State v. Malave ( 2020 )


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  •     *** FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAIʻI REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER ***
    Electronically Filed
    Supreme Court
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    22-APR-2020
    01:03 PM
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAI‘I
    ---o0o---
    ________________________________________________________________
    STATE OF HAWAI‘I, Respondent/Plaintiff-Appellee
    vs.
    ISRAEL VEGA MALAVE, Petitioner/Defendant-Appellant
    ________________________________________________________________
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    CERTIORARI TO THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
    (CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX; 1FFC-XX-XXXXXXX)
    APRIL 22, 2020
    RECKTENWALD, C.J., NAKAYAMA, McKENNA, POLLACK, AND WILSON, JJ.
    AMENDED OPINION OF THE COURT BY RECKTENWALD, C.J.
    I.   INTRODUCTION
    Israel Vega Malave was convicted in the Family Court
    of the First Circuit on two counts of Sexual Assault in the
    First Degree for sexually assaulting his pre-teen stepdaughter
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    over a period of approximately two years. 1         This case requires us
    to review two issues: the jurisdiction of the family court to
    try Malave and the propriety of instructing the jury on a lesser
    included offense.
    The Intermediate Court of Appeals (ICA) rejected
    Malave’s argument that the family court did not have
    jurisdiction, and that it should have instructed the jury on the
    lesser included offense of Sexual Assault in the Third Degree
    (Sexual Assault 3).     The ICA therefore affirmed the family
    court’s judgment.     Malave asks this court to address the
    following two issues that he contends were incorrectly resolved
    by the ICA:
    1.    Whether the ICA gravely erred in holding that
    the family court had subject matter jurisdiction
    pursuant to Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes (HRS) § 571-
    14(a)(1); and
    2.    Whether the ICA gravely erred in finding that
    there was no rational basis in the record to support
    providing the jury instruction of the lesser included
    offense of sexual assault in the third degree.
    We conclude that the ICA did not err in affirming the
    family court.    Although the jury should have been instructed to
    determine jurisdictional facts, the error was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt because the uncontroverted evidence showed that
    Malave had physical custody of CW.
    1    The Honorable Shirley M. Kawamura presided.
    2
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    Moreover, the family court was not obligated to
    instruct the jury on the lesser included offense of Sexual
    Assault 3 because the record did not contain a rational basis to
    acquit Malave of Sexual Assault 1 and convict him of Sexual
    Assault 3.    Accordingly, we affirm the family court’s judgment.
    II.   BACKGROUND
    On February 22, 2017, Malave was indicted on six
    counts in family court. 2      Counts 1-3 charged Malave with Sexual
    Assault in the First Degree on the Complaining Witness (CW)
    pursuant to Hawai‘i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 707-730(1)(b)
    (2014):
    COUNT 1: On or about September 30, 2011 to and including
    September 19, 2013, in the City and County of Honolulu,
    State of Hawai‘i, ISRAEL VEGA MALAVE, being the parent or
    guardian or any other person having legal or physical
    custody of [CW], did knowingly engage in sexual penetration
    with [CW], who was less than fourteen years old, by
    inserting his penis into her genital opening, thereby
    committing the offense of Sexual Assault in the First
    Degree, in violation of Section 707-730(1)(b) of the Hawai‘i
    Revised Statutes.
    COUNT 2: On or about September 30, 2011 to and including
    September 19, 2013, in the City and County of Honolulu,
    State of Hawai‘i, ISRAEL VEGA MALAVE, being the parent or
    guardian or any other person having legal or physical
    custody of [CW], did knowingly engage in sexual penetration
    with [CW], who was less than fourteen years old, by
    inserting his penis into her mouth, thereby committing the
    offense of Sexual Assault in the First Degree, in violation
    of Section 707-730(1)(b) of the Hawai‘i Revised Statutes.
    COUNT 3: On or about September 30, 2011 to and including
    September 19, 2013, in the City and County of Honolulu,
    State of Hawai‘i, ISRAEL VEGA MALAVE, being the parent or
    2     The indictment is captioned “IN THE FAMILY COURT OF THE FIRST CIRCUIT”
    and has the family court case number FC-CR No. 1FFC-XX-XXXXXXX.
    3
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    guardian or any other person having legal or physical
    custody of [CW], did knowingly engage in sexual penetration
    with [CW], who was less than fourteen years old, by
    inserting his finger into her genital opening, thereby
    committing the offense of Sexual Assault in the First
    Degree, in violation of Section 707-730(1)(b) of the Hawai‘i
    Revised Statutes.
    Counts 4-6 charged Malave with Sexual Assault in the
    Third Degree pursuant to HRS § 707-732(1)(b)(2014):
    COUNT 4: On or about September 30, 2008 to and including
    September 19, 2013, in the City and County of Honolulu,
    State of Hawai‘i, ISRAEL VEGA MALAVE, being the parent or
    guardian or any other person having legal or physical
    custody of [CW], who was not married to [CW], 3 and knew he
    was not married to [CW], did knowingly subject to sexual
    contact, [CW], a person who was less than fourteen years
    old, by placing his hand on her breast thereby committing
    the offense of Sexual Assault in the Third Degree, in
    violation of Section 707-732(1)(b) of the Hawai‘i Revised
    Statutes.
    COUNT 5: On or about September 30, 2008 to and including
    September 19, 2013, in the City and County of Honolulu,
    State of Hawai‘i, ISRAEL VEGA MALAVE, being the parent or
    guardian or any other person having legal or physical
    custody of [CW], who was not married to [CW], and knew he
    was not married to [CW], did knowingly subject to sexual
    contact, [CW], a person who was less than fourteen years
    old, by placing his hand on her buttock thereby committing
    the offense of Sexual Assault in the Third Degree, in
    violation of Section 707-732(1)(b) of the Hawai‘i Revised
    Statutes.
    COUNT 6: On or about September 30, 2008 to and including
    September 19, 2013, in the City and County of Honolulu,
    State of Hawai‘i, ISRAEL VEGA MALAVE, being the parent or
    guardian or any other person having legal or physical
    custody of [CW], who was not married to [CW], and knew he
    was not married to [CW], did knowingly subject to sexual
    contact, [CW], a person who was less than fourteen years
    old or did cause CW to have sexual contact with him, by
    placing her hand on his penis thereby committing the
    offense of Sexual Assault in the Third Degree, in violation
    3     In 2016, the Hawai‘i Legislature amended the definition of “sexual
    contact” to remove the exemption for married persons. Sess. L. 2016, ch. 231
    § 32 (effective Jul. 1, 2016). HRS § 1-3 indicates that this change would
    only apply prospectively, so at the time of the alleged conduct, the
    exemption for married persons applied.
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    of Section 707-732(1)(b) of the Hawai‘i Revised Statutes.
    A.   Relevant Trial Testimony
    It was undisputed that Malave and CW began living
    together, along with CW’s mother, when CW was five years old.
    It was further undisputed that on September 20, 2013, when she
    was eleven years old and in sixth grade, CW told her school
    counselor that Malave had been touching her inappropriately.
    The last instance of alleged assault was two days prior to CW
    reporting this information to her counselor.            According to CW’s
    testimony, she had been in trouble for drinking alcohol at
    school on the day she made the report.
    CW’s school counselor testified that, when CW reported
    sexual abuse to her, she immediately reported this information
    to her administrator and called the police.            Honolulu Police
    Department (HPD) Officer Kalae Phillips responded to the call.
    Officer Phillips testified that he interviewed CW;
    during the interview, CW reported sexual abuse since the age of
    seven, beginning with Malave undressing her and touching her in
    inappropriate places, and eventually leading to forced sex.
    Officer Phillips further testified that Malave was
    arrested in the parking lot of CW’s school that same day, when
    he arrived to pick CW up.
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    In her testimony at trial, CW testified that she had
    never been married.     CW referred to Malave as her stepfather.
    She indicated that Malave was a strict parent at times, and that
    she did not think of him as her father.
    With respect to Malave touching CW’s breasts and
    buttocks, CW testified that, beginning when she was seven or
    eight years old, Malave “would start touching [her] on [her]
    boobs or [her] butt, or he would start rubbing [her] thighs.”
    CW testified that when he touched her during this period of
    time, he touched her with his hands.          CW testified that this
    happened “occasionally, sometimes two to three times a week, or
    whenever [her] mom wasn’t home.”          This contact allegedly
    happened in CW’s bedroom or Malave’s bedroom.            CW testified that
    Malave touched her both over her clothes and under them.              With
    respect to Malave touching her breasts, CW said that she was
    “starting to develop” breasts at that time (when she was seven
    or eight).   When asked to explain how Malave would touch her, CW
    stated that “he would rub his hands in circular motions across”
    her breasts or buttocks.      While this happened, Malave would tell
    CW that he liked it, or tell her to stay still if she wanted to
    move.   CW testified that she did not like it when Malave touched
    her, that she felt “gross” and “embarrassed,” “didn’t like
    [her]self,” and “felt like something was wrong with [her]” that
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    made Malave touch her.       Malave told CW that if she told anyone
    what was happening, he “would do the same thing to [her] little
    sister or hurt [her] family.”         CW took that threat to mean that
    Malave would hurt CW’s mother, CW’s siblings, or anyone on CW’s
    mother’s side of the family.        CW believed that Malave could hurt
    these individuals because he was “bigger and stronger” than her.
    CW knew that Malave had been in the military, and that made her
    think Malave would “really hurt” her family.
    With respect to Malave having CW touch his penis, CW
    next testified that, beginning when she was seven or eight years
    old, Malave would grab her arm and try to put her hand on his
    penis.    Malave succeeded in putting CW’s hand on his penis one
    time.    CW testified that she did not want to touch Malave’s
    penis and that she was “scared,” “felt grossed out,” and “wanted
    to run away.”     CW could not say precisely where her mother was
    when this happened, but testified that her mother was either at
    work or in her (her mother’s) bedroom. 4          CW testified that Malave
    continued to place his hands on her breasts and buttocks until
    4     CW provided more details about this incident later in her testimony.
    She stated that this happened “before he forced [her] to have sex with him”
    when his pants were off but her clothes were still on. She tried to pull her
    arm back but Malave told her to stop. CW stopped trying to fight him and let
    him place her hand on his penis. He told her to be “gentle” and “careful”
    and had her move her hand back and forth. CW eventually stopped and Malave
    did not force her to continue. CW testified that she remembered nothing else
    from that incident.
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    approximately September 18, 2013, two days before she disclosed
    the abuse.
    With respect to penetration of CW’s vagina with
    Malave’s penis, CW went on to testify that the first incident
    involving this type of penetration was when she was ten or
    eleven years old.     CW testified that she was in the bathroom
    about to take a shower on “a late night” when her mother was not
    home.   Malave came into the bathroom, picked her up and put her
    on the bathroom sink counter, and inserted his penis into her
    vagina.   CW testified that this hurt and was uncomfortable.
    Afterward, she felt sick, hated herself, and wanted to run away.
    CW testified that there were “multiple” incidents after the
    first one, though she could not recall specifics of any other
    incident or say how many there were altogether.
    For these later incidents, the prosecutor elicited
    testimony from CW that appeared to describe how contact with
    Malave usually went, and did not focus on particular instances.
    The following exchange was not limited to any particular time
    aside from CW’s statement that sexual penetration began when she
    was about ten years old:
    Q: Okay. When the defendant would take you to your
    bedroom or to his bedroom that he shared with your
    mom, would he take you to the bed?
    A: Yes.
    Q: What position would you be in on the bed?
    A: I would be lying on my back.
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    Q: And what about his body?
    A: He was over me.
    Q: What about his arms?
    A: They were both to the side of me.
    Q: And what would he be doing with his hands?
    A: He would be touching my boobs or my butt. 5
    Q: What about the rest of his body?
    A: It was over me.
    Q: And what would he be doing with his body?
    A: He would – that’s when he would insert his penis
    inside my vagina, and that’s when his body would be
    moving back and forth.
    CW testified further that “[o]ccasionally,” Malave
    penetrated her vagina with his fingers.           She stated that it felt
    “[u]ncomfortable.”      This happened either in CW’s bedroom or in
    Malave’s.
    CW also testified that Malave inserted his penis into
    her mouth.    In general, what led up to oral penetration
    according to CW’s testimony was Malave grabbing CW by the arm
    and telling her to open her mouth and be careful.              CW testified
    that she was scared when this happened and felt like vomiting.
    Again, CW did not attach any particular time to this type of
    contact.    CW’s testimony was phrased in general terms and
    appeared to describe what would normally happen during her
    sexual interactions with Malave.
    CW testified that, when Malave penetrated her vagina
    with his penis, “a white substance came out.”             CW knew that it
    5     Because Malave was allegedly touching CW’s breasts and buttocks during
    penetration, this conduct could serve to establish Counts 1, 4, or 5.
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    was a white substance because she could “feel it, or if he would
    move, [she] would see it on him.”         Although she did not know
    what it was at that time, it looked like a “thick cream.”              She
    testified that Malave never wore a condom.
    After sexual interactions, CW testified that Malave
    took her clothing and washed it while CW took a shower.              She
    stated that she did not know why he made her give him her
    clothing and take a shower.       At one point, the washer in her
    house broke, so Malave washed her clothing by hand in the sink.
    Malave gave CW gifts when she was ten or eleven: a new
    Apple computer for Christmas, an iPad, and a rose.
    CW explained that the abuse occurred one to two times
    per week, when CW’s mother was not home, until September 20,
    2013, when CW disclosed the abuse to her school counselor.
    CW testified that after she told her counselor what
    was happening, she was placed into foster care, where she spent
    approximately one-and-a-half weeks.         She further testified that
    she now lives on the mainland with her grandparents who are her
    legal guardians.
    CW also testified in an interview conducted by HPD
    Detective Vince Legaspi.      Detective Legaspi spoke with CW on
    September 21, 2013.     On cross-examination, defense counsel had
    CW confirm that she did not tell Detective Legaspi that Malave
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    “rubbed [her] boobs in a circular motion.”           CW stated that she
    told Detective Legaspi about Malave touching her breasts and
    buttocks, although she did not specifically describe the
    touching as “a circular motion.”          CW said that she didn’t tell
    Detective Legaspi “most of the stuff” that she told the
    prosecutor’s office because she was embarrassed.            CW did,
    however, tell Detective Legaspi that Malave had forced her to
    have sex with him.     She chose to tell him this because “that’s
    what scared [her] the most.”
    Defense counsel also elicited testimony from CW in
    which she admitted that she did not talk about Malave touching
    her breasts or buttocks when she testified in front of the first
    grand jury in this matter on September 24, 2013.            Defense
    counsel also pointed out that CW answered “no” when Dr. Guliz
    Erdem, the physician who examined CW after she reported sexual
    abuse, asked her whether Malave fondled her.
    With respect to oral sex acts, defense counsel went on
    to elicit CW’s testimony that she did not tell her school
    counselor, Officer Phillips, Detective Legaspi, or the first
    grand jury that Malave put his penis in CW’s mouth.             She did,
    however, say this to Dr. Erdem and in the second grand jury
    proceeding held in 2017.
    Defense counsel also pointed out that at the first
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    grand jury proceeding, CW said that Malave took her clothes off,
    and at the second, she said she took her own clothes off.                 CW
    also testified that, when Malave ejaculated, the ejaculate went
    on to CW’s bed.
    Dr. Erdem testified that on September 20, 2013, she
    examined CW at the Sex Abuse Treatment Center.            Dr. Erdem
    further testified that during CW’s examination, CW reported that
    Malave: (1) penetrated her vagina with his penis; (2) put his
    fingers in her vagina; (3) caused oral contact between CW and
    Malave’s genitals; (4) caused CW to masturbate him; and (5)
    ejaculated, but that Malave did not fondle or kiss CW.              Dr.
    Erdem testified that CW had two “indentation cleft[s]” on her
    hymen - one on each side at the 9:00 and 3:00 positions (using
    the face of a clock for reference).         The cleft at the 9:00
    position was “very, very deep.”        Dr. Erdem said that a cleft is
    considered “deep” in medical terms when the cleft passes “50
    percent of the lip.”     Dr. Erdem testified that the clefts,
    “especially the deep one,” could be consistent with a sexual
    trauma - “any object penetrating the hymen opening,” including a
    penis, finger, or other object.
    Scott Henderson, criminalist at HPD’s forensic biology
    lab, was qualified at trial as an expert in serology and
    forensic DNA testing.      Henderson performed tests to detect semen
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    on vaginal swabs taken from CW on September 20, 2013.             He found
    no evidence of semen on the swabs.          He also tested a bed sheet
    that CW took from her bed in November 2013 and gave to her
    grandmother.    Henderson testified that he found no evidence of
    semen on the sheet.     Finally, Henderson explained that he tested
    CW’s vaginal swabs for Malave’s DNA and found none.             He
    testified that there are a number of explanations for lack of
    semen in the vaginal canal after sex, including that there was
    no ejaculation, condom use, showering, swimming, douching, or
    menstruation.
    CW’s grandmother also testified at trial to several
    anecdotes in which CW’s behavior could have suggested Malave was
    acting inappropriately toward her.          At a family dinner at her
    home, grandmother reported that CW refused to sit next to
    Malave.   According to grandmother’s testimony, one day when
    Malave dropped CW off at her home for a visit, CW ran upstairs
    to the master bathroom and got in the shower, where she stayed
    for approximately 45-60 minutes.          Grandmother explained that
    when she checked on CW, she saw CW laying on the floor of the
    shower.   Grandmother further testified that Malave had a
    vasectomy in the spring of 2012.
    Malave rested after the State’s case-in-chief.
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    B.   Jury Instructions
    The family court instructed the jury on Counts 1 to 3
    with the elements of Sexual Assault 1 and did not instruct the
    jury on the lesser included offense of Sexual Assault 3.               The
    family court also did not instruct the jury as to the
    jurisdictional facts, specifically that it must find that Malave
    had legal or physical custody of CW.
    C.   Conviction and Sentencing
    The jury returned a verdict on November 1, 2017,
    finding Malave guilty of Counts 1 and 3.           The jury could not
    reach a unanimous decision on Counts 2 and 4 to 6.              The State
    declined to re-try Malave on Counts 2 and 4 to 6.              On March 13,
    2018, Malave was sentenced to 20 years each for Counts 1 and 3,
    to be served concurrently.
    D.   Post-Trial Procedure
    Malave filed a motion to set aside judgment.              The
    basis was that the family court lacked jurisdiction because it
    did not make an on-the-record finding that Malave had physical
    or legal custody over CW.        The family court scheduled a hearing
    on the motion to dismiss for May 11, 2018, but Malave filed his
    notice of appeal to the ICA on April 13, 2018 and then withdrew
    the motion to dismiss on May 10, 2018.
    The ICA affirmed Malave’s conviction, concluding that
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    the family court had jurisdiction, and that Malave was not
    entitled to a lesser included offense instruction for Counts 1
    and 3.
    E.   Supreme Court Proceedings
    Malave timely filed an application for certiorari with
    this court raising the following two questions:
    1. Whether the ICA committed grave error when it
    found that the family court had subject matter
    jurisdiction pursuant to HRS § 571-14(a)(1), despite
    the uncontroverted evidence that Petitioner was not
    the legal parent, guardian, and/or having physical
    custody of the Minor Complainant.
    2. Whether the ICA committed grave error when it
    found that there was no rational basis on the record
    to support providing the jury instruction of the
    lesser included offense of sexual assault in the
    third degree.
    III.   STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    A.   Jurisdiction
    “[A] court's jurisdiction to consider matters brought
    before it is a question of law which is subject to de novo
    review on appeal applying the ‘right/wrong’ standard.”               State v.
    Lorenzo, 77 Hawai‘i 219, 220, 
    883 P.2d 641
    , 642 (Ct. App. 1994)
    (citations omitted).
    B.   Jury Instructions
    We clarified the standard of review for jury
    instructions that were not objected to at trial was clarified in
    State v. Nichols, holding that:
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    although as a general matter forfeited assignments of error
    are to be reviewed under [Hawaiʻi Rules of Penal Procedure
    (HRPP)] Rule 52(b) plain error standard of review, in the
    case of erroneous jury instructions, that standard of
    review is effectively merged with the HRPP Rule 52(a)
    harmless error standard of review because it is the duty of
    the trial court to properly instruct the jury. As a
    result, once instructional error is demonstrated, we will
    vacate, without regard to whether timely objection was
    made, if there is a reasonable possibility that the error
    contributed to the defendant's conviction, i.e., that the
    erroneous jury instruction was not harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    Id. at 337,
    141 P.3d at 984 (footnote omitted).
    In the context of lesser included offense jury
    instructions, “this court has held that when jury instructions
    or the omission thereof are at issue on appeal, the standard of
    review is whether, when read and considered as a whole, the
    instructions given are prejudicially insufficient, erroneous,
    inconsistent, or misleading.”         State v. Flores, 131 Hawai‘i 43,
    57-58, 
    314 P.3d 120
    , 134-35 (2013) (citations, alterations, and
    quotation marks omitted).
    IV.   DISCUSSION
    We conclude that the family court had jurisdiction to
    preside over Malave’s trial, and he was not entitled to a lesser
    included offense instruction on Counts 1-3.
    A.   Jurisdiction
    1.   Factual Determinations Regarding the Family Court’s
    Jurisdiction Over the Case Should Have Been Submitted
    to the Jury
    Hawaii’s family court is a division of the circuit
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    courts.   Adams v. State, 103 Hawai‘i 214, 222, 
    81 P.3d 394
    , 402
    (2003) (citing HRS § 571-3 (1993)).          HRS § 571-14(a) (2018)
    gives the family court exclusive original jurisdiction “[t]o try
    any offense committed against a child by the child’s parent or
    guardian or by any other person having the child’s legal or
    physical custody.” 6
    “In the first circuit any judge or judges so
    designated by the chief justice of the supreme court shall be
    the judge or judges of the family court of the first circuit.”
    HRS § 571-4 (2018).      In 1996, an order was entered by Chief
    6     The full text of subsections (1) and (2) - the subsections relevant
    here - is as follows:
    Except as provided in sections 603-21.5 and 604-8, the court shall have
    exclusive original jurisdiction:
    (1) To try any offense committed against a child by
    the child’s parent or guardian or by any other person
    having the child’s legal or physical custody, and any
    violation of section 707-726, 707-727, 709-902, 709-
    903, 709-903.5, 709-904, 709-905, 709-906, or 302A-
    1135, whether or not included in other provisions of
    this paragraph or paragraph (2);
    (2) To try any adult charged with:
    (A) Deserting, abandoning, or failing to
    provide support for any person in violation of
    law;
    (B) An offense, other than a felony, against
    the person of the defendant’s husband or wife;
    (C) Any violation of an order issued pursuant
    to chapter 586; or
    (D) Any violation of an order issued by a
    family court judge.
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    Justice Ronald Moon designating circuit judges of the first
    circuit to sit as family court judges.            Order Designating
    Circuit Judges of the First Judicial Circuit of the State of
    Hawai‘i to Act as Circuit Family Judges, Hawai‘i Supreme Court
    (Oct. 29, 1996),
    https://www.courts.state.hi.us/docs/sct_various_orders/order19.p
    df.   Thus, when first circuit court judges preside over criminal
    cases in family court, it is immaterial whether or not the
    family court has jurisdiction under HRS § 571-14(a), circuit
    court judges sitting in family court have authority over both
    circuit and family matters. 7        Adams, 103 Hawai‘i at 
    222, 81 P.3d at 402
    .
    Pursuant to HRS § 701-114(1)(c)(2014), however, “no
    person may be convicted of an offense unless” the State proves
    “[f]acts establishing jurisdiction” beyond a reasonable doubt.
    As noted above, the family court has jurisdiction to try
    offenses allegedly committed against children by any person
    having legal or physical custody of the child.              HRS § 571-
    14(a)(1).     The family court thus should have instructed the jury
    7     District court and family court judges in the first, second, third, and
    fifth circuits are also temporarily assigned to preside in the circuit courts
    pursuant to a separate 1996 order from Chief Justice Moon.
    Assignment of District and District Family Court Judges, Hawaiʻi Supreme Cour
    t (Oct. 29, 1996), https://www.courts.state.hi.us/docs/sct_various_orders/ord
    er19a.pdf.
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    that it must find beyond a reasonable doubt that Malave
    satisfied these criteria. 8 State v. Iuli, 101 Hawai‘i 196, 207,
    
    65 P.3d 143
    , 154 (2003).
    We conclude that when a jury trial is conducted in
    family court in a case subject to HRS § 571-14(a), the jury
    should be instructed by way of a special interrogatory to find
    whether the defendant had physical or legal custody of the
    complaining witness.      Because many family court judges are also
    circuit court judges, pursuant to Adams, lack of physical or
    legal custody alone may not justify an acquittal.              If the jury
    finds that the defendant did not have physical or legal custody
    of the CW, and the presiding judge is both a family court judge
    and a circuit court judge, the judge has jurisdiction in the
    capacity of a circuit court judge. 9
    2.   Failure to Instruct the Jury on Jurisdiction Was
    Harmless
    “[W]here uncontradicted and undisputed evidence
    of . . . jurisdiction . . . is contained in the record, the
    trial court’s failure to instruct the jury is harmless beyond a
    8     Iuli thus implicitly overruled the holding in State v. Alagao, 77
    Hawai‘i 260, 262, 
    883 P.2d 682
    , 684 (App. 1994), that “the court, not the
    jury, decides the facts relevant to the question of subject matter
    jurisdiction.”
    9     We also note that while HRS § 571-14 allows the family court “exclusive
    original jurisdiction” over certain cases, it also allows waiver of that
    jurisdiction.
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    reasonable doubt.”
    Id. Malave’s application
    incorrectly states
    that there was “uncontroverted” evidence that Malave did not
    have legal or physical custody of CW at the time of the
    offenses.     While it is clear that Malave did not have legal
    custody of CW, he has not presented any argument, or pointed to
    any evidence, showing that he did not have physical custody of
    CW.
    “‘Physical custody’ means the physical care and
    supervision of a child.” 10       HRS § 583A-102.      The evidence in the
    record instead shows that Malave did have physical custody of CW
    for the reasons the ICA noted: CW lived with her mother, Malave,
    and CW’s two half-siblings; Malave watched and cared for CW
    while her mother was at work; Malave cooked meals, did laundry,
    disciplined CW, and sometimes helped her with homework; and CW
    was expected to follow Malave’s rules and obey him.               Failure to
    instruct the jury on jurisdiction was thus harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt.
    B.    Lesser Included Offense Instruction
    1.    Third-Degree Sexual Assault is a Lesser Included
    Offense of First-Degree Sexual Assault
    The definitions of Sexual Assault 3 and Sexual Assault
    10    Alagao, 77 Hawai‘i at 
    263, 883 P.2d at 685
    , relied on a statutory
    definition of “physical custody” that the legislature amended in 2002. 2002
    Haw. Sess. Laws Act 124. We thus no longer rely on the definition as stated
    in Alagao.
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    1 are identical save for one term - where Sexual Assault 1 uses
    the term “sexual penetration,” Sexual Assault 3 uses the term
    “sexual contact.”     At the time of Malave’s offense, “sexual
    contact” was defined as:
    [A]ny touching, other than acts of ‘sexual
    penetration’, of the sexual or other intimate parts
    of a person not married to the actor, or of the
    sexual or other intimate parts of the actor by the
    person, whether directly or through the clothing or
    other material intended to cover the sexual or other
    intimate parts.
    HRS § 707-700 (1972) (emphasis added).
    “Sexual penetration” was (and is) defined as:
    (1) Vaginal intercourse, anal intercourse, fellatio,
    deviate sexual intercourse, or any intrusion of any
    part of a person’s body or of any object into the
    genital or anal opening of another person’s body; it
    occurs upon any penetration, however slight, but
    emission is not required. As used in this definition,
    ‘genital opening’ includes the anterior surface of
    the vulva or labia majora; or
    (2) Cunnilingus or anilingus, whether or not actual
    penetration has occurred.
    HRS § 707-700.
    Our initial analysis is whether the presence of the
    exemption for married persons in the definition of “sexual
    contact” excluded Sexual Assault 3 from being a lesser included
    offense of Sexual Assault 1.       We conclude that it did not.
    The definition of a lesser included offense is set
    forth in HRS § 701-109(4):
    (a) It is established by proof of the same or less
    than all the facts required to establish the
    commission of the offense charged;
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    (b) It consists of an attempt to commit the offense
    charged or to commit an offense otherwise included
    therein; or
    (c) It differs from the offense charged only in the
    respect that a less serious injury or risk of injury
    to the same person, property, or public interest or a
    different state of mind indicating lesser degree of
    culpability suffices to establish its commission.
    At the time, Sexual Assault 3 required that the
    perpetrator was not married to the victim.            Therefore, it
    appears initially that Sexual Assault 3 is not an included
    offense in Sexual Assault 1 pursuant to (4)(a) because it
    requires proof of an additional fact - that the perpetrator and
    victim were not married.       This court laid out the elements of
    first-degree and third-degree sexual assault in State v. Arceo,
    84 Hawai‘i 1, 14-15, 
    928 P.2d 843
    , 856-57 (1996).             In Arceo, we
    recognized that third-degree sexual assault required proof of an
    element that first-degree sexual assault did not, namely that
    the perpetrator “was aware that the Minor was not married to
    him.”
    Id. at 15,
    928 P.2d at 857.         But the Arceo court was not
    asked to decide whether the additional element excluded Sexual
    Assault 3 from being included in Sexual Assault 1.
    Cases from this court and the ICA have assumed that
    Sexual Assault 3 is a lesser included offense of Sexual Assault
    1.   See, e.g., State v. Behrendt, 124 Hawai‘i 90, 108, 
    237 P.3d 1156
    , 1174 (2010) (affirming the circuit court’s decision to
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    instruct the jury on Sexual Assault 3 as a lesser included
    offense of Sexual Assault 1); State v. Mueller, 102 Hawai‘i 391,
    397-98, 
    76 P.3d 943
    , 949-50 (2003) (vacating conviction of
    Sexual Assault 1 and remanding to the circuit court with
    instructions to enter a judgment of conviction of the lesser
    included offense of Sexual Assault 3) (superseded on other
    grounds by statute as stated in Behrendt); State v. Abdon, No.
    CAAP-13-86, 
    2014 WL 4800994
    , at *6 (App. Sep. 26, 2014)
    (vacating the circuit court’s judgment based on its failure to
    instruct on the lesser included offense of Sexual Assault 3 for
    the charge of Sexual Assault 1) (citing Behrendt, 124 Hawai‘i at
    
    109-10, 237 P.3d at 1175-76
    ); State v. Miller, No. 27065, 
    2007 WL 318166
    , at *1 (Haw. Ct. App. Jan. 30, 2007) (noting, though
    neither affirming nor reversing, that the circuit court vacated
    the jury’s guilty verdict on the first-degree sexual assault
    charge and entered judgment on the lesser included offense of
    third-degree sexual assault). 11       None of these cases discuss the
    significance of the fact that “sexual contact” included the
    requirement that the perpetrator and victim were not married,
    which appears to exclude Sexual Assault 3 from inclusion in
    Sexual Assault 1 pursuant to HRS § 701-109(4)(a).
    11    All of these cases were decided before the Legislature removed the
    exemption for married couples from the definition of “sexual contact.”
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    The most logical and simplest resolution of this
    apparent conflict lies in HRS § 701-109(4)(c), which defines a
    lesser included offense to be one which “differs from the
    offense charged only in the respect that a less serious injury
    or risk of injury to the same person.”          Sexual contact - short
    of penetration - carries a less serious injury or risk of injury
    to the victim.    This reconciles the additional element that
    Sexual Assault 3 contained at the time of Malave’s alleged
    offenses with the proposition that it is a lesser included
    offense of Sexual Assault 1.
    The case law on included offenses under HRS § 701-
    109(4)(c) explains that the subsection applies where “there may
    be some dissimilarity in the facts necessary to prove the lesser
    offense, but the end result is the same.”           State v. Kinnane, 79
    Hawai‘i 46, 55, 
    897 P.2d 973
    , 982 (1995) (citations omitted).
    This court applies the following factors to determine whether an
    offense is included pursuant to subsection (c): “(1) the degree
    of culpability; (2) the degree or risk of injury; and (3) the
    end result.”
    Id. In State
    v. Kinnane, we found that sexual assault in
    the fourth degree was an included offense in attempted sexual
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    assault in the second degree 12 pursuant to HRS § 701-109(4)(c).
    Id. at 56,
    897 P.2d at 983.         Much of the reasoning of Kinnane is
    helpful here. 13
    In analyzing the second factor, injury or risk of
    injury, the Kinnane decision states that “‘sexual contact’ (i.e.
    ‘any touching of the sexual or other intimate parts of a
    person,’) . . . is ‘less serious’ than the risk of ‘sexual
    penetration’ (i.e. any intrusion of any part of a person’s
    body . . . into the genital . . . opening of another person’s
    body.)”
    Id. (second and
    third ellipses in original).            In
    12The   court wrote:
    A person commits the offense of attempted sexual
    assault in the second degree . . . if the person
    intentionally engages in conduct which, under the
    circumstances as the person believes them to be,
    constitutes a substantial step in a course of conduct
    intended or known to be practically certain to
    subject another person to an act of sexual
    penetration that the person is aware is by
    compulsion.
    . . . .
    A person commits the offense of sexual assault in the
    fourth degree . . . if the person knowingly subjects
    another person to sexual contact by compulsion or
    causes another person to have sexual contact with the
    actor by compulsion.
    79 Hawai‘i at 
    53-54, 897 P.2d at 980-81
    .
    13    For the first factor, the Kinnane court found that the requisite state
    of mind of attempted second-degree sexual assault is a combination of
    knowledge and intent, while the requisite state of mind of fourth-degree
    sexual assault is knowledge.
    Id. at 55,
    897 P.2d at 982. This does not apply
    to Malave’s case because the requisite state of mind for both first- and
    third-degree sexual assault is knowledge. HRS §§ 707-730(1)(b), 707-
    732(1)(b).
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    Kinnane, therefore, it was immaterial that the two offenses at
    issue - attempted sexual assault in the second degree and sexual
    assault in the fourth degree - did not require proof of any
    injury as an element of the offense.         The sexual contact or
    sexual penetration itself could also be viewed as the injury in
    Malave’s case.    See State v. Buch, 83 Hawai‘i 308, 313, 
    926 P.2d 599
    , 604 (1996) (noting that, where two offenses both require
    some type of sexual contact to establish their commission, the
    two offenses “require proof of the same injury”).
    Finally, the Kinnane court found that the third
    factor, the end result of each offense, weighed in favor of
    finding that Sexual Assault 4 was a lesser included offense of
    attempted Sexual Assault 2.       79 Hawai‘i at 
    56, 897 P.2d at 983
    .
    “In both instances the victim . . . is placed in jeopardy of
    being injured or is being injured by the defendant’s conduct.”
    Id. (quoting State
    v. Feliciano, 
    62 Haw. 637
    , 639, 
    618 P.2d 306
    ,
    308 (1980) (ellipsis in original) (brackets in original
    omitted)).
    Based on Kinnane, we conclude that Sexual Assault 3 is
    an included offense of Sexual Assault 1 pursuant to HRS § 701-
    109(4)(c).
    2.   There Was No Rational Basis for the Jury to Acquit
    Malave of First-Degree Sexual Assault But Convict Him
    of Third-Degree Sexual Assault
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    Although Sexual Assault 3 is a lesser included offense
    of Sexual Assault 1, the family court was not required to
    instruct the jury on it.       As noted above, “[A] ‘trial court is
    not obligated to charge the jury with respect to an included
    offense unless there is a rational basis in the evidence for a
    verdict acquitting the defendant of the offense charged and
    convicting him of the included offense.’”            State v. Flores, 131
    Hawai‘i 43, 50, 
    314 P.3d 120
    , 127 (2013) (quoting State v. Kupau,
    76 Hawai‘i 387, 390, 
    879 P.2d 492
    , 495 (1994)).
    Malave points to four pieces of evidence that he
    argues contradict or call into question CW’s testimony: (1) CW’s
    statement to her school counselor that Malave had been “touching
    her inappropriately”; (2) CW’s statement to Officer Phillips
    that Malave had forced her to have sex with him, without
    specifically defining “sex” as penetration; (3) CW’s statement
    on cross-examination that it was “possible” that Malave had only
    touched her inappropriately; 14 and (4) what Malave called Dr.
    Erdem’s “leading questions” during CW’s examination at the Sex
    Abuse Treatment Center.
    14    This argument misstates the trial testimony. During cross-examination,
    CW said that she did not remember exactly what she told the counselor on
    September 20, 2013, and that it was possible that she had told the counselor
    only that Malave was touching her inappropriately. CW did not say that it
    was possible that Malave never penetrated her, which is what the certiorari
    application states.
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    But these points are unavailing.           CW’s statements that
    Malave had been “touching” her are not evidence that Malave did
    not penetrate her.      Similarly, CW’s failure to provide a
    definition of “sex” does not support the contention that there
    was no penetration.      CW never stated that it was possible that
    Malave never penetrated her.        And Dr. Erdem’s questions were not
    unduly leading, nor would leading questions tend to show that
    Malave did not penetrate CW.
    Thus, after reviewing the record, we find that there
    was no rational basis in the evidence for a jury to acquit
    Malave of Sexual Assault 1 but convict him of Sexual Assault 3
    for the conduct underlying the Sexual Assault 1 charges.               As
    stated above, the alleged acts underlying the Sexual Assault 1
    charges were: (1) inserting his penis into CW’s genital opening;
    (2) inserting his penis into CW’s mouth; and (3) inserting his
    finger into CW’s genital opening.          In order to provide a
    rational basis to instruct the jury on Sexual Assault 3 for
    these counts, there must be some evidence presented that Malave
    merely made contact between his penis and CW’s genitals or
    mouth, or between his finger and CW’s genitals, that did not
    rise to penetration. 15
    15   The ICA seemed to conclude that Malave’s decision not to testify
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    Given the lack of evidence to establish that only
    sexual contact, and not sexual penetration, occurred for the
    type of conduct alleged in Counts 1 to 3, there was no rational
    basis for a jury to acquit Malave of Sexual Assault 1 while
    convicting him of Sexual Assault 3 for this alleged conduct.
    Several ICA decisions on the subject of lesser
    included offense instructions rely on this court’s opinion in
    Behrendt, 124 Hawai‘i 90, 
    237 P.3d 1156
    .           We thus take this
    opportunity to clarify that prior decision.            In Behrendt, the
    trial court instructed the jury on the lesser included offense
    of Sexual Assault 3.      124 Hawai‘i at 
    108, 237 P.3d at 1174
    .            The
    jury acquitted the defendant of Sexual Assault 1, but convicted
    him of Sexual Assault 3.
    Id. at 100,
    237 P.3d at 1166.          On
    appeal, the defendant challenged the trial court’s decision to
    instruct on the lesser charge.         Id. at 
    108, 237 P.3d at 1174
    .
    This court affirmed the circuit court based on our conclusion
    that there was a rational basis to instruct the jury on the
    lesser charge, even though the evidence presented largely
    focused on penetration, reasoning that “a rational juror could
    precluded satisfying the rational basis standard for the lesser included
    offense instruction. This proposition is incorrect, as a defendant may not
    be penalized for exercising the right not to testify. Chavez v. Martinez,
    
    538 U.S. 760
    , 768-69 (2003). Rather, there must be some evidence in the
    record that provides a rational basis to acquit of the greater offense and
    convict of the lesser, regardless of who presents that evidence and how.
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    have inferred that there was ‘sexual contact’ prior to the
    penetration.”    124 Hawai‘i at 
    110, 237 P.3d at 1176
    (emphasis
    added).
    ICA decisions holding that defendants were entitled to
    lesser included offense instructions for Sexual Assault 3 when
    charged with Sexual Assault 1 appear generally to treat Sexual
    Assault 1 as categorically requiring a lesser included offense
    instruction.    See State v. Wright, 144 Hawai‘i 381, 
    442 P.3d 444
    ,
    
    2019 WL 2148065
    , at *3 (unpublished) (App. May 16, 2019)
    (“[W]hen a complaining witness testifies that a defendant has
    committed an act of ‘sexual penetration,’ the trial court must
    also instruct the jury on the lesser included offense as it is a
    rational inference that ‘sexual contact’ also occurred.”); State
    v. Abdon, 
    2014 WL 4800994
    , at *7.         As shown by our analysis in
    the instant case, this interpretation of Behrendt is not
    correct.   The evidence in Behrendt, which this court explained
    in detail in the opinion, included evidence from which a jury
    could rationally conclude that the defendant committed Sexual
    Assault 3, but not Sexual Assault 1, during the conduct that the
    State alleged constituted Sexual Assault 1.           For example, in
    Behrendt, CW testified that the defendant “would have me sit on
    top of him, where he’s behind me, or he would have me straddle
    him.”   This conduct could constitute Sexual Assault 3, but
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    because it does not speak of penetration, would not be
    sufficient to constitute Sexual Assault 1.           There was no similar
    evidence present in the record of Malave’s case.            We thus
    emphasize that, while evidence of Sexual Assault 1 may often
    support giving the lesser included offense instruction of Sexual
    Assault 3, this is a fact-specific inquiry rather than a
    categorical rule.     And in Malave’s case, the record did not
    support giving the lesser included offense instruction.
    V.   CONCLUSION
    For the reasons above, we affirm the family court’s
    March 13, 2018 judgment of conviction and sentence and the ICA’s
    July 1, 2019 judgment on appeal.
    Emmanuel G. Guerrero                      /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
    For petitioner
    /s/ Paula A. Nakayama
    Sonja P. McCullen
    For respondent                            /s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
    /s/ Richard W. Pollack
    /s/ Michael D. Wilson
    31