Murphy v. State
Decision Date | 01 February 1977 |
Docket Number | No. 75--679--CR,75--679--CR |
Citation | 249 N.W.2d 779,75 Wis.2d 522 |
Parties | Jami MURPHY, Plaintiff in Error, v. STATE of Wisconsin, Defendant in Error. |
Court | Wisconsin Supreme Court |
Plaintiff in error Jami Murphy, hereinafter referred to as defendant, was found guilty by a jury of being party to the crime of burglary, contrary to secs. 943.10(1)(a) and 939.05, Stats., and sentenced to eighteen months in the state prison at Taycheedah. The conviction arises out of an incident occurring March 12, 1975. On that date the Pirate's Cove bar at Delavan was broken into in the early morning hours and $168 was stolen from the premises.
The complaining witness was Police Officer Russell Jansen of the town of Delavan police department. He testified he was checking business establishments in the area of the Pirate's Cove on the night in question. Upon entering an alley behind the bar, the officer noticed a 1956 Oldsmobile parked in the alley behind the tavern building. Shining his flashlight through the car window from his squad vehicle, he saw no one in the Oldsmobile. He noted the license number. After checking a nearby business area, he returned a few minutes later and discovered that the 1956 Oldsmobile was gone.
Police Officer Jansen proceeded onto the highway and spotted the 1956 Oldsmobile, which he had by that time identified through a department of transportation license check. The police officer observed only one person in the vehicle he was following. He stopped the car in the city of Elkhorn, aided by two Elkhorn police officers to whom he had radioed for assistance.
When the 1956 Oldsmobile was stopped, its driver got out of the car and walked to the squad car to talk with Officer Jansen. Subsequently Jansen walked to the vehicle and shined his flashlight into the interior of the car. He discovered two persons, the defendant and one Thomas Kordosky, crouched down on the passenger side of the front seat. He opened the door on the passenger side and discovered a money pouch under the defendant's foot. (A subsequent check revealed that this pouch had been taken from the Pirate's Cove.) Defendant and her two companions were observed in the Pirate's Cove tavern approximately seven hours before the burglary was committed.
Defendant Jami Murphy testified at the time of trial that she had been drunk and asleep in the car during the time of the burglary. She testified she did not remember earlier leaving the 'Office,' another bar in which she had been drinking prior to the burglary. She testified that the first thing she remembered after drinking at the 'Office' was the police officer opening the front door of the car. Two other witnesses--fellow passenger Thomas Kordosky and one Bruce Chaney--testified they thought defendant was drunk that night. Police Officer Jansen testified he was able to talk with, understand and carry on a conversation with the defendant at the police station, as did Police Chief C. R. Craig of the town of Delavan police department.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty. Judgment was entered thereon and defendant was sentenced to eighteen months in the state prison at Taycheedah. The trial court denied defendant's postconviction motion for modification of sentence. Defendant appeals from the judgment of conviction and the order denying modification of her sentence.
Howard B. Eisenberg, State Public Defender, and Alvin E. Whitaker, Asst. State Public Defender, for plaintiff in error.
Bronson C. La Follette, Atty. Gen., and Michael R. Klos, Asst. Atty. Gen., for defendant in error.
This appeal raises two questions: (1) Was the evidence presented at trial sufficient to sustain the jury verdict of guilty? Trial court answer: Yes. (2) Was the imposition of an eighteen-month sentence excessive under the circumstances and therefore an abuse of discretion? Trial court answer: No. The two issues raised will be dealt with in order.
SUFFICIENCY OF EVIDENCE.
Defendant contends on appeal that the evidence adduced at trial is legally insufficient to support the jury verdict of guilty. On review the test is whether this court can conclude that the jury as trier of fact and acting reasonably could be convinced of the guilt of this defendant by evidence it had a right to believe and accept as true. 1 If more than one inference can be drawn from the evidence, the inference which supports the jury finding must be followed unless the testimony was incredible as a matter of law. 2 The evidence in the case before us was circumstantial in nature as is common in burglary trials. It is well established that a criminal conviction can stand in whole or in part on circumstantial evidence. 3
There is no dispute that the Pirate's Cove was broken into and a money pouch taken from the premises. Defendant's contention is that she was passed out and asleep on the front seat of the 1956 Oldsmobile during the burglary. Her fellow passenger in the car and a friend testified she was drunk that evening. The police officer and police chief testified that she was able to carry on a conversation with them at the police station. The issue presented is one of credibility. The jury could have believed her story that she was passed out or asleep entirely unaware of what was going on. But it was not required to do so and in fact it did not do so.
Alternatively, defendant contends that since she walked with a limp and cane following a snowmobile accident, it was not possible for her to get from the tavern to the automobile in the time span testified to by the arresting officer. Officer Jansen testified he first spotted the 1956 Oldsmobile at 3:46 a.m. and observed it was gone at 3:48 or 3:49 a.m. He further testified that he stopped the car in Elkhorn at 3:52 a.m. The jury was not obliged to accept this testimony as accurate to the minute or second.
It was obvious that whoever was in the Pirate's Cove got from the building to the car and drove off before the police officer returned to the scene. Therefore, testimony that those who did not limp, or one who did walk with a limp, did traverse that distance cannot be held incredible as a matter of law. It is only when the evidence that the trier of fact relied upon is 'inherently or patently incredible' that the appellate court will substitute its judgment for that of the fact finder. 4 Here the evidence was not.
It was properly within the province of the jury 5 to reject defense testimony that (1) defendant was passed-out drunk in the car during the commission of the burglary, and that (2) defendant was unable to walk from the burglarized building to the automobile within the time span testified to by the police officer. The jury, as trier of fact and evaluator of credibility, could and did accept the testimony on behalf of the state that (1) defendant and her two companions had been observed in the Pirate's Cove earlier in the evening of the burglary; (2) that their car was observed by the police officer parked in the alley behind the burglarized tavern; (3) that minutes later the car was followed by the police officer who could observe only the driver to be in it; (4) that when stopped the car had three persons in it, the driver and two passengers (with the defendant crouched down on the front seat); and (5) that the fruits of the burglary were discovered under the defendant's foot in the right front seat of the car. 6
The jury was properly instructed by the trial court that they could convict this defendant if they were convinced beyond a reasonable doubt she was concerned in the commission of the burglary. 7 On the evidence presented by the state, with the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, this jury was entitled to find not only that this defendant aided and abetted the crime of burglary (which in itself would sustain this conviction) but also that she entered the Pirate's Cove with her two companions and burglarized the premises.
Defendant contends on appeal that this jury 'was left with facts entirely consistent with defendant's innocence.' 8 It is certainly true that if the jury believed the testimony of the defendant as to her being passed out and unaware of what was going on, a reasonable hypothesis consistent with her innocence would have been established. But that is not the test. A jury can, within bounds of reason, reject testimony suggestive of innocence. 9
Here the jury could and did reject the testimony of the defendant. Our court has stated that '. . . only the evidence which the trier of fact could have believed and relied upon (not all the evidence adduced at trial) must be consistent with every reasonable theory of innocence.' 10 At the same time, and in the same opinion, our court made clear that, '(t)he function of the jury is to decide which evidence is credible and which is not, and how conflicts in the evidence are to be resolved.' 11 Thus any reference to testimony which the jury 'could have believed' clearly is limited to evidence which the jury was entitled to believe and did rely upon in reaching its verdict. A jury is not required to believe all testimony adduced at trial. As this court has held: 'Such a result would eliminate the main function of the jury--to resolve conflicts in the testimony and to determine which evidence is credible or worthy of belief.' 12 In the case before us, we hold that the evidence adduced, believed and rationally considered by this jury was sufficient to prove this defendant's guilty beyond any reasonable doubt.
EXCESSIVENESS OF SENTENCE.
The trial court sentenced the defendant to eighteen months in the state prison at Taycheedah. The contention on appeal is that such sentence was excessive and constituted an abuse of discretion. While there is a strong policy against...
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