State v. Hobbick

2018 WI App 71, 922 N.W.2d 312, 384 Wis. 2d 632
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 10, 2018
DocketAppeal No. 2017AP1400-CR
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 WI App 71 (State v. Hobbick) 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. Hobbick, 2018 WI App 71, 922 N.W.2d 312, 384 Wis. 2d 632 (Wis. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

¶ 1 Ryan Hobbick appeals a judgment, entered upon a jury's verdict, convicting him of one count of burglary, as a party to the crime. He also appeals an order denying postconviction relief. Hobbick contends that: (1) the circuit court erroneously exercised its discretion by allowing the State to introduce "other acts" evidence at trial; (2) he was denied his due process right to a fair trial when the State failed to disclose a favorable plea agreement it had reached with his codefendant, Miles Gloss; and (3) his trial attorney provided ineffective assistance by failing to cross-examine Gloss about his plea agreement and by failing to request a cautionary jury instruction regarding the same. We reject Hobbick's arguments and affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 An Information charged Hobbick with one count of burglary, as a party to the crime. The State alleged that Hobbick and Gloss had stolen various items from A to Z Towing, a salvage yard located in Dunn County, between September 1 and December 31, 2014. A to Z Towing had previously been owned and operated by Wayne Larson, but it had been closed since Larson's death in 2010.

¶ 3 Like Hobbick, Gloss was also charged with a single count of burglary, as a party to the crime, in connection with the thefts from A to Z Towing. On April 7, 2015-over ten months before Hobbick's trial-Gloss entered a guilty plea to that charge. In exchange for his plea, additional charges in other matters were dismissed and read in for purposes of restitution, and the parties agreed to jointly recommend that the circuit court withhold sentence and impose a three-year term of probation. The plea agreement required Gloss to provide "a complete disclosure to law enforcement regarding these cases as well as testify truthfully regarding any co-defendants." The court accepted Gloss's guilty plea and, consistent with the parties' recommendation, withheld sentence and imposed three years of probation. However, Gloss's probation was subsequently revoked, and on January 8, 2016-approximately one and one-half months before Hobbick's trial-he was sentenced to four years of initial confinement, followed by four years of extended supervision.

¶ 4 At Hobbick's trial, Gloss testified that he, Hobbick, and Stevie Walls, Sr., entered the A to Z Towing property on multiple occasions "somewhere around" November 2014 and stole copper, "car stuff," and tools. Gloss testified the three men scrapped some of the property they took from A to Z Towing, and they stored other items of stolen property at Walls' residence. Gloss also testified that he saw a box of checks on the floor of a tow truck at A to Z Towing, but he denied taking any of the checks.

¶ 5 Michael Larson-Wayne Larson's son and the current owner of A to Z Towing-testified he found a receipt on A to Z Towing's property dated December 10, 2014, for the sale of gas at a Kwik Trip in Lake Hallie, Wisconsin. Other trial testimony established that Hobbick and Donald Charles, who was dating Hobbick's mother-in-law, purchased gas at the Lake Hallie Kwik Trip on that date. Charles testified he paid for the gas using a check and left the receipt in his truck. He further testified that he repeatedly loaned his truck to Hobbick and Gloss during the fall of 2014. He denied ever having been to A to Z Towing.

¶ 6 Evidence at Hobbick's trial also showed that, in December 2014, Hobbick's wife, Tiffany Hobbick, told police that Gloss had approached Hobbick about a plan to "case" various businesses in order to burglarize them. Tiffany told police Hobbick initially refused to participate in Gloss's plan, but he later agreed after he and Tiffany quit their jobs in October 2014 and fell on financial hard times. During a search of Tiffany and Hobbick's home, police recovered a notebook containing a list of electrical supply stores and other businesses, many of which had been burglarized. Tiffany admitted at trial that she and Hobbick kept the notebook in their home and wrote the names of businesses in it, but she denied it contained a list of businesses to be "cased."

¶ 7 Prior to Hobbick's trial, the State had moved to introduce what it characterized as "other acts" evidence regarding two topics: (1) checks from A to Z Towing, bearing the forged signature of Wayne Larson, which Hobbick and Tiffany had attempted to deposit; and (2) online purchases that were made on Tiffany and Hobbick's home computer using Wayne Larson's name. The circuit court granted the State's motion, concluding the evidence in question was relevant to establish Hobbick's identity as one of the burglars, as well as his "lack of mistake."

¶ 8 Consequently, the State introduced evidence at Hobbick's trial that, on December 7, 2014, Tiffany deposited a check for $4500 from A to Z Towing into her bank account. Although the check was dated December 7, 2014, it was purportedly signed by Wayne Larson, who had died in 2010. The check's memo line contained the notation "2001 eclipse."

¶ 9 The following morning, Tiffany withdrew $3000 from her bank account. Later that day, Tiffany and Hobbick attempted to deposit a second check for $4500 from A to Z Towing into Tiffany's account. The second check was dated December 8, 2014, and like the prior check, it was purportedly signed by Wayne Larson and contained the notation "2001 eclipse" in the memo line.

¶ 10 Bank employees became suspicious when Tiffany and Hobbick attempted to deposit the second check, given its similarities to the first check. They therefore conducted an internet search, which revealed that the individual named Wayne Larson who had owned A to Z Towing was deceased. Bank staff then called the police, who confronted Tiffany and Hobbick about the checks. Hobbick told police that he and Tiffany had sold their vehicle to Larson, who had given them two separate checks as payment. When shown Larson's obituary, which included a photograph, Hobbick asserted Larson was not the individual to whom they had sold their vehicle. A bank employee testified Hobbick "basically present[ed] it to us as they had been duped on the sale of their car." However, Tiffany subsequently told police that, on the way home from the bank that day, she and Hobbick tore up the remaining checks from A to Z Towing and threw them out the window because they were scared.

¶ 11 The State also introduced evidence at Hobbick's trial that, in the fall of 2014, someone using Tiffany and Hobbick's home computer made multiple online purchases from Menards using the name "Wayne Larson." The purchases included $8000 of copper pipe. On November 14, 2014, someone picked up copper pipe from Menards that had been ordered under Wayne Larson's name. On the same day, Hobbick sold 529 pounds of new copper pipe at a scrap yard for $1322.50. The next day, he sold another load of copper at a different scrap yard for $2113. When questioned by police, Hobbick admitted purchasing copper from Menards but claimed he had paid with a check. He also admitted selling some of the copper he had purchased for scrap, but he did not explain why he would scrap new copper.

¶ 12 Hobbick testified in his own defense and denied burglarizing A to Z Towing. He admitted going to the bank with Tiffany in December 2014 to deposit a check for the sale of a 2001 Mitsubishi Eclipse, but he denied having any knowledge that the check had been written on A to Z Towing's account. He testified Tiffany told him she received the check from Gloss. He denied purchasing anything from Menards under Wayne Larson's name.

¶ 13 The jury found Hobbick guilty of the single burglary count charged in the Information.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 WI App 71, 922 N.W.2d 312, 384 Wis. 2d 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hobbick-wisctapp-2018.