COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND RELEASED August 13, 1996 |
NOTICE |
A party may file with the
Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of
Appeals. See § 808.10 and
Rule 809.62(1), Stats. |
This opinion is subject to
further editing. If published, the
official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. |
Nos. 96-0663-CR
96-0664-CR
96-0665-CR
96-0666-CR
STATE
OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF
APPEALS
DISTRICT III
STATE OF WISCONSIN,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
LYLE W. JOURDAN,
Defendant-Appellant.
APPEAL from judgments
and orders of the circuit court for Brown County: DONALD J. HANAWAY and WILLIAM C. GRIESBACH, Judges. Affirmed.
MYSE, J. Lyle W. Jourdan appeals
from judgments and orders denying his motion to modify his sentence based upon
the enhanced penalties provided under §§ 346.65(2)(e) and 343.44(2g)(e), Stats.
Jourdan alleges that the State failed to prove, and he did not admit,
his prior convictions for operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated and
operating a motor vehicle after suspension or revocation. Because this court concludes that Jourdan
admitted these were the sixth, seventh, and eighth convictions for both the
offenses of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated and after revocation or
suspension, which is sufficient for the imposition of enhanced penalties, the
order denying the motion for modification of sentence is affirmed.
Jourdan was charged with
three counts of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated (OWI) contrary to §
346.63(1)(a), Stats.; three
counts of operating a motor vehicle with a prohibited blood alcohol
concentration contrary to § 346.63(1)(b), Stats., and four counts of operating a motor vehicle after
suspension or revocation as an habitual traffic offender contrary to §
343.44(1), § 343.44(2g)(e), and § 343.31(3)(g), Stats. In each case,
the counts were the sixth and sequential convictions for the respective
offenses. He was also charged with one
count of bail jumping contrary to § 946.49(1)(a), Stats., which conviction was not appealed.
A plea agreement was
reached allowing Jourdan to enter no contest pleas to the OWI charges sixth,
seventh, and eighth, and a single count of operating after revocation,
sixth. Jourdan read and signed a plea
questionnaire and waiver form. The form
indicated that he would enter pleas to "operating while intoxicated—6th,
7th & 8th" and "operating after revocation—6th (1
count)." The court conducted a
personal colloquy with Jourdan, who acknowledged that the factual basis for the
offenses as alleged in the complaint were correct.
In accordance with the
plea agreement, the State then moved to dismiss the three alternative blood
alcohol concentration charges and the habitual traffic offender allegations, as
well as three of the associated operating after revocation charges. The court then imposed a sentence of one
year in the county jail on each OWI count to be served consecutively and a
$1,000 fine on each count. Jourdan was
also sentenced to one year in the county jail and a $2,000 fine for the
operating after revocation offense, which period of confinement was to be
served concurrently with the other jail sentences.
Jourdan filed a
postconviction motion to modify his sentences based on his contention that the
enhanced penalties could not be imposed because the State failed to prove his
prior convictions and he had not admitted the convictions as required by
Wisconsin law.
The facts of record in
this case are undisputed. Whether the
record satisfies the statutory requirement necessary to enhance the penalties
provided by chs. 343 and 346, Stats.,
presents a question of law this court resolves without deference to the trial
court's determination. State v.
Keith, 175 Wis.2d 75, 78, 498 N.W.2d 865, 866 (Ct. App. 1993).
Jourdan asserts that the
general principles of law applicable to criminal repeater statutes in §§ 939.62
and 973.12, Stats., are
applicable to the enhanced penalties provided for traffic offenses which are
defined by statute as being criminal in nature. Jourdan argues that under the criminal penalty enhancer
provisions, the State is required to prove each of the relevant prior
convictions before enhanced penalties can be assessed unless the defendant
admits the repeater allegation. Jourdan
argues that under State v. Farr, 119 Wis.2d 651, 350 N.W.2d 640
(1984), the defendant's admission must be personal and may not be inferred from
the record. Jourdan argues that because
the requirement of a personal admission by the defendant involves important due
process considerations, the analysis assumes constitutional dimensions. He therefore concludes that the record is
insufficient to meet the important requirements enunciated in Farr.
This court does not
agree. Jourdan expressly admitted, for
sentencing purposes, his previous five convictions for OWI and operating a
motor vehicle after suspension or revocation to the trial court. First, the record discloses that Jourdan
personally read, understood, and signed a plea questionnaire and waiver form
indicating the offenses charged were his sixth, seventh and eighth
offenses. This admission means nothing
if it does not mean that these were the sixth and sequential convictions for
sentencing purposes.
Second, during the
colloquy with the court, Jourdan acknowledged that the factual allegations
contained in the complaint were accurate.
The complaint states that he had five prior convictions for operating
after revocation and that he is an habitual traffic offender. Further, the complaint clearly discloses the
enhanced penalties to be imposed. The
complaint reads that "the court shall, for the sixth conviction in five
years, impose the penalty of a fine of not less than $2,000 nor more than
$2,500 and imprisonment for not less than 6 months nor more than 1 year and a
6-month revocation of driving privileges."
Because he acknowledged
in open court that the allegations in the complaint were true, it follows that
Jourdan admitted this was his sixth and sequential convictions for sentencing
purposes. Based upon the totality of
this evidence, this court concludes that the oral acknowledgment, coupled with
the written acknowledgment in the guilty plea questionnaire and waiver form,
are sufficient to constitute an unambiguous admission by Jourdan as to the
applicability of the enhanced penalty provisions for operating a motor vehicle
while intoxicated and after suspension or revocation for a fifth and subsequent
conviction as provided by §§ 343.44(2g(e) and 346.65(2)(e); Stats.
An argument could be
made that these admissions by Jourdan are insufficient to establish the
relevant time period of those convictions for sentencing purposes. We conclude, however, that the admissions
are sufficient. The only relevant
period for sentencing purposes involves the previous five-year and ten-year
time span as set forth in §§ 343.44 (2g)(e) and 346.65(2)(e), Stats.
By admitting to the veracity of the complaint's allegations, Jourdan
acknowledged the applicability of the penalty enhancing provisions and the
timing of the previous convictions.
Pleading to OWI sixth would have no purpose other than to acknowledge
the applicability of the penalty enhancing provisions. Therefore, Jourdan's admissions were
sufficient to establish that the convictions occurred within the relevant time
period.
Because this court has
concluded that Jourdan admitted the existence of the prior convictions and
their applicability to enhance the penalties of the offenses charged in these
cases, this court need not address the question whether the enhanced penalty
provision contained in the traffic code is subject to the same procedural
requirements as a penalty enhancer statute applicable to nontraffic criminal
charges. Accordingly, that question is
not addressed by this opinion.
By the Court.—Judgments
and orders affirmed.
This opinion will not be
published. Rule 809.23(1)(b)4, Stats.