this opinion.
[1] All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2007-08 version unless otherwise indicated.
[2] For convenience, we refer to these defendants-respondents collectively as "the Golkes" in this opinion. Where distinctions are appropriate, we will refer to the relevant party or parties by name.
[3] The parties dispute whether the March 13, 2000, letter was actually sent to Joseph and Charles Golke. We address this further below.
[4] Indiana Insurance later determined that it did cover David Golke with respect to this claim.
[5] The record is unclear as to the precise dates of both demolition and commencement of construction on the new home.
[6] David Golke and Indiana Insurance Company asked this court to take judicial notice of this publication or supplement the record with it. We deny the motion.
[7] Ellington Mutual Insurance Co. later intervened and asserted that it provided no coverage for Joseph Golke, Charles Golke, or their limited liability roofing company.
[8] Joseph and Charles Golke do maintain, however, that American Family has not provided sufficient notice.
[9] Subrogation, the claim also at issue here, is a cause of action "[w]here one party is substituted for another whose debt the party pays, entitling the paying party to rights, remedies, or securities that would otherwise belong to the debtor." Black's Law Dictionary 1440 (7th ed. 1999). Here, American Family substitutes itself in place of the Ronaldsons and is allowed to pursue this action against third parties as if it stepped into the Ronaldsons' shoes.
[10] See, e.g., N.
Assurance Co. v. Ware, 145 F.R.D. 281, 284 (D. Me. 1993) (holding that "reasonable
notice to likely adversaries" that the evidence was to be destroyed would
be sufficient to prevent a sanction for spoliation); Cooper v. United
Vaccines, Inc., 117 F. Supp. 2d 864, 875 (E.D. Wis. 2000) (stating that the
claim might not have been dismissed if the plaintiff had notified the defendant
of its intention to engage in destructive testing of the evidence so that the
defendant could have participated or conducted its own testing); Howell v.
Maytag, 168 F.R.D. 502, 506 (M.D. Pa. 1996) (stating that "plaintiffs
could reasonably have given [the defendant] notice of the potential claim, and
provided it with an opportunity to conduct an independent investigation before
the demolition of the fire scene."); Baliotis v. McNeil, 870 F.
Supp. 1285, 1290-91 (M.D. Pa. 1994) (stating that relevant evidence should not
be destroyed without giving the other party an opportunity for inspection); Hirsch
v. Gen. Motors Corp., 628 A.2d 1108, 1122 (N.J. Super. Ct. Law Div. 1993) (holding
that a "potential spoliator need do only what is reasonable under the
circumstances," which included allowing defendants a reasonable amount of
time to inspect the evidence and giving notice of probable litigation (citation
omitted));
[11] In this case, American Family had a legitimate reason to destroy the home——the Ronaldsons needed a place to live.
[12] He bases this assertion on the National Fire Protection Association and American Society for Testing and Materials standards which state that fire inspectors should preserve physical evidence from a fire scene.
[13] State ex rel. Flores
v. State, 183
[14] See also, State
v. Kemp, 106 Wis. 2d 697, 709, 318 N.W.2d 13 (1982) (referring to
"the presumption of receipt from mailing"); Greene v. Donner,
198
[15] Even in 1897, when this
court held that mailing a letter was prima facie evidence of its receipt
(rather than raising a presumption of receipt), an express denial of receipt
was required to challenge the evidence. McDermott v. Jackson, 97
[16] This court has long
held that implicit in testimony that a letter was mailed is the fact that
"the letter was inclosed (sic) in an envelope, properly addressed, [and]
deposited in the postoffice (sic) with the postage duly prepaid." Reeves, 170
[17] David Golke was not a neighbor of his brothers' business, but the principle that the receipt by one addressee of a letter sent simultaneously by the same sender of an identical letter to a second addressee strengthens the presumption that the second addressee also received the letter and that routine practice was followed.
[18] The concurrence argues that the Golkes were not given a reasonable amount of time to inspect the evidence. See Concurrence, ¶73. But the concurrence ignores the unrebutted testimony that this deadline would have been extended upon request. Moreover, the concurrence forgets that, had Joseph and Charles Golke responded, their insurer surely could have arranged an inspection within the relevant timeframe. As for David Golke, his insurer initially denied coverage. This put the responsibility on David Golke to protect his rights, which he did not do. In short, the Golkes simply ignored American Family's communications. Contra the concurrence, they did have sufficient time to either inspect or schedule an inspection of the evidence.
[19] The concurrence makes it seem as though if American Family had only preserved certain parts of the home——the chimney assembly, fireplace, doghouse (a part of the roof), roof decking and joints, and part of the interior chase——all parties would have been satisfied. See Concurrence, ¶63. It is not clear why, however, just these specific parts would have been enough for the Golkes. This situation illustrates why a party may discharge its duty to preserve evidence. When a legitimate reason to destroy evidence exists, as here with the home, parties have an obligation to protect their rights when put on notice. The Golkes failed to do that here.
[20] Majority op., ¶44. See also majority op., ¶¶5, 58-59.
[21] The circuit court held a bench trial relating to the Golkes' insurance coverage and to American Family's destruction of evidence. It did not rule on the coverage issue. I assume the majority opinion's remand is for further proceedings related to coverage and to the merits of American Family's claim against the Golkes.
[22] Another American Family expert testified through a deposition that removal and preservation of physical evidence was not feasible and that the only way to preserve evidence of the fire scene was through photography. The circuit court did not find this testimony persuasive.
[23] Majority op., ¶29.
[24] Majority op., ¶5.
[25]
[26] See Estate of
Neumann v. Neumann, 2001 WI App 61, ¶80, 242
See also Howell v. Maytag, 168 F.R.D. 502, 505 (M.D. Pa. 1996) ("Where evidence is destroyed, sanctions may be appropriate, including . . . the exclusion of countervailing evidence . . . ."); N. Assurance Co. v. Ware, 145 F.R.D. 281, 284 (D. Me. 1993) (excluding evidence as a sanction for the spoliation of evidence); Hamilton Mut. Ins. Co. v. Ford Motor Co., 702 N.E.2d 491, 493 (Ohio Ct. App. 1997) ("In product liability cases where evidence is intentionally or negligently 'spoiled' or destroyed by a plaintiff or his expert before the defense has an opportunity to examine that evidence for alleged defects, a court may preclude any and all expert testimony as a sanction for the spoliation of evidence." (quotation marks and citation omitted)).
[27] See, e.g., Turner v. Hudson Transit Lines, Inc., 142 F.R.D. 68, 77-78 (S.D.N.Y. 1991) (stating that "courts impose monetary sanctions for the destruction of evidence"; imposing a monetary sanction); Harkins Amusement Enters., Inc. v. Gen. Cinema Corp., 132 F.R.D. 523, 524 (D. Ariz. 1990) (imposing a monetary sanction for the destruction of evidence); Capellupo v. FMC Corp., 126 F.R.D. 545, 553 (D. Minn. 1989) (same).
[28] Neumann, 242
See also Schmid v.
In Nation-Wide Check Corp. v. Forest Hills
Distributors, Inc., 692 F.2d 214, 218 (1st Cir. 1982), then-Judge
Breyer (now Justice Breyer) explained the rationale underlying the
"spoliation inference" as follows:
The adverse inference is based on two rationales, one evidentiary and one not. The evidentiary rationale is nothing more than the common sense observation that a party who has notice that a document is relevant to litigation and who proceeds to destroy the document is more likely to have been threatened by the document than is a party in the same position who does not destroy the document. . . . The other rationale for the inference has to do with its prophylactic and punitive effects. Allowing the trier of fact to draw the inference presumably deters parties from destroying relevant evidence before it can be introduced at trial. The inference also serves as a penalty, placing the risk of an erroneous judgment on the party that wrongfully created the risk.
[29] Majority op., ¶9.
[30] The majority opinion identifies the "sophistication of the parties" as a relevant factor in the spoliation analysis. Majority op., ¶29.
[31] The March 13 letter stated in relevant part: "If you have a liability insurance carrier, please forward this letter to them and we will handle these matters directly with them."
[32] Majority op., ¶15.
See also majority op., ¶56 ("The April 1, 2000, deadline was in fact extended by at least ten days before demolition and rebuilding commenced . . . .").
[33] American Family's claims adjustor testified that although he could not recall when the fire scene was demolished, he could infer from two documents in the record that demolition began no earlier than April 11, 2000. American Family introduced two internal reports indicating that as of April 11, 2000, American Family still had not contracted for the rebuilding of its insured's home. The claims adjustor stated in his testimony that he thought "[American Family] would not have given the okay to start the demolition without knowledge of the——what we were going to be paying out for the rebuilding process."
The circuit court neither accepted nor rejected the claims adjustor's testimony about his inference from the internal reports.
[34] See majority op., ¶12.
[35] Majority op., ¶33.
[36] The text of the Wisconsin Statutes is searchable at http://nxt.legis.state.wi.us/nxt/gateway.dll?f=templates&fn=stats.htm (last visited June 30, 2009).