G.D.B. v. State

440 P.3d 706
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 22, 2019
DocketNo. 20170257-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 440 P.3d 706 (G.D.B. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G.D.B. v. State, 440 P.3d 706 (Utah Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

MORTENSEN, Judge:

¶1 G.D.B., a minor, appeals the juvenile court's adjudication finding him delinquent on one count of sexual abuse of a child for touching his four-year-old niece's vagina and trying to put his penis "in [her] bum." G.D.B. argues that the State failed to prove the touching was done with the intent to arouse or gratify G.D.B.'s sexual desires, as required by Utah Code section 76-5-404.1. We affirm.

BACKGROUND1

Revelation of Abuse

¶2 G.D.B. was seven-and-a-half years older than the four-year-old victim, his niece (Victim).2 G.D.B. and Victim spent a lot of time together. Victim's mother (Mother) babysat G.D.B. and took him on outings with Victim. On most weekends, Victim stayed with her grandmother (Grandmother), who is G.D.B.'s mother. Victim usually slept in Grandmother's room, but she claimed she occasionally slept in the living room, where G.D.B. also slept. Although Grandmother was always nearby in the apartment, G.D.B. and Victim were sometimes alone in the same room together.

¶3 One evening in February or March 2016, Victim and Mother were watching a television show about people trying to survive naked in the wild. Victim asked Mother, "[W]hy are their private parts fuzzed out?" Mother answered, "[B]ecause private parts are ... for them to see and not for the world to see." Victim responded, "[W]ell, [G.D.B.] always wants to see my private parts." Victim then revealed to Mother that G.D.B. touched her vagina and assured Mother that she was telling the truth.

¶4 After hearing Victim's account, Mother no longer allowed Victim to stay at Grandmother's apartment. While she missed visiting Grandmother, Victim did not want to see G.D.B. Victim said that she felt "safe" around G.D.B. only when others were present because "she knew [G.D.B.] wouldn't [touch her inappropriately] in front of somebody else." Mother reported the incident to Child Protective Services (CPS).

¶5 About a month later, while using the bathroom on a camping trip, Victim asked Mother how boys urinate. Mother explained that boys have different body parts. Victim responded, "I know they have a penis .... [G.D.B.] always tried to stick his penis in me." When Mother asked where on her body, Victim indicated her vagina. Mother also disclosed this information to CPS.

Investigation of Abuse

¶6 In June 2016, a special victim's investigator (Investigator) interviewed Victim at the Children's Justice Center (CJC) about the abuse she had revealed to Mother. According to Investigator, Victim was "developmentally able to communicate accurately about the situation." Victim said that G.D.B. touched "her private parts," defined by Victim as her vagina and buttocks, more than once. Victim revealed that G.D.B. touched her with his hands over her clothing. Victim also stated that she repeatedly tried to stop G.D.B. from touching her, but G.D.B. refused to stop.

*708¶7 Shortly after the CJC interview, Victim received a medical examination conducted by a nurse practitioner (Nurse) specializing in sexual abuse exams. Victim told Nurse that G.D.B. had touched "her front part" with his hands under her clothes and that the touching hurt.

¶8 Although Victim's physical examination was normal and showed no signs of abuse, Nurse determined that Victim "had a significant history that was positive for sexual abuse" based on Victim's answers to Nurse's questions. Nurse clarified that a normal exam does not rule out sexual abuse, because "95 percent of children who make allegations of sexual abuse have normal exams."

¶9 Based on the CJC interview and the medical exam, the State filed a petition alleging that G.D.B. had sexually abused Victim in violation of Utah Code section 76-5-404.1. The relevant subsection of the statute provides:

An individual commits sexual abuse of a child if, under circumstances not amounting to rape of a child, object rape of a child, sodomy on a child, or an attempt to commit any of these offenses, the actor touches the anus, buttocks, pubic area, or genitalia of any child, the breast of a female child, or otherwise takes indecent liberties with a child, with intent to cause substantial emotional or bodily pain to any individual or with the intent to arouse or gratify the sexual desire of any individual regardless of the sex of any participant.

Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-404.1(2) (LexisNexis Supp. 2018).3

Testimony at Trial

¶10 At trial, Victim testified that G.D.B. "put his finger in [her] vagina .... [o]ne time" and "his penis in [her] bum .... all the time, every single time" she would stay at Grandmother's apartment. This abuse occurred in the living room, where G.D.B. slept and where Victim claimed that she sometimes also slept.

¶11 G.D.B. admitted that he and Victim were sometimes left alone together. But he denied that he and Victim slept in the same room. He also said that he had never touched Victim "inappropriately," played "house" or "doctor" with her, accidentally touched her private parts, changed her clothes, helped her use the bathroom, given her a bath, or seen her naked.

¶12 Grandmother testified that Victim and G.D.B. never slept in the same room together, Victim was never alone with G.D.B., and Victim never told her that G.D.B. touched her.4

Disposition in the Juvenile Court

¶13 G.D.B. made two points in closing argument. First, he argued that Victim was not a credible witness, alleging that inconsistencies in Victim's statements at the CJC interview, during the medical examination, and at trial discredited her testimony. Second, G.D.B. asserted that the State had failed to prove the sexual intent element:

[ Utah Code section 76-5-404.1(2) ] has an intent element. It's not just touching. There has to be touching the breast, the anus, the butt of a child, with the intent to arouse or gratify, to cause substantial bodily, emotional or bodily pain. There's been no evidence whatsoever that the State has put on that has met that intent element, zero evidence. There is absolutely no physical evidence.

Counsel concluded by arguing that the State had failed to meet its burden of proof generally. Counsel, however, never asserted that G.D.B.'s age or immaturity affected his ability to form a sexual intent and never specifically asked the juvenile court to consider his age in rendering its decision.

¶14 In its closing argument, the State countered that Victim's testimony was credible even though some of the "details [got] mixed up." The State asserted that "inconsistencies in [Victim's] statement about what happened ... can be attributed to how many *709times this happened to her, and how she in her mind, her five-year-old mind, she can't distinguish, and she can't articulate the different times this happened, because it happened so many times."

¶15 The State further argued that sexual intent could be inferred from the circumstances of the touching, and it emphasized that G.D.B. offered no innocent explanation for any touching.

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Bluebook (online)
440 P.3d 706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gdb-v-state-utahctapp-2019.