State v. Marqus G. Phillips

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 4, 2023
Docket2023AP000450-CR
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Marqus G. Phillips (State v. Marqus G. Phillips) 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. Marqus G. Phillips, (Wis. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. October 4, 2023 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Samuel A. Christensen petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2023AP450-CR Cir. Ct. No. 2021CT560

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT II

STATE OF WISCONSIN,

PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,

V.

MARQUS G. PHILLIPS,

DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for Winnebago County: BARBARA H. KEY, Judge. Affirmed.

¶1 GROGAN, J.1 Marqus G. Phillips appeals a judgment entered after a jury found him guilty of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated, third

1 This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(f) (2021-22). All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless otherwise noted. No. 2023AP450-CR

offense (OWI), contrary to WIS. STAT. § 346.63(1)(a). Phillips claims the trial court erroneously exercised its discretion when it denied his motion for a mistrial after the trial court found a State witness violated the sequestration order but that the violation did not prejudice Phillips. This court affirms.

I. BACKGROUND

¶2 In the early morning hours of May 29, 2021, police officers Jacob Schwartz and Sarah Pauer were dispatched to a home on Prospect Avenue in Oshkosh in response to a “suspicious vehicle complaint.” The caller had contacted police and reported that Phillips, whom she had met and spoken with earlier in the day, “pulled up to her house in a red Pontiac … and was walking around her house.” When the officers arrived, they saw the red Pontiac parked on the street and noticed Phillips was asleep in the driver’s seat of another car in the driveway. The officers made contact with Phillips and observed signs of intoxication, including a strong odor of alcohol, slurred speech, and glassy eyes. According to the officers, Phillips acknowledged he was in no condition to drive, and after declining the officers’ offer to drive him somewhere, Phillips walked away.

¶3 A short time later, the same caller contacted police again because Phillips was back at her house “knocking on her door and yelling.” While speaking with dispatch, the caller reported that Phillips drove away in his red car before officers could respond. When police returned to the home, they found a wallet that appeared to belong to Phillips on the ground near the door. The officers found an identification card for Phillips’s wife, Rachel, inside the wallet and were able to reach her by telephone. She offered to meet the officers at a nearby Kwik Trip to retrieve the wallet. As the officers were pulling into the

2 No. 2023AP450-CR

Kwik Trip, they both saw the same red car that had been parked at the Prospect Avenue home pulling into and parking in the Kwik Trip parking lot. When the officers approached the red car, Phillips was in the driver’s seat. Phillips denied driving his car and insisted the driver was inside the Kwik Trip. Officers again observed signs of intoxication from Phillips, including a strong odor of alcohol, slurred speech, and glassy eyes. Phillips refused to do field sobriety tests, and police arrested Phillips for OWI.

¶4 The State subsequently charged Phillips with OWI, third offense, contrary to WIS. STAT. § 346.63(1)(a), and Phillips entered a not guilty plea. His case was tried to a jury in March 2022. The trial court ordered all witnesses sequestered, but the prosecutor forgot to tell his witnesses about the sequestration order. The only witnesses to testify at the trial were Schwartz and Pauer. Schwartz testified first while Pauer waited in the hallway outside the courtroom. After sitting on a hallway chair for about three and one-half hours, Pauer stood up and leaned against the courtroom door or the wall near the closed courtroom door. A court official observed this and told Pauer she could not stand there, and she thereafter moved to the other side of the hallway and leaned against the other wall. Based on the hallway video obtained later, which shows Pauer near the courtroom door for approximately two minutes, as well as its own notes regarding the timing of certain trial testimony, the trial court determined that Pauer stood up after Schwartz had completed his direct examination.

¶5 During his trial testimony, Schwartz told the jury that he was sent to the home on Prospect Avenue in response to a complaint, saw the red car parked on the street there, noticed Phillips asleep in a different car in the driveway, and observed signs indicating Phillips was intoxicated. Schwartz told the jury that he saw Phillips walk away but that a short time later, the police were called back to

3 No. 2023AP450-CR

the house. During the return to the house, the police found Phillips’s wallet on the ground near the front door of the home, contacted Rachel, whose identification was found in the wallet, and Rachel agreed to meet the officers at Kwik Trip so they could give her the wallet. When Schwartz arrived at Kwik Trip, he saw the red car “pulling into Kwik Trip” just before he did. He confirmed that he did not see anyone get in or out of that red car and that when he approached the car moments later, Phillips was in the driver’s seat. Much of Schwartz’s testimony was supplemented with Schwartz’s body camera video, which was shown to the jury and introduced into evidence. Schwartz testified that based on his observations, Phillips “was intoxicated to the point that it would be unsafe for him to be operating a motor vehicle.”

¶6 Pauer testified next. She also wore a body camera during her interactions with Phillips, and the jury saw some of that footage during her testimony. Pauer testified about finding Phillips “passed out or asleep in the driver’s seat of the vehicle … parked in the [Prospect Avenue] driveway” and told the jury that Phillips seemed intoxicated because “[h]e was slurring his words” and “there was a strong odor of intoxicants emanating from the vehicle.” When the prosecutor thereafter attempted to show more of Pauer’s body camera video, the defense lawyer objected to it being repetitive. The trial court asked if Pauer’s video contained “anything different” than Schwartz’s video, and the prosecutor responded: “No. Just shows the defendant again.” When asked whether she believed it was safe for Phillips to drive, Pauer answered negatively and explained that she “could smell an odor of intoxicants coming from his person. His speech was slurred. He was a little unsteady on his feet. And then he was found asleep in the car.”

4 No. 2023AP450-CR

¶7 The prosecutor then asked questions about the officers finding Phillips’s wallet when they returned to the Prospect Avenue house a second time and about contacting Rachel and agreeing to meet her at Kwik Trip to return the wallet. When Pauer was shown her body camera video from the Kwik Trip portion, she confirmed that she “saw the [red car] pull into the Kwik Trip,” she kept her eyes on it as it parked, and that she did not see anyone get in or out of the car. She also testified that Phillips was in the driver’s seat when the officers approached the red car.

¶8 Pauer told the jury that the encounter at Kwik Trip was less than one hour after they first encountered Phillips at the Prospect Avenue house and that she did not think it was safe for Phillips to be driving because “he was still slurring his words, he still had an odor of intoxicants emanating from his person, glassy eyes.” When asked on cross-examination whether she heard Phillips say “the driver was in the Kwik Trip[,]” Pauer said she could “not recall.”

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Marqus G. Phillips, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marqus-g-phillips-wisctapp-2023.