Village of Grafton v. Elizabeth A. Wesela ( 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.
    April 7, 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.           2020AP1416                                                 Cir. Ct. No. 2020CV48
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                                            IN COURT OF APPEALS
    DISTRICT II
    VILLAGE OF GRAFTON,
    PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
    V.
    ELIZABETH A. WESELA,
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
    APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Ozaukee County:
    SANDY A. WILLIAMS, Judge. Affirmed.
    ¶1         NEUBAUER, C.J.1 Elizabeth Wesela appeals from a circuit court
    order convicting her of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated (OWI) and
    1
    This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(f) (2019-20).
    All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2019-20 version unless otherwise noted.
    No. 2020AP1416
    with a prohibited alcohol concentration (PAC), both as first offenses.2 Although
    Wesela agrees that evidence supported the police officer’s initial stop, she argues
    that the officer lacked reasonable suspicion to extend the stop to conduct field
    sobriety tests and further investigation with a preliminary breath test. Wesela
    argues that the circuit court erred in denying her motion to suppress all evidence
    obtained after the stop. After reviewing the evidence and the court’s findings, we
    conclude that the totality of the circumstances established reasonable suspicion to
    extend the stop and probable cause to administer a preliminary breath test. We
    affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2    Wesela filed a de novo appeal to the circuit court after a municipal
    court denied Wesela’s motion to suppress evidence and found her guilty of OWI
    and PAC.       The circuit court heard and denied a similar suppression motion.
    Wesela subsequently waived her jury trial request and agreed to a court trial on the
    basis of stipulated facts, including the testimony and evidence offered by an
    officer (the sole witness at the hearing on the motion to suppress), with the
    exception of the preliminary breath test (PBT) result.
    ¶3    Wesela was pulled over by a Village of Grafton police officer at
    around 1:20 a.m. on a June morning after she drove her car away from a parking
    lot that served as a park-and-ride for Summerfest attendees. Although the officer
    did not observe Wesela committing any traffic offenses, he pulled Wesela over
    2
    A review of the record shows that the court properly treated both convictions as one for
    purposes of imposing penalties under WIS. STAT. § 346.65. See WIS. STAT. § 346.63(1)(c) (if a
    person is found guilty of both OWI and PAC, the court shall treat it as one conviction for
    purposes of sentencing and for counting convictions).
    2
    No. 2020AP1416
    after determining that the registered owner of the car she was driving had an
    expired driver’s license. The officer “smelled the odor of intoxicants coming from
    inside the vehicle” when he approached Wesela’s driver’s side window and
    noticed that her eyes were “somewhat bloodshot.”3 Wesela admitted that she had
    been drinking at Summerfest earlier that evening.
    ¶4     The officer went back to his car to check Wesela’s driver’s license.
    After waiting about five minutes for a backup officer to arrive, the officer asked
    Wesela to step out of the car and onto the sidewalk. The officer asked Wesela
    additional questions about her drinking that evening after she stepped out of the
    car. Wesela told the officer that she had consumed four alcoholic seltzers and
    “two to three beers” over the course of the evening. After Wesela exited her car,
    the officer smelled intoxicants on her breath. Wesela then submitted to field
    sobriety tests (FSTs), in which the officer saw sufficient clues to indicate
    intoxication on two of the three standardized FSTs. The officer then conducted a
    PBT, which showed a prohibited blood alcohol concentration. The officer placed
    Wesela under arrest.
    ¶5     After the officer arrested Wesela for OWI, Wesela agreed to provide
    an evidentiary breath sample using an intoximeter, which provided a breath
    alcohol concentration result of .12. The officer then issued the citations referred to
    above.
    The officer determined during the course of the stop that the vehicle’s registered owner
    3
    was actually Wesela’s mother, not Wesela. In the course of discovering this information,
    however, he detected signs of impairment.
    3
    No. 2020AP1416
    ¶6     As noted above, the circuit court first denied Wesela’s motion to
    suppress. The court found that the officer’s testimony in general was credible, and
    specifically found credible and supported by the evidence his observations of
    bloodshot eyes and the odor of intoxicants and his conclusion that Wesela was
    intoxicated based on her performance on the FSTs.
    ¶7     The circuit court then found Wesela guilty of both citations at trial,
    specifically finding (1) Wesela was operating a motor vehicle; (2) Wesela was
    operating under the influence; and (3) Wesela was operating with a prohibited
    alcohol concentration of over .08.          In support, the court cited Wesela’s
    performance on the FSTs to which she submitted and “that her eyes were
    bloodshot,” as well as the intoximeter results showing a BAC of .12 about an hour
    after Wesela’s arrest.
    ¶8     Wesela appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    Standard of Review and the Law of Reasonable Suspicion and Probable Cause to
    Administer a Preliminary Breath Test
    ¶9     It is a mixed question on review whether a motion to suppress
    evidence should have been granted or not. State v. Dumstrey, 
    2015 WI App 5
    , ¶7,
    
    359 Wis. 2d 624
    , 
    859 N.W.2d 138
     (2014). Unless clearly erroneous, we uphold
    the circuit court’s findings of fact, and we review de novo the application of those
    facts to constitutional principles. 
    Id.
     “A finding of fact is clearly erroneous if it is
    against the great weight and clear preponderance of the evidence.”             State v.
    Anderson, 
    2019 WI 97
    , ¶20, 
    389 Wis. 2d 106
    , 
    935 N.W.2d 285
    .
    4
    No. 2020AP1416
    ¶10    Temporary detention during a traffic stop is a seizure and, therefore,
    it must conform to the constitutional requirement of reasonableness. State v.
    Popke, 
    2009 WI 37
    , ¶11, 
    317 Wis. 2d 118
    , 
    765 N.W.2d 569
    . A law enforcement
    “officer may stop a vehicle when he or she reasonably believes the driver is
    violating[, or has violated,] a traffic law.” State v. Hogan, 
    2015 WI 76
    , ¶34, 
    364 Wis. 2d 167
    , 
    868 N.W.2d 124
     (citation omitted). The officer may extend the stop
    if he or she “becomes aware of additional suspicious factors which are sufficient
    to give rise to an articulable suspicion that the person has committed or is
    committing an offense or offenses separate” from the violation that prompted the
    officer’s initial investigation. State v. Colstad, 
    2003 WI App 25
    , ¶19, 
    260 Wis. 2d 406
    , 
    659 N.W.2d 394
     (citation omitted). An extended inquiry must be supported
    by reasonable suspicion. Hogan, 
    364 Wis. 2d 167
    , ¶35.
    ¶11    Reasonable suspicion is “a suspicion grounded in specific,
    articulable facts and reasonable inferences from those facts, that the individual has
    committed [or was committing or is about to commit] a crime.” State v. Waldner,
    
    206 Wis. 2d 51
    , 56, 
    556 N.W.2d 681
     (1996) (alteration in the original; citation
    omitted). Reasonable suspicion is a “common sense test” that asks: Under the
    totality of the circumstances presented, what would a reasonable law enforcement
    officer reasonably suspect in light of his or her training and experience? Colstad,
    
    260 Wis. 2d 406
    , ¶8 (citation omitted); see Hogan, 
    364 Wis. 2d 167
    , ¶¶36-37.
    “[S]uspicious conduct by its very nature is ambiguous, and the principle function
    of the investigative stop is to quickly resolve that ambiguity.” State v. Anderson,
    
    155 Wis. 2d 77
    , 84, 
    454 N.W.2d 763
     (1990).
    ¶12    Under WIS. STAT. § 343.303, an officer may administer a PBT when
    he or she “has probable cause to believe” the person “is violating or has violated”
    a state or local drunk driving law. “In this context, ‘probable cause to believe’
    5
    No. 2020AP1416
    refers to a quantum of proof greater than the reasonable suspicion necessary to
    justify an investigative stop, ... but less than the level of proof required to establish
    probable cause for arrest.” Colstad, 
    260 Wis. 2d 406
    , ¶23 (citation omitted).
    The Officer had Reasonable Suspicion to Extend the Stop
    ¶13      Although Wesela concedes that the officer appropriately stopped her
    car based on the fact that its registered owner had an expired license, she argues
    that the stop became unlawful as soon as Wesela presented the officer with a
    facially valid driver’s license. We reject this argument. Our supreme court has
    explicitly stated that it is not an unlawful extension of a traffic stop for an officer
    to perform a routine check on a driver’s license. See State v. Smith, 
    2018 WI 2
    ,
    ¶2, 
    379 Wis. 2d 86
    , 
    905 N.W.2d 353
    . (“[W]hen an officer conducts a valid traffic
    stop, part of that stop includes checking identification.”).
    ¶14      Wesela also argues that the officer’s decision to extend the traffic
    stop to perform the FSTs was not supported by reasonable suspicion; as a result,
    she argues, the prolonged stop became an unlawful seizure. However, when the
    totality of the facts present at the scene are considered, we conclude that those
    facts amount to reasonable suspicion that Wesela was operating under the
    influence. See State v. Lange, 
    2009 WI 49
    , ¶23, 
    317 Wis. 2d 383
    , 
    766 N.W.2d 551
     (a court considers whether “the totality of the circumstances within [the
    officer’s] knowledge at the time of the arrest would lead a reasonable police
    officer to believe ... that the defendant was [driving] under the influence of an
    intoxicant”).
    ¶15      Specific articulable facts supporting reasonable suspicion that
    Wesela was operating under the influence included the odor of intoxicants
    emanating from her vehicle, her bloodshot eyes, her admission that she had been
    6
    No. 2020AP1416
    drinking at the festival, and the timing of the incident in the early morning hours
    when the officer observed Wesela leaving the festival bus.4 See, e.g., Lange, 
    317 Wis. 2d 383
    , ¶¶30, 32, 37-38. Because there was reasonable suspicion to extend
    the stop to perform the FSTs, the circuit court properly denied Wesela’s motion to
    suppress.
    The Officer had Probable Cause to Administer the PBT
    ¶16      Wesela next argues that even assuming that the officer had
    reasonable suspicion to extend the stop and conduct FSTs, the officer lacked
    probable cause to administer the PBT. We reject this argument. The totality of
    the FST evidence discussed above, wherein Wesela exhibited signs of
    intoxication, along with the other facts the officer observed, was sufficient cause
    for the officer to request the PBT sample.
    4
    Wesela contends the circuit court’s findings were clearly erroneous, arguing that the
    video does not show bloodshot eyes, and the officer did not report bloodshot eyes to his colleague
    when discussing his decision to have Wesela perform the FSTs. She also notes that the officer
    indicated to his colleague that he thought she was not “overly intoxicated” and he reported to his
    colleague and Wesela that he smelled “a little bit” of alcohol coming from the car. As discussed
    above, the circuit court found the officer to be credible, as the officer did not need to detail the
    basis for the FSTs to his colleague, and that, while Wesela may not have evidenced a high level
    of intoxication, the indications were sufficient to support reasonable suspicion. Wesela has failed
    to establish that the court’s findings are clearly erroneous. We defer to the court’s finding that the
    officer’s testimony was credible. The circuit court, as the factfinder here, is in a better position to
    assess credibility and resolve any inconsistencies in the testimony and thus we largely defer to it
    on witness credibility. See State v. Carnemolla, 
    229 Wis. 2d 648
    , 660-61, 
    600 N.W.2d 236
     (Ct.
    App. 1999) (“[m]ore often, credibility, or lack thereof, is revealed by a close examination of the
    witness’s demeanor.”) (Alteration in original; citation omitted).
    Additionally, “when evidence in the record consists of disputed testimony and a video
    recording, we will apply the clearly erroneous standard of review when we are reviewing the
    [circuit] court’s findings of fact based on that recording.” State v. Walli, 
    2011 WI App 86
    , ¶¶14,
    17, 
    334 Wis. 2d 402
    , 
    799 N.W.2d 898
     (“Here, the [circuit] court’s ruling involved not simply the
    review of the video, the court also evaluated the credibility of the officer and weighed all of the
    evidence.”).
    7
    No. 2020AP1416
    ¶17     As stated above, an officer may administer a PBT when he or she
    has “probable cause to believe” the person is violating a drunk driving law. See
    WIS. STAT. § 343.303. “[P]robable cause to believe” here requires proof beyond
    what is required for an investigative stop, but is less than the level of proof
    required to arrest. Colstad, 
    260 Wis. 2d 406
    , ¶23 (citation omitted).5
    ¶18     Wesela argues that the FSTs the officer administered were unreliable
    because they failed to conform to the standardized procedures approved by the
    United States Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety
    Administration. She complains that the video shows the position of the officer’s
    pen was too high when performing the horizontal gaze nystagmus test (HGN), and
    his directions on the walk and turn test were unclear. We reject this argument.
    Whether the tests were properly administered goes to their weight and not their
    admissibility. See City of West Bend v. Wilkens, 
    2005 WI App 36
    , ¶1, 
    278 Wis. 2d 643
    , 
    693 N.W.2d 324
    ; see also State v. Krumm, No. 2019AP243-CR,
    unpublished slip op. ¶18 (WI App May 5, 2020) (“We are not persuaded that the
    deficient administration of the HGN test in this case renders the test results so
    devoid of probative value that they cannot be considered within the totality of the
    circumstances analysis.”).
    ¶19     The officer saw clues of intoxication on two of the three standard
    FSTs. Wesela argues that the officer’s failure to observe signs of intoxication on
    all of the tests resulted in the officer lacking probable cause to administer a PBT.
    5
    To support probable cause to arrest, the weight of the evidence need not show guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt or even that guilt is a likelihood. State v. Truax, 
    151 Wis. 2d 354
    ,
    359-60, 
    444 N.W.2d 432
     (Ct. App. 1989). Rather, if the information leads a reasonable officer to
    believe that guilt is more than a possibility, probable cause to arrest exists. Id. at 360.
    8
    No. 2020AP1416
    She also points to the officer’s acknowledgement that the number of clues was just
    enough to support his conclusion that she exhibited potential intoxication.
    However, Wesela’s argument overlooks the fact that the clues did support his
    conclusion that she was possibly intoxicated, along with his testimony that he
    smelled intoxicants in Wesela’s vehicle and observed bloodshot eyes and that,
    before the officer administered the FSTs, he smelled intoxicants on her breath and
    she had admitted to drinking a substantial number of alcoholic drinks—six or
    seven—before getting in her car in the early morning hours.
    ¶20     Wesela’s argument also overlooks the fact that she asked the circuit
    court to make a finding that the officer administered the FSTs incorrectly, but the
    court did not make such a finding. To the contrary, the court found that on both
    the HGN test and the walk and turn test, Wesela “demonstrated that there’s
    impairment possible because of the different clues.” These facts, as found by the
    court after watching the videos and hearing the officer’s testimony, indicated that
    Wesela was intoxicated, and created sufficient probable cause for the officer to
    administer the PBT.6 See Colstad, 
    260 Wis. 2d 406
    , ¶¶24-25 (explaining that,
    despite fact that defendant performed well on some of the FSTs, his performance
    on other FSTs combined with the other clues the officer observed was sufficient
    probable cause to administer a PBT).
    ¶21     Wesela does not argue that the officer did not have cause to
    administer the intoximeter test if he had probable cause to arrest, which we
    6
    Wesela claims that she is challenging probable cause to arrest, but our review of the
    briefing indicates that she is actually challenging only probable cause to administer the PBT.
    9
    No. 2020AP1416
    conclude he did. She also does not challenge the intoximeter results, which
    showed that she had a .12 BAC. Therefore, we uphold her arrest.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶22    The totality of the circumstances established reasonable suspicion to
    extend the stop to conduct field sobriety tests and probable cause to administer a
    preliminary breath test.
    By the Court.—Order affirmed.
    This opinion will not be published.         See WIS. STAT. RULE
    809.23(1)(b)4.
    10
    No. 2020AP1416
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2020AP001416

Filed Date: 4/7/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 9/9/2024