William WALKER v. STATE of Maryland.
No. 51, Sept. Term, 2000.
Court of Appeals of Maryland.
March 8, 2001.
768 A.2d 631 | 253
Leigh S. Halstad, Asst. Atty. Gen. (J. Joseph Curran, Jr., Atty. Gen. of Maryland, on brief), Baltimore, for appellee.
Argued before BELL, C.J., and ELDRIDGE, RAKER, WILNER, CATHELL, HARRELL and LAWRENCE F. RODOWSKY, (retired, specially assigned), JJ.
LAWRENCE F. RODOWSKY, Judge, retired, specially assigned.
“(a) A person is guilty of a sexual offense in the third degree if the person engages in:
. . . .
“(5) Vaginal intercourse with another person who is 14 or 15 years of age and the person performing the act is at least 21 years of age.”
In Garnett v. State, 332 Md. 571, 632 A.2d 797 (1993), we held that the second degree rape statute,
“It [is] agreed between the State and the Defense that on September 16, 1999, at approximately twelve in the afternoon, Officer Brennan of the Baltimore County Police Department was dispatched to 4519 Old Court Road as a result of a rape report that had been called in by Detective Fox of Family Crimes. At that time he spoke with the victim, who was 15-year-old Carla Peterkin. Her date of birth was February 27, 1984. Her father was also present, Mr. Craig Peterkin.
“They both advised the officer that the victim, Carla, had run away from home, was brought back September 16th by Detective Fox. During this time the Defendant had been living with 29-year-old William Walker, whose date of birth is September 15, 1970. They had been living at Deer Lodge Court in Baltimore County.
“At that time the victim stated she had [consensual] sexual intercourse with the Defendant approximately seventy-five times. She also believed that she was pregnant and the Defendant was the father of her child.
“The Defendant was then interviewed and read his rights pursuant to Miranda. He did agree to speak with the officer.
“He advised he had intercourse with the victim approximately seventy-five times, he did not know she was 15. He advised that she told him she was 19.
“And I did speak with the victim and they did indicate that was true.
“She also then—later when she was questioned about it, she said her real age was 17. He did admit that if she was pregnant, he was the father. And the victim worked at the time at Weis supermarket. Her job application was fraudulent. It stated that she was 17 years old.
“The Defendant did not see the job application, however he knows it [is] the policy of Weis to hire no one under 17. That would be the agreed statement of facts.”
Without objection defense counsel added that Ms. Peterkin and Walker met while both were employed at Weis Market.
Walker then moved for a judgment of acquittal based on reading into the statute, as a matter of statutory construction, a defense of reasonable mistake as to the victim‘s age. Alternatively, the defense argued that recognition of the defense was required under the due process clause of the fifth and fourteenth amendments to the Constitution of the United States and under Articles 20 and 24 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. Walker submitted that Garnett, 332 Md. 571, 632 A.2d 797, was distinguishable because the statute there involved dealt with victims age thirteen and younger.
The circuit court denied the defendant‘s motion, concluding that the defense was not available but stating that “perhaps it should be, especially in situations such as this.” The court found the defendant “technically” guilty of a third degree sexual offense, but did not require him to register as a sex offender. Walker was sentenced to six months, service of the sentence was suspended, and Walker was placed on unsupervised probation for one year. This appeal followed.
I
Walker‘s statutory construction argument faces the same obstacle that the defendant in Garnett was unable to overcome. There this Court fully recognized that criminal statutes containing no express mens rea element, other than certain regulations “respond[ing] to the demands of public health and welfare,” ordinarily are not construed to impose “strict” criminal liability. Garnett, 332 Md. at 578, 632 A.2d at 800-01. Nevertheless, the legislative history of
The statute that was involved in Garnett was enacted by Chapter 573 of the Acts of 1976. As introduced by Senate Bill
Significant in Garnett was that, before final enactment in 1976, the General Assembly deleted the proposed requirement that the defendant “knows or should know” that the victim was under the age of fourteen years. We concluded that we could not read back into
Section 464B(a)(5), with which we are concerned in the instant matter, similarly has its modern origins in Chapter 573 of the Acts of 1976. Historically,
“If any person shall carnally know any female not his wife, between the ages of fourteen and sixteen years, such carnal knowledge shall be deemed a misdemeanor and the offender . . . shall be punished by imprisonment . . . for a
term not exceeding two years, or be fined in a sum not exceeding five hundred dollars, or [both;] and provided further, that this section shall not apply to male persons under the age of eighteen years.”
The introductory version of Senate Bill 358 of the 1976 General Assembly Session would have decriminalized carnal knowledge. The amendments by the Judicial Proceedings Committee restored it. The offense was made a part of a new section, creating a fourth degree sex offense, a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for up to one year. As then proposed, that section read:
“(a) . . . A person is guilty of a sexual offense in the fourth degree if the person engages:
“(1) In sexual contact with another person against the will and without the consent of the other person; or
“(2) In a sexual act [including vaginal intercourse] with another person who is 14 or 15 years of age which age the person performing the sexual act knows or should know and the person performing the sexual act is 4 or more years older than the other person.”
(Emphasis added).
Further amendments before final passage removed vaginal intercourse from the definition of “sexual act,” added as a fourth degree sexual offense vaginal intercourse with a fourteen or fifteen year old, and deleted the requirement that the defendant “knows or should know” the age of the victim.
Then codified as
“(a) What constitutes.—A person is guilty of a sexual offense in the fourth degree if the person engages:
“(1) In sexual contact with another person against the will and without the consent of the other person; or
“(2) In a sexual act with another person who is 15 years of age and the person performing the sexual act is four or more years older than the other person; or
“(3) In vaginal intercourse with another person who is 14 or 15 years of age and the person performing the sexual act is four or more years older than the other person.
“(b) Penalty.—Any person violating the provisions of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction is subject to imprisonment for a period of not more than one year, or a fine of not more than $1,000, or both fine and imprisonment.
By Chapter 205 of the Acts of 1978,
We infer with some confidence that the source of the four year age differential that runs throughout the 1976 sexual offenses statute was drawn from the 1898 carnal knowledge statute. In 1965 Governor J. Millard Tawes had appointed a commission on the criminal law. See State of Maryland Commission on Criminal Law, Report and Part I of Proposed Criminal Code at v (June 1, 1972) (the Commission Report). The Commission Report proposed that there be a “Part 130: Sex Offenses” in a criminal code. See Commission Report at 185-96. The draft of Part 130 utilized a four year differential for sex crimes involving minors. That decision was based on former
As in Garnett, the fact that the General Assembly first proposed and then deleted an explicit requirement that the defendant knew or should have known the age of the victim,
The statute under which Walker was prosecuted,
Thus, from the standpoint of a defense of reasonable mistake of age, the third degree sex offense under
For the foregoing reasons we conclude that, as a matter of statutory construction, the availability of a defense of reasonable mistake of age cannot be read into carnal knowledge between a fourteen or fifteen year old victim and a defendant who is age twenty-one or older.
II
In a combined constitutional/statutory construction argument Walker undertakes to distinguish
Under the statutory scheme, if consensual vaginal intercourse takes place on the victim‘s thirteenth birthday when the defendant is one day short of the defendant‘s seventeenth birthday, there is no crime. On the other hand, if the same conduct takes place one day earlier, the defendant commits statutory rape and is subject to twenty years confinement. Thus, the statute approved in Garnett and in Owens can be viewed as also having but a one day margin of error.
Similarly, if consensual vaginal intercourse takes place on the day before the victim‘s sixteenth birthday and on the defendant‘s nineteenth birthday, the defendant commits a sex
More fundamental is that Walker‘s asserted two year margin of error in statutory rape ignores that consensual vaginal intercourse with a person fourteen or fifteen years of age by one who is four or more years older is also criminal. The “margin of error” of the statutory scheme where one person is under sixteen years of age is based on the age differential between the two parties and, in that sense, the margin of error is just under four years.
At oral argument Walker emphasized two decisions, United States v. Ransom, 942 F.2d 775 (10th Cir.1991), and Perez v. State, 111 N.M. 160, 803 P.2d 249 (1990). Each of these cases involved a statutory scheme in which there was an intermediate area, somewhat analogous to Maryland‘s carnal knowledge statute, between “strict” liability statutory rape and non-criminal consensual intercourse. Walker would have us extrapolate from these cases a requirement that the intermediate offense recognize a reasonable mistake of age defense. We are not persuaded. Ransom was charged with violating
Perez presented a scheme under which statutory rape involved victims under thirteen and carnal knowledge involved victims thirteen to sixteen years of age “when the perpetra-
Ultimately, the constitutional concern that Walker perceives is one of substantive due process. He raises the specter of non-criminal conduct, i.e., vaginal intercourse with a partner sixteen or more years of age, being restricted by concern that the partner might not yet be sixteen. Here, however, the precise statute with which we are concerned can be violated only by a defendant age twenty-one or over, as reflected in Chart 2 set forth below depicting the effect of the 1994 amendment on the statutory structure presented in Chart 1.
The foregoing conclusion is demonstrated by the cases holding that there is no reasonable mistake of age defense under statutory rape and carnal knowledge type statutes where the age of consent is sixteen or seventeen. See, e.g., United States v. Brooks, 841 F.2d 268, 269 (9th Cir.) (carnal knowledge: under age sixteen), cert. denied, 487 U.S. 1227, 108 S.Ct. 2887, 101 L.Ed.2d 922 (1988); Phagan v. State, 268 Ga. 272, 486 S.E.2d 876, 878 (1997) (statutory rape: under age sixteen), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 1128, 118 S.Ct. 1079, 140 L.Ed.2d 136 (1998);2 State v. Drake, 219 N.W.2d 492, 493 (Iowa 1974) (statutory rape: under age seventeen); State v. Campbell, 239 Neb. 14, 473 N.W.2d 420, 424 (1991) (first
Accordingly, we shall affirm.
JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BALTIMORE COUNTY AFFIRMED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY THE APPELLANT.
ELDRIDGE, Judge, concurring:
I concur in the result only. See Owens v. State, 352 Md. 663, 691-693, 724 A.2d 43, 57-58 (Eldridge, J., concurring), cert. denied, 527 U.S. 1012, 119 S.Ct. 2354, 144 L.Ed.2d 250 (1999); Garnett v. State, 332 Md. 571, 588-592, 632 A.2d 797, 805-807 (1993) (Eldridge, J., dissenting).
CATHELL, Judge, Dissenting.
For the reasons generally stated in Judge Bell‘s (now Chief Judge Bell‘s) dissent in Garnett v. State, 332 Md. 571, 632 A.2d 797 (1993), and for the reasons stated in Chief Judge Bell‘s dissent in Owens v. State, 352 Md. 663, 724 A.2d 43 (1999), in which I joined, I respectfully dissent.
Chief Judge BELL joins in this dissent.
