State v. Brent T. Novy ( 2013 )


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    2013 WI 23
    SUPREME COURT               OF    WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:               2011AP407-CR, 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    COMPLETE TITLE:
    State of Wisconsin,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    Brent T. Novy,
    Defendant-Appellant-Petitioner.
    REVIEW OF A DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS
    Reported at 
    338 Wis. 2d 439
    , 
    809 N.W.2d 889
    (Ct. App. 2012 - Published)
    PDC No: 
    2012 WI App 10
    OPINION FILED:          March 14, 2013
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:          October 9, 2012
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:               Circuit
    COUNTY:              Kenosha
    JUDGE:               Barbara A. Kluka
    JUSTICES:
    CONCURRED:           Abrahamson, C.J., Bradley, J., concur (Opinion
    filed).
    DISSENTED:
    NOT PARTICIPATING:    Prosser, J., did not participate.
    ATTORNEYS:
    For the defendant-appellant-petitioner, there were briefs
    filed    by       Gerald   P.   Boyle   and   Boyle,     Boyle   &   Boyle,   S.C.,
    Milwaukee, and oral argument by Gerald P. Boyle.
    For      the    plaintiff-respondent,       the   cause   was   argued   by
    Christine A. Remington, assistant attorney general, with whom on
    the brief was J.B. Van Hollen, attorney general.
    
    2013 WI 23
    NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    (L.C. No.    2008CF500, 2008CF1307 & 2009CF58)
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                               :            IN SUPREME COURT
    State of Wisconsin,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,                                    FILED
    v.                                                          MAR 14, 2013
    Brent T. Novy,                                                        Diane M. Fremgen
    Clerk of Supreme Court
    Defendant-Appellant-Petitioner.
    REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals.                  Affirmed.
    ¶1      PATIENCE DRAKE ROGGENSACK, J.             This is a review of a
    decision of the court of appeals1 that affirmed a judgment of the
    circuit      court   for   Kenosha   County.2        Novy    raises     two    issues.
    First, Novy claims that the trial court erred when it allowed
    the    State    to   use   certain    fingerprint          evidence     and    related
    testimony in rebuttal, which the court had previously excluded
    from the       State's case-in-chief      due    to    a    
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    1
    State v. Novy, 
    2012 WI App 10
    , 
    338 Wis. 2d 439
    , 
    809 N.W.2d 889
    .
    2
    The Honorable Barbara A. Kluka presided.
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    (2009–10) discovery violation.3              Second, Novy asserts that he was
    deprived of his right to a fair trial by an impartial jury
    because, he claims, one of the jurors was sleeping during a
    portion of defense counsel's closing argument.
    ¶2    We    conclude      that,      with    regard    to     the    admission    of
    fingerprint-related testimony on rebuttal, the circuit court did
    not   erroneously       exercise     its    discretion.            The    circuit    court
    initially determined that the State had failed to comply with
    its   discovery     obligations          under    
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1);       and
    therefore, the court excluded fingerprint evidence and related
    testimony        from    the       State's        case-in-chief           pursuant      to
    § 971.23(7m)(a).         However, after Novy testified such that the
    excluded    fingerprint         evidence         and    related      testimony       would
    controvert his testimony, the circuit court concluded that it
    could be    presented      in    rebuttal.          The    circuit       court   properly
    interpreted § 971.23 under the facts of this case, and given the
    significant discretion          afforded         circuit    courts       on   evidentiary
    matters,    we    cannot     say     that    the       circuit     court      erroneously
    exercised its discretion in permitting the rebuttal use of the
    fingerprint evidence and related testimony.
    ¶3    With regard to the circuit court's treatment of the
    allegedly sleeping juror, the circuit court did not find that
    the juror was sleeping; therefore, Novy failed to establish a
    3
    Although the charged events occurred between 2007 and
    2009, the relevant statutory provisions are identical to the
    current version of the statutes, and therefore, all subsequent
    references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2009—10 edition
    unless otherwise indicated.
    2
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    finding       necessary       to   his    contention.            The   circuit        court's
    findings are not clearly erroneous, and therefore, we will not
    overturn       the    circuit      court's    refusal       to    strike        the   juror.
    Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the court of appeals.
    I.     BACKGROUND4
    ¶4     For conduct that occurred between May 2008 and January
    2009, Novy was charged in Kenosha County with two counts of
    stalking, 11 counts of felony bail jumping, and one count of
    violating a harassment injunction.                   All of the charges related
    to Novy's conduct toward his ex-fiancé, Julie N.                               The two had
    dated on and off for approximately five years, until September
    of     2007,    when       Julie   ended      the    relationship.               After     the
    relationship         ended,    Novy      continued    to    contact       Julie,      to   the
    point       where,    in   November       2007,   Julie     sought       and    obtained     a
    harassment           injunction       against        Novy        under         
    Wis. Stat. § 813.125
    (4).          The injunction prohibited Novy from contacting
    Julie in any way, and required that he avoid her residence.
    ¶5      In early May 2008, Novy was charged with one count of
    stalking, in violation of 
    Wis. Stat. § 940.32
    (2)(a), (b), and
    (c).        The complaint (case no. 08-CF-500) alleged that, between
    October 17, 2007, and February 4, 2008, Novy had engaged in a
    4
    Novy's trial involved 14 separate charges, but only two of
    those charges are relevant to this appeal:      one count of bail
    jumping and one stalking charge.      Therefore, we will briefly
    summarize the facts leading up to and including the trial,
    focusing on the two relevant charges, as well as the facts
    related to Novy's allegation that a juror was sleeping during
    defense counsel's closing argument.
    3
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    course of conduct, directed at Julie, which had caused Julie to
    suffer serious emotional distress, and that Novy knew or should
    have     known      that       his     conduct        would        cause     such     distress.
    Generally,         Novy's       alleged        conduct           included        following       and
    harassing        Julie    in    public        places,    calling         Julie at work           and
    hanging      up,    accessing          Julie's       voicemail       and    prowling       around
    Julie's house.           Novy was released on a $1,000 signature bond,
    which provided that he was to have "No [c]ontact w/ Julie [N.];
    not to be within 1000 feet of her residence."
    ¶6        Then,   on     November 12,          2008,       Novy     was    charged       with
    another count of stalking under 
    Wis. Stat. § 940.32
    (2) and eight
    counts      of    felony       bail    jumping,        in    violation       of     
    Wis. Stat. § 946.49
    (1)(b).                These     charges        (case       no.     08-CF-1307)         all
    involved a course of conduct in which Novy allegedly had engaged
    between May 4,           2008,    and        November 10,         2008.      Similar       to   the
    conduct     underlying         the     previous       stalking       charge,       the   alleged
    conduct involved hang-up calls to Julie's home, following her in
    public (including waiting for her outside her place of work),
    lurking      around      Julie's        house     and       in    her     neighborhood,         and
    repeatedly calling Julie's friends.                         Again, Novy was released on
    bond, this time a $5,000 cash bond, which also provided that he
    was to have no contact with Julie or her residence.
    ¶7        Relevant for purposes of this appeal, one of the eight
    counts      of    bail   jumping        in     case    number       08-CF-1307       (Count      7)
    alleged that, on the night of November 9, 2008, Julie received a
    hang-up call from a payphone at L&M Meats in Kenosha, which was
    close to Novy's residence.                    Julie had previously noticed Novy's
    4
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    vehicle near L&M Meats, and had called her sister from that
    payphone      to    determine      the     phone     number       associated      with    that
    phone.        After       receiving       the    hang-up     call    on    the     night    of
    November 9, Julie called the police, who went to the payphone at
    L&M Meats and verified that was the number from which Julie had
    recently      received       the      phone      call.        Officers         also     lifted
    fingerprints from the receiver of the payphone.                           Police analysts
    later       determined       that      these        fingerprints          matched       Novy's
    fingerprints.
    ¶8     On     January 14,       2009,        Novy    was    charged       with    three
    additional         bail    jumping       counts,       as   well     as    one    count     of
    violating      the    harassment          injunction,       contrary      to     
    Wis. Stat. § 813.125
    (7).         The complaint (case no. 09-CF-58) alleged that
    Novy    had    been       seen   driving        slowly      past    Julie's      house,     in
    violation of the harassment injunction and the conditions of his
    bonds for the prior charges.                    Novy was again released on a cash
    bond ($20,000), which reiterated the prohibition on contacting
    Julie or being within 1,000 feet of her residence.
    ¶9     In late May 2010, a jury trial was held in Kenosha
    County, wherein the three separate cases were joined and Novy
    was tried on all 14 counts.                 During opening statements, counsel
    for the State referred to testimony about fingerprint evidence
    that would tend to show that Novy had called Julie from L&M
    Meats on November 9, 2008.                  After opening statements, defense
    counsel moved to exclude the fingerprint evidence and related
    testimony      on    the    ground     that      the    defense     had    requested       all
    evidence subject to disclosure under 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1), but
    5
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    the State failed to provide access to the cards on which the
    fingerprints were exhibited.5
    ¶10        The circuit court concluded that the State had failed
    in its obligation to properly disclose the fingerprint evidence,
    as required by 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)(g).                     Therefore, the court
    granted the defendant's motion to exclude the evidence.                           When
    counsel for the State asked whether the fingerprint evidence
    would be available for rebuttal, Judge Kluka responded, "I don't
    know."
    ¶11        After    the    State     completed   its     case-in-chief,       the
    defense moved to dismiss Count 7 in case number 08-CF-1307, the
    bail jumping charge relating to the alleged phone call from the
    L&M   Meats       payphone,      arguing     that   without    fingerprint-related
    testimony, the State no longer had any evidence linking Novy to
    the phone on the night in question.                    The State conceded that,
    without the fingerprint-related testimony, the State would be
    unable      to    prove    the    elements    of    bail   jumping    for   Count    7.
    Accordingly, the circuit court granted the defendant's motion to
    dismiss that count.
    ¶12        During the defense case, Novy chose to testify.                 Prior
    to    his    testimony,          defense    counsel    sought    to    prevent      any
    questions regarding the phone call from L&M Meats on November 9,
    2008, on the ground that the alleged call related solely to the
    5
    Although the State had provided defense counsel with an
    expert's report relating to the fingerprint evidence, the actual
    fingerprint cards were not available when defense counsel went
    to review the materials at the evidence bureau.
    6
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    dismissed bail jumping charge.                          The State responded that the
    phone call from L&M Meats was a proper subject for questioning
    because the call related to the course of conduct supporting the
    second       count   of    stalking,          which       allegedly       occurred     between
    May 4, 2008, and November 10, 2008 (case no. 08-CF-1307).                                    The
    circuit      court agreed         with      the        State    and   concluded      that   such
    questioning was relevant to the second stalking count.
    ¶13    During      cross-examination               of     Novy,    counsel     for   the
    State asked Novy, "[D]id you call Julie from L and M Meats here
    in Kenosha on November 9th of 2008 at approximately 8:00 p.m.?"
    Novy   responded,         "No,    I     did       not."         During    Novy's     redirect,
    defense      counsel      did     not       ask    Novy        any    clarifying     questions
    regarding his use of the payphone at L&M Meats on the night in
    question.
    ¶14    As the State prepared to present its case-in-rebuttal,
    counsel for the State asked whether the fingerprint evidence
    from L&M Meats and related testimony would be allowed at that
    point, given         Novy's      denial       of       having    called Julie        from that
    phone.       Defense counsel protested, arguing that the fingerprint-
    related testimony showed only that Novy had at some point used
    the payphone at L&M Meats, not that he had necessarily used it
    that   night.         Additionally,           defense           counsel   argued     that   the
    discovery      statute,       
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)         and   (7m),    mandated
    that evidence that had been excluded for discovery violations be
    excluded throughout the trial, not solely for the State's case-
    in-chief.       The circuit court, however, disagreed and allowed the
    State to present the fingerprint evidence and related testimony,
    7
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    calling       it    "bona       fide    rebuttal       evidence"    as   to    the   second
    stalking charge.
    ¶15    In    its        case-in-rebuttal,         the    State      presented      the
    testimony of two officers from the Kenosha Police Department,
    Officers Hamilton and Primmer.                       Officer Hamilton testified that
    he was an evidence technician; that he had been dispatched to
    examine the payphone at L&M Meats on the night of November 9,
    2008;    and       that    he    had    recovered       two   fingerprints      from      that
    phone.        Additionally,            Officer   Primmer        testified     that   he    had
    conducted an analysis of the fingerprints that had been lifted
    from the payphone at L&M Meats, and that he had determined that
    those prints matched the fingerprints that the department had on
    file for Novy.
    ¶16       Defense counsel did not cross-examine Officer Primmer.
    On surrebuttal, however, defense counsel re-called Novy.                                  Novy
    testified that, although he had previously denied calling Julie
    from the payphone at L&M Meats, he had used that phone "quite a
    few times" in the past.                 In particular, Novy stated that he had
    used the phone to call a friend in the Philippines because his
    cell phone did not have an international calling plan.
    ¶17       After      closing       arguments       and   immediately      before      the
    selection      of     the       alternate    juror,      defense     counsel     sought     a
    sidebar.       The record reflects that defense counsel alleged that
    one of the jurors had been sleeping during the defense's closing
    argument, and that the juror therefore should be struck.                                   The
    circuit court denied the motion, and noted that she makes an
    8
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    effort "to keep track of what's going on with the jurors," and
    that she had not seen the juror sleeping.
    ¶18   The jury found Novy guilty of both counts of stalking,
    six counts of bail jumping, and the one count of violating the
    harassment injunction.             Novy was sentenced to 90 days in jail
    for violating the injunction, and two years of imprisonment for
    the   second      stalking      offense,           consisting       of    one    year   of
    confinement       and    one   year      of    extended      supervision.        For    the
    remainder of the charges, Novy was placed on probation for five
    years, with the sentences withheld.
    ¶19   On appeal to the court of appeals, Novy raised the two
    issues    currently       before    this       court,   seeking      vacation     of    his
    sentence and a remand for a new trial.6                        The court of appeals
    affirmed    the    circuit     court's         decision      regarding     the   rebuttal
    evidence and the allegedly sleeping juror, concluding that both
    matters were within the broad discretion of the circuit court,
    and that there was nothing in the record to suggest that the
    court had erroneously exercised its discretion.                           See State v.
    Novy, 
    2012 WI App 10
    , ¶¶18, 23, 
    338 Wis. 2d 439
    , 
    809 N.W.2d 889
    .
    ¶20   Novy        petitioned       for       review,    and    we    granted      his
    petition.
    6
    In the court of appeals, Novy also raised another issue
    relating to "other acts" evidence that he has not raised before
    this court.
    9
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    II.    DISCUSSION
    A.    Standard of Review
    ¶21    Novy raises two issues for review.                       The first issue——
    whether the circuit court erred by allowing the State to present
    evidence      in    rebuttal       when       that       evidence    previously       had   been
    excluded as a sanction for a discovery violation——relates to the
    circuit        court's         decision             on      an      evidentiary        matter.
    Consideration of this issue begins with statutory interpretation
    and     application,          which       present         questions     of     law    for    our
    independent         review,       although          we     benefit     from    the    previous
    interpretations of the court of appeals and the circuit court.
    Richards v. Badger Mut. Ins. Co., 
    2008 WI 52
    , ¶14, 
    309 Wis. 2d 541
    , 
    749 N.W.2d 581
    .                    In addition, whether to admit or deny
    evidence rests in the sound discretion of the circuit court,
    which    we    will     not    overturn         absent       an    erroneous    exercise      of
    discretion.         See State v. Smith, 
    2005 WI 104
    , ¶28, 
    283 Wis. 2d 57
    , 
    699 N.W.2d 508
    .
    ¶22    Second, Novy argues that the circuit court erred by
    failing       to    strike    a    juror      whom        defense    counsel    alleged      was
    sleeping       during    the       defense's         closing       argument.    The    circuit
    court did not find that the juror was sleeping.                               We will uphold
    a   circuit        court's    findings         of    fact     unless    they    are    clearly
    erroneous.         See State v. Funk, 
    2011 WI 62
    , ¶¶29–30, 
    335 Wis. 2d 369
    , 
    799 N.W.2d 421
    .
    B.     Rebuttal Evidence
    ¶23    Novy     argues         that   the        circuit    court     erred   when    it
    allowed the State to rebut Novy's testimony using fingerprint
    10
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    evidence and related testimony that the court had previously
    excluded    for   a        discovery      violation      under    Wis.     Stat.
    § § 971.23(1) and (7m)(a).           The State contends that its use of
    the   fingerprint-related       evidence      is   clearly    permitted    under
    § 971.23(1)(d).       We    therefore     begin    our   discussion   with   the
    relevant   portions    of    the     discovery     statute,   § 971.23,    which
    provide in relevant part:
    (1) What a district attorney must disclose to a
    defendant.   Upon demand, the district attorney shall,
    within a reasonable time before trial, disclose to the
    defendant or his or her attorney and permit the
    defendant or his or her attorney to inspect and copy
    or photograph all of the following materials and
    information, if it is within the possession, custody
    or control of the state:
    . . . .
    (d) A list of all witnesses and their addresses
    whom the district attorney intends to call at the
    trial. This paragraph does not apply to rebuttal
    witnesses or those called for impeachment only.
    (e) Any relevant written or recorded statements
    of a witness named on a list under par. (d), including
    . . . any reports or statements of experts made in
    connection with the case . . . and the results of any
    physical or mental examination, scientific test,
    experiment or comparison that the district attorney
    intends to offer in evidence at trial.
    . . . .
    (g) Any physical evidence that the district
    attorney intends to offer in evidence at the trial.
    . . . .
    11
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    (7m) Sanctions for failure to comply.    (a) The court
    shall exclude any . . . evidence not presented for
    inspection or copying required by this section, unless
    good cause is shown for failure to comply.
    (Emphasis added.)
    1.     General principles
    ¶24    When interpreting the meaning of 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    ,
    we begin with the language of the statute.                            State ex rel. Kalal
    v. Circuit Court for Dane Cnty., 
    2004 WI 58
    , ¶45, 
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 110
    .             "If the meaning of the statute is plain,
    we ordinarily stop the inquiry," and the statute will be applied
    according      to    that   plain       meaning.               
    Id.,
           ¶¶45–46    (internal
    quotation marks omitted).               Statutes are interpreted in context,
    as they relate to each other.              Id., ¶46.
    ¶25    Wisconsin     Stat.   § 971.23(1)(d)                  has    an   exception    for
    disclosure of rebuttal evidence that has been interpreted by
    appellate courts on other occasions.                          Such interpretations have
    concluded     that    the   plain       meaning          of    § 971.23(1)(d)        does    not
    require      the    State   to    disclose         "rebuttal          witnesses      or   those
    called for impeachment only."                  See Lunde v. State, 
    85 Wis. 2d 80
    , 91, 
    270 N.W.2d 180
     (1978).
    ¶26    Appellate courts also have concluded that the State
    has no obligation under 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)(d) to disclose
    rebuttal evidence, even when the State anticipates before trial
    that   certain      evidence      may    be    used           for   rebuttal.        State   v.
    Konkol, 
    2002 WI App 174
    , ¶1, 
    256 Wis. 2d 725
    , 
    649 N.W.2d 300
    .
    ¶27    Notwithstanding       that           the        State       has   no   statutory
    discovery obligation to disclose rebuttal evidence, where the
    12
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    circuit court determines that the State has failed to comply
    with     the        initial     requirements          set        forth   in     
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1), the court "shall exclude any witness not listed or
    evidence not presented for inspection or copying required by
    this section, unless good cause is shown for failure to comply."
    § 971.23(7m)(a).
    ¶28     Such an initial order under 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (7m)(a)
    was made by the circuit court in this case when the fingerprint
    evidence and related testimony that would have been used for the
    State's case-in-chief was excluded.                        Notwithstanding this order,
    after Novy testified, the State asserts that the fingerprint
    evidence and related testimony became rebuttal evidence.                                      No
    appellate court has determined what, if any, effect paragraph
    (7m)(a) has on paragraph (1)(d)'s exception for discovery of
    rebuttal testimony.
    ¶29     Furthermore,        in        addition       to     statutory         provisions
    governing      disclosure of           evidence       by    the    State,      we    have   long
    recognized          the     circuit         court's     discretion        on        evidentiary
    matters, including the exclusion and admission of evidence on
    rebuttal.           See Howard v. Beldenville Lumber Co., 
    129 Wis. 98
    ,
    110-11, 
    108 N.W. 48
     (1906); McGowan v. Chi. & Nw. Ry. Co., 
    91 Wis. 147
    , 153–54, 
    64 N.W. 891
     (1895).
    ¶30     We have set forth a relatively broad general rule to
    define    rebuttal          evidence.         We     have    explained        that     rebuttal
    evidence       is    that     "which    squarely       meets      and    controverts        some
    affirmative fact or facts which the adversary has attempted to
    13
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    prove."         State v. Watson, 
    46 Wis. 2d 492
    , 499, 
    175 N.W.2d 244
    (1970) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶31      Furthermore, even with this general rule for rebuttal
    evidence,        we     have    consistently          reaffirmed         a     circuit         court's
    broad discretion to admit "evidence of any acts or circumstances
    which      are    inconsistent          with     the    relevant          testimony            of    [a]
    witness.         Any evidence, otherwise proper, which in any respect
    tends      to     contradict         the     witness,         is    admissible            for       this
    purpose."        
    Id. at 500
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶32      Indeed, we have affirmed circuit courts' discretion to
    admit      evidence       in    rebuttal        even     if    the       evidence         tends       to
    corroborate the case-in-chief, see McGowan, 91 Wis. at 154, and
    where    the      evidence      could have been               submitted        in    the       State's
    case-in-chief,           see    Watson,        
    46 Wis. 2d at 500
    .        In        those
    instances,         we    have    recognized           that     the       admission         of       such
    evidence         may    be     "necessary        to     achieve          justice,"         and       the
    determination of what is necessary in those instances is subject
    to   the      circuit        court's       discretion.             
    Id. at 499
          (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    ¶33      However, appellate courts have implied that evidence
    is   not      appropriate       in     rebuttal        where       it    is    plain      that       the
    evidence was withheld from the case-in-chief for dramatic effect
    or to ambush the defendant, although this rule would be subject
    to the necessities of justice.                      See Lunde, 
    85 Wis. 2d at
    91–92;
    McGowan, 91 Wis. at 154; cf. Konkol, 
    256 Wis. 2d 725
    , ¶¶15–19
    (rejecting         circuit       court's        determination            that        an    expert's
    14
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    testimony was "not really rebuttal" and that it "could have been
    proffered during the case in chief").
    ¶34     Wisconsin courts have come to refer to evidence that
    is proper for rebuttal as "bona fide rebuttal evidence."                                 See
    Lunde, 
    85 Wis. 2d at 91
    ; State v. Sandoval, 
    2009 WI App 61
    , ¶30,
    
    318 Wis. 2d 126
    , 
    767 N.W.2d 291
    .                    Specifically, appellate courts
    have defined bona fide rebuttal evidence as that which (1) was
    not necessary to the State's (or plaintiff's) case-in-chief, and
    (2) which became necessary and appropriate when the defense made
    its case.        See Lunde, 
    85 Wis. 2d at
    91–92.                    Bona fide rebuttal
    evidence is not determined by asking whether the evidence could
    have    been     admitted        in    the   State's     case-in-chief,        but   rather
    whether the evidence became necessary and appropriate because it
    controverts the defendant's case.                      See Konkol, 
    256 Wis. 2d 725
    ,
    ¶18; Lunde, 
    85 Wis. 2d at
    91–92.
    ¶35     Moreover, rebuttal evidence is no less bona fide when
    the    State        is    able    to    anticipate       the     defense's     theory     or
    particular pieces of evidence.                      See Konkol, 
    256 Wis. 2d 725
    ,
    ¶15.         Once    the     defendant        raises    a     particular      theory,    the
    defendant's veracity and the credibility of that theory become
    relevant issues in the case.                  See id., ¶17.        The State's ability
    to     predict       or    anticipate        the    defendant's      theory     does     not
    diminish       the       necessity     or    propriety      of    otherwise     bona    fide
    rebuttal evidence.               See id., ¶17 & n.6.           To the extent that the
    State is better able to prepare a strong rebuttal to the defense
    theory,      the     truth-seeking           function    of      litigation    is    better
    served, in that the possibility of such rebuttal will keep the
    15
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    defendant honest, or at least afford the State an opportunity to
    shed light upon questions raised by the defense's case.                                  See
    id., ¶17 n.6.
    2.    Application
    ¶36    As     we   apply   the    principles      set     out    above,   we     will
    uphold a circuit court's decision to admit or exclude evidence
    if the        circuit      court   examined    the    relevant      facts, applied a
    proper        legal    standard,     and,     using       a    demonstrated       rational
    process, reached a reasonable conclusion.                          Miller v. Hanover
    Ins. Co., 
    2010 WI 75
    , ¶29, 
    326 Wis. 2d 640
    , 
    785 N.W.2d 493
    .
    ¶37    The      circuit     court's        discussion       of     whether       the
    fingerprint evidence and related testimony was proper rebuttal
    evidence       shows       consideration      of    the       relevant    facts    and    is
    consistent with the discovery statute, 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    , as
    interpreted by appellate courts.                    Following opening statements,
    Novy objected to the use of the fingerprint evidence and related
    testimony based on the State's failure to provide the defense
    with access to the fingerprint cards that were to be used by the
    State's witnesses.7            The circuit court agreed with Novy and held
    that,       under     § 971.23(7m)(a),        the     State      could     not    use    the
    7
    The parties do not dispute that the State provided the
    defense with a report of the State's expert, Todd Thorne,
    detailing the conclusions of his analysis of the fingerprints.
    The circuit court concluded, however, that the report was
    insufficient under 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)(g), which requires the
    State to provide access to "[a]ny physical evidence that the
    district attorney intends to offer in evidence at the trial."
    On that basis, the court excluded from the State's case-in-chief
    both the physical fingerprint evidence and the State's expert's
    testimony.
    16
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    fingerprint evidence in its case-in-chief, although the court
    reserved judgment on whether the evidence would be admissible in
    rebuttal.
    ¶38    The     circuit          court's           interpretation         of    
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    ——including the                 State's          discovery       obligations         and    the
    applicable sanctions for discovery violations——is supported by
    the plain meaning of the statute as interpreted by appellate
    courts.       Section 971.23(1)(g) requires the State to disclose
    "any   physical       evidence"             that    the     State    intends         to     offer    in
    evidence      at     trial,       and        upon        failure    to     comply         with     that
    provision,         § 971.23(7m)(a)             requires        that       the    court           "shall
    exclude      any    . . .     evidence             not    presented       for    inspection         or
    copying      required       by    [§ 971.23]."                Accordingly,            the    court's
    initial decision to exclude the fingerprint evidence and related
    testimony from the State's case-in-chief was in accord with the
    plain language of the statute.
    ¶39    Novy contends that once the circuit court excluded the
    fingerprint         evidence          and     related        testimony,         the       court     was
    without      discretion          to     allow        the     evidence       or       testimony      on
    rebuttal.      Novy relies on 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (7m)(a)'s statement
    that, upon finding that the State has violated its discovery
    obligations, "[t]he court shall exclude any witness not listed
    or evidence not presented for inspection . . . unless good cause
    is shown for failure to comply."                          He asserts that this provision
    withdraws the circuit court's discretion to later allow such
    evidence for purposes of rebuttal.                           Appellate court decisions,
    however, have suggested otherwise.
    17
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    ¶40    As noted above, the discretion afforded circuit courts
    has been reaffirmed numerous times since the enactment of the
    discovery statute.            See Konkol, 
    256 Wis. 2d 725
    , ¶¶15–18.                           In
    Konkol, the court of appeals determined that the circuit court
    had erroneously excluded rebuttal evidence, where the circuit
    court had concluded that the State's use of the evidence in
    rebuttal     was        an     attempt           to    circumvent       the      disclosure
    requirements       of   
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)(d).         
    Id.,
       ¶¶5–7,        18.
    Relying on our decision in Lunde, 
    85 Wis. 2d at
    91–92, the court
    of appeals in Konkol reaffirmed the principle that the proper
    analysis for determining whether evidence is "bona fide rebuttal
    evidence" is not whether the evidence could have been admitted
    in the State's case-in-chief, but rather whether the evidence
    became     necessary         and    appropriate          upon    presentation         of     the
    defense's case.         Konkol, 
    256 Wis. 2d 725
    , ¶18.
    ¶41    This test for bona fide rebuttal evidence effectively
    harmonizes the plain language of the sanctions provision in the
    discovery statute and the discretion of the circuit court.                                   The
    sanctions     provision            of     the     discovery     statute,       
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (7m)(a),         provides             that    "[t]he    court    shall    exclude"
    evidence     for    which          the        State   failed    to   comply      with        the
    disclosure requirements.                 Here, the circuit court did just that:
    upon determining that the State failed to provide proper access
    to the fingerprint cards, that evidence and related testimony
    was excluded from the State's case-in-chief.
    ¶42     However, notwithstanding the initial exclusion, such
    an exclusion need not be absolute because circuit courts retain
    18
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    significant         discretion     to     admit     rebuttal     evidence,      even    when
    such evidence was not disclosed for use in the case-in-chief.
    See 
    id.
     (relying on Lunde, 
    85 Wis. 2d at
    91–92); cf. Wold v.
    State, 
    57 Wis. 2d 344
    , 355, 
    204 N.W.2d 482
     (1973) (recognizing
    that in the context of impeachment of a defendant by a prior
    inconsistent statement that was obtained in violation of the
    warnings required under Miranda v. Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966),
    the proper focus is on the statement's trustworthiness, or lack
    thereof,      not    on     whether the        statement    was      excluded    from the
    State's case-in-chief).             Moreover, as relevant here, the circuit
    court's discretion to admit evidence on rebuttal is particularly
    broad    "when       the    evidence      is    necessary       to    achieve    justice."
    Watson, 
    46 Wis. 2d at 499
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶43    During the defense's case, Novy testified that he did
    not call Julie from the payphone at L&M Meats on the night of
    November 9, 2008.            This statement raised an issue of credibility
    between       Novy's       and   Julie's       accounts    of    what    occurred       that
    evening       because      Julie   had    previously       testified      that    she   had
    received such a phone call and implicated Novy.                            Accordingly,
    after Novy's testimony, admission of testimony related to the
    fingerprint         evidence       became       necessary       and     appropriate      as
    rebuttal testimony to contradict Novy's testimony.
    ¶44        Furthermore,        neither        the   State's       pointed    question
    (whether Novy called Julie from the payphone that night) nor the
    fact that Novy might have used the phone on other occasions
    diminished the propriety of the State's use of the fingerprint
    evidence and related testimony in rebuttal.                           As we have said,
    19
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    the standard for rebuttal evidence is quite broad:                      any evidence
    otherwise admissible that "in any respect tends to contradict
    the witness, is admissible" for rebuttal.                    
    Id. at 500
     (internal
    quotation marks omitted).               On this standard, we cannot say that
    the   circuit    court       erroneously         exercised     its    discretion     in
    allowing the State to offer testimony that tended to undermine
    or contradict Novy's testimony regarding his use of the payphone
    at L&M Meats on November 9, 2008.8
    ¶45   Accordingly,         we     conclude    that     the     circuit    court's
    interpretation        of   the        statute     was    consistent      with    prior
    appellate decisions, and that the circuit court's decision to
    allow testimony relating to fingerprint evidence on rebuttal was
    not an erroneous exercise of discretion.
    C.    Juror Inattentiveness
    ¶46   The second issue Novy raises is that the circuit court
    erred by denying Novy's motion to strike a juror whom defense
    counsel     claimed    was      sleeping        during   the    defense's       closing
    8
    Novy also argues that the fingerprint-related testimony
    became irrelevant once the applicable bail jumping charge (Count
    7) was dismissed.      However, the nature of the offense of
    stalking suggests that Novy's conduct relevant to the bail
    jumping charge (viz., calling Julie at home) was equally
    relevant to demonstrate the course of conduct for stalking. See
    State v. Conner, 
    2011 WI 8
    , ¶28, 
    331 Wis. 2d 352
    , 
    795 N.W.2d 750
    (discussing the nature of the offense of stalking). This is so
    because if the jury believed that Novy called Julie from L&M
    Meats on the night in question, such facts would tend to support
    the State's theory that Novy had engaged in a course of conduct
    that Novy knew or should have known would cause Julie to suffer
    serious emotional distress, and that did in fact cause such
    distress. See 
    Wis. Stat. § 940.32
    (2)(a), (b), and (c) (setting
    forth elements of the offense of stalking).
    20
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    argument.      This argument is based on the constitutional right to
    an impartial jury and due process, as guaranteed by the Sixth
    and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and
    Article I, Section 7 of the Wisconsin Constitution.                                See State
    v. Kettner, 
    2011 WI App 142
    , ¶23, 
    337 Wis. 2d 461
    , 
    805 N.W.2d 132
    .
    1.    General principles
    ¶47    The    right     to    a     fair    trial    by    an        impartial      jury
    underlies the        requirement          that    jurors   have    heard       all    of the
    material portions of the trial.                   See 
    id.
            "The absence of this
    condition, whether it is due to a hearing deficiency or a state
    of     semi-consciousness,            could       imperil        the        guarantees      of
    impartiality and due process."                    
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Hampton
    (Hampton I), 
    201 Wis. 2d 662
    , 668, 
    549 N.W.2d 756
     (Ct. App.
    1996)     (internal       quotation        marks     omitted).              Review    of     an
    allegation of juror inattentiveness involves a twofold inquiry:
    First, the circuit court must determine, as a question of fact,
    whether      the    juror    was    actually       inattentive         to    the    point   of
    potentially undermining the fairness of the trial; here, whether
    the juror was sleeping.              See State v. Hampton (Hampton II), 
    217 Wis. 2d 614
    , 621, 
    579 N.W.2d 260
     (Ct. App. 1998).                                  Second, if
    the circuit court finds that the juror was in fact sufficiently
    inattentive,        the     court   must     determine      whether          the    defendant
    suffered prejudice as a result of the juror's inattentiveness.
    See 
    id.
    ¶48    As with evidentiary issues, questions involving juror
    conduct and attentiveness implicate the circuit court's broad
    21
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    discretion.      See 
    id.
         Accordingly, although we review a circuit
    court's prejudice analysis as a matter of law, we will uphold a
    circuit     court's    factual     findings     regarding    the     conduct   and
    attentiveness of the jurors, unless those findings are clearly
    erroneous.    See Kettner, 
    337 Wis. 2d 461
    , ¶12.
    2.    Application
    ¶49    Our decision on this issue rests on the absence of a
    necessary factual finding by the circuit court that a juror was
    sleeping.     See 
    id.
          Without such a finding, we need not address
    the   question    of   law   this      issue   presents,    i.e.,    whether   the
    juror's alleged sleeping prejudiced Novy.
    ¶50    After completion of closing arguments, defense counsel
    sought a sidebar during which he moved to strike the allegedly
    sleeping juror.        Judge Kluka denied the motion and, after the
    jury left the courtroom, counsel was afforded an opportunity to
    make a record of his objection.                During that discussion, Judge
    Kluka noted that she considered the defense counsel's request,
    but that she did not see the juror sleeping.                        Additionally,
    Judge Kluka also noted that she had kept "track of what's going
    on with the jurors fairly well," and that she had "paid very[,]
    very close attention to the demeanor and conduct of the jurors."
    ¶51   In explaining the reason for her ruling, the circuit
    court did not find that the juror was sleeping, and therefore,
    Novy did not establish a fact necessary to his motion to strike.
    On this record, we cannot say that the circuit court's findings
    are clearly erroneous because they did not include a finding
    that the juror was sleeping.              Because we accept such findings,
    22
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    we do not discuss this legal challenge further.9                       Accordingly, we
    affirm the circuit court's denial of Novy's motion to strike the
    allegedly    sleeping      juror      from     further    participation        in    his
    trial.
    III.     CONCLUSION
    ¶52   We    conclude     that,     with   regard     to     the    admission    of
    rebuttal fingerprint-related             testimony,      the     circuit    court    did
    not   erroneously       exercise   its    discretion.            The    circuit    court
    initially determined that the State had failed to comply with
    its   discovery     obligations        under    
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1);       and
    therefore, the court excluded fingerprint evidence and related
    testimony        from    the    State's         case-in-chief           pursuant     to
    9
    At oral argument,    counsel for Mr. Novy was questioned
    about whether the circuit court made findings regarding the
    allegedly sleeping juror.      Justice Roggensack said that it
    seemed "the trial court made a finding that she didn't see that
    there was any juror sleeping." Counsel for Mr. Novy responded,
    "You know, judge, I read that, and that certainly is true, but I
    don't think the judge in [her] decision made that the issue. I
    think [she] made the issue that you just don't have to have a
    juror listen to closing arguments if they choose not to listen."
    Oral Argument at 4:40, State v. Novy, 2011AP407-CR, available at
    http://www.wiseye.org/Programming/VideoArchive/ArchiveList.aspx?
    cv=34.
    Counsel for the State noted defense counsel's concession on
    the trial court's finding, and reiterated that it was the
    State's position that "the circuit court made a finding that the
    juror was not sleeping," but that the court also "went that step
    further and said 'Even if the juror was sleeping, then [the
    court    doesn't]   find   any  prejudice  because   this   wasn't
    testimonial.'"    Underscoring this point, counsel for the State
    concluded    that   "On   these   facts,  [although]   there   was
    no . . . explicit finding, . . . I think it can definitely be
    interpreted as a finding of fact that the juror was not asleep."
    
    Id. at 27:00
    .
    23
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR
    § 971.23(7m)(a).       However, after Novy testified such that the
    excluded    fingerprint        evidence          and    related         testimony      would
    controvert his testimony, the circuit court concluded that it
    could be    presented      in rebuttal.             The    circuit       court      properly
    interpreted § 971.23 under the facts of this case, and given the
    significant discretion         afforded          circuit     courts      on   evidentiary
    matters,    we    cannot     say     that    the       circuit      court     erroneously
    exercised its discretion in permitting the rebuttal use of the
    fingerprint evidence and related testimony.
    ¶53    With regard to the circuit court's treatment of the
    allegedly sleeping juror, the circuit court did not find that
    the juror was sleeping; and therefore, Novy failed to establish
    a finding    necessary to          his   contention.              The   circuit     court's
    findings are not clearly erroneous; and therefore, we will not
    overturn    the    circuit     court's       refusal         to    strike     the    juror.
    Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the court of appeals.
    By    the    Court.—The       decision       of   the    court      of   appeals    is
    affirmed.
    ¶54     DAVID T. PROSSER, J., did not participate.
    24
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    ¶55    SHIRLEY S. ABRAHAMSON, C.J.                (concurring).      I write
    separately for two reasons.               First, I disagree with the majority
    opinion's interpretation and application of 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    to the undisputed facts in the present case.                     Second, I disagree
    with the majority opinion's approach to the second issue, namely
    the allegedly sleeping juror.
    I
    ¶56    The majority opinion does not address the difficult
    issue of law facing the court, namely interpreting and applying
    the text of 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
     to the undisputed facts of the
    case.       The majority opinion carefully reprints the text of the
    statute       but    then   ignores     the   words     themselves.    Indeed,    the
    majority       opinion      masks,     avoids,    and    seems   oblivious   to   the
    difficult           statutory     interpretation         issue    by   failing     to
    distinguish between witness testimony, which is governed by 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)(d) and physical evidence, which is governed by
    § 971.23(1)(g).
    ¶57       The     question       presented    in     the    instant   case   is,
    according to the court of appeals,1 the State, and the defendant,
    whether fingerprint evidence (physical evidence)2 excluded from
    the State's case-in-chief as a discovery sanction may later be
    1
    State v. Novy, 
    2012 WI App 10
    , ¶9, 
    338 Wis. 2d 439
    , 
    809 N.W.2d 889
    .
    2
    It is undisputed that the fingerprint evidence in this
    case is "physical evidence."      Fingerprint evidence has been
    categorized as "physical evidence" on multiple occasions. See,
    e.g., State v. Martin, 
    2012 WI 96
    , ¶63, 
    343 Wis. 2d 278
    , 
    816 N.W.2d 270
    ;   State  v.   Armstrong,  
    2005 WI 119
    , ¶63, 
    283 Wis. 2d 639
    , 
    700 N.W.2d 98
    ; State v. Stuart, 
    2005 WI 47
    , ¶54,
    
    279 Wis. 2d 659
    , 
    695 N.W.2d 259
    .
    1
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    used        by   the    State   in       its   rebuttal       witnesses'     testimony    to
    challenge the defendant's testimony.                         In other words, the issue
    is not whether the expert witnesses can be rebuttal witnesses.
    They can under the statute at issue and relevant case law.                               The
    issue, rather, is whether the State can, while questioning its
    rebuttal expert witnesses, introduce into evidence and have the
    witnesses testify about the physical fingerprint evidence that
    has been excluded under 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    .
    ¶58      The     majority    opinion         does    not    directly   answer    the
    question presented in the instant case.                            Instead, the majority
    opinion states a different question:                          whether the trial court
    erred       when   it     allowed        the   State    to    use    certain   fingerprint
    evidence and related testimony in rebuttal.                              Majority op., ¶1.
    The     majority         opinion     seems      to     answer      yet   another   question
    (changing          the     phrase         "fingerprint          evidence     and   related
    testimony" in the question to "fingerprint-related testimony" in
    the answer):           "We conclude that, with regard to the admission of
    fingerprint-related testimony on rebuttal, the circuit court did
    not erroneously exercise its discretion [to admit the rebuttal
    testimony]."           Majority op., ¶2.3
    ¶59      The    majority     opinion         meshes     physical    evidence    (the
    fingerprint cards) and the witnesses' testimony and thus shifts
    the focus of inquiry from physical evidence to testimony.
    3
    Yet sometimes the majority opinion seems to address the
    admissibility of the fingerprint evidence itself.   See, e.g.,
    majority op., ¶37.
    2
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    ¶60    Throughout   the    opinion    the   majority    uses   the    words
    "testimony"     and    "evidence"      either    interchangeably4         or    in
    combination in some phrase,5 all the while stating that it is
    applying the plain meaning of 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    .              The case law
    upon which the majority relies, case law that is pre- and post-
    the present version of § 971.23, addresses only testimony; the
    case law does not address physical evidence or testimony related
    to   physical   evidence.        Yet   § 971.23    treats     testimony        and
    physical evidence separately——and differently.              That's the rub.
    ¶61    I look first at 
    Wis. Stat. §§ 971.23
    (1)(d) and (1)(g).6
    Wisconsin Stat. § 971.23(1)(d) requires that before trial, the
    4
    See, e.g., majority op., ¶25, in which the majority states
    that 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)(d) "has an exception for disclosure
    of rebuttal evidence." Not true. Section 971.23(1)(d) excepts
    rebuttal testimony.
    5
    The majority opinion repeatedly refers to the State's use
    of "certain fingerprint evidence and related testimony in
    rebuttal" or some such mixed reference to fingerprint physical
    evidence and testimony of a witness.    See, e.g., majority op.,
    ¶¶1, 2, 11, 14, 23, 28, 37, 39, 43, 44, 52.
    6
    
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    , Discovery and Inspection:
    (1) What a district attorney must disclose to a
    defendant.   Upon demand, the district attorney shall,
    within a reasonable time before trial, disclose to the
    defendant or his or her attorney and permit the
    defendant or his or her attorney to inspect and copy
    or photograph all of the following materials and
    information, if it is within the possession, custody
    or control of the state:
    . . . .
    (d) A list of all witnesses and their addresses whom
    the district attorney intends to call at the trial.
    This paragraph does not apply to rebuttal witnesses or
    those called for impeachment only.
    3
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    district attorney must disclose to the defendant a list of all
    witnesses whom the district attorney intends to call at trial.
    Wisconsin Stat. § 971.23(1)(g) requires the district attorney to
    disclose      any    physical        evidence      that     the    district       attorney
    intends to use at trial.
    ¶62    The statute governing discovery of the witness list,
    § 971.23(1)(d), makes an exception for a rebuttal or impeachment
    witness.      Such a witness need not be included on the list of
    witnesses disclosed before trial.
    ¶63    In     contrast,        the     statutory       provision          governing
    discovery of physical evidence, § 971.23(1)(g), does not provide
    a similar exception for rebuttal or impeachment evidence.
    ¶64    What are we to make of this different treatment in the
    statute      of    testimony    and     physical        evidence?         Testimony    and
    physical evidence are not synonymous.                     "Testimony" and "physical
    evidence" are different types of evidence.
    ¶65    I begin my discussion by reciting what happened at the
    trial court.
    ¶66    The    physical        evidence      at     issue     was    two    "cards"
    containing        fingerprints.         One   card      contained    the    defendant's
    known fingerprints; the other card contained fingerprints lifted
    from   the    pay    phone.          Prior    to   trial,    the    State     failed   to
    disclose to the defendant the physical evidence——the fingerprint
    cards——it intended to use               at    trial.       Disclosure       of   physical
    . . . .
    (g) Any physical evidence that the district attorney
    intends to offer in evidence at trial.
    4
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    evidence           prior     to    trial      is     required       by     
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)(g).
    ¶67     The       defendant       moved     to    exclude        the    physical
    fingerprint evidence.              The trial court granted the defendant's
    motion and prohibited the State from introducing this physical
    fingerprint evidence at trial.                     The ruling comports with 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)(g),            although      the   circuit     court     did    not
    specifically refer by number to this paragraph of the statute.
    The State does not challenge the trial court's exclusion of the
    physical fingerprint evidence from its case-in-chief.
    ¶68        Even though the trial court had excluded the physical
    fingerprint evidence from the State's case-in-chief, the State
    still sought to call the fingerprint experts in its case-in-
    chief.        The experts would have testified about their examination
    of the fingerprints on the two cards and their conclusion that
    the known fingerprints matched the fingerprints lifted from the
    pay phone.            The trial court refused to allow the experts to
    testify       in    the    State's      case-in-chief    because     their     testimony
    relied     on      the     physical      fingerprint     evidence    that      had   been
    excluded.          The trial court concluded that without the physical
    fingerprint           evidence,      none    of    the   experts'        testimony    was
    relevant to the case.                The State does not challenge the trial
    court's exclusion of the witnesses from its case-in-chief.
    ¶69       Indeed, the majority opinion concludes, as do I, that
    the trial court validly excluded the fingerprint cards and the
    expert testimony that would have been based on the cards from
    the State's case-in-chief.                Majority op., ¶38.
    5
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    ¶70      The problem arose when the State sought to introduce
    the    previously         excluded        physical          fingerprint        evidence      in
    rebuttal.         According to the text of the statute, 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (7m)(a) provides the sanction for failure to disclose
    physical evidence:           "The court shall exclude any witness not
    listed     or     evidence   not        presented         for   inspection       or   copying
    required by this section, unless good cause is shown for failure
    to    comply.       The    court        may    in     appropriate        cases   grant      the
    opposing party a recess or a continuance" (emphasis added).
    ¶71      Despite    
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (7m)(a)        excluding        the
    physical        fingerprint        evidence          that       wasn't     presented        for
    inspection,        the    circuit       court,       without     any     analysis     of    the
    statute      or    case    law,        simply       announced     that     there      was    no
    distinction between a witness and physical evidence and that a
    rebuttal witness can bring in any kind of physical evidence that
    the State may wish to use in connection with that witnesses'
    testimony.7        The circuit court laid down a rule of law that the
    bench and bar could readily apply.
    ¶72      Because    the    majority          opinion     does     not   analyze      the
    relationship       between       testimony          and   physical     evidence       and   the
    application of the text of 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (7m)(a) to both,
    7
    The defendant did not see the fingerprint cards before
    they were introduced into the record on rebuttal, and therefore
    the defendant was unable to procure his own expert to challenge
    the State's experts' testimony.
    Although the State had not listed the names of the
    witnesses who would testify about the fingerprints, the
    defendant had a copy of the fingerprint report and knew the
    names of the fingerprint experts.
    6
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    the majority opinion, unlike the ruling of the circuit court, is
    muddled and fails to give proper guidance to the bench and bar.
    ¶73    For help in interpreting the present statute, I have
    examined the cases cited in the majority opinion.                Although past
    cases upon which the majority opinion relies sometimes used the
    words       "testimony"   and    "evidence"   interchangeably     in   rebuttal
    witness cases,8 none of the cases is relevant for resolving the
    issue presented here because each case dealt with testimony, not
    physical evidence.9
    8
    That the words           "testimony" and "evidence" are sometimes
    used interchangeably            should not be surprising.      After all,
    testimony is one type           of evidence.   In many instances it might
    not matter whether              a court uses the word "evidence" or
    "testimony." In the              present case, however, the applicable
    statute treats the two          separately and differently.
    9
    See, e.g., cases cited at majority op., ¶¶25, 26, 29-35,
    40, 42, 44.
    State v. Lunde, 
    85 Wis. 2d 80
    , 
    270 N.W.2d 180
     (1978) (State
    was permitted to present bona fide rebuttal witness testimony
    from a witness who had not been previously identified to the
    defendant because the rebuttal witness's testimony was only
    necessary and appropriate once the defendant testified.    State
    action was permitted under old 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (3)(a), which
    is now § 971.23(1)(d)).
    State v. Watson, 
    46 Wis. 2d 492
    , 499-500, 
    175 N.W.2d 244
    (1970) (Decided before the statute was enacted.     State could
    present "rebuttal evidence" through "rebuttal witnesses" to
    impeach the credibility of a testifying defendant).
    Howard v. Beldenville Lumber Co., 
    129 Wis. 98
    , 
    108 N.W. 48
    (1906) (Decided before the statute was enacted.   The plaintiff
    had wide discretion to present rebuttal testimony to contradict
    the defendant's testimony.   The court used the term "evidence"
    to refer to rebuttal "testimony" that did not include any
    "physical evidence.").
    7
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    ¶74    I   have   also     reviewed   the    history   of   
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
     going back to the 1969 enactment of the first version
    of the statute.10      What is clear from the statutory history is
    that since the statute's enactment, the defendant's discovery of
    the list of witnesses and discovery of physical evidence were
    treated    differently   in     two   distinct   statutes.11     The    statute
    McGowan v. Chicago & N.W. Ry. Co., 
    91 Wis. 147
    , 
    64 N.W. 891
    (1895) (Decided before the statute was enacted.    The plaintiff
    could call witnesses on rebuttal even though the plaintiff had
    known the witnesses existed before trial and had considered
    calling them in the case-in-chief.).
    State   v.  Sandoval,   
    2009 WI App 61
    ,  ¶¶30-31,   
    318 Wis. 2d 126
    , 
    767 N.W.2d 291
     (State could call a rebuttal witness
    whose testimony about what he saw included exculpatory evidence
    that had not been disclosed to the defendant before trial
    pursuant to 
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)(h)).
    State v. Konkol, 
    2002 WI App 174
    , ¶18, 
    256 Wis. 2d 725
    , 
    649 N.W.2d 300
     (State had no duty to list a rebuttal witness under
    
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)(d) even if the prosecutor knew before
    trial that the witness would be called. Testimony, not physical
    evidence, was admitted.).
    10
    The current statute requiring a district attorney to
    provide pretrial discovery to a defendant was created by ch.
    255, Laws of 1969, a complete redraft of the criminal procedure
    statutes undertaken by the Criminal Rules Committee established
    by the Judicial Council.
    11
    
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (3)(a) (1969-70), List of Witnesses:
    A defendant may, not less than 15 days nor more than
    30 days before trial, serve upon the district attorney
    an offer in writing to furnish the state a list of all
    witnesses the defendant intends to call at the trial,
    whereupon within 5 days after the receipt of such
    offer,   the district attorney shall      furnish  the
    defendant a list of all witnesses and their addresses
    whom he intends to call at the trial.    Within 5 days
    after the district attorney furnishes such list, the
    defendant shall furnish the district attorney a list
    of all witnesses and their addresses whom the
    defendant intends to call at the trial. This section
    8
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    governing          discovery    of    witnesses     included     an    exception    for
    rebuttal and impeachment witnesses, while the statute governing
    discovery          of    physical     evidence     did     not   include     such   an
    exception.12            The 1969 statute and the revisions, including the
    present version, preserve this distinction.
    ¶75    I     conclude    that    
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (1)      does   not
    explicitly authorize a trial court to admit physical evidence on
    rebuttal.            Perhaps    other    legal    principles     can    support     the
    admission          of    the   previously       excluded    physical      fingerprint
    evidence in the State's case on rebuttal.                    The majority opinion
    hints         that        perhaps       admissibility        should       hinge     on
    trustworthiness, and that the general principles of impeachment
    shall not apply to rebuttal witnesses or those called
    for impeachment only.
    
    Wis. Stat. § 971.23
    (4)     (1969-70)        Inspection     of    Physical
    Evidence:
    On a motion of a party subject to s. 971.31(5), all
    parties shall produce at a reasonable time and place
    designated by the court all physical evidence which
    each   party   intends   to  introduce    in  evidence.
    Thereupon, any party shall be permitted to inspect or
    copy such physical evidence in the presence of a
    person designated by the court.        The order shall
    specify the time, place and manner of making the
    inspection, copies or photographs and may prescribe
    such terms and conditions as are just.
    12
    The current criminal discovery statute took its present
    form in 1996 after the enactment of 1995 Wisconsin Act 387,
    which repealed, renumbered, and recreated certain portions of
    the old statute. The analysis of 1995 Assembly Bill 721 (which
    became 1995 Act 387) by the Legislative Reference Bureau
    indicates that the new bill aimed to eliminate old arduous
    procedure requirements in favor of simpler, more responsive
    discovery of witness lists and physical evidence.
    9
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    testimony should apply to the present case.                     See majority op.,
    ¶42.13
    ¶76       In any event, I concur in the mandate because I agree
    with the State that if the admission of the fingerprint evidence
    in rebuttal was error, it was harmless error in the present
    case.
    II
    ¶77        I turn now to the second issue, the allegedly sleeping
    juror.
    ¶78        The majority embarks on its own new theory about the
    allegedly sleeping juror——a theory that was neither briefed nor
    argued by the parties.                 This theory asserts that the circuit
    court based its decision on findings of fact.                     I disagree with
    the majority opinion.
    ¶79        The circuit court did not base its decision on any
    factual findings.              Rather, the circuit court based its decision
    on     a     legal    conclusion:          Even   if   the    defendant's    factual
    allegations that the juror was sleeping were true, the defendant
    was not prejudiced.
    ¶80        Rather than addressing the actual legal basis of the
    decision of the circuit court, the majority opinion fails to
    even       mention       it.     Because    the   majority     opinion's    analysis
    arrives at conflicting conclusions, mischaracterizes the circuit
    court record and ultimately fails to provide guidance to circuit
    courts       on    how    they    should    proceed    when    confronted   with   a
    13
    See also Novy, 
    338 Wis. 2d 439
    , ¶¶14, 15.
    10
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    challenge         that   a    juror       was    sleeping,          I    write      separately    to
    address this issue.
    A
    ¶81   The       majority's        theory          and     analysis     of    the   sleeping
    juror    issue      rests      on    its     discussion            of    the   circuit      court's
    findings of facts——findings that the circuit court never made.
    ¶82     At the outset of its discussion of the sleeping juror
    issue,    the      majority opinion              states          that    review of the issue
    involves      a    twofold      inquiry.              First,       the    circuit      court   must
    determine,         as    a    question          of        fact,    whether       the   juror     was
    sleeping.          Majority op., ¶47.                    Second, the circuit court must
    determine whether the defendant suffered prejudice as a result
    of the juror's inattentiveness.                       
    Id.
    ¶83   After this set-up of the inquiry, the majority opinion
    then provides the standard of review: "[A]lthough we review a
    circuit court's prejudice analysis as a matter of law, we will
    uphold a circuit court's factual findings regarding the conduct
    and   attentiveness            of    the     jurors,            unless    those     findings     are
    clearly erroneous."             Majority op., ¶48.
    ¶84     Throughout            its     opinion,              the    majority      repeatedly
    concludes that the circuit court "did not find that the juror
    was sleeping."               Majority op., ¶¶3, 22, 51, 53.                          The majority
    opinion also states that its decision "rests on the absence of a
    necessary factual finding by the circuit court that a juror was
    sleeping."          Majority         op.,       ¶49.            Nevertheless,       the    majority
    opinion simultaneously applies the standard of review to the
    non-existent         finding        and     concludes            that    the   circuit      court's
    11
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    "findings are not clearly erroneous."                    See majority op., ¶¶3,
    22, 51, 53.
    ¶85    The majority opinion emphasizes that the circuit court
    "had not seen the juror sleeping," majority op., ¶¶17, 50, and
    mentions the circuit court's statement that it tries "to keep
    track of what's going on with the jurors."                       Majority op., ¶17.
    Ultimately,       the    majority      opinion    concludes       that    "[o]n    this
    record, we cannot say the circuit court's findings are clearly
    erroneous because they did not include a finding that the juror
    was sleeping."      Majority op., ¶51.
    ¶86    Thus, on the one hand, the majority opinion concludes
    that    the    circuit    court      made   no   finding    that    the    juror   was
    sleeping.       Majority op., ¶¶3, 22, 51, 53.                   The circuit court
    also made no finding that the juror was not sleeping.                        In other
    words, the circuit court made no finding of fact about whether
    the juror was or was not sleeping.                  Nevertheless, the majority
    opinion       paradoxically         concludes     that     the     circuit    court's
    findings on the issue are not clearly erroneous.
    ¶87    In order to determine whether a finding of historical
    fact is clearly erroneous, it is axiomatic that there must first
    be a finding of historical fact.14               Yet the majority opinion does
    not mention any other findings of fact that the circuit court
    made    related    to    this     issue     of   juror   inattentiveness.          The
    14
    See, e.g., State v. Owens, 
    148 Wis. 2d 922
    , 926-27, 
    436 N.W.2d 869
     (1989).
    12
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    majority opinion appears to review a sole finding of fact that
    it acknowledges never occurred.15
    ¶88    Even a cursory review of the record reveals that the
    circuit       court    undertook    no    factual        inquiry     into      whether       the
    juror was sleeping.           The circuit court did not voir dire the
    allegedly sleeping juror, did not take any testimony, and did
    not consider other admissible evidence in the record on this
    fact.
    ¶89      Furthermore, the          majority        opinion's      reliance        on   the
    circuit       court's    statements       that      it    did     not    see    the      juror
    sleeping       similarly     cannot       be       the    basis      for    the     elusive
    "findings" on which the majority opinion rests its conflicting
    conclusions.          This court has held that a "circuit court may not
    rely on its own personal observations of events not contained in
    the record."          State v. Anson, 
    2005 WI 96
    , ¶33, 
    282 Wis. 2d 629
    ,
    
    698 N.W.2d 776
    .         Furthermore,         a    judge    presiding         at   a    trial
    cannot testify as a witness.16
    ¶90    It is the majority's misplaced focus on non-existent
    findings of fact that gets the majority into analytical trouble.
    The only reference to a finding of fact related to a sleeping
    15
    "On this record, we cannot say that the circuit court's
    findings are clearly erroneous because they did not include a
    finding that the juror was sleeping.   Because we accept such
    findings, we do not discuss this legal challenge further."
    Majority op., ¶51.
    16
    State v. Anson, 
    282 Wis. 2d 629
    , ¶¶33, 34 & n.3, 
    698 N.W.2d 776
     (citing 
    Wis. Stat. §§ 906.05
     & 902.01(2)); State v.
    Hampton (Hampton I), 
    201 Wis. 2d 662
    , 672-73, 
    549 N.W.2d 756
    (Ct. App. 1996).   For additional discussion on the issue of a
    circuit court's personal observation and judicial notice, see
    ¶¶105-119, infra.
    13
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    juror in the majority's entire opinion is its reference to what
    it describes as a non-existent finding.
    ¶91   Although the majority acknowledges that the first step
    when presented        with   an       sleeping     juror    issue is to determine
    whether the juror was in fact sleeping, the majority fails to
    acknowledge     that    such      a    determination        never    occurred    in   the
    present case.
    B
    ¶92   The      majority's          approach         to     "facts"    and      its
    contradictory         conclusions           appear         to     stem      from      its
    mischaracterization of the record.                  The circuit court determined
    that "even assuming what [the defense attorney alleged about the
    sleeping     juror]    is    correct,"       the    law    does     not   automatically
    require the juror's removal.
    ¶93   The majority selectively quotes the circuit court to
    make it appear as if the circuit court found that the juror was
    not sleeping, without actually stating that the circuit court
    found that the juror was not sleeping.                     However, the context of
    what occurred before the circuit court is different from what
    the majority appears to describe.
    ¶94   The defendant's attorney raised the issue about the
    juror before the circuit court by advising the court that he had
    seen    a    juror    sleeping        during     his   closing       argument.        The
    defendant's attorney described what he saw as follows:
    MR. CICCHINI:   Just for the record.    I saw his eyes
    closed and his head nod down on one occasion[], and I
    saw his eyes closed on several occasions.
    14
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    ¶95     In response, the State acknowledged that the juror may
    not have been paying rapt attention during closing arguments,
    but noted that she had not seen any indication that the juror
    was sleeping during the presentation of evidence:
    MS. JAY: I certainly observed that he was not paying
    rapt attention, but I——I'll just take it personally.
    I didn't see anything during the trial during evidence
    that indicated to me that he was asleep during the
    evidence portion.    So, I just didn't think it was
    necessary to make him the 13th juror.
    ¶96     The   circuit     court     then    stated     its    reasoning     for
    denying the defendant's motion to strike the alleged sleeping
    juror.   It    observed      that   it    was   aware   of   case   law   that    may
    require removal if the juror is sleeping during the presentation
    of evidence.        Here, however, the allegation was that the juror
    was   sleeping      during    closing      arguments.        The    circuit     court
    determined that "even assuming what [the defendant's attorney
    alleged about the sleeping juror] is correct," the law does not
    automatically        require        the    juror's      removal.          Counsels'
    presentation and the full reasoning of the circuit court are as
    follows:
    MR. CICCHINI:   Would you like to do the juror issue
    real quick? I'd like to make a record real quick that
    I brought up at the side bar?
    THE COURT:      Oh, sure.
    MR. CICCHINI: During the side bar, I made a motion to
    strike as the——or have removed or strike as the 13th
    juror——Miss Jay [the prosecuting attorney] can maybe
    confirm this——I think his name was [juror's name]?
    MS. JAY:      Correct.
    MR. CICCHINI: Okay. He was in the lower right hand
    corner.   He had a Cubs shirt on, dark hair; and
    15
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    noticed him sleeping during the closing——my closing
    argument——and because I——I was trying to make eye
    contact with him, and I noticed that.     I move to
    strike. I believe that Miss Jay concurred that she——
    well she can speak for herself; but she noticed
    similar and opposed the motion. The court denied the
    motion. And I think that summarizes it.
    THE COURT:   The motion to strike him as the alternate
    juror.
    MR. CICCHINI:   Yes, alternate juror. Yes.
    THE COURT:   Attorney Jay.
    MS. JAY: I certainly observed that he was not paying
    rapt attention, but I——I'll just take it personally.
    I didn't see anything during the trial during evidence
    that indicated to me that he was asleep during the
    evidence portion.    So I just didn't think it was
    necessary to make him the 13th juror.
    MR. CICCHINI:   Oh, I'm sorry.   I guess——could I just
    describe in brief detail what I saw?
    THE COURT:   Sure.
    MR. CICCHINI:   Just for the record.    I saw his eyes
    closed and his head nod down on one occasion, and I
    saw his eyes closed on several occasions.
    THE COURT:   During your closing.
    MR. CICCHINI:   Yes.        Thank you.
    THE COURT:      Did    you    see     it   during   Attorney   Jay's
    closing?
    MR. CICCHINI:    I——one time what I think I first
    noticed that his——his head was down but he was rubbing
    his forehead and came up back up, and I did not see it
    then. I saw it during my closing.
    THE COURT: Okay. Your observations are noted. I did
    consider this request at the side bar just before
    sending the jurors out to deliberate.    I myself []
    didn't notice it. I try to keep track of what's going
    on with the jurors fairly well.   I am aware of case
    law which says if a juror is sleeping during
    testimony, during the presentation of evidence, that
    16
    No.     2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    can warrant the     dismissal of that juror or [] raise
    some issues with    respect to deliberations in the sense
    that the juror      [] doesn't have the same basis for
    deliberations as    the other jurors.
    I——I didn't notice any of those kinds of problems
    while testimony was coming in during which I think I
    paid very——very close attention to the demeanor and
    conduct of the jurors.
    So, even assuming what you say is correct, it does not
    automatically require removal of that juror; and for
    that reason I did not grant your request and we
    selected the alternate randomly instead (emphasis
    added).
    ¶97     Both parties describe the circuit court's statement as
    a legal conclusion reached by the circuit court's assuming the
    factual question.      Indeed, when pressed at oral argument before
    this court about whether the circuit court based its decision on
    factual    findings,   the   defendant's     attorney    rebuffed    such   an
    assertion.      He   responded     that   the   issue   the   circuit    court
    addressed was not the factual question of whether the juror was
    sleeping, but rather it was the legal question addressing the
    import of any juror sleeping when it allegedly occurred during
    closing arguments.17
    17
    The complete exchange occurred as follows:
    Justice Roggensack:      Counselor, as I read the
    arguments and the materials provided, I thought that
    the trial court made a finding that she didn't see
    that there was any juror sleeping.
    Defendant's Attorney: You know, [Justice Roggensack],
    I read that and um, that certainly is true but I don't
    think the judge in [her] decision made that the issue.
    I think [s]he made the issue that you just don't have
    to have a juror listen to closing argument if they
    choose not to listen.     I mean, let's face facts,
    jurors may be thinking about the Green Bay Packer game
    during the entire closing argument and we wouldn't
    17
    No.       2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    ¶98    After   Justice    Roggensack        raised    the     issue   with    the
    defendant's attorney, the State's attorney briefly addressed the
    issue.      The State concluded that the circuit court did not make
    an   "explicit    finding"     of     fact   on    the     record    regarding      the
    sleeping juror and asked the court "to conclude that there was
    no prejudice."18
    know that but it wouldn't really make any difference
    because what's important is that they listen to all
    the testimony and then make their decision on the
    testimony. Does that answer your honor's . . . ?
    Justice Roggensack:   Well, I thought that, to me it
    was a finding and we adhere to the findings of the
    circuit court, unless they are clearly erroneous and I
    thought the judge was asked about this, it was brought
    to her attention and she said she didn't see any
    jurors sleeping and I thought she said she watched the
    jury quite closely.    So if it's a finding of fact,
    that's a different kind of an issue than if it's a
    question of law about whether we want to do something
    with a juror who was sleeping, you gotta get over the
    first step which was, was there a juror sleeping
    before you can get to the second step?
    Defendant's Attorney:     I understand that, [Justice
    Roggensack]. I'm not gonna disagree with that. Thank
    you. [The defendant's attorney proceeded to argue the
    issue of the rebuttal evidence.]
    18
    The     Assistant Attorney         General's      full     statement    is   as
    follows:
    I will do the same as defense counsel did and start
    with the sleeping juror issue.     There weren't many
    questions on it but I did want to clear up something.
    I think he [the defendant's attorney] made the
    statement that it was obvious or something to that
    effect that the juror was sleeping or appeared to be
    sleeping in this case. To Justice Roggensack's point,
    I do believe that the circuit court made a finding
    that the juror was not sleeping but went that step
    further and said that even if the juror was sleeping,
    I [the circuit court] don't find any prejudice because
    18
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    ¶99    In   any     event,    whether    a   circuit   court   can   make   a
    finding of fact regarding the attentiveness of a juror under the
    circumstances of the present case is problematic.                   No evidence
    was presented on the issue, and it is ordinarily inappropriate
    for a circuit court to take judicial notice of the fact that a
    juror was inattentive without further inquiry.                  See ¶¶105-122,
    infra.
    C
    ¶100 The majority's mischaracterizations do not stop with
    the record and the circuit court's decision.
    ¶101 The majority opinion declares:                The court of appeals
    concluded that the issue of the allegedly sleeping juror was
    "within    the   broad    discretion     of   the   circuit   court,   and    that
    there was nothing in the record to suggest that the court had
    erroneously      exercised     its    discretion."          Majority   op.,    ¶19
    (citing Novy, 
    338 Wis. 2d 439
    , ¶23).
    ¶102 Not     so!      The court     of   appeals   treated     the   circuit
    court as having based its conclusion on prejudice, not on any
    finding of whether the juror was in fact sleeping.                  The court of
    appeals stated:        "We know of no Wisconsin case, and Novy has not
    cited one, in which a juror was removed for nodding off during
    this wasn't testimonial.    On these facts, there was
    no, it was not an explicit finding but I think it can
    definitely be interpreted as a finding of fact that
    the juror was not asleep and I think, so I just wanted
    to clear up that the State on the sleeping juror issue
    would ask this court to affirm and conclude that there
    was no prejudice and that the defendant failed to meet
    his burden on that issue.    [The State then proceeded
    to argue the rebuttal evidence issue].       (Emphasis
    added.)
    19
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    closing arguments.      We therefore reject Novy's argument that the
    trial court erred in failing to conduct a further inquiry into
    whether the juror was sleeping."19
    D
    ¶103 As a result of relying on a finding of fact that does
    not exist and mischaracterizing the record and the decisions of
    the circuit court and court of appeals, the majority opinion
    ultimately fails to undertake the ultimate question of whether
    the   defendant's     constitutional         right   to   a   fair    trial    was
    violated by juror inattentiveness.
    ¶104 By short-circuiting the analysis, the majority further
    fails to provide guidance on how circuit courts are to handle an
    allegation of a sleeping juror.
    E
    ¶105 Unlike the majority opinion, I acknowledge the circuit
    court's stated reasoning for denying the defendant's motion to
    strike.       The   circuit     court   did    not   determine       whether   the
    defendant's allegation of a sleeping juror was true.                      Instead
    the circuit court determined that "even assuming what [Novy's
    attorney alleged about the sleeping juror] is correct," the law
    does not automatically require the juror's removal.                  The circuit
    19
    Novy, 
    338 Wis. 2d 439
    , ¶23.
    After reaching this conclusion, the court of appeals went
    on to state that defense counsel did not ask the circuit court
    to conduct further inquiry into whether the juror was asleep;
    that it would not fault the circuit court for failing to
    undertake a further inquiry under the circumstances of the
    present case; and that the circuit court did not erroneously
    exercise its discretion in failing to conduct a further inquiry
    into whether the juror was sleeping. 
    Id.
    20
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    court concluded that even if the juror was sleeping, as alleged,
    it did not prejudice the defendant.
    ¶106 Here, the defendant's attorney alleged that he "saw
    [the     juror's]          eyes   closed       and       his    head     nod     down    on     one
    occasion[]" and "saw his eyes closed on several occasions."                                     The
    alleged        inattentiveness           occurred          during       defense         counsel's
    closing argument.
    ¶107 The constitutional right to an impartial jury requires
    that the jurors "have heard all of the material testimony."20
    When a party seeks to have a juror discharged, whether it is due
    to sleep or for another cause, it is the circuit court's duty to
    "make careful inquiry into the substance of the request and to
    exert        reasonable      efforts      to       avoid       discharging       the    juror."21
    Upholding juror integrity is a task assigned to the courts.22
    The ultimate question of whether the defendant's constitutional
    right to a fair trial was violated by juror inattentiveness is a
    question         of        law    that         a        reviewing        court         determines
    independently.23
    ¶108 A        circuit      court       must       "approach      the      issue    [of    a
    sleeping juror] with extreme caution."24
    20
    Hampton I, 201 Wis. 2d at 668.
    21
    State    v.    Lehman,     
    108 Wis. 2d 291
    ,            300,    
    321 N.W.2d 212
    (1982).
    22
    State v. Gonzalez, 
    2008 WI App 142
    , ¶9, 
    314 Wis. 2d 129
    ,
    
    758 N.W.2d 153
    .
    23
    State v. Hampton (Hampton II), 
    217 Wis. 2d 614
    , 621-22,
    
    579 N.W.2d 260
     (Ct. App. 1998).
    24
    Lehman, 
    108 Wis. 2d at 300
    .
    21
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    ¶109 As a threshold issue, parties must timely object in
    order        to    properly raise        the    issue   before   the   circuit   court.
    When parties notice a sleeping juror, they must bring the issue
    to   the          circuit    court's    attention       during   trial    "as   soon   as
    practicable" after they notice the sleeping juror.25                             If the
    objection           is   not   timely,     it    may    be   considered   "waived"     or
    "forfeited".26              No one argues that the objection was not timely
    in the instant case.
    ¶110 When a timely objection is made, the circuit court may
    proceed in different ways depending on the circumstances of the
    case.         The circuit court may have to decide whether the juror
    was sleeping.            Because the circuit court in the instant case did
    not address this question, the parties did not argue in their
    briefs how the circuit court should have handled the question.
    I write to remind the bench and bar that Hampton I27 and Hampton
    II28 are instructive about what a circuit court is to do to make
    a finding about juror attentiveness.29
    25
    State v. Saunders, 
    2011 WI App 156
    , ¶32, 
    338 Wis. 2d 160
    ,
    
    807 N.W.2d 679
    .
    26
    See Hampton I, 201 Wis. 2d at 669.
    27
    Id.
    28
    Hampton II, 217 Wis. 2d at 621-24.                        See also Anson, 
    282 Wis. 2d 629
    , ¶¶33-34.
    29
    For a discussion of the numerous cases across the country
    on juror inattentiveness, see George L. Blum, Annotation,
    Inattention of Juror from Sleepiness or Other Cause As Ground
    for Reversal or New Trial, 
    59 A.L.R. 5th 1
     (2003) (made current
    by weekly addition of relevant new cases).
    22
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    ¶111 The       issue       in     the    present     case   was     raised   in     a
    substantially similar manner to that which occurred in Hampton
    I, in which the defendant also raised the issue orally at trial
    outside the presence of a jury.                      The Hampton I court determined
    that     when    there    is       a     "sufficient        demonstration     of      juror
    sleepiness," the circuit court should undertake further factual
    inquiry.30
    ¶112 In Hampton I, the attorney noticed a juror sleeping
    during      witness    testimony          and    raised     the    issue    outside      the
    presence of the jury.31                 Although the circuit court acknowledged
    that the juror was "drowsy" during portions of the testimony, it
    did not undertake any further inquiry into whether the juror was
    actually sleeping.            The court of appeals concluded that there
    was a sufficient demonstration of juror sleepiness to warrant
    further factual inquiry and remanded the matter to the circuit
    court for an evidentiary hearing.32
    ¶113 Following         a    remand       for    an   evidentiary      hearing     in
    Hampton I, the circuit court found that the juror was drowsy for
    ten minutes and fell asleep for one or two minutes.33                          On appeal
    from the evidentiary hearing, the court of appeals concluded in
    Hampton II that Hampton's due process rights to a fair trial
    30
    Hampton I, 201 Wis. 2d at 673.
    31
    Id. at 666-67.
    32
    Id. at 673-74.
    33
    Hampton II, 217 Wis. 2d at 622.
    23
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    were not violated because the testimony that was missed was not
    pivotal to the case.34
    ¶114 In order for a circuit court to make a finding of fact
    regarding the inattentiveness of a juror, there must be facts in
    the record to support such a finding.
    ¶115 It is problematic for a circuit court to take judicial
    notice of the juror's inattentiveness or to rely on its own
    observations.
    ¶116 Case     law    from   other    jurisdictions     suggests        that   a
    trial court may on "informed judicial knowledge" take judicial
    notice of the fact that a juror was sleeping when the circuit
    judge actually observes the juror sleeping.35                      Wisconsin case
    law, including Hampton I, warns that taking judicial notice of
    the fact that a juror was or was not sleeping without further
    inquiry is ordinarily inappropriate.36
    ¶117 The procedures for judicial notice are set forth in
    
    Wis. Stat. § 902.01
     (2009-10).                 Judicial notice of whether a
    juror        is   sleeping   does   not     fit    easily   with   the    kinds       of
    adjudicative facts that may be judicially noticed under 
    Wis. Stat. § 902.01
    (2).     See    Anson,       
    282 Wis. 2d 629
    ,     ¶33   &   n.3
    (holding that a circuit court cannot take judicial notice of
    facts it observes); Lemke v. Lemke, 
    2012 WI App 96
    , ¶21, 343
    34
    Id. at 624.
    35
    Hampton I, 201 Wis. 2d at 669 n.5.
    36
    Id. at 671-72 (quoting United States v. Barrett, 
    703 F.2d 1076
    , 1083 (9th Cir. 1983)).       See also Anson, 
    282 Wis. 2d 629
    , ¶¶33-34. Compare Hampton II, 217 Wis. 2d at 619-
    20.
    24
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    Wis. 2d 748,          
    820 N.W.2d 470
              (declaring      that    "[a]    trial       court
    sitting          as   a     fact-finder          may    derive    inferences          from     the
    testimony and take judicial notice of a fact that is not subject
    to   reasonable            dispute,        but     it    may     not    establish        as    an
    adjudicative          fact      that      which    is    known    to    the     judge    as    an
    individual."); State v. Peterson, 
    222 Wis. 2d 449
    , 457-58, 
    588 N.W.2d 84
             (Ct.      App.    1998)    (stating       a    trial       court    "may     not
    establish as an adjudicative fact that which is known to the
    judge as an individual."); II McCormick on Evidence § 329 at 373
    (John W. Strong ed., 5th ed. 1999) ("What a judge knows and what
    facts        a   judge    may      judicially      notice       are    not   identical        data
    banks.").
    ¶118 In making the required factual determinations, circuit
    courts should take care not to act as witnesses.                                     Although a
    circuit court may make credibility determinations when making
    its factual findings, the case law indicates a circuit court may
    not rely on its personal knowledge of events not appearing in
    the record.37             A circuit court that relies on its own personal
    observations of events not in the record as the basis for a
    37
    An example of this principle is set forth in Anson, which
    stated that a circuit court may not state "its opinion [that]
    the witness was being intimidated by the presence of several
    well-known gang members in the courtroom, if the presence and
    behavior of these individuals was not documented in the record."
    Anson, 
    282 Wis. 2d 629
    , ¶34 (emphasis in original).
    Compare and contrast Hampton II, in which the court of
    appeals concluded that the circuit court's opinion about the
    attentiveness of the juror did not transform the circuit court
    into a material witness, requiring the judge's disqualification
    under 
    Wis. Stat. § 757.19
    (2)(b).   Hampton II, 217 Wis. 2d at
    619-20.
    25
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    factual finding "is essentially acting as a witness in the case
    by providing testimony."38                  Acting as a witness is contrary to
    
    Wis. Stat. § 906.05
    , which provides that a judge "presiding at
    the trial may not testify in that trial as a witness."
    ¶119 I recognize there is some tension within the case law
    regarding the circuit court's role in determining the fact of
    whether a juror was inattentive.                      I conclude that the safest and
    best         practice      is   for       the    party     challenging     the      juror's
    attentiveness to put evidence in the record so that the circuit
    court         may    make       a    factual          determination   of       a    juror's
    attentiveness (or lack thereof) on the basis of evidence in the
    record. A circuit court may then have to determine whether a
    juror's inattention prejudiced the defendant to the extent that
    the defendant did not receive a fair trial.
    F
    ¶120 Here, the circuit court did not undertake any factual
    inquiry about the juror sleeping.                        It did not have to do so.
    Instead the circuit court determined that even if the juror were
    sleeping,        the defendant            was   not    prejudiced.    In making        that
    determination, the circuit court recognized that the ultimate
    focus of the analysis is to determine whether a defendant is
    prejudiced.39           As the Hampton I court noted, "it is universally
    recognized          that    before        inattentiveness      warrants    a       mistrial,
    38
    Anson, 
    282 Wis. 2d 629
    , ¶33.
    39
    Hampton I, 201 Wis. 2d at 668.
    26
    No.    2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    there must be a determination regarding prejudice."40                       The same
    logic holds true regarding a motion to strike a sleeping juror.
    ¶121 To satisfy the prejudice requirement, a defendant must
    establish that the           juror    missed     enough    of    the proceeding     to
    prejudice the defense.41            Generally, a defendant is prejudiced if
    a   juror    misses   hearing        "material    testimony."42        Likewise,     a
    defendant can be prejudiced by a sleeping juror if the juror
    misses a "pivotal" or "significant" part of the case.43
    ¶122 In the present case, there is no indication that the
    sleeping juror missed a pivotal or significant portion of the
    proceeding.      Furthermore, it is undisputed that the juror heard
    all material testimony.              The defendant has therefore failed to
    establish that the allegedly sleeping juror was prejudicial to
    the defense.
    ¶123 Because there is no indication that the defendant was
    prejudiced, the circuit court's discretionary refusal to strike
    the   juror    was    reasonable.          Therefore,      I    conclude    that   the
    circuit court did not erroneously exercise its discretion when
    it denied the defendant's motion to strike.
    ¶124 Unfortunately,            the   majority       opinion's    analysis     is
    confusing and fails to provide guidance on how circuit courts
    should      proceed   when    confronted        with   the      challenge   that   the
    40
    Id. at 670.
    41
    Id. at 668.
    42
    Id. at 668.
    43
    Hampton II, 217 Wis. 2d at 621, 624.
    27
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    defendant's constitutional right to an impartial jury is being
    denied based on an assertion that a juror was sleeping.
    ¶125 For the reasons set forth, I write separately.
    ¶126 I   am   authorized   to    state   that   Justice    ANN   WALSH
    BRADLEY joins this opinion.
    28
    No.   2011AP407-CR & 2011AP408-CR & 2011AP409-CR.ssa
    1