Charles B. DOUGLAS, Petitioner-Appellant, v. UNITED STATES of America, Respondent-Appellee.
No. 17-1104
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
June 5, 2017
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied August 3, 2017
1069
Before EASTERBROOK, SYKES, and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges.
Argued May 16, 2017
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED
Jennifer Soble, Attorney, Indiana Federal Community Defenders, Inc., Hammond, IN, for Petitioner-Appellant.
David E. Hollar, Attorney, Office of the United States Attorney, Hammond, IN, for Respondent-Appellee.
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
Charles Douglas pleaded guilty to possessing a firearm, which his earlier felony convictions made it illegal for him to have.
The invocation of
Douglas does not contend that classifying his convictions as violent felonies violates the Constitution but instead that the district court misapplied the elements clause, as interpreted in Curtis Johnson v. United States, 559 U.S. 133, 130 S.Ct. 1265, 176 L.Ed.2d 1 (2010). Curtis Johnson, a statutory decision, was issued about five years before Douglas filed his
Yet the United States has chosen not to contest the use of
The parties agree that the sole issue on the merits is whether Class C felony battery in Indiana at the time of Douglas‘s two convictions for that offense was a violent felony under the elements clause of
A person who knowingly or intentionally touches another person in a rude, insolent, or angry manner commits battery, a Class B misdemeanor. However, the offense is:
- (1) a Class A misdemeanor if:
- (A) it results in bodily injury to any other person;...
- (3) a Class C felony if it results in serious bodily injury to any other person or if it is committed by means of a deadly weapon[.]
Battery was a Class C felony in Indiana if a person “knowingly or intentionally touches another person in a rude, insolent, or angry manner” and that touch “results in serious bodily injury to any other person“. Any touch entails the use of force as an engineer or physicist uses that word, but Curtis Johnson holds that this is not the legal sense of “force” in
And that‘s true enough for the simple battery defined by the introductory clause of Indiana‘s law. But Douglas was not convicted of the Class B misdemeanor version of the crime; he was convicted of the Class C felony version, which has “serious bodily injury” as an element. Curtis Johnson tells us that the sort of force to which
Douglas observes that tickling another person entails force. If the tickled person twitches, falls, strikes his head on a coffee table, and suffers a serious injury, Douglas tells us, the tickler could be convicted of Class C felony battery. If Indiana treated that situation, and similar ones, as Class C felonies, then Douglas would have a good point under Curtis Johnson. But just as Yates could not identify any case in which Wisconsin‘s judiciary had deemed a light touch enough to convict someone of causing bodily harm, so Douglas has not located any decision in which Indiana‘s courts have convicted someone of committing Class C felony battery after a light touch initiates a long causal chain that ends in serious injury. All the cases that the parties discuss involve violent force. See, e.g., Mann v. State, 895 N.E.2d 119 (Ind. App. 2008). Indeed, Indiana‘s courts say that the force must be enough to exclude any possibility that the injuries occurred by accident or an unforeseeable intervening circumstance. See, e.g., Moore v. State, 49 N.E.3d 1095 (Ind. App. 2016). Indiana‘s statute therefore must be treated the same way Yates treated Wisconsin‘s.
According to Douglas, however, no state crime can be a violent felony unless the person intends not only the use of force but also the injury caused by that force. Indiana‘s battery law has an intent element, but that element applies to the force rather than the outcome. Douglas relies on Leocal v. Ashcroft, 543 U.S. 1, 125 S.Ct. 377, 160 L.Ed.2d 271 (2004), and some similar decisions, but they do not establish the proposition that the injury must have its own mens rea.
Leocal dealt with the elements clause in
We have held that an offense defined as a knowing or intentional act that causes bodily harm comes within the elements clause of
AFFIRMED
EASTERBROOK
Circuit Judge
