Rоbert Stutesman appeals a judgment of conviction on fifteen counts of failure to pay child support contrary to § 948.22(2), STATS, (felony), eight as a repeater, and one count of failure to pay child support contrary to § 948.22(3) (misdemeanor), as a repeater. He also аppeals the order denying his post-conviction motion for a new trial. The sole issue raised on appeal is whether the trial court erred in excluding evidence that Stutesman was incarcerated during the time period relevant to the charges. We conclude that the trial сourt violated Stutesman's Sixth Amendment right to present a defense by excluding that evidence, and we therefore reverse and remand for a new trial.
BACKGROUND
Stutesman had three children during his marriage to Terry Ann Schultz. Stutesman and Schultz were divorced in December 1990, and, pursuant to various court orders, Stutesman wаs directed to pay child support. The time periods alleged in the information for the sixteen counts of failure to pay child support were from November 1, 1990 to June 30, 1994, and from September 1,1994 to July 25,1996.
Before trial, the State filed a motion in limine to prohibit the defendant from introducing testimony оr other evidence that he was unable to pay child support because he was incarcerated. The State argued that it was within the control of the defendant whether to *181 commit a crime, and the defense of inability to pay contemplated circumstances beyond thе defendant's control. Defense counsel argued that it was the State's burden to prove that Stutesman intentionally engaged in criminal conduct in order to avoid paying child support, and whether that was his intent was a question for the jury. The court granted the State's motion, concluding that evidenсe of Stutesman's incarceration was irrelevant. The court stated that the responsibility to pay child support did not terminate just because a person commits a crime and is incarcerated. The court observed that, although incarceration might be grounds for a trial court within the exercise of its discretion to reduce child support upon a motion, it was the obligation of the obligator to bring such a motion, and Stutesman had not done so.
After the jury returned a guilty verdict on the sixteen counts, Stutesman moved for a new trial on the ground that he had been denied the right to рresent the defense that he was unable to pay support because he was incarcerated. The trial court denied the motion for much the same reasons it granted the State's motion in limine. The court concluded that whether a defendant could present an affirmative dеfense was a question of law for the court, not a question of fact, and because Stutesman was in jail for crimes he committed, he did not have an affirmative defense based on inability to pay.
On appeal, Stutesman repeats his assertion that the trial court's ruling excluding evidencе of incarceration violated his constitutional right to present a defense. The State responds that Stutesman's constitutional right to present a defense was not violated because he did not make a sufficient offer of proof to the trial court and he did not establish that the еvidence he *182 sought to admit was relevant. We agree with Statesman that the trial court's exclusion of all evidence of his incarceration deprived him of the constitutional right to present a defense. We conclude that he did not waive the assertion of this right by making an insufficient offer оf proof and that the evidence he sought to admit was relevant.
The constitutional right to present evidence is grounded in the confrontation and compulsory process clauses of Article I, Section 7 of the Wisconsin Constitution and the Sixth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
State v. Dodson,
Section 948.22(2), STATS., the felony statute under which Statesman was charged, provides:
(2) Any person who intentionally fails for 120 or more consecutive days to provide spousal, grandchild or child support which the person knows or reasonably should know the person is legally obligated to provide is guilty of a Class E felony. A prosecutor may charge a person with multiple *183 counts for a violation under this subsection if each count covers a period of at least 120 consecutive days and there is no overlap between periods.
The misdemeanor statute under which he was charged covers intentionally failing to pay child support for a period of less than 120 consecutive days. See § 948.22(3), STATS. Under § 948.22(4)(a) evidence that a person subject to a court order knew or reasonably should have known that he or she was required to pay child support under the order and failed to do so constitutes prima facie evidence of intentional failure to pay child support.
Affirmatives defenses are addressed in § 948.22(6), STATS., which provides:
(6) Under this section, affirmative defenses include but are not limited to inability to provide child, grandchild or spousal support. A person may not demonstrate inability to provide child, grandchild or spousal support if the person is employable but, without reasonable excuse, either fails to diligently seek employment, terminates employment or rеduces his or her earnings or assets. A person who raises an affirmative defense has the burden of proving the defense by a preponderance of the evidence.
According to the statute, inability to pay child support is an affirmative defense. Evidence of Stutesman's incarceration is therefore relevant to a defense if it has any tendency to make Stutesman's inability to pay child support during the relevant time period "more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence." See § 904.01, STATS, (defining relevance). We understand that the trial court deсided that incarceration was irrelevant to a defense under the statute because the statute excludes from the definition of *184 "inability to provide ... child support" situations where the "the person is employable but, without reasonable excuse, either fails to diligently seek emplоyment, terminates employment or reduces his or her earnings or assets." Section 948.22(6), Stats. The court apparently accepted the State's argument that because Statesman's incarceration was the result of offenses that he committed, he voluntarily put himself in a position whеre he could not pay child support, similar to the situations described in the statute. In essence, the court ruled that, as a matter of law, evidence of incarceration is never relevant to show inability to pay. This ruling is based on an erroneous construction of the statute.
The construction of a statute is a question of law, which we review de novo.
State v. Sample,
The trial court's rеasoning that Stutesman could not present evidence of incarceration because he had not moved to modify his obligation also rests on legal error. It is true we have held that incarceration, even though resulting from intentional criminal conduct, is a change in circumstance giving a court competence to review a child support order,
Voecks v. Voecks,
On appeal, the State does not argue that evidence of incarceration is never relevant to the defense of *186 inability to pay, but instead contends that the trial court's ruling was correct in this case because Statesman did not make a sufficient offer of proof of the dates of incarceration. The State contends that, when the Stаte brought its motion in limine, Statesman failed to have the hand-marked calendars defense counsel gave the prosecutor marked as exhibits or submitted to the trial court in an offer of proof. Further, the State argues, although defense counsel did have these calendars marked as exhibits and submitted into evidence at the postconviction hearing, the calendars did not constitute admissible testimony of the dates of incarceration.
There is no merit to this argument. The State argued in support of its motion in limine
1
that evidence of incarceration was irrelevant because the commission of a crime was within a defendant's control and the law should not permit someone to commit a crime in order to avoid paying child support. The exact dates of Statesman's incarceration and the method of proof of those dates at trial were not challenged by the State's motion in limine, were not raised during argument, were not addressed by the court's ruling and are unnecessary to our review. There is no similarity between these circumstances and those in the cases the State cites in support of this argument.
See, e.g., State v. Williams,
*187 The State also contends that Stutesman did not establish that evidence of incarceration was relevant to his ability to pay because he did not show, for example, that he did not have Huber privileges, or that he did not have assets from which he could have paid child support while incarcerated. Again, there is no merit to this argument. The State did not object to admission of evidence of incarceration оn these or other similar grounds, and the court did not rest its ruling on such considerations. Rather, as we have already stated, the State's position before the trial court was that evidence of incarceration was inadmissible because commission of a crime was voluntary, and that is the proposition defense counsel argued against and the one the court decided. The State may not on appeal raise new objections to the evidence of incarceration, which the defense did not have the opportunity to respond to through an offer of proof before the trial court. 2
In summary, we conclude that the trial court erred in ruling that evidence of Statesman's incarceration is irrelevant to the affirmative defense of inability to pay. Because it is relevant evidence and because there is no countervailing prejudice, the trial court's ruling violated Statesman's constitutional right to present evidence. We do not apply the harmless error rule but instead remand for a new trial because the exclusion of the evidence of Statesman's incarceration deprived him of the ability to prеsent his defense of inability to
*188
pay.
3
See State v. Pullizzano,
By the Court. — Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
Notes
This motion was apparently made orally, at a hearing on another written motion in limine, after defense counsel provided the prosecutor with calendar pages showing the dates of incarceration.
We agree with the State's point that evidence of incarceration does not, in itself, automatically establish a defense of inability to pay. However, that is not Statesman's pоsition. Statesman's position is that he should be permitted to present evidence of incarceration to the jury and let the jury decide whether he was unable to pay child support.
After the court granted the State's motion, defense counsel stated:
Well — . So what the court is ruling is that his entire affirmative defense that he was unable to pay because he was incarcerated during large periods of this time, is precluded.
The court answered: "Absolutely...."
