State Ex Rel. Rizzo v. County Court of Kenosha County

146 N.W.2d 499, 32 Wis. 2d 642, 1966 Wisc. LEXIS 942
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 146 N.W.2d 499 (State Ex Rel. Rizzo v. County Court of Kenosha County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Rizzo v. County Court of Kenosha County, 146 N.W.2d 499, 32 Wis. 2d 642, 1966 Wisc. LEXIS 942 (Wis. 1966).

Opinions

Hanley, J.

The following issue is raised on this appeal:

Where the relator has answered under the compulsion of a court order, pursuant to sec. 885.34, Stats., questions relating to pre-1959 gambling activities in Milwaukee county, will prohibition lie to prevent prosecution of the relator for gambling in Kenosha county after 1959 ?

The relator contends that, having been compelled to testify as to the three specific questions and any questions supplementary thereto, he is entitled as a matter of law [646]*646to be free from any prosecution on any charges of gambling.

Statutory procedures which allow testimony to be compelled by court order and which grant immunity from prosecution to the witness so testifying are based on the theory of quid pro quo. In exchange for information that a prosecutor could not otherwise obtain, the witness receives immunity from prosecution for the crimes to. which his testimony relates. The statute merely creates an immunity coextensive with the constitutional privilege against self-incrimination. 8 Wigmore, Evidence (McNaughton rev. 1961), pp. 512, 513, sec. 2282. State v. Davidson (1943), 242 Wis. 406, 409, 8 N. W. (2d) 275.

The basic principles with regard to the immunity of a witness who has been compelled to divulge incriminating statements were made explicit in the landmark case of State v. Murphy (1906), 128 Wis. 201, 219, 107 N. W. 470 (Opinion of Marshall, J.). In independent opinions, Mr. Justice Marshall and Mr. Justice Winslow articulated the fundamental rules:

“(1) The statute does not wipe out the offense about which the witness might have refused to answer. It creates a bar to a prosecution for the offense. The offense with its attendant moral turpitude is left just the same, but by force of the statute the public is remediless.
“ (2) The statute is not broader than the constitutional guaranty for which it was intended to be a ‘substitute.’ The very idea of a substitute suggests the limitation of one as that of the other. In other words, that they are equivalents, one being exchanged, by force of the law, for the other.
_ “(3) The statute does not immune because of evidence given other than that of a self-incriminatory character; such as without the statute would be obscured by the constitutional privilege of silence.
“ (4) For the statute to operate there must be evidence under real compulsion, not mere right of compulsion. . . .
“(5) ... In other words, the law contemplates only a situation as regards an event, whether denominated a transaction, a matter, or a thing, where, under the con[647]*647stitutional privilege of silence, the person compulsorily-called to testify might refuse to speak, but for removal of the precise danger which such privilege was designed to shield him from. So the statute becomes active whenever and wherever the constitutional privilege would otherwise operate; and its activity ceases when that would otherwise not intervene. It is a substitute, and that only.” 128 Wis. at pages 219, 220 (Opinion of MARSHALL, J.).

Mr. Justice Winslow went on to explain:

“. . . In my judgment the immunity statute is as broad as the privilege which it was passed to obviate, and no broader. In order to gain the immunity the witness must, in my opinion, be compelled to testify. He could waive his constitutional privilege by testifying voluntarily, he can likewise waive his statutory immunity by doing the same thing. I do not think that compelling a person to appear by subpoena can properly be considered as compelling him to testify. It was not so considered with regard to the constitutional guaranty. A person might be compelled by subpoena to attend, but might testify voluntarily when so in attendance, and thus waive his privilege. In like manner I think he may waive his immunity. Otherwise the statute becomes a snare to the prosecutor and a means of avoiding the just consequences of crime. I do not mean by this that it is necessary for the witness to refuse to answer, but simply that he should make known the fact that he does not testify voluntarily but only in obedience to the command of the law and the court. When this has been done he gains immunity from prosecution on account of the transaction or matter concerning which he testifies, and not before.
“In this case, therefore, I think there was no immunity on two grounds: First, because the defendant testified voluntarily before the grand jury; he was not compelled to testify. Second, because he did not give any testimony concerning the transaction or thing for which he is now being prosecuted.” 128 Wis. at pages 221, 222 (Opinion, Winslow, J.).

The principles enunciated by Justices Marshall and Winslow were explicitly approved by a unanimous court in Carchidi v. State (1925), 187 Wis. 438, 442, 443, 204 N. W. 473. The approach taken by the Wisconsin supreme [648]*648court with regard to an immunity statute was previously held not to violate federal constitutional privilege against self-incrimination. Brown v. Walker (1896), 161 U. S. 591, 16 Sup. Ct. 644, 40 L. Ed. 819.

Thus basically a witness will be immune from prosecution as to those offenses about which he testified if (1) he was actually compelled to testify under the statute, and (2) the testimony that he divulged while under compulsion is part of or led to evidence which supports the prosecution from which he claims immunity. Under sec. 885.34, Stats., there is the additional requirement that a witness will receive immunity only if compelled to testify “by order of the court on motion of the district attorney.” In State ex rel. Jackson v. Coffey, supra, this court held that “order of the court” in the statute means an order issued from an open court sitting as such, not by a judge sitting as magistrate in a John Doe proceeding.

In application the basic requirements for immunity outlined above have been explained by the following complementary principles:

(1) The witness must claim his privilege against self-incrimination as a condition to any immunity under the predecessor to sec. 885.34, Stats. State v. Davidson, supra.
(2) A witness who testifies without objection to questions which elicit incriminating testimony thereby waives his privilege and is not entitled to immunity from prosecution based on such testimony. State v. Grosnickle (1926), 189 Wis. 17, 26, 206 N. W. 895.
(3) A witness has no right to claim the privilege where his answers could not be used as a basis for, or in aid of, a prosecution against him. Brown v. Walker, supra.
(4) “A matter is incriminating or tends to incriminate whenever, in the probable operation of law or the ordinary happening of events, there would be reasonable grounds to apprehend dangers to the witness from his being compelled to answer questions about which he has particular personal knowledge.” Maloney, A Code of [649]*649Evidence for Wisconsin — Self-Incrimination, 1946 Wisconsin Law Review, 147,155.
(5) “The privilege afforded not only extends to answers that would in themselves support a conviction . . .

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State Ex Rel. Rizzo v. County Court of Kenosha County
146 N.W.2d 499 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.W.2d 499, 32 Wis. 2d 642, 1966 Wisc. LEXIS 942, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rizzo-v-county-court-of-kenosha-county-wis-1966.