Appellant was charged with sodomy by an act of fellatio (oral stimulation of penis) under Ark. Stat. Ann. § 41-815 (Repl. 1964). He appeals from his conviction on the grounds that no statute makes fellatio a public offense; that § 41-815 is so vague and broad as to deprive appellant of his federal constitutional rights; and the section establishes a religion and invades the right of privacy.
The cited statute reads: “Every person convicted of sodomy, or buggery shall be imprisoned in the penitentiary for a period of not less than one (1) nor more than twenty-one (21) years.”
The allegation that the statute does not cover the act of fellatio is without merit. In Strum v. State,
Neither do we find any merit in the contention that the statute is vague and too broad in scope. The crime of sodomy has long been recognized by a host of jurisdictions as consisting of unnatural sex relations. Smith v. State,
Of the allegation that sodomy should not be regulated because such acts are regarded as sinful by some religious groups, little need be said. If that theory were adopted then many of our criminal statutes would be emasculated. This brings us to the final argument, namely that § 41-813 invades the constitutional right of privacy. That question is not before us because the act was not committed in privacy. It occurred between the adult appellant and a fourteen year old boy, seated in an automobile on a public road adjacent to Interstate 30.
Affirmed.
