A jury convicted Appellant of sexual assault and assessed Ms punisliment at confinement for fifteen years in the penitentiary. The conviction was affirmed.
May v. State,
Appellant was charged under V.T.C.A. Penal Code, § 22.011(a)(2), with intentionally and knowingly causing the penetration of the female sexual organ of a child. A child is defined as a person under seventeen years of age not the spouse of the actor. V.T.C.A. Penal Code, § 22.011(c)(1). The trial court excluded testimony that the complainant, who was fourteen at the time of the offense, had intercourse with at least seven males from the time she was twelve until she reached fourteen. Appellant contended tMs evidence was admissible and relevant to the promiscuity defense. 1
The Court of Appeals held that evidence of the complainant’s previous sexual activity prior to reaching age fourteen was not relevant and therefore inadmissible because the promiscuity defense was not available under those circumstances. The Court of Appeals held that promiscuity necessarily requires that the conduct be consensual, citing
Wicker v. State,
When construing a statute, this Court is bound to give effect to the collective intent of the legislature in enacting the statute.
Boykin v. State,
Here, applying the literal wording of the statute, the legislature did not explicitly limit the availability of the defense to situations in wMch the prior sexual conduct occurred after the complainant reached age fourteen. The limitation applies to the age of the complainant when the offense being prosecuted occurred. The only explicit time restriction relating to the prior sexual conduct is that it must have occurred prior to the offense. Therefore, reading the statute literally, as long as the victim was over fourteen when the offense occurred, promiscuous behavior occurring prior to the time of the offense— even that wMch occurred prior to age fourteen — was available to prove the defense.
The Court of Appeals held that a literal interpretation fails to give effect to the plain meaning of the word promiscuous. It reasoned that because a child under fourteen cannot legally consent to sex and promiscuity
First, it is true that a child under fourteen cannot legally consent to sex, because subsection (a)(2) is a strict liability offense not requiring proof that the victim did not consent. Even if the victim consented in fact, that consent is not given any legal effect and provides no defense. Second, although “promiscuously” is not defined in the statute, we agree that the term implies consensual behavior. However, in ascertaining the ordinary meaning of promiscuity, we are not concerned with legal consent as a term of art, but with consent in its ordinary usage, 1.e., permission, willingness, voluntariness, agreement, acquiescence, or assent. That the child’s prior agreement to participate in sexual activity before age fourteen was not legally consensual does not mean it was involuntary or without permission. Thus, allowing evidence of willing participation in prior sexual conduct by a child under fourteen to support a promiscuity defense gives effect to the plain meaning of promiscuity. 2
A literal interpretation of the statute gives effect to all the words in the statute and is not ambiguous. We also conclude that this interpretation does not lead to absurd results which the legislature could not have intended. 3 The Court of Appeals erred by failing to give effect to the plain meaning of the statute, and concluding that sexual conduct by a child prior to the age of fourteen can never, as a matter of law, be promiscuous. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand the cause to that court for disposition consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The promiscuity defense was abolished effective September 1, 1994. However, Appellant’s offense occurred before the date of its repeal. At the time of the offense, V.T.C.A. Penal Code, § 22.011(d)(1) (repealed) provided, "It is a defense to prosecution under Subsection (a)(2) of this section that the child was at the time of the offense fourteen years of age or older and had prior to the time of the offense engaged promiscuously in conduct described in that subsection.”
. In
Norman v. State,
. That the legislature has since abolished the promiscuity defense does not impact our interpretation of its intent at the time the defense was enacted.
