Sawatzky v. City of Oklahoma City
This text of 1995 OK CR 69 (Sawatzky v. City of Oklahoma City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
OPINION
Kenneth B. Sawatzky was found guilty by a jury on November 14, 1994, of Offering to Engage in an Act of Lewdness in violation of [786]*786Oklahoma City Municipal Code 1993, Chapter 30, Section 30-152, in Oklahoma City Municipal Court, Case No. 94-4237631. Sa-watzky was formally sentenced on December 1, 1994. He was fined $250.00 and ordered to pay $105.00 in court costs. Sawatzky applied to place his appeal on the Accelerated Docket of this Court pursuant to Rule 11.3 of the Rules of the Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals, 22 O.S.Supp.1995, Ch. 18, App. The appeal was thereafter assigned to the Accelerated Docket. On February 13, 1995, Sawatzky filed a Motion for Removal from the Accelerated Docket that was subsequently denied.
This case is neither about the regulation of conduct between consenting adults in the privacy of their bedrooms, nor the legal status to be provided to homosexual persons. Fundamentally, this case is about whether Oklahoma City may legally prohibit public solicitations for private non-commercial acts of sodomy. Sawatzky solicited an act of lewdness1 in a public place from a police officer. The act solicited was intended to take place in private and Sawatzky and the officer are members of the same gender. In this context it is clear that Sawatzky is not entitled to relief.
In his first proposition of error Sawatzky claims that Sections 30-151 and 30-152 violate his right to privacy as guaranteed under the Oklahoma Constitution. This Court has yet to reach the question of whether the right to privacy extends to private non-commercial sodomy between consenting adults of the same gender,2 and the United States Supreme Court has expressly refused to extend the equivalent right under the federal constitution to individuals who engage in such conduct.3 We decline to reach the issue here because this case involves a public solicitation and nothing more.
In his second and third propositions Sa-watzky claims that Sections 30-151 and 30-152 violate his right to equal protection. The second proposition is based on the state constitution and the third proposition is based on the federal constitution. The right to equal protection guaranteed under Oklahoma’s Constitution has consistently been interpreted as coextensive with the right to equal protection guaranteed under the federal constitution.4 Consequently, we address these propositions together.
Sawatzky invites this Court in his second and third propositions to determine whether same sex adults may lawfully engage in private non-commercial consensual sodomy. We declined to reach this issue in Post because the facts of that case did not warrant such a determination.5 Likewise, the facts of Sawatzky’s case do not warrant a determination of this issue and we do not address it.
[787]*787This case involves a public solicitation for acts defined by Oklahoma City as lewd under Section 30-151. Section 30-151(l)(b),6 creates an exception for married persons in the definition of lewdness. The married person exception is the only distinction between groups contained in the text of Sections 30-151 and 30-152. Because Sawatzky is not a member of a suspect or quasi-suspect class, we will examine Sawatzky’s equal protection claim under the rational basis test. Among other things Sections 30-151 and 30-152 are designed to protect persons from being asked by others to engage in sexual activity. Protecting citizens from solicitations for sexual acts is a legitimate governmental interest.7 The distinction found in Section 30-151, exempting married persons from the definition of lewdness, logically recognizes that such solicitations may be a consequence of the marital relationship.8 Therefore, we hold that the married person exception is rationally related to a legitimate governmental interest and does not violate the right to equal protection guaranteed by the Oklahoma and federal constitutions.9
In his final proposition of error Sa-watzky contends that Sections 30-151 and 30-152 violate his rights under Article 1, Section 2 of the Oklahoma Constitution. Essentially Sawatzky’s claim is that Sections 30-151 and 30-152 are impermissibly founded on religious beliefs in violation of the establishment clause. This claim is unsupported by the record and is denied.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1995 OK CR 69, 906 P.2d 785, 66 O.B.A.J. 3722, 1995 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawatzky-v-city-of-oklahoma-city-oklacrimapp-1995.