Senf v. State
Senf v. State
Opinion
The appellant, Robert Wayne Senf, was charged by separate complaints with four instances of contributing to the delinquency of a child, in violation of Ala. Code 1975, § 12-15-13. These charges resulted from the appellant's permitting a group of teenagers to use his residence to hold a party at which beer was available to and was consumed by the teenagers. The appellant was first tried in juvenile court, where he was adjudged guilty and was sentenced on all four charges. His appeal to this Court from those convictions was dismissed, Senf v. State,
Prior to trial, the appellant filed written motions to dismiss the four cases. These motions alleged that § 12-15-13 is unconstitutionally vague and indefinite and that the complaints against the appellant are not sufficient to apprise him of the nature of the charges against him. At the beginning of the bench trial, the trial court summarily denied the motions to dismiss without any discussion thereof. R. 5. In this appeal, the appellant reasserts his constitutional challenge of § 12-15-13 and his challenge of the sufficiency of the complaints. He also contends that the evidence is not sufficient to support his convictions.
Smith v. Goguen,"Due process requires that all 'be informed as to what the State commands or forbids,' Lanzetta v. New Jersey,
306 U.S. 451 ,453 ,59 S.Ct. 618 ,619 , *Page 43783 L.Ed. 888 (1939), and that 'men of common intelligence' not be forced to guess at the meaning of the criminal law. Connally v. General Construction Co.,269 U.S. 385 ,391 ,46 S.Ct. 126 ,127 ,70 L.Ed. 322 (1926)."
The first sentence of § 12-15-13(a) provides that
"[i]t shall be unlawful for any parent, guardian or other person to willfully aid, encourage or cause any child to become or remain delinquent, dependent or in need of supervision or by words, acts, threats, commands or persuasions, to induce or endeavor to induce, aid or encourage any child to do or perform any act or to follow any course of conduct which would cause or manifestly tend to cause such child to become or remain delinquent, dependent or in need of supervision or by the neglect of any lawful duty or in any other manner contribute to the delinquency, dependency or need of supervision of a child."
As used in § 12-15-13, a "child" is "an individual under the age of 18, or under 19 years of age and before the juvenile court for a matter arising before that individual's 18th birthday," § 12-15-1(3); a "delinquent child" is "[a] child who has committed a delinquent act and is in need of care or rehabilitation," § 12-15-1(9); and a "delinquent act" is any "act committed by a child that is designated a violation, misdemeanor or felony offense under the law of this state," § 12-15-1(8).
The first sentence of § 12-15-13 essentially sets forth four alternative means by which the offense of contributing to the delinquency of a child may be committed:2 (1) "willfully aid[ing], encourag[ing] or caus[ing]" a person under the age of 18 to commit a violation, misdemeanor, or felony; (2) using "words, acts, threats, commands or persuasions, to induce or endeavor to induce, aid or encourage" a person under the age of 18 to engage in any act or course of conduct that "would cause or manifestly tend to cause such child to" commit a violation, misdemeanor, or felony; (3) "neglect[ing] . . . [a] lawful duty . . . [thereby] contribut[ing] to the" commission of a violation, misdemeanor, or felony by a person under the age of 18; and (4) "in any other manner contribut[ing]" to the commission of a violation, misdemeanor, or felony by a person under the age of 18. The third and fourth alternatives may well be *Page 438 unconstitutionally vague;3 however, the appellant was not charged under either of those alternatives. The appellant was charged under the first and second alternatives, which might be considered vague in the context of some conduct not here at issue,4 but which we find sufficiently clear to have apprised the appellant that his particular conduct was criminal.
In this state, it is a misdemeanor for persons under the age of 21 "to purchase, consume, possess or to transport" any alcoholic beverage. §
Briefly summarized, the State's evidence tended to show that the appellant agreed to allow a group of teenagers to hold a party at his house. A keg of beer was brought to the party by one of the teenagers and, when it was empty, a second keg of beer was obtained by the appellant. A number of the teenagers attending the party were under the age of 18 and many of these teenagers consumed beer on the appellant's premises. The first and second alternatives of § 12-15-13(a) are sufficiently definite to warn the appellant that his conduct was prohibited.
The appellant further asserts that the complaints are insufficient because the prosecution failed "to allege some nexus between Appellant's actions and the named minor children being delinquent." Appellant's brief at 15. As noted above in Part I, the appellant was charged under the first and second alternatives of § 12-15-13(a). The complaints charged that the appellant
"did aid and encourage [a named individual], a minor child under eighteen years of age to become delinquent, or has, by words, acts of omission, threats, commands, or persuasion, induced or endeavored to induce, aided or encouraged said child in such county to do or perform an act or to follow a course of conduct which would cause or manifestly tend to cause such child to become or remain delinquent, dependent or in need of supervision, in that [the appellant] did, within said 12 months [before the commencement of this prosecution], within said county, aid, encourage and accompany said minor child to attend a party at his home and to have access to kegs of beer at a party with minors in possession of it, and such other acts which are detrimental to the general health and welfare of the said minor child. . . ."
A charging instrument must "apprise the accused not only of the nature of the offense, *Page 439
but also of the particular act or means by which it was committed." Harrison v. State,
B.D.S.5 testified that in December 1990, he arranged through a mutual acquaintance to hold a party at the appellant's residence in Loachapoka, Alabama. B.D.S. was 17 years old at the time. Prior to the party, B.D.S. distributed at his high school flyers on which appeared the words "Nasty Brew IV," a drawing depicting two beer kegs, and a map to the appellant's residence. B.D.S. testified that he was "known for the nasty brew parties," that this was "the fourth party [he had] had," and that he had "engineered" the three previous parties also. R. 26. On cross-examination, B.D.S. acknowledged that the three previous parties had not been held at the appellant's house, that he had "never even met" the appellant until the day of the party, and that the appellant "was just somebody that somebody else talked into letting some people have a party there." R. 27. He further stated that he "doubt[ed]" that he had shown the appellant the "Nasty Brew IV" flyer. R. 27.
On the day of the party, December 8, 1990, B.D.S. went to the appellant's house to help the band set up. He took with him a keg of beer that had been purchased by a third party. The appellant was at his residence when B.D.S. and the members of the band arrived. According to B.D.S., the appellant "brought us down to the basement and we put the keg in the corner of the basement." R. 14. Although B.D.S. did not "remember any specific conversation" about where to place the keg and the band, he stated that the appellant "was down there with us when we were setting everything up." R. 15.
B.D.S. stated that "the largest number of people at the party at any one time" was "possibly two hundred." R. 17. According to B.D.S., he was acquainted with most of the people attending the party and "[n]ot more than two or three" of those in attendance were adults. R. 17. Although B.D.S. attempted to collect $3.00 from everyone attending the party who drank beer, he did not check anyone's identification. B.D.S. testified that the appellant was present at the party at times: "He'd come downstairs for a while and then he'd go back upstairs. He kind of wandered back and forth." R. 19. B.D.S. stated that the appellant did not collect money, check anyone's identification, or attempt to exercise any control over the dispensing of the beer.
The keg of beer that B.D.S. had brought to the appellant's house ran out at some point in the evening. B.D.S. testified that he gave the appellant money to purchase another keg and that the appellant "went back into Auburn and bought another keg." R. 20. Beer from this second keg was dispensed at the party. According to B.D.S., "[p]robably over a hundred and less than two hundred people" became intoxicated at the party. R. 28. "Just about all of" those who became intoxicated were minors. Id.
Sometime after the second keg was tapped, students from a rival high school arrived and began drinking beer. Subsequently, a fight broke out in the appellant's yard. During this fight, a vehicle was damaged and one person received injuries requiring medical treatment. The appellant called the sheriff's department and the *Page 440 party broke up upon the arrival of a deputy sheriff.
The appellant, who was then a graduate student at Auburn University, made two statements to a sheriff's department investigator concerning the party held at his residence. In the first statement, which was given on December 9, the appellant acknowledged that he "knew some people [at the party] were underage," although he maintained that he "didn't know who was drinking." CR. 37. In the second statement, which was given December 10, the appellant told the investigator that
"[b]ack on December 8, 1990, [B.D.S.] asked me to go get a keg of beer. He gave me about $51.00 and me and a guy, I don't know his name, went in his car to the A P in Auburn. I bought the keg of beer and the guy put it in the back seat and we went back to the party at my house. I don't know who took the keg inside." CR. 38.
S.G., D.P.R., R.T.B., and K.M., the children named in the four complaints against the appellant, all testified that they attended the party at the appellant's house and that they drank beer while they were there. R. 32, 42, 53, 64. At the time of the party, S.G. and K.M. were 17 years old and D.P.R. and R.T.B. were 16 years old. None of the four were adjudicated delinquent on the basis of having possessed or consumed alcohol in violation of §
As we observed in Part II, the complaints charge the appellant with contributing to the delinquency of the named children by aiding them in the commission of the misdemeanor offense of possessing alcohol. The State's evidence was clearly sufficient to support convictions for such charges — the appellant knew that underage teenagers were present at the party; he purchased a keg of beer at the request of one of the underage teenagers; the four children named in the complaints all appeared to have arrived at the party after the keg purchased by the appellant was tapped; and all four were, at least temporarily, in possession of the beer they consumed. While the appellant may not have known at the outset what type of party he had agreed to permit and who might attend, he was clearly in possession of this knowledge by the time he purchased the second keg.
It is not necessary that the named children have been adjudicated delinquent on the basis of possessing or consuming alcohol. Alabama subscribes to the majority view that a defendant may be convicted of contributing to the delinquency of a child regardless of whether the child actually commits a delinquent act or has been adjudicated delinquent on the underlying offense. See Smithson v. State,
For the reasons stated above, the judgments of the circuit court are affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
All Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Robert Wayne Senf v. State.
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- Published