State v. Wells

187 N.W.2d 328, 51 Wis. 2d 477, 1971 Wisc. LEXIS 1095
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1971
DocketState 107
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 187 N.W.2d 328 (State v. Wells) 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. Wells, 187 N.W.2d 328, 51 Wis. 2d 477, 1971 Wisc. LEXIS 1095 (Wis. 1971).

Opinions

Robert W. Hansen, J.

The record in this case sets forth the standard operating procedures that mark the mugging-type robbery.

There is the selection of the victim. Senior citizens, particularly those living alone and suffering the infirmities of advancing years, are preferred targets. Here the victim, Frederick Gens, was an eighty-one-year-old man, living alone in a rented room.

There is the selection of the time and place. By advance surveillance or “stakeout,” a time and place are selected when it is predictable that the victim will be [482]*482alone. Here the time of the assault was 9:80 a. m., on a Sunday morning; the place, the porch of the rooming house where the victim lived.

There is the use of an accomplice as decoy and lookout. The role of the accomplice is to engage the attention and disarm the suspicions of the selected victim, as well as to serve as lookout for the police or other unwelcome intruders. Here a woman associate was used to persuade the victim to step out onto his porch, and to keep watch. She fled, however, soon after beating commenced.

There is the selection of the weapon to be used. The function of the weapon in a mugging is to make it unlikely that the victim will have time to shout for help or have any chance to make any resistance. Thus, a gun, if selected, is as likely to be wielded as a club against the skull as it is to be pointed at the victim. Here the weapon chosen was a family-sized soda water bottle.

There is an immediate resort to violence. Typically, the mugger, without warning, jumps on the victim and commences beating him into a state of helplessness. Unlike the professional bank robber, the mugger hits first, asks questions afterwards. Here the defendant leaped at the victim, beat him about the head, knocked him down, beat him some more, and took his wallet (containing $16 in currency).

There is a savagery to the beatings administered. The brutal beatings that characterize most muggings go beyond the purpose of securing silence or preventing resistance. The degree and type of violence used goes far beyond the jostling of the targeted victim by a pickpocket or purse snatcher. Here the defendant, after he had clubbed the eighty-one-year-old victim to the floor of the porch, jumped on him as he lay prone, and continued or renewed beating him about the head.

[483]*483There is the trip to the hospital for the victim. Unless beaten to death on the scene, the mugging victim usually requires hospital treatment because of the brutal beating he suffered. Here the victim was admitted to the county emergency hospital shortly after 10 a. m. where it was ascertained that he had been beaten extensively about the head and chest, suffering, among other injuries, four deep scalp lacerations and a fractured skull. It is stipulated that he died of the skull fracture and cerebral damage.

Given a record establishing the death of a victim of a mugging-type robbery, postconviction counsel argues that only third-degree murder — murder while engaged in the commission of a felony (sec. 940.03, Stats.) — ■ was established, not first-degree murder — causing the death of another human being with intent to kill that person (sec. 940.01). Counsel argues that the defendant may have intended to beat up Mr. Gens and take his money, but did not intend to take his life. In other words, the defendant may have intended to take his victim to the threshold, but did not intend to push him over it. The contention is that the defendant must be held to have intended only to take his victim up to the doorstep of death, even though he turned out to be a poor judge of distance.

Seldom is an intent to kill ascertainable from the lips of the intender. Never can it be established by a retroactive mind-reading effort to determine what the actor was thinking when he planned and executed the act. That would require a crystal ball that re-created the past rather than sought to peer into the future. So as an objective test to determine the subjective intent of the doer of a deed, the courts rely upon a presumption, well stated by this court to be:

[484]*484“In the absence of evidence to the contrary, he who takes the life of another by the infliction of a wound naturally and probably calculated to produce death is presumed to have intended that result and to be guilty of murder in the first degree under our statutes. . . .” Farino v. State (1931), 203 Wis. 374, 380, 234 N. W. 366. See also: Gelhaar v. State (1969), 41 Wis. 2d 230, 163 N. W. 2d 609; Greer v. State (1968), 40 Wis. 2d 72, 161 N. W. 2d 255.

Evidence of contrary intention may rebut the presumption. See: Melli v. State (1936), 220 Wis. 419, 265 N. W. 79; Gelhaar v. State, supra, Greer v. State, supra; Beauregard v. State (1911), 146 Wis. 280, 131 N. W. 347.

It is this test of presumptive intent that the trial court correctly followed in finding the defendant to have intended the death of the victim, the court finding:

“. . . there is an intent to kill a human being, manifested by the actions of the defendant, and he is bound by the usual and ordinary and probable results of his free and deliberate acts. If there are no circumstances to rebut the presumption, the law presumes that death was intended, if a person uses such means as would cause death, unless there are circumstances to prevent or rebut the presumption, which, in this case, do not exist.”

Postconviction counsel concedes that this court has repeatedly approved the application of the test of presumptive intent in murder and attempted murder cases, but points out these were cases involving guns or knives, noting that, “. . . In all of these cases the weapon used was intrinsically lethal — a gun or knife — and the facts surrounding the use of the weapon indicated death was intended. . . .” The lethal or death-dealing aspect of a particular weapon derives from the manner and circumstances surrounding its use as much as from its physical properties. When a blackjack or large bottle is swung repeatedly against the skull of a defenseless [485]*485person, death is as predictable a consequence as when there is involved the thrust of a steak knife. It is the circumstances surrounding the use of the weapon which must be considered in each case.

As to the facts and circumstances in this case, defendant’s brief states, in part: “Taking the evidence most favorably to the State,” as it is to be taken on a challenge to a conviction, “it indicates that the defendant struck Mr. Gens two or three times with an empty 10-ounce soda water bottle; that the blows were not administered with sufficient force to knock Mr. Gens unconscious . . . .” That understates the case. While the record does not disclose the precise number of blows struck, the hospital findings establish that at least four of the blows were of sufficient force to lacerate the defendant’s scalp deeply. It is stipulated that the cause of death was a fractured skull, so one of the blows was of sufficient strength to be skull-fracturing. One eyewitness described the noise of the blows like that of children jumping up and down on the hood of an automobile.

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State v. Wells
187 N.W.2d 328 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 N.W.2d 328, 51 Wis. 2d 477, 1971 Wisc. LEXIS 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wells-wis-1971.