State v. Quaid Q. Belk ( 2020 )


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  •      COURT OF APPEALS
    DECISION                                              NOTICE
    DATED AND FILED                          This opinion is subject to further editing. If
    published, the official version will appear in
    the bound volume of the Official Reports.
    April 21, 2020
    A party may file with the Supreme Court a
    Sheila T. Reiff                petition to review an adverse decision by the
    Clerk of Court of Appeals           Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10
    and RULE 809.62.
    Appeal No.        2019AP982-CR                                             Cir. Ct. No. 2015CF2861
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                         IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT I
    STATE OF WISCONSIN,
    PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
    V.
    QUAID Q. BELK,
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
    APPEAL from a judgment and an order of the circuit court for
    Milwaukee County: M. JOSEPH DONALD, Judge. Judgment affirmed in part;
    order affirmed in part, reversed in part, and cause remanded with directions.
    Before Brash, P.J., Blanchard and Dugan, JJ.
    ¶1        BRASH, P.J. Quaid Q. Belk appeals from his judgment of
    conviction and an order denying his motion for postconviction relief. Belk was
    convicted on several counts relating to an automobile accident caused by Belk’s
    No. 2019AP982-CR
    intoxicated use of a vehicle, which killed one victim and injured another. Those
    counts were hit and run causing death; hit and run causing great bodily harm;1
    homicide by intoxicated use of a vehicle; injury by intoxicated use of a vehicle;
    second-degree reckless homicide; and second-degree reckless injury.
    ¶2     In his postconviction motion, Belk asserted several claims of
    ineffective assistance of counsel, including that his trial counsel failed to call a
    witness to the crash who would have testified that Belk was not trying to flee the
    scene of the accident. We conclude that Belk’s motion is sufficient to entitle him
    to a postconviction evidentiary hearing on that claim as it relates to the two counts
    of hit and run causing death and great bodily harm. We therefore reverse the trial
    court’s order denying a hearing on that claim.
    ¶3     However, Belk’s other ineffective assistance claims—which would
    have an effect on the other four counts for which he was convicted—were not
    sufficiently pled in his postconviction motion to warrant the grant of an
    evidentiary hearing.       Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s order denying an
    evidentiary hearing on those claims.               We also affirm Belk’s judgment of
    conviction for the remaining four counts.
    1
    The Third Amended Information refers to this count in accordance with the language of
    WIS. STAT. § 346.67 (2015-16): “[d]uty upon striking person or attended or occupied vehicle.”
    The same statute is referenced in the count charging “hit and run—resulting in death”; it is not
    clear why different language was used for the two counts. Additionally, in its decision denying
    Belk’s postconviction motion, the trial court used the “hit and run” language to describe both
    counts. For purposes of consistency, we use the “hit and run” language throughout this opinion
    with regard to both counts.
    All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2015-16 version unless otherwise
    noted.
    2
    No. 2019AP982-CR
    BACKGROUND
    ¶4     The accident from which the charges against Belk originated
    occurred in June 2015.     Officer Michael Michalski of the Milwaukee Police
    Department, who was on routine patrol that night, observed a Chevrolet Monte
    Carlo traveling at a high rate of speed—estimated at seventy miles per hour—
    down North 27th Street. Officer Michalski then observed, through his rearview
    mirror, the Monte Carlo crash into another vehicle.              Officer Michalski
    immediately went to the location of the crash.
    ¶5     Officer Michalski stated that he observed the driver of the Monte
    Carlo—later identified as Belk—run from his vehicle to a residence on 27th
    Street. The officer believed that Belk was attempting to conceal himself on the
    front porch of that residence, but then ran from the porch when the owner of the
    house, Reginald Alston, came out onto the porch with his dog. At that point,
    Officer Michalski took Belk into custody.
    ¶6     From his observations of Belk, Officer Michalski believed that Belk
    was intoxicated: his eyes were glassy, and there was an odor of alcohol on his
    breath. A preliminary breath test indicated that Belk had a blood alcohol content
    of 0.117.
    ¶7     In the meantime, other officers who had responded to the accident
    found two people in the car that Belk had crashed into with his Monte Carlo. The
    driver, Deon Maurice Jenkins, was trapped in the vehicle and was unresponsive.
    He was transferred to a hospital where he later died from his injuries. The
    passenger in the vehicle, M.B., was also transferred to the hospital for treatment of
    her injuries, which included eleven broken ribs and a broken pelvis.
    3
    No. 2019AP982-CR
    ¶8     The matter proceeded to trial in March 2017, where a jury convicted
    Belk of the six counts listed above. His sentences for the two hit and run counts
    consist of consecutive prison terms totaling twenty years of initial confinement
    and fifteen years of extended supervision; his sentences for the other counts were
    imposed to run concurrently to those sentences for the hit and run counts.
    ¶9     Belk filed a postconviction motion in November 2018 on the
    grounds that he received ineffective assistance of counsel in multiple respects.
    Belk’s first claim alleged that trial counsel had failed to investigate or interview
    Alston as a potential witness for the defense. He attached an affidavit by Alston,
    in which Alston stated that he had witnessed the accident from his porch. Alston
    noted that he had seen Belk speak with M.B. for ten to fifteen seconds after he had
    exited his vehicle. Furthermore, Alston averred that he believed Belk had come
    up on his porch to seek help, and that he was not trying to hide. Additionally,
    Alston stated that he had to help Belk walk down the porch stairs to where the
    police were waiting to take him into custody. Belk contends that this testimony
    could have altered the jury’s findings specifically with regard to the hit and run
    charges.
    ¶10    Belk’s   other   claims   of    ineffective   assistance     of   counsel
    included: failing to follow through with a motion to suppress custodial statements
    made by Belk, which was filed by previous trial counsel; inadequately cross-
    examining the State’s witnesses, which “prohibited the development of a possible
    affirmative defense,” as well as a failure to challenge the testimony of the State’s
    experts; failure to call any witnesses for the defense to challenge the State’s case,
    resulting in a complete failure to present a defense; and giving a deficient closing
    statement, in that it revealed that counsel had no cogent defense theory.
    4
    No. 2019AP982-CR
    ¶11     Based on his allegations, Belk sought a new trial, or minimally a
    postconviction evidentiary hearing.           Belk simultaneously filed a motion for
    resentencing on the grounds that Alston’s affidavit was a new factor that
    warranted sentence modification.2
    ¶12     The trial court rejected all of Belk’s claims. The court found that
    trial counsel’s failure to investigate Alston as a potential witness had not
    prejudiced Belk’s defense; the court deemed the other witnesses at the accident
    scene—particularly, the police officers and M.B.—to be credible, and thus found
    that there was not a reasonable probability that Alston’s testimony would have
    altered the outcome of the trial. The court found Belk’s other claims to be
    conclusory and therefore insufficient to warrant relief. The court also denied
    Belk’s motion for resentencing, holding that Alston’s affidavit did not prove that
    Belk was sentenced based on inaccurate information.
    ¶13     Therefore, the trial court denied Belk’s postconviction motion in its
    entirety, without a hearing.3 This appeal follows.
    2
    We note that postconviction counsel conflates the terms “resentencing” and “sentence
    modification,” which are “distinctly different concepts.” See State v. Wood, 
    2007 WI App 190
    ,
    ¶9, 
    305 Wis. 2d 133
    , 
    738 N.W.2d 81
    . Sentence modification may be granted if a defendant can
    show that there is a new factor that could affect the sentence that was imposed, see State v.
    Harbor, 
    2011 WI 28
    , ¶33, 
    333 Wis. 2d 53
    , 
    797 N.W.2d 828
    , whereas a defendant may be entitled
    to resentencing if the original sentence was invalid, see Wood, 
    305 Wis. 2d 133
    , ¶9, such as in
    cases where the sentencing court relied on inaccurate information, see State v. Tiepelman, 
    2006 WI 66
    , ¶31, 
    291 Wis. 2d 179
    , 
    717 N.W.2d 1
    .
    3
    We further note that simultaneously to his postconviction motion, Belk filed a motion
    for resentencing based on Alston’s affidavit. The trial court denied that motion as well, on the
    ground that Alston’s affidavit did not support a finding that Belk’s sentence was based on
    inaccurate information.
    5
    No. 2019AP982-CR
    DISCUSSION
    ¶14    We begin by reviewing Belk’s first claim of ineffective assistance of
    counsel relating to the failure to investigate Alston as a potential defense witness.
    To prove ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must show both that
    counsel’s performance was deficient and that the deficiency prejudiced his
    defense. Strickland v. Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687 (1984). Furthermore, a
    claim of ineffective assistance requires that a postconviction evidentiary hearing
    be held “to preserve the testimony of trial counsel.” State v. Machner, 
    92 Wis. 2d 797
    , 804, 
    285 N.W.2d 905
     (Ct. App. 1979).
    ¶15    However, a defendant is not automatically entitled to a Machner
    hearing. State v. Bentley, 
    201 Wis. 2d 303
    , 310-11, 
    548 N.W.2d 50
     (1996).
    Rather, the postconviction court is required to hold an evidentiary hearing only if
    the defendant has alleged “sufficient material facts that, if true, would entitle the
    defendant to relief.” State v. Allen, 
    2014 WI 106
    , ¶9, 
    274 Wis. 2d 568
    , 
    682 N.W.2d 433
    . This is a question of law that we review de novo. 
    Id.
    ¶16    If, on the other hand, the postconviction motion “does not raise facts
    sufficient to entitle the movant to relief, or presents only conclusory allegations, or
    if the record conclusively demonstrates that the defendant is not entitled to relief,”
    the trial court, in its discretion, may either grant or deny a hearing. 
    Id.
     We will
    uphold such a discretionary decision if the trial court “has examined the relevant
    facts, applied the proper legal standards, and engaged in a rational decision-
    making process.” Bentley, 
    201 Wis. 2d at 318
    .
    ¶17    Belk asserts that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to
    investigate Alston as a witness, and that his defense was prejudiced because
    Alston’s testimony was material to the defense of the hit and run charges against
    6
    No. 2019AP982-CR
    him. Those charges were based on the requirements set forth in WIS. STAT.
    § 346.67, which imposes certain duties on drivers involved in an accident with a
    person or another vehicle. Those duties include staying at the scene and rendering
    assistance to anyone who was injured. Sec. 346.67(1).
    ¶18    The charges against Belk regarding that statute were based on the
    statements of Officer Michalski regarding his observations at the scene of the
    accident, which he testified to at trial. Specifically, the officer stated that he saw
    Belk standing outside of his Monte Carlo after the crash, and that Belk “look[ed]
    directly at officers and then [took] off running.” Officer Michalski further stated
    that Belk was attempting to conceal himself on Alston’s front porch, and that
    when Officer Michalski approached the porch, Belk “g[o]t up from his hiding
    position” and attempted to “run off the porch.” Additionally, Officer Michalski’s
    partner, who was in the squad car with Officer Michalski at the time of the crash,
    testified to essentially the same facts.
    ¶19    The scenario provided by the officers is different from the version of
    events that Alston provides in his affidavit. For example, Alston stated that after
    the crash, he saw Belk climb out of the driver’s side window of the Monte Carlo
    and fall into the street. He noted that Belk was bleeding from his head and
    appeared disoriented. He also saw M.B. climb from the other vehicle and fall into
    the street, after which he saw Belk speak to M.B. for “about 10 to 15 seconds”
    before Belk approached Alston’s porch.
    ¶20    Alston then explained that he spoke to Belk as he came onto his
    porch, telling Belk to “calm down” because he appeared “scared and out of it.”
    Alston stated that Belk was not trying to hide on the porch; instead, Alston
    believes Belk was trying to get help. Furthermore, when the police approached
    7
    No. 2019AP982-CR
    the porch and ordered Belk to come down, Alston stated that he had to help Belk
    walk down the stairs.
    ¶21    Additionally, Alston states in his affidavit that trial counsel never
    contacted him to discuss the accident. In fact, Alston notes that the State asked
    him to appear at trial—and he sat outside the courtroom every day of the trial—but
    he was never called as a witness.
    ¶22    A postconviction motion that has pled sufficient material facts to
    entitle a defendant relief will generally include “the five ‘w’s’ and one ‘h’; that is,
    who, what, where, when, why, and how.” Allen, 
    274 Wis. 2d 568
    , ¶23. Belk’s
    postconviction motion, with Alston’s affidavit attached, includes this requisite
    information: that Alston would testify to his observations of the accident and—
    more importantly—of Belk’s conduct after the accident, which would support
    Belk’s defense theory that he was not attempting to flee the scene of the accident.
    Although much of the testimony in Alston’s affidavit conflicts with much of the
    testimony of the officers who were at the scene, as well as M.B.’s testimony—she
    stated that Belk never came to check on her after the crash—Alston’s credibility
    “would have been a factor for the jury to consider.... The jury would have had to
    determine the weight and credibility to assign” to each witness’s testimony. See
    State v. Jenkins, 
    2014 WI 59
    , ¶65, 
    355 Wis. 2d 180
    , 
    848 N.W.2d 786
     (citation
    omitted; ellipses in Jenkins).
    ¶23    Therefore, we conclude that Belk has sufficiently pled his ineffective
    assistance claim relating to his trial counsel’s failure to investigate and potentially
    call Alston as a witness to defend the charges regarding Belk’s failure to comply
    with WIS. STAT. § 346.67. See Allen, 
    274 Wis. 2d 568
    , ¶23. Accordingly, Belk is
    8
    No. 2019AP982-CR
    entitled to a Machner hearing regarding that claim as it relates to his convictions
    for two counts of hit and run. See Allen, 
    274 Wis. 2d 568
    , ¶9.
    ¶24    However, with regard to Belk’s other ineffective assistance claims—
    which relate to his convictions on the four other counts—we agree with the trial
    court that Belk has not met his burden of pleading sufficient facts. For example,
    with regard to his motion to suppress his custodial statements, Belk asserts that his
    trial counsel was ineffective for failing to pursue the motion, which was filed by
    previous counsel; however, he provides no facts pertaining to the custodial
    statements challenged in that motion to suppress.
    ¶25    Likewise, Belk’s claims that trial counsel failed to adequately cross-
    examine the State’s witnesses and challenge the State’s expert witnesses were also
    insufficiently pled. Belk does not specify with particularity what he believes
    counsel should have asked those witnesses; rather he merely states that counsel
    failed to “meaningfully test” the State’s case. Thus, these claims are wholly
    conclusory. Belk’s claim that trial counsel failed to call any defense witnesses is
    similarly conclusory in nature. Belk fails to specify any defense witnesses—other
    than Alston—whom Belk believes should have been called.
    ¶26    In the same vein, Belk’s claim that trial counsel’s closing argument
    was deficient is also insufficient. This claim centers around counsel’s comments
    regarding whether DNA testing was done on Belk’s Monte Carlo, inferring that
    the testing may have shown that Belk was not in that vehicle at the time of the
    crash. However, there was no evidence ever presented during trial regarding DNA
    testing, and further, this defense was never pursued during the trial. Thus, Belk
    contends the closing argument was deficient. However, this comment was only
    one small portion of the closing argument. Moreover, Belk does not explain how
    9
    No. 2019AP982-CR
    that renders the entire closing argument deficient, nor does he provide facts and
    evidence that should have been included in the closing.
    ¶27     In short, Belk’s ineffective assistance claims—other than the claim
    involving Alston—fail to allege “the five ‘w’s’ and one ‘h’” that are indicative of
    a sufficiently pled motion.       See id., ¶23.     Rather, Belk has presented only
    conclusory allegations in these claims.           Therefore, the trial court did not
    erroneously exercise its discretion in denying a Machner hearing on these claims.
    See Allen, 
    274 Wis. 2d 568
    , ¶9.
    ¶28     Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s denial of a hearing on
    Belk’s ineffective assistance claim regarding trial counsel’s failure to call Alston
    as a witness, and remand this matter for a Machner hearing on that claim as it
    relates to Belk’s hit and run convictions pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 346.67. We
    emphasize that we are making no determination as to whether trial counsel was
    ineffective for failing to call Alston; rather, we are only concluding that Belk’s
    postconviction motion was sufficient to entitle him to a Machner hearing on this
    claim, at which time the trial court can engage in a Strickland analysis of the
    claim.4
    ¶29     As to Belk’s other ineffective assistance claims, we affirm the order
    of the trial court denying these claims without a hearing, and we affirm Belk’s
    judgment of conviction regarding the other counts for which he was convicted.
    4
    The outcome of the Machner hearing may require reassessment by the trial court of
    Belk’s motion for resentencing, as that motion is also based on Alston’s affidavit.
    10
    No. 2019AP982-CR
    By the Court.—Judgment affirmed in part; order affirmed in part,
    reversed in part, and cause remanded with directions.
    Not recommended for publication in the official reports.
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2019AP000982-CR

Filed Date: 4/21/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024