THE STATE v. RANDLE
S15G0946
Supreme Court of Georgia
JANUARY 19, 2016
298 Ga. 375 | 781 SE2d 781
HUNSTEIN, Justice.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
DECIDED JANUARY 19, 2016.
G. B. Moore III, for appellant.
L. Craig Fraser, District Attorney; Samuel S. Olens, Attorney General, Patricia B. Attaway Burton, Deputy Attorney General, Paula K. Smith, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Scott O. Teague, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
S15G0946. THE STATE v. RANDLE.
(781 SE2d 781)
HUNSTEIN, Justice.
Appellee Blake Randle is a registered sex offender who seeks release from the sex offender registration requirements prescribed at
In 1993, Randle pled guilty under North Carolina v. Alford1 to one count of child molestation stemming from an incident in which he touched the penis of a ten-year-old boy. The trial court imposed an eight-year sentence, three to be served in prison and the balance on probation. Randall completed his prison sentence, registered as a sex offender in accordance with
The State appealed, arguing that Randle‘s act of touching the victim‘s genitals gave rise to a presumption that the victim had suffered “intentional physical harm” that would preclude Randle‘s removal from the sex offender registry. In a split decision, the Court of Appeals affirmed, with the majority concluding that the phrase “intentional physical harm” refers to “conduct that goes beyond offensive and unwanted touching and involves the intentional infliction of physical pain or injury upon the victim.” Randle, 331 Ga. App. at 5. The dissent, on the other hand, opined that intentional physical contact of any type constitutes “intentional physical harm” that would preclude an offender‘s removal from the registry. Id. at 9-11 (Branch, J., dissenting). We granted certiorari, thus, to resolve the issue of whether “intentional physical harm” in this context encompasses all intentional physical contact or only that which is shown to have caused some physical pain or injury. Our review of this purely legal issue is de novo. See Luangkhot v. State, 292 Ga. 423 (736 SE2d 397) (2013).
When we consider the meaning of a statute, we must presume that the General Assembly meant what it said and said what it meant . . . and so we must read the statutory text in its most natural and reasonable way, as an ordinary speaker of the English language would. The common and customary usages of the words are important, but so is their context. For context, we may look to other provisions of the same statute, the structure and history of the whole statute,
and the other law . . . that forms the legal background of the statutory provision in question.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Zaldivar v. Prickett, 297 Ga. 589, 591 (1) (774 SE2d 688) (2015).
At the crux of this dispute is the meaning of the word “harm.” As the Court of Appeals majority noted, the common understanding of “harm,” as reflected in leading English language dictionaries, involves “damage,” “injury,” or “hurt.” See Randle, 331 Ga. App. at 5 (citing three well-known print dictionaries); accord Merriam-Webster Dictionary, http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/harm (website last accessed Jan. 14, 2016). In comparison, the word “contact” is defined to mean “a state of touching” or “a union or junction of surfaces.” See Merriam-Webster Dictionary, http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/contact (website last accessed Jan. 14, 2016); accord Cambridge Dictionaries Online, http://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/contact (website last accessed Jan. 14, 2016) (“contact” defined as “the fact of two people or things touching each other“). In common parlance, thus, the word “harm” indicates not any contact but, rather, injurious contact. Also notable is the juxtaposition of the word “suffer” immediately preceding the phrase “intentional physical harm,” which further supports the connotation of physical pain or injury.
Looking beyond the words of the phrase in question, we note that among the other five criteria specified in
The notion of “intentional physical harm” as involving actual physical injury also finds support in the context of the larger legislative scheme of which
This construction of “intentional physical harm” also accords with authority from elsewhere in the realm of our criminal law. In defining the offense of simple battery, the legislature has long recognized a distinction between “intentionally mak[ing] physical contact of an insulting or provoking nature” and “intentionally caus[ing] physical harm.” See
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the phrase “intentional physical harm,” as it is used in
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
331 Ga. App. 1.
Peter J. Skandalakis, District Attorney, Robert W. Mooradian, Assistant District Attorney, for appellant.
Christa L. Kirk, for appellee.
James C. Bonner, Jr., Brandon A. Bullard, Margaret E. Heinen; Law Firm of Shein & Brandenburg, Elizabeth A. Brandenburg, amici curiae.
