STATE of Wisconsin, Plaintiff-Respondent, v. Mark A. KRUZYCKI, Defendant-Appellant.†
No. 93-0292-CR
Court of Appeals
Submitted on briefs May 10, 1994. — Decided March 9, 1995.
531 N.W.2d 429
†Petition to review denied.
For the plaintiff-respondent the cause was submitted on the brief of James E. Doyle, attorney general, with Mary E. Burke, assistant attorney general.
Before Gartzke, P.J., Dykman and Sundby, JJ.
GARTZKE, P.J. Mark Kruzycki appeals from a judgment convicting him on four counts of first-degree sexual assault,
Kruzycki raises several issues: (1) whether commitment under the now-repealed provisions of the Sex Crimes Law,
We conclude that Kruzycki was erroneously sentenced as a repeater, but he was not subjected to double jeopardy, and the trial court properly allowed the prosecution to use his 1979 convictions to impeach his credibility. Because Kruzycki did not object to the alleged prosecutorial misconduct, and the alleged misconduct was not plain error, and the criteria for a new trial under
1. Sentencing Under the Repeater Statute
The repeater statute,
The crimes for which Kruzycki was convicted and sentenced in the case resulting in this appeal were committed in September 1991. In 1979, he was convicted of first-degree sexual assault and second-degree sexual assault,
The trial court denied Kruzycki‘s postconviction motion challenging the increases to his terms of imprisonment under the repeater statute. It reasoned that because he had been in “actual confinement” when serving his commitments under the Sex Crimes Law, he had no opportunity for criminal conduct, and therefore the period of that confinement is excluded when computing the “preceding 5-year period” described in
The State contends that Kruzycki waived the right on appeal to question his sentence as a repeater when he withdrew his motion challenging the applicability of the repeater statute and again when he stipulated to its applicability. We consider the withdrawal as essentially nothing more than the usual waiver which occurs when trial counsel fails timely to object to error and thus usually prevents his or her client from raising the issue for the first time on appeal. The waiver rule is one of judicial administration, and it does not affect our power to deal with an issue. Wirth v. Ehly, 93 Wis. 2d 433, 443-44, 287 N.W.2d 140, 145-46 (1980). Kruzycki‘s stipulation to the applicability of the repeater statute does not affect our review. A concession on an issue of law does not bind an appellate court. A question of law “cannot be bargained away by counsel nor shielded
No Wisconsin precedent specifically states that commitment under the now-repealed provisions of the Sex Crimes Law tolls the five-year limit on the use of prior convictions to enhance sentences under the repeater statute,
The State urges that we treat the word “sentence” in
However, the considered views repeatedly expressed in State v. Hungerford 76 Wis. 2d 171, 251 N.W.2d 9 (1977), regarding the nature of the confinement of a person committed under the Sex Crimes Law, are such that we cannot hold that a commitment is a sentence for purposes of the repeater statute,
The issue in Hungerford was whether a sentence for the crime of escape under
The Hungerford court foreshadowed the State‘s argument in this appeal on the legislature‘s intent. The court said,
While the argument can be made that the legislature intended that persons who escape from
custody while under a commitment pursuant to ch. 975, STATS. , should be sentenced consecutively to the commitment, the language of the statute [§ 946.42(4), STATS., 1975 ] is plain and unambiguous. Hungerford had not been sentenced nor could a sentence be imposed under the sex deviate commitment.
Hungerford, 76 Wis. 2d at 177-78, 251 N.W.2d at 11 (footnote omitted).
The repeated language in Hungerford having hammered the point that a commitment under the Sex Crimes Law is not a sentence, we reject the State‘s proposed construction of the last sentence in
2. Double Jeopardy
The complaining witness, J.T., testified that on September 13, 1991, Kruzycki invited her to his apartment that evening. When she arrived, Kruzycki had the lights out, candles burning and music playing. They sat down at a table and talked, drank coffee and smoked cigarettes. After fifteen to twenty minutes, J.T. got up to make a telephone call. The telephone sat on a mattress in the corner of the one-room efficiency. J.T.
Kruzycki asserts that under the circumstances his convictions and consecutive sentences for the two acts of vaginal sexual assault subject him to double jeopardy. Both the
The prohibition against double jeopardy prevents arbitrarily dividing a single offense into multiple offenses with multiple punishments. State v. Kanarowski, 170 Wis. 2d 504, 510, 489 N.W.2d 660, 662 (Ct. App. 1992). When the claim is made that a single offense has been wrongfully divided into multiple offenses, the first question is whether the offenses are identical in law, that is, whether they involve one sec-
Kruzycki‘s two acts of vaginal sexual assault are the same in law. Each violates the same section of the statute,
In Hirsch the defendant was charged with three counts of first-degree sexual assault, having sexual contact with a five-year-old child, contrary to
The facts before us differ dramatically from those in Hirsch. In Hirsch the defendant allegedly moved his hand from the child‘s vagina to her anus and back again, and at some point he turned her over. Kruzycki assaulted J.T. for fifty minutes, excluding the cunnilingus. He engaged in vaginal intercourse, during which he withdrew and ejaculated twice, then he turned her over and had anal intercourse, and then he turned her over a second time and again had vaginal intercourse. Nonconsensual penile entry of a victim‘s vagina and anus is vastly different in kind and degree of force than manually touching a vagina and anus. Gaining entry and twice reaching ejaculation, then turning the victim over and gaining anal entry and then again turning the victim over and again gaining vaginal entry, are acts involving separate and distinctly different volitional acts, in contrast with the sexual contacts in Hirsch.
Having concluded that the two acts of vaginal intercourse are sufficiently different in fact to justify separate charges or counts under the same statute, we next examine the legislative intent. The Sauceda court concluded that when enacting
We conclude that the two charges against Kruzycki and his convictions and sentences on those charges do not violate state or federal prohibitions against subjecting a person to double jeopardy.
3. Impeachment by Use of Prior Convictions
Kruzycki was tried in 1991 for the September 1991 sexual assaults. In 1979, he was convicted of first-degree sexual assault, second-degree sexual assault and burglary. Evidence that a witness has been convicted of a crime is admissible for the purpose of attacking the witness‘s credibility.
A prior conviction on any crime is relevant to the credibility of a witness‘s testimony. State v. Kuntz, 160 Wis. 2d 722, 753, 467 N.W.2d 531, 543 (1991). Our law presumes that a person who has been convicted of a crime is less likely to be a truthful witness than a person who has not been convicted. Liphford v. State, 43 Wis. 2d 367, 371, 168 N.W.2d 549, 551 (1969). The
Whether to allow prior-conviction evidence for impeachment purposes under
When deciding whether to admit evidence of prior convictions for impeachment purposes a trial court should
consider whether from the lapse of time since the conviction, the rehabilitation or pardon of the person convicted, the gravity of the crime, the involvement of dishonesty or false statement in the crime . . . , the probative value of the evidence of the crime is substantially outweighed by the danger of undue prejudice.
Kuntz, 160 Wis. 2d at 752, 467 N.W.2d at 543 (quoting Judicial Council Committee‘s Note, Chapter 906, Wisconsin Rules of Evidence, 59 Wis. 2d R181 (1974)) (citations omitted).
Before the trial court admitted the convictions for impeachment purposes, it considered not only that the convictions proposed for use as impeachment material had occurred in 1979 but also Kruzycki‘s lack of reha-
The trial court‘s ruling is based on facts of record. Since his 1979 convictions, Kruzycki was confined from July 1979 through February 1985 and from September 1986 through July 1990. The court employed a rational analysis of the relationship between the ages of Kruzycki‘s past convictions, the periods he was confined, and his lack of reform. It properly exercised its discretion.
Kruzycki contends that the concerns that make consideration of a Sex-Crimes-Law commitment improper for purposes of the repeater statute also render improper that consideration when determining whether to admit a prior conviction for impeachment purposes. We disagree. The trial court‘s rationale is based on Kruzycki‘s reduced ability to commit a crime while he was confined under the Sex Crimes Law. Why he was confined is irrelevant to the court‘s reasoning.4
4. New Trial for Plain Error and in Interest of Justice
Kruzycki argues that the prosecutor‘s unobjected-to conduct was plain error warranting a new trial. A defendant‘s failure to object to a plain error affecting substantial rights does not preclude us from taking notice of the error.
Kruzycki asserts that plain error occurred because the prosecutor accused him on cross-examination of concocting his story over the three months he had access to discovery materials and because she argued the same point in her closing rebuttal argument. Whether or not arguable error occurred, we see nothing so obvious about it to justify our invoking the plain-error rule.
Kruzycki next contends that prosecutorial misconduct occurred because (1) the prosecutor called him “pathetic,” (2) the prosecutor told the jury that she was not the only one who could have inquired to find out what the complaining witness was wearing on the day
5. Conclusion
We remand for resentencing and otherwise affirm the judgment of conviction and order on postconviction motions.
By the Court.—Judgment and order affirmed in part; reversed in part and cause remanded with directions.
DYKMAN, J. (concurring in part; dissenting in part). I agree that Kruzycki was not subjected to double jeopardy, that the trial court properly exercised its discretion in admitting evidence of Kruzycki‘s 1979 convictions, and that we should not order a new trial
