Chad Schroeder appeals from an order that denied his postconviction motion challenging his conviction and sentence on two charges of third-degree sexual assault contrary to § 940.225(3), Stats. The charges involved incidents occurring before his eighteenth birthday, but the criminal complaint was not filed until after he turned eighteen. He pleaded guilty to both counts. Schroeder contends that he was entitled to a hearing under
State v. Becker,
BACKGROUND
The State filed a delinquency petition on December 4, 1990, charging Schroeder with one count of
On March 28,1991, the State filed a criminal complaint charging Schroeder with eleven counts of either second or third-degree sexual assault. A second amended complaint added seventeen more counts. Three of the counts were based on the same conduct alleged in the delinquency petition as amended; twenty-three were based on other incidents occurring before Schroeder's eighteenth birthday; and two were
After an unsuccessful direct appeal raising only an ineffective assistance of counsel issue, Schroeder filed a motion for postconviction relief under § 974.06, Stats., asking the court to vacate the judgments of conviction on counts 2 and 3 of the information because "subject matter jurisdiction as to [those counts] properly rested with the Juvenile Court [and] [t]he Juvenile Court never waived jurisdiction in regard to those charges." Therefore, Schroeder contended, the convictions on those two charges were void and had to be dismissed with prejudice. Alternatively, Schroeder's motion sought an evidentiary hearing under
State v. Becker,
DISCUSSION
On appeal Schroeder contends the trial court erred in deciding that he waived the right to raise his objections to counts 2 and 3 by the entry of his guilty pleas because, he contends, those objections challenged the subject matter jurisdiction of the court, and the entry of a guilty plea does not waive objections to subject matter jurisdiction. The State responds that Schroeder's claim that he is entitled to a
Becker
hearing does not affect the court's subject matter jurisdiction but instead implicates a defendant's constitutional right to due process, and guilty pleas do waive any potential constitutional error. Whether a trial court lacks subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law, which we review de novo.
State v. Webster,
The general and often-stated rule is that the knowing, voluntary and intelligent entry of a guilty plea waives all "nonjurisdictional defects" preceding the entry of a plea, including constitutional violations and objections to personal jurisdiction, but does not waive objections to subject matter jurisdiction.
Pillsbury v. State,
Criminal subject matter jurisdiction is defined as the power of the court to inquire into the charged crime, to apply the applicable law and to declare the punishment in a court of a judicial proceeding. The power is one conferred by law. A court has subject matter jurisdiction where it has been authorized to hear and determine the primary object of the action.
The circuit courts in Wisconsin are courts of general jurisdiction. They have original subject matter jurisdiction of all matters, civil and criminal, not excepted in the constitution or prohibited by law.
Mack,
If the criminal complaint is defective, or if the defendant is convicted under an invalid law, the conviction itself is 4 not void. The circuit court still has subject matter jurisdiction to render its judgment. Even where the error in the law. or proceedings is fatal to the prosecution, the circuit court has the power to inquire into the sufficiency of the charges before the court.
Id.
at 295,
The court in
Mack
observed one instance in which courts have held a defect was "jurisdictional" and therefore non-waivable-when the complaint fails "to charge any offense known to law."
Id.
(citing
Champlain v. State,
The criminal complaint against Schroeder, and the amended complaints, properly alleged the elements of the crimes of second-degree sexual assault as defined in § 848.08(2), Stats., and third-degree sexual assault as defined in § 940.225(3), STATS., and Schroeder does not contend otherwise. Rather, he contends that the use of the terms "jurisdiction of the juvenile court" and "jurisdiction of the criminal court" or "adult court" in Becker and subsequent cases applying Becker, demonstrate that an inappropriate motive for the State's delay in charging affects the court's subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the criminal charges and is therefore not waived by a guilty plea. We disagree.
The court in
Becker
based its requirement of a hearing on
Miller v. Quatsoe,
Recognizing that the constitution may not require that the state provide a bifurcated system so as to better provide for the juvenile offender, nevertheless it still remains that when the state chooses to establish such a system, that system must operate in a manner commensurate with the Fourteenth Amendment's demands of due process and equal protection.
Miller,
Decisions applying
Becker
have recognized that the purpose of the
Becker
hearing is to address the claim of a due process violation. For example, in
State v. Montgomery,
We acknowledge that in
Montgomery, LeQue
and
State v. Annala,
We add to our statements in
Michael J.L.
that, besides using the terms "jurisdiction" and "subject matter jurisdiction" when discussing the circuit court's statutory authority to adjudicate delinquency petitions, we, like the supreme court, have also used the terms "juvenile court" and "adult court" or "criminal court."
See Becker,
Thus, after court reorganization, the term "juvenile court," properly understood, means the circuit court adjudicating a case under the juvenile code,
see Michael J.L.,
Reading
Becker, Montgomery, LeQue
and
Annala
in light of
H.N.
and
Michael J.L.
permits us to more clearly formulate the purpose and effect of a
Becker
hearing. The competency of a circuit court to adjudicate offenses under the juvenile code in effect at the time relevant to this case required that a delinquency petition alleging the offenses be filed in the circuit court before Schroeder turned eighteen.
See
§48.12(1), Stats., 1991-92;
LeQue,
We conclude that the reasons the State did not file a delinquency petition alleging counts 2 and 3 before Schroeder's eighteenth birthday are relevant to whether Schroeder's right to due process was violated, but are not relevant to whether the circuit court had subject matter jurisdiction over those charges. Even if the State delayed for reasons constitutionally impermissible under Becker, the circuit court nevertheless had subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate those counts alleged in the criminal complaint. Therefore, Schroeder's entry of a guilty plea to those counts waived his objection based on the delay and waived his right to a Becker hearing to determine the reasons for the delay. 13
Notes
When the delinquency petition was filed, §48.12(1), STATS., 1989-90, provided that "[t]he court has exclusive jurisdiction, except as provided in ss. 48.17 and 48.18, over any child 12 years of age or older who is alleged to be delinquent. ..." Section 48.18(1), Stats., 1989-90, provided that after the child's sixteenth birthday or, in certain instances after the fourteenth birthday, "the child or district attorney may apply to the court to waive its jurisdiction under this chapter...." If the judge grants the waiver petition, § 48.18(6), 1989 — 90, provides: "the circuit court thereafter has exclusive jurisdiction." Sections 48.12 and 48.18, as well as other sections relating to delinquency proceedings contained in the former Chapter 48, STATS., have since been repealed and recodified in Chapter 938, STATS., the Juvenile Justice Code. See 1995 Wis. Act 77. Among other changes, the pertinent ages for children subject to the code and to waiver petitions are lower. See §§ 938.12 and 938.18, STATS.
According to
State v. Velez,
At the time of the defendant's guilty plea in
Mack v. State,
Circuit court, jurisdiction. SECTION 8: The circuit courts shall have original jurisdiction in all matters civil and criminal within this state, not excepted in this constitution, and not hereafter prohibited by law; and appellate jurisdiction from all inferior ' courts and tribunals, and a supervisory control over the same. They shall also have the power to issue writs of habeas corpus, mandamus, injunction, quo warranto, certiorari, and all other writs necessary to carry into effect their orders, judgments and decrees, and give them a general control over inferior courts and jurisdictions.
Article VII, Section 8 of the Wisconsin Constitution now provides:
Except as otherwise provided by law, the circuit court shall have original jurisdiction in all matters civil and criminal within this state and such appellate jurisdiction in the circuit as the legislature may prescribe by law. The circuit court may issue all writs necessary in aid of its jurisdiction.
Section 252.03, STATS., 1975, is substantially the same as § 753.03, Stats., 1997-98, except that the former did not refer to the "court of appeals." Section 753.03,1997-98, provides:
Jurisdiction of circuit courts. The circuit courts have the general jurisdiction prescribed for them by article VII of the constitution and have power to issue all writs, process and commissions provided in article VII of the constitution or by the statutes, or which may be necessary to the due execution of the powers vested in them. The circuit courts have power to hear and determine, within their respective circuits, all civil and criminal actions and proceedings unless exclusive jurisdiction is given to some other court; and they have all the powers, according to the usages of courts of law and equity, necessary to the full and complete jurisdiction of the causes and parties and the full and complete administration of justice, and to carry into effect their judgments, orders and other determinations, subject to review by the court of appeals or the supreme court as provided by law. The courts and the judges thereof have power to award all such writs, process andcommissions, throughout the state, returnable in the proper county.
We have also held that the entry of a guilty plea waived objections to subject matter jurisdiction based on conflicting evidence concerning where the crime occurred.
State v. Bratrud,
We rejected LeQue's argument that, since he allegedly committed the offenses at an age at which he could not have been waived into adult criminal court under the statute applicable at the time (§ 48.18(1), STATS., 1987-88), the legislature did not intend that charges could be filed in adult criminal court after he turned eighteen. We concluded that the "adult circuit court [had] the authority to determine
all
criminal actions [and
See footnote 5.
We recognize that the definition of subject matter jurisdiction in
Department of Human Serv. v. H.N.,
Article VII, Section 2 of the Wisconsin Constitution of 1975 provided in pertinent part:
Judicial power, where vested. SECTION 2. [As amended April 1966] The judicial power of this state, both as to matters of law and equity, shall be vested in a supreme court, circuit courts, and courts of probate. The legislature may also vest such jurisdiction as shall be deemed necessary in municipal courts, and may authorize the establishment of inferior courts in the several counties, cities, villages or towns, with limited civil and criminal jurisdiction.
Sections 253.01 and 253.13, STATS., 1975.
This was the language in the versions of §§48.12 and 48.18, Stats., applicable in
Miller v. Quatsoe,
Article VII, Section 2 of the Wisconsin Constitution now provides:
The judicial power of this state shall be vested in a unified court system consisting of one supreme court, a court of appeals, a circuit court, such trial courts of general uniform state-wide jurisdiction as the legislature may create by law, and a municipal court if authorized by the legislature under section 14.
Because of our disposition of the
Becker
issue, we do not address the second issue briefed by the parties — whether
State v. Escalona-Naranjo,
