State v. Smith

729 So. 2d 648, 1999 WL 74614
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 9, 1999
Docket97-KA-1393
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 729 So. 2d 648 (State v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Smith, 729 So. 2d 648, 1999 WL 74614 (La. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

729 So.2d 648 (1999)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Mitchell E. SMITH

No. 97-KA-1393.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

February 9, 1999.

*649 Byrne W. Dyer, III, Gretna, Louisiana, for defendant/appellant, Mitchell E. Smith.

Harry F. Connick, District Attorney, Karen Godail Arena, Assistant District Attorney, of Orleans Parish, New Orleans, Louisiana, for the State of Louisiana/appellee.

MURRAY, Judge.

The appeal of Mitchell E. Smith, who was convicted of crime against nature, presents a question that has not been addressed directly by any Louisiana court: Whether La.Rev. Stat. 14:89 A(1), which criminalizes private, non-commercial sexual activity between consenting adults, violates the right to privacy expressly guaranteed by Article 1, § 5 of the Louisiana Constitution.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Mitchell Smith was charged with one count of aggravated crime against nature, and one count of simple rape of Yvonne Lauro. Mr. Smith pled not guilty to both charges and waived a jury trial. The matter was tried to the court on October 28, 1996, and taken under advisement. On November 8, 1996, the trial court rendered its verdict, finding Mr. Smith not guilty of simple rape and not guilty of aggravated crime against nature, but guilty of the responsive verdict of "simple" crime against nature. Mr. Smith's motion in arrest of judgment was denied, and he waived any sentencing delay. The court sentenced him to three years in the Department of Corrections, but suspended the sentence. It placed Mr. Smith on two years active probation, and ordered him to pay fines. This appeal followed.

On appeal Mr. Smith assigned four errors, all relating to the constitutionality of La.Rev. Stat. 14:89 A(1). Pursuant to La.Rev.Stat. 13:4448, this Court notified The Honorable Richard Ieyoub, Attorney General for the State of Louisiana, that the constitutionality of a statute had been challenged. The State was afforded an opportunity to file a brief with regard to that issue, but did not do so.

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS:

On September 25, 1995, Yvonne Lauro contacted Det. Joseph Goines of the New Orleans Police Department sex crimes unit, and alleged that she had been sexually assaulted on the previous day. Ms. Lauro took Det. Gaines to various locations where she had been with the man who allegedly assaulted her, whom she knew only as "Mitch." At Jack's Motel Det. Goines obtained a license plate number that enabled him to trace the car's registered owner, Mitchell E. Smith. The detective obtained a photograph of Mr. Smith and compiled a photographic line-up, from which Ms. Lauro identified Mr. Smith.

At trial it was established that Ms. Lauro and Mr. Smith each went to Brewski's Lounge in the Village Square Shopping Center in Chalmette on the afternoon of September 24, 1995. They were seated next to one another and began talking. They had at least one drink together before driving to Gabby's, a lounge in New Orleans East. From there they went to Jack's Motel on Chef Menteur Highway.

Ms. Lauro testified that she was "feeling badly," apparently from too much alcohol.[1]*650 She admitted that she agreed to go to the motel, but testified that she did so only because Mr. Smith assured her that he did not want to have "any kind of sexual relations." However, when they got to the room he began taking her clothes off, over her protests. Ms. Lauro testified that she cried and screamed rape, but was unable to move. Mr. Smith then performed oral and anal sex on her, forced her to have vaginal intercourse and to perform oral sex on him. Some time later he helped her dress. She felt sick and vomited on the floor. Mr. Smith helped her to his car, and drove her home.

Because she did not want to be lectured by her mother, Ms. Lauro went directly to her room after Mr. Smith dropped her off. She called her boyfriend's cousin and then her boyfriend. She did not contact the police until the next day when she called the St. Bernard Sheriff's Office and her cousin with the New Orleans Police Department. She testified that she did not want her boyfriend to be mad because she was drinking and about what she did, so she told him a "story that would sound better." Neither her boyfriend nor his cousin were sympathetic, so she called her ex-husband, who suggested that she take a bath to relax and calm down.

Ms. Lauro acknowledged that she had lied to the police when she told them that she had not agreed to go to the motel and thought Mr. Smith was taking her home. She testified that she told the police that because:

... that's what I had told my boyfriend that same night that I was raped because I was afraid that my boyfriend was going to lecture me and that he would break up with me, so that's what I told my boyfriend, and I also told my boyfriend's cousin so that they wouldn't have two separate stories. I didn't want my boyfriend to be mad at me. I wanted some comfort, I didn't want to be lectured.

Mr. Smith's version of events was consistent with Ms. Lauro's up to the point that the couple left Gabby's to go to Jack's Motel. He testified that he asked Ms. Lauro to go to the motel to "fool around," and she agreed. He also testified that they kissed in the car on the way to the motel, as they had on the way from Brewski's to Gabby's. When they arrived at the motel, they each undressed. They began kissing. Mr. Smith denied that Ms. Lauro yelled rape, and testified that she stopped him only to ask if he had a condom. When he told her that he did not, she told him that she did not think she could "go through with this." At that point, he testified that he pulled away. Ms. Lauro then performed oral sex on him. He denied having performed oral sex on her. He became aroused, and attempted to have intercourse with Ms. Lauro but stopped because "she just wasn't in the mood." He testified that he got a Coke for her so that she could take her epilepsy medication. She took the medicine, and then vomited on the floor. He helped her to clean herself. Ms. Lauro offered to pay for the room, and told him that she wanted to stay there, but he insisted on taking her home because he was concerned that she would have a seizure. She walked from the room to the car on her own. He stopped to buy a bottle of water for her on the way home. Ms. Lauro pointed out her house, and he dropped her off.

A maintenance man from the motel testified that Ms. Lauro and Mr. Smith were at the motel on September 24, 1995. They sat in their car while he finished cleaning their room. They then got out of the car and went into the room. He testified that Mr. Smith had his arm around Ms. Lauro, "walking her." Later he and another motel employee cleaned the room, which had vomit on the floor.

A waitress who was working at Gabby's on September 24, 1995, testified that she was the only waitress on duty that evening, and she waited on Mr. Smith and a lady. The couple stayed thirty minutes to an hour. She testified that the lady had only one drink while there, and did not appear intoxicated to her. When questioned by the court as to how she could remember the details of the day of the incident, she explained that she heard about Mr. Smith's arrest from her boss two days later.

An expert in pharmacy testified that the medications Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
729 So. 2d 648, 1999 WL 74614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-smith-lactapp-1999.