SANFORD, Plaintiff in error, V. STATE, Defendant in error.
No. 75-861-CR
Supreme Court of Wisconsin
February 15, 1977
Argued January 6, 1977. (Also reported in 250 N. W. 2d 348.)
For the foregoing reasons, the constitutionality of sec. 144.07 (1m), Stats., is therefore upheld.
By the Court.—Judgment affirmed.
For the defendant in error the cause was argued by Betty R. Brown, assistant attorney general, with whom on the brief was Bronson C. La Follette, attorney general.
ROBERT W. HANSEN, J. This appeal centers its attack on the trial court ruling that evidence of the prior incident above involving this defendant was admissible in his trial on the charge of rape.
In this state, by statute, evidence of other crimes, wrongs or acts is not admissible “to prove the character of a person in order to show that he acted in conformity therewith,” but is not excluded “when offered for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.”1 [Emphasis supplied.] In the instant case, the trial court admitted the challenged testimony as to the prior incident on the issue of identity. With the defense that of alibi, and the identification of defendant by the victim of the rape challenged, the issue as to the identity of the rapist was the principal issue at the trial of this defendant.
It is well settled in this state that evidence of other crimes may be admitted “for the limited purpose of identifying the defendant by means of the method of operation as the person who committed the particular crime charged.”2 That is the majority rule in other jurisdictions as well.3 This court has stated the rule to be: “... evidence of prior crimes is admissible when such evidence is particularly probative in showing elements of the specific crime charged, intent, identity, system of criminal activity, to impeach credibility ....”4 [Emphasis supplied.]
Despite the statute and controlling case law, defendant argues that evidence as to the prior sexual assault was improperly admitted because it lacked probativeness, since it was not “similar enough in character” to the crime charged. Defendant relies upon the case in which this court held that only evidence of “prior offenses of a like or unique nature” may be shown for purposes of identifying the defendant as one who perpetrated the crime charged.8
The requirement of similarity is here clearly met. Striking similarities between the rape alleged and the prior incident include: (1) Both victims emerging from a bus at night and walking toward their homes; (2) innocuous questions asked of the victim by her attacker to stop her and hold her attention; (3) each victim grabbed from behind, an object stuck in her back and the victim told by her assailant that he had a gun; (4) a garage
Additionally, defendant contends the prior incident here was not “approximate enough in time” as to be probative of the issue at trial. Our court has held that the probative value of a prior incident “depends in part upon its nearness in time, place, and circumstances to the alleged crime or element sought to be proved.”10 Remoteness in point of time does not necessarily render evidence irrelevant “... but it may do so where the lapsed time is so great as to negative all rational or logical connection between the fact sought to be proved and the remote evidence offered in proof thereof.”11
However, in the same decision, we held that “Rejection of evidence because of remoteness rests in the trial court‘s discretion.”12 In the exercise of such discretion, the element of remoteness in time “must be balanced against the uniqueness of the prior act of which evidence is
We agree with that finding, but also note that any issue as to remoteness of the prior incident is almost completely defused by the fact that during the time gap between the prior incident and the rape, defendant was in confinement in a correctional institution. At oral argument it was agreed by state and defense that the defendant was thus confined. In fact he was released only a few days before the assault involved in this appeal, according to the oral argument. Thus the defendant returned to the same neighborhood to repeat the same plan or pattern of conduct at very nearly his earliest opportunity so to do. With the element of opportunity to repeat added, the time span between the prior incident and the present criminal offense becomes a matter of days, not months or years. Accordingly, probativity of the prior incident is not attenuated by the time factor.
This court requires trial courts to consider and determine “whether the prejudice of other-crimes evidence is so great as compared with its relevancy and the necessity for its admission in the particular case as to require its exclusion.”14 Thus, in the very recent Tarrell Case, as to prior acts ranging from inappropriate comments to a girl to enticing a minor for immoral purposes, our court agreed with the trial court that, “[w]hile the admission
As a separate and independent base for attack upon the admission of evidence as to the prior incident, defendant contends that such evidence related to an alleged prior act of the defendant, committed while a juvenile, and hence was not admissible under
The short answer is that no reference to or record of any juvenile court proceedings was introduced at the time of the rape trial of this defendant. No transcript of proceedings in the juvenile court was offered or admitted. Merely because defendant was under the age of majority at the time of the prior incident does not in itself bring the testimony of the victim as to what then transpired within the reach of either
A shorter answer would be that this issue as to nonadmissibility under
Finally, defendant contends it was error for the trial court to permit the prosecution to impeach testimony of the defendant via the use of evidence of the details and circumstances of a prior incident which led to a prior juvenile adjudication. This is very nearly a rerun of the issue dealt with above. The reference is to the testimony of the police officer as a rebuttal witness. The officer testified that the defendant had admitted forcing the victim in the prior incident to commit acts of sexual perversion. This followed defendant‘s testimony on the witness stand that he had not forced the victim in the
Defendant contends such impeachment of defendant‘s testimony violates
The defendant testified on cross-examination that he did not make certain admissions to police officers who questioned him concerning the prior sexual assault. In rebuttal, to impeach such testimony, the state called to the witness stand a police officer who testified that the defendant did make the certain specified admissions to him and his partner. There was no reference in the police officer‘s testimony to any “juvenile adjudication” to which
At the outset the trial court issued a two-prong order. First, the court held that evidence contained in the state‘s offer of proof of the prior incident was admissible on the issue of identity. Second, the court held that if the defendant took the stand and denied the prior incident, the state could impeach his testimony with incriminating statements allegedly made by defendant to a police officer who had investigated that incident. That is what the trial
By the Court.—Judgment and order affirmed.
ABRAHAMSON, J. (dissenting). For reasons similar to ones I expressed more fully in my dissenting opinion in State v. Tarrell, 74 Wis.2d 647, 661, 247 N.W.2d 696 (1976), I believe the majority has erred in its application of
I have read the record, and I do not find that the other offense offered in evidence here was “of a like or unique nature” to the offense charged. To prove identity the other like crimes must be so nearly identical, so unusual and distinctive, as to be like the defendant‘s signature. McCormick on Evidence, sec. 190, p. 449 (2d ed. 1972). A careful study of the list in the majority opinion of the “similarities” between the offense charged and the single prior act shows that many of the points of similarity would be points of similarity between any two rape cases.
Even if one finds the prior act probative on the issue of identity (or modus operandi), I conclude the probative value of the evidence was far outweighed by the danger of undue prejudice.
