State v. Carprue

2004 WI 111, 683 N.W.2d 31, 274 Wis. 2d 656, 2004 Wisc. LEXIS 482
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 2004
Docket02-2781-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 2004 WI 111 (State v. Carprue) 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 v. Carprue, 2004 WI 111, 683 N.W.2d 31, 274 Wis. 2d 656, 2004 Wisc. LEXIS 482 (Wis. 2004).

Opinion

DAVID T. PROSSER, J.

¶ 1. The State seeks review of a published decision of the court of appeals that reversed Johnnie Carprue's (Carprue) conviction for second-degree sexual assault. 1 The court of appeals concluded that the conviction had to be reversed because Carprue was denied due process by a circuit judge who appeared partial to the prosecution. State v. Carprue, 2003 WI App 148, 266 Wis. 2d 168, 667 N.W.2d 800. We conclude that when this case is analyzed in light of appropriate legal principles and standards, the result compelled by the court of appeals does not hold. While prudence would have counseled less assertive conduct from the circuit judge, the law does not demand a reversal of Carprue's conviction.

¶ 2. To decide this matter, we reflect on judicial authority to call and interrogate witnesses at trial, the limitations to that authority, and how abuse of that authority in a criminal tried may impact a defendant's due process rights. Carprue asserts that the circuit judge presiding over his trial abused her authority, and, as a result, denied Carprue his constitutional right to a fair trial. In addition, Carprue brings an ineffective *661 assistance of counsel claim predicated on his trial attorney's failure to object to the circuit judge's actions.

¶ 3. The State argues, and we agree, that while the circuit judge's actions were inadvisable, the defendant has failed to demonstrate he is entitled to reversal of his conviction under any applicable legal theory. Accordingly, we reverse.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 4. Johnnie Carprue was released from the Milwaukee House of Correction (HOC) on May 9, 2001. A day later, Carprue was taken into custody on a charge of second-degree sexual assault. The trial on this charge was held between August 29 and September 4, 2001, in the Milwaukee County Circuit Court, Jacqueline D. Schellinger, Judge.

¶ 5. The complaining witness, T.B., and Carprue provide sometimes similar, sometimes vastly different accounts of the events that transpired following Carprue's release. Both agree that T.B. became acquainted with Carprue through her sister's boyfriend, who was also serving time in the HOC. While Carprue was confined at HOC, his communication with T.B. was primarily by telephone, although T.B. visited Carprue on two or three occasions and also saw him at a court appearance.

¶ 6. As Carprue's release date drew near, he needed a place to stay. Because Carprue was to be a subject of "in-house" monitoring under the auspices of In-House Correctional Services, he was required to have a fixed address for monitoring purposes. Carprue attempted to make living arrangements with his aunt, but the arrangements fell through. T.B. offered Carprue a place to stay, even though she had only recently *662 moved to Milwaukee and was living with her sister. Carprue accepted, and when he was released on the afternoon of May 9th, he was taken to T.B.'s sister's residence.

¶ 7. Carprue did not stay at that address long. The sister's boyfriend did not want him there. Carprue left, he called T.B. later that evening, and the two agreed to meet. Ultimately, they proceeded to Carprue's aunt's residence.

¶ 8. At this point, the accounts begin to diverge. T.B. testified that when they arrived at the aunt's residence, they watched a movie in the living room. She indicated she fell asleep during the movie and woke up a few hours later to braid Carprue's cousin's hair before he left for school. She testified that she and Carprue did not engage in physical contact of a sexual nature up to that point.

¶ 9. Carprue offers a different version of how the two spent the late evening and early morning hours of May 9th and 10th. Carprue testified that the two were in the living room for only a brief period. During that time, the two were "kissing and hugging," and T.B.'s pants were unbuttoned. When Carprue's aunt entered from outside, Carprue threw his coat over T.B. so that she could fasten her pants. At about 3:30 in the morning, Carprue and T.B. then entered a bedroom where Carprue's cousin and a friend were playing video games. Carprue testified that during the time in the bedroom with the others, he was fondling T.B.'s vagina without objection, and that her pants were again unbuttoned.

¶ 10. Despite the inconsistencies in their testimony, both Carprue and T.B. recount that around 5:00 *663 a.m., T.B. braided Carprue's cousin's hair. Both agree that thereafter T.B. entered a back bedroom of the apartment. 2

¶ 11. T.B. testified that she was initially alone in the room and that she removed her pants to be more comfortable. She then lay down on a makeshift sleeping pallet atop one blanket and beneath another, and fell asleep. T.B. testified that she awoke when she sensed the presence of Carprue lying next to her. She said Carprue asked for a kiss and she obliged. He then asked if "he could have some." T.B. took this to mean sexual intercourse. She testified that she answered "no" and reminded him, as they had discussed in their telephone conversations, that her religious beliefs precluded her from having pre-marital sex. According to T.B., he responded "You not going to give me none?" and she again answered in the negative, to which he grinned and told her he was going to "take some" anyway. T.B. testified that at first she thought he was kidding, but soon knew he was serious when he pinned her down and raped her, overcoming her repeated verbal and physical attempts to stop him.

¶ 12. Carprue presented a starkly different picture of events. In his version, he briefly left T.B. alone in the back bedroom, and when he returned, he lay next to her on the makeshift bed. T.B. had not fallen asleep. He *664 testified that they talked for a while. Carprue denied asking T.B. for a kiss, and testified that she initiated kissing. He then recited in explicit detail alleged consensual sexual activities. He indicated that at some point their sexual intercourse became "rough," but nonetheless remained consensual.

¶ 13. In Carprue's version of events, he exited the bedroom, which had no door separating it from the kitchen, and met his aunt who was entering the kitchen from the living room. He and his aunt had a brief conversation regarding breakfast; then Carprue went back into the bedroom. T.B. showed Carprue her coat, which had blood on it. The coat had apparently been underneath them during sexual intercourse. T.B. became angry and they had an argument. According to Carprue, T.B. was upset because the two were not supposed to have "gone that far" and that she had violated the tenets of her religious beliefs. Carprue testified that he explained to her that she did not have to confess her transgressions and that no one would find out. Carprue testified that she calmed down and said she still wanted to accompany him to his mother's house later that morning. The two fell asleep. Around noon, they awoke and T.B. left.

¶ 14. For her part, T.B. recalls that Carprue abruptly ended the nonconsensual intercourse when he heard his aunt enter the kitchen.

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Bluebook (online)
2004 WI 111, 683 N.W.2d 31, 274 Wis. 2d 656, 2004 Wisc. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carprue-wis-2004.