Aрpellant Clarence Issac Wise, Jr. was convicted of attempted sexual assault of a fourteen-yeаr-old in violation of A.R.S. § 13-1406(A). After admitting a prior felony conviction, Wise was sentenced to seven and one-half years imprisonment.
It is clear that the test in this state to determine if an offense is a lesser included one is whether the greater offense cannоt be committed without necessarily committing the lesser. State v. Malloy,
A.R.S. § 13-1406(A) states that sexual assault is committed by a person
“intentionally or knowingly engaging in sexual intercourse or oral sexual contact with any person not his or her spouse without consent of such person.” (emphasis added.)
Sexual intercourse, defined in A.R.S. § 13-1401(3), means
“penetration into the penis, vulva or anus by any part of the body or by any object or manual masturbаtory contact with the penis or vulva,”
and oral sexual contact, defined in A.R.S. § 13-1401(1), means
“oral contact with the penis, vulva or anus.”
A.R.S. § 13-1404(A) states that sexual abuse is committed by a person
“intentionally or knowingly engaging in sexual contact with any person not his or her spouse without consent of that person or with any person who is under fifteen years of age and who is not his or her spouse.” (emphasis added.)
Sexual contact, defined in A.R.S. § 13— 1401(2), means
“any direct or indirect fondling or maniрulating of any part of the genitals, anus or female breast.”
The state, in its opposition to apрellant’s motion for rehearing at the Court of Appeals, argued that one may commit sexual assault without necessarily “fondling” or “manipulating” the victim’s vulva, anus or breast. The state based its argument on its interpretation of the definitiоns of “fondling” and “manipulating” found in the Random House Dictionary of the English Language (1966).
The Random House Dictionary, at pages 551 and 872, provides us with the following definitions:
Fondle: “to handle or touch lovingly affеctionately, or tenderly; caress: to fondle a precious object; to fondle a child.” (emphasis in original)
Manipulate: “to handle, manage, or use, esp. with skill, in some process of treatment, or performance: to manipulate a tractor.” (emphasis in original)
Though “penetration into the penis, vulva or anus by any part of the body or by аny object” and “oral contact with the penis, vulva or anus” need not involve fondling, each necessarily involves manipulation of “[a] part of the genitals [or] anus * * By thrusting an erect penis, or a broomstick for that matter, into а vulva, a person “uses” the victim’s vulva “in some * * * performance”. Though fondling denotes tenderness or gentleness, maniрulating does not.
Furthermore, if “fondling” and “manipulating” denoted the same activity, the Legislature would have had no reаson to use both. In interpreting statutes, we assume the Legislature avoids redundancy in favor of concision. See State Board of Technical Registration v. McDaniel,
We approve, as modified herein, the Court of Appeals’ decision that sexual abuse is a lesser included offense of sexual assault, and approve the Court of Appeals’ opinion as to appellant’s right to an instruction on sexual abuse. The trial court’s judgment of convictiоn is reversed and the case is remanded.
Notes
. A detailed version of the facts can be found in State v. Wise,
. The fact that a person may be convicted of sexual abuse because the victim was under fifteen years of age, whereas the victim’s age is irrelevant under sexual assault, does not mean sexual abuse is not a lesser included offense of sexual assault. It simply means that where the victim is under fiftеen years of age, the state, to prove sexual assault rather than sexual abuse, must prove penetration and lack of consent. Where the victim is fifteen years of age or older, penetration alone must be proved to raise the offense from sexual abuse to sexual assault because lack of consent is, in that case, an element of sexual abuse.
. It is clear that words and phrases in statutes shall be given their ordinary meaning unless it appears from context or otherwise that a different meaning is intended. McIntyre v. Mohave County,
