Kenneth B. SAWATZKY, Appellant, v. The CITY OF OKLAHOMA CITY, Appellee.
No. M-94-1309.
Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma.
Nov. 21, 1995.
906 P.2d 785
GARY L. LUMPKIN, Judge; JAMES F. LANE, Judge; RETA M. STRUBHAR, Judge
Michael Porter, Mike Fouts, Assistant Municipal Counselors, Oklahoma City, for City at trial.
Mark Henricksen, Henricksen & Henricksen Lawyers, Inc., El Reno, for Appellant on appeal.
William O. West, Municipal Counselor, Michael Porter, Assistant Municipal Counselor, Oklahoma City, for Appellee on appeal.
OPINION
CHAPEL, Vice Presiding Judge.
Kenneth B. Sawatzky was found guilty by a jury on November 14, 1994, of Offering to Engage in an Act of Lewdness in violation of
This case is neither about the regulation of conduct between consenting adults in the privacy of their bedrooms, nor the legal status to be provided to homosexual persons. Fundamentally, this case is about whether Oklahoma City may legally prohibit public solicitations for private non-commercial acts of sodomy. Sawatzky solicited an act of lewdness1 in a public place from a police officer. The act solicited was intended to take place in private and Sawatzky and the officer are members of the same gender. In this context it is clear that Sawatzky is not entitled to relief.
In his first proposition of error Sawatzky claims that Sections 30-151 and 30-152 violate his right to privacy as guaranteed under the
In his second and third propositions Sawatzky claims that Sections 30-151 and 30-152 violate his right to equal protection. The second proposition is based on the state constitution and the third proposition is based on the federal constitution. The right to equal protection guaranteed under Oklahoma‘s Constitution has consistently been interpreted as coextensive with the right to equal protection guaranteed under the federal constitution.4 Consequently, we address these propositions together.
Sawatzky invites this Court in his second and third propositions to determine whether same sex adults may lawfully engage in private non-commercial consensual sodomy. We declined to reach this issue in Post because the facts of that case did not warrant such a determination.5 Likewise, the facts of Sawatzky‘s case do not warrant a determination of this issue and we do not address it.
In his final proposition of error Sawatzky contends that Sections 30-151 and 30-152 violate his rights under
LUMPKIN and LANE, JJ., concur.
STRUBHAR, J., dissents.
STRUBHAR, Judge, dissenting.
The majority in its opinion has stated that this case is not about the regulation of conduct between consenting adults in the privacy of their bedrooms or about the legal status to be provided to homosexual persons. Rather, it has held that this case is about whether Oklahoma City may legally prohibit public solicitations for private non-commercial acts of sodomy. Under the specific facts of this case, I agree that this limited approach is appropriate. It is with the majority‘s ensuing analysis that I disagree.
Assuming, arguendo, that this is a valid governmental interest, I would note that such situation was not implicated by the facts of this case. The record in this case clearly supports a finding that the language spoken by Appellant which was construed to be an offer to engage in lewd acts was not made under circumstances which could reasonably have been perceived to have been offensive. Rather, as is evinced by the testimony of the arresting officer, Appellant was purposefully led to believe that a sexual solicitation would be welcome. Nothing in this situation indicated that the solicitation was unwelcome or offensive. Although the majority opinion states in footnote 7 that “reasonable prohibitions against soliciting sexual acts do not violate the First Amendment whether the underlying conduct is lawful or unlawful” the municipal ordinance prohibits both invited and offensive solicitations and to this extent, it imposes unreasonable restrictions. Accordingly, I dissent.
Notes
Oklahoma City defines lewdness as:
- any lascivious, lustful or licentious conduct,
- the giving or receiving of the body for indiscriminate sexual intercourse, fellatio, cunnilingus, masturbation, anal intercourse, or lascivious, lustful or licentious conduct with any person not his or her spouse, or
- any act in furtherance of such conduct or any appointment or engagement for prostitution.
