Sickel v. State

363 P.3d 115, 2015 Alas. App. LEXIS 181, 2015 WL 7873714
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedDecember 4, 2015
Docket2480 A-11393
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 363 P.3d 115 (Sickel v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sickel v. State, 363 P.3d 115, 2015 Alas. App. LEXIS 181, 2015 WL 7873714 (Ala. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Robin Lee Sickel and her romantic partner, Jeff Waldroupe, owned three horses. They kept these horses on land owned by Waldroupe's father, In mid-December 2010, these horses were found to be starving and without shelter. The only food and water available to them was frozen solid. One of the horses was more than 200 lbs underweight; it had collapsed and had lain there so long that its head and the side of its body were frozen to the ground. The horse had to be euthanized.

Sickel was convicted of eruelty to animals under AS 11.61.140(a). This statute declares that it is a crime if a person, "with criminal negligencel,] fails to care for an animal" and this failure to provide care leads to the animal's death or causes the animal severe physical pain or prolonged suffering. AS 11.61.140(2)(2).

Sickel now appeals her conviction. She points out that, as a legal matter, a person who fails to prevent a harm does not act "with criminal negligence" unless the person has an applicable duty of care-a legal duty to try to prevent the specified harm. 1

*117 The statute at issue in this case, AS 11,.61.140(a), does not define which persons have a duty to care for particular animals. The statute simply declares that any person who violates this duty (acting with at least criminal negligence) is guilty of a crime if their breach of duty leads to the animal's death or causes the animal severe physical pain or prolonged suffering. Because the statute fails to define who bears a duty to care for animals, Sickel argues that the statute is unconstitutionally vague and that her conviction for eruelty to animals is therefore unlawful.

It is true that the eruelty to animals statute fails to specify which persons have a duty to care for particular animals. But we are authorized to look to the common law to remedy this omission. As we explain in this opinion, we hold that the statute applies to all persons who have undertaken responsibility for the care of an animal-either because they are the owner of the animal, or because they have agreed to kennel or board the animal, or because they have otherwise assumed responsibility for the animal's care.

And even though AS 11.61.140(g)(@) is silent regarding this principle, the parties ree-ognized that this principle controlled the outcome of Sickel's case; they actively litigated whether Sickel had undertaken personal responsibility for the care of the horses, and their final arguments to the jury emphasized that this question was dispositive of Sickel's guilt or innocence. We therefore affirm Sickel's conviction.

The scope of the duty of care under AS 11.61.140(a)(2)

- Sickel was charged with violating subsection (a)(2) of the eruelty to animals statute. This clause of the statute applies to a person who "fails to care for an animal". In other words, the actus reus of this crime is defined as an omission-a failure to act.

And as we explained earlier, the law does not punish a person's faflure to act unless that failure to act constitutes a breach of that person's legal duty. See AS 11.81.900(b)(483) (defining "omission"). ° normally, a person has no duty to take affir— mative action to prevent a erime or to protect others from harm. 2 But the common law recognizes several instances in which 'one person's relationship to another person cere-ates a duty of protection or care. Thus, under the common law, parents have a duty to protect their minor children, ship captains must come to the aid of their crew and their passengers, and jailors must protect the inmates in their eustody. In general, see Wayne R. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law (2nd edition 2008), § 62(a)(1), Vol. 1, pp. 437-88.

The common law also recognizes that a duty of care can arise by contract or agreement, or by any other voluntary assumption of care. Thus, a person employed as a lifeguard at a beach or swimming pool assumes a duty of care toward the swimmers, and a person employed as a crossing guard at a school has a duty of care toward the students. In general, see LaFave, § 6.2(a)(8), Vol. 1, pp. 489-440. And if someone voluntarily assumes responsibility for a helpless person (even in the absence of compensation or formal agreement), this likewise gives rise to a duty to protect the helpless person from further harm. - LaFave § 6.2(a)(4), Vol. 1, p. 440. O9

In past Alaska cases, these common-law principles of responsibility have been applied to define the seope of criminal statutes-even when those statutes do not expressly speak of liability based on a failure to act. In both Wills v. State, 57 P.3d 688, 693-97 (Alaska App.2002), and Michael v. State, 767 P.2d 193, 197-98 (Alaska App.1988), 3 this Court *118 held that a parent can properly be convicted of assault for failing to take reasonable steps to protect their child when they know that the child is in danger of being assaulted by the other parent.

Here, we are dealing with a statute that expressly defines the prohibited conduct as a failure to act,. But a failure to act can not be punished unless it constitutes a breach of duty. To define the seope of the applicable duty, we conclude that we should turn to the common-law principles that we have been discussing.

The underlying aim cof AS 11.61.140(a)(2) is to protect animals from ser- . ious neglect by the people who have assumed responsibility for their care. Typically, these people will be the animals' owners. But there will be times when other people assume responsibility for the care of an animal, either in conjunction with the owners or in lieu of the owners. Thus, the real question is not to identify the persons who have legal ownership of the animal, but rather the persons who have taken on the duty of caring for them. |

This is borne out by the corresponding law of other jurisdictions. For example, both California and Rhode Island define the duty as falling on any person "having the charge: or custody of any animal, either as owner or otherwise". 4 Texas law declares that the duty of care applies to "[any] animal in the person's custody". 5

While the owners. of animals may often be the ones who are in charge. of providing their daily care, this is not always true. Thus, in State v. Yorczyk, 167 Conn. 434, 356 A.2d 169, 170 (1974), the court held that it was reversible error to instruct the jury that the owner of an animal is criminally Hable for its mistreatment or neglect, even when the owner did not have charge and custody of the animal and did not know that it was being mistreated or neglected. See also Muhlkauser v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
363 P.3d 115, 2015 Alas. App. LEXIS 181, 2015 WL 7873714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sickel-v-state-alaskactapp-2015.