State v. Michael Charles Daugherty

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 28, 2024
Docket2023AP001168-CR
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Michael Charles Daugherty (State v. Michael Charles Daugherty) 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. Michael Charles Daugherty, (Wis. Ct. App. 2024).

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. March 28, 2024 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. 2023AP1168-CR Cir. Ct. No. 2019CF806

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT IV

STATE OF WISCONSIN,

PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,

V.

MICHAEL CHARLES DAUGHERTY,

DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for Rock County: KARL HANSON, Judge. Affirmed.

Before Blanchard, Graham, and Taylor, JJ.

Per curiam opinions may not be cited in any court of this state as precedent

or authority, except for the limited purposes specified in WIS. STAT. RULE 809.23(3).

¶1 PER CURIAM. Michael Daugherty appeals a judgment of conviction for operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated (OWI), as a sixth No. 2023AP1168-CR

offense, following a jury trial. Daugherty argues that the circuit court erroneously exercised its discretion when it denied his motion for a mistrial on the second day of a four-day trial. The asserted ground for a mistrial was that the jury had been exposed to an audiovisual recording of police activity during which an unidentified voice, apparently a dispatcher, was heard to say the phrase “five priors” following Daugherty’s arrest and in an apparent reference to him. Daugherty contends that, because this phrase could have been heard and understood by jurors in a way that was prejudicial to him, “it cannot be said that [the] jury was sufficiently impartial.” Therefore, he contends, the court was obligated to declare a mistrial. We conclude that Daugherty has not clearly shown that the court erroneously exercised its discretion in denying the motion and accordingly affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶2 Daugherty crashed a car at an intersection in Beloit at approximately 7:00 p.m. one Sunday evening in August 2019. Responding police arrested Daugherty. As pertinent to this appeal, the State charged him with a violation of WIS. STAT. § 346.63(1)(a) (2021-22).1

¶3 At trial, Daugherty’s former wife and her current husband testified that Daugherty, before his arrest that evening, arrived unexpectedly at their residence. According to these witnesses, after brief interactions that included a verbal altercation with the current husband, Daugherty got into his car and drove away at a “high rate of speed.” He then proceeded to drive around the block

1 All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2021-22 version unless otherwise noted.

2 No. 2023AP1168-CR

several times in a “[r]eckless” manner. He hit a curb and crashed the car. Police arrived on the scene a few minutes later.

¶4 Daugherty gave trial testimony that is difficult to track at times, but it included the following. After he had negative interactions with people at his former wife’s house, and while he was “upset” and “angry,” he “took off” in his car. Shortly thereafter he apparently returned to his former wife’s residence, where someone hit him on the head while he had the driver’s side window lowered. He then drove again, at which time “somebody” “grabb[ed] at my steering wheel,” trying “to pull me out of the car.” Because of this, “I couldn’t make the corner.” The car “hit the curb, and I thought I had a flat.”

¶5 Daugherty further testified that he did not consume any alcohol on the day of the crash until after the crash. More specifically, he testified that he got out of the car and ran to hide in a bush, where he drank a full pint bottle of whiskey that had been in the pocket of his shorts. Police found him in the bush after about 20 to 30 minutes. He hid in the bush because he was afraid that people from his former wife’s residence might “jump[ him] again.”

¶6 One witness called by the prosecution was a person who resided near the crash scene. This witness testified that he saw the crash occur, after which Daugherty “jumped out of the driver’s side and took off running.” No one else was in the car with Daugherty at the time of the crash. This witness immediately tried to follow Daugherty, lost sight of him at first, but then saw him “in the bushes.” The police arrived within five minutes of the crash.

¶7 Officer Zachary Stec, who was among officers who responded to the report of the car crash, testified in part as follows. Stec discovered Daugherty where witnesses had reported that police would find him: “lying in a bush” near

3 No. 2023AP1168-CR

the crash scene. Stec handcuffed Daugherty. After this, Daugherty: did not follow Stec’s instructions about how to stand up while handcuffed; “could not maintain his balance upon standing”; emitted “a strong odor of intoxicants” on his breath and from his person; and spoke in a “very slurred” manner. In addition, Daugherty’s eyes were “extremely bloodshot and glassy.”

¶8 Stec further testified that Daugherty was placed in the back seat of a squad car, at which time he became “loud and boisterous and began blowing on my rear camera, putting his mouth up to the camera and blowing extremely fast, which [Stec] felt was odd behavior.” Daugherty denied to police that he had driven the crashed car, but police found a key to the car in his pocket. Stec did not “see anything discarded” when Daugherty emerged from the bush, and Stec did not find any alcohol containers.

¶9 A police-worn body camera recording viewed by the jury reflects that, after the arrest, Officer Stec asked Daugherty if he had “anything to drink today,” and that Daugherty responded, “Oh, yeah, a little bit.”

¶10 Pursuant to a warrant for a blood draw, Daugherty was found to have a blood alcohol concentration of .178.

¶11 Defense witnesses included a person who testified that, as of the time of trial, she had been in a romantic relationship with Daugherty since 2018, and that the two resided together on the day of his arrest. This witness testified that Daugherty left the residence a little after 6:00 p.m. that day, at which time he “[s]eemed fine and normal” and did not appear to be impaired. She also testified that she had not observed him drink alcohol that day. She testified that it was a 30- to 35-minute drive from their residence to Daugherty’s former wife’s residence.

4 No. 2023AP1168-CR

¶12 The defense also called a hospital pharmacist and consultant who holds a doctorate in clinical pharmacology. This witness testified that the following was “very plausible”: assuming that Daugherty had a blood alcohol level of zero at the time of the crash at approximately 7:00 p.m., and further assuming that he swiftly consumed one pint of whiskey (40 percent alcohol by volume) over the course of approximately 10 to 12 minutes beginning immediately following the crash, his blood alcohol concentration could have reached .178 by the time his blood sample was drawn at approximately 10:00 p.m. that night.

¶13 At the end of a four-day trial, the jury returned a guilty verdict for a violation of WIS. STAT. § 346.63(1)(a), the charge on which Daugherty was convicted and sentenced.

¶14 We now turn to the aspect of the trial at the heart of this appeal. On the second day of trial, the prosecution offered as evidence, and proposed to publish to the jury, recordings containing video and sound captured by (1) the body camera that Stec was wearing that evening, and (2) a forward-facing camera mounted on the dashboard of Stec’s squad car. With no objections by the defense, the circuit court admitted this exhibit containing the two recordings and allowed them to be played for the jury.2

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Michael Charles Daugherty, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-michael-charles-daugherty-wisctapp-2024.