State ex rel. Block v. Circuit Court for Dane County

2000 WI App 72, 610 N.W.2d 213, 234 Wis. 2d 183, 2000 Wisc. App. LEXIS 413
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 1, 2000
DocketNo. 00-0507-W
StatusPublished

This text of 2000 WI App 72 (State ex rel. Block v. Circuit Court for Dane County) 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
State ex rel. Block v. Circuit Court for Dane County, 2000 WI App 72, 610 N.W.2d 213, 234 Wis. 2d 183, 2000 Wisc. App. LEXIS 413 (Wis. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

EICH, J.

¶ 1. Mark Block seeks a writ of prohibition preventing the Wisconsin Elections Board from deposing witnesses during the course of its investigation of a complaint involving a mailing undertaken and financed by the Wisconsin Coalition for Voter Participation in the waning days of the 1997 Wisconsin Supreme Court election in which incumbent Justice Jon Wilcox was challenged by Attorney Walter Kelly. Among other things, the Board is investigating the existence of a connection between the Coalition's expenditures for the mailing and the Wilcox campaign. Mark Block was the director of the Wilcox campaign and has been identified by the Commission as a "target" in its investigation.1

¶ 2. In various proceedings in the circuit court and this court, principals of the Coalition, James Wigderson and Brent Pickens, sought to bar the Board's inquiry on several fronts. Eventually, pursuant to court order, their depositions were taken by the [185]*185Board's investigators and they were required to produce various documents relating to the Coalition's activities.

¶ 3. Block contends that, under applicable statutes, he is entitled not only to notice of all subpoenas issued by the Board, but also to attend all investigatory depositions scheduled by the Board's investigators, and to cross-examine the witnesses so subpoenaed. And he says that denial of those "rights" will unfairly prejudice his interests. The circuit court agreed that Block, as a target of the Board's investigation, was entitled to notice of the subpoenas. The court concluded, however, that he was not entitled to appear at, and participate in, witness depositions conducted by the Board's investigators. Block then applied to this court for a supervisory writ recognizing his right to attend and participate in the depositions and (a) prohibiting any further investigatory depositions by the Board without his attendance, and (b) barring the use at any further proceeding of testimony given by any witness at any deposition at which he or his counsel did not attend.

¶ 4. Block has not persuaded us that he is entitled to the relief he seeks and we therefore decline to issue the writ.

¶ 5. We first consider the statutes upon which Block attempts to build his argument. Wisconsin Stat. § 5.05(l)(b) (1997-98)2 charges the Elections Board with the responsibility for administering Wisconsin's election laws. It then states that, "pursuant to such responsibility," the Board may

[i]n the discharge of its duties and upon notice to the party or parties being investigated, subpoena [186]*186and bring before it any person in the state and require the production of any... records relevant to an investigation. A circuit court may by order permit the [board to] inspect[ ] and copy[ ] . . . the accounts and ... records at any financial institution ... to obtain evidence of any violation of ch. 11. . . . In the discharge of its duties, the board may cause the deposition of witnesses to be taken in the manner prescribed for taking depositions in civil actions in circuit court (emphasis added).

¶ 6. Wisconsin Stat. § 804.05 is the general statute governing depositions in civil actions. It states that any party to the action may take the testimony of any other person upon deposition, and it contains provisions for subpoenas, notice of the deposition, stenographic or other reporting of the testimony, and the location, verification and certification of the deposition. Block concentrates on § 804.05(4), which states, among other things, that "[examination and cross-examination of deponents may proceed as permitted at the trial."

¶ 7. Finally, Block refers us to Wis. Stat. § 906.15(1) and § 906.15(2)(a), which state that while a judge or court commissioner may, at the request of a party, order that witnesses be excluded "so that they cannot hear the testimony of other witnesses," this authority "does not authorize exclusion of. . . [a] party who is a natural person."

¶ 8. Block puts forth a three-fold argument. He says first that the language in Wis. Stat. § 5.05(l)(b) providing for "notice to the party . . . being investigated" makes him, as an acknowledged target of the Board's investigation, a "party" to the investigatory proceedings. He next asserts that the language in § 5.05(l)(b) stating that depositions taken by the Board [187]*187are to be "taken in the manner prescribed for taking depositions in civil actions in circuit court" incorporates all of the "deposition" provisions of the code of civil procedure — including statements in Wis. Stat. § 804.05(2) and (4)(a) that parties taking depositions must give notice of the depositions to "every other party to the action," and that "[examination and cross-examination of deponents may proceed as permitted at the trial" — and he argues that these provisions give him, as a "party" to the investigatory proceedings, the right to cross-examine all witnesses the Board's investigators may decide to depose. Finally, he says that Wis. Stat. § 906.15 bars the circuit court from "excluding]" him from hearing the testimony of the witnesses.

¶ 9. The argument that Wis. Stat. § 5.05(l)(b), by identifying the target of the investigation in terms of the "party being investigated" and providing that depositions must be taken in the manner set forth for civil actions, entitled him to access to, and full participation in, all investigatory depositions, is unavailing. First, even though the statute may be inartfully drawn in some respects, it plainly delegates three separate powers to the Board: (1) to subpoena witnesses and require the production of documents; (2) to inspect and copy accounts and records at financial institutions; and (3) to depose witnesses. And each of those powers has its own distinct condition precedent: (1) persons or entities who are targets of the investigation must be notified if the Board desires to subpoena witnesses; (2) banking records may be examined by the Board only upon court order; and (3) if the Board decides to depose a witness, the deposition must be taken "in the manner prescribed ... in civil actions." The statutory direction for notice to the investigatory target — which Block's argument gives sweeping breadth — is limited by the plain [188]*188language of the statute to the Board's exercise of its subpoena power. The notice requirement does not relate in any way to the conduct of any depositions the Board may wish to take (or to any financial records it may wish to examine). In short, § 5.05(l)(b) does not grant Block, as an investigatory target, the right to either appear at, or participate in, investigatory depositions. We agree with the Board that if the legislature had intended to grant such expansive rights to targets of an investigation it would have said so in the statute.3

¶ 10. Block also points to Wis. Stat. § 906.15

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Bluebook (online)
2000 WI App 72, 610 N.W.2d 213, 234 Wis. 2d 183, 2000 Wisc. App. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-block-v-circuit-court-for-dane-county-wisctapp-2000.