State v. Raleigh
This text of 686 So. 2d 621 (State v. Raleigh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE of Florida, Petitioner,
v.
Michael RALEIGH, Respondent.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Belle B. Turner, Assistant Attorney General, Daytona Beach, for Petitioner.
Gregory W. Eisenmenger and Robert R. Berry of Amari, Theriac & Eisenmenger, P.A., Cocoa, for Respondent.
GRIFFIN, Judge.
The State of Florida seeks certiorari to quash orders of the lower court which have allowed the defendant below, Michael Raleigh, to assert consent as a defense to charges of lewd assault in violation of section 800.04, Florida Statutes (1993).
Raleigh was sixteen or seventeen years old at the time of the charged offenses, both alleged victims were age fifteen.[1] Raleigh moved to dismiss the charges, asserting that section 800.04, Florida Statutes (1993)[2] is *622 unconstitutional as applied to him because it precludes his raising as a defense the consent of the victims.
The lower court entered an order in each case finding that section 800.04, Florida Statutes, is facially constitutional; however, relying on the Supreme Court of Florida's reasoning and holding in B.B. v. State, 659 So.2d 256 (Fla.1995), the lower court held the statute to be unconstitutional as applied to a sixteen-year-old defendant, presumably because he is a minor. The lower court granted Raleigh's motion to dismiss "to the extent that the statute prohibits the use of the victim's consent as a defense to the crime charged." The lower court held that evidence of the victim's consent would be admissible, and that the jury instructions would be modified accordingly.
In Jones v. State, 640 So.2d 1084 (Fla.1994), the supreme court squarely held that section 800.04, Florida Statutes, is constitutional because the state's compelling interest in protecting children outweighed a minor's right to privacy. The court reasoned that the statute's disallowance of consent of the fourteen-year-old victims as a defense did not render the statute unconstitutional under the privacy provision of the state constitution. The court reiterated what it had said in Schmitt v. State, 590 So.2d 404 (Fla.1991), cert. denied, 503 U.S. 964, 112 S.Ct. 1572, 118 L.Ed.2d 216 (1992):
[A]ny type of sexual conduct involving a child constitutes an intrusion upon the rights of that child, whether or not the child consents ... [S]ociety has a compelling interest in intervening to stop such misconduct.
Jones, 640 So.2d at 1086. The court wrote that "[t]he rights of privacy that have been granted to minors do not vitiate the legislature's efforts and authority to protect minors from conduct of others." Id. at 1087.
Raleigh distinguishes Jones on the basis that the Jones defendants were adults, whereas the defendant in B.B. was a minor. The statute at issue in B.B. was section 794.05, Florida Statutes, which prohibits carnal intercourse with unmarried persons under age eighteen of previously chaste character. Although some of the "right to privacy" rationale for the B.B. decision and some of the language used in that opinion may have invited the challenged rulings of the lower court in this case, Jones is clear and its reasoning and holding both were reaffirmed in B.B. 659 So.2d at 258. B.B. plainly is limited to its statutory target. In B.B., the court noted the state's compelling interest in "protecting children from sexual activity before their minds and bodies have sufficiently matured to make it appropriate, safe and healthy for them ... and that this interest pertains to one minor engaging in carnal intercourse with another...."[3] The B.B. court held that section 794.05 did not further that compelling interest by the least intrusive means. The focus of the legislation at issue in this case is the protection of all minors in clear, neutral, logical terms. In B.B., the problem was the way section 794.05 was drawn; the B.B. court concluded the weaknesses of the statute could not overcome the minor's rights. Whatever the well from which the high court found B.B.'s constitutional right to engage in consensual sex with another minor may have sprung, such a right is of limited force in the face of a compelling *623 state interest. This was recognized in B.B. itself. Id. at 259.
It should by now be clear through experience, as recognized in Jones, that there is no constitutionally protected right to the defense of consent when any person commits a lewd act on a minor. The difficulty of defining exactly what "consent" consists of when the "consenting" party is a child, what might be deemed the communication of "consent" by a minor, how a minor would be expected (or required) to communicate lack of consent and determining the earliest age at which "consent" would be valid are just some of the obvious reasons why the legislature has determined this defense cannot apply in such cases. Moreover, the courts of Florida have not shown themselves adept in fairly defining "consent" in the context of sexual encounters with minors,[4] nor is it clear that the definition of "consent" in section 794.011(1)(a), Florida Statutes, could be imported into chapter 800 by judicial fiat. The statutory provision removing the defense of consent from the crimes identified in section 800.04 is clearly constitutional where the perpetrator is eighteen years old and the victim is fourteen. It cannot be of any constitutional or logical significance to the child victim if the perpetrator is only seventeen or sixteen ... or ten. To suggest that a minor has a constitutional right to have "consensual" sex with another minor until this right magically disappears on the minor's eighteenth birthday is to misread B.B.[5] We grant the writ in the consolidated appeals and vacate the order authorizing the consent defense.
WRIT GRANTED.
HARRIS, J., concurs and concurs specially, with opinion.
THOMPSON, J., dissents, with opinion.
HARRIS, Judge, concurring specially:
I agree with Judge Griffin that the fact that this case involves section 800.04, Florida Statutes, as opposed to section 794.05, Florida Statutes, brings it within the ambit of Jones v. State, 640 So.2d 1084 (Fla.1994). In Jones, the supreme court in reviewing a prosecution under section 800.04 focused on the privacy rights of the victim (a minor) and held that the State has sufficient "compelling interest" to prohibit sexual activity with such minor even with the minor's consent. In B.B. v. State, 659 So.2d 256 (Fla.1995), relied on by Respondents, the supreme court focused on the privacy right of the minor defendant to have sex with another minor and held that the State lacked sufficient compelling interest to prosecute such minor under the provisions of section 794.05.
It should be noted that the protected class in section 794.05 is "any unmarried person, of previous chaste character, who at the time of such intercourse is under the age of eighteen years of age ..." The defendant in B.B., assuming that he was of previous chaste character or that such condition need not be present in the perpetrator, was also within the protected classhe was unmarried and under eighteen years of age. However, even if the defendant herein is a minor, he is not within the protected class established by section 800.04.
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686 So. 2d 621, 1996 WL 660937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-raleigh-fladistctapp-1996.