Gray v. Eggert

2001 WI App 246, 635 N.W.2d 667, 248 Wis. 2d 99, 2001 Wisc. App. LEXIS 894
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedSeptember 5, 2001
Docket01-0007
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2001 WI App 246 (Gray v. Eggert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. Eggert, 2001 WI App 246, 635 N.W.2d 667, 248 Wis. 2d 99, 2001 Wisc. App. LEXIS 894 (Wis. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

SCHUDSON, J.

¶ 1. Russel Eggert, Milwaukee Transport Services, Inc., and Milwaukee County Inc. (collectively, "Milwaukee Transport") appeal from the trial court judgment awarding Juanita N. Gray $5000, plus taxable costs, as a sanction for what the court perceived as Milwaukee Transport's failure to comply with a scheduling order. The trial court concluded that Milwaukee Transport had violated the order by not making a good-faith effort to settle the case. We reverse.

*102 I. BACKGROUND

¶ 2. On April 7, 1998, Gray was driving a school bus that collided with a county bus Eggert was driving. Alleging that she had sustained injuries as a result of the collision, Gray sued Milwaukee Transport and claimed that she had incurred medical expenses of approximately $1419 and a wage loss of less than $150. Milwaukee Transport denied liability and contended that Gray "was negligent and failed to use reasonable care" and that her injuries, if any, resulted from her negligence.

¶ 3. The trial court issued a scheduling order requiring that "[t]he parties shall complete mediation no later than [January 17,] 2000." 1 The parties participated in mediation on January 4, 2000, but reached no resolution.

¶ 4. On July 26, 2000, the date set for trial, the trial court, in a chambers conference the court subsequently summarized on the record, learned that Milwaukee Transport had offered no financial settlement. Milwaukee Transport had offered nothing because, it maintained, Gray had driven her school bus into the county bus while it was "standing still" and, therefore, Milwaukee Transport believed it had "absolutely no liability." The trial court instructed the parties to attempt further negotiation. Apparently, counsel then conferred and advised the trial court that Milwaukee Transport would settle the case for $100, and that Gray had offered to settle for $5000.

*103 ¶ 5. Thus advised that the parties had been unable to resolve the case, the court expressed its frustration, commenting, in part:

There was mention about a mediation, but there was no mention about sitting down and trying to resolve and settle the case in good faith. And when defense counsel says they've offered zero, zero means zero, so the mediation process that existed was a sham or perfunctory.
I then called the lawyers' attention to the scheduling order [which states, in part,] that ["]counsel are expected to confer and make a good faith effort to settle the case[."]
There was no good faith effort to settle the case as of a few minutes before 9:00 .. . this morning.
Defense counsel, upon my inquiry, advised me who was in the position of authority to settle the case.... I indicated that he should call his client and make a good faith offer... to settle the case, and confer and settle the case, as ordered by Diane Sykes, who is now on the Wisconsin State Supreme Court.
I then indicated that when that offer in good faith is conferred back to the court..., I expect [plaintiffs counsel] to make a good faith offer in response.
It's 9:15. The response I get from [defense counsel] is a hundred dollars. That is not done in good faith.
The court imposes the sanctions under the scheduling order for failure of defense counsel to confer with plaintiff in an effort to settle this case in good faith.

¶ 6. The court then invoked portions of the scheduling order, providing in relevant part: "[C]ounsel are *104 expected to confer and make good faith effort to settle the case.... FAILURE TO COMPLY WITH THE TERMS OF THIS ORDER SHALL BE CONSIDERED CAUSE FOR IMPOSING SANCTIONS WHICH MAY INCLUDE THE DISMISSAL OF CLAIMS AND DEFENSES. See § 804.12 and 805.03 Wis. Stats." 2 (Footnote added.) The trial court concluded: "For failure to comply in good faith with the scheduling order to sit and confer and try to settle the case in good faith, the court strikes the answer and responsive pleadings of the defendant, [and] enters judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of five thousand dollars."

¶ 7. The next day, Milwaukee Transport moved for reconsideration. Counsel for Milwaukee Transport argued, "With all due respect, the defendants find it difficult to believe that it is just for the court to find that [they acted] in bad faith for offering only a nominal amount to settle a matter which the defendants view as a case of no liability." Counsel for Milwaukee Transport elaborated the evidentiary basis for his position, and further maintained:

Defendants do not believe its offering a nominal amount to settle a case of this nature can qualify as bad faith. Defendants believe that no defendant should be forced to pay money under such circumstances, but it is particularly true that Milwaukee County Trans [por]t, as an arm of Milwaukee County, should not be required to pay every plaintiff who files suit. Due to the size of its operations, Milwaukee County Trans[por]t is a major target for litigation. It is constantly dealing with claims of questionable merit. The mentality already exists in this community that you can always sue the bus *105 company. This philosophy could only be reinforced by a ruling that seems to require Milwaukee County Trans-[por]t to pay substantial sums to every plaintiff.
Milwaukee County Trans[por]t regularly settles cases of this sort for one hundred dollars. Present counsel settled a case for Milwaukee County Trans-[por]fc.for exactly one hundred dollars in early May of this year in the course of a mediation conducted by the same mediator who conducted mediation in the case at bar on similar facts.

Counsel then further challenged the trial court's sanction because it "seems not to be consistent with the spirit of alternative dispute resolution embodied in [Wis. Stat. §] 802.12."

¶ 8. The trial court, rejecting Milwaukee Transport's motion for reconsideration, reiterated the previous day's basis for its ruling, and added that it also had been influenced by the demeanor of Milwaukee Transport's counsel:

[Y]our non-verbal communication, and the way that you expressed the hundred dollars, reminded me of the smiling Cheshire cat in Alice in Wonderland, and was said in a very cocky way, and there was nothing to demonstrate by your demeanor that you were at all sincere, and there was nothing to suggest at any point in time that you sat and tried to confer in good faith to reach a settlement. ... [T]here was nothing at all to demonstrate by your conduct, your non-verbal communications, your demeanor and your language that you were acting in good faith to try to settle the case. No one was ordering you to do it, but you weren't even trying. The clear inference given is that you were playing a game. Form you were giving me without substance. And if these scheduling orders are to have any meaning, they're going to be enforced.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 WI App 246, 635 N.W.2d 667, 248 Wis. 2d 99, 2001 Wisc. App. LEXIS 894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-eggert-wisctapp-2001.