State v. Fritz

569 N.W.2d 48, 212 Wis. 2d 284, 1997 Wisc. App. LEXIS 741
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJuly 8, 1997
Docket96-1905-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 569 N.W.2d 48 (State v. Fritz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fritz, 569 N.W.2d 48, 212 Wis. 2d 284, 1997 Wisc. App. LEXIS 741 (Wis. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

FINE, J.

James A. Fritz, Jr., appeals from a judgment entered on guilty verdicts convicting him of second-degree sexual assault of a child, see § 948.02(2), STATS., and second-degree sexual assault, see § 940.225(2)(b), STATS., and from the trial court's order denying his motion for postconviction relief contending that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. 1 We reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I.

According to the criminal complaint, this case was set into motion when eighteen-year-old Michelle F. complained to authorities that more than two years earlier, in January of 1993, Fritz forced her to have sex and gave her chlamydia, a sexually transmitted disease. At the time of the alleged assault, Michelle F. was several weeks shy of her sixteenth birthday and Fritz was not quite twenty.

While represented by retained counsel, Fritz and the Milwaukee County District Attorney plea-bargained the case. Under the plea bargain, which was reduced to writing in a letter dated May 30, 1995, the prosecutor offered the following:

I will issue one count of Second Degree Sexual Assault of a Child. I will not issue an additional count of First Degree Sexual Assault related to the *287 transmitting of the chlamydia resulting in great bodily harm if your client enters a guilty plea to the issued count. ...
1 would recommend a stayed prison sentence, and probation. I would ask that as a condition of his probation, Mr. Fritz be required to serve some amount of time at the House of Correction, but would leave the amount up to the court. 2

Although Fritz contended that the sex between him and Michelle F. was consensual, and that he should not be forced to plead guilty to a felony, he agreed to accept the plea bargain as, according to the postconviction-hearing testimony of his retained counsel, "the best route to take." 3 The retained lawyer testified at the postconviction hearing that he did not believe that Fritz had a "triable case" because Fritz had admitted to having sex with Michelle F., and, accordingly, "there was no defense that could be proffered at trial unless Mr. Fritz were to lie concerning the statements which he had made, the admissions which he had made."

In order to save money, Fritz then ended the services of his retained counsel, whose bills were being *288 paid by Fritz's father, and received legal representation by the State Public Defender's appointment of a private lawyer, William Pulkinen. Although, consistent with the plea bargain, Fritz waived his right to a preliminary examination, he did not enter a guilty plea, and, as a consequence, the prosecutor upped-the-ante by filing an amended Information that added a second-degree-sexual-assault count. This new count alleged the transmission of chlamydia from Fritz to Michelle F. The case went to trial, Fritz testified and denied having sexual intercourse with Michelle F., and, as noted above, he was convicted on both counts. The trial court sentenced Fritz to two concurrent seven-year periods of incarceration.

At the postconviction hearing on his ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, Fritz testified that he told Pulkinen that he had sex with Michelle F. Pulkinen testified that although Fritz told him that he and Michelle F. had sexual relations, it was before the date alleged in the criminal complaint. Pulkinen admitted advising Fritz that it would be Fritz's word against Michelle F.'s word at any trial, and that he could not be found guilty unless the prosecution persuaded all twelve jurors of his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Fritz testified that he interpreted this as "implying for me to lie on the witness stand." Fritz also testified at the postconviction hearing that he would have taken the plea bargain if Pulkinen had not given him bad advice — telling him, according to Fritz's testimony, that he had nothing to lose by going to trial because he would get probation in any event.

In its written decision denying Fritz's postconviction motion, the trial court noted that Fritz lied during the trial, and also lied to the person who prepared the pre-sentence report by again denying that he had sex *289 with Michelle F. The trial court concluded that Fritz's "credibility" was thus "questionable." Nevertheless, the trial court also found that parts of Fritz's testimony were corroborated by his wife and by his mother and father. 4 Specifically, the trial court recounted that Fritz's wife testified that Fritz would have taken the plea bargain but for Pulkinen's advice, and that Fritz's parents testified that they heard Pulkinen tell Fritz that, essentially, he had nothing to lose by going to trial.

The trial court found Pulkinen to be not credible, concluding that he "bobbed and weaved on the important issue of whether Fritz ever admitted to him directly that he had sex with Michelle." Moreover, the trial court believed testimony by Fritz's retained counsel that Pulkinen had never contacted him to find out about the case, and that Pulkinen's testimony to the contrary was not true: "Pulkinen was obviously making up the [conversation with Fritz's retained counsel] as he was going along, depending upon what he thought would reflect most favorably on him at any given moment." Significantly, the trial court determined that Pulkinen's "time sheets contained no evidence of any contact with" Fritz's retained counsel. Thus, the trial court found that although Pulkinen's testimony "contradicted, in part, the Fritz family's testimony," "Pulkinen repeatedly contradicted himself': "He was evasive, vague, non-responsive and changeable about almost every subject pertinent to this inquiry. His manner was disorganized and forgetful at times, and at others very apparently calculated." After an extensive review of Pulkinen's testimony, the trial court concluded that it was "completely untrustworthy": "He is *290 lying, because he knows that the truth has serious professional implications for his license to practice law." 5

After weighing the credibility of the witnesses who testified at the postconviction hearing, the trial court reached a chilling conclusion — that an attorney licensed to practice law in this state advised a client to lie on the witness stand:

I conclude, therefore, based upon the entirety of this record, that Fritz did indeed discuss with Pulkinen the fact that he had sex with the victim in this case. I further conclude that Pulkinen and Fritz, secure in the assumption that Fritz's polygraph admissions would not be admissible, decided that there was nothing to lose in taking the case to trial based upon a fraudulent defense, and that is what in fact occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
569 N.W.2d 48, 212 Wis. 2d 284, 1997 Wisc. App. LEXIS 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fritz-wisctapp-1997.