COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND RELEASED December 7, 1995 |
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. |
No. 94-2918
STATE
OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF
APPEALS
DISTRICT IV
HECTOR CUBERO,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
DAN BUCHLER,
Respondent-Respondent.
APPEAL from an order of
the circuit court for Dane County:
ANGELA B. BARTELL, Judge. Affirmed.
Before Eich, C.J.,
Gartzke, P.J., and Vergeront, J.
PER
CURIAM. Hector Cubero appeals from an order affirming a
decision of the disciplinary committee at Racine Correctional Institution
(RCI). At issue is its finding that
Cubero violated Wis. Adm. Code §
DOC 303.511, being in an unassigned area.
He alleges numerous procedural and substantive errors in the
proceeding. We reject his arguments and
affirm.
Cubero worked in the
records office at RCI. However, he was
discovered in the office at a time when he was not scheduled to work
there. When he was detained and searched, officers found that he possessed
records he was apparently not authorized to have. As a result, he was charged in a conduct report with theft and
possession of contraband, as well as being in an unassigned area. He was also placed in temporary lockup pending
his hearing.
Evidence at the hearing
indicated that Cubero had not stolen the recovered documents from the records
office but that he lawfully possessed them.
He was therefore acquitted on the theft and contraband charges. However, the evidence also showed that he
was signed out to the library, was not scheduled to work in the records office
when he was discovered there, and was observed acting suspiciously while in the
office. As a result, the disciplinary
committee found him guilty on the remaining charge of being in an unassigned
area. As punishment, the committee
imposed five days' adjustment segregation and ninety days' program segregation,
and referred Cubero to the program review committee (PRC). On appeal, RCI's warden removed the
ninety-day program segregation.
On appeal, Cubero raises
the following issues: (1) that RCI
officers abused their discretion by placing him in temporary lockup;
(2) that the officer who prepared the conduct report on the incident
failed to properly investigate beforehand; (3) that the security director
failed to sign and date the conduct report; (4) that the committee relied
on an incident report that was not disclosed to Cubero; (5) that the
evidence did not support the committee's finding; (6) that the committee
had no authority to refer him to the PRC; and (7) that the trial court
erred by holding that Cubero must exhaust his administrative remedies before
raising the committee's procedural errors in his petition for judicial review.
We need not review the
decision to place Cubero in temporary lockup.
Cubero petitioned for review of the disciplinary committee's decision as
upheld by the warden. He has not shown
that the temporary lockup decision affected that decision. Cubero's remedy, if he had one, was therefore
unavailable in this proceeding.
We also need not review
whether the conduct report resulted from a proper investigation. The issue before the disciplinary committee
concerned Cubero's guilt or innocence on the charges against him. The committee was not assigned
responsibility to judge the sufficiency of the investigation that resulted in
those charges. In any event, the record
does not indicate that Cubero raised the issue before the committee. An issue is generally waived if not raised
before the trier of fact. Saenz
v. Murphy, 162 Wis.2d 54, 63, 469 N.W.2d 611, 615 (1991), overruled
on other grounds, Casteel v. Vaade, 167 Wis.2d 1, 481 N.W.2d
476, 484 (1992).
Cubero asserts that the
security director did not sign and date the conduct report and infers that the
director therefore failed to review it as he is required to do. However, the record does not bear out
Cubero's assertion. It shows that the
conduct report was signed and dated by the security director on June 7, 1993,
and served on Cubero the next day.
There is no contrary evidence in the record. Even if the security director had failed in this duty, Cubero
cannot reasonably argue that any such omission prejudiced him.
The committee's reliance
on an incident report was harmless. The
report contained evidence on the theft and contraband charges that were dismissed.
Additionally, Cubero never challenged its use during the proceeding.
The evidence supported
the committee's finding on the unassigned area charge. Cubero points out that an officer who
supervised his work in the records office testified that he was allowed to come
and go from the office. He argues that
this testimony establishes that he was innocent because he had permission to be
in the records office. However, the officer
also testified that she did not know whether he had permission on that particular
occasion. Other evidence established
that Cubero was signed out to the library.
The committee could reasonably determine that if Cubero was signed out
to another area, and his supervisor did not know whether he had permission to
be in the records office, then he did not have that permission.
The committee did not
exceed its authority by referring Cubero to the PRC. As Cubero notes, Wis. Adm.
Code § DOC 303.84 sets forth the penalties for violating a
disciplinary rule and a referral to the PRC is not listed as a penalty. However, Wis.
Adm. Code § DOC 302.20(2) authorizes the PRC to review an inmate's
status after a disciplinary infraction.
The DOC considers referral for that review mandatory. See Wis.
Adm. Code § DOC ch. 302 appendix, n. DOC 302.20. When the committee referred Cubero to the
PRC it was following this mandate, and was not imposing a penalty under
§ DOC 303.84.
Because we have
addressed each of Cubero's issues on de novo review of the disciplinary
decision, it is not necessary to address whether the trial court properly held
that he failed to exhaust his administrative remedies on certain of those
issues.
By the Court.—Order
affirmed.
This opinion will not be
published. See Rule 809.23(1)(b)5, Stats.