OPINION
Miсhael Conrad Sullivan appeals his conviction for indecency with a child. Following appellant’s open plea of guilty, the trial court sentenced appellant to sixteen years imprisonment. In four points of error, appellant contends the indecency with a child statute is unconstitutional under the United States and Texas constitutions. We аffirm.
BACKGROUND
Appellant delivered pizza part-time for supplemental income. Upon making a pizza delivery to complainant’s home, appellant observed complainant, a ten year old boy, and engaged him in conversation about a decal on the boy’s shirt. Appellant then reached down and rubbed the boy’s chest both inside and outside of the boy’s shirt. After being paid for the pizza, appellant made another delivery, went to a store and purchased soft drinks and ice cream, and returned to the complainant’s neighborhood where he passed out the soda and ice cream to children playing in the area.
Appellant pleaded guilty to the offense of indecency with a child and signed a judicial confession which was admitted into evidence at the plea hearing as State’s exhibit one. The confession states appellant did “unlawfully, knowingly and intentionally engage in sexual contact with [the complainant] ... by contact between the hand of defendant and BREAST of complainant, with the intent to arouse and gratify the sexual desire of the defendant.”
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE STATUTE
The gravamen of appellant’s argument is the indecency statute fails to make a gender *711 distinction between touching the breast of a male and a female child. Appellant contends touching the breast of a male child would not ordinarily be considered sexual in nature. Therefore, appellant argues, the statute violates the due process requirements of the state 2 and federal constitutions by failing to provide fair notice that touching the breast of a young boy is criminal. Appellant further argues the statute is unconstitutionally over-broad and vague because it encompasses innocent and innocuous conduct, namely touching the breast of a male child. We conclude the indecency statute is constitutional.
1.Standard of Review
When reviewing the constitutionality of a statute, we presume the statute is valid and the legislature has not acted unreasonably or arbitrarily in enacting the statute.
Ex parte Granviel,
2.Waiver
Preliminarily, the State contends appellant raises only challenges to the indecency statute as applied to his specific conduct, and asserts appellant has waived these constitutional complaints by failing to assert them in the triаl court. In his reply brief, appellant contends he is challenging the facial validity of the statute and therefore was not required to urge his complaint before the trial court.
In order to preserve for appellate review an attack on the constitutionality of a statute as applied, the defendant must raise the complaint in the triаl court.
Curry v. State,
Appellant was not required, however, to raise below constitutional challenges that the statute is facially invalid or void
ab initio. See Garcia,
3.Overbroad/V ague
It is axiomatic that a statute which either forbids or requires the doing of an act in terms so vague that persons of common intelligence must guess as to its meaning and differ as to its application lacks the first essential of due process of law.
Ex parte Chemosky,
*712
An overbroad statute sweeps too broadly by attempting to regulate constitutionally protected activity.
Bynum, v. State,
In relevant part, the statute provides “[a] person commits an offense if, with a child younger than 17 years and not his spouse, whether the child is of the same or opposite sex, he ... engages in sexual contact with the child.” Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 21.11(a)(1) (Vernon 1994). The term “sexual contact” is defined as “any tоuching of the anus, breast, or any part of the genitals of another person with intent to arouse or gratify the sexual desire of any person.” Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 21.01(2) (Vernon 1994).
Therefore, to commit an offense, one must touch a child’s body with the requisite intent. A statute which forbids intentional conduct is rarely subject to a facial over-breadth challenge.
See United States v. National Dairy Prods. Corp.,
Appellant’s contention that the statute encompasses innocent contact with a male child is incorrect. Plainly this is not what the statute provides. Appellant’s argument hinges on ignoring the requisite intent. Innocent touching оf a male child, or female child, is not prohibited by the statute. Only touching intended to arouse or gratify sexual desires is prohibited. Therefore, contrary to appellant’s assertion, a parent engaging in the simple act of bathing a small child would not be in violation of the statute because such touching is not intended to arouse or gratify any sexual desirе. We conclude the statute does not encompass a substantial amount of constitutionally protected activity and reject appellant’s facial overbreadth challenge.
Village of Hoffman Estates
requires we next consider the facial vagueness challenge.
Nevertheless, the court of criminal appeals appears to have taken a more narrow view of
Village of Hoffman Estates.
It has repeatedly stated that in analyzing a facial vagueness challenge where no First Amendment rights are involved, “we need only scrutinize the Act to determine whether it is impermissibly vague as applied to appellant’s conduct.”
Clark v. State,
Several оf our sister appellate courts have read this language literally, apparently concluding it obviates the need for considering the challenged act in all of its applications, and have limited their review solely to the operation of the statute as applied to the defendant’s conduct.
See, e.g., State v. Mendel,
To so hold, however, would put us at odds with
Village of Hoffman Estates
which recognizes that a statute may be challenged on its face as unduly vague, in violation of due process, even if the statute does not reach constitutionally protected conduct.
Village of Hoffman Estates,
We have no trouble, however, сoncluding the statute is not unconstitutionally vague as applied to appellant. The indecency statute unambiguously applies to appellant’s conduct. The statute clearly delineates the prohibited conduct — touching the specified body parts of children with intent to arouse or gratify sexual desires. In his judicial confession, appеllant admitted he touched the complainant with the intent to arouse and gratify his sexual desires. Appellant was not required to guess what is prohibited; his conduct is clearly covered by the statute. Certainly any adult of ordinary intelligence would know such conduct is prohibited by the statute and could act accordingly.
6
See Kolender,
Appellant also has not attemptеd to demonstrate the statute is unconstitutionally vague in all of its applications.
7
In his brief, appellant tacitly admits the statute is not vague when applied to female children. A statute is facially void for vagueness only when there is no core of prohibited activity,
Briggs,
4. Due Process
In his first and second points of error, appellant complains the indecency statute violates the due process provisions of the federal and state constitutions.
8
In order to satisfy substаntive due process requirements, legislation “must bear a reasonable relation to a proper legislative purpose” and “be neither arbitrary nor discriminatory.”
United States v. Coastal States Crude Gathering. Co.,
Appellant’s due process challenges suffer from the same fundamental flaw as his overbreadth challenge. He ignores the requisite intent necessary for the offense. Certainly the legislature has a legitimate purpose in prоtecting all children, regardless of their sex, from sexual predators. It is a rational means to further that purpose to prevent adults from touching certain body parts of children with the intent to arouse and gratify sexual desires. The legislature rationally could have concluded children of either sex will suffer emotional harm, and be placed at significаnt risk of physical harm, if the law allowed those with pedophilic tendencies to touch the breasts of either male or female children. Additionally, as the legislative history shows, the legislature also was concerned that the failure to provide the same protection for male children as female children could render the legislation subject to attack on equal protection grounds. 9 Accordingly, we conclude the indecency statute is rationally related to a legitimate legislative purpose and does not violate the due process provisions of the United States Constitution or the due course of law provision of the Texas Constitution. We overrule appellant’s first аnd second points of error. For the reasons set forth above, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. We understand appellant’s due process challenge under the state constitution to refer to the due course of law provision found at article I, section 19 of the Texas Constitution.
. Appellant’s third point of error challenges the statute as vague and overbroad under the state constitution, and his fourth point asserts the same challenge under the federal constitution. Although he discusses the two points separately, appellant does not argue that a different standard applies under the federal and state constitutions and his arguments under both points are not substantively different; therefore, we will address both points together.
. This is precisely the approach the California legislature has taken. Under California law, any touching of a child under fourteen years of age with the intent to sexually arouse either the defendant or the child is unlawful.
People v. Martinez,
. This general rule is subject to аn exception where a party has relied on the benefits of the statute prior to the declaration of invalidity. .La-
pasnick v. State,
. Appellant challenges as vague only the portion of the statute which defines "sexual conduct” as including "any touching of the ... breast” of a child. He does not сhallenge the intent provision. Constitutional challenges to the intent provision have been rejected in other contexts.
See,
e.g.,
Byrum,
. The failure of appellant to do so casts further doubt on whether appellant did indeed intend to assert a facial vagueness challenge as he contends.
. Appellant’s first point of error addresses the state сonstitution and his second point addresses the federal constitution. The corresponding "due process” provision of the Texas Constitution provides: "No citizen of this State shall be deprived of life, liberty, property, privileges or immunities, or in any manner disfranchised, except by the due course of the law of the land.” Tex. Const, art. I, § 19. Historically, courts have equated the due course of law clause in the Texas Constitution with the guarantee of due process under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.
See Norris v. State,
. We are not, however, limited to the legislative history to determine a rational basis for the legislation. Unless the claim involves a violation of fundamental rights, any rational basis for the statute, even if not the real reason for the govem-mental action, satisfies the requirements of substantive due process.
Chandler v. Jorge A. Gutierrez, P.C.,
