¶ 1. One-hundred and eleven plaintiffs in Milwaukee County circuit-court consolidated cases 2004-CV-8584 and 2004-CV-8585 appeal the circuit court's dismissal on summary judgment of their complaints. Ten plaintiffs have not appealed.
¶ 2. Appellants are either City of Milwaukee police officers or City of Milwaukee firefighters who claim to be entitled to disability benefits granted to other Milwaukee police and firefighters by our decisions in
Welter v. City of Milwaukee,
H — (
¶ 3.
Welter
determined that Milwaukee police officers had vested rights in connection with disability benefits that could not be modified without their consent.
Welter,
¶ 4. Not all the plaintiffs in the
Rehrauer
circuit-court action appealed the circuit court's decision adverse to them, and none of the
DeBraska
plaintiffs appealed. Further, no police officer adversely affected by
DeBraska
sought to intervene in the
Rehrauer
appeal. This is the genesis of not only this action, but also of our unpublished decision in
Rehrauer v. City of Milwaukee,
No. 2004AP2596,
¶ 5. As material to our decision, the appellants in this case fall into two main groups:
(1) Those police officers and firefighters who signed releases giving up their right to sue the City in connection with the matters encompassed by the circuit-court decisions in DeBraska and Rehrauer I. All of the police-officer appellants and all but two of the firefighter appellants, Lawrence W. Lee and Donald J. Pluta, are within this group.
(2) Lee and Pluta who, although they did not sign the releases, were plaintiffs in the Rehrauer I circuit-court action but did not appeal the circuit court's ruling *238 adverse to them. 1 They did, however, unsuccessfully seek in Rehrauer II to be relieved of the circuit-court order in Rehrauer I.
The operative part of the release provides:
For and in consideration of the adoption of the attached charter ordinance and other good and valuable consideration as specified in a settlement agreement between the consenting parties in Bradley DeBraska, et al. v. City of Milwaukee, et al., Circuit Court Case No. 98-CV-006533, Dunn v. City of Milwaukee, et al., Circuit Court Case No. 95-CV-011125, Rehrauer, et al., v. City of Milwaukee, et al., Circuit Court Case No. 98-CV-007745, and Elias v. City of Milwaukee, Circuit Court Case No. 97-CV-000973, the undersigned does for themselves, their heirs, executors and administrators forever release and discharge the City of Milwaukee, the Milwaukee Employes' [sic] Retirement System/Annuity and Pension Board of the City of Milwaukee and their officers, agents, and employees from any and all claims, demands, actions and causes of action, both at law and in equity, of any kind or nature whatsoever and any and all liability whatsoever, including liability for attorney fees and costs, if any, in any way growing out of the imposition of a conversion age under s. 36-05-3-c of the Milwaukee City Charter or Charter Ordinance, Substitute 2, Common Council File No. 980130.
Each release also has the following sentence before the signature line for the person accepting the settlement and granting the release: "The foregoing release has been read and understood by the undersigned before signing thereof."
*239 II.
¶ 6. As noted, the merits of this case were decided on summary judgment. Thus, our review is
de novo. See Green Spring Farms v.
Kersten,
A. The Releases.
¶ 7. The clear language of the releases signed by all but two of the appellants leaves no wiggle-room; the signers acknowledged that they were giving up significant rights-the right to sue the City in connection with the disability benefits at issue in the DeBraska and Rehrauer I circuit-court cases. In an attempt to defeat what the releases clearly say, the appellants make three undeveloped passing contentions: (1) that the circuit court did not have to reach the question of whether the releases were ambiguous because it determined that claim-preclusion barred the appellants' actions and thus, as phrased in its brief-in-chief on this appeal, "the Trial Court's statement should not carry any preceden-tial value"; (2) that the releases could have been drafted differently; and (3) that the appellants were forced to *240 sign the releases on pain of foregoing the benefits of the settlement referenced in those releases.
¶ 8. As to the appellants' first contention, our review here is, as we have already explained,
de novo.
Further, although circuit-court opinions may be persuasive because of their reasoning, they are
never
"preceden-tial."
Kuhn v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
¶ 9. There are two affidavits in the Record submitted to the circuit court by the appellants in opposition to the City's motion for summary judgment that address the releases' validity. The affidavits, executed by appellants King T. Monaghan and Robert J. Puls, aver that they were not aware of the settlements referenced in the releases "[ujntil after the commencement of this lawsuit." Additionally, there is in the Record an affidavit that the parties agree is representative of nineteen affidavits submitted to the circuit *241 court in Rehrauer II by the plaintiffs in Rehrauer I who did not appeal. The affiant in that representative affidavit asserts that the settlement referenced in the release was the quid pro quo for her decision to not appeal the circuit-court order in Rehrauer I. None of this defeats the releases' validity.
¶ 10. First, as to the contention that some of the appellants were not aware of the settlements referenced by the releases when they signed the releases, either not reading a contract or not being aware of its unambiguous terms does not relieve a party from being bound by a contract he or she has signed.
Hennig v. Ahearn,
¶ 11. Second, as the circuit court recognized, the releases here are clear.
The language of a contract must be understood to mean what it clearly expresses. A court may not depart from the plain meaning of a contract where it is free from ambiguity. In construing the terms of a contract, where the terms are plain and unambiguous, it is the duty of the court to construe it as it stands, even though the parties may have placed a different construction on it.
Cernohorsky v. Northern Liquid Gas Co.,
¶ 12. Third, as we have seen, waiving their right to appeal was the
quid pro quo,
as expressed by the release, the "consideration," for the benefits the appellants received under the settlement — the proverbial bird in the hand (something sure now) versus two birds in the bush (an unsure chance to get something more). Despite the appellants' rhetoric, this is hardly "duress" that makes the releases unenforceable. Although fraud can vitiate the enforceability of a contract that is otherwise clear on its face,
ibid.,
appellants have presented no evidentiary material that even raises a color-able issue of fact that the City perpetrated a fraud upon them.
See
Wis. Stat. Rule 802.08(3) (party opposing summary judgment "must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial");
Transportation Ins. Co. v. Hunzinger Constr. Co.,
*243 ¶ 13. Those who waived their rights by signing the releases are bound by the waiver. Accordingly, on our de novo review, we affirm the circuit court's dismissal of the complaints as to those appellants.
B. Lee and Pluta.
¶ 14. As we have seen, Lee and Pluta did not sign the releases. They were, however, plaintiffs in the circuit-court action in
Rehrauer I.
They did not appeal the
Rehrauer I
circuit court's dismissal of their claims, but, rather sought relief in
Rehrauer II
under Wis. Stat. Rule 806.07, as they do here. Passing whether claim-preclusion bars them from re-litigating here what they lost in
Rehrauer II, see Gross,
¶ 15.
Ackermann
concerned three naturalized residents of the United States whose naturalization the government sought to cancel and whom the government sought to deport: Hans Ackermann, his wife, Frieda Ackermann, and Mrs. Ackermann's brother, Max Keilbar.
Id.,
¶ 16. As we have seen,
Ackermann
determined that a party who does not appeal an adverse lower court decision is not entitled to the result gotten by those who
did
appeal successfully.
Ackermanris
rationale applies here.
See Nelson v. Taff,
¶ 17.
Mullen
concerned a motorist who sought to collect under her uninsured-motorist policy.
Id.,
¶ 18. In the meantime, Mullen settled her dispute with her insurance company.
Id.,
¶ 19. Unlike Mullen, who had tried to preserve her reducing-clause contention by seeking review by the supreme court, the appellants here who did not appeal
Rehrauer I
abandoned any argument that the circuit court in that case was wrong. As
Ackermann
reminds us: "There must be an end to litigation someday, and free, calculated, deliberate choices are not to be relieved from."
Id.,
*246 C. Motion to Amend Complaint.
¶ 20. After expiration of the deadline set by the scheduling order to amend their complaints, appellants sought to amend. As we have seen, the circuit court denied the motion.
¶ 21. Appellants' proposed amended complaint made clear that they were challenging the validity of the releases, and added claims that the releases "violated Plaintiffs' constitutional, statutory, and contractual rights — including their rights to equal protection, their rights to due process, and their rights not to have their property taken for private use and not to have their property taken for public use without receiving just compensation." The proposed amended complaint also alleged that the Milwaukee Employes' [sic] Retirement System Annuity and Pension Board violated its fiduciary duty to the plaintiffs who signed the releases by not trying to dissuade them from doing so.
¶ 22. An appellate court "will not reverse the trial court's determination on a motion to amend unless there has been a manifest abuse of discretion."
Leciejewski v. Sedlak,
¶ 23. In sum, we affirm the circuit court's dismissal of the appellants' complaints. Although the appellants may be disappointed by the choices they made, or the advice they received, there must ultimately be an end to all litigation.
See Ackermann,
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Lee had appealed but, as phrased by his affidavit submitted in opposition to the City's motion for summary judgment, "dropped out of' the Rehrauer I. appeal.
As we have seen in footnote 1, Lee did appeal from the circuit-court order in
Rehrauer I,
but withdrew. This does not
*246
change things. See
State v. Lee,
Thus, any matters raised by the appellants' conditional motion for summary judgment based on the proposed amended complaint are moot, and neither of appellants' briefs develops an argument that it is not.
