State v. Scott K. Fisher

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2006 WI 44 SUPREME COURT CASE NO.: OF WISCONSIN 2004AP2989-CR COMPLETE TITLE: State of Wisconsin, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Scott K. Fisher, Defendant-Respondent. ON CERTIFICATION FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS OPINION FILED: SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS: ORAL ARGUMENT: February 23, 2006 SOURCE OF APPEAL: COURT: COUNTY: JUDGE: Circuit Jackson John A. Damon JUSTICES: CONCURRED: DISSENTED: May 17, 2006 CROOKS, J., dissents (opinion filed). WILCOX and ROGGENSACK, J.J., join in part. NOT PARTICIPATING: ATTORNEYS: For the plaintiff-appellant, the cause was argued by Jeffrey J. Kassel, assistant attorney general, with whom on the briefs was Peggy A. Lautenschlager, attorney general. For the defendant-respondent, there was a brief by Paul B. Millis and Skolos & Millis, S.C., Black River Falls, and oral argument by Paul B. Millis. An amicus curiae brief was filed by Daniel A. MacDonald and Mohs, MacDonald, Widder & Paradise, Madison, on behalf of the National Rifle Association of America, Inc. 2006 WI 44 NOTICE This opinion is subject to further editing and modification. The final version will appear in the bound volume of the official reports. No. 2004AP2989-CR (L.C. No. 2004CM26) STATE OF WISCONSIN : IN SUPREME COURT State of Wisconsin, Plaintiff-Appellant, FILED v. MAY 17, 2006 Scott K. Fisher, Cornelia G. Clark Clerk of Supreme Court Defendant-Respondent. APPEAL from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Jackson County, John A. Damon, Judge. ¶1 ANN certification question of WALSH from Reversed and cause remanded. BRADLEY, the whether court the J. of This case is appeals. respondent, It Scott before us presents Fisher, can on the be prosecuted for carrying a concealed weapon in light of the right to keep Wisconsin and bear arms Constitution. under Article Fisher was a I, Section tavern 25 owner of in the Black River Falls who kept a loaded gun in the center console of his vehicle. At the time of his arrest, approximately 4:00 in the No. afternoon, he was on his way to McDonald's 2004AP2989-CR and was running personal errands. ¶2 him, Fisher moved to dismiss the criminal complaint against asserting that he kept the gun for security purposes because he routinely transported large amounts of cash generated by his business. entered a The circuit court granted Fisher's motion and judgment dismissing the complaint. The State appealed. ¶3 The State and Fisher dispute whether the concealed carry statute, Wis. Stat. § 941.23 (2003-04),1 is constitutional as applied to him under this court's decisions in State v. Cole, 2003 WI 112, 264 Wis. 2d 520, 665 N.W.2d 328, and State Hamdan, 2003 WI 113, 264 Wis. 2d 433, 665 N.W.2d 785. v. Because we conclude that under those cases Article I, Section 25 does not bar Fisher's prosecution, we reverse the circuit court's judgment and remand for further proceedings. I ¶4 In order to determine whether § 941.23 is unconstitutional as applied to Fisher, we must interpret and apply both These are review. the state questions Hamdan, of 264 constitution law subject Wis. 2d 433, and to ¶19; statutory provisions. independent see also appellate Cole, 264 Wis. 2d 520, ¶10. 1 All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 200304 version unless otherwise indicated. 2 No. ¶5 In summarizing addressing this the court's issue before decisions us, in 2004AP2989-CR we Cole begin and by Hamdan, interpreting Article I, Section 25 in the face of constitutional challenges to § 941.23. We then turn to examine several pertinent principles established by those cases, using them to guide our Ultimately, analysis we of the conclude that circumstances § 941.23 is presented here. constitutional as applied to Fisher because his interest in exercising his right to keep and bear arms for purposes of security by carrying a concealed weapon in his vehicle does not substantially outweigh the state's interest in enforcing § 941.23. II A ¶6 Article I, Section 25 of the Wisconsin Constitution was adopted in November 1998. It reads as follows: The people have the right to keep and bear arms for security, defense, hunting, recreation or any other lawful purpose. Section 941.23, the statute prohibiting the carrying of concealed weapon, predates the adoption of the amendment. a It provides: Any person except a peace officer who goes armed with a concealed and dangerous weapon is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor. ¶7 its Three years ago, in Cole and Hamdan, this court had first opportunity to address the constitutionality § 941.23 in light of Article I, Section 25. of In Cole, a case involving a concealed weapon carried in a vehicle, the court 3 No. upheld the statute constitutional against both challenge. In a facial Hamdan, and a case 2004AP2989-CR an as-applied involving a concealed weapon carried inside a small family-run store, the court determined that the statute was unconstitutional as applied. ¶8 We summarize each of these cases below. It is not our purpose to re-tread all of the constitutional ground that Cole and Hamdan covered. However, a somewhat detailed review of the cases is necessary to put Fisher's as-applied challenge in its proper context. ¶9 In Cole, the court recognized that the right to keep and bear arms is not absolute. Cole, 264 Wis. 2d 520, ¶24. In addition, it determined that the test for the constitutionality of a regulation of that right depends on whether the regulation is a reasonable exercise of the state's inherent police power. Id., ¶¶22-23, 26-27. This reasonableness test, the court explained, focuses on a balancing of the interests at stake: the authority of the state to enact legislation for the health, safety, and welfare of the public as implemented in § 941.23 against the right to keep and bear arms under Article I, Section 25. Id., ¶¶27-28. ¶10 The court concluded in Cole that the statute is "a reasonable regulation on the time, place, and manner in which the right to bear arms may be exercised." that the statute "does not Id., ¶28. unreasonably citizen's ability to exercise the right." court noted, of all laws that 4 regulate the It said infringe Id. upon a Indeed, the time, place, or No. manner in which the right to keep and bear 2004AP2989-CR arms may be exercised, "[t]he CCW statute [§ 941.23] in particular serves an important public safety purpose." Id., ¶43. Ultimately, the court held that § 941.23 was constitutional on its face. Id., ¶44. ¶11 The defendant challenge to § 941.23. in Cole Id., ¶45. also raised an as-applied Although the court concluded that he had waived such a challenge, it nonetheless addressed his argument that the statute was unconstitutional as applied to his circumstances. ¶12 Id., ¶¶45-49. In Cole, the defendant vehicle stopped by police. was a Id., ¶3. passenger in a motor The police found some marijuana in Cole's left breast pocket, a loaded .380 caliber pistol in the glove compartment, and a loaded semiautomatic pistol beneath the driver's seat. .45 Id. caliber Cole told police that he carried the .380 in the glove compartment for protection. Id. He was charged with a violation of § 941.23 but claimed that he was carrying weapons because he had been the victim of a brutal beating when he was younger and did not feel safe in the neighborhood. Id., ¶¶1-4, 48. He did not assert that he had the weapons in response to any "specific or imminent threat." Id. In rejecting his argument, the court reasoned as follows: We do not dispute the legitimacy of Cole's reason for carrying the weapon. However interesting the debate about the right to self-defense by possession of a weapon in a vehicle may be, such concerns are not implicated by the facts of this case. In State v. Nollie, 2002 WI 4, 249 Wis. 2d 538, 638 N.W.2d 280, a 5 No. 2004AP2989-CR case arising after the passage of the right to bear arms amendment, this court confirmed that a person may claim self-defense when charged under the CCW statute. Id., ¶¶18-19, 24, 26. However, in that case, we found that the unsubstantiated threat of four young men nearby, being loud and profane in a "high crime" area, was not "imminent and specific enough" for the defendant to invoke self-defense. Id., ¶¶23-25. Cole, 264 Wis. 2d 520, ¶48. ¶13 Nollie] The court explained that "[t]he same problem [as in arises in [Cole's] case" because he presented evidence of any threat at or near the time he was arrested. no Id. It determined that "[w]hatever the outer reaches of application of the CCW statute might be in light of the new constitutional amendment, [Cole's] fact scenario does not fall within them." Id., ¶49. ¶14 In rejecting Cole's as-applied challenge, the court unequivocally held that "[t]he right to bear arms is clearly not rendered illusory by prohibiting an individual from keeping a loaded weapon hidden either in the glove compartment or under the front seat in a vehicle." Id. The court noted the danger of accidents involved in the transport of loaded weapons and noted that those dangers support restrictions on such weapons. Id. ¶15 On the decided Hamdan. same day the court decided Cole, it also In Hamdan, the court held that the concealed carry statute could not be constitutionally applied to the owner of a family-run grocery store who kept a loaded gun under the counter near the store cash register. Hamdan, 264 Wis. 2d 433, ¶¶1, Hamdan 6-7, 81-82. The defendant 6 in had been in the No. 2004AP2989-CR process of putting the gun in storage for the night when police officers entered the store and eventually discovered that he had the gun in his trouser pocket. Id., ¶¶1-3. Like the defendant in Cole, he was charged with carrying a concealed weapon under § 941.23. ¶16 Id., ¶4. The grocery store in Hamdan was located in a high- crime neighborhood in Milwaukee. Id., ¶¶7-8. There had been at least three homicides, 24 robberies, and 28 aggravated batteries reported that year in the small census tract that included the Id., ¶8. store. In addition, violent criminal episodes had occurred both inside and immediately outside the store. Id. During the six years leading up to Hamdan's offense, his store was the target of four armed robberies, three of which were successful, and two fatal shootings. Id., ¶¶1, 8. On one occasion, an armed assailant held a gun to Hamdan's head and pulled the trigger, but the weapon misfired and Hamdan survived. Id., ¶8. On another occasion, Hamdan had engaged in a struggle with an armed assailant who was attempting to rob the store and, in the course of this attack, shot and killed the robber in self-defense. Id. violent including crime, After Hamdan's prosecution, incidents of shootings that resulted striking the store, continued in and around the store. ¶17 The court in Hamdan, like the court in bullets Id. in Cole, recognized that "the right to bear arms for lawful purposes is not an absolute." establish an Id., ¶40. unfettered "Article I, Section 25 does not right to bear arms." Id., ¶41. Likewise, the court recognized in Hamdan, as it had in Cole, 7 No. that "Wisconsin's prohibition of the carrying 2004AP2989-CR of concealed weapons is, as a general matter, a reasonable exercise of police power." Id., ¶53. ¶18 Further following the lead Hamdan applied a rule of reasonableness. of Cole, the Id., ¶44. court in In order to effectuate the rule, it set forth the following framework for defendants who challenge on constitutional grounds a prosecution for carrying a concealed weapon. burden of proof. They are Id., ¶86. required to Defendants have the secure affirmative answers to two questions before they can raise a constitutional defense: First, under the circumstances, did the defendant's interest in concealing the weapon to facilitate exercise of his or her right to keep and bear arms substantially outweigh the State's interest in enforcing the concealed weapons statute? The State generally has a significant interest in prohibiting the carrying of concealed weapons. Thus, to satisfy this element, the defendant must have been exercising the right to keep and bear arms under circumstances in which the need to do so was substantial. Second, did the defendant conceal his or her weapon because concealment was the only reasonable means under the circumstances to exercise his or her right to bear arms? Put differently, did the defendant lack a reasonable alternative to concealment, under the circumstances, to exercise his or her constitutional right to bear arms? Id.2 2 If a defendant secures affirmative answers to these two questions, a third question remains: whether the State can show at trial that the defendant had an unlawful purpose at the time he or she carried the concealed weapon. State v. Hamdan, 2003 WI 113, ¶87, 264 Wis. 2d 433, 665 N.W.2d 785. Here, the State is not maintaining that Fisher was carrying a concealed weapon for an unlawful purpose. 8 No. ¶19 2004AP2989-CR Examining the first of the two questions, the court in Hamdan said that it was necessary to "balance the conflicting rights of purposes an individual against the to keep authority of and bear arms the State to for lawful exercise its police power to protect the health, safety, and welfare of its citizens." Id., ¶45. It explained, "only if the public benefit in this exercise of the police power is substantially outweighed by an individual's need to conceal a weapon in the exercise of the right to bear arms will an otherwise valid restriction on that right be unconstitutional as applied." ¶20 The court also identified four Id., ¶46. objectives behind § 941.23: (1) Carrying a concealed weapon permits a person to act violently on impulse, whether from anger or fear. (2) People should be put on notice when they are dealing with an individual who is carrying a dangerous weapon. Notice permits other people, including law enforcement officers, to act accordingly. (3) Related to the previous objective, concealed weapons facilitate the commission of crime by creating the appearance of normality and catching people off guard. (4) Concealed carry laws promote the preservation of life by affixing a stigma of criminality to those who carry concealed weapons in cases except as those allowed by the statute. ¶¶54-56. 9 Id., No. ¶21 2004AP2989-CR Considering these objectives under the circumstances in Hamdan, the court was not persuaded that any of them were particularly compelling as applied to the defendant: Although a shopkeeper is not immune from acting on impulse, he or she is less likely to do so in a familiar setting in which the safety and satisfaction of customers is paramount and the liability for mistake is nearly certain. There is less need in these circumstances for innocent customers or visitors to be notified that the owner of a business possesses a weapon. Anyone who enters a business premises, including a person with criminal intent, should presume that the owner possesses a weapon, even if the weapon is not visible. A shopkeeper is not likely to use a concealed weapon to facilitate his own crime of violence in his own store. The stigma of the law is inapplicable when the public expects a shopkeeper to possess a weapon for security. Id., ¶57. ¶22 The court in Hamdan relied on authority from numerous jurisdictions and repeatedly emphasized the special status of two locations for purposes of the right to keep and bear arms for security: one's home and one's privately-owned business. See id., ¶¶58-68. The court determined that "a citizen's desire to exercise the right to keep and bear arms for purposes of security is at its apex when undertaken to secure one's home or privately "[i]f owned business." the constitutional Id., right ¶67. to The keep and court bear concluded, arms for security is to mean anything, it must, as a general matter, permit a person to possess, carry, and sometimes conceal arms to maintain the security of his private residence or privately operated business, and to safely move and store weapons within these premises." Id., ¶68. Conversely, explained the court, 10 No. 2004AP2989-CR the state's interest in prohibiting concealed weapons is least compelling in those two locations. ¶23 Focusing on Hamdan's Id., ¶67. particular circumstances, the court determined that his interest in concealing a weapon in his grocery store was substantial because his store was in a highcrime neighborhood; robberies and the homicides; store he had had been been a the crime site of victim past at the store; he had concerns not only for himself but also for his family and customers; and he had good reason to anticipate future crime problems at the store and a need to provide his own security to deal with the problems. Id., ¶82. The court concluded that Hamdan's substantial need to exercise his right outweighed the state's "negligible" interest in prohibiting Hamdan from concealing a weapon in his store at the time of his arrest. ¶24 Id. In examining the second of the two questions, the court concluded that Hamdan had no reasonable means of keeping and handling the weapon in his store except to conceal it. ¶83. Id., The court explained that it would have been dangerous and counterproductive to openly display the weapon during business hours, and that requiring him to do so would have seriously impaired his right to bear arms for security. Id. Carrying the handgun openly in the store would have shocked his customers, seriously option. threatened his safety, Id. 11 and was not a reasonable No. 2004AP2989-CR B ¶25 Cole and Hamdan must be read together to resolve the as-applied constitutional challenge to § 941.23 that is before us.3 Those cases establish several principles that inform our analysis. ¶26 First, the Hamdan test applies whenever a defendant asserts that § 941.23 is unconstitutional as applied. words, the Hamdan test is not limited to In other challenges to prosecutions for carrying a concealed weapon in one's home or privately-owned business. When summarizing the test, the court set forth the requirements for "[a] defendant who challenges on constitutional grounds a prosecution for carrying a concealed weapon." ¶27 Hamdan, 264 Wis. 2d 433, ¶86. Second, the court in Hamdan recognized that there are two places in which a citizen's desire to exercise the right to keep and bear arms for purposes of security is at its apex: in the citizen's home or in his or her privately-owned business. Id., ¶67. Thus, it logically and necessarily follows that the individual's interest in the right to bear arms for purposes of 3 Before continuing with our analysis of the issue Fisher's as-applied challenge to Wis. Stat. § 941.23 we pause to note that at the end of his oral argument, Fisher switched gears from the arguments made in his brief and asserted a facial challenge to the constitutionality of the statute. This court squarely addressed and rejected a facial challenge to § 941.23 in State v. Cole, 2003 WI 112, 264 Wis. 2d 520, 665 N.W.2d 328. We see no reason today to revisit and overrule Cole only three years later. 12 No. 2004AP2989-CR security will not, as a general matter, be particularly strong outside those two locations. ¶28 Third, in a similar vein, under both Hamdan and Cole an individual generally has no heightened interest in his or her right to bear arms for security while in a vehicle. This principle follows from Hamdan's repeated focus on the heightened interest in that right in the individual's home or privatelyowned business. It is even more emphatically dictated by Cole, in which the court unequivocally held that "[t]he right to bear arms is clearly not rendered illusory by prohibiting an individual from keeping a loaded weapon hidden either in the glove compartment or under the front seat in a vehicle." Cole, 264 Wis. 2d 520, ¶49. ¶29 Fourth, while the state's interest in prohibiting the carrying of concealed weapons may generally be at its weakest in an individual's home or privately-owned business, Hamdan, 264 Wis. 2d 433, ¶67, the state's interest will generally be strong when a concealed weapon is being carried in a vehicle. The objectives behind the concealed carry statute as identified in Hamdan include that carrying a concealed weapon individuals to more easily act violently on impulse. allows Id., ¶54. Those objectives also include that other individuals, including law enforcement officers, should be placed on notice when they are dealing with someone who is carrying a dangerous weapon, along with the related concern that concealed weapons facilitate the commission of crime by creating the appearance of normality and catching people off guard. Id., ¶55. 13 The court in Hamdan No. said that this significant." ¶30 notice objective is "perhaps 2004AP2989-CR the most Id. These objectives are highly salient when an individual carries a concealed weapon in a motor vehicle. Of particular concern is the potential danger to law enforcement officers if an individual is carrying a concealed weapon during the course of a traffic stop. enforcement and Given the frequency of contacts between law motorists, individuals carrying concealed weapons in motor vehicles present a greater overall risk to law enforcement than do individuals carrying concealed weapons in their homes or privately-owned businesses. ¶31 The carrying of loaded weapons in a motor vehicle also presents an additional risk of accident. ¶49. Cole, 264 Wis. 2d 520, The court in Cole recognized this risk as a consideration when analyzing Cole's as-applied challenge to the constitutionality of the concealed carry statute in the vehicle context. Id. The legislature has recognized a similar safety concern by generally prohibiting the transport of any firearm in a vehicle unless it is unloaded and encased. Wis. Stat. § 167.31(2)(b).4 4 Wisconsin Stat. § 167.31(2)(b) provides that, subject to various exceptions, "no person may place, possess, or transport a firearm . . . in or on a vehicle, unless the firearm is unloaded and encased . . . ." Under § 167.31(1)(b), "encased" means "enclosed in a case that is expressly made for the purpose of containing a firearm and that is completely zipped, snapped, buckled, tied or otherwise fastened with no part of the firearm exposed." A person who violates § 167.31(2)(b) is subject to a forfeiture of up to $100 under § 167.31(2)(e). 14 No. ¶32 2004AP2989-CR Fifth, because the individual's interest in carrying a concealed weapon in a vehicle is generally comparatively weak and the state's interest in prohibiting such weapons in vehicles is relatively strong, it is only in extraordinary circumstances that an individual asserting a constitutional defense under Hamdan will be able to secure an affirmative answer to the first question in extraordinary the Hamdan test. circumstances Stated another an individual will way, only in carrying a concealed weapon in a vehicle be able to demonstrate that his or her interest in the right to keep and bear arms for security substantially outweighs the state's interest in prohibiting that individual from carrying a concealed weapon in his or her motor vehicle. If a defendant reasonably believes that he or she is actually confronted with a threat of bodily harm or death and that carrying a concealed weapon is necessary for protection from the threat, extraordinary circumstances would be present. Absent such circumstances, an individual carrying a concealed weapon in a vehicle will generally be unable to demonstrate that his or her interest in the right to keep and bear arms for security substantially outweighs the state's interest in prohibiting that individual from carrying a concealed weapon in a motor vehicle. ¶33 By requiring extraordinary circumstances, we strike the proper balance between an individual's comparatively weak interest in carrying a concealed weapon in a vehicle and the state's strong interest in prohibiting such weapons in vehicles. To do otherwise would constitute 15 a significant retreat from No. Cole. It would also repeated emphasis on render homes largely and superfluous privately-owned 2004AP2989-CR the court's businesses in Hamdan. ¶34 With these principles in mind, we turn to the specific circumstances here. We rely on facts primarily from Fisher's testimony at the hearing on his motion to dismiss. Additional facts come from the criminal complaint against Fisher. ¶35 At the time of his arrest, Fisher was the owner and operator of a tavern in Black River Falls, Wisconsin. He often had large sums of cash on hand at the end of a night's business. He would leave some cash in the tavern's safe for business the next day and on most nights, usually four or five times a week, he would take the remaining cash with him. On some nights, he would take the money directly to the bank to deposit it, and on other nights he would take it home to deposit the next day. ¶36 would Given not the always unpredictability know in advance of the business, whether he transporting cash after closing the tavern. Fisher would be Because it did not seem practical to remove the weapon when he was not transporting cash for the business, he kept the gun in his vehicle even at times when he was not transporting cash. Fisher kept the gun loaded, with the safety on, in the vehicle's console. He never brought the gun into the tavern.5 5 Under Wis. Stat. § 941.237(3)(d), tavern licensees, owners, and certain of their agents are exempted from the general statutory prohibition on possessing a handgun on the tavern premises. See also generally § 941.237. 16 No. ¶37 Fisher considered himself at risk 2004AP2989-CR because he transported cash from his business to the bank or his home. Although he had never been robbed, he knew of an incident in Whitehall where a bartender's throat was cut by somebody walking out of the bar. He also knew of four businesses that had been robbed, some at gunpoint, in the last year or so in Black River Falls. ¶38 Approximately one-and-one-half weeks before Fisher's arrest, someone had stolen his vehicle outside his tavern after he left it running to warm up in the cold at 2:45 a.m. When he called the police to inform them of the theft, he notified them that his vehicle recovered, and contained Fisher a loaded received transporting loaded firearms. vehicle at handgun, a pistol. time shotgun, it a was .22 citation The in vehicle the mail was for The firearms that were in the stolen caliber included rifle, and a .40 caliber a .22 caliber Three of these firearms were loaded. ¶39 in the a gun. the On the day of Fisher's arrest, at approximately 4:00 afternoon, he stopped at a Department of Natural Resources office in Black River Falls to discuss the citation. He was on his way to McDonald's and was running other personal errands. During the course of Fisher's discussion with a warden, he told the warden that he had a loaded handgun in his vehicle at that time. a .40 caliber The warden seized the firearm, which was semiautomatic console of the front seat. and an additional round handgun located in the center It had nine rounds in its magazine chambered. 17 The warden also seized No. 2004AP2989-CR another loaded magazine, a box of .40 caliber ammunition, and an unidentified cartridge, all of which were next to the gun in the center console. ¶40 do not When we consider these facts, we determine that they show that Fisher demonstrated a substantial need to exercise his right to keep and bear arms for security purposes by carrying a concealed weapon in his vehicle. A comparison of some of the key facts of Hamdan to the key facts in this case is illustrative. ¶41 The defendant in Hamdan owned and operated a grocery and liquor store that was located in a high-crime neighborhood in Milwaukee. at least Hamdan, 264 Wis. 2d 433, ¶¶7-8. three homicides, batteries reported that included Hamdan's 24 year store. robberies, in Id., the and small ¶8. There had been 28 census Fisher's aggravated tract tavern, that in contrast, cannot realistically be considered to be situated in a high-crime neighborhood. He testified that he knew of four businesses that had been robbed, some at gunpoint, in the last year or so in Black River Falls. evidence that with publicly-available crime rates in Black The State has countered this FBI River crime Falls statistics showing (population 6,225, according to the FBI statistics) do not differ significantly 18 No. 2004AP2989-CR from rates in other areas of similar populations.6 We are not persuaded that Fisher can reasonably characterize Black River Falls at the time of his arrest as a high-crime area. Such a characterization would erase any meaningful distinction between a truly high-crime area and any other area. ¶42 In Hamdan, violent criminal episodes had occurred both inside and immediately outside Hamdan's store. Id. During the six years leading up to his offense, Hamdan's store was the target of four armed robberies, three of which were successful, and two evidence fatal shootings. in the record Id., that ¶¶1, in the 8. Here, approximately there five is no years Fisher had owned the tavern it was ever the site of an armed robbery, a fatal shooting, or any other violent criminal episodes. ¶43 Less than three years before his offense, Hamdan had been attacked by an armed assailant who held a gun to his head and pulled the trigger, although the weapon misfired and Hamdan survived. Id., ¶¶1, 8. At one point, Hamdan had engaged in a struggle with another armed assailant who was attempting to rob the store and, in the course of this attack, shot and killed the robber in self-defense. Id., ¶8. 6 Here, in contrast, Fisher had These statistics show that in the year in which Fisher was arrested, there were a total of six violent crimes in Black River Falls reported by law enforcement, including one robbery. This is not necessarily inconsistent with Fisher's testimony, and we are not suggesting that Fisher's testimony was false. The circuit court found Fisher to be a credible witness, and we take all of his testimony at his motion hearing to be true for purposes of this appeal. 19 No. 2004AP2989-CR never been robbed, and there was no evidence that he had ever been a victim of a crime, other than when his vehicle was stolen. ¶44 facts in In short, a comparison of key facts in Hamdan to key this case illustrates major weaknesses in Fisher's claim that he had a substantial interest in exercising his right to keep and bear arms for security purposes. Although a defendant may not need to establish facts exactly like those in Hamdan in order to demonstrate such a substantial interest, Fisher's circumstances are a far cry from Hamdan's. ¶45 facts in In addition, we perceive a dissonance between certain this case and Fisher's security under the circumstances. asserted concern for his Presumably, one of the times that Fisher would have been most vulnerable was when he was closing his tavern for the night or when he was transporting cash from the tavern to his vehicle. Nothing in his testimony suggested that he kept a concealed weapon with him when moving between the tavern and his vehicle. asserted interest in security is Also relevant to Fisher's that only one-and-one-half weeks before his arrest, he was willing to leave three loaded firearms in his running, unlocked vehicle unattended outside his tavern at 2:45 a.m. ¶46 All of these circumstances go to the reasonableness of Fisher's claim that he had a need to exercise his right to keep and bear arms for security purposes that justified carrying a concealed weapon in his vehicle. The incident in which his car was three stolen while it contained 20 loaded firearms also No. 2004AP2989-CR underscores that the state's interest in prohibiting Fisher from carrying a concealed weapon in his vehicle was eminently reasonable.7 ¶47 Fisher also argues there was no evidence suggesting he was prone to act irresponsibly or impulsively in the use of a weapon. He also notes that he firearms and the use of force. had training in the use Fisher further argues that he is a law-abiding citizen with no history of criminal conduct. do not find these arguments convincing. significantly diminishes of the We None of those facts state's strong interest in enforcing § 941.23 in the motor vehicle context, which, by its very nature, presents a greater risk of harm than would be present in an individual's home or privately-owed business. ¶48 secure In sum, Fisher failed to meet his burden of proof to an affirmative answer to the question of whether his interest in concealing a weapon to facilitate the exercise of his right to keep and bear arms substantially outweighed the state's interest in enforcing § 941.23. The facts here amount to far less than a showing that he had any significant interest 7 We recognize that the fact that Fisher's car was stolen is one of the circumstances on which he relies in asserting a substantial interest in carrying a concealed weapon for security. This fact, however, cuts both ways. Although Fisher's charge is not for his conduct on the night his vehicle was stolen, that conduct is relevant both to the reasonableness of his asserted interest in carrying a concealed weapon for security purposes at the time of his arrest and to the reasonableness of the state's interest in prohibiting him from carrying a concealed weapon in his vehicle at the time of his arrest. 21 No. in exercising his right to keep and bear arms 2004AP2989-CR for security purposes by carrying a concealed weapon in his vehicle. At the time of his arrest, it was 4:00 in the afternoon in Black River Falls, and he was engaged in personal errands and on his way to McDonald's. Not only was he carrying a concealed weapon in a location that is not one of the "apex" locations identified in Hamdan, but also the other specific circumstances of his case are not particularly compelling. ¶49 that Although the facts presented might be taken to suggest Fisher exercising security, had his on vehicle. actually right than to balance substantially prohibiting more his keep carrying average and the of citizen's interest in arms purposes of bear circumstances outweighing the an do state's a for not come strong concealed close interest weapon in a to in motor He could not have reasonably believed that he was confronted Therefore, he also with a could threat not have of bodily harm reasonably or death. believed that carrying a concealed weapon was necessary for protection from such a threat. Fisher's case does not present the type of extraordinary circumstances that could justify the carrying of a concealed weapon in a motor vehicle. ¶50 Fisher makes two additional arguments that, while somewhat tailored to the facts of his case, are in many ways categorical. Both arguments go to the constitutionality of § 941.23 more generally, not just as applied to his particular circumstances. These arguments are that (1) recent legislative action demonstrates the legislature's intent that § 941.23 may 22 No. 2004AP2989-CR be unconstitutional, and (2) his vehicle is an extension of his business. ¶51 We address each argument in turn. We begin with Fisher's argument based on recent legislative action. Fisher asserted at oral argument that we should our consider in analysis the legislature's recent unsuccessful attempts to create a licensing system for carrying a concealed weapon and to amend § 941.23. According to Fisher, this shows the legislature's belief that there should not be such a broad rule prohibiting the carrying of concealed weapons and that such a broad rule is perhaps unconstitutional. For at least two reasons, we disagree that the legislature's recent attempts to create a licensing system and to amend § 941.23 can be taken as a signal that the statute is unconstitutional. ¶52 First, in Cole, the court already put to rest the notion that legislative attempts to create a licensing system for carrying a concealed weapon constitutionality of § 941.23. cast doubt on the On the contrary, said the court in Cole, such attempts "suggest that the legislature believes the concealed weapons law is still intact." Cole, 264 Wis. 2d 520, ¶42. ¶53 attempts Second, to the extent the legislature's unsuccessful to amend § 941.23 could be persuasive evidence of legislative intent, they would not support Fisher's claim of a constitutional right to carry a concealed weapon in his vehicle. In both legislative sessions since Cole and Hamdan, the legislature sought to add an exception to § 941.23 for carrying a concealed weapon in one's "dwelling or place of business or on 23 No. 2004AP2989-CR land that he or she owns, leases, or legally occupies . . . ." 2003 S.B. 214, §§ 36, 39 (engrossed version); 2005 S.B. 403, §§ 50, 56.8 exception It for did not, carrying a however, concealed seek to weapon provide in one's such an vehicle. Thus, the legislature's recent efforts are of no assistance to Fisher or those similarly situated. ¶54 We turn to Fisher's other categorical argument, that his vehicle is an extension of his business. This argument, of course, is an attempt to shoehorn his case into one of two locations under which citizen's interest in the the Hamdan right to court keep recognized and bear that arms a for purposes of security is at its apex.9 ¶55 Fisher's approach strikes a note of discord with both Cole and Hamdan. Were this court to so easily recognize a motor vehicle as an extension of one's privately-owned business, the 8 The exception would not have applied to someone who is prohibited under state or federal law from possessing the weapon. 2003 S.B. 214, § 39 (engrossed version); 2005 S.B. 403, § 56. 9 Fisher cites three cases, all from one jurisdiction, in which courts have concluded that a taxicab fits a "place of business" exception in a statute prohibiting the possession of a firearm. See People v. Santana, 354 N.Y.S.2d 387, 389 (N.Y. Crim. Ct. 1974); People v. Anderson, 344 N.Y.S.2d 15, 19 (N.Y. Crim. Ct. 1973); People v. Santiago, 343 N.Y.S.2d 805, 806 (N.Y. Trial Term 1971). Many other courts, however, have reached contrary conclusions with respect to similar exceptions in gun control laws, including concealed carry statutes. Boston v. State, 952 S.W.2d 671, 672 (Ark. 1997); State v. Lutters, 853 A.2d 434, 439-47 (Conn. 2004); Yirenkyi v. District of Columbia Hackers' License Appeal Bd., 520 A.2d 328, 332 (D.C. 1987); People v. Cosby, 255 N.E.2d 54, 57 (Ill. App. Ct. 1969); People v. Brooks, 275 N.W.2d 26, 27 (Mich. Ct. App. 1979). 24 No. 2004AP2989-CR result would be a significant retreat from Cole's holding that "the right to bear arms is clearly not rendered illusory by prohibiting an individual from keeping a loaded weapon hidden either in a glove compartment or under the front seat in a vehicle." Cole, 264 Wis. 2d 520, ¶49. Likewise, such a result would make meaningless the Hamdan court's focus on a person's home and privately-owned business as the two places in which the constitutional right to keep and bear arms for purposes of security is at its apex. Contrary to both Cole and Hamdan, Fisher's approach ¶56 paves the way for countless motor vehicle owners or operators to argue that they fall within this apex. We can conceive of no reason to distinguish between vehicles as an extension of one's privately-owned business and vehicles as an extension of one's home. Thus, anyone who for example, regularly jewelry), or even colorable claim of under possesses drives a a Fisher's personal approach luxury constitutional virtually valuables vehicle, (such as would have a to carry a privilege concealed weapon in his or her vehicle for security. ¶57 either These Cole or are not Hamdan. results They are that also can not be countenanced results that by were intended under the constitutional amendment. ¶58 The court recognized in Cole that Article I, Section 25 was not generally intended to abrogate existing statutes that regulate firearms. the amendment, the In analyzing the legislative intent behind court cited favorably to a Legislative Council Staff memorandum, which stated that "it is unlikely that 25 No. 2004AP2989-CR any of the current laws regulating or restricting either the possession or carrying of firearms is in serious jeopardy of being invalidated constitutional added). as right." an infringement Cole, 264 of the Wis. 2d 520, proposed ¶36 (emphasis "Clearly," the court concluded, "the legislature knew gun control laws existed and this memo shows that they also had reason to believe the passage of Article I, Section 25 would not impact the status of those laws." ¶59 The court explained Id. that a Legislative Reference Bureau drafting memo also "supports the proposition that the legislature intended gun control legislation . . . to survive the new constitutional right to bear arms." Id., ¶37. court history held suggests in that the that Cole "[t]he legislature legislative did not intend reasonable gun laws such as the CCW statute." ¶60 The clearly to repeal Id., ¶39. In fact, it appears that the primary impetus behind the amendment was to invalidate or preempt local bans on handgun ownership or possession. As Justice Prosser observed in a concurrence to Cole advancing that "the amendment deserve[d] a more nuanced interpretation," the amendment was "one of several reactions to municipal initiatives to ban handguns." Id., ¶¶60- 61 (Prosser, J., concurring). ¶61 The court repeated in Hamdan what it recognized in Cole, holding that the state's "broad police power to regulate the ownership and use of firearms and other weapons continues, notwithstanding Article I, Section 25." Hamdan, 264 Wis. 2d 433, ¶39; see also Jeffrey Monks, The End of Gun Control 26 No. or Protection Against Tyranny?: 2004AP2989-CR The Impact of the New Wisconsin Constitutional Right to Bear Arms on State Gun Control Laws, 2001 Wis. L. Rev. 249, 293 (concluding that the general intent of the legislature was to preserve Wisconsin's existing firearms laws). ¶62 Yet, despite all these affirmations of the general constitutionality of state gun control laws that existed at the time the amendment was adopted, the position advanced by Fisher is a broad attack on § 941.23. The consequences of his position cannot be squared with either the history of the amendment or this court's jurisprudence interpreting it. ¶63 We note that constitutional challenges to § 941.23 as applied to individuals carrying a concealed weapon in a vehicle are also likely to implicate the constitutionality of § 167.31, the statute firearm that in a generally vehicle prohibits unless it is the transport unloaded and of any encased. Although Fisher was not cited for a violation of § 167.31 at the time of this arrest, it is plain under the facts of the case that he could have been. To the extent courts entertain constitutional challenges to § 941.23 for carrying a concealed weapon in a vehicle, the constitutionality often be implicated as well. § 167.31 is not before us of § 167.31 will Although the constitutionality of today, we make these observations because they underscore the breadth of Fisher's argument and its uneasy fit with the history of the constitutional amendment. ¶64 carrying Both a the legislature concealed and and dangerous 27 this court weapon in a have spoken: vehicle will No. 2004AP2989-CR generally be contrary to the state's interest in protecting the health, safety, and welfare of Wisconsin citizens, and § 941.23 will not present a constitutional issue under Article I, Section 25 except in extraordinary circumstances. III ¶65 In sum, we conclude that § 941.23 is constitutional as applied to Fisher. His interest in exercising his right to keep and bear arms for purposes of security by carrying a concealed weapon in his vehicle does not substantially outweigh the state's interest in prohibiting him from carrying a concealed weapon in his vehicle.10 We therefore reverse the circuit court's judgment of dismissal and remand this case for further proceedings. By the Court. The judgment of the Jackson County Circuit Court is reversed and the cause is remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 10 Having concluded that Fisher affirmative answer to the first question not address the second question, whether right under Article I, Section 25 in a manner that did not violate § 941.23. 28 has not secured an under Hamdan, we need he could exercise his reasonable alternative No. ¶66 N. strongly PATRICK disagree CROOKS, with constitutionality of the J. 2004AP2989-CR.npc Because (dissenting). majority s Stat. Wis. reaffirmation 941.23, § of I the despite the overwhelming passage of Article I, Section 25 of the Wisconsin Constitution, presents an I respectfully as-applied dissent. challenge to Although the this case constitutionality of § 941.23, I believe the statute is unconstitutional not only as applied here, but also contrary to Article I, on its Section face 25. or I per se, write since it is separately to reiterate the conclusions set forth in my concurrence/dissent in State v. Hamdan, 2003 WI 113, 264 Wis. 2d 433, 665 N.W.2d 785, in which I took the same position unconstitutionality of § 941.23.1 in regard to the The broad language of Article 1 I acknowledge that the majority opinion's affirmation of the facial constitutionality of Wis. Stat. § 941.23 adheres to this court's own precedent as expressed in State v. Hamdan, 2003 WI 113, 264 Wis. 2d 433, 665 N.W.2d 785, and State v. Cole, 2003 WI 112, 264 Wis. 2d 520, 665 N.W.2d 328. I have both a great appreciation of and high regard for the importance of stare decisis in our legal system. However, adherence to precedent that is obviously flawed is far more harmful to the integrity of and confidence in our legal system than abandoning such precedent in favor of a proper determination of law. As United States Supreme Court Justice Benjamin Cardozo wrote: I am ready to concede that the rule of adherence to precedent, though it ought not to be abandoned, ought to be in some degree relaxed. I think that when a rule, after it has been duly tested by experience, has been found to be inconsistent with the sense of justice or with the social welfare, there should be less hesitation in frank avowal and full abandonment. We have had to do this sometimes in the field of constitutional law. 1 No. 2004AP2989-CR.npc I, Section 25 clearly overrides the very restrictive language of § 941.23. ¶67 A reasonable state, through restrictions constitutional rights. on its the police exercise power, of may an impose individual's It is undisputed that the constitutional amendment's broad declaration of the right to keep and bear arms may be reasonably limited by such police power. Yet, in light of our constitutional amendment which grants Wisconsin citizens the right to bear arms "for security, defense, hunting, recreation or any other lawful purpose," a statutory prohibition on carrying concealed weapons at all times, under all circumstances, the sole exception being for peace officers, is not a reasonable exercise of the state's police powers. As I stated in my concurrence/dissent in Hamdan, "[t]he breadth of the statute is incompatible with the broad constitutional right to bear arms." Hamdan, 264 Wis. 2d 433, ¶103. I ¶68 The majority Wis. Stat. § 941.23 is undertakes an analysis unconstitutional as as to whether applied to Fisher, and in doing so, ignores a fundamental flaw in its own reasoning by failing to recognize that the amendment is too broad, and the statute is too restrictive to coexist. ¶69 Although the majority opinion refuses to give Fisher the benefit of the constitutional amendment, it again engages in interpreting the judicially created exceptions laid out in Benjamin N. Cardozo, The Nature of the Judicial Process, Yale University Press, 150 (1960 ed.)(footnote omitted). 2 No. Hamdan. "[i]f The majority the cites constitutional Hamdan right to for keep the 2004AP2989-CR.npc proposition and bear that arms for security is to mean anything, it must, as a general matter, permit a person to possess, carry, and sometimes conceal arms to maintain the security of operated business . . . ." ¶70 This court his private residence or privately Id., ¶68 (emphasis added). cannot create exceptions to Wis. § 941.23 to cure that statute's constitutional defects. the job of the Wisconsin Legislature.2 Stat. That is It is well-established in Wisconsin law that "'[w]here the language used in a statute is plain, the court cannot read words into it that are not found . . . even to save its constitutionality, because this would be legislation and not construction.'" State v. Zarnke, 224 Wis. 2d 116, 139, 589 N.W.2d 370 (1999) (citing Mellen Lumber v. Indus. Comm., 154 Wis. 114, 120, 142 N.W. 187 (1913)). is the governmental body whose job it is The legislature to balance the competing interests between individuals and the public at large. 2 This court plainly set forth the position that it is the role of the legislature, not the judiciary, to act in the area of laws concerning carrying concealed weapons. As we stated in State v. Dundon: Forty-three states have legislative enactments permitting citizens to carry concealed weapons under a variety of conditions and circumstances. The existence of these many statutes underscores the impropriety of the judiciary attempting to act in this controversial policy area which is so clearly the province of other branches. State v. Dundon, 226 Wis. 2d 654, 673, 594 N.W.2d 780 (1999). It should be noted that now only Wisconsin remains without such legislative enactments. See infra notes 3, 4 and 5. 3 No. 2004AP2989-CR.npc This court must either uphold a statute as written, or strike it down as unconstitutional provision. if it a constitutional Judicially creating exceptions, on a case-by-case basis, is totally inappropriate.3 the violates Hamdan exceptions to The majority's attempt to tie self-defense and "extraordinary circumstances" (Majority op., ¶¶32-33) demonstrates an intent to continue the one-exception-at-a-time approach of Hamdan. ¶71 Article I, Section 25 of the Wisconsin Constitution reads, in its entirety, "The people have the right to keep and bear arms for security, other lawful purpose." it is undisputed defense, hunting, recreation Wis. Const. art. I, § 25. that Fisher was carrying or any In this case, a weapon for "security" purposes a purpose that falls unambiguously within the amendment. Also, there is no dispute that he had only a lawful purpose. right 3 to do so. Yet, the majority concludes that he had no While reasonable time, place, and manner See, e.g., Lang v. Lang, 161 Wis. 2d 210, 224, 467 N.W.2d 772 (1991)("We cannot, under the guise of liberal construction, supply something that is not provided in a statute. . . .")(citing Application of Duveneck, 13 Wis. 2d 88, 92, 108 N.W.2d 113 (1961)); State v. Martin, 162 Wis. 2d 883, 907, 470 N.W.2d 900 (1991) ("Our task is to construe the statute, not to rewrite it by judicial fiat.") (citing State v. Richards, 123 Wis. 2d 1, 12, 365 N.W.2d 7 (1985)); State ex rel. Badtke v. Sch. Bd., 1 Wis. 2d 208, 213, 83 N.W.2d 724 (1957)("Modifications of the statute if it works badly or in unexpected and undesirable ways must be obtained through legislative, not judicial action."); Columbus Park Hous. v. Kenosha, 2003 WI 143, ¶34, 267 Wis. 2d 59, 671 N.W.2d 633 (citation omitted) ("[I]t is the duty of this court to apply the policy the legislature has codified in the statutes, not impose our own policy choices to do otherwise would render this court little more than a super-legislature. Thus, we must apply the statute as written, not interpret it as we think it should have been written."). 4 No. 2004AP2989-CR.npc restrictions may comport with the constitutional amendment,4 such public policy legislature. determinations The majority, are properly instead of left to down striking the the statute, attempts, yet again, to do the job of the legislature and to judicially rewrite Wis. Stat. § 941.23. concerns of law enforcement are best The legitimate addressed by the legislature, not by a piecemeal approach by this court. ¶72 Wisconsin Stat. § 941.23 could pass constitutional muster if it contained reasonable exceptions to the present farreaching prohibition on carrying a concealed weapon. Wisconsin and Illinois are the only states, except Alaska and Vermont,5 without a law concealed allowing weapons.6 residents Even to though obtain permits Illinois has to carry adopted a constitutional provision guaranteeing the right to bear arms, and a law prohibiting the carrying of concealed weapons, it has 4 As I noted in Hamdan, other Wisconsin laws restricting weapons are narrowly tailored and therefore do not create the same constitutional problems as the statute at issue. See, e.g., Wis. Stat. §§ 941.26 (ban on machine guns), 941.28 (ban on short-barreled shotguns and rifles), 941.29 (possession of a firearm by a felon), 948.60 (possession by a minor), and 948.605 (possession in a school). Hamdan, 264 Wis. 2d 433, ¶104 n.6. 5 Alaska and Vermont concealed weapons. allow the unpermitted carrying of 6 On March 23, 2006, the Kansas Legislature overrode Governor Kathleen Sebelius' veto of SB 418, a concealed weapons bill. The new law will go into effect on July 1, 2006. Also, Nebraska Governor Dave Heineman signed LB 454, allowing the carrying of concealed weapons, into law on April 5, 2006. See also David B. Kopel, The Licensing of Concealed Handguns for Lawful Protection: Support From Five State Supreme Courts, 68 Alb. L. Rev. 305 n.3 (2005). 5 No. 2004AP2989-CR.npc also adopted statutory exceptions to its concealed-carry law.7 Except as noted, Wisconsin is the only state statutory exceptions and/or a permit system. and/or a permit system, are necessary without Such exceptions, in light constitutional guarantees of Article I, Section 25. § 941.23 of its constitutional such infirmity, of the To relieve the Wisconsin Legislature must either create a permit system so that qualified individuals may legally carry concealed weapons, and/or create exceptions to § 941.23 consistent with the use of the state's police power and the Wisconsin Constitution. ¶73 Despite the majority s contention to the contrary, the Wisconsin Legislature s attempts to modify Wis. Stat. § 941.238 are evidence of its belief that the present ban on carrying a 7 See 720 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/24-1(a) (2005), which provides in relevant part: A person commits the offense weapons when he knowingly: of unlawful use of . . . . (4) [c]arries or possesses in any vehicle or concealed on or about his person except when on his land or in his own abode or fixed place of business any pistol, revolver, stun gun or taser or other firearm. . . ." 720 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/24-1(a) (2005). 8 In S.B. 214 (2003-04) and S.B. 403 (2005-06) the Wisconsin Legislature attempted to enact a permit system for carrying a concealed weapon and to create a home and business exception to Wis. Stat. § 941.23. 6 No. concealed weapon is unconstitutional.9 2004AP2989-CR.npc Majority op., ¶51. The majority dismisses the argument of legislative intent on the grounds that indicates majority's the that § failure of the 941.23 is still judicially created legislation intact, exceptions. to become law with the albeit The majority then proceeds to determine that even if such failed legislation was indicative of legislative intent, it would still fail to support Fisher s claim of a constitutional right to carry a concealed weapon in his vehicle reasoning is flawed. for business security purposes. This The fact that the bill did not become law is certainly not indicative of a legislative intent to maintain the concealed weapon statute as it currently exists. The bill twice passed in both the Assembly and the State Senate, only to be vetoed by the Governor. Milwaukee J. See Ban on Concealed Weapons Stands, Sentinel, Feb. 3, 2004, http://www2.jsonline.com:80/news/state/feb04/204715.asp; http://www.legis.state.wi.us/2005/data/SB403hst.html. in both the 2003-04 and 2005-06 sessions, Moreover, the Senate successfully overrode the veto, while the Assembly only failed to do so by one vote in 2003-04, and by two votes in 2005-06. The majority, therefore, seems to confuse legislative intent with gubernatorial intent, despite the fact that the legislative intent could not be much clearer. 9 While there is no be inferred from failed this case departs from therefore significant to of Wis. Stat. § 941.23. Wisconsin case law that allows intent to legislation, the legislative history in the typical failed legislation and is the discussion of the constitutionality 7 No. ¶74 As it did in Hamdan, the 2004AP2989-CR.npc majority once again improperly holds that the determination of the facts is to be done as a matter of law, rather than decided by the trier of fact usually a jury. Having judicially carved out an exception to Wis. Stat. § 941.23 for a privately owned business in Hamdan, the majority decides here, as a matter of law, that Fisher s car, which is used to transport his tavern s money to the bank, cannot be considered Majority op., ¶56. an extension of his place of business. Such weighing of the evidence and finding of facts relating to Fisher s constitutional defense is appropriate only for the trier of fact. The majority also fails to give any deference, whatsoever, to the facts found by the circuit court, the trier of fact in this case. The statute is clearly unconstitutional as applied to Fisher. II ¶75 The majority in this case once again ignores the clear and explicit language of Article I, Section 25 of the Wisconsin Constitution, fails to strike down Wisconsin s overbroad and very restrictive concealed weapon statute, and instead continues to judicially re-write constitutional defects. is unconstitutional in it, in order to attempt to cure its I would hold that Wis. Stat. § 941.23 light of the constitutional amendment adopted overwhelmingly by Wisconsin citizens, both as applied 8 No. 2004AP2989-CR.npc here, and on its face given the broad language of Article I, Section 25.10 Therefore, I respectfully dissent. 10 As stated in my Hamdan concurrence/dissent, I would delay the holding for a reasonable period of time to allow time for the Wisconsin Legislature and the Governor to act. See DOC v. Kliesmet, 211 Wis. 2d 254, 267, 564 N.W.2d 742 (1997) (delaying, for one year, the effective date of this court's decision limiting the authority of the Wisconsin Department of Corrections to house inmates in county jails over sheriffs' objections). 9 No. ¶76 2004AP2989-CR.npc I am authorized to state that Justices JON P. WILCOX and PATIENCE DRAKE ROGGENSACK join that portion of this dissent that concludes that Wis. Stat. § 941.23 is unconstitutional as applied. See also Holytz v. Milwaukee, 17 Wis. 2d 26, 115 N.W.2d 618 (1962)(delaying for 40 days the effective date of this court's decision abrogating the doctrine of governmental tort immunity, while carefully analyzing the rights of the state in light of the Wisconsin Constitution); Pascucci v. Vagott, 362 A.2d 566 (NJ 1976)(delaying for 60 days the effective date of its decision invalidating a general assistance benefit schedule); Hellerstein v. Assessor of Town of Islip, 332 N.E.2d 279, 287 (NY 1975)(delaying for 18 months the effective date of its decision invalidating real estate assessment technique); Bond v. Burrows, 690 P.2d 1168 (Wash. 1984) (delaying for 15 days the effective date of its decision invalidating a sales tax differential between counties). 10 No. 1 2004AP2989-CR.npc

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