David Welton was convicted of “willful injury” in violation of Iowa Code § 708.4 (1979). Welton had a fight with the woman who was living with him, and broke her jaw in two places. In order to be guilty of the crime of “willful injury” in Iowa, a defendant must have caused a “serious injury,” and that phrase is defined to include “protracted loss or impairment of the function of any bodily member or organ.” Iowa Code § 702.18 (1979).
In this federal habeas corpus proceeding, Welton argues that a jawbone is not a “bodily member or organ.” He also claims that his companion’s loss of use of her jaw cannot be deemed “protracted.” The victim’s jaw was wired shut for about six weeks. The Iowa courts’ interpretation of the statute to cover petitioner’s conduct, he says, is so unexpected as to violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The District Court 1 rejected this contention, and so do we.
Knutson v. Brewer,
So far as state law is concerned, the courts of Iowa may give to the terms “member,” “organ,” and “protracted” whatever meaning they wish. We are obliged to accept their interpretation, just as though it were written into the statute in so many words. Our task is only to decide whether the Iowa courts’ interpretation of their own law is so unexpected, so outlandish, that no reasonable person could have expected it. See
Bouie v. City of Columbia,
What we said in Knutson, supra, applies here:
[W]e think it significant that the issue of construction involved here is not the drawing of a line between legal conduct and illegal conduct. What [Welton] did was unlawful under any interpretation of Iowa law, and he makes no contention to the contrary. His position, reduced to its simplest terms, is that he had a right to expect that he would be convicted for [simple assault] only, rather than for [willful injury]. This kind of reliance interest is not, in our view, entitled to a great deal of weight. When a person does an act that he well knows to be a violation of some law, and when a statute is later interpreted to cover his conduct in a way that does not do violence to the ordinary understanding of the English language, the Fourteenth Amendment is not offended.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Hon. Donald E. O’Brien, United States District Judge for the Southern and Northern Districts of Iowa.
