United States v. Bygrave

46 M.J. 491, 1997 CAAF LEXIS 61
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedAugust 28, 1997
DocketNo. 96-0702
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 46 M.J. 491 (United States v. Bygrave) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Bygrave, 46 M.J. 491, 1997 CAAF LEXIS 61 (Ark. 1997).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

ARTERTON, District Judge:1

Appellant was tried by a general court-martial, military judge alone, on March 23 and 25, 1992, and was convicted of two specifications of assault with a means likely to cause death or grievous bodily harm, in violation of Article 128(b)(1), Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 928(b)(1). Appellant was sentenced to a bad-conduct discharge, confinement for 4 years, total forfeitures, and reduction to pay grade E-l. On June 26, 1992, the convening authority approved the sentence and, with the exception of the bad-conduct discharge, ordered it executed. The Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review (now the Court of Criminal Appeals2) initially ordered a new convening authority’s action, 40 MJ 839 (1994), subsequent to which the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the findings and the approved sentence in an unpublished opinion dated January 31, 1996. We granted review of the following issue:

WHETHER THE FINDING OF GUILTY TO AGGRAVATED ASSAULT CAN STAND IN LIGHT OF THE FACT THAT THE ALLEGED VICTIM CONSENTED TO HAVING SEXUAL INTERCOURSE WITH APPELLANT DESPITE ACTUAL KNOWLEDGE THAT APPELLANT WAS HIV-POSITIVE.

Facts

In 1986, appellant tested positive for the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), resulting in treatment at the HIV Ward of the Naval Hospital in San Diego. Despite warnings of the risk of spreading the virus through sexual intercourse, appellant maintained a sexually active lifestyle involving at least two partners. The first partner, Petty Officer J, engaged in heterosexual sex with appellant over a year-long period, including acts of unprotected sex. Appellant did not warn Petty Officer J that he was HIV-positive. In June 1988, Petty Officer J herself tested positive for the virus.

Appellant’s second partner, beginning in January 1990, was Boatswain’s Mate Third Class (BM3) C. Prior to commencing sexual relations, appellant informed BM3 C of his HIV-positive status. Thereafter, appellant and BM3 C engaged in consensual sexual intercourse on a regular basis, using a condom on most, but not all, occasions. In July 1991, BM3 C tested positive for HIV. Six months later, BM3 C and appellant were married.

After a trial in March of 1992, a general court-martial convicted appellant on two specifications of aggravated assault, one arising from his sexual relationship with Petty Officer J; the other from his sexual relationship with BM3 C. Appellant has not challenged his conviction on the first specification. The only issue before us on the present appeal is whether BM3 C’s informed consent constitutes a valid defense to the second specification.

Discussion

This Court has made clear on numerous occasions that an HIV-positive service member commits an aggravated assault by having unprotected sexual intercourse with an uninformed partner.3 United States v. School-field, 40 MJ 132 (CMA 1994); United States [493]*493v. Joseph, 87 MJ 392 (CMA 1993); United Stales v. Johnson, 30 MJ 53 (CMA 1990). We have concluded that “under many circumstances, AIDS [Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome] is ‘the natural and probable consequence’ of exposure to HIV.” Id. at 57 (citation and emphasis omitted). Accordingly, we have held that any time a service member “willfully or deliberately” exposes another person to HIV, that service member may be found to have acted in a manner “likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm.” Joseph, 37 MJ at 396.

While appellant obviously can make no claim that informed consent by itself eliminates the risk of HIV transmission — indeed, the infection of appellant’s wife would persuasively belie any argument to that effect— he offers a number of other reasons why he believes that informed consent either removes this case from the ambit of Article 128 or renders his prosecution under Article 128 unconstitutional.

I. Statutory Issues

Appellant correctly notes that none of our prior HIV decisions squarely address whether informed consent provides a defense to a prosecution for aggravated assault under Article 128. However, the relevance of the victim’s state of mind is not readily apparent on the face of the statute. We note that aggravated assault is not a crime like rape, in which lack of consent is an element of the offense. See Art. 120(a), UCMJ, 10 USC § 920(a). Moreover, the very nature of the offense invalidates, as a matter of law, any consent that has been given. Aggravated assault, of course, differs from simple assault in that the perpetrator has used a “means or force likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm.” Art. 128(b)(1). As this Court has previously observed, “[0]ne cannot consent to an act which is likely to produce grievous bodily harm or death.” United States v. Outhier, 45 MJ 326, 330 (1996). Thus, while under certain circumstances consent may be a defense to simple assault, Joseph, 37 MJ at 396 n. 5, consent is generally not a valid defense to aggravated assault.4 See, e.g., United States v. Outhier, supra; United States v. Brantner, 28 MJ 941, 944 (NMCMR 1989); R. Perkins & R. Boyce, Criminal Law 155 (3d ed.1982).

At oral argument, appellant suggested that consent negates one of the required elements of aggravated assault, namely, that the act be perpetrated with “unlawful force or violence.” However, our prior decisions make clear that an act of sexual intercourse may in some circumstances be an “offensive touching” subject to prosecution under Article 128, even in the absence of overt coercion or violence. See, e.g., Joseph, 37 MJ at 395 n. 4. In order for consent to be relevant to the “unlawful force or violence” element, the consent must be legally cognizable. For that reason, consent to sex secured without disclosure of HIV-positive status does not remove the act from the ambit of Article 128, for the consent has been improperly obtained. See id. at 395-96. By similar reasoning, even informed consent cannot save an accused in a case such as this one, for, as we have just noted, assault law does not recognize the validity of consent to an act that is likely to result in grievous injury or death, such as unprotected sex with an HIV-positive partner.5 Given that appellant’s unprotected sex acts with BM3 C were performed without legally valid consent, we must conclude that they amount to “unlawful force or violence” [494]*494within the meaning of Article 128.6

Next, appellant points to the numerous states that have adopted specific criminal statutes addressing HIV transmission, including some that provide for a defense of informed consent. Appellant contends that the criminalization of HIV transmission, particularly in the context of informed consent, requires us to balance a number of highly sensitive public-policy concerns. Appellant argues that Congress should follow the lead of many state legislatures in passing a law to address this issue directly, and that this Court should refrain from holding that Article 128 encompasses informed, consensual sex until after Congress decides how to balance the competing interests. The problem with appellant’s argument is that Congress has already established a mechanism for balancing the competing interests: Article 128.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 M.J. 491, 1997 CAAF LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bygrave-armfor-1997.