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WI SB80

WI SB80
Statutory recognition of specialized treatment court and commercial court dockets.


summary

Introduced
02/26/2025
In Committee
05/08/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2025-2026 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill statutorily recognizes specialized dockets for treatment courts and for commercial cases. The bill recognizes in statute treatment courts, which are defined in the bill to include adult drug treatment court, juvenile drug treatment court, operating while intoxicated treatment court, mental health treatment court, family dependency treatment court, veterans treatment court, hybrid treatment court, and tribal healing to wellness court. The bill also statutorily recognizes a specialized docket for commercial cases. Under the bill, the chief justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, taking into consideration recommendations from the relevant chief judges of the judicial administrative districts, must select circuit court judges who will be assigned to the commercial court docket upon each judge[s agreement to serve. The bill provides that a judge who presides over cases on the commercial court docket is not prohibited from working on any other assigned docket. Under the bill, certain commercial case types must be assigned to the commercial court docket, including cases involving all of the following: governance or internal affairs of business organizations; 2) tortious or statutorily prohibited business activity, unfair competition, or antitrust claims; 3) the sale, consolidation, or merger of a business organization or the conversion, share LRB-2002/1 SWB:emw 1) the 2025 - 2026 Legislature SENATE BILL 80 exchange, or sale of substantially all of the assets of a business organization; 4) the issuance, sale, or transfer of securities; 5) intellectual property rights; 6) the relationship between a franchisor and franchisee or similar distribution relationship; 7) certain claims or disputes involving the Uniform Commercial Code, when the amount in controversy exceeds $100,000; 8) receiverships in excess of $250,000; 9) confirmation of arbitration awards and compelling or enforcing arbitration awards when the amount in controversy exceeds $100,000; and 10) real estate construction disputes when the amount in controversy exceeds $250,000. The bill provides that certain types of cases are ineligible for assignment to the commercial court docket, including small claims cases, cases involving a governmental entity or political subdivision seeking to enforce a statutory or regulatory restriction or prohibition, or disputes between landlords and tenants. The commercial court docket created under the bill is a commercial case docket that generally involves disputes between commercial entities rather than individuals and does not include actions typically involving individuals such as personal injury suits, products liability, malpractice, or other tort claims or landlord and tenant disputes or similar claims. Under the bill, parties may jointly move for discretionary assignment of a case to the commercial court docket if the case is one that is not identified under the mandatory criteria but is not otherwise ineligible for assignment. The bill provides that a decision granting or denying a motion for a discretionary assignment of a case to the commercial court docket is final and nonappealable. The bill also allows that parties to a case that is filed in a judicial administrative district that does not have a dedicated commercial court docket may, in certain circumstances, jointly petition for transfer of the case to a commercial court docket. Under the bill, no party may withdraw a request for transfer to the commercial court docket after a judicial assignment of the case has been made.

AI Summary

This bill statutorily recognizes and establishes specialized court dockets for treatment courts and commercial cases in Wisconsin. For treatment courts, the bill defines eight specific types of courts, including adult and juvenile drug treatment courts, mental health treatment courts, veterans treatment courts, and tribal healing to wellness courts. These courts are designed to address underlying issues related to criminal behavior by providing treatment and using graduated rewards and sanctions to help participants successfully address addiction or mental health issues. For commercial cases, the bill creates a specialized docket that will handle complex business-related disputes, such as cases involving business governance, securities, intellectual property rights, and commercial transactions where the amount in controversy exceeds certain thresholds. The chief justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court will select circuit court judges to serve on the commercial court docket, with at least four judges assigned in several judicial administrative districts. The bill outlines detailed procedures for mandatory and discretionary case assignments, specifies which types of cases are eligible or ineligible for the commercial court docket, and provides mechanisms for transferring cases between judicial districts. The overall goal is to increase judicial expertise, improve case management, and enhance the efficiency of handling specialized legal matters.

Committee Categories

Justice

Sponsors (8)

Last Action

Available for scheduling (on 05/08/2025)

bill text


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