¶ 1. In this nеgligence case, Robert Johnson was a passenger in his own vehicle when his friend, Marvin Crandall, caused an accident that in
¶ 2. In 2008 Johnson filed a $300,000 offer of settlement, but the parties never settled. At the 2013 trial, the jury awarded Johnson over $400,000 in damages and found that he was twenty percent contributorily negligent. Because the award exceeded the amount of Johnson's 2008 offer of settlement, Johnson sought interest on the judgment from the time the offer of settlement was made at twelve percent, per Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4) (2007-08).
¶ 3. Cintas 2 appeals from the judgment, arguing that the jury was not "fully and fairly" instructed about negligence law and that an indirect reference to Crandall's criminal record marred the trial. Johnson cross-appeals on the issue of whether the reduced interest rate under the 2011 amendment applies when an offer of settlement was filed before the law changed.
¶ 4. We agree with Johnson that retroactive reduction of the interest rate applicable to a judgment under Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4) is unconstitutional. The court should have applied the twelve percent rate that was in force at the time the offer of settlement was
Facts
¶ 5. In 2007, Johnson sued to recover money for personal injuries and related damages caused by a car accident that happened in July 2006. Johnson's summons and complaint incorrectly named Cintas 2's parent corporation, "Cintas Corporation," rather than Cintas 2, as a defendant, although Johnson served the pleadings on Cintas 2. See Johnson v. Cintas Corp. No. 2,
¶ 6. An initial default judgment granted against Cintas 2 was voided on appeal due to defective service (i.e., naming the wrong corporate entity in the complaint), and the cause was remanded for further proceedings. Id., ¶¶ 1, 4. Upon remand, in May 2012 the court vacated a judgment for damages that had been issued after the default judgment, and the case proceeded to trial in April 2013.
¶ 7. Cintas 2 requested jury instructions and a special verdict form that would have told the jury to evaluate Johnson's contributory negligence in two different forms: negligence in permitting Crandall to drive his vehicle and negligence in voluntarily riding in the vehicle while Crandall drove. Cintas 2 argued that the jury must consider these two types of negligence separately so as to account for both Johnson's "active negligence" in giving Crandall the vehicle and
¶ 8. At trial, Crandall testified that he and Johnson spent the whole dаy together before the accident, driving to Crandall's mother's house in the morning and to some bars later in the day. They were drinking throughout the entire day, including while driving. Johnson did the driving earlier in the day, but Crandall drove when they left the last bar, and he was the driver at 10:20 p.m. that evening when the accident occurred. One of the sheriff deputies who responded to the accident testified that both Crandall and Johnson smelled of intoxicants at the scene and that he found two open cans of intoxicants in the car, still cold to the touch, which led him to believe both men were drinking alcohol in the vehicle.
1 9. Before Crandall testified, Johnson's attorney disclaimed any intention of asking Crandall about his criminal record, but said he did intend to ask Crandall if he had used cocaine that day. During his testimony, when Crandall denied having taken cocaine or prescription drugs during the twenty-four hours preceding the accident, Johnson's attorney askеd, "[W]ere you charged with having done that?" Before Crandall had a chance to answer, Cintas 2 objected, and after a sidebar Johnson's attorney asked a new question. In both the opening and the closing instructions the jury
¶ 10. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Johnson in the amount of $412,372, reduced to $329,897.60 due to Johnson's twenty percent contributory negligence. Cintas 2 moved for a new trial on the grounds that (1) thе negligence instructions were wrong and (2) the unanswered question about a criminal charge against Crandall prejudiced the defense, but the circuit court rejected both arguments.
¶ 11. Johnson sought twelve percent interest on the judgment from the time of the 2008 offer of settlement until payment of the judgment, per Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4) (2007-08). Johnson argued that the applicable interest rate was the one in effect at the time of the offer rather than the lower rate in effect at the time of the verdict and judgment. The circuit court rejected Johnson's argument, concluding that the right to the interest was not "vested" until "the time judgment is entered" and that therefore the reduced interest rate under the current law was applicable.
¶ 12. Both parties appeal.
Retroactivity of Reduced Rate of Interest Under Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4)
¶ 13. We begin with the most important issue: whether the 2011 reduction in the interest rate on judgments that exceed offers of settlement under Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4) applies if a statutory offer of settlement was filed before the amendment took effect. Interpretation of a statute is a question of law reviewed independently in the appellate court. Local 321, Int'l Ass'n of Firefighters v. City of Racine,
f 15. If our consideration of a new law leads us to conclude that the law applies retroactively, then we must go on to consider whether retroactive application is constitutional in the case at hand. See Matthies v. Positive Safety Mfg. Co.,
¶ 16. With these guidelines in mind, we turn to Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4). The statute provides that when a party has filed a settlement offer "which is not accepted and the party recovers a judgment which is greater than or equal to the amount [of that offer], the party is entitled to interest... on the amount recovered." Id. The interest accrues "from the date of the offer of settlement until the amount is paid." Id.
¶ 18. Cintas 2 argues, and the circuit court accepted, that this amendment has no retroactive effect, because Johnson had no vested right to interest until he "recovered] a judgment." Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4). At the time when Johnson's entitlement to interest under § 807.01(4) arоse, when he recovered a judgment exceeding his offer of settlement, the new law was in effect. So, the argument goes, the applicable interest rate was the rate under that new law: one percent over prime.
¶ 19. Cintas 2 also points out that the initial applicability section states the law "first applies to an execution on a judgment entered on [the law's] effective date." Again, Johnson's judgment was entered after that effeсtive date of the law change, so, Cintas 2 argues, the new law applies.
¶ 20. Johnson does not dispute Cintas 2's interpretation of 2011 Wis. Act 69,
¶ 21. Johnson also cites case law that characterizes the interest imposed by Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4) as a form of damages, either compensatory or punitive in nature. See, e.g., Upthegrove Hardware, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Lumbermans Ins. Co.,
¶ 22. Cintas 2 counters that the fact that the interest "accounts for the time value of money, does not make it 'tantamount to damages' " but instead promotes settlement. This settlement mechanism, in Cintas 2's view, creates no "vested right" to the interest unless and until judgment is obtained. With respect to whether the retroactive effect of the law violates due process, Cintas 2 reiterates its view that there are no vested rights before a judgment exceeding the offer of settlement is obtained. Without any vested right, Cintas 2 argues, there can be no due process violation.
¶ 23. As the parties seem to agree, the applicability section of the amendment suggests that the new law applies to any judgment executed after the law's effеctive date, without consideration of whether an offer of settlement had already been made.
¶ 24. On the question of whether the law concerns a substantive right or a mere procedural rule, we conclude it is substantive. The rule is a special application of prejudgment interest. The idea behind prejudgment interest is to address the fact that a defendant faced with a legitimate claim may decide to fight it simply because the defendаnt can earn interest on the money that is owed to the plaintiff. See S.A.
¶ 25. The plaintiffs ability to earn interest on a judgment equal to or exceeding an offer of settlement incentivizes both parties to carefully evaluate the strength of the claim and the costs of the litigation. The statute puts both parties — the one making the offer and the one taking the risk of rejecting it — on notice, once the statutory offer of settlement is filed, that a particular rate of interest is applicable to any judgment equal to or greater than that offer. Both parties rely on that expectation regarding the rate of interest as the litigation proceeds.
¶ 26. Our conclusion would be the same if the tables werе turned and the legislature attempted retroactively to impose an increased rate of interest under Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4). That would substantially impair the defendant's vested expectations concerning the likely scope of the damages in the litigation.
¶ 27. Because literal application of the statute's initial applicability section would substantially impair
¶ 28. Precedents establish that there was no public interest sufficient to outweigh the substantial impairment of laws that (1) retroactively applied a cap on certain medical malpractice damages, see Martin v. Richards,
¶ 29. Having concluded that Wis. Stat. § 807.01 is substantive, not procedural, we further conclude that retroactively changing the interest rate that attaches tо a statutory offer of settlement under § 807.01(4) would be unconstitutional. The applicable rate of interest under § 807.01(4) is the rate that was in effect on the date that the offer of settlement was filed.
The Jury Was Instructed Properly About Johnson's Contributory Negligence
¶ 30. In its appeal, Cintas 2 argues first that the jury instructions on Johnson's contributory negligence and the special verdict form failed to fully and fairly inform the jury about applicable law. An error in jury instructions "warrants reversal. . . only if the error .... probably and not merely possibly misled the jury. If the overall meaning communicated by the instructions was a correct statement of the law, no grounds for reversal exist." Peplinski v. Fobe's Roofing, Inc.,
¶ 31. The instruction Cintas 2 thinks it was entitled to is Wis JI — Civil 1014, Negligent Entrustment. The comment to that instruction cites the relevant provision of the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 308 (1965), which provides as follows:
It is negligence to permit a third person to use a thing or to engage in an activity which is under the control of the actor, if the actor knows or should know that such person intends or is likely to use the thing or to conduct himself in the activity in such a manner as to creatе an unreasonable risk of harm to others.
Id., see also Stehlik v. Rhoads,
¶ 32. So the instructions and verdict form here correctly and completely presented the issue of Johnson's contributory negligence.
No Evidence Was Admitted About a Criminal Charge Against Crandall
¶ 33. Lastly, Cintas 2 argues that it is entitled to a new trial because of the unanswered question Johnson asked Crandall about whether he was charged criminally for use of cocaine. Generally speaking, "an improper but unanswered question is not sufficient error" to warrant reversal. State v. Edwardsen, 146
¶ 34. We conclude that applying the 2011 amendment of Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4) to a case in which an offer of settlement was filed before the amendment took effect would substantially impair vested rights. We reverse and remand for application of the twelve percent interest rate that was in effect at the time when the offer of settlement here was filed. We affirm the judgment in all other respects.
¶ 35. Costs to the plaintiff-respondent-cross-appellant on the appeal and cross-appeal.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed in part; reversеd in part and cause remanded with directions.
Notes
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2011-12 version unless otherwise noted.
2011 Wis. Act 69 was published on December 1, 2011, and generally an act's effective date is the date after its publication. Wis. Stat. § 991.11.
An amicus brief by the Wisconsin Association for Justice (WAJ) does offer another interpretation of the statute, relating to the fact that the law first applies to "execution on" a judgment on its effectivе date. 2011 Wis. Act 69, § 4. WAJ points out that "execution" of a judgment does not happen until
Johnson seems to argue at one point that Heritage Farms, Inc. v. Market Ins. Co.,
In response to these precedents, Cintas 2 simply argues that the cases are distinguishable because the right to interest undеr Wis. Stat. § 807.01(4) does not accrue until after judgment. We have already rejected that argument, and it is no help in the constitutional balancing analysis.
In fact, as the amicus points out, the state senator offering the legislation that became 2011 Wis. Act 69 testified that it "would not be retroactive" and would apply to "the interest that attaches to judgments going forward." Senate Committee on Judiciary, Utilities, Commerce, and Government Operations: Executive Sessiоn (Oct. 26, 2011) (testimony of Sen. Rich Zipperer, Minutes 52:45 to 53:10), http:// www.wiseye.org/Programming/VideoArchive/EventDetail. aspx?evhdid=5398.
Discussing the verdict form and instructions that are so key to Cintas 2's appeal is an apt moment to note that the table of contents in the appendix provided by Cintas 2 fails to indicate which numbered document in the appellate record is the source of each document in the appendix. The better and
