State v. Titus

2012 UT App 231, 286 P.3d 941, 715 Utah Adv. Rep. 32, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 234, 2012 WL 3511466
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 16, 2012
Docket20110012-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2012 UT App 231 (State v. Titus) 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
State v. Titus, 2012 UT App 231, 286 P.3d 941, 715 Utah Adv. Rep. 32, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 234, 2012 WL 3511466 (Utah Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

VOROS, Associate Presiding Judge:

{1 Defendant Mark Scott Titus was convicted in a bench trial of two counts of lewdness involving a child, a class A misdemeanor offense under Utah Code section 76-9-702.5. See Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-702.5 (2008). On appeal, he contends that the evidence was insufficient to support the trial court's judgment. In addition, he challenges the trial court's findings as inadequate. We affirm.

I. Sufficiency of Evidence

12 Titus first contends that the evidence was insufficient to support his convictions. "Because we are asked to review the results of a bench trial for sufficiency of evidence, we will only reverse if the trial court's findings were clearly erroneous." State v. Briggs, 2008 UT 75, ¶ 10, 197 P.3d 628. "When reviewing a bench trial for sufficiency of the evidence, we must sustain the trial court's judgment unless it is 'against the clear weight of the evidence, or if [we] otherwise reach[ ] a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.' '' State v. Gordon, 2004 UT 2, ¶ 5, 84 P.3d 1167 (quoting State v. Goodman, 763 P.2d 786, 786-87 (Utah 1988) (alterations in original)). "Additionally, 'in those instances in which the trial court's findings include inferences drawn from the evidence, we will not take issue with those inferences unless the logic upon which their extrapolation from the evidence is based is so flawed as to render the inference clearly erroneous.' '' Briggs, 2008 UT 75, ¶ 11, 197 P.3d 628 (quoting Glew v. Ohio Sav. Bank, 2007 UT 56, ¶ 18, 181 P.3d 791).

T3 Titus was convicted of two counts of lewdness involving a child in a private place.

A person is guilty of lewdness involving a child if the person ... does any of the following to, or in the presence of a child who is under 14 years of age:
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(b) exposes his or her genitals, the female breast below the top of the areola, the buttocks, the anus, or the pubic area:
(i) in a public place; or
(ii) in a private place:
(A) under cireumstances the person should know will likely cause affront or alarm; or
(B) with the intent to arouse or gratify the sexual desire of the actor or the child....

Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-702.5(1). Here, the undisputed evidence shows that Titus exposed his genitals in the presence of boys under fourteen years of age in a private place, his own home. The State does not contend that he did so with the intent to arouse or gratify anyone's sexual desire. The point of contention is whether he did so under circumstances that he should have known would likely cause affront or alarm.

14 Two friends of Titus's son testified at trial. 1 They were eight or nine years old at the time of the offense. The first boy testified that he would hang out at Titus's house and that Titus "would walk around the house naked, and tell [him] to take [his] clothes off." One time Titus was on the couch watching a TV program showing naked men and women having sex. 2 Titus said, "If you want to watch this you have to take your clothes off." The boy testified, "I went behind the couch and got naked, and then I went and sat on the couch and put a pillow on me." The boy was "kind of" seared, "not too much," just "mostly uncomfortable"; but, he testified, "I didn't want [Titus] to come *943 over and take my clothes off or come touch me." 3

5 The other friend testified that he lived down the street from Titus. Asked whether anything happened at Titus's house to make him feel uncomfortable, the boy responded, "They would turn on porn and we would watch it every time." 4 Asked to explain what he meant by "porn," the boy responded that men and women were "making love" on TV. "Mostly every time" this happened, Titus would be sitting on the couch naked. The boy was also undressed. He could not recall Titus saying anything to him before he undressed; "it just happened, I guess," he testified.

16 Titus contends that "[the trial court's findings and the evidence fail to support that Mr. Titus was nude under cireum-stances that he should have known would likely cause affront or alarm." Titus argues that he "did not sexualize his nudity," but that "he dealt with it as a matter of fact." For example, he did not touch himself, One boy, he notes, "did not even claim to be uncomfortable" with the nudity. The other did not convey his discomfort to Titus. Titus argues that he consequently "had no reason to know that his nudity in the home would likely cause affront or alarm...." Thus, he asserts, his conviction "is based solely on inferences that give rise to only remote or speculative possibilities of guilt." State v. Brown, 948 P.2d 337, 344 (Utah 1997).

T7 Titus's argument is not without force: the State agrees "that people are entitled to be nude in the privacy of their own homes and that there may even be occasions when adults can be nude in the presence of children without committing a crime." In addition, the facts of this case are markedly less egregious than, for example, those in Roosevelt City v. Anderson, 2008 UT App 464U, 2008 WL 5257188 (mem.), another case involving exposure in front of children. In Roosevelt we wrote, "It should seem obvious that exposing one's genitals" and touching women's exposed breasts "would likely cause affront or alarm when done a few feet from three children ages six through eleven." Id. at para. 6 (omissions in original).

{8 Nevertheless, we cannot agree with Titus that he "did not sexualize his nudity." He exposed himself while viewing sexually-oriented material on television and while the boys were themselves undressed. One of the boys had no explanation for his nakedness; the other testified that Titus insisted upon it as a condition of the boy's watching the TV program. 'These troubling details distinguish this case from the more innocuous situations to which Titus compares it, such as male nudity in locker room showers, see Jenkins v. Commonwealth, 308 S.W.3d 704, 713-14 (Ky.2010) (reversing an indecent exposure conviction where defendant showered in the same locker room shower stall with two small boys after swimming, absent "evidence that the removal of Jenkins' swimming trunks had any effect on either of them").

I 9 Furthermore, the trial court found that the boys' testimony "was credible" and that "there was sufficient consistency between the testimony of the witnesses, specifically the three children, in terms of the elements or the evidence that satisfies the elements of the crime to find that Mr. Titus is guilty" of lewdness involving a child. We defer to the trial court's assessment of witness credibility.

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Bluebook (online)
2012 UT App 231, 286 P.3d 941, 715 Utah Adv. Rep. 32, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 234, 2012 WL 3511466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-titus-utahctapp-2012.