Lead Opinion
OPINION
Thе appellant-defendant, Danny L. Henderson, was convicted of aggravated rape and sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. Because the State failed to prove circumstances amounting to aggravated rape under T.C.A. § 39-3703, we conclude thаt the offense for which the defendant was convicted must be reduced to rape.
The evidence showed that on February 24, 1980, the defendant entered a Giles County motel owned and operated by the victim’s son. The victim was filling in for
The crime of aggravated rape, T.C.A. § 39-3703, requires proof of penetration accompanied by one of several enumerated circumstances. The indictment in this case charged that the defendant effected sexual penetration by force or coercion, causing “personal injury” to the victim, which, if proved, would establish aggravated rape under T.C.A. § 39-3703(a)(2). “Personal injury” is defined by T.C.A. § 39-3702(9) to mean “bodily injury or serious bodily injury as defined in § 39-601.” The definition of bodily injury contained in that statute includes “illness or impairment of the function of a bodily member, organ, or mental faculty.” By contrast, under T.C.A. § 39-3705, rape is the “unlawful sexual penetration of another accompanied by ... force or coercion.”
The State asks us to sustain the defendant’s conviction for aggravated rape on the basis of the testimony of James F. Cooper, a clinical psychologist who treated the victim for what he called the “normal emotional traumа” associated with the crime of rape. The State argues that Cooper’s testimony establishes the existence of an “impairment of [the victim’s] mental faculty,” which, although temporary, is sufficient to satisfy the definition of “personal injury” under T.C.A. §§ 39-3702(9) and 39-601. However, a review of the record indicates that Cooper’s testimony was secured outside the presence of the jury. Moreover, before the jury returned to the courtroom, the State was granted leave to withdraw Cooper’s testimony. Obviously it cannot now be relied uрon to establish the existence of a necessary element of the offense.
Nor do we find that the victim’s testimony alone is sufficient to sustain the more serious offense of aggravated rape. There is nothing to suggest that her “emotional reaction” to thе offense rose to the level of an impairment of her mental faculties, temporary or otherwise. Rape is a reprehensible crime, and one would expect the response of a rape victim to be highly emotional in nature. But we are nоt prepared to say that the legislature intended to equate emotional distress with “impairment of a mental faculty,” for the reasons set out below.
The experts now seem unanimous in their conclusion that rape is not so much a crime of sex as it is a crimе of violence against the victim. In this sense, it is difficult to envision a rape that does not involve “personal” injury or trauma to the victim, if only of psychic dimensions. However, this fact alone would not automatically convert a rape into an aggravated rape, or there would be no need for a distinction between these two separate offenses as set out in § 39-3703 and § 39-3705.
In an analogous situation, the California Court of Appeal was asked to determine whether physical ailments (nose bleeds, fainting, and stomach aches) suffered by the kidnapped Ghowchilla school children constituted “bodily harm” within the meaning of California’s aggravated kidnapping statute, which provided for an enhanced penalty for conviction of kidnapping in which the victim suffered “bodily harm.” Testimony at trial established that the children’s ailments were not inflicted directly by the defendants but were the result of “acute anxiety” engendered by the children’s collective “ordeal of terror.” People v. Schoenfeld,
*640 If the more serious penalty may be imposed when the only injury is of a nature similar to that shown by the present record, which concededly is almost necessarily an incident to every forcible kidnaping, neither the purpose of enhancement of the penalty for the more heinous crime nor the intention of deterring the kidnaper frоm killing or injuring his victim is subserved. On the contrary, if there necessarily be bodily injury in almost every kidnapping sufficient to warrant imposition of the more serious penalty, the kidnaper might well reason that the better course for him would be to kill the victim to minimize the probability of identificаtion.
... all kidnapings involve' some degree of suffering insofar as mental distress or emotional harm is relatively manifested. If, as the People contend, such evidence alone (with or without minor physical symptoms) is sufficient, then conceptually every forcible restraint and confinement would be automatically subject to the augmented penalty without the essential showing of substantial bodily injury. Such an unreasonable result would totally defeat the dual purpose of preventing physical harm to the victim and providing an added penalty for the more abhorrent criminal conduct.
Id. at 772.
In construing the legislature’s intent in creating an enhancement statute such as the one before us, it is axiomatic that the courts must give meaning to the plain language of the statute. Key v. State,
The dissenting judge in the instant ease maintains that the question of “impairment of mental faculty” was one of fact for the jury to determine, based on the victim’s very limited testimony concerning her emotional distress following the rape. But there was no dispute at trial concerning the psychological trauma she experienced, and we conclude, as did the court in Schoenfeld, that “where the underlying facts are undisputed — as here shown — the questiоn whether such probative facts support the conclusions drawn becomes one of law reviewable on appeal.” People v. Schoenfeld, supra,
We therefore conclude that the judgment in this case must be modified to reflect Henderson’s conviction of rape, under T.C.A. § 39-3705. Pursuant to the holding of Huffman v. State,
For the reasons set out above, the judgment is modified to reflect the defendant’s conviction of rape, with a sentence of five years imprisonment subject to the State’s consent.
Notes
. People v. Jackson, 44 Cal.2d 511,
. It is unfortunate that another hearing may be necessary in this case, since the jury could have set the same penalty (15 years) against this defendant for rape as they set for aggravated rape. Thus it is apparent that if the State had originally decided to charge the defendant with rape under T.C.A. § 39-3705(a)(l), or if the State had abandoned the aggravated rape charge at the same time the testimony of the State's expert witness was ¡withdrawn, both the
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I am in respectful disagreement with my colleagues in reducing this offense from aggravated rape to rape with resulting reduction of punishment from fiftеen to five years.
With the clinical psychologist’s testimony offered outside the jury and withdrawn by the State at the trial, I am in complete accord with their rejection of the State’s argument that the testimony of the clinical psychologist established the necessаry element, “personal injury", for the offense of aggravated rape, T.C.A. § 39-3703.
Notwithstanding, I am of the opinion that the victim’s testimony raised a jury question as to whether or not this rape was aggravated.
In order to prove aggravated rape, the State must demonstrаte that the defendant caused “personal injury” to the victim. Personal injury as defined in T.C.A. § 39-3702(9) encompasses bodily injury which is defined in T.C.A. § 39-601(a)(l):
“(1) Bodily injury includes a cut, abrasion, bruise, burn, or disfigurement; physical pain; illness or impairment of the function of a bodily member, organ, or mental faculty.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The victim’s tеstimony revealed that during the assault she was “petrified” and when he left she was in shock and could not move. Her mental condition was a “disaster”. She related that physically, she was hurt in small ways but not compared to how she was mentally. Further, after the assault the victim had been to a mental health center.
I will agree with the majority and its reliance on People v. Schoenfield,
In People v. Hines,
“Bodily injury is defined as physical pain, illness, or аny impairment of physical or mental condition. (Citation omitted.) Admittedly, this is a broadly inclusive definition; nevertheless it creates a meaningful distinction between cases in which bodily injury is inflicted and those in which it is not. To support a finding of bodily injury the prosecution must prove at lеast some physical pain, illness or physical or mental impairment, however slight, was caused by the kidnapper.” (Emphasis supplied.)
“Rape is very often accompanied by physical injury to the female and can also inflict mental and psychological damage.”
The verdict of guilt for aggravated rape was supported by the evidence and is compatible with the law.
While not controlling, the majority with reliance on Roilins v. State,
In closing, in light of the victim’s testimony it is unarguable that her mental faculty as a result of this rape has not been imрaired.
In so holding, this writer does not feel that all rapes are aggravated and under certain circumstances a rape charge under T.C.A. § 39-3705 may be warranted in the clear absence of any evidence as required by T.C.A. § 39-3703.
