State v. Petion
State v. Petion
Opinion
**475
Whether an assault results in physical injury or
serious
physical injury can have profound ramifications for the victim. Consequently, substantially greater punishment may be imposed for the latter injury than the former.
1
Although this court has acknowledged "the difficulty of drawing a precise line as to where physical injury leaves off and serious physical injury begins" (internal quotation marks omitted);
State
v.
Ovechka
,
The defendant, Divenson Petion, appeals from the Appellate Court's judgment affirming his conviction of two counts of assault in the first degree in violation of
**476
General Statutes § 53a-59 (a) (1).
2
See
State
v.
Petion
,
The Appellate Court's opinion sets forth the facts that the jury reasonably could have found; see
State
v.
Petion , supra,
Shortly before the May, 2012 incident giving rise to the criminal charges at issue, Bran resumed a friendship with a former boyfriend, Robert Raphael. On the day of the incident, Bran invited Raphael to her apartment, and he arrived in the early afternoon. In addition to Bran and her two children, her cousin's two children were present. Later that afternoon, there was a knock on the door. Bran answered the door, expecting that it was her cousin arriving to pick up her children, but it was the defendant. He asked to see his daughter. Bran explained that it was not a good time because the child was asleep.
The defendant then saw Raphael. The defendant became angry, pushed Bran aside, and entered the apartment. He began to shout at Raphael to get out of the apartment. Raphael did not want to leave Bran and the children alone with the defendant in his agitated state, and told the defendant that he was staying. In response, the defendant began pushing and punching Raphael. As Raphael retreated further into the apartment, the defendant pursued him. The defendant pulled out a knife from his pocket and slashed Raphael across the face, cutting from Raphael's ear to along his jaw bone, deeply enough to damage a facial nerve and cut a branch of his jugular vein. Bran inserted herself between the two men during the confrontation, hoping to stop the defendant from injuring Raphael. In the process, the defendant cut Bran on her left arm. Raphael, who was bleeding profusely, ran out of the **478 apartment, got in his car, and drove himself to the hospital. 3
The defendant repeatedly apologized to Bran and then left the apartment. Bran was not immediately aware that she had been cut. She realized that she had been injured when her son came downstairs, alerted Bran that she was bleeding, and grabbed a towel to cover her wound. Shortly after the incident, Bran's cousin arrived to pick up her children, and she drove Bran to the hospital.
When she arrived at the hospital, Bran had an abrasion and two lacerations on her left arm, one measuring three-quarters of one centimeter and another measuring four centimeters. 4 The smaller laceration was treated with a single suture. The larger *996 laceration was closed with ten sutures, which left a scar after the laceration healed.
The record reveals the following additional facts. The state charged the defendant with two counts of assault in the first degree in violation of § 53a-59 (a) (1). The first count alleged that, with the intent to cause serious physical injury to Raphael, the defendant caused such injury to Raphael by means of a dangerous instrument. The second count alleged that, with the intent to cause serious physical injury to Raphael, the defendant **479 caused such injury to Bran by means of a dangerous instrument.
At trial, the defendant presented an alibi witness, a family friend. At the close of evidence, the defendant moved for a judgment of acquittal on the charge of first degree assault as to Bran. The court denied the motion. Neither the defendant nor the state elected to have the jury charged on any lesser included offense. The jury returned a guilty verdict on both counts. On each count, the trial court imposed a seventeen year term of imprisonment, followed by three years of special parole, to run concurrently.
The defendant appealed from the judgment of conviction to the Appellate Court. He argued, in relevant part, that there was insufficient evidence to support a conviction of first degree assault as to Bran because the state had failed to demonstrate beyond a reasonable doubt that she suffered a " 'serious physical injury.' "
5
We thereafter granted the defendant's petition for certification to appeal, limited to the following issue: "In rejecting the defendant's claim that there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction of assault in the first degree in violation of ... § 53a-59 (a) (1) with
**480
respect to ... Bran, did the Appellate Court properly conclude that a jury reasonably could have found that the one and one-half inch scar on her forearm constituted serious disfigurement and, therefore, a serious physical injury?"
State
v.
Petion
,
In their responses to this question, the parties devote significant portions of their analyses to a comparison between those injuries that the Appellate Court has deemed sufficient to support a jury's finding of serious disfigurement in other cases and Bran's injury in the present case. Although they disagree as to which side of the line the present case falls, they agree that juries would be aided in making this determination by factors to guide them. 6
We do not find the comparative approach taken by the parties to be useful here, particularly because the Appellate
*997
Court had not examined the meaning of "serious disfigurement" in any of these cases,
7
and this court previously had given no guidance on the matter. Thus, before we can consider the evidence, we must ascertain the meaning of the legal standard against which we assess that evidence. See
State
v.
Drupals
,
The defendant was convicted of violating § 53a-59 (a) (1), which provides in relevant part: "A person is guilty of assault in the first degree when ... [w]ith intent to cause serious physical injury to another person, he causes such injury to such person or to a third person by means of ... a dangerous instrument ...." 8 The Penal Code in turn defines certain essential terms. " 'Physical injury' means impairment of physical condition or pain ...." General Statutes § 53a-3 (3). " 'Serious physical injury' means physical injury which creates a substantial risk of death, or which causes serious disfigurement, serious impairment of health or serious loss or impairment of the function of any bodily organ ...." General Statutes § 53a-3 (4).
These definitions plainly reflect a legislative intention to establish a material degree of difference between mere physical injury and serious physical injury. This differentiation is reflected in the severity of punishment attendant to each. Assault resulting in physical injury, unless inflicted by discharge of a firearm, carries a maximum term of imprisonment of five years, whereas assault resulting in serious physical injury carries a maximum term of imprisonment of twenty years. See General Statutes §§ 53a-35a (6) and (7), 53a-59 (b) and 53a-60 (b). Thus, "[a]lthough it may often be difficult to distinguish between the two, such a distinction must be drawn; a person can be found guilty of assault in the first degree under ... § 53a-59 [a] [1] only if he 'causes serious physical injury to another person.' "
**482
(Emphasis in original.)
State
v.
Rossier
,
We need not attempt, in the present case, to draw comprehensive distinctions for general application. Our focus is on one type of serious physical injury-serious disfigurement. See General Statutes § 53a-3 (4).
We begin by examining the foundational term "disfigurement." Our Penal Code does not define this term. Neither did New York's Penal Code, from which our code's relevant definitions and many of its core provisions, such as our assault provisions, were drawn. See, e.g.,
State
v.
Courchesne
,
Although this court has not previously considered whether this statutory definition would apply to the Penal Code, we note that every other jurisdiction that has considered the term's meaning as applied to penal statutes generally or assault provisions specifically, including New York, has adopted a definition of disfigurement that largely conforms to our workers' compensation definition. 9 Therefore, we conclude that this **484 meaning should apply to our Penal Code. See General Statutes § 1-1 (a) (directing that words that have acquired *999 particular and appropriate meaning in law be construed as such and otherwise be construed in accordance with commonly approved usage).
We next consider the difference between disfigurement and
serious
disfigurement. At the time of the Penal Code's adoption, the common meaning of "serious," specifically in relation to injury, was "having important or dangerous possible consequences ...." Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary, supra, p. 792. Other jurisdictions have applied similar definitions to "serious" as a modifier to "disfigurement" in their penal statutes:
10
"grave,
*1000
or great";
**485
Williams
v.
State
,
Thus, just as inflicting serious physical injury is deemed to be conduct of significantly greater culpability than inflicting physical injury, it is evident that " 'to disfigure ... seriously' must be to inflict some harm substantially greater than the minimum required for 'disfigurement.' "
People
v.
McKinnon
,
We do not view this change to mean that the duration of the injury is not a proper consideration under § 53a-59 (a) (1). The term "serious" is broader than "prolonged" in that it covers more than only the temporal dimension, and it would appear that the legislature decided that the broader term was all that was necessary. See
State
v.
Bledsoe
,
In the same way that permanence is not a necessary condition for serious
*1002
disfigurement; cf. General Statutes § 53a-59 (a) (2) (intent and effect of disfiguring another person "seriously
and permanently
" is one basis of assault in first degree [emphasis added] );
13
neither is it a sufficient condition, in and of itself, to establish serious disfigurement. We are mindful that some of our Appellate Court's decisions appear to suggest that, whenever a defendant inflicts an injury that leaves a permanent scar, the evidence would be sufficient to permit the trier of fact to determine that serious disfigurement exists. See, e.g.,
State
v.
Griffin
,
Factors identified by other jurisdictions as relevant to the seriousness of a disfigurement in the form of a scar include its permanence, but also its location, size, and general appearance. See, e.g.,
State
v.
Roper
,
*1003
Levin
v.
State
,
**491
Sloan
v.
State
, Docket No. 49A02-1002-CR-195,
On the basis of the foregoing analysis, we discern the following distinction between disfigurement and serious disfigurement. "Disfigurement" means impairment of or injury to the beauty, symmetry or appearance of a person that renders the person unsightly, misshapen or imperfect, or deforms the person in some manner, or otherwise causes a detrimental change in the external form of the person. "Serious disfigurement" is an impairment of or injury to the beauty, symmetry or appearance of a person of a magnitude that substantially detracts from the person's appearance from the perspective of an objective observer. In assessing whether an impairment or injury constitutes serious disfigurement, factors that may be considered include the duration of the disfigurement, as well as its location, size, and overall appearance. Serious disfigurement does not necessarily have to be permanent or in a location that is readily visible to others. 14 The jury is not bound by any strict formula in weighing these **492 factors, as a highly prominent scar in a less visible location may constitute serious disfigurement, just as a less prominent scar in a more visible location, especially one's face, may constitute serious disfigurement.
With these principles in mind, we turn to the defendant's claim that the evidence in the present case is insufficient to establish that Bran suffered a "serious physical injury" in the form of "serious disfigurement." Although ordinarily a factual question for the jury; see, e.g.,
State
v.
Almeda , supra,
"In reviewing the [legal] sufficiency of the evidence concerning this element of assault in the first degree, our task is to construe the evidence in the light most favorable to sustaining the jury's verdict, and then to determine whether any rational trier of fact could have
**493
found that the harm suffered rose to the level of a serious physical injury under the statute." (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
State
v.
Almeda , supra,
The evidence regarding Bran's injuries principally came from the testimony of her treating physician at the hospital and two sets of photographs of the injured area: one set taken shortly after medical treatment was rendered and the other set taken thirty months later, at the time of trial. Each set included one photograph magnifying the injuries at close range and one photograph in which Bran displayed the injured area of her arm, taken from a sufficient distance to capture the area from Bran's upper torso to her head. Bran's physician testified that the scar would remain in its present condition.
Bran testified that she was unaware that she had been cut until her son told her that she was bleeding. Her only testimony relating to the appearance of her injury was her agreement that the photographs taken after treatment accurately depicted her condition at that time and her estimation of the approximate size of the scar at the time of trial. No testimony was provided regarding the impact of the scar on her appearance. The state opted not to have Bran display her scar to the jury directly, presenting the contemporaneous photographs instead.
The evidence collectively established the following undisputed facts. Immediately following the incident, Bran had an approximately 1.38 inch (three and one-half centimeters) abrasion and an approximately 0.30 inch (three-quarters of one centimeter) laceration just above her left elbow. Just below her left elbow, on her forearm, Bran had an approximately 1.57 inch (four centimeter) laceration. The smaller laceration was **494 closed with a single suture; the larger laceration was closed with ten sutures. The closed lacerations appear quite narrow. 15 By the time of trial, the larger of the two lacerations had left a scar approximately the same length as the laceration, although it appears to be slightly wider in the magnified close-up than when sutured. The scar is a slightly lighter tone than the surrounding skin. No other injury is apparent.
Our application of the factors previously identified as relevant to assessing whether the victim has sustained a serious disfigurement establishes that Bran sustained a disfigurement, in the form of a permanent scar. That scar is in a location that could be seen if Bran wears anything shorter than a three-quarter sleeve top. The scar is not, however, in a prominent location such as her face or neck.
16
It is relatively
*1005
small in size, uniform in shape (a straight line), and otherwise unremarkable in its general appearance. Although the scar is visible if one looks for it, in the photograph that appears to have been taken from a distance of normal social interaction, its appearance is not such that one's eye naturally would be drawn to it. Serious disfigurement requires something more than visibility, as it must be visible to mar one's appearance and, hence, meet the threshold for disfigurement. See
Akaran
v.
State
, supra,
This evidence compels the conclusion that the disfigurement is not of a magnitude that objectively could be found to substantially detract from Bran's appearance. We hold that the evidence is not legally sufficient to meet the threshold for serious disfigurement.
We note that, while no two cases are precisely the same, other jurisdictions considering a single scar of roughly similar size, location, and/or appearance as the one in the present case have concluded that the evidence did not rise to the level of serious disfigurement. See, e.g.,
Vo
v.
State
,
These cases reflect that, even though no bright line can be drawn between simple disfigurement and serious disfigurement, the courts have a role in ensuring that the evidence meets a minimum threshold that distinguishes **497 the two. When reasonable minds could disagree as to the side of the line on which the injury falls, it would be improper for this court to act as a seventh juror and to substitute its own view for that of the jury. However, this is not such a case.
Although the state framed its disfigurement argument to the jury solely in reference to Bran's scar at the time of trial, it asserts in its brief to this court that the jury also was free to consider the appearance of Bran's injuries when inflicted, and properly could have rendered its verdict on that basis. We agree that, in assessing the seriousness of the disfigurement, the jury was not limited to considering the injury in its final, fully healed state. See, e.g.,
State
v.
Barretta , supra,
We emphasize that, in concluding that the evidence was not legally sufficient to establish that the defendant **498 caused Bran to suffer serious disfigurement, we do not intend to trivialize the assault or the physical legacy of it that remains with Bran. However, it is clear that the state failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed assault in the first degree by inflicting serious physical injury on Bran with a dangerous instrument. Therefore, the defendant's conviction of that charge must be reversed.
II
In light of this determination, we must consider the state's contention that we should not direct a judgment of acquittal on this charge but, instead, that
*1007
the judgment should be modified to reflect the highest lesser included offense that requires only physical injury, not serious physical injury, i.e., assault in the second degree in violation of § 53a-60 (a) (2),
18
and the defendant should be resentenced accordingly. The state concedes that, under
State
v.
LaFleur
, supra,
Our decision in
LaFleur
hewed closely to the analysis applied in
State
v.
Sanseverino
,
Three years later, in
LaFleur
, this court similarly was faced with the question of whether instructional error on an element
*1008
of assault in the first degree required the conviction to be reversed or the judgment to be modified to the lesser included offense of assault in the second degree when the jury had not been instructed on that lesser offense.
State
v.
LaFleur
, supra,
The majority cited several reasons why, in the absence of those unusual circumstances, a court should not modify a conviction when the state did not request a charge on the lesser included offense: "First, an appellate court does not sit as a [fact finder] in a criminal case and should avoid resolving cases in a manner [that] appears to place the appellate court in the jury box....
**501 "Second ... this view preserves the important distinction between an appellate determination [that] the record contains sufficient evidence to support a guilty verdict and a jury determination [that] the [s]tate proved its case beyond a reasonable doubt....
"Third, when [a jury instruction on the lesser offense has been given] ... it can be said with some degree of certainty that a [sentencing remand] is but effecting the will of the fact finder within the limitations imposed by law ... and ... that the appellate court is simply passing on the sufficiency of the implied verdict. When, however, no instruction at all has been offered on the lesser offense, second guessing the jury becomes far more speculative....
"Fourth, when the jury could have explicitly returned a verdict on the lesser offense, the defendant is well aware of his potential liability for the lesser offense and usually will not be prejudiced by the modification of the judgment from the greater to the lesser offense....
"Fifth, adopting a practice of remanding for sentencing on a lesser included offense when that offense has not been submitted to the jury may prompt the [s]tate to avoid requesting or agreeing to submit a lesser included offense to the jury....
"Sixth, the [s]tate would obtain an unfair and improper strategic advantage if it successfully prevents the jury from considering a lesser included offense by adopting an all or nothing approach at trial, but then on appeal, perhaps recognizing [that] the evidence will not support a conviction [of] the greater offense, is allowed to abandon its trial position and essentially concede [that] the lesser included offense should have been submitted to the jury....
"Seventh ... [t]he defendant may well have [for-gone] a particular defense or strategy due to the trial
**502
[court's] rejection of a lesser included offense." (Internal
*1009
quotation marks omitted.)
The majority's analysis in
LaFleur
resulted in two notable clarifications of the
Sanseverino
factors. First, the majority effectively determined that it would presume that the state's failure to request an instruction on the lesser included offense was strategic unless the evidentiary deficiency resulted from an unforeseeable change in the law, not merely the resolution of an issue of first impression, such that the state could not have anticipated the change. Id., at 147,
The dissent in
LaFleur
argued that the
Sanseverino
factors were never intended to apply as a general framework for assessing whether modification of the judgment is proper in the absence of a jury charge on the lesser included offense. Id., at 166-67,
Having thus provided a comprehensive review of the precedent that the state seeks to overrule, we must consider whether the prudential doctrine of stare decisis counsels against that action. Stare decisis "counsels that a court should not overrule its earlier decisions unless the most cogent reasons and inescapable logic require it.... Stare decisis is justified because it allows for predictability in the ordering of conduct, it promotes the necessary perception that the law is relatively unchanging, it saves resources and it promotes judicial efficiency." (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Graham
v.
Commissioner of Transportation
,
*1010
(Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Sepega
v.
DeLaura
,
We are not persuaded that the state has provided a sufficient justification for overruling LaFleur . The state's reasons mirror those made by the dissent in LaFleur , which did not carry the day. The state does not argue that the split among both federal and state courts on this issue has evolved to a greater consensus favoring modification. The very fact that reasonable jurists disagree on this matter suggests that LaFleur has not been proven "clearly" wrong.
Nor is there any evidence that the rule in LaFleur is unworkable. If the state wants to avoid the possibility that the evidence will be deemed insufficient to support the charge, whether by the jury or a reviewing court, it can simply request an instruction on any lesser included offense supported by the evidence. In fact, we agree with the dissent in LaFleur that the practical effect of the majority's analysis is a bright line rule.
Reliance interests also favor application of the holding in
LaFleur
to the present case. Both parties were on notice at trial that
LaFleur
was the controlling law. Knowing this, the state chose to gamble that the evidence would be found factually and legally sufficient to support a conviction of assault in the first degree as
**505
to both victims, despite the obvious disparity in the seriousness of their injuries. It is fair to presume, under these circumstances, that the defendant believed that the evidence was insufficient to support a charge of assault in the first degree as to Bran and that, in the absence an instruction on a lesser included offense, either (a) the jury would find him not guilty; see
Fair
v.
Warden
,
We therefore conclude that the defendant's conviction of assault in the first degree as to Bran must be
**507
reversed. In light of this determination, one further observation is warranted. "This court has endorsed the ... aggregate package theory of sentencing.... Pursuant to that theory, we must vacate a sentence in its entirety when we invalidate any part of the total sentence. On remand, the resentencing court may reconstruct the sentencing package or, alternatively, leave the sentence for the remaining valid conviction or convictions intact.... Thus, we must remand this case for resentencing on the sole [count] on which the defendant stands convicted." (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
State
v.
LaFleur
, supra,
The judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed only with respect to the conviction of assault in the first degree as to Bran and the case is remanded to that court with direction to remand the case to the trial court with direction to render judgment of acquittal on that charge, to vacate the defendant's sentence, and to resentence him on the remaining charge;
*1012 the judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed in all other respects.
In this opinion KAHN and ECKER, Js., concurred.
PALMER, J., concurring in the judgment.
I agree with and join part I of the majority opinion, 1 in which the majority concludes that there was insufficient evidence of serious physical injury to support the conviction of the defendant, Divenson Petion, on one of two counts of assault in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-59 (a) (1). Although I concur in the judgment, I do not join part II of the majority opinion, in **508 which the majority rejects the state's request to modify the judgment of conviction to reflect the defendant's conviction of the lesser included offense of assault in the second degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-60 (a) (2) in light of this court's reversal of the defendant's conviction of first degree assault on the basis of evidentiary insufficiency.
I continue to maintain my view that
State
v.
LaFleur
,
That having been said, LaFleur was the governing law at the time of trial in the present case, and the defendant was entitled to rely on that law when he opted against seeking a lesser included offense instruction. Therefore, even if I would favor overruling LaFleur, I would do so prospectively only. Accordingly, I agree that the defendant's conviction on one of two of the first **509 degree assault counts should be reversed and concur in the judgment.
MULLINS, J., with whom ROBINSON, C.J., and D'AURIA, Js., join, dissenting.
I agree with much of the well reasoned analysis set forth in today's decision. In particular, I agree with the definitions that it articulates and the factors that it identifies as relevant to assessing whether a disfigurement rises to the level of "serious disfigurement." General Statutes § 53a-3 (4). Certainly, this area was in need of clarification, which this court now has provided. I do not agree, however, that, under *1013 the clarification provided today, no reasonable juror could find that the injury the defendant, Divenson Petion, inflicted on the victim, Rosa Bran, rose to the level of serious disfigurement. The source of my disagreement stems from the fact that the question of whether this injury constituted a serious disfigurement is a quintessential jury question. Under the facts of the present case, I cannot conclude that, as a matter of law, no reasonable juror could find that Bran's principal injury, namely the larger cut that required ten stitches to close and left a one and one-half inch permanent scar on her forearm, rose to the level of serious disfigurement.
Indeed, although I might not view Bran's injury as one that substantially detracts from her appearance, I cannot conclude that no reasonable juror could conclude otherwise. The injury is permanent, of a sufficient size, and in a sufficiently visible location that others might view it as a significant cosmetic deformity. I do not intend to suggest that this court has no role in reviewing such findings. A disfigurement that is not permanent, or one that is permanent but far less visible, might clearly fail to meet the threshold. That is not the present case. Thus, I would conclude that the evidence presented in this case was sufficient for a reasonable **510 juror to determine that Bran's injury "is an impairment of or injury to the beauty, symmetry or appearance of a person of a magnitude that substantially detracts from the person's appearance from the perspective of an objective observer." Accordingly, I would affirm the judgment of the Appellate Court.
Finally, because I believe the defendant's conviction should be upheld, I need not reach the issue of whether this court should overrule
State
v.
LaFleur
,
An exception, not relevant to the present case, arises when a defendant inflicts physical injury by means of the discharge of a firearm. See footnote 2 of this opinion.
General Statutes § 53a-59 (a) provides: "A person is guilty of assault in the first degree when: (1) With intent to cause serious physical injury to another person, he causes such injury to such person or to a third person by means of a deadly weapon or a dangerous instrument ; or (2) with intent to disfigure another person seriously and permanently, or to destroy, amputate or disable permanently a member or organ of his body, he causes such injury to such person or to a third person; or (3) under circumstances evincing an extreme indifference to human life he recklessly engages in conduct which creates a risk of death to another person, and thereby causes serious physical injury to another person; or (4) with intent to cause serious physical injury to another person and while aided by two or more other persons actually present, he causes such injury to such person or to a third person; or (5) with intent to cause physical injury to another person, he causes such injury to such person or to a third person by means of the discharge of a firearm." (Emphasis added.)
Raphael was in critical condition when he was admitted to the hospital.
State
v.
Petion
, supra,
Bran's treating physician testified that Bran's vital signs-blood pressure and respiratory rate-were "grossly abnormal" when he first had contact with her but acknowledged that the elevated levels were a function of adrenaline when someone is injured. He offered no testimony as to whether or how long these levels were sustained; nor did he suggest that these levels created a substantial risk of death, or caused a serious impairment of health or serious loss or impairment of the function of any bodily organ. See General Statutes § 53a-3 (4) (defining serious physical injury). Bran was not admitted to the hospital for observation and received no treatment other than sutures for the lacerations.
The defendant challenged the sufficiency of the evidence only with respect to the assault charge involving Bran. The defendant contended that prosecutorial improprieties deprived him of a fair trial with respect to the charges of assault as to both Raphael and Bran. The Appellate Court rejected that claim; see
State
v.
Petion
, supra,
Although the trial court's charge provided no such factors to guide the jury, the defendant does not raise a claim of instructional error.
In one earlier case, cited by the Appellate Court in the present case; see
State
v.
Petion
, supra,
" 'Dangerous instrument' means any instrument, article or substance which, under the circumstances in which it is used or attempted or threatened to be used, is capable of causing death or serious physical injury ...." General Statutes § 53a-3 (7).
See, e.g.,
Akaran
v.
State
, Docket No. A-8690,
Penal laws in the majority of jurisdictions also define serious physical or bodily injury to include serious disfigurement, although many of those jurisdictions add a durational term (e.g., protracted, prolonged, permanent). See Ala. Code § 13A-1-2 (14) (2015) ("serious and protracted disfigurement");
Other jurisdictions that define serious physical injury to include disfigurement but do not use the term "serious" include the following:
The legislature repealed this definition when it decided to limit the circumstances under which compensation would be provided for serious disfigurement or scarring, adding instead language to the statute prescribing those particular limitations. See Public Acts 1993, No. 93-228, §§ 1, 19, codified at General Statutes (Rev. to 1995) § 31-308 (c) (precluding compensation "for any scar or disfigurement which is not located on [A] the face, head or neck, or [B] any other area of the body which handicaps the employee in obtaining or continuing to work").
Although we have no evidence that this substantive consideration motivated the legislature's decision to eliminate "prolonged," the omission of any specific durational requirement raises a question about the impact that surgery has in terms of minimizing the period of disfigurement. In some jurisdictions that require prolonged or permanent disfigurement, courts have considered the seriousness of the condition only after surgery. See, e.g.,
State
v.
Malufau
,
This court has similarly concluded that other forms of serious physical injury need not be permanent. See
State
v.
Ovechka , supra,
The mere fact that a scar is in a location that may be seen only by someone with whom the victim has an intimate relationship would not preclude a finding of serious disfigurement.
The photograph magnifying the laceration at close range shows loose threads from bandages that were removed to reveal the wounds. The width of those threads appears to be roughly the same width as the laceration. No evidence was proffered regarding the depth of the lacerations or their appearance prior to suturing.
We disagree with the Appellate Court's conclusion that the location of Bran's scar made it "no less observable than a facial scar."
State
v.
Petion
, supra,
The state did not produce evidence to establish how long the laceration remained in the condition reflected in the photographs or when the sutures were removed, a fact from which such an inference arguably might be drawn. Although the sutures undoubtedly make Bran's appearance less attractive than after they were removed, the state has not claimed that the jury could properly assess the seriousness of the injury on the basis of the treatment method selected by the victim's physician (e.g., closing a wound with glue, which would not be visible, versus with sutures or some other visible means). Our review of case law from other jurisdictions has not revealed any authority supporting that proposition.
General Statutes § 53a-60 (a) provides in relevant part: "A person is guilty of assault in the second degree when ... (2) with intent to cause physical injury to another person, the actor causes such injury to such person or to a third person by means of a deadly weapon or a dangerous instrument other than by means of the discharge of a firearm ...."
See footnote 18 of this opinion for the text of § 53a-60 (a) (2). General Statutes § 53a-61 (a) provides in relevant part: "A person is guilty of assault in the third degree when: (1) With intent to cause physical injury to another person, he causes such injury to such person or to a third person ... or (3) with criminal negligence, he causes physical injury to another person by means of a deadly weapon, a dangerous instrument or an electronic defense weapon."
That request to charge was for an instruction under the subsection requiring that "the actor recklessly causes serious physical injury to another person by means of a deadly weapon or a dangerous instrument"; (emphasis added) General Statutes § 53a-60 (a) (3) ; whereas the state seeks to modify the judgment to reflect a conviction under the subsection requiring that, "with intent to cause physical injury to another person, the actor causes such injury to such person or to a third person by means of a deadly weapon or a dangerous instrument other than by means of the discharge of a firearm ...." General Statutes § 53a-60 (a) (2). The former is a class C felony because it requires serious physical injury, whereas the latter is a class D felony. See General Statutes § 53a-60 (b).
Although I agree with and join part I of Justice McDonald's opinion, and concur in the judgment, for reasons stated hereinafter, I do not join part II of Justice McDonald's opinion. Therefore, that opinion, in which Justices Kahn and Ecker join, is technically not a majority opinion but, rather, an opinion announcing the judgment of the majority of this court. In the interest of simplicity, however, I refer to that opinion as the majority opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.