In the Interest of A.K., Minor Child A.K., Minor Child , 2013 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 2 ( 2013 )


Menu:
  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 12–0608
    Filed January 4, 2013
    IN THE INTEREST OF A.K., Minor Child
    A.K., Minor Child,
    Appellant.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Lyon County, Robert J.
    Dull, District Associate Judge.
    Juvenile     appeals    from   his   adjudication   as   a   delinquent.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
    Michael J. Jacobsma and Missy J. Clabaugh of Jacobsma &
    Clabaugh PLC, Sioux Center, for appellant.
    Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Bruce L. Kempkes, Assistant
    Attorney General, and Carl J. Petersen, County Attorney, for appellee.
    2
    HECHT, Justice.
    A juvenile accused of sexually abusing and assaulting three
    children appeals from his delinquency adjudication.                 He contends the
    juvenile court should have excluded evidence of a prior bad act and that
    there was insufficient evidence to support the findings that he committed
    the delinquent acts.       Upon our de novo review, we affirm the juvenile
    adjudication as to six of the seven counts of delinquency and reverse as
    to one count.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    In August and September 2011, two petitions were filed alleging
    fifteen-year-old A.K. was a delinquent child pursuant to Iowa Code
    chapter 232 for committing a total of three counts of sexual abuse in the
    second degree and four counts of assault with intent to commit sexual
    abuse involving three different victims. 1 A.K. denied the charges, and an
    adjudicatory hearing was held in January 2012.
    At the adjudicatory hearing, D.E. 2 testified regarding events that
    happened on the night of July 1, 2011:              That night, he walked to the
    figure eight races at the county fairgrounds with his sisters and some
    friends. 3 A.K. pulled up in a white car and offered to give them a ride,
    and the group accepted. After arriving at the races, the group split up,
    but later A.K. approached D.E. and asked him if he wanted to play truth
    1FileNo. JVJV500105 alleged A.K. committed three acts which would constitute
    sexual abuse in the second degree against D.E. and one act which would constitute
    assault with intent to commit sexual abuse against J.E. File No. JVJV500109 alleged
    A.K. committed three acts which would constitute assault with intent to commit sexual
    abuse against K.D.
    2D.E.  was eight years old when the alleged abuse occurred, but was nine by the
    time of the adjudicatory hearing.
    3Although   D.E. and the other children were not sure of the date of the incident,
    police were able to narrow down the time frame to July 1 based on A.K.’s phone records
    and the racing schedule.
    3
    or dare. A.K. and D.E. got into A.K.’s parked car, and A.K. touched him
    “inappropriately.” After the races ended, A.K. offered to drive D.E. to a
    farm to look at the animals and obtained permission from D.E.’s older
    sister. A.K. drove D.E. to a remote location, and they got into the back
    seat. A.K. pulled down his pants and removed D.E.’s pants. A.K. lifted
    D.E. onto his lap and touched his penis to D.E.’s anus. He also rubbed
    D.E.’s penis with his hand, and put D.E.’s penis in his mouth. A.K. then
    took D.E. back to town to meet his sister. D.E. did not tell anyone about
    the incident until several days later.
    D.E.’s twin sister, J.E., also testified.              She corroborated D.E.’s
    testimony about riding to the races with A.K. and about D.E. leaving with
    A.K. both during and after the races. She also testified that later in the
    summer, A.K. asked her if she wanted to ride her bike out to Blue Scout
    Island with him. She agreed. They entered an old burned-out house,
    and A.K. dared her to pull her pants down. She did. He looked at her
    and then she pulled her pants up and she left. He neither touched her
    nor moved toward her. She waited to tell anyone about the incident until
    several days later.
    D.E. and J.E.’s older sister testified about the night of the races
    and corroborated that D.E. and A.K. disappeared during the races and
    were found together in A.K.’s car. She also corroborated that A.K. left
    with D.E. in his car after the races to go to the farm. All three children
    described the interior of A.K.’s car in specific detail, including the fact
    that the steering wheel was covered in tape because A.K. told them the
    air bag had been set off.
    K.D. 4 testified that A.K. was friends with his brother and
    sometimes came to his house along with other friends to watch TV after
    4K.D.   was eleven years old at the time of the incident and at the time of trial.
    4
    school.   On three occasions during the summer of 2011, A.K. tickled
    him, and the horseplay escalated as A.K. rubbed K.D.’s penis through his
    pants for about twenty minutes. K.D. testified that he did not tell anyone
    about the incidents because he was embarrassed. He acknowledged that
    his brother and another friend were in the room when the incidents took
    place but that they did not seem to notice anything.
    A.K. did not testify but introduced testimony from his mother,
    father, and sister that the car described by the children was inoperable
    and parked in South Dakota at his father’s apartment on July 1, 2011.
    A neighbor and an acquaintance testified that they recalled seeing A.K.
    on a bicycle on the evening of July 1. Some other children who had been
    at K.D.’s house on the days in question testified that roughhousing was
    common and that they did not see A.K. rubbing K.D.’s penis. A.K. also
    introduced evidence tending to show that D.E. and J.E. had changed
    elements of their stories when they had talked to friends, members of law
    enforcement, and a counselor.
    The juvenile court adjudicated A.K. a delinquent on all seven
    counts. A.K. appealed. He contends the district court erred in allowing
    evidence of a prior bad act admitted by A.K. to an investigating officer.
    He also contends there was insufficient evidence to support the
    adjudication.
    II. Scope of Review.
    Delinquency proceedings are special proceedings that serve as an
    alternative to the criminal prosecution of a child.     In re J.A.L., 
    694 N.W.2d 748
    , 751 (Iowa 2005). The objective of the proceedings is the
    best interests of the child. Id. We review delinquency proceedings de
    novo. Id. Although we give weight to the factual findings of the juvenile
    court, especially regarding the credibility of witnesses, we are not bound
    5
    by them. In re J.D.F., 
    553 N.W.2d 585
    , 587 (Iowa 1996). We presume
    the child is innocent of the charges, and the State has the burden of
    proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the juvenile committed the
    delinquent acts.   Iowa Code § 232.47(10) (2011).       Our review of the
    juvenile court’s admission of other-acts evidence is for an abuse of
    discretion. J.A.L., 694 N.W.2d at 751.
    The State argues that our de novo standard of review of the
    sufficiency of the evidence for juvenile adjudications is inappropriate and
    unwarranted by Iowa Code chapter 232.           The State contends that
    although our caselaw has long held that our review is de novo and that
    we consider the facts anew to determine whether the State has met its
    burden to prove the child engaged in acts of delinquency, the statute has
    not supported such review since 1965 and urges us to adopt a standard
    of review identical to the review we conduct in criminal cases. Such a
    standard would require us to determine whether, viewing the light in the
    evidence most favorable to the State, any reasonable fact finder could
    have found beyond a reasonable doubt that the juvenile committed the
    delinquent acts. See State v. Bash, 
    670 N.W.2d 135
    , 137 (Iowa 2003).
    As the State describes, before 1965, proceedings under chapter
    232 were “in equity.” Iowa Code § 232.13 (1962). Thus our review on
    appeal was de novo, as it is in all equity cases.     See Iowa R. App. P.
    6.907. However, chapter 232 was substantially revised in 1965, and the
    provision expressly requiring delinquency proceedings to be tried in
    equity was removed.     Compare Iowa Code § 232.13 (1962), with Iowa
    Code § 232.58 (1966). In its place was the directive that “an interested
    party . . . may appeal to the supreme court for review of questions of law
    and fact.”   Id. § 232.58 (1966).   Identical language is still in effect in
    section 232.133(1) (2011).   However, in cases following the revision of
    6
    chapter 232, we continued to assert that our review was de novo without
    acknowledging that particular change in the statutory language.      See,
    e.g., In re Henderson, 
    199 N.W.2d 111
    , 116 (Iowa 1972).       Instead, we
    cited to the old rule of appellate procedure which indicated that our
    review of equity cases was de novo. Id.
    The State points out that other states and federal jurisdictions
    apply the same standard of review to sufficiency-of-the-evidence claims
    in juvenile cases as in criminal cases.   These other jurisdictions have
    reasoned that because the State has the same “beyond a reasonable
    doubt” burden in both juvenile and adult criminal proceedings, the
    standards and scope of appellate review should also be the same in
    juvenile and criminal proceedings. See United States v. DeLeon, 
    768 F.2d 629
    , 631 (5th Cir. 1985) (concluding standard of review of federal
    juvenile adjudication is whether, viewing evidence in light most favorable
    to the government, a reasonable fact finder could have found beyond a
    reasonable doubt the juvenile committed the alleged act); In re Jose D.R.,
    
    186 Cal. Rptr. 898
    , 901 (Ct. App. 1982) (holding standard of review in
    juvenile adjudications is same as in criminal convictions because
    standard of proof below is identical in the two proceedings); In re W.C.,
    
    657 N.E.2d 908
    , 923 (Ill. 1995) (holding the standard of review in
    juvenile adjudication is whether, after viewing evidence in light most
    favorable to the State, any rational trier of fact could have found the
    essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt); J.D.P. v.
    State, 
    857 N.E.2d 1000
    , 1010 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006) (holding that in
    reviewing sufficiency of evidence in juvenile adjudication the appellate
    court considers the evidence most favorable to the judgment and the
    reasonable inferences drawn therefrom and affirms if those inferences
    constitute substantial evidence); In re A.D., 
    771 A.2d 45
    , 48 (Pa. Super.
    7
    Ct. 2001) (holding      review of sufficiency of evidence      of juvenile
    adjudication is same as reviewing substantial evidence to support a
    criminal conviction).
    While the State accurately describes the changes to chapter 232 in
    1965, we do not think the revision requires a change in our standard of
    review.    The revised language provides that an interested party may
    appeal “for review of questions of law and fact.” Iowa Code § 232.133(1).
    This language is compatible with our framework of de novo review which
    in other contexts requires this court to review the “facts as well as the
    law [to] determine from the credible evidence [the parties’] rights anew.”
    State ex rel. Turner v. Younker Bros., Inc., 
    210 N.W.2d 550
    , 567 (Iowa
    1973) (emphasis added); see also In re Marriage of Winegard, 
    257 N.W.2d 609
    , 613 (Iowa 1977). Further, we have continued to assert that juvenile
    proceedings are in equity and subject to de novo review for more than
    forty years since the amendments identified by the State. Certainly if the
    legislature had intended such a dramatic change in the scope of our
    appellate review in juvenile proceedings, it would have seen fit to more
    explicitly revise the statute to correct our misunderstanding at some
    point during the last four decades.
    Although the State contends there is “no legitimate reason or
    policy” supporting the application of different standards of review in
    juvenile   adjudications    and   adult   criminal   convictions,   juvenile
    delinquency proceedings are different in significant ways from adult
    criminal proceedings.      The primary goal of juvenile proceedings is to
    further the best interests of the child—not to punish but instead to help
    and educate the child. See Iowa Code § 232.1; Henderson, 199 N.W.2d
    at 119. The State has not explained how a change in our standard of
    review would promote the best interests of the juvenile. Notably, none of
    8
    the cases from other jurisdictions cited by the State address this issue.
    The rationale offered by the other courts focuses solely on the similar
    burden placed on the State in both types of proceedings.
    We note that de novo review of the evidence may promote efficiency
    when there is an evidentiary error below because we can review the
    evidence anew, without considering the inadmissible evidence, to
    determine whether the State has proven the child committed the acts
    beyond a reasonable doubt. See J.A.L., 694 N.W.2d at 753. If we applied
    the more deferential review urged by the State, we would have to remand
    for a new trial when evidentiary error was not harmless and keep the
    child in limbo longer.
    Further, juvenile proceedings differ from criminal proceedings in
    another   important      respect.   Neither   statutory   nor    constitutional
    provisions guarantee juveniles the right to a jury trial. See Iowa Code
    § 232.47(2); McKeiver v. Pennsylvania, 
    403 U.S. 528
    , 533, 545–47, 
    91 S. Ct. 1976
    , 1980, 1986–87, 
    29 L. Ed. 2d 647
    , 654, 661–62 (1971); In re
    Johnson, 
    257 N.W.2d 47
    , 50–51 (Iowa 1977). This important distinction
    between adult and juvenile proceedings favors a more in-depth appellate
    review of the facts supporting and opposing an adjudication.
    Some fear that because of the unique nature of juvenile
    proceedings, juveniles will often “receive[] the worst of both worlds . . .
    get[ting] neither the protections accorded to adults nor the solicitous care
    and regenerative treatment postulated for children.”            Kent v. United
    States, 
    383 U.S. 541
    , 556, 
    86 S. Ct. 1045
    , 1054, 
    16 L. Ed. 2d 84
    , 94
    (1966). Others have argued that the lack of a right to jury trial renders
    juvenile proceedings especially vulnerable to inaccurate fact finding and
    unfair resolutions because they are presided over by a single judge.
    Martin Guggenheim & Randy Hertz, Reflections on Judges, Juries, and
    9
    Justice: Ensuring the Fairness of Juvenile Delinquency Trials, 33 Wake
    Forest L. Rev. 553, 576–77, 593 (1998) [hereinafter Guggenheim].
    Although de novo appellate review may not provide the same measure of
    protection that a jury trial would, we see no reason to abandon it lightly,
    especially given that we do not think it mandated by statute. 5
    Given these considerations, we decline to change our standard of
    review    of   the    sufficiency    of   the    evidence     supporting       a   juvenile
    adjudication.
    III. Discussion.
    A. Prior Acts Evidence.                During the testimony of Detective
    Birkey, who had interviewed A.K. regarding the allegations, this exchange
    took place:
    Q: Okay. And after you asked that did [A.K.’s father]
    or A.K. volunteer that he had touched a five-year-old child
    inappropriately in Sioux Falls?
    MR. JACOBSMA: Objection. Relevance.
    MR. PETERSON: It goes to intent, Your Honor. It’s my
    perception that the defense counsel, especially in [K.D.’s]
    case, is alleging that this was roughhousing and had no
    sexual intent. Part of the intent is specific intent to commit
    a sexual assault.
    THE COURT: The objection’s overruled.                        You may
    answer the question.
    5Studies   have shown that a defendant is more likely to be found guilty after a
    bench trial than a jury trial. Guggenheim, 33 Wake Forest L. Rev. at 562–63. While
    these studies cannot discern who is “right” in the situations where the fact finders
    disagree as to guilt, scholars have offered suggestions explaining why judges are more
    likely to vote for conviction than are juries. Of primary concern is that judges are
    routinely exposed to inadmissible, prejudicial, extra-record evidence, particularly in
    juvenile cases. Id. at 571. Often this evidence (such as a confession obtained in
    violation of the juvenile’s constitutional rights) will suggest, if not downright prove, that
    the juvenile committed the alleged act. Id. at 571–72. Although appellate courts
    “indulge in a fiction that a trial judge is capable of putting inadmissible information out
    of her mind[,] . . . empirical evidence suggests, and some judges have forthrightly
    acknowledged, such highly prejudicial information inevitably affects a judge, even if
    only at a subconscious level.” Id. at 572 (footnotes omitted).
    10
    THE WITNESS: I asked him if he had ever touched
    anyone inappropriately, and he said, “No, no, actually--”
    then he stopped, and I said, “never.” And he said, “Well,
    yeah, once.” And he told me he had touched the vagina of a
    five-year-old girl in Sioux Falls. According to police reports I
    already had, I believe she was four at the time.
    MR. PETERSON: And so you were aware of this
    incident in Sioux Falls, South Dakota?
    THE WITNESS: Yeah, I was.
    In this appeal, A.K. contends this testimony should have been
    excluded pursuant to Iowa Rule of Evidence 5.404(b) as evidence of a
    prior bad act. However, the only ground urged for exclusion at trial was
    relevance, which is not relied on in the appeal. The State contends this
    general “relevance” objection was insufficient to preserve error on
    5.404(b) grounds and notes that A.K. has abandoned his relevancy
    objection on appeal. We need not decide whether error was preserved on
    this issue or whether, if preserved, the “other acts” evidence was
    admissible, however, because the evidence challenged by A.K. does not
    affect the outcome of our decision on de novo review as to the sufficiency
    of the evidence supporting any of the seven counts of delinquency alleged
    in this case.
    B.   Sufficiency of the Evidence.      A.K. was charged with seven
    separate delinquent acts.      With regard to the three alleged offenses
    involving D.E., A.K. was charged with committing acts that would have
    violated Iowa Code section 709.3, sexual abuse in the second degree.
    Specifically this meant that the State had to show that A.K. committed
    sexual abuse against a person who was under the age of twelve. Iowa
    Code § 709.3(2). Sexual abuse is defined as “any sex act” with another
    person who is a child. Id. § 709.1(3). A “sex act” does not necessarily
    require skin to skin contact.    State v. Pearson, 
    514 N.W.2d 452
    , 455
    11
    (Iowa 1994).     Thus it was the State’s burden to prove A.K. committed
    three different sex acts with D.E.
    Our de novo review of the evidence convinces us that the State has
    proven beyond a reasonable doubt that A.K. committed three acts of
    sexual abuse against D.E. D.E. testified that A.K. sucked on his penis;
    rubbed his penis; and that he placed D.E., nude, on top of his naked
    groin and that A.K.’s penis touched D.E.’s anus. These are clearly sex
    acts. Although counsel for A.K. was able to identify several variances in
    D.E.’s accounts given to different people before trial, we do not find the
    variances to be significant or destructive to the eight-year-old’s
    credibility. We further note that D.E.’s clear and accurate description of
    the interior of A.K.’s car adds significantly to his credibility. Although
    A.K. offered the testimony of his sister and others to establish that the
    car D.E. and the other children described was inoperable and was
    parked in another state at the time of the alleged abuse, we, as did the
    juvenile court, find the testimony of D.E. and the other children more
    credible than the testimony of A.K.’s witnesses. Accordingly, we affirm
    the juvenile court’s determination that A.K. committed delinquent acts
    that would constitute three violations of section 709.3(2) if he were an
    adult.
    Similarly, regarding the allegations involving K.D., we conclude the
    State has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that A.K. committed three
    acts which would constitute assaults with intent to commit sexual abuse
    in violation of section 709.11.      As to each of these offenses, the State
    must prove that A.K. committed an assault, as defined in section 708.1,
    with the intent to commit sexual abuse. Assault is defined, in relevant
    part, as any of the following:
    12
    1. Any act which is intended to cause pain or injury
    to, or which is intended to result in physical contact which
    will be insulting or offensive to another, coupled with the
    apparent ability to execute the act.
    2. Any act which is intended to place another in fear
    of immediate physical contact which will be painful,
    injurious, insulting, or offensive, couple with the apparent
    ability to execute the act.
    Iowa Code § 708.1(1)–(2).
    K.D.’s   testimony was   uncontroverted   that   A.K.   engaged   in
    horseplay with K.D. which escalated into A.K. rubbing K.D.’s penis
    through his pants for extended periods of time on three different
    occasions. On at least one occasion, K.D. told A.K. to stop, and A.K. did
    not. Although A.K. solicited testimony from other boys who were present
    on one or more of the occasions and who did not observe the rubbing,
    the boys corroborated that A.K. had been at the house during the
    relevant time frame and that A.K. had wrestled or engaged in horseplay
    with K.D. K.D. testified that he did not like to be touched that way by
    A.K. and he found it embarrassing.      We find K.D.’s testimony more
    credible than the testimony opposing it.    The State proved beyond a
    reasonable doubt that A.K. committed three acts of assault with intent to
    commit sexual abuse against K.D.
    However, we find the State has not met its burden to prove A.K.
    committed an assault against J.E. as the crime is defined under Iowa
    Code section 708.1(1) and (2). J.E.’s uncontroverted testimony was that
    after she willingly accompanied A.K. to the abandoned house, A.K. dared
    her to pull down her pants.     She complied at first but after a few
    moments pulled up her pants and ran away. J.E. testified that A.K. was
    across the room from her when he spoke to her. A.K. did not touch her,
    move toward her, or make any verbal utterance threatening her with
    physical contact.   We cannot conclude beyond a reasonable doubt on
    13
    this record that A.K. assaulted J.E. Accordingly, we reverse the juvenile
    court’s adjudication of A.K. as to this count.
    IV. Conclusion.
    For the reasons stated above, we affirm the juvenile court’s
    adjudication of A.K. as a delinquent as alleged in counts I, II, and III of
    File No. JVJV500105 (D.E.) and counts I, II, and III of File No.
    JVJV500109 (K.D.). We reverse the juvenile court’s adjudication of A.K.
    as a delinquent as to count IV of File No. JVJV500105 (J.E.).
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.