PUBLISHED
OPINION
COURT OF
APPEALS
DECISION
DATED AND FILED
April 4,
2000
Cornelia G. Clark
Acting Clerk, Court of Appeals
of
Wisconsin
NOTICE
This opinion is subject to further editing. If
published, the official version will
appear in the bound volume of the Official
Reports.
A party may file
with
the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the
Court of Appeals.
See
Wis. Stat.
§808.10
and Rule 809.62.
No. 99-0577-CR
STATE OF
WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS
DISTRICT
I
State of
Wisconsin,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
David Carneal White,
Defendant-Appellant.
APPEAL from a judgment and an order of the circuit court for
Milwaukee County:
ELSAC. LAMELAS, Judge. Affirmed.
Before Wedemeyer, P.J., Schudson and Curley, JJ.
¶1. SCHUDSON, J.David Carneal White appeals from the
circuit court
judgment and order, following his conviction for substantial
battery, staying his prison
sentence until he gains supervised release or discharge from his
Wis. Stat. ch.980 (1997-98)
commitment.1 He argues that
the
court erred by staying his sentence based on his status as a
sexually violent person committed
under ch.980.2 We conclude,
consistent with the reasoning of State v. Szulczewski,
216 Wis.2d 495,
574 N.W.2d 660 (1998), that the circuit court had discretion to
stay White's sentence until
his supervised release or discharge under ch.980. Accordingly,
we affirm.
¶2. The facts are undisputed. On March 13, 1998, White
pled guilty to
substantial battery, in violation of Wis. Stat.
§940.19(2).3 On March 31, 1998, as a result of
proceedings
unrelated to the substantial battery, White was committed for
institutional care as a sexually
violent person under Wis. Stat. §980.06. In April 1998, the
circuit court sentenced
White to twenty-three months in prison for the substantial
battery. The court stayed the
sentence "until the defendant, in connection with his Ch.980
commitment, gains
supervised release to a non-secure placement or facility, such as
any facility where the
defendant would have access to the community; or until the
defendant is discharged from his
Ch.980 commitment, whichever comes first."
¶3. White argues that the court had no authority to
stay his sentence because
Wis. Stat. §973.15(1), in relevant part, requires that
"all sentences [to the
Wisconsin state prisons] commence at noon on the day of
sentence." While
acknowledging that §973.15(8)(a)1, on which the circuit
court relied for its authority to
stay the sentence, allows a court to stay the execution of a
sentence for "legal
cause," White maintains that a Wis. Stat. ch.980 commitment
does not constitute
"legal cause." The State responds that the supreme
court's reasoning in
Szulczewski legally and logically encompasses the
circumstances here
and, therefore, establishes that the circuit court had the
authority to exercise discretion to
stay White's sentence.4 We
agree.
¶4. In Szulczewski, the supreme court
considered whether a
circuit court had authority to stay a sentence, for battery by a
prisoner, during the period in
which the defendant remained in a mental institution, having been
committed, in an unrelated
case, following his acquittal by reason of mental disease or
defect (NGI), under Wis. Stat.
§971.17 (1993-94). See Szulczewski, 216
Wis.2d at
497. The supreme court held that a circuit court "has the
discretion to decide whether
to stay execution of a prison sentence imposed on an NGI
acquittee who is convicted of and
sentenced for a crime while under the NGI commitment."
Id.
¶5. The supreme court acknowledged the apparent
conflict between Wis. Stat.
§973.15(1) (1993-94), generally requiring that "all
sentences commence at noon
on the day of sentence," and Wis. Stat. §971.17(1)
(1987-88), which, in relevant
part, requires that "[w]hen a defendant is found not guilty
by reason of mental disease
or defect, the court shall order him to be committed to the
department [of health and social
services] to be placed in an appropriate institution for custody,
care and treatment until
discharged as provided in this section." See
Szulczewski, 216 Wis.2d at 499-500. The supreme court
considered
whether a circuit court could stay the sentence of "an NGI
acquittee who is convicted
of and sentenced for a crime while under the NGI
commitment," see
id. at 497, despite the fact that "§973.15
requires immediate
imprisonment of a convicted defendant, with no exception made
expressly for NGI
acquittees," see id. at 501, and despite
the fact that
"§971.17(1) does not on its face authorize the
discharge of an NGI acquittee for
imprisonment upon sentence for a crime," id.
¶6. The supreme court construed the apparently
conflicting statutes to
"harmonize" them in a manner serving the purposes of
both. See
id. at 503-05. To do so, the court, ascertaining and
giving effect to the
legislature's intent in enacting each statute, see id.
at 504-05, concluded
that, under Wis. Stat. §973.15(8)(a) (1993-94), "legal
cause" for a stay of
sentence encompassed an NGI acquittee's commitment, see
id. at
505-08.
¶7. Here, as in Szulczewski, two statutory
provisions are in
apparent conflict, thus requiring judicial interpretation.
Statutory interpretation presents a
question of law we review independently, benefiting from the
analysis of the circuit court.
See id. at 499. As the supreme court
reiterated:
Under the ordinary rules of statutory
interpretation, statutes
should be reasonably construed to avoid conflict. When two
statutes conflict, a court is to
harmonize them, scrutinizing both statutes and construing each in
a manner that serves its
purpose. The principal objective of statutory interpretation is
to ascertain and give effect to
the intent of the legislature.
Id. at 503-04 (citations
omitted).
¶8. The purpose of Wis. Stat. §973.15(1) is not
ascertained in isolation.
See id. at 504. Rather, its requirement for immediate
commencement of
a sentence must be interpreted together with: (1)the allowance
for staying a sentence for
"legal cause," under §973.15(8)(a), see
id. at 505; and
(2)"the objectives of deterrence[,] retribution, and
segregation" of the criminal
code, see id. at 504. Further, the supreme court
explained:
Even if a criminal statute does not expressly
govern the
conduct of persons confined to mental health facilities, the
language of many criminal
statutes can be interpreted to govern the conduct of such
persons. It is therefore reasonable
to conclude that the legislature intended NGI acquittees to
experience the consequences set
forth in the criminal code. It is also reasonable to conclude
that the legislature intended to
effectuate the goals of the NGI statutes, including treatment of
an NGI acquittee's mental
illness and behavioral disorders, even when an acquittee commits
a subsequent criminal
offense.
Id. at 504-05. Similarly, the
crime
of substantial battery, for which White was sentenced, no less
than the crime of battery by a
prisoner, for which the defendant in Szulczewski was
sentenced,
implicates the legislative objectives of "deterrence[,]
retribution, and
segregation." See id. at 504. And, as we will
explain, the
purposes of Wis. Stat. ch.980, no less than those of Wis. Stat.
§971.17, implicate
concerns for the treatment of mental illness and behavioral
disorders.
¶9. While Wis. Stat. §§980.06, 980.08, and
980.09, setting forth
the commitment, supervised release, and discharge provisions for
sexually violent persons,
say nothing about whether a commitment could ever be interrupted
by a subsequent sentence,
the "principal purposes" of Wis. Stat. ch.980 are
clear: "the protection of
the public and the treatment of convicted sex offenders who are
at a high risk to reoffend in
order to reduce the likelihood that they will engage in such
conduct in the future."
State v. Carpenter, 197 Wis.2d 252, 271, 541 N.W.2d
105 (1995).
These purposes are not significantly different from those
underlying the NGI statute:
"to treat the NGI acquittee's mental illness and to protect
the acquittee and society
from the acquittee's potential dangerousness." See
Szulczewski, 216 Wis.2d at 504.5 Thus, because of the close
correspondence
between the statutes and legislative purposes at issue in
Szulczewski and
those in the instant case, the supreme court's rationale in
Szulczewski
applies with equal force here.
¶10. A statutory interpretation requiring a court
to stay a sentence,
or precluding a court from doing so, during the period of
a Wis. Stat. ch.980
commitment, inevitably would "frustrate" certain
statutory purposes in some
cases. See id. at 504. In one case, depending on
myriad factors
including the seriousness of the crime, the length of the
sentence, and the placement and
progress of the defendant under ch. 980, a court could reasonably
conclude that execution of
the sentence should be stayed until supervised release or
discharge. In another case, based
on these and perhaps other factors, a court could reasonably
conclude that the sentence
should be served immediately.
¶11. Accordingly, we conclude that a circuit court has
authority to stay a
sentence for "legal cause" during the period of a
defendant's commitment under
Wis. Stat. ch.980. We also conclude that a circuit court, in
deciding whether to stay a
sentence during the period of a ch. 980 commitment, must exercise
discretion on a
case-by-case basis in order to balance and give effect to the
goals of both mental health
treatment and incarceration. Just as the supreme court
concluded, with respect to Wis. Stat.
§§973.15(1), (8)(a) and 971.17, we conclude, with
respect to §973.15(1),
(8)(a) and ch.980, that a sentencing court must "make a
reasoned determination about
imposing or staying a prison sentence on the basis of the facts
of each case."
Szulczewski, 216 Wis.2d at 505.
By the Court.-Judgment and order affirmed.
Recommended for publication in the official
reports.
1 All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 1997-98
version unless otherwise
noted.
2 On appeal, White challenges only the sentencing court's
authority to stay his
sentence, not its discretionary decision in doing so. Indeed, he
concedes that the court, in
exercising discretion to stay his sentence, was following the
recommendation of both the
prosecution and the defense.
3 Section 940.19(2) of the Wisconsin Statutes provides:
"Whoever causes substantial
bodily harm to another by an act done with intent to cause bodily
harm to that person or
another is guilty of a Class E felony."
4 The State also responds that White is judicially estopped from
arguing that the circuit court
lacked authority to stay his sentence because he took the
opposite position at sentencing.
See State v. Magnuson, 220 Wis.2d 468, 470-71, 583
N.W.2d 843 (Ct.
App. 1998) (appellate court may decline to consider party's
argument on appeal that directly
contradicts that party's argument in the trial court); cf.
State v.
Mendez, 157 Wis.2d 289, 294, 459 N.W.2d 578 (Ct. App.
1990) ("A
party will not be allowed to maintain inconsistent positions in
judicial actions and
proceedings."). The State's position is supported by the
record reflecting that defense
counsel, in both his sentencing brief and argument, repeatedly
maintained that the court
could and should stay White's sentence. Defense counsel
contended that, for purposes of
determining whether the court had authority to stay the sentence,
White's circumstances were
comparable to those of the defendant in State v.
Szulczewski, 216 Wis.2d
495, 574 N.W.2d 660 (1998), and that, "in terms of both
legislative intent and the
law," their circumstances were "identical."
As the State also acknowledges, however, "[t]he only
possible reason not to
apply judicial estoppel in this case is the hint in the record
that perhaps [White] did not agree
with the position his counsel took at sentencing." At his
sentencing, White stated, in
relevant part:
I'll try to explain the [chapter 980
commitment] treatment, the
treatment also extends to a halfway house. And what I was trying
to say if I'm going to do
the treatment, let me do it a hundred percent. Let me go all of
the way. Even if I am at the
halfway house and, like you said, then the penitentiary time
kicks in there, and I can't go
that then I got to go back to the joint, so that is my term right
there, 50 to 75, so let me do
the jail time so I can be a hundred percent. Let me get the jail
time out, and then I still,
under the 980 don't make no difference, so I can do the hundred
percent, instead of just
going halfway, let me go all of the way-
White's comments are ambiguous and, at most,
seem to
address the circuit court's discretion to decide whether
to stay the sentence, not
its authority to do so. Still, given the possibility that
White's position may have
differed from that of defense counsel, and given that resolution
of the underlying legal issue
may obviate the need to revisit the same issue, both in the
instant case and in others that
eventually will come to Wisconsin's courts, we decline to invoke
judicial estoppel. See
State v. Petty, 201 Wis.2d 337, 354, 548 N.W.2d 817
(1996) (equity does not
require application of judicial estoppel where defendant's trial
court conduct may have been
an "unthinking or confused blunder," particularly given
that "the
inapplicability of the doctrine is justified by the more
compelling interest of allowing a party
to correct an innocent mistake, in light of the high stakes
involved in a criminal
proceeding"); see also State v. McCready,
2000 WI
App 68, ¶8, Nos. 99-1822-CR, 99-1823-CR (court of appeals
has discretion to not
invoke judicial estoppel, even when defendant has "`play[ed]
"fast and loose with
the courts" by asserting inconsistent positions'")
(quoted sources
omitted).
5 As noted, defense counsel, before the trial court, maintained
that, for purposes of
determining whether the court could stay the sentence, there were
not significant distinctions
between the circumstances of a defendant committed under Wis.
Stat. §971.17 and
Wis. Stat. ch.980. On appeal, White suggests only one
distinction. He writes: "A
section 971.17 commitment is always for a finite length of time.
A chapter 980 commitment
is potentially for the entirety of the committee's life."
White fails, however, to explain
why this possible distinction would make any difference.
Moreover, as the State points out,
even this suggested distinction disappears in the case of a
defendant committed under
§971.17 for first-degree intentional homicide. See
Wis. Stat.
§971.17(1).