State v. Jack M. Suriano

2017 WI 42, 893 N.W.2d 543, 374 Wis. 2d 683, 2017 WL 1513086, 2017 Wisc. LEXIS 233
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 2017
Docket2015AP000959-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2017 WI 42 (State v. Jack M. Suriano) 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. Jack M. Suriano, 2017 WI 42, 893 N.W.2d 543, 374 Wis. 2d 683, 2017 WL 1513086, 2017 Wisc. LEXIS 233 (Wis. 2017).

Opinions

REBECCA GRASSL BRADLEY, J.

f 1. We review whether Jack Suriano's actions, which caused three attorneys appointed by the State Public Defender to withdraw in rapid succession, constituted forfeiture of his right to counsel, and whether the right-to-counsel warnings and procedure this court recommended in State v. Cummings, 199 Wis. 2d 721, 546 N.W.2d 406 (1996), should be made mandatory. We conclude that Suriano forfeited his constitutional right to counsel by repeatedly refusing to cooperate with his attorneys, constantly complaining about their performance, verbally abusing them, and triggering one lawyer's fear of a physical threat. Suriano's dilatory and manipulative game-playing frustrated the progression of this case and interfered with the proper administration of justice. We uphold the circuit court's1 determination that Suriano forfeited his right to counsel, and we affirm the court of appeals decision.2 We see no reason to change the forfeiture standard this court set forth in Cummings and decline Suriano's request to modify it. Instead, we reaffirm our holding that right-to-counsel warnings in forfeiture cases and the procedures suggested by the Cummings dissent are strongly recommended, but not required. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

¶ 2. In October 2013, Suriano obstructed the Door County Sheriffs Department and sanitation offi[689]*689cials who came to his home with a warrant to take a soil sample from the property. Police arrested Suriano, and he was charged with obstructing an officer, contrary to Wis. Stat. § 946.41(1) (2013-14).3 Due to Suriano's indigence, the State Public Defender ("SPD") appointed Attorney Grant Erickson as his lawyer.

f 3. Less than one month later, Erickson filed a motion to withdraw telling the circuit court he and Suriano had "differing opinions and objectives for the handling and resolution of this case." At the hearing on the withdrawal motion, the circuit court asked Suriano if he opposed the motion. Suriano answered: "Well, I think we need to have some testimony on that. Maybe if I could put Grant on the stand and ask him a question or two. Get some information on the record here." Suriano asked Erickson what Erickson's end goal was and how it differed from Suriano's end goal. Erickson testified that, while his goal was to resolve the case, Suriano's goals included:

• To take depositions of all the parties and explore all contractual relationships;
• To prove his innocence;
• "[T]o explore every legal or even nonlegal aspect of this case" to make things difficult and frustrate "the legal system";
• "To be an ass"; and
• "[T]o make it difficult or frustrating for the court system to proceed" because Suriano believed he was improperly charged.

After this testimony, the circuit court again asked Suriano if he opposed Erickson's motion. Suriano did [690]*690not directly answer the court's question; instead, he responded: "Anybody would probably be better so —Interpreting this answer as a "no," the circuit court granted the motion but warned Suriano that it "did not anticipate]" changing the February 2014 pretrial and March 2014 trial dates that remained on the calendar.

f 4. The SPD gave Suriano a second attorney, Linda Schaefer, who very quickly moved to withdraw, averring that "a significant conflict ha[d] developed" so she could "no longer effectively represent Mr. Suriano." At the February 2014 pretrial hearing, the circuit court addressed Schaefer's motion and asked Suriano if he wanted to comment on it. Suriano said "No," and the circuit court granted the motion. This second withdrawal clearly bothered the circuit court, prompting a warning for Suriano:

[T]he other thing I would suggest, Mr. Suriano, you do is call the public defender's office. You will now be on your third attorney appointed with the public defender's office. I think they have a three strike rule. Talk to them about that.... [W]hen individuals go through three attorneys, they don't appoint an attorney any longer so maybe you need to call them and talk to them about that also, sir, because, as I said, you are now going to be on your third attorney with the public defender's office.

When discussing the existing trial date, Suriano asked the circuit court to send communications directly to him "rather than sending it to someone who won't share it with me," but the court explained that "all correspondence and communication from the Court goes through your attorney, not to you directly."

[691]*691f 5. The SPD appointed Raj Kumar Singh as Suriano's third attorney. At an April 2014 status conference, Singh told the circuit court:

• Suriano insisted Singh remind the court Suriano refused to enter his own plea at his initial appearance and instead stood "mute";
• Suriano wanted the case dismissed;
• Great "discord" already existed between Suriano and Singh on "the law that relates to this case"; and
• Suriano was completely dissatisfied with Singh's "performance so far as his lawyer," causing Singh to think Suriano "really wants to represent himself."

Then, Singh asked the circuit court to question "Su-riano directly about whether or not he wants me to continue as his lawyer." Singh requested the circuit court's help to make sure Suriano understood:

That if he wants anybody, whoever it is, let's say it's me to represent him as an attorney, then he's reserving three things for himself: How to plead; whether or not to waive his right to a jury. Now then there is more to that than that, but that's his part. And whether or not to testify in his own defense or remain silent. He needs to understand, other than those three things, all of the other decisions are left to the attorney, if you agree. And with that understanding, does he want to have an attorney representing him and, specifically does he want me because I have reason to doubt that he does want me and I have reason to doubt that he wants an actual attorney in general.

¶ 6. The circuit court then asked Singh about the SPD's "three-strike" rule—that is, whether the SPD would appoint another attorney when a defendant has already had three SPD-appointed attorneys who with[692]*692drew.4 Singh responded he could not speak for the SPD, but he had "grave doubts" about whether the SPD would appoint a fourth attorney if Suriano fired Singh. Singh said everyone should "assume that if I end up off the case he's going to have to either represent himself [or] get a lawyer on the economy." The court then specifically asked Suriano if he wanted Singh to continue as his lawyer. Suriano did not directly answer the court's question; instead, he rattled off a series of complaints about Singh, claimed he had not "received any value" from the SPD, and contended that, although his case should be "very easy to win on dismissal," none of his lawyers would pursue it.

¶ 7.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. D. R.-R.D.J.
Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2025
State v. Joseph P. DeFilippo
Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2023
Winnebago County DHS v. N.J.D.
Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2023
State v. Graham L. Stowe
Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2023
State v. Rodney Lewis Bowman, Sr.
Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2021
State v. Rudy Earl McWashington
Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2021
State v. Donavinn D. Coffee
2020 WI 1 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2020)
State v. Adam N. Young
Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2020
State v. Jack M. Suriano
2017 WI 42 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 WI 42, 893 N.W.2d 543, 374 Wis. 2d 683, 2017 WL 1513086, 2017 Wisc. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-jack-m-suriano-wis-2017.