Department of Natural Resources v. Wisconsin Court of Appeals, District IV
Department of Natural Resources v. Wisconsin Court of Appeals, District IV
Dissenting Opinion
¶50 The majority contravenes (1) the court's duty to undertake a mandatory harmless error analysis; (2) the statute's text; (3) the statutory history; (4) the legislative history; and (5) the meaning of "plain legal duty."
¶51 First, the majority does not undertake a mandatory harmless error analysis as required by our case law. See State v. Reyes Fuerte,
¶53 This court is barred from picking and choosing when it will engage in a mandatory harmless error analysis and when it will not. The court has explicitly declared that harmless error "is an injunction on the courts, which, if applicable, the courts are required to address"
¶54 Second, the majority's statutory interpretation is contrary to the statute's text. "When the same term is used throughout a chapter of the statutes, it is a reasonable deduction that the legislature intended that the term possess an identical meaning each time it appears."
*393Bank Mut. v. S.J. Boyer Const., Inc.,
¶55 Third, the majority opinion is contrary to the statutory history of
¶56 Prior to the amendment, the phrase "unless another venue is specifically authorized by law" operated to direct Chapter 227 actions in which the state was the sole defendant to be venued in Dane County unless some other statute directed venue to be elsewhere.
*394
*134¶57 The majority claims that the analysis of the statutory history set forth above ignores "the significant structural changes wrought by Act 61." Majority op., ¶38 n.16. The "significant structural changes" are of the court's own making, not the legislature's. Did the legislature intend, by changing "shall be venued in Dane County" to "shall be venued in the county designated by the plaintiff" in
¶58 It is much more likely that the legislature did not intend to create such a lopsided framework and instead intended to create a framework wherein an appellant's ability to choose the venue is necessarily tied to the plaintiff's having a choice of venue at the trial court level. Interpreting
¶59 Fourth, the majority opinion is contrary to the statute's legislative history. The Legislative Reference Bureau's analysis of 2011 S.B. 117, a document distributed to all legislators, explained that the bill "permitted" plaintiffs to designate the county within which to bring an action. The use of the word "permit" is telling. The word "permits" contemplates a choice. How can the Administrative Petitioners be said to have been "permitted" to designate venue when by operation of
¶60 The Fiscal Estimate Narrative for 2011 S.B. 117, another document circulated to all lawmakers, explicitly described the operation of the bill as allowing plaintiffs to choose their venue under the statute.
¶61 The majority faults a court's reliance on documents such as the Legislative Reference Bureau's analysis of the bill and the Fiscal Estimate Narrative, suggesting that nobody has the slightest idea what impact these documents had on individual legislators and casting doubt on whether anyone reads the documents.
¶62 Co-equal branches of government owe respect to each other.
¶63 At a minimum, a court should presume that legislators are aware of the explanatory material the Legislative Reference Bureau must set forth in each bill.
*397The interpretation of a statute in the explanatory note prepared by the legislative staff that drafted the text of the statute should not, in every instance, be totally ignored by a court.
¶64 Fifth and finally, the majority errs in its discussion of "plain legal duty." Quoting State ex rel. Kalal v. Circuit Court for Dane County,
¶65 For these reasons, I dissent.
¶66 I am authorized to state that Justice ANN WALSH BRADLEY joins this dissenting opinion.
See also State v. Reyes Fuerte,
Harvey,
Reyes Fuerte,
"If the provisions under par. (a) to (c) do not apply, then venue shall be in any county designated by the plaintiff."
"Except as provided in pars. (b) and (c), all actions in which the sole defendant is the state ... shall be venued in the county designated by the plaintiff unless another venue is specifically authorized by law."
For example,
A review of the Wisconsin Statutes reveals that in many situations a statute directs that venue be in a particular county. See, e.g.,
Courts presume that the legislature respects the work of the courts. Thus, this court presumes that the legislature is aware of existing case law when it passes legislation, Czapinski v. St. Francis Hosp., Inc.,
This court respects the work of the legislature. A judicial construction of a statute is entitled to more weight when the legislature has not acted to change that judicial construction, Estate of Miller v. Storey,
It is, of course, one of the judicial branch's legal fictions to declare that the legislature is aware of existing case law when enacting legislation. The court itself may not always be aware of its own existing case law when it decides a case.
The Legislative Reference Bureau is required to prepare Prefatory Notes (Analysis to Bills) for each bill.
See State ex rel. Kalal v. Cir. Ct. for Dane Cnty.,
" '[C]lear and unequivocal' does not require the duty to be settled or obvious. There may be a plain duty even when it involves 'a novel question of law requiring harmonization of several statutory provisions.' " Majority op., ¶11 (citation omitted).
Opinion of the Court
*360¶1 The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources ("DNR") says its appeal in Clean Wisconsin, Inc. v. DNR, 2016AP1688 ("Clean Wisconsin") is pending in the wrong district, and asks us to exercise our supervisory authority to shepherd it to the correct venue. Because we agree with the DNR, we grant its petition for a supervisory writ and vacate the order of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals transferring venue for Clean Wisconsin from District II to District IV.
*361¶2 We accepted review because this case presents an important issue of first impression regarding the right of an appellant to select appellate venue under
*118I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE
¶3 The dispute giving rise to this petition for a supervisory writ involves the DNR's decision to reissue a Wisconsin Pollutant Discharge Elimination System ("WPDES") permit to Kinnard Farms, Inc. ("Kinnard Farms"), a dairy farm in Kewaunee County. After a group of five individuals (led by Lynda A. Cochart, hereinafter the "Cochart Petitioners") contested the decision, an administrative law judge concluded the permit should issue, but only with the addition of two conditions to which Kinnard Farms objected.
¶4 Clean Wisconsin, Inc. ("Clean Wisconsin") and the Cochart Petitioners each filed petitions seeking judicial review of the DNR's decision. Clean Wisconsin filed in Dane County (the county of its residence), while the Cochart Petitioners filed in Kewaunee County (the county of their residence). The *362Circuit Court for Dane County, as the court in which the first petition was filed, exercised its statutorily-granted discretion to consolidate the Kewaunee County case into the Dane County case.
¶5 The DNR appealed the circuit court's decision, and selected District II as the appellate venue. A single court of appeals judge (sitting in District IV) issued an order, sua sponte, transferring venue from District II to District IV on August 31, 2016. The judge, relying on
¶6 Approximately two weeks later, the DNR petitioned this court for a supervisory writ requiring the Court of Appeals to transfer venue back to District II. We stayed the appeal and asked the respondents for a response to the petition. We subsequently ordered full briefing and argument.
*363II. DISCUSSION
A. Supervisory Writs
¶7 The authority to issue supervisory writs depends on the constitutional grant of jurisdiction to this court. In relevant part, our constitution says:
(1) The supreme court shall have superintending and administrative authority over all courts.
(2) The supreme court has appellate jurisdiction over all courts and may hear original actions and proceedings. The supreme *119court may issue all writs necessary in aid of its jurisdiction.
(3) The supreme court may review judgments and orders of the court of appeals, may remove cases from the court of appeals and may accept cases on certification by the court of appeals.
Wis. Const. art. VII, § 3. We have previously observed that with the grant of jurisdiction come all the writs necessary to give it effect:
The framers of the constitution appear to have well understood that, with appellate jurisdiction, the court took all common law writs applicable to it; and with superintending control, all common law writs applicable to that; and that, failing adequate common law writs, the court might well devise new ones, as Lord Coke tells us, as "a secret in law."
Attorney Gen. v. Chicago & N.W. Ry. Co.,
¶8 "A supervisory writ is 'a blending of the writ of mandamus and the writ of prohibition.' " Madison Metro. Sch. Dist.,
*365¶9 A party may request a supervisory writ from this court by petition.
*120grave hardship or irreparable harm will result; (3) the duty of the trial court is plain and it ... acted or intends to act in violation of that duty; and (4) the request for relief is made promptly and speedily." Kalal,
¶10 We will consider only the first three factors identified above-the respondents do not contest the timeliness of the DNR's petition, and we agree that filing within two weeks of the Court of Appeals' order denying the motion for reconsideration is, under these circumstances, unquestionably "prompt and speedy." For the sake of analytical clarity, our opinion addresses the three factors in the following order. We begin with whether the Court of Appeals will violate a plain duty to hear the DNR's appeal in the proper district if the venue-transfer order stands. Then, we will consider whether an appeal would be an inadequate remedy.
*366And finally, we will determine whether the DNR will suffer grave hardship or irreparable harm if the writ does not issue.
B. Plain Duty
1. Existence of the Duty
¶11 We start with determining whether the Court of Appeals has a plain duty to hear the DNR's appeal in the proper venue. A plain duty is one that is "clear and unequivocal and, under the facts, the responsibility to act [is] imperative." Id., ¶ 22 (internal marks and citation omitted). "[C]lear and unequivocal" does not require the duty to be settled or obvious. There may be a plain duty even when it involves "a novel question of law requiring harmonization of several statutory provisions." See Madison Metro. Sch. Dist.,
*367¶12 Appellate venue is governed by
(1) Except as provided in sub. (2), a judgment or order appealed to the court of appeals shall be heard in the court of appeals district which contains the court *121from which the judgment or order is appealed.
(2) A judgment or order appealed from an action venued in a county designated by the plaintiff to the action as provided under s. 801.50(3)(a) shall be heard in a court of appeals district selected by the appellant but the court of appeals district may not be the court of appeals district that contains the court from which the judgment or order is appealed.
¶13 The first subsection of
2. Compliance with the Duty
¶14 Whether the Court of Appeals acted consonantly with its plain duty when it transferred the DNR's appeal from District II to District IV depends on the requirements of three statutes, all of which have something to say about venue in this case. The statute controlling appellate venue is
¶15 We determine the meaning of these statutes by focusing on their text, context, and structure. "[S]tatutory interpretation 'begins with the language of the statute,' " and we give that language its "common, ordinary, and accepted meaning." Kalal,
¶16 The presenting question is whether the general or specific appellate venue rule of
Except as provided in pars. (b) and (c),[8 ] all actions in which the sole defendant is the state, any state board or commission, or any state officer, employee, or agent in an official capacity shall be venued in the county designated by the plaintiff unless another venue is specifically authorized by law.[9 ]
¶17 The Administrative Petitioners tell us that
¶18 With respect to the first objection, it is true that § 801.50(3)(a) refers only to "actions." But that term encompasses "special proceedings" as well: "Proceedings in the courts are divided into actions and special proceedings," and "[i]n chs. 801 to 847, 'action' includes 'special proceeding' unless a specific provision of procedure in special proceedings exists."
*123227 must prevail."); State ex rel. Town of Delavan v. Circuit Court for Walworth Cty.,
¶19 Therefore, in the absence of a contrary provision in chapter 227, it does not matter that the Administrative Petitioners commenced this case as a "special proceeding" rather than as an "action." Nor is this the first time we have used
¶20 The second objection gives us no reason to doubt the applicability of
*373Wis.'s Envtl. Decade, Inc. v. DILHR,
¶21 And that brings us to the third venue-related statute of interest. The respondents say
*124¶22 The heart of the contest between the DNR and the respondents, therefore, lies in this question: Does a plaintiff "designate" the county for circuit court venue even when
b. Does "Designate" Mean "Choose"?
¶23 Each of the respondents' arguments circles back to a central theme: The Administrative Petitioners cannot be understood to have "designated" a *374county for venue (within the meaning of
¶24 The operative sentence from
¶25 Our practice is to give words their natural meaning, and we often begin with respected dictionaries to find it.
¶26 The term "designate" entered our appellate and circuit court venue statutes at the same time via 2011 Wisconsin Act 61. So we next consider the text and structure of that act. The entire purpose of the *125act was to change the treatment of venue in both the circuit and appellate courts when the state is the sole defendant, so it is brief and to the point. The parts that interest us are §§ 2 and 3g, which provide in relevant part:
Section 2. 752.21(2) of the statutes is created to read:
752.21 (2) A judgment or order appealed from an action venued in a county designated by the plaintiff to the *376action as provided under s. 801.50(3)(a) shall be heard in a court of appeals district selected by the appellant but the court of appeals district may not be the court of appeals district that contains the court from which the judgment or order is appealed.
Section 3g. 801.50(3) of the statutes, as affected by 2011 Wisconsin Act 21, is renumbered 801.50(3)(a) and amended to read:
801.50(3)(a)AllExcept as provided inthis subsectionpars. (b) and (c), all actions in which the sole defendant is the state ... shall be venued inDane Countythe county designated by the plaintiff unless another venue is specifically authorized by law.
2011 Wis. Act 61, §§ 2, 3g ("Act 61").
¶27 "Designate," of course, appears in both § 2 (creating the new appellate venue provision) and § 3g (amending the circuit court venue provision). If we viewed § 3g of the act in isolation, we could easily conclude that "designate" means "choose." Before Act 61, a plaintiff suing the state was required to file his case in Dane County. With the revision introduced by Act 61, however, he may file in any county he wishes. Thus, he must necessarily choose which it will be, and "designate" is quite capable of describing that act. But when we look at the act as a whole, which we are bound to do,
¶28 When the legislature used the term "designated" in the appellate venue section of the act (2011 *377Wis. Act 61, § 2), it juxtaposed it against the term "selected." Whereas the plaintiff "designates" venue in the circuit court, the appellant "selects" venue in the court of appeals. When the legislature uses different terms in the same act, we generally do not afford them the same meaning. See Gister v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
¶29 Unlike "designate," "select" does not carry a troubling multiplicity of definitions. In its transitive verb form, it means one thing, and one thing only: "[t]o choose." 14 The Oxford English Dictionary 901 (2d ed. 1989). These terms are not just in related statutes. They are in the same act, the same section, and the same sentence. And the words were chosen by the same legislature. With this degree of specificity and particularity, we will not understand them to bear the same meaning. Because "select"
*126means "to choose," "designate" cannot.
*378¶30 This provides significant insight into what "designated" means in the context of
c. Other Authorized Venues
¶33 As we have already seen, the plaintiff's designation controls venue in a case solely against the state, "unless another venue is specifically authorized by law."
If 2 or more petitions for review of the same decision are filed in different counties, the circuit judge for the county in which a petition for review of the decision was first filed shall determine the venue for judicial review of the decision, and shall order transfer or consolidation where appropriate.
¶34 This provision was operative in the circuit court because Clean Wisconsin and the Cochart Petitioners both filed petitions for judicial review of the same DNR decision, but in different counties. So the statute gives the circuit court the authority to override the plaintiff's designation inasmuch as it specifically instructs the court to "determine the venue for judicial *382review *128of the decision." And it grants the court authority to transfer or consolidate the cases to actualize that determination. The court's discretion is broad here-it may transfer one of the cases so they are both pending in the same county; or it may transfer both cases to a third county, and it may consolidate the cases instead of allowing them to proceed as separate matters.
¶35 Here, the circuit court consolidated the Cochart Petitioners' case into Clean Wisconsin's case, and left it venued in Dane County. After consolidation, only the Clean Wisconsin petition remained, although it then included the Cochart Petitioners as parties. See Seventeen Seventy-Six Peachtree Corp. v. Miller,
¶36 By leaving the Clean Wisconsin petition pending in Dane County, the circuit court determined its venue, but only in the negative sense of not having ousted the designation already made. So the question is whether not disturbing Clean Wisconsin's designation actually negates it. On this point, the structure of Act 61 advances our understanding of its plain meaning. The portion in which we are now interested says: "[A]ll actions in which the sole defendant is the state ... shall be venued in the county designated by *383the plaintiff unless another venue is specifically authorized by law." 2011 Wis. Act 61 § 3g;
¶37 Because
¶38 The respondents came to a different conclusion based, at least in part, on their understanding of *384the "unless" clause as it existed prior to Act 61. However, their interpretation does not account for the significant change to the statute *129occasioned by Act 61. Prior to Act 61, the relevant part of
¶39 There is still the matter of the Cochart Petitioners. Their petition designated Kewaunee County, but they litigated in Dane County. If their petition had arrived in Dane County Circuit Court via a simple transfer-of-venue order, the exception to the venue-designation rule might have become operative. Dane County is "another venue" in relation to Kewaunee County, and if this hypothetical had come to pass, it would have been specifically authorized by law. An appeal from that case may have engaged
¶40 That brings us back to venue for the appeal. Because Clean Wisconsin designated the circuit court venue within the meaning of
C. Inadequate Remedy
¶41 Next, we determine whether an appeal would be an inadequate remedy. We will not issue a supervisory writ when an appeal provides an adequate remedy. Kalal,
¶42 We have previously recognized that trial court venue can present an issue requiring review before entry of final judgment. The pathway to that review has varied over the years, and has depended largely on what our rules of civil procedure have said at the time. For example, it was once possible to appeal *387a venue order before entry of final judgment.
¶43 The lack of an appellate pathway in this case is analogous to Spence. That is to say, our rules of appellate procedure do not give the DNR the right to appeal the Court of Appeals' venue order. Strictly speaking, there is no right of appeal to this court at *388all.
¶44 Because a petition for review in this case would require a "plus" factor just to bring the venue issue before us, it is a mechanism too chancy to constitute an adequate remedy. Faced with a similar conundrum, at least one other court came to the same conclusion. In In re Volkswagen of America, Inc.,
¶45 We conclude that a petition to review the court of appeals' eventual decision on the merits is an inadequate remedy to address the question of appropriate appellate venue. Our review of that question should not depend on the existence of an additional "plus" factor that would support a petition for review.
D. Irreparable Harm
¶46 Finally, we determine whether the DNR would suffer irreparable harm if this court denies the supervisory writ. Kalal,
¶47 The legislature granted appellants in the DNR's procedural posture the right to select appellate venue. It is nearly tautological to observe that losing a statutorily-granted right is a harm. Losing the right with no means to recover it makes the harm irreparable. As described above, a petition for review is an uncertain and ill-suited *132vehicle for addressing whether the court of appeals heard a case in the proper district. Because the question would, therefore, be unlikely to receive appellate attention at all, the DNR would be left with no sure means by which to remedy the deprivation of its statutory right. That makes the loss, by definition, irreparable. See, e.g., Proctor,
¶48 The dissent would conduct what it characterizes as a "mandatory harmless error analysis," dissent, ¶51, which would deny the appellant its statutorily-granted right unless the choice of venue is outcome-determinative. The dissent says that, because District IV's judges are just as fair as the judges of any other district, the DNR cannot demonstrate the appeal would resolve differently if heard elsewhere. See id., ¶ 52. So the dissent would make
III. CONCLUSION
¶49 We conclude that the DNR has met the requirements for the issuance of a supervisory writ. We, therefore, grant the petition for a supervisory writ and vacate the August 31, 2016, Court of Appeals order transferring the appeal in this case from District II to District IV. The Court of Appeals shall hear the appeal in District II.
By the Court. -The petition for a supervisory writ is granted; the rights are declared as stated; and the stay on appeal is lifted.
All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2015-16 version unless otherwise indicated.
The nature of the conditions is not material to our analysis.
See
The original provision of the 1848 Wisconsin Constitution, Wis. Const. art. VII, § 3, read:
The supreme court, except in cases otherwise provided in this constitution, shall have appellate jurisdiction only, which shall be coextensive with the state; but in no case removed to the supreme court shall a trial by jury be allowed. The supreme court shall have a general superintending control over all inferior courts; it shall have power to issue writs of habeas corpus, mandamus, injunction, quo warranto, certiorari, and other original and remedial writs, and to hear and determine the same.
The requirement that an aggrieved party must first seek such a writ from the court of appeals is excused here, of course, because the writ, if granted, would lie against that court. Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 809.71 ("A person seeking a supervisory writ from the supreme court shall first file a petition for a supervisory writ in the court of appeals under s. 809.51 unless it is impractical to seek the writ in the court of appeals. A petition in the supreme court shall show why it was impractical to seek the writ in the court of appeals or, if a petition had been filed in the court of appeals, the disposition made and reasons given by the court of appeals.").
The dissent suggests this directive is at odds with State ex rel. Two Unnamed Petitioners v. Peterson,
"The general rule is that the word 'shall' is presumed mandatory when it appears in a statute." Karow v. Milwaukee Cty. Civil Serv. Comm'n,
The exceptions mentioned here are not relevant to this case:
(b) All actions relating to the validity or invalidly of a rule shall be venued as provided in s. 227.40(1).
(c) An action commenced by a prisoner, as defined under s. 801.02(7)(a)2., in which the sole defendant is the state, any state board or commission, or any state officer, employee, or agent in an official capacity shall be venued in Dane County unless another venue is specifically authorized by law.
As an "administrative arm" of the state, the DNR is the state for purposes of this venue provision. See Metzger v. Dep't of Taxation,
The Court of Appeals did not advance this argument in its brief.
"In construing a statute, the general rule is that all words and phrases should be construed according to common and approved usage unless a different definition has been designated by the statutes. We may resort to a dictionary to ascertain the common and approved usage of a term not defined by the statute." In re Commitment of Curiel,
Kalal,
The Court of Appeals agreed the words "designate" and "select" must carry different meanings, but attempted to explain the distinction between them without identifying any substantive difference. Its brief said:
[I]n this interpretation the words do have different meanings: "designate" is something that a plaintiff does in circuit court, while "select" is something that an appellant does in the court of appeals. It is entirely reasonable that the legislature would choose two different words for these different acts, so as to avoid any potential confusion or commingling of the two concepts. No further explanation is required to explain why different words were used.
Some further explanation would have been helpful. This case turns on whether these words have distinct meanings, so understanding how they describe different concepts is essential to our analysis. But the Court of Appeals tells us only that "designate" means "something," that "select" also means "something," and that they are different depending on the court in which they occur. That's not much to go on, especially when the Court of Appeals, elsewhere in its brief, suggests the two actually mean the same thing: "[T]he statutes at issue allow an appellant to have a choice of forum when the plaintiff has a choice of forum...." If both "designate" and "select" mean "choose," then the plaintiff in the circuit court and the appellant in the court of appeals are doing the exact same thing. So the Court of Appeals has not, in fact, offered an explanation of how the act of "designating" differs from the act of "selecting."
The dissent says we should understand "designate" to mean "choose" because that's how the Legislative Reference Bureau understood it, and the Bureau forwarded its understanding of Act 61 (then 2011 S.B. 117) to members of the legislature. See dissent, ¶59. The dissent says the Bureau "explained that the bill 'permitted' plaintiffs to designate the county within which to bring an action."
We can assume all legislators received the Bureau's memo. But we have no idea how many read it, or whether the Bureau's use of "permit" caught their attention or influenced their understanding of the bill, or whether (assuming it did) the Bureau's word-choice influenced their votes, and if it did, whether a majority of each chamber was persuaded to adopt the dissent's understanding of the language they enacted because the Bureau used the word "permit" in its memo. So the dissent raises an interesting historical question (to which we will never know the answer), but it is a question that has nothing to do with the plain meaning of Act 61. The same is true of the "Fiscal Estimate Narrative" to which the dissent refers in paragraph 60.
The dissent says we would show greater respect for the legislators if we assumed the Bureau's memo changed their understanding of their own bill. See dissent, ¶¶62-63. That would seem an odd mark of respect. We believe it is much more respectful to assume they are capable of adopting language that expresses their intent, and that they did not adopt the Bureau's language because they did not wish to.
The dissent says the phrase "designated by the plaintiff" should have the same meaning in
The Court of Appeals essentially argues that we must give the "unless" clause the same meaning it had prior to Act 61. But when the legislature changes the structure of a statute, we must construe it anew. See State ex rel. Dep't of Agric. v. Marriott,
The dissent agrees with the Court of Appeals, but neither of them account for the significant structural changes wrought by Act 61. See dissent, ¶¶6-9. Nor do either of them offer any reason we should ignore those changes.
W. Bank of Scotland v. Tallman,
"Supreme court review is a matter of judicial discretion, not of right...." Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 809.62(1r).
The court of appeals' "primary function is error correcting"; "the supreme court's primary function is that of law defining and law development." Cook v. Cook,
We generally do not review a case unless it presents a "real and significant question of federal or state constitutional law," or we see a need to "establish[ ], implement[ ] or chang[e] a policy within" our authority, or we need to "develop, clarify or harmonize the law," or the court of appeals' decision either conflicts with controlling authority or is in need of re-examination "due to the passage of time or changing circumstances." Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 809.62(1r).
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE of Wisconsin EX REL. DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES, Petitioner, v. WISCONSIN COURT OF APPEALS, DISTRICT IV, Clean Wisconsin, Inc., Lynda A. Cochart, Amy Cochart, Roger D. DeJardin, Sandra Winnemueller, Chad Cochart and Kinnard Farms, Inc., Respondents.
- Cited By
- 27 cases
- Status
- Published