In this case, we are asked to determine whether
FACTS
The relevant facts are as follows. Starting in September 2015, appellant Juan Manuel Ortega-Rodriguez began sexually abusing 10-year-old G.M. by touching her inappropriately. Ortega-Rodriguez was a father figure to G.M. The abuse continued for several months. During the first few days of January 2016, the nature of the abuse changed. Ortega-Rodriguez began engaging in genital-to-genital contact with G.M a couple of times per day. The genital-to-genital contact continued for eight or nine days. On January 11, G.M reported Ortega-Rodriguez's behavior. It is undisputed that Ortega-Rodriguez never sexually penetrated G.M.
The State charged Ortega-Rodriguez with first-degree criminal sexual conduct under subdivision 1(h)(iii) of Minnesota Statutes § 609.342 for his January 2016 conduct. Subdivision 1(h) provides:
Subdivision 1. Crime defined. A person who engages in sexual penetration with another person, or in sexual contact with a person under 13 years of age as defined in section 609.341, subdivision 11, paragraph (c), is guilty of criminal sexual conduct in the first degree if any of the following circumstances exists: ...
(h) the actor has a significant relationship to the complainant, the complainant was under 16 years of age at the time of the sexual penetration, and:
(i) the actor or an accomplice used force or coercion to accomplish the penetration;
(ii) the complainant suffered personal injury; or
(iii) the sexual abuse involved multiple acts committed over an extended period of time.
Neither mistake as to the complainant's age nor consent to the act by the complainant is a defense.
The State also charged Ortega-Rodriguez with second-degree criminal sexual conduct under
On appeal, Ortega-Rodriguez challenged only his first-degree criminal sexual conduct conviction. He argued that the State presented insufficient evidence to support the conviction because the statute requires proof of "sexual penetration" and the State conceded that it did not prove sexual penetration.
The court of appeals affirmed. It rejected Ortega-Rodriguez's argument that
[I]nterpreting [subdivision 1(h) ] to require sexual penetration would lead to absurd results because a person could be found guilty of first-degree criminal sexual contact if he engaged in one instance of [bare genital-to-genital] contact with a person under 13 years of age [under subdivision 1(a) ] ... but not guilty if he engaged in multiple instances of [bare genital-to-genital] contact with a person under 13 years of age and had a significant relationship to the victim.
ANALYSIS
The question presented is whether
Subdivision 1(h) expressly uses the words "sexual penetration" in defining the crime. Reading the words "sexual penetration" out of subdivision 1(h) or (as the State would have it) adding the phrase "[bare genital-to-genital] contact with a person under 13 years of age" to that subdivision is beyond our authority. State v. Hensel ,
Adopting the court of appeals' reasoning, the State contends that another reasonable interpretation of the language of
The State's "overarching language" interpretation not only reads out the explicit words "sexual penetration" in subdivision 1(h) but also disregards the two-part structure of the statute. Under the statute, the State must first prove that the defendant engaged in one of the two categories of prerequisite conduct: sexual penetration or bare genital-to-genital contact with a person under 13.
The State's position that the act of bare genital-to-genital contact with a person under 13 should be read into every one of the statute's subparts is further undermined when we consider
Having concluded that the plain language of subdivision 1(h) unambiguously requires proof of sexual penetration, we must consider the State's absurdity argument. The State contends that we are obligated to reject the unambiguous plain language of a statute when it leads to absurd results. In Wegener v. Commissioner of Revenue , we looked beyond the statute's plain language because applying that language was so absurd that it would "utterly depart from" the statute's purpose.
The State posits that requiring proof of "sexual penetration" to convict under subdivision
The plain language of subdivision 1(h) unambiguously requires proof of sexual penetration, and such an interpretation does not lead to an absurd result. We therefore reverse the decision of the court of appeals and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
CONCLUSION
For the forgoing reasons, we reverse the decision of the court of appeals.
Reversed.
Notes
The phrase "sexual contact with a person under 13 years of age" in subdivision 1 has a special definition: "The intentional touching of the complainant's bare genitals or anal opening by the actor's bare genitals or anal opening with sexual or aggressive intent or the touching by the complainant's bare genitals or anal opening of the actor's or another's bare genitals or anal opening with sexual or aggressive intent."
Ortega-Rodriguez also argued on appeal that the 8 or 9 days of genital-to-genital contact in January 2016 is not an "extended period of time" for the purpose of a conviction under
The conclusion that the plain language of
In Wenthe , we interpreted
