The defendant was charged with “indue[ing a] person under eighteen of chaste life to have unlawful sexual intercourse.” G. L. c. 272, §4. The proof put in to support the charge was that the defendant offered a fourteen year old boy five dollars to engage in fellatio, and that the offer was rejected. The defendant moved for a required finding of not guilty, based
on
the premise that one who is unsuccesfully solicited has not been induced within the meaning of § 4. The
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judge agreed with the latter premise and instructed the jury that there could be no inducement within the meaning of the statute without an act of sexual intercourse.
1
The judge went on, however, to reason that since, in the words of a dictum in
Commonwealth
v.
Gosselin,
The judgment must be reversed. A criminal attempt has two elements: (1) a specific intent to commit the substantive offense (see
Commonwealth
v.
Ware,
The only overt act alleged in the present complaint was the completed offense, i.e., inducing the victim to engage in sexual intercourse. The Commonwealth concedes that this was not proved.
2
A solicitation was proved, but “[o]vert acts not alleged may not be relied on to satisfy this requirement.”
Commonwealth
v.
Gosselin,
The defendant, relying on the dictum from the
Gosselin
decision that the judge had invoked,
3
argues that he stood in jeopardy at the trial of being convicted of the attempt, that the Commonwealth failed to prove the'only overt act alleged, and that, in consequence, he may not now be retried on a charge of attempting to induce the victim to engage in sexual intercourse.
4
The quoted dictum, however, must be read in conjunction with the later discussion in the same decision (
The holding of the Gosselin case, as distinct from the dictum, is that a charge of a completed crime which alleges no overt act except the completed crime does not charge an attempt to commit the completed crime. 5 That principle is dispositive of this case. It was error to submit the case to the jury on the question of attempted inducement, because the complaint did not charge an attempt. The defendant was entitled to a required finding of not guilty on the charge of inducement, and the trial on that charge does not stand as a bar to the defendant’s retrial on a complaint properly charging an attempt.
Judgment reversed.
Verdict set aside.
Judgmentfor the defendant.
Notes
At the trial the Commonwealth took the position that “induce” meant an attempt to persuade and that the offense was complete without regard to whether it culminated in sexual intercourse. The word “induce,” however, is commonly used in a sense implying success: “to move and lead (as by persuasion or influence); prevail upon; influence, persuade,” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1971), first definition. The judge ruled correctly that the general principle of construction of criminal statutes required adoption of the more restrictive construction. Out-of-State cases supporting this view include
State
v.
Miller,
On appeal the Commonwealth acknowledges that an act of intercourse is a component of the offense but takes the position that solicitation was alleged by the use of the word “induce.” Two acts, it contends, comprise the full offense: an act of urging or encouraging and a resulting act of intercourse. We reject this construction of the word induce for the reasons' explained in note 1, supra.
The defendant’s position at trial was different; there he contended that a charge of attempt was not included within the charge of the completed offense.
Specifically, he is asking that this court order the entry of a required finding of not guilty on so much of the complaint as charges the crime of attempt.
The dictum in the
Gosselin
case should be applied with caution for the additional reason that the crime of attempt has as an element a specific intent to commit the substantive crime. Conviction of a substantive crime does not normally require proof of a specific intent to commit that crime (see
Commonwealth
v.
Henson,
