On Point blog, page 44 of 49
State v. Arthur J. Anderson, 2010AP1673-CR, District 3, 2/8/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Anderson: Susan E. Alesia, SPD, Madison Appellate; case activity; Anderson BiC; State Resp.; Reply
Guilty Plea – Criminal Damage to Property – Factual Basis
¶6 To be found guilty of criminal damage to property, the State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that:
1. The defendant caused damage to physical property.
Ch. 51 Recommitment – Instruction on Dangerousness, Sufficiency of Evidence
Oneida County v. Michael B., 2010AP002216-FT, District 3, 2/8/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Michael B.: Lora B. Cerone. SPD, Madison Appellate; case activity
Mental Recommitment – Instruction on Dangerousness
The following oral jury instruction didn’t impermissibly direct the jury to find dangerousness, on trial for mental recommitment: “This is a recommitment proceeding, therefore, the law requires that the requirement of a recent act,
Sanctions
City of Shawano v. Darlene F. Sense, 2010AP2193-FT, District 3, 2/8/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); case activity; Memo Br.; Memo Resp.; Memo Reply
¶10 As a final matter, we address certain deficiencies in Sense’s appellate brief. First, Sense’s repeated references to “appellant” and “respondent” throughout her brief violate WIS. STAT. RULE 809.19(1)(i), which requires reference to the parties by name,
State v. Daniel H. Hanson, 2010 WI App 146, review granted 2/8/11
on petition for review of published decision; for Hanson: Robert R. Henak, Chad A. Lanning; case activity
Issues (provided by court):
Whether a driver of a vehicle can be convicted of attempting to elude a law enforcement officer under Wis. Stat. § 346.04(3) while on a cell phone with a 911 intake dispatcher and driving to a police station.
Whether an officer is a “victim” (See State v.
TPR – Plea to Grounds
Brown County Dept. of Human Services v. Brenda B., 2011 WI 6, affirming unpublished decision; for Brenda B.: Leonard D. Kachinsky; case activity
¶3 Given that a finding of parental unfitness does not necessarily result in an involuntary termination of parental rights, we determine that the circuit court was not obligated to inform Brenda that by pleading no contest she was waiving her constitutional right to parent.
Richard M. Fischer v. Van Hollen, 741 F. Supp. 2d 944, 960 (E.D. Wis. 2011)
district court decision, denying respondent’s motion to amend judgment granting habeas relief (post on original grant, here).
Habeas – State’s Waiver
The State’s failure to raise certain arguments, prior to grant of 2254 relief, waived its right to press those points on a Rule 59 motion to amend the judgment granting relief.
The respondent in this case, like in most petitions for a writ of habeas corpus,
Remedial Contempt
Koch v. Neumann, 2010AP1531, District 3, 2/1/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); case activity; BiC; Resp.; Reply
The contemnor argues that a remedial sanction (30 days’ jail, stayed for 1 year conditioned on no further violations of prior judgment) imposed by the trial court was unsupported because the contemptuous conduct had already terminated. Although remedial sanctions are permissible only for continuing contempt,
Traffic Stop
County of Sheboygan v. William M. Lane, 2010AP1756, District 2, 2/2/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Lane: George Limbeck; case activity; State BiC; Lane Resp.
¶6 As a threshold matter, the County addresses the proper test for assessing the validity of the traffic stop. The County contends that the appropriate standard is “reasonable suspicion” as opposed to “probable cause.” We disagree.
TPR – Voluntariness of Plea
Portage Co. HHS v. Jesus S., 2010AP2698, District 4, 2/3/11
court of appeals decision (1-judge, not for publication); for Jesus S.: Theresa J. Schmieder; case activity
For a no-contest plea to a TPR petition to be knowing and voluntary, the parent must be notified of the direct consequences of his or her plea, including an automatic finding of parental unfitness, ¶6, citing Oneida Cnty. Dep’t of Social Servs.
Consent to Search
State v. Robert L. Stokes, 2009AP919-CR, District 1, 2/1/11
court of appeals decision (3-judge, not recommended for publication); for Stokes: John M. Bolger; case activity; Stokes BiC; State Resp.; Reply
Given trial court credibility findings, the resident’s consent to the police to enter and search was voluntary.
¶19 Finally, we are not convinced by Robert’s argument that the trial court erred in denying his suppression motion regardless of whether Deborah’s consent was valid because police had no lawful reason to be in the Stokes’ yard and on their porch.