State v. Shay
State v. Shay
Opinion
*721 Scott W. Shay appeals his convictions of rape and aggravated criminal sodomy of S.P. He raises two issues on appeal. First, Shay claims that because the State failed to present sufficient evidence that S.P. was unconscious or physically powerless, one of *722 the alternative means of committing both charges, both convictions must be reversed. Second, Shay claims the district court erred in overruling his objections to jury instructions discouraging the jury from exercising its power of nullification. *80 For reasons we will explain more fully in this opinion, we agree with Shay's first claim, but only as to his aggravated criminal sodomy conviction. Thus, we affirm Shay's rape conviction, but we reverse his aggravated criminal sodomy conviction and remand for a new trial on that charge, only on the alternative means supported by sufficient evidence in the first trial.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Shay, who was 49 years old at the time of the incident, was a long-time friend of S.P.'s family. S.P. considered Shay a father figure and spent every other weekend with him. S.P. would discuss things with Shay which she did not feel comfortable speaking to her mother about, such as her relationship with boys.
In early August 2015, S.P., her friend, T.M., and Shay went camping to celebrate S.P.'s 16th birthday. To start the day, they went swimming at a nearby lake. After swimming, S.P., T.M., and Shay went to Shay's farm to pick up his horse trailer, which he had converted into a camper. The group then went to a campground at a local lake.
After arriving at the campground, the girls asked Shay to go get them some alcohol from the liquor store. Shay returned with a couple six-packs of Twisted Lemonade, S.P.'s favorite alcoholic drink. The group began drinking and S.P. later testified that she had four to seven alcoholic lemonades.
Later, S.P. decided that she wanted to go skinny dipping in the lake. S.P., T.M., and Shay walked to the water and the girls asked Shay to turn around while they took off their clothes. Shay did not swim with the girls. After swimming for a little while, the girls told Shay to turn around so they could get out of the water and put their clothes back on.
Around midnight, S.P. decided to go to sleep and she laid down on her stomach in the camper. S.P. testified she was wearing pajama pants but no underwear. Shay put a blanket over S.P. and she *723 fell asleep. At some point, T.M. also laid down in the camper and fell asleep. S.P. testified that she later woke up and discovered that her pajama pants had been pulled down to her thighs and that Shay was touching her vagina with his fingers. S.P. testified that she just laid still and did not move because she was "scared." S.P. could feel Shay penetrating her vagina with his fingers. According to S.P., Shay also put his mouth on her vagina. S.P. testified that Shay also unsuccessfully tried to penetrate her vagina with his penis. These activities lasted for about 15 minutes.
After Shay stopped touching S.P., she became enraged and started yelling at Shay while kicking and hitting him. T.M. woke up when S.P. started yelling. S.P. told T.M. that Shay had raped her and told her to call her mom. S.P. testified that she started leaving the camper and Shay followed, asking her what was wrong. Eventually, T.M.'s mom arrived and drove the girls to T.M.'s house. S.P. contacted her mom, told her what happened, and went to the police station. S.P. also participated in a rape examination.
When the police interviewed Shay, he at first said nothing happened. But he later admitted to penetrating S.P.'s vagina with his fingers. He also admitted S.P. was sleeping when the touching started.
The State charged Shay with one count of rape committed while S.P. was "overcome by force or fear" or, in the alternative, committed while S.P. was "unconscious or physically powerless." The State also charged Shay with one count of aggravated criminal sodomy committed under the same two alternatives.
Shay did not testify at trial, but he did not contest the allegations that he digitally penetrated S.P. and put his mouth on her vagina. Shay's defense at trial was that the sexual activity was consensual. The district court instructed the jury on each alternative means of rape and aggravated criminal sodomy for which Shay was charged. After deliberating, the jury found Shay guilty of both crimes. The district court sentenced Shay to 165 months' imprisonment on each count, to be served consecutively. Shay appealed.
ALTERNATIVE MEANS CLAIM
Shay first argues there was insufficient evidence to support his *724 convictions. He does *81 not dispute there was sufficient evidence to prove that each crime was committed while S.P. was "overcome by force or fear." But he claims that because the State failed to present sufficient evidence that S.P. was unconscious or physically powerless, one of the alternative means of committing both charges, both convictions must be reversed.
The State argues that it presented sufficient evidence that S.P. was unconscious or physically powerless when the crimes were committed. The State asserts that "unconscious" and "physically powerless" are options within a means of committing each crime and that there was sufficient evidence to support each option.
Determining whether a statute presents alternative means of committing a crime involves statutory interpretation and construction, subject to unlimited appellate review.
State v. Brown
,
In
State v. Wright
,
Sometimes it is hard to tell whether a statute presents alternative means of committing a crime or whether the statute merely presents options within the same means of committing the crime. The Kansas Supreme Court sets forth the appropriate test in
Brown
,
Shay does not argue there was insufficient evidence to prove that the rape and aggravated criminal sodomy occurred while S.P. was overcome by force or fear. But he argues there was insufficient evidence to prove the crimes were committed while S.P. was unconscious or physically powerless. The State correctly asserts that "unconscious" and "physically powerless" are options within a means of committing each crime, so the State only needs to prove one of them, not both, to support Shay's convictions.
Sufficiency of the evidence supporting the rape conviction
The State presented sufficient evidence to support Shay's conviction of rape while S.P. was unconscious or physically powerless. This court has had held that being asleep is the same as being unconscious in the context of aggravated sexual battery. See
State v. Johnson
, No. 107,015,
The same logic applies to Shay's rape charge. S.P. testified that she fell asleep in the camper and later woke up and discovered that Shay had pulled her pajama pants down and was touching her vagina with his fingers. S.P. testified that Shay was inserting his fingers into her vagina as soon as she woke up, meaning that the digital *726 penetration began when she was still sleeping. Plus, Shay admitted to the police that he penetrated S.P.'s vagina with his fingers and that she was sleeping when the touching started. So there is direct evidence that S.P. was sleeping, or unconscious, when the rape occurred. When viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the State, there was sufficient evidence that Shay raped S.P. while she was unconscious or physically powerless.
Sufficiency of the evidence supporting the aggravated criminal sodomy conviction
Whether there was sufficient evidence to support Shay's conviction of aggravated criminal sodomy is a closer question. There was no evidence presented in the case showing that Shay touched S.P.'s vagina with his mouth while she was still asleep. As we just discussed, S.P. testified that when she woke up, Shay was already inserting his fingers into her vagina. S.P. also testified that during the 15 minutes that she laid there awake, Shay put his mouth on her vagina. But S.P.'s testimony fails to establish that Shay sodomized S.P. while she was still sleeping or unconscious. And there was no other evidence that Shay committed this act while S.P. was sleeping, as Shay denied to the police that he ever touched S.P.'s vagina with his mouth.
On whether S.P. was physically powerless, she admitted that she was capable of moving and that Shay "wasn't holding [her] down or anything." But she testified that she did not move because she was "scared." The State argues that S.P. "froze and was physically powerless during the rape and aggravated criminal sodomy."
To support its position, the State cites
State v. Parker
,
In Parker , the victim was truly "physically powerless" to resist her attacker because of her age and frailty compared to the defendant's size. That is not the situation we have here. S.P. admitted that she was capable of moving and that Shay "wasn't holding [her] down or anything." But she testified that she did not try to move out of fear.
K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 21-5504(b)(3), the statute defining aggravated criminal sodomy, lists two pertinent alternative means of committing the crime, when the victim is (A) overcome by force or fear; or (B) unconscious or physically powerless. We agree with Shay that allowing a victim's testimony that she was too scared to move to serve as evidence of physical powerlessness would eliminate any distinction between the two alternative means of committing the crime. This is not a situation like the one in
Parker
; here, there was no evidence presented that S.P. was physically powerless in relation to Shay. See
Parker
,
Even when viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the State, there was no evidence that S.P. was unconscious or physically powerless when Shay touched her vagina with his mouth. As a result, there was insufficient evidence to support Shay's conviction of aggravated criminal sodomy under this alternative means of committing the *83 crime and his conviction on that count must be reversed.
Remedy
We are not reversing Shay's aggravated criminal sodomy conviction because there was insufficient evidence that he committed the crime; indeed, Shay does not dispute there was sufficient evidence to prove that the crime was committed while S.P. was overcome by force or fear. But the district court instructed the jury that it could find Shay guilty of aggravated criminal sodomy based on an alternative means not supported by the evidence, i.e., the crime
*728
was committed while S.P. was unconscious or physically powerless. Our Supreme Court has held an alternative means error can never be harmless and always requires reversal of the defendant's conviction.
Wright
,
In
State v. Shaw
,
"Finally, the State makes a brief argument that challenges the disposition utilized by the Court of Appeals. The panel simply reversed Owen's convictions. The State contends that Owen was not acquitted of forgery, but rather she was convicted based upon sufficient evidence of only two of the charged three alternative means. Therefore, the State contends that the appropriate disposition is to reverse the conviction and remand for a new trial on the alternatives for which there was sufficient competent evidence in the first trial. That way, we can preserve the concept that it is the jury's function to determine guilt, while still preserving the concept that a defendant has a right to jury unanimity. We agree. Owen was not acquitted of forgery, albeit she was not legitimately convicted of having endorsed the check."2015 WL 1309978 , at *7.
Based on
Shaw
and
Owen
, we reverse Shay's aggravated criminal sodomy conviction and remand for a new trial only on the alternative means supported by sufficient evidence in the first trial, i.e., the crime was committed while S.P. was overcome by force or fear. The State cannot retry Shay for aggravated criminal sodomy committed while S.P. was unconscious or physically powerless because there was insufficient evidence to support that conviction in the first trial, and a retrial on this alternative means is barred by double jeopardy. See
*729
Burks v. United States
,
JURY INSTRUCTIONS ON NULLIFICATION
Shay also claims the district court erred in overruling his objections to jury instructions discouraging the jury from exercising its power of nullification. The State responds that the jury instructions given by the district court correctly stated the law and did not amount to reversible error.
"When analyzing jury instruction issues, we follow a three-step process: '(1) determining whether the appellate court can or should review the issue,
i.e.
, whether there is a lack of appellate jurisdiction or a failure to preserve the issue for appeal; (2) considering the merits of the claim to determine whether error occurred below; and (3) assessing whether the error requires reversal,
i.e.
, whether the error can be deemed harmless.' [Citation omitted.]"
State v. McLinn
,
Shay challenges four instructions given by the district court as erroneous, included below with his proposed language in italics and the language he proposed be removed struck through:
• "Now that you have been chosen as jurors for this trial, you are required to decide this caseonlyon the evidence admitted. At the end of the case, I will instruct you on the law that youmustmay apply to the evidence in order to reach a verdict."
• "It is my duty to instruct you in the law that applies to this case, and it is your duty to consider and follow all of the instructions. Youmustmay decide the case by applying these instructions to the facts as you find them."
• "The test you must use in determining whether [the defendant] is guilty or not guilty is this: If you have a reasonable doubt as to the truth of any of the claims required to be proved by the State ..., you must find [the defendant] not guilty. If you have no reasonable doubt as to the truth of each of the claims required to be proved by the State ..., youshouldmay find [the defendant] guilty."
*730 • "Your verdictmustmay be foundedentirelyupon the evidence admitted and the law as given in these instructions."
The first instruction set forth above was given orally by the district court as a preliminary instruction at the beginning of the trial and is found at Pattern Instructions for Kansas (PIK) Crim. 4th 50.010. The second instruction set forth above was given by the district court at the end of the trial as written instruction number 1 and is found at PIK Crim. 4th 50.040. The third instruction set forth above was given by the district court at the end of the trial as part of written instruction number 6 and is found at PIK Crim. 4th 51.010. The fourth instruction set forth above was given by the district court at the end of the trial as part of written instruction number 14 and is found at PIK Crim. 4th 68.010.
The district court rejected Shay's modification to each jury instruction, and Shay has preserved the objections for review. Thus, we can move to the second step of the analysis and determine whether error occurred below by deciding whether the requested instructions were factually and legally appropriate.
We will start with Shay's requested reasonable doubt instruction. As Shay points out in his brief, the Kansas Supreme Court has recognized that the jury has the power of jury nullification. See
State v. Osburn
,
But using the word
should
is a different story. This court has rejected Shay's argument about the reasonable doubt instruction in several opinions. See
State v. Allen
,
As to Shay's other objections, the court must not direct a verdict through the jury instructions.
Smith-Parker
,
*85
Shay's requested instructions were not legally appropriate. The instructions given here did not sidestep the holding in
Smith-Parker
, none of the instructions flew "too close to the sun of directing a verdict for the State." See
Smith-Parker
, 301 Kan. at 164,
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with directions.
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