State of Iowa v. Charles Frederick Feuring ( 2016 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 15-1438
    Filed September 14, 2016
    STATE OF IOWA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    CHARLES FREDERICK FEURING,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Madison County, Gary G. Kimes,
    Judge.
    Charles Feuring appeals his third-degree-sexual-abuse       conviction.
    AFFIRMED.
    Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, and Maria Ruhtenberg,
    Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Kyle Hanson, Assistant Attorney
    General, for appellee.
    Considered by Potterfield, P.J., and Doyle and Tabor, JJ.
    2
    DOYLE, Judge.
    Charles Feuring appeals his conviction for third-degree sexual abuse. He
    challenges the jury instruction defining the “by force or against the will of”
    element    of   third-degree     sexual    abuse,    arguing    the    instruction   was
    unconstitutionally overbroad and vague. He further claims there is insufficient
    evidence to support his conviction. Because the trial court properly instructed the
    jury and sufficient evidence supports Feuring’s conviction, we affirm.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Feuring, who is seventy-four years old, had been acquainted with YY1
    since she was a young child. When YY was approximately fourteen years old,
    Feuring began making comments that made her uncomfortable. YY testified, “He
    would tell me how I appealed to him, tell me how beautiful I was. He would ask
    me if I had a boyfriend. He would tell me that he would always take care of me,
    that—You know, stuff like that.” When YY was fourteen or fifteen years old,
    Feuring began asking her if she was sexually active.               YY felt increasingly
    uncomfortable with Feuring’s behavior as she reached the age of sixteen,
    explaining:
    He would make comments. He one time made a comment about
    how nice my butt looked. He would always try to be near me, close
    to me, hold me. I mean, he would make comments, you know, oh,
    you’d be so nice to kiss. You know, about the boyfriend, asked if I
    had a relationship.
    1
    Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.422(2) allows a party to omit or redact information
    concerning crime victims and the names of minor children from documents filed with the
    court unless the information is material to the proceedings. In the trial information and
    other documents filed with the district court, the parties replaced the name of the
    complaining witness, a minor child, with the pseudonym “YY.” Iowa Rule of Court 21.25
    requires this court to refer to parties “by first name, initials, or pseudonym” in certain
    instances. Although not required here, we will continue to refer to the complaining
    witness as YY throughout this opinion.
    3
    Feuring also asked YY if she would ever have sex with him. When YY said no,
    Feuring told her that if she “ever changed [her] mind, that he would take care of
    [her], that it would be [their] secret.”
    In April 2014, Feuring kissed YY, who was then sixteen years old. Feuring
    provided beer for YY to drink. YY explained at trial how Feuring’s temper and
    her fear of upsetting him influenced how she reacted to the kiss: “I wanted to
    push away but I couldn’t. I just let him do it. I wanted to push away but I wasn’t
    sure if that was the correct move.” Afterward, YY asked to go home, but Feuring
    continued talking to her about sex, described the sex acts he wanted to perform
    with her, and tried to remove her clothes.       When YY expressed discomfort,
    Feuring said, “[W]e won’t go all the way tonight.” YY told Feuring, “I don’t see
    [you] that way. I don’t look at [you] as a sexual figure.” Feuring told YY, “[T]hat’s
    understandable that you don’t see me that way but I just want you to know that I
    see you that way and that I would love you and take care of you.” He also
    suggested renting a motel room so they could have sex in a more comfortable
    environment, but YY told him “no,” and Feuring responded that they would talk
    about it “the next time.”
    One week later, Feuring gave YY alcoholic beverages and kissed her
    again. Fearing that Feuring would be upset and would force himself on her if he
    was rejected, YY did not attempt to stop him. YY testified “[she] told him that
    [she] didn’t want to do anything, that [she] just wanted to go home and that [she]
    was tired,” and Feuring took her home.
    4
    Later that night, Feuring invited YY to go hunting with him. YY initially
    feigned sickness and declined, but she eventually relented and agreed to a short
    hunt that night.   Before beginning to hunt, Feuring again gave YY alcoholic
    beverages and tried to kiss her. After the hunt, Feuring asked YY to have sex
    with him, and she told him “no.”       Feuring then gave YY another alcoholic
    beverage, which YY accepted because “[she] figured that if [she] drank enough
    that [she would]n’t remember any of it.” When Feuring reminded YY they could
    have sex and keep it a secret, she told him, “I don’t look at [you] that way” and “I
    want[] to go back home.”
    Rather than returning home, Feuring kissed YY again, removed her pants,
    and put his penis in her vagina. Feuring did not wear a condom because, as he
    told YY, he had undergone a vasectomy.           YY testified that she considered
    fighting Feuring off but she was too impaired at that point to drive the truck,
    unsure of her whereabouts, and fearful that Feuring would come after her.
    However, YY believed she had made it clear that she did not want to have sex
    with Feuring, testifying: “I told him no, I didn’t see him that way, I didn’t want to
    have sex.” YY testified that during the act, she lay there, unmoving and looking
    up at the “ceiling” of Feuring’s truck. Although Feuring used his tongue while
    kissing, YY did not use her tongue back. She tried to turn her head away from
    Feuring, but he would turn it back and kiss her again. YY cried during the act,
    but Feuring commented, “You like it. You’re smiling.”
    Fearful of the possible repercussions, YY did not tell anyone what
    happened for two days. After reporting what occurred, YY was taken to the
    hospital for a medical examination, which revealed she had an abrasion where
    5
    the top layer of skin had rubbed off at the opening of her vagina at the “six
    o’clock position.”   The nurse that examined YY testified the abrasion was
    indicative of “some kind of forced penetration into her vagina because it causes a
    rubbing,” explaining that “we have a natural lubrication when we get sexually
    excited that helps lubricate the area” and “[y]ou don’t normally get an abrasion
    like that unless the area is dry and there is a friction that causes that.” She
    further testified that the abrasion at the six o’clock position indicated a forced
    sexual encounter because women who are sexually assaulted “are usually on
    their back and [the penis] is being forced down into [the vagina].”
    DNA testing was performed on the clothes YY wore on the night in
    question.    A stain in YY’s underwear tested positive for semen without
    spermatozoa present, which was consistent with the contributor of the semen
    having had a vasectomy. Multiple stains on YY’s jeans contained semen without
    spermatozoa but also contained epithelial cells from someone other than YY.
    Testing of the epithelial cells from one of the weaker stains was consistent with a
    DNA sample obtained from Feuring, with the probability of finding that DNA
    profile in a population of unrelated individuals chosen at random being one out of
    eighty-five thousand. Testing of the epithelial cells found in two other stains
    matched the DNA sample obtained from Feuring, with the probability of finding
    that DNA profile in a population of unrelated individuals chosen at random being
    less than one out of one-hundred billion. The State’s expert testified the stains
    were consistent with sexual intercourse.
    The State charged Feuring with first-degree kidnapping for “kidnapping
    and intentionally subjecting YY to sexual abuse” and third-degree sexual abuse
    6
    for “sexually abus[ing] YY by performing a sex act against YY’s will or by force.”
    Following a June 2015 jury trial, Feuring was found not guilty of kidnapping but
    guilty of sexual abuse. Feuring appeals.
    II. Jury Instruction.
    Feuring first contends the court erred in instructing the jury on one of the
    elements the State was required to prove to obtain a conviction. Our review is
    for correction of errors at law. See State v. Hoyman, 
    863 N.W.2d 1
    , 7 (Iowa
    2015). “However, when a defendant is alleging error involving a constitutional
    right, we make an independent evaluation of the totality of the relevant
    circumstances to determine if such an error was made.” State v. Bennett, 
    503 N.W.2d 42
    , 45 (Iowa Ct. App. 1993).
    To find Feuring guilty of third-degree sexual abuse, the jury was instructed
    the State had to prove that Feuring performed a sex act “by force or against the
    will of” YY when they were not living together as husband and wife. Instruction
    No. 23 explained the State was required to prove Feuring committed a sex act
    “by force or against the will of” YY:
    [T]he State must prove that [Feuring] committed a sex act
    “by force or against the will” of [YY]. In order to do so, however, the
    State does not have to prove that [YY] physically resisted
    [Feuring]’s acts. The force used by [Feuring] does not have to be
    physical. It may consist of threats of violence against the victim or
    another person which overcame [YY]’s will by fear.
    You may consider all of the circumstances surrounding
    [Feuring]’s act in deciding whether the act was done by force or
    against the will of [YY].
    Feuring claims Instruction No. 23 does not accurately state the law. He
    argues the court should have instead given his proposed instruction on the
    element, which adds one sentence to the language of Instruction No.
    7
    23: “[Feuring] knew or should have known it was against her will.” However,
    Iowa law does not require proof the defendant knew or should have known the
    sex act was done by force or against the will of another; it requires only that the
    sex act “is done by force or against the will of the other.”        See 
    Iowa Code § 709.1
    (1) (defining sexual abuse), .4(1) (setting forth the elements of third-
    degree sexual abuse) (2013). The plain language of the statute does not require
    more. Because the instruction Feuring proposed did not accurately state the law,
    the district court properly declined to instruct the jury as Feuring requested. See
    State v. Hanes, 
    790 N.W.2d 545
    , 548 (Iowa 2010) (“Our review is to determine
    whether the challenged instruction accurately states the law . . . .”).
    Feuring alleges that without requiring proof a defendant knew or should
    have known the other person did not consent, the “against the will of” language is
    unconstitutionally vague and overbroad.            We disagree.           A statute is
    unconstitutionally overbroad if it infringes upon protected freedoms, and the
    overbreadth analysis is limited to alleged denials of First Amendment rights. See
    State v. Armstrong, 
    787 N.W.2d 472
    , 477 (Iowa Ct. App. 2010). Feuring does
    not make any claim regarding a violation of his First Amendment rights, and
    therefore, his claim is waived. See 
    id. at 477-78
    . A statute is unconstitutionally
    vague if it fails to “define the criminal offense with ‘sufficient definiteness that
    ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited and in a manner that
    does not encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.’”              
    Id. at 478
    (quoting State v. Millsap, 
    704 N.W.2d 426
    , 436 (Iowa 2005)).              The statutory
    language is clear and unambiguous in that it applies to a defendant that commits
    8
    a sex act against another person’s will.          The conduct being criminalized is
    specific and defined in a way that citizens of this state can understand.
    Feuring attacks the constitutionality of our sexual-abuse statute as vague
    as applied, arguing that by allowing a conviction without proof that a defendant
    knew or should have known the act was done against the will of the other person,
    the statute requires the defendant to “imagine what is in the mind of the person
    he is having sex with in order to determine if he or she ‘really wants to.’” Our
    supreme court rejected a similar argument in State v. Sullivan, when it held the
    provision of section 709.4 that protects “those who are so mentally incompetent
    or incapacitated as to be unable to understand the nature and consequences of
    the sex act” was not unconstitutionally vague. 
    298 N.W.2d 267
    , 272-73 (Iowa
    1980).
    We are unimpressed by defendant’s arguments that the
    statute is rendered vague by its requirement that the alleged
    violator determine another’s mental capacity.           The potential
    offender must simply determine if his or her partner understands
    the nature and consequences of engaging in the sex act. Under
    normal circumstances a mental incapacity to consent would be
    apparent in ordinary social intercourse. The potential offender who
    would engage in sex acts with a stranger may be required to ask
    questions to be “safe,” just as he or she would be required to do in
    order to ascertain the other’s chronological age to avoid
    prosecution under subsection 709.4[(1)(b)(1)].[2]
    The fact an erroneous judgment by an offender may still
    subject him or her to criminal sanction if the partner in fact does not
    possess the requisite mental capacity does not make the statute
    unconstitutional.   This crime does not require knowledge or
    2
    Feuring’s argument involves the concern—real or imagined—that a defendant can be
    convicted of sexual abuse by engaging in a sex act that, by outward appearances,
    seems to be consensual with a partner who secretly withholds consent. The solution
    offered by our supreme court in Sullivan more than thirty-five years ago to those
    concerned with being prosecuted for sexual abuse by engaging in a sex act with a
    person “suffering from a mental defect or incapacity” is just as relevant and applicable to
    those concerned with being prosecuted for engaging in a sex act “against the will of”
    another today: the concern may be alleviated simply by asking a question.
    9
    intent. . . . We hold the standard imposed by subsection
    709.4[(1)(b)(1)] is clear: To avoid the proscribed conduct one must
    refrain from performing a sex act with a person who is mentally
    incapable of understanding the nature and possible consequences
    of sexual activity.
    
    Id.
     We likewise reject Feuring’s vagueness challenge.
    III. Sufficiency of the Evidence.
    Feuring also argues there is insufficient evidence to support the verdict.
    He claims the State failed to prove he acted against YY’s will. We review this
    claim for correction of legal error and will uphold the jury’s verdict if it is
    supported by substantial evidence. See State v. Heard, 
    636 N.W.2d 227
    , 229
    (Iowa 2001). Evidence is substantial if it would convince a rational finder of fact
    that the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. See 
    id.
     In making this
    determination, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the State and
    draw all fair legitimate inferences and presumptions in the State’s favor. See 
    id.
    The uncontroverted evidence shows YY never stated her consent to have
    sex with Feuring.    Rather, YY testified that whenever Feuring asked if she
    wanted to have sex with him, she answered “no.” Feuring ignored her direct
    statements and viewed the surrounding circumstances as consent. He assumed
    her actions—or more accurately, her inaction in failing to tell him “no” again or
    fight him off when he persisted in his attempts to have sex with her—amounted
    to consent. After viewing the evidence, the jury reached the opposite conclusion.
    Substantial evidence supports a finding Feuring had sex with YY against
    her will. YY testified she did not consent to sex with Feuring. Although Feuring’s
    counsel attempted to discredit this claim, it was for the jury to determine whether
    YY’s testimony was credible. See State v. Morgan, 
    877 N.W.2d 133
    , 138-39
    10
    (Iowa Ct. App. 2016) (noting it is the “very function of the jury” to determine
    witness credibility and the jury is free to believe or disbelieve any testimony as it
    chooses); see also State v. Voelpel, 
    226 N.W. 770
    , 771 (Iowa 1929) (stating that
    when a defendant attempts to impeach a witness’s testimony, “it is for the jury to
    determine, from all the facts and circumstances, the credibility that shall be given
    to the witness”). YY’s description of the circumstances surrounding the sex act
    supported her claim the act was against her will. For instance, YY testified that
    she did not actively participate in the act, instead lying still and looking up at the
    roof of the truck while crying. She also testified that rather than reciprocating
    when Feuring kissed her using his tongue, she did not kiss him back with her
    tongue and tried to turn her head away. Finally, physical evidence corroborates
    YY’s testimony and indicates Feuring acted against YY’s will; the medical
    examination revealed an abrasion at the opening of YY’s vagina, which was
    consistent with forced penetration.
    Having determined the trial court properly instructed the jury as to the
    definition of the “by force or against the will of” element of third-degree sexual
    abuse and substantial evidence supports the finding Feuring acted against the
    will of YY, we affirm.
    AFFIRMED.