County of Green Lake v. Lori Melchert ( 2021 )


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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.
    February 24, 2021
    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.           2020AP473                                                  Cir. Ct. No. 1996TR120
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                             IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT II
    COUNTY OF GREEN LAKE,
    PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
    V.
    LORI MELCHERT F/K/A LORI A. ZUPKE,
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
    APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Green Lake County:
    MARK T. SLATE, Judge. Affirmed.
    ¶1       NEUBAUER, C.J.1 Lori Melchert appeals from an order denying her
    motion for reconsideration of a denial of her motion to reopen and dismiss the
    second of her two operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated (OWI) first-offense
    1
    This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(c) (2017-18).
    All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2017-18 version unless otherwise noted.
    No. 2020AP473
    convictions, based on lack of court competency to enter the judgment of conviction
    and denial of her right to remain silent. Her motion was made while she faced a
    third-offense OWI in another county. We agree with Green Lake County (the
    County) that Melchert forfeited any right to challenge the court’s competency. We
    also agree that her Fifth Amendment right to remain silent was not invoked here,
    and, as such, was not violated. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2     The facts in this case are undisputed. In November 1995, Melchert
    was cited for a first-offense OWI in Marquette County, Wisconsin. The Marquette
    County Circuit Court convicted Melchert of this charge on March 1, 1996.
    ¶3     Melchert was cited for another OWI in January 1996, this time in
    Green Lake County, Wisconsin. The deputy sheriff issued Melchert a citation for a
    first-offense OWI (civil forfeiture), presumably because on that date her record
    remained clear of any other OWI conviction, given that she was not convicted in
    Marquette County until March of that year. Melchert pled no contest and was
    convicted of the civil forfeiture OWI offense in the Green Lake County Circuit
    Court on March 11, 1996.
    ¶4     In January 2020, with another OWI charge pending in a different
    Wisconsin county, Melchert filed a motion to reopen and dismiss the 1996 Green
    Lake County conviction. Her motion challenged the competence of the circuit court
    2
    No. 2020AP473
    to enter a civil forfeiture judgment for the second first-offense conviction against
    her, because it should have been charged as a criminal second-offense OWI.2
    ¶5      Following a hearing on the matter, the circuit court denied Melchert’s
    motion. The court relied upon our supreme court’s decision in City of Eau Claire
    v. Booth, 
    2016 WI 65
    , 
    370 Wis. 2d 595
    , 
    882 N.W.2d 738
     and held that Melchert
    had forfeited her right to challenge the court’s competence based on the passage of
    twenty-four years since she pled to the charge.
    ¶6      Melchert filed a motion for reconsideration with the circuit court.
    Melchert asked the court to address her previously raised argument that her 1996
    Green Lake County conviction should be vacated because she had a Fifth
    Amendment right to remain silent as to her Marquette County conviction when she
    appeared on the second first-offense OWI. As such, she argued, her silence as to
    that conviction could not support the court’s holding that she forfeited her right to
    challenge competence. The court denied her motion, again relying on Booth and a
    more recently decided supreme court case, City of Cedarburg v. Hansen, 
    2020 WI 11
    , 
    390 Wis. 2d 109
    , 
    938 N.W.2d 463
    . Melchert appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    Standard of Review
    ¶7      “We independently review questions of subject matter jurisdiction
    and competency.” Booth, 
    370 Wis. 2d 595
    , ¶6 (citing Village of Trempealeau v.
    2
    In Wisconsin, a first-offense OWI is a civil forfeiture, and second and subsequent
    offenses are generally crimes, with each countable offense subject to the statutory escalating
    penalty requirements. WIS. STAT. § 346.65(2)(am). With her motion to reopen and dismiss the
    second first-offense OWI, Melchert sought to reduce the third OWI to second.
    3
    No. 2020AP473
    Mikrut, 
    2004 WI 79
    , ¶7, 
    273 Wis. 2d 76
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 190
    ). “We also independently
    review whether a party forfeits the right to challenge circuit court competency.” 
    Id.
    Circuit Court Competency and Forfeiture of the Right to Challenge Competency
    ¶8      Melchert argues that she did not forfeit her ability to challenge the
    circuit court’s competency in her 1996 Green Lake County OWI case because her
    present challenge is distinguishable from Booth.3 As one of the distinguishable
    factors, she cites her own argument that her right to remain silent would have been
    violated had anyone asked her when she pled to the charge if she had any previous
    OWI convictions. We turn first to Booth, Hansen, and their applicability here
    before addressing Melchert’s integrated hypothetical argument asserting her rights
    to remain silent and against self-incrimination.
    ¶9      In Booth, our supreme court held that a defendant’s significant delay
    in raising a competency challenge to a mischarged OWI conviction may result in
    forfeiture of that argument. Booth, 
    370 Wis. 2d 595
    , ¶25. In that case, the defendant
    moved to vacate a first-offense OWI because she should have been charged with a
    second-offense OWI. Id., ¶2. She filed the motion to vacate twenty-two years after
    her conviction, with seventh-, eighth-, and ninth-offense OWI charges pending
    against her. Id., ¶3. Our supreme court held that Booth forfeited her right to
    challenge the mischarged OWI conviction by failing to timely raise that argument.
    Id., ¶1. The court first determined that a mischarged first-offense OWI, given the
    3
    We note that in her principal brief, Melchert makes no attempt to distinguish her situation
    from that addressed by our supreme court in City of Cedarburg v. Hansen, 
    2020 WI 11
    , 
    390 Wis. 2d 109
    , 
    938 N.W.2d 463
    . Only after the County points this fact out in its response brief does
    she make any attempt to distinguish Hansen, and she does so merely by lumping it in with the
    discussion in her reply brief of City of Eau Claire v. Booth, 
    2016 WI 65
    , 
    370 Wis. 2d 595
    , 
    882 N.W.2d 738
    . Although there are differences between Booth and Hansen, the distinctions do not
    matter to our resolution of this appeal and, consequently, we overlook Melchert’s apparent
    concession that Hansen is indistinguishable for all practical purposes.
    4
    No. 2020AP473
    escalating penalty scheme, affected the circuit court’s competency, but not its
    subject matter jurisdiction. Id., ¶22. The court then observed that challenges to a
    court’s competency are forfeited if not timely raised, id., ¶11 (citing Mikrut, 
    273 Wis. 2d 76
    , ¶38), and concluded that Booth’s challenge was untimely, id., ¶25. It
    found that her “considerable delay in raising the issue suggests an attempt to play
    fast and loose with the court system, which is something this court frowns upon.”
    Id., ¶25.
    ¶10    Hansen followed the logic of Booth and reached the same result—a
    rejection of the defendant’s collateral attack on one of his earlier OWIs. In Hansen,
    the defendant was convicted in a Wisconsin municipal court of an OWI in 2005.
    Hansen, 
    390 Wis. 2d 109
    , ¶2. When he was charged with OWI again in 2016, he
    attempted to collaterally attack his 2005 OWI conviction by proving that he had a
    2003 OWI conviction in Florida. 
    Id.
     Hansen argued that in light of the Florida
    conviction, his 2005 OWI was technically a second offense, which thereby resulted
    in the municipal court lacking subject matter jurisdiction. 
    Id.
     Our supreme court
    disagreed, concluding that “only the municipal court’s competence was affected by
    the pleading.” Id., ¶51. As in Booth, however, our supreme court held that
    Hansen’s objection to the court’s competence was forfeited “by his 11 years of
    silence.” Id., ¶55. Consequently, both Hansen’s “2005 and 2003 convictions were
    countable offenses in 2016 for purposes of Wisconsin’s statutory progressive
    penalty requirements.” Id.
    ¶11    Applying Booth and Hansen, we conclude that Melchert forfeited her
    ability to challenge the circuit court’s competency in entering a second first-offense
    OWI conviction against her. As a threshold matter, we agree with Melchert that the
    court lacked competency to convict her twice of a first-offense OWI. The holdings
    of Booth and Hansen are unequivocal in that regard, and the County does not
    5
    No. 2020AP473
    dispute as much. However, we agree with the circuit court that the similarities
    between this case and Booth and Hansen warrant the same outcome.
    ¶12     Like Booth and Hansen, Melchert was charged incorrectly4 with a
    second first-offense OWI. Further, Melchert similarly waited until a new OWI
    charge was pending against her before electing to challenge the court’s competency
    for the prior OWI. Finally, Melchert’s twenty-four-year delay in objecting to the
    court’s competency is a similarly “considerable delay in raising the issue” as
    Booth’s twenty-two-year delay and Hansen’s eleven-year delay. See Booth, 
    370 Wis. 2d 595
    , ¶25; see also Hansen, 
    390 Wis. 2d 109
    , ¶55. On these facts, Melchert
    forfeited her objection to the court’s lack of competency to enter a second first-
    offense OWI conviction because she filed her objection too late. Therefore, we
    conclude the circuit court properly denied Melchert’s motion to vacate.
    Melchert’s Attempts to Distinguish Controlling Case Law and Innocent-Victim
    Argument
    ¶13     Melchert attempts to convince us that unlike the defendant in Booth,
    who “play[ed] fast and loose with the court system” by hiding the ball for many
    years, see Booth, 
    370 Wis. 2d 595
    , ¶25, Melchert is an innocent victim of the system
    and “[s]he did exactly what she was supposed to do” in pleading in 1996 to a second
    OWI as though it were a first offense. She argues that the County should have been
    aware of her other conviction (just ten days before she pled to the Green Lake
    County charge) because Melchert’s first offense was from a neighboring county,
    whereas the first offense in Booth was from a neighboring state. According to
    Melchert, the County should not be able to benefit from sitting on this information
    4
    We observe that, technically, Melchert was charged correctly in the 1996 Green Lake
    County case, because she had not yet been convicted in the Marquette County case when she
    committed the OWI offense in Green Lake County. The actual problem was in not amending the
    charge after her Marquette County conviction.
    6
    No. 2020AP473
    about her OWIs “for over two (2) decades.” Therefore, she argues that “the County
    should be estopped from alleging that [Melchert] should have brought this issue to
    the attention of the court before being charged” in the most recent case and, as such,
    we should vacate her Green Lake County conviction.
    ¶14    We are unpersuaded by Melchert’s innocent-victim argument. There
    is no record support for her assertion that the Green Lake County prosecutor was
    aware of her prior OWI conviction when Melchert entered her plea to the challenged
    conviction. Instead, although Melchert was surely aware of her other conviction
    only ten days earlier, she took advantage of the lack of knowledge by Green Lake
    County and avoided criminal charges at that time by pleading to a civil forfeiture.
    Clearly, Melchert benefitted from her silence. Moreover, Melchert fails to provide
    any legal support for this line of argument. Without fully developing her argument,
    Melchert requests us to essentially ignore the factual similarities and holdings of
    Booth and Hansen, which we decline to do.
    ¶15    We also reject Melchert’s attempt to distinguish Booth by arguing
    that its reasoning is inapplicable because “Melchert was facing criminal penalties if
    she informed the court of her prior OWI.” As we established above, the pertinent
    facts in Booth, Hansen, and this case are nearly identical. Both Booth and Hansen
    already had OWI first-offense convictions when they were charged with a second
    first-offense OWI. As such, like Melchert, both Booth and Hansen would have
    faced criminal penalties for a second OWI offense had they informed the court of
    their prior first-offense OWIs in a timely manner. This fact did not deter from our
    7
    No. 2020AP473
    supreme court’s finding of forfeiture when deciding those cases, and Melchert fails
    to convince us that it should here.5
    Melchert’s Fifth Amendment Argument
    ¶16     Melchert also fails to convince us that we should give serious
    consideration to her hypothetical Fifth Amendment argument. To briefly explain,
    Melchert offers an argument about her hypothetical invocation of her Fifth
    Amendment rights to remain silent and to freedom from self-incrimination. See
    U.S. Const. amend. V; see also WIS. Const. art. I, § 8. She argues that had she been
    asked in the 1996 Green Lake County plea hearing if she had a prior conviction,
    which she was not, then she may have invoked the Fifth Amendment and refused to
    answer, but she did not. Thus, she argues, without citing any on-point legal
    authority, this hypothetical invocation of the Fifth Amendment cannot now be used
    to conclude that she forfeited her right to challenge the court’s competency to act in
    the second first-offense OWI case. We are unpersuaded by Melchert’s hypothetical
    argument and “we decline to base our ruling on a hypothetical series of events.” See
    Marlowe v. IDS Prop. Cas. Ins. Co., 
    2013 WI 29
    , ¶40, 
    346 Wis. 2d 450
    , 
    828 N.W.2d 812
    ; see also State v. Smith, 
    2012 WI 91
    , ¶62 n.19, 
    342 Wis. 2d 710
    , 
    817 N.W.2d 410
     (observing that “the court resolves the facts before it, and does not issue
    advisory opinions or address hypothetical facts”) (citation omitted); Saint Croix
    Cty. v. Severson, No. 2017AP1111, unpublished slip op. ¶16 (WI App Nov. 13,
    2018) (rejecting defendant’s collateral attack on an improperly charged OWI and
    5
    We also reject Melchert’s argument that the reasoning of Booth does not apply here
    because the case on which the Booth court relied to support its holding, Village of Trempealeau v.
    Mikrut, 
    2004 WI 79
    , ¶7, 
    273 Wis.2d 76
    , 
    681 N.W.2d 190
    , involved a challenge to a number of
    ordinance violations which would not have subjected the defendant to criminal penalties. As we
    explain above, Booth itself is factually on all fours with Melchert’s situation, thereby making it
    irrelevant to our analysis that Mikrut may be factually distinguishable.
    8
    No. 2020AP473
    explaining that defendant’s constitutional right to counsel, which was unavailable
    for a first-offense OWI charge, is “determined by what was actually charged, not by
    what should have been charged”).
    CONCLUSION
    ¶17    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Melchert forfeited her
    objections to the circuit court’s lack of competency to proceed to judgment on the
    1996 Green Lake County conviction and the County’s lack of authority to prosecute
    that action. We further reject her hypothetical Fifth Amendment argument. We
    therefore conclude the circuit court properly denied Melchert’s motion to vacate the
    Green Lake County conviction.
    By the Court.—Order affirmed.
    This     opinion   will   not       be   published.   See   WIS.   STAT.
    RULE 809.23(1)(b)4.
    9
    No. 2020AP473
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2020AP000473

Filed Date: 2/24/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024