Vol. 75, No. 7, July
2002
Supreme Court Digest
This column summarizes all decisions of the
Wisconsin Supreme Court (except those involving lawyer or judicial
discipline, which are digested elsewhere in the magazine). Profs. Daniel
D. Blinka and Thomas J. Hammer invite comments and questions about the
digests. They can be reached at Marquette University Law School, 1103 W.
Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee, WI 53233, (414) 288-7090.
by Prof. Daniel D. Blinka &
Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
Appellate/Criminal
Procedure
Truth-in-sentencing - Application of Penalty Enhancement Statutes -
Court of Appeals' Decision Vacated
State v. Jones, 2002
WI 53 (filed 24 May 2002)
This case arose under Wisconsin's new truth-in-sentencing laws. The
defendant was convicted of a Class E felony and it also was established
that he was a habitual offender by virtue of a prior felony conviction.
For the Class E felony, the defendant faced a maximum penalty of two
years in confinement and, if that maximum were imposed, it could be
followed by a maximum of three years of extended supervision for an
overall term of imprisonment of five years. Because the defendant was a
habitual criminal, that overall maximum term of imprisonment could be
increased by up to six years. See Wis. Stat. §
939.62(1)(b).
The circuit court imposed the maximum confinement and extended
supervision penalties for the Class E felony and then increased them by
adding three years to the maximum term of confinement and two years to
the maximum period of extended supervision because the defendant was a
habitual offender.
The defendant appealed, arguing that Wis. Stat. section 973.01(2)(c)
does not authorize a sentencing court to impose any portion of a penalty
enhancer as extended supervision. Instead, the defendant urged, any
penalty enhancement can be applied only to increase the term of
confinement in prison.
In a published decision, the court of appeals agreed with the
defendant's position. It concluded that the statute's plain language
does not authorize a sentencing court to impose any portion of a penalty
enhancer as extended supervision. Rather, any increase attributable to
the enhancer may be applied only to increase the maximum term of
confinement in prison. See State v. Jones, 2002 WI App 29
(summarized in the March 2002 issue of the Wisconsin
Lawyer).
The supreme court has ordered the court of appeals to withdraw this
decision. The basis for the supreme court's action has nothing to do
with the substantive merits of the court of appeals' decision. Rather,
the supreme court concluded that the defendant's motion to voluntarily
dismiss the appeal, which was filed before the court of appeals'
decision was dated and filed, "operated to automatically dismiss his
appeal with no further action needed from the court of appeals." (¶
8) "We conclude that this situation is controlled by State v.
Lee, 197 Wis. 2d 959, 542 N.W.2d 143 (1996), where this court held
that the court of appeals may not refuse to dismiss an appeal when an
appellant notifies the court of voluntary dismissal of the appeal
pursuant to Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 809.18 prior to the court of
appeals' issuance of a decision on the merits of the appeal." (¶ 6)
Accordingly, said the supreme court, the court of appeals' decision in
this matter must be withdrawn.
Criminal Law
Disorderly Conduct - Anonymous Mailings - "Disturbance"
State v. Schwebke,
2002 WI 55 (filed 29 May 2002)
Defendant Schwebke was convicted of disorderly conduct for sending
"anonymous" mailings on six occasions to three different people,
contrary to Wis. Stat. section 947.01. The court of appeals affirmed his
conviction.
The supreme court, in an opinion written by Justice Bablitch, also
affirmed. The court held that the disorderly conduct statute "does not
necessarily require disruptions or disturbances that implicate the
public directly. The statute encompasses conduct that tends to cause a
disturbance or disruption that is personal or private in nature, as long
as there exists the real possibility that this disturbance or disruption
will spill over and disrupt the peace, order or safety of the
surrounding community as well." (¶30) "Personal annoyance" alone is
not sufficient. The court was unconvinced that the Legislature did not
intend to include "harassing" conduct within section 947.01. Finally,
the record supported the conviction. The mailings were disturbing
because they evinced the defendant's "obsessive" observations of "every
aspect" of the victims' lives. (See ¶42)
Chief Justice Abrahamson, joined by Justice Bradley, dissented. The
dissenters fully agreed that Schwebke's behavior was traumatically
disturbing, but argued that the victims (and the state) should have
resorted to remedies other than section 947.01, which was too broadly
construed by the majority.
(See ¶54)
Exposing Minors to Harmful Materials - No Contest Pleas
State v. Trochinski,
2002 WI 56 (filed 30 May 2002)
The defendant, Trochinski, pleaded no contest to one count of
exposing a minor to harmful materials, contrary to Wis. Stat. section
948.11(2). The charges arose when the defendant gave nude pictures of
himself to a 17-year-old girl who worked at a gas station that he
frequented. The nude pictures, 10 in all and including one with his
penis exposed, were in an envelope and accompanied by a photocopied
letter from Playgirl magazine indicating that the photos would
be published in a forthcoming issue. He also wrote a personal letter
that "invited" the girl to "review the photographs." Trochinski's no
contest plea followed his unsuccessful attack on the statute's
constitutionality. In later seeking post-conviction relief, he argued
that he should be permitted to withdraw his plea because he did not
understand the term "harmful" as used in section 948.11(2). This claim
also was rejected. The court of appeals also rejected Trochinski's
attacks against the statute and his claim that his plea should be
withdrawn.
The supreme court, in a decision by Justice Crooks, affirmed. First,
the court concluded that Trochinski "failed to establish a prima facie
case that his plea was involuntary." (¶3) Nothing in the
Bangert case (1986) or its progeny "suggests that a circuit
court is required to do as Trochinski suggests here - describe the
elements of the offense and ensure the defendant specifically
understands how the State must prove each element." (¶22)
Rather, Trochinski's knowledge of the elements was adequately
established by the signed plea questionnaire, where the elements were
"clearly laid out," and the plea colloquy during which the court
"summarized the elements." (¶23) All that mattered was that
Trochinski "understood and acknowledged that the photos were harmful to
children." The court rejected his contention "that he did not understand
the meaning of `harmful to children' because he did not understand that
the jury would decide whether the photos were inappropriate for [the
victim]." The Legislature had made this determination by providing that
a child was anyone under 18. (¶24) In sum, the Bangert
procedures provide that "a valid plea requires only knowledge of the
elements of the offense, not a knowledge of the nuances and descriptions
of the elements." (¶29)
Second, the court upheld the facial constitutionality of section
948.11(2) based on "settled law." The court declined Trochinski's
invitation to reverse several prior cases, yet reiterated "that the
personal contact between the perpetrator and the child-victim is what
allows the state to impose on the defendant the risk that the victim is
a minor." (¶39)
Chief Justice Abrahamson, joined by Justice Bablitch, dissented on
the ground that a sufficient factual basis did not support the finding
of guilt. The dissent did not view the main issue as whether the plea
was "voluntary."
Criminal Procedure
Discovery - Statements of the Defendant
State v. DeLao, 2002
WI 49 (filed 7 May 2002)
Prior to trial, the defendant filed a discovery demand, specifically
demanding that the state provide her with written summaries of any oral
statements she had made. On the second day of trial, after the state had
rested, the district attorney advised the trial court that the state had
in its possession statements made by the defendant, which had not been
disclosed to the defense. The prosecutor further indicated an intention
to use these statements to impeach the defendant if she testified. The
prosecutor explained to the court that the state's primary investigator
in the case had just that day made the prosecutor aware of the
defendant's statements, although the investigator was aware of those
statements prior to trial. Over objection, the circuit court permitted
the district attorney to cross-examine the defendant using the
statements.
In a published decision, the court of appeals reversed. See
2001 WI App 132. It concluded that a discovery violation occurred when
the state failed to provide the defense with the statements in the
possession of the chief investigator. The appellate court further
concluded that no good cause existed for the withholding of the evidence
and it remanded the case for a new trial.
In a majority decision authored by Justice Bradley, the supreme court
affirmed the court of appeals. The court began its analysis by observing
that the discovery statute requires that, upon demand, the state must
provide to the defense, within a reasonable time before trial begins, a
written summary of the defendant's oral statements that the prosecutor
plans to use at trial. See Wis. Stat. § 971.23(1)(b).
Under section 971.23, the state's discovery obligations may extend to
information in the possession of law enforcement agencies but not
personally known to the district attorney. "Put another way, under
certain circumstances, the knowledge of law enforcement officers may be
imputed to the prosecutor." (¶ 21) However, the prosecutor's
obligation to find out about information obtained by investigative
agencies is not without limits. "The State is charged with knowledge of
material and information in the possession or control of others who have
participated in the investigation or evaluation of the case and who
either regularly report or with reference to the particular case have
reported to the prosecutor's office." (¶ 24)
Even though the chief investigator was aware of the statements, the
state argued on appeal that the failure to turn them over to the defense
was not a violation of the discovery statute because the statute speaks
in terms of furnishing material "which the district attorney plans to
use in the course of the trial." The state argued that the prosecutor
did not know of these statements before trial and thus could not have
planned to use them at trial.
The supreme court rejected this argument. It concluded that the
language of the statute embodies an objective standard. As
applicable to this case, the question is whether a reasonable district
attorney exercising due diligence would have known of the defendant's
statements and, if so, whether a reasonable prosecutor would have
planned to use them in the course of trial. The supreme court concluded
that on the facts here, a reasonable prosecutor should have known of the
statements and would have planned to use them.
The court also rejected the state's argument that it had good cause
for failing to disclose the statements. The state's assertion that it
had acted in good faith was insufficient to show good cause for its
failure to disclose. Some explanation in addition to good faith is
necessary and the state did not provide that explanation. Said the
court, "the fact that the prosecutor in [the defendant's] case did not
actually know of the evidence is no explanation at all. In short, the
State has failed to demonstrate good cause for its violation of the
discovery statute" (¶ 58)
Lastly, the court concluded that, given the evidence in this case,
the defendant was prejudiced by the admission of her statements at
trial. Accordingly, the court affirmed the decision of the court of
appeals reversing the conviction and remanding the matter for a new
trial.
Justice Prosser filed a dissenting opinion that was joined by Justice
Sykes.
Evidence - Crime Lab Report - Confrontation Right - Hearsay
Exceptions
State v. Williams,
2002 WI 58 (filed 6 June 2002)
The defendant, Williams, was convicted of possession of cocaine with
intent to deliver and several other charges. He claimed that his right
to confrontation was violated by the admission into evidence of a state
crime lab report to prove the presence of cocaine. The analyst who
performed the tests did not testify; rather, the laboratory's "unit
leader" provided supporting expert testimony. The court of appeals
certified this case to the supreme court.
The supreme court, in an opinion authored by Justice Bradley,
affirmed the judgment. Since the case raised an issue of first
impression, the court examined persuasive authority from other
jurisdictions that made a "critical point": one must distinguish
"between an expert who forms an opinion based in part on the work of
others and an expert who merely summarizes the work of others. In short,
one expert cannot act as a mere conduit for the opinion of another."
(¶19) Prevailing cases "teach that the presence and availability
for cross-examination of a highly qualified witness, who is familiar
with the procedures at hand, supervises or reviews the work of the
testing analyst, and renders her own expert opinion is sufficient to
protect a defendant's right to confrontation, despite the fact that the
expert was not the person who performed the mechanics of the original
tests." (¶20) On this record, the court found no violation of the
confrontation right in light of the supervisor's qualifications and
experience, "her close connections" to the tests that inculpated the
defendant (she performed the "peer review"), and her expert opinion that
the tested substance was cocaine.
Williams next claimed that the supervisor's expert testimony was not
admissible because the laboratory report on which it was based was
inadmissible hearsay. First, the court concluded that Wis. Stat. section
907.03, and supporting case law, permits experts to base opinions on
inadmissible evidence provided it is of a type reasonably relied upon by
experts in the field in drawing inferences or opinions. Second, the
court addressed the admissibility of the report under the "business
records" exception to the hearsay rule, section 908.03(6). It held that
the trial court's decision to admit the report under this hearsay
exception was error. "[C]onsidering the statutory scheme and the rule
that records prepared in anticipation of litigation generally do not
fall within the business records exception to the hearsay rule, we
determine that the state crime lab report prepared for Williams'
prosecution was erroneously admitted as a business record under section
908.03(6)." (¶50) The error was, however, harmless.
Finally, the trial court properly refused to introduce a third
party's alleged exculpatory statement under the hearsay exception for
statements against penal interest, section 908.045(4). In a nutshell,
the defense failed to show that it exercised the due diligence necessary
to demonstrate the declarant's "unavailability," as demanded by section
908.045(4). Nor did the exclusion of this evidence violate the
defendant's constitutional right to present a defense. The record failed
to reveal that the excluded evidence was "essential" to his defense.
(The court also upheld the sufficiency of evidence supporting the
conviction.)
Involuntary Statements - Suppression - Witnesses
State v. Samuel,
2002 WI 34 (filed 25 April 2002)
The defendant, Samuel, was convicted of sexual assault, abduction,
and interference with custody for conduct involving his relationship
with a minor girl, Tisha, with whom he traveled outside Wisconsin for 13
months. Tisha made various statements to law enforcement officers that
described her sexual relationship with the defendant. In pretrial
motions, Samuel moved to suppress Tisha's statements to police on the
ground that they were involuntary because of threats and coercion. The
circuit court found that Samuel lacked standing to attack Tisha's
statements. At trial the state called Tisha as a witness, but her
testimony largely exculpated Samuel. On cross-examination the state
introduced her prior, inculpatory statements made to police. The court
of appeals reversed Samuel's conviction, ruling that "the standard for
suppressing a defendant's involuntary statements should also apply to
the suppression of involuntary witness statements." (¶13)
The supreme court, in a decision written by Justice Bradley, reversed
the court of appeals. Using the due process analysis as its
"touchstone," the court held that the witnesses' statements should be
subjected to a more demanding standard than a criminal defendant's. More
precisely, police misconduct must be "egregious" in the sense that it
"undermines confidence in the reliability of a witness's statements."
(¶30) Among the factors to be considered are: "(1) whether a
witness was coached on what to say; (2) whether investigating
authorities asked questions blatantly tailored to extract a particular
answer; (3) whether the authorities made a threat with consequences that
would be unlawful if carried out; (4) whether the witness was given an
express and unlawful quid pro quo; (5) whether the State had a separate
legitimate purpose for its conduct; and (6) whether the witness was
represented by an attorney at the time of the coercion or statement,
..."
The first four factors weigh in favor of suppression, the latter two
against it. (¶31)
The court next addressed the applicable procedures. First, the
defendant must bring a motion to suppress, which must allege sufficient
facts to warrant an evidentiary hearing. If the motion papers are
insufficient, a trial court may conduct a nonevidentiary hearing to
determine if the defendant's initial burden has been met and there is a
need for an evidentiary hearing. Second, at an evidentiary hearing the
defendant bears the burden of producing evidence to establish a prima
facie case of involuntariness. Once this burden is met, the state must
persuade the judge by a preponderance of the evidence that the statement
is voluntary under the standard set forth above. (¶¶
35-39)
On the record before it, the court concluded that "Tisha's statements
were not derived from egregious police misconduct that would produce
statements unreliable as a matter of law." (¶46)
Justice Bablitch dissented and would have remanded the case because
the record "raises serious questions as to the interrogation methods
employed during the intake conference and immediately thereafter."
(¶50)
Expert Testimony - Right to Present Evidence
State v. St. George,
2002 WI 50 (filed 8 May 2002)
The defendant was convicted for sexually assaulting 5-year-old Kayla,
whom he allegedly fondled after she crawled into bed with him and
Kayla's mother. The assault occurred sometime during the night. Although
Kayla reported the assault to her mother the next day and later repeated
the story to a doctor and others, when called at trial Kayla denied that
the fondling had occurred and testified that she had made up some of the
events. The defendant denied that he had improperly touched Kayla. The
court of appeals affirmed his conviction.
The supreme court, in a decision authored by Chief Justice
Abrahamson, reversed and remanded for a new trial. The defendant raised
two issues. First, he claimed a constitutional right to present evidence
that Kayla had engaged in sexual contact with another child. Applying a
two-part test (see below), the court upheld the exclusion of such
evidence on grounds of relevancy. Kayla's initial statements did not
demonstrate "such precocious sexual knowledge that a jury would believe
that some sexual contact with the defendant must necessarily have
occurred." And without such an inference, there was "no reason for the
defense to show that Kayla could have acquired sexual knowledge from
prior sexual encounters" (¶26).
As to the second issue, the trial court erroneously exercised its
discretion by excluding testimony by a defense expert regarding
recantation and interview techniques regarding children. Since the
defendant was not attacking the constitutionality of Wis. Stat. section
907.02 or Wisconsin law regarding the admissibility of expert witness
testimony, the court examined the scope of a defendant's constitutional
right to present a defense. The court is required "to determine the
accused's interest in admitting the evidence and to determine whether
the evidence is clearly central to the defense and the exclusion of the
evidence is arbitrary and disproportionate to the purpose of the rule of
exclusion, so that exclusion `undermine[s] fundamental elements of the
defendant's case.'"(¶53) The test, then, has two parts.
Under the standard's first part, the defendant must show the
following four factors: 1) The expert witness testimony met the
standards of Wis. Stat. section 907.02 governing the admission of expert
testimony; 2) the expert's testimony was clearly relevant to a material
issue in this case; 3) the expert's testimony was necessary to the
defendant's case; and 4) the probative value of the testimony of the
defendant's expert witness outweighed its prejudicial effect. (¶54)
The appellate record supported a finding of all four factors. The second
part of the constitutional right addresses whether the defendant's right
to present the proffered evidence "is nonetheless outweighed by the
state's compelling interest to exclude the evidence." (¶55) The
court found no such countervailing interest.
Concurring, Justice Sykes wrote separately to "emphasize [her]
concern about constitutionalizing the multitude of discretionary
evidentiary decisions that occur on a daily basis in criminal trials in
the circuit courts of this state." (¶76)
Justice Crooks, joined by Justice Wilcox, dissented. They argued that
the majority erroneously applied its own "erroneous exercise of
discretion standard." (¶90)
Wisconsin Sales Representative Act
Wis. Stat. Section 134.93 - Corporations as Plaintiffs
Industry-to-Industry Inc. v.
Hillsman Modular Molding Inc., 2002 WI 51 (filed 17 May
2002)
Industry-to-Industry Inc. (Industry) is a manufacturer's
representative and Hillsman Modular Molding Inc. (Hillsman) is a
Florida-based business that makes custom injection plastic parts.
Industry had been Hillsman's Wisconsin representative since 1971. In
1999 Hillsman terminated its relationship with Industry. Thereafter
Industry filed suit against Hillsman alleging that Hillsman failed to
pay commissions on orders prior to August 1999 in breach of their
contract and in violation of the Wisconsin Sales Representative Act (the
act). See Wis. Stat. § 134.93.
The circuit court granted partial summary judgment to Hillsman,
concluding that Industry was not an "independent sales representative"
as defined in the act and thus could not bring suit thereunder. The
court of appeals reversed.
In a decision authored by Justice Crooks, the supreme court affirmed
the court of appeals. Pursuant to section 134.93(1)(b), an "independent
sales representative" is defined as "a person, other than an insurance
agent or broker, who contracts with a principal to solicit wholesale
orders and who is compensated, in whole or in part, by commission." The
question on appeal was whether Industry, as a corporation, qualifies as
a "person" within the meaning of the statute.
The supreme court held that a corporation is a "person" within the
meaning of the act. In so concluding, the court looked not only at the
common understanding of corporations as "persons" in Wisconsin law, but
also at Wis. Stat. section 990.01(26), which defines a "person" as
specifically including corporations. The court found that applying this
general statutory definition as well as the common understanding
described above would not be contrary to the manifest intent of the
Legislature. Further support for this conclusion was identified in the
relevant language of the statute under construction.
Wisconsin Lawyer