Lead Opinion
The state responds, and we agree, that our decision in State v. Wier ,
Affirmed.
Notes
In a supplemental brief, defendant asserts that the trial court erred when it instructed the jury that it could reach a nonunanimous verdict. We reject that supplemental assignment of error on the merits without discussion.
Defendant points out that the jury acquitted him of first-degree rape.
Concurrence Opinion
Concurrence Opinion
A person commits the crime of second-degree sexual abuse when the person subjects another person to sexual intercourse or certain acts of penetration "and the victim
The Supreme Court recently discussed the difference between conduct elements and circumstance elements in State v. Simonov ,
The Supreme Court reversed the trial court, agreeing with defendant (and us) that knowledge was the minimum
Applying those principles to the UUV statute, the court rejected the state's argument that the owner's lack of consent was a circumstance element, i.e. , an " 'accessory fact' that accompanie[d] the offender's physical act." Id . at 536, 548,
In my view, under the court's analysis in Simonov , lack of consent is a conduct element for sexual abuse. That is, it is part of the nature or essential character of the proscribed act. Analogizing to the court's statement about UUV in Simonov , that the crime of sexual abuse criminalizes a particular form of conduct-nonconsensual sexual contact-borders on the axiomatic. To say otherwise, and to treat the other person's lack of consent as merely an attendant circumstance, is to say that the essential character of the prohibited act is having sexual contact with another person. But that is an entirely lawful act. It is only the lack of consent that makes it unlawful. The essence of the crime of sexual abuse is not sexual contact but, rather, nonconsensual sexual contact.
In Simonov , the court used the theft statutes to demonstrate "the role of circumstance elements in a criminal offense." Id . at 541,
That lack of consent is essential to the prohibited act is the most important reason that it is a conduct element, but there are also additional considerations that support that conclusion. One is that first-degree sexual abuse, ORS 163.427, requires a minimum culpable mental state of knowledge for the element of forcible compulsion, i.e. , the use of force to overcome lack of consent. Wier ,
Another additional consideration is that second-degree sexual abuse, like UUV, is a felony. See ORS 163.425(2). In Simonov , the court cited the severity of the consequences of a felony conviction as suggestive "that the legislature did not contemplate that mere criminal negligence would suffice to establish criminal liability for UUV."
Finally, I note that the state argues that the sexual abuse statutes are distinguishable from the UUV statute (as interpreted in Simonov ) due to grammatical differences between the statutes. A person commits UUV when the person uses another's vehicle "without consent of the owner." ORS 164.135(1). A person commits second-degree sexual abuse when the person subjects another person to sexual intercourse "and the victim does not consent thereto." ORS 163.425(1)(a). A person commits third-degree sexual abuse when the person subjects another person to sexual contact and "[t]he victim does not consent to the sexual contact" or cannot consent due to age, ORS 163.415(1)(a), or when the person propels a dangerous substance at another person for sexual purposes "without the consent of the victim," ORS 163.415(1)(b).
Courts are necessarily sensitive to wording, phrasing, grammar, and syntax when construing statutes, because text is paramount in statutory construction, and because those nuances are sometimes our only window into the legislative intent. And, in Simonov ,
We did not explain in Wier how we came to conclude that lack of consent is a circumstance element of the crime of third-degree sexual abuse. The only hint to our reasoning is a "see" cite to two items of legislative history. See Wier ,
Moreover, notably, there are two paragraphs in the third-degree sexual abuse statute, one of which uses the same phrasing as the second-degree sexual abuse statute, and the other of which uses the same phrasing as the UUV statute, regarding lack of consent. See ORS 163.415(1)(a)(A) (it is third-degree sexual abuse when a person subjects another person to sexual contact and "[t]he victim does not consent to the sexual contact"); ORS 163.415(1)(b) (it is third-degree sexual abuse when a person propels a dangerous substance at a victim for sexual purposes "without the consent of the victim").
