By the Court,
Respondent Marty Edward Castaneda is accused of intentionally and repeatedly exposing his genitals and buttocks while standing on the sidewalk in front of the county jail near Lewis Avenue and First Street in Las Vegas. A witness sitting in a nearby car observed his exhibitions and called the police. Castaneda was arrested and charged with indecent exposure under NRS 201.220. He entered a plea of not guilty and also asserted a constitutional challenge to the statute, arguing that it is facially vague and overbroad and cannot be enforced, even if the State were to prove the conduct charged at trial. The district court agreed with Castaneda and dismissed the indecent exposure charges.
We reverse and remand. NRS 201.220(1) provides that “[a] person who makes any open and indecent or obscene exposure of his or her person, or of the person of another, is guilty” of a gross misdemeanor for a first offense. While Castaneda is correct that NRS 201.220 does not define what it means to expose one’s “person” in an “open and indecent or obscene” manner, the lack of internal definitions does not invalidate the statute.
Indecent exposure was a public offense at common law. For such an offense, NRS 193.050(3) incorporates the common law definitions. The common law, as well as the case law concerning NRS 201.220, leaves no doubt that a person who intentionally exposes his genitals on a public street corner commits indecent exposure. Thus, NRS 201.220 applies to Castaneda’s conduct, and he may not avoid liability by theorizing about the statute’s hypothetical vagueness as to others.
Given the Legislature’s use of the common law to define NRS 201.220’s terms, we read NRS 201.220 as limited to the common law prohibition against open and indecent or obscene exposure of one’s genitals or anus. So limited, NRS 201.220 does not catch a substantial amount of constitutionally protected expressive conduct within its sweep.
See Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.,
I.
Although our review is de novo, we commence it under the presumption “that statutes are constitutional”; the party challenging a statute has “the burden of making ‘a clear showing of invalidity.’”
Berry v. State,
n.
A.
The district court invalidated NRS 201.220 as unconstitutionally vague. “Vagueness doctrine is an outgrowth not of the First Amendment, but of the Due Process Clause[s] of the Fifth” and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
United States v. Williams,
‘ ‘ [Mathematical precision is not possible in drafting statutory language.”
City of Las Vegas v. Dist. Ct.,
But constitutional vagueness analysis does
not
treat statutory text as a closed universe. Enough clarity to defeat a vagueness challenge ‘ ‘ ‘may be supplied by judicial gloss on an otherwise uncertain statute,’ ”
As the discussion that follows will show, we conclude that, under NRS 193.050, NRS 201.220(1) must be read as incorporating the common law prohibition against intentional exposure of the genitals or anus under circumstances that make such exposure open and indecent or obscene. Thus limited, NRS 201.220(1) properly applies to Castaneda and is not unconstitutionally vague.
B.
The challenged statute states: “A person who makes any open and indecent or obscene exposure of his or her person, or of the person of another, is guilty: (a) [f]or the first offense, of a gross misdemeanor [and] (b) [f]or any subsequent offense, of a category D felony ...” NRS 201.220(1). Castaneda has a prior conviction, so he faces a felony charge.
Castaneda’s vagueness argument focuses on the statute’s euphemistic reference to “his or her person.” As he reads the word “person,” most of us expose our “person” every day. He faults the statute for not specifying the parts of the body whose exposure qualifies as “indecent or obscene” and argues that the statute, as written, leaves too much to guesswork to satisfy due process.
The State responds by pointing to the settled common law and commonsense understanding that, in a civilized society, people do not intentionally and publicly display their genitals. Going further, the State argues that NRS 201.220(l)’s prohibition of “any open and indecent or obscene exposure of the person” forbids exhibition of those parts of the body “which instinctive modesty, human decency or natural self respect requires shall be customarily kept covered in the presence of others.” An exposure can be “indecent” without being “obscene.”
Quiriconi v. State,
Both sides miss the point that history provides. In the indecent exposure context, the common law used “person” as a euphemism for penis, making it fair to read NRS 201.220(1) as prohibiting open and indecent or obscene exposure of one’s genitals. However, neither the statute’s words nor its common law antecedents support the State’s view that NRS 201.220(1) penalizes exposures just because they offend local sensibilities or standards of morality. Leaving it to the word “indecent” to conclusively define the conduct that NRS 201.220(1) outlaws, rather than adhering to the common law equation of “person” with “genitals,” goes beyond settled common law doctrine and the fair intendment of the words in NRS 201.220(1) and ventures into vagueness territory.
“By statute in virtually every jurisdiction, indecent exposure is recognized as an offense.” 3 Charles E. Torcía,
Wharton’s Criminal Law
§ 308, at 200 (15th ed. 1995). Over half the states have indecent exposure statutes that specify what body parts cannot be openly exposed, with most naming the genitals, anus, or sex organs and some also listing the buttocks and female breasts.
See
Jeffrey C. Narvil,
Revealing the Bare Uncertainties of Indecent Exposure,
29 Colum. J.L. & Soc. Probs. 85, 92-93 (1995) (canvassing statutes). Other jurisdictions, including Nevada, have older, more general statutes. These statutes express their prohibition “not in terms of genitals, buttocks, or breasts, but rather ‘person,’ ‘private parts,’ ‘intimate
Whether or not there is merit in actually prohibiting the exposure of specific anatomical parts, the [specific] statutes do accomplish an important objective in criminal law: They inform the public precisely what behavior will be considered unlawful. . . . While most persons possessing even a passing familiarity with mainstream American society would recognize that [the more general] statutes restricting exposure of one’s “private” or “intimate” parts [or “person”] would likely encompass the genitals, one might not hold the same assurance with regard to other parts of the body.
Id. (footnotes omitted).
Addressing vagueness challenges like Castaneda’s, courts elsewhere have not found their generally worded statutes to require people to search their “own standards of morality [or] standards of dress” to know which body parts they publicly exhibit at their peril.
Duvallon v. District of Columbia,
The analysis in Duvallon and Pamigoni is cogent, especially because the District of Columbia’s indecent exposure statute resembles NRS 201.220(1) in that it makes it unlawful “for any person or persons to make any obscene or indecent exposure of his or her person.” D.C. Code § 22-1312(a) (2001).
The defendant in
Duvallon
sought review from the United States Supreme Court by appearing outside its building wearing only a sandwich board entitled, “Petition for Rehearing.”
In
Parnigoni,
the defendant took off his clothes to play nude Ping-Pong with his host’s eleven-year-old son, surprising his host who came home early to find his houseguest naked in the family’s basement game room.
Castaneda’s complaint that he did not have fair notice that NRS 201.220(1) incorporates the common law prohibition against genital exposure fares no better than Parnigoni’s. The predecessor to NRS 201.220(1) was adopted in 1911, at the same time as the predecessor to NRS 193.050. Crimes and Punishments Act of 1911 §§ 35, 195,
reprinted in
1912 Revised Laws of Nevada, Vol. 2, §§ 6300, 6460. NRS 193.050(3) declares that, “The provisions of the common law relating to the definition of public offenses apply to any public offense which is . . . prohibited [by statute] but is not defined, or which is . . . prohibited but is incompletely defined.” And as we held in
Hogan
v.
State,
This court definitively construed NRS 201.220(1) in
Young
v.
State,
Numerous authorities agree that intentional genital exposure violates statutory and common law prohibitions against indecent exposure of one’s “person” or “private parts.”
See Com.
v.
Arthur,
In 1995, the Legislature amended NRS 201.220 to add a new subsection 2 that provides, “For the purposes of this section, the breast feeding of a child by the mother of the child does not constitute an act of open and indecent or obscene exposure of her body.” 1995 Nev. Stat., ch. 105, § 3, at 128. Castaneda argues that this new paragraph makes NRS 202.120(1) unconstitutionally vague, even if it was clear before; why have a specific permission for breastfeeding, he asks, if indecent exposure of one’s “person” only prohibits genital exposure? But the new language was added as part of the Legislature’s larger effort to endorse breastfeeding, not to change the prohibition in NRS 201.220(1). 3 NRS 201.220(2) did not substantively expand NRS 201.220(1) and introduce vagueness that didn’t exist before. See also NRS 193.060 (“The provisions of this title [15, encompassing NRS Chapters 193-207], insofar as they are substantially the same as existing statutes, shall be construed as continuations thereof and not as new enactments”).
Castaneda stands charged with intentionally exposing his genitals on a downtown Las Vegas street corner. If proved, this violates NRS 201.220(1). The fact the statute depends on case- and common-law definitions to establish the conduct it forbids— specifically, what it means to expose one’s “person” — does not render it impermissibly vague.
See Berry,
C.
The amended information alleges that Castaneda intentionally “ma[d]e an open, indecent, and obscene exposure of his person by then and there deliberately dropping his pants and underwear and exposing his penis and/or groin area and/or buttocks in the direct view and presence of” the complaining witness. (Emphasis added.) The “and/or” phrasing is problematic. It suggests — as the State’s expansive reading of NRS 201.220(1) would hold — that NRS 201.220(1) permits conviction based on exposure of the buttocks alone. We disagree.
As discussed above, in the absence of a specific indecent exposure statute, many courts have held that “intent to expose one’s genitals is a necessary element of the offense.”
Massicot,
Of note, the offense consists of the intentional, open and indecent or obscene exposure, not its visual observation by others.
See Young,
We deal here with a criminal statute of statewide application. Nevada is home to rural, sparsely populated areas ‘ ‘where generations of families with old values have left their stamp upon a small town” and where “attitude[s] toward life [have] changed but little over a span of a century.” Robert Laxalt,
Nevada
12 (W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. 1977). These rural values contrast sharply with Las Vegas and Reno “where the exodus from neighboring California and the westward movement of people have created cities of newly forming identities.”
Id. See also Ashcroft v. American Civil Liberties Union,
Our reading of NRS 201.220(1) keeps it true to its common law origins.
See Duvallon,
III.
The district court also declared NRS 201.220 unconstitutionally overbroad. It did so based on stated concerns that NRS 201.220 could be used to convict “a woman nursing a child who is not the child’s mother” or “[p]ersons expressing themselves artistically or politically through nudity or dressing scantily.” The statute’s application to wet nurses, however, is not before the court: NRS 201.220(1) clearly proscribes Castaneda’s conduct and his wet nurse hypothetical neither implicates the First Amendment,
see Holder,
In
Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.,
To invalidate a statute as overbroad at the behest of one to whom it properly applies “is, manifestly, strong medicine” that is administered “sparingly and only as a last resort.”
Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
For these reasons, we reverse and remand.
Notes
Some Nevada cases have used a conjunctive “both/and” formulation in stating these two vagueness tests.
See City of Las Vegas
v.
Dist. Ct.,
The court noted that the “statute refers to the ‘. . . indecent exposure of
his
or
her
person’ ’ ’ and concluded that it thus was not limited to males but, rather, “[i]t is the indecent exposure of the comparable portions of the male and female anatomy that constitutes the crime. In other words, the indecent exposure of human genitalia is the offense.”
Duvallon,
The 1995 Legislature added an almost identical breastfeeding exemption to Nevada’s lewdness statute, NRS 201.210(2), and also enacted NRS 201.232(2): “Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a mother may breast feed her child in any public or private location where the mother is otherwise authorized to be, irrespective of whether the nipple of the mother’s breast is uncovered during or incidental to the breast feeding.” This makes sense because the common law teaches that breasts are not genitals.
States that extend the offense to include exposure of the buttocks have done so explicitly. See Del. Code Ann. tit. 11, § 764 (2007) (defining “indecent exposure” to include exposure of the genitals or buttocks); Ind. Code Ann. § 35-45-4-l(d) (LexisNexis 2009) (defining “nudity” to include “showing of the . . . buttocks with less than a fully opaque covering”).
The parties do not argue and this case does not present an issue of whether a statewide or local standard governs the determination of when a given exposure is indecent or obscene.
