Tennessee statute proscribing "crime against nature" held not
unconstitutionally vague as applied to cunnilingus, satisfying as
it does the due process standard of giving sufficient warning that
men may so conduct themselves as to avoid that which is forbidden.
Viewed against that standard, the challenged statutory phrase is no
vaguer than many other terms describing criminal offenses at common
law, which are now codified in criminal codes. Moreover, the
Tennessee Supreme Court, by previously rejecting claims that the
statute was to be narrowly applied, has given sufficiently clear
notice that it would be held applicable to acts such as those
involved here when such a case as this arose.
Wainwright v.
Stone, 414 U. S. 21, and
Bouie v. City of Columbia, 378 U.
S. 347, distinguished.
Certiorari granted; 514 F.2d 570, reversed.
PER CURIAM.
Respondent was convicted in the Criminal Court for Knox County,
Tenn., of having committed a "crime against nature" in violation of
Tenn.Code Ann. § 39-707 (19,75). [
Footnote 1] The evidence showed that he had entered the
apartment of a female neighbor late at night on the pretext of
using the telephone. Once inside, he produced a butcher knife,
forced his neighbor to partially disrobe, and compelled her to
submit to his twice performing cunnilingus upon her. He was
sentenced to five to seven years' imprisonment. The Tennessee Court
of Criminal Appeals affirmed the conviction, rejecting
respondent's
Page 423 U. S. 49
claim that the Tennessee statute's proscription of "crimes
against nature" did not encompass cunnilingus, as well as his
contention that the statute was unconstitutionally vague.
501 S.W.2d 826 (1973). The Supreme Court of Tennessee denied
review.
Respondent renewed his constitutional claim in a petition for a
writ of habeas corpus filed in the District Court for the Eastern
District of Tennessee. [
Footnote
2] The District Court denied respondent's petition, holding
that, when considered in light of previous interpretations by the
courts of Tennessee, § 39-707 was "not unconstitutionally
vague nor impermissibly overbroad."
Respondent appealed to the Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit, and that court sustained his constitutional challenge.
Believing that the statutory term "crimes against nature" could
not, "in and of itself, withstand a charge of unconstitutional
vagueness," and being unable to find any Tennessee opinion
previously applying the statute to the act of cunnilingus, the
Court of Appeals held that the statute failed to give respondent
"fair warning." 514 F.2d 570 (1975).
It is settled that the fair warning requirement embodied in the
Due Process Clause prohibits the States from holding an individual
"criminally responsible for conduct which he could not reasonably
understand to be proscribed."
United States v. Harriss,
347 U. S. 612,
347 U. S. 617
(1954);
see Wainwright v. Stone, 414 U. S.
21,
414 U. S. 22
(1973). But this prohibition against excessive vagueness does not
invalidate every statute which a reviewing court believes could
have been drafted with greater precision. Many
Page 423 U. S. 50
statutes will have some inherent vagueness, for "[i]n most
English words and phrases there lurk uncertainties."
Robinson
v. United States, 324 U. S. 282,
324 U. S. 286
(1945). Even trained lawyers may find it necessary to consult legal
dictionaries, treatises, and judicial opinions before they may say
with any certainty what some statutes may compel or forbid.
Cf.
Nash v. United States, 229 U. S. 373
(1913);
United States v. National Dairy Corp.,
372 U. S. 29
(1963). All the Due Process Clause requires is that the law give
sufficient warning that men may conduct themselves so as to avoid
that which is forbidden. [
Footnote
3]
Viewed against this standard, the phrase "crimes against nature"
is no more vague than many other terms used to describe criminal
offenses at common law and now codified in state and federal penal
codes. The phrase has been in use among English-speaking people for
many centuries,
see 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries *216,
and a substantial number of jurisdictions in this country continue
to utilize it.
See Note, The Crimes Against Nature, 16
J.Pub.L. 159, 162 n. 19 (1967). Anyone who cared to do so could
certainly determine what particular acts have been considered
crimes against nature, and there can be no contention that the
respondent's acts were ones never before considered as such.
See, e.g., Comer v. State, 21 Ga.App. 306, 94 S.E. 314
(1917);
State v. Townsend, 145 Me. 384,
71 A.2d
517 (1950).
Respondent argued that the vice in the Tennessee statute derives
from the fact that jurisdictions differ as to whether "crime
against nature" is to be narrowly applied to only those acts
constituting the common law offense
Page 423 U. S. 51
of sodomy, or is to be broadly interpreted to encompass
additional forms of sexual aberration. We do not understand him to
contend that the broad interpretation is itself impermissibly
vague; nor do we think he could successfully do so. We have twice
before upheld statutes against similar challenges. In
State v.
Crawford, 478 S.W.2d
314 (1972), the Supreme Court of Missouri rejected a claim that
its crime against nature statute was so devoid of definition as to
be unconstitutional, pointing out that its provision was derived
from early English law and broadly embraced sodomy, bestiality,
buggery, fellatio, and cunnilingus within its terms. We dismissed
the appeal from this Judgment as failing to present a substantial
federal question.
Crawford v. Missouri, 409 U.S. 811
(1972);
see Hicks v. Miranda, 422 U.
S. 332,
422 U. S.
343-345 (1975). And in
Wainwright v. Stone,
supra, we held that a Florida statute proscribing "the
abominable and detestable crime against nature" was not
unconstitutionally vague, despite the fact that the State Supreme
Court had recently changed its mind about the statute's permissible
scope.
The Court of Appeals, relying on language in
Stone,
apparently believed these cases turned upon the fact that the state
courts had previously construed their statutes to cover the same
acts with which the defendants therein were charged. But although
Stone demonstrated that the existence of previous
applications of a particular statute to one set of facts forecloses
"lack of fair warning" challenges to subsequent prosecutions of
factually identical conduct, it did not hold that such applications
were a prerequisite to a statute's withstanding constitutional
attack. If that were the case, it would be extremely difficult ever
to mount an effective prosecution based upon the broader of two
reasonable constructions of newly enacted or previously unapplied
statutes, even
Page 423 U. S. 52
though a neighboring jurisdiction had been applying the broader
construction of its identically worded provision for years.
Respondent seems to argue instead that, because some
jurisdictions have taken a narrow view of "crime against nature"
and some a broader interpretation, it could not be determined which
approach Tennessee would take, making it therefore impossible for
him to know if § 39-707 covered forced cunnilingus. But even
assuming the correctness of such an argument if there were no
indication which interpretation Tennessee might adopt, it is not
available here. Respondent is simply mistaken in his view of
Tennessee law. As early as 1955, Tennessee had expressly rejected a
claim that "crime against nature" did not cover fellatio,
repudiating those jurisdictions which had taken a "narrow
restrictive definition of the offense."
Fisher v. State,
197 Tenn. 594,
277
S.W.2d 340. And, four years later, the Tennessee Supreme Court
reiterated its view of the coverage intended by § 39-707.
Emphasizing that the Tennessee statute's proscription encompasses
the broad meaning, the court quoted from a Maine decision it had
earlier cited with approval to the effect that "
the prohibition
brings all unnatural copulation with mankind or a beast, including
sodomy, within its scope.'" Sherrill v. State, 204 Tenn.
427, 429, 321
S.W.2d 811, 812 (1959), quoting from State v. Cyr, 135
Me. 513, 198 A. 743 (1938). And the Maine statute, which the
Tennessee court had at that point twice equated with its own, had
been applied to cunnilingus before either Tennessee decision.
State v. Townsend, supra. Thus, we think the Tennessee
Supreme Court had given sufficiently clear notice that §
39-707 would receive the broader of two plausible interpretations,
and would be applied to acts such as those committed here when such
a case arose.
Page 423 U. S. 53
This also serves to distinguish this case from
Bouie v. City
of Columbia, 378 U. S. 347
(1964), a decision the Court of Appeals thought controlling. In
Bouie, the Court held that an unforeseeable judicial
enlargement of a criminal statute narrow and precise on its face
violated the Due Process Clause. It pointed out that such a process
may lull
"the potential defendant into a false sense of security, giving
him no reason even to suspect that conduct clearly outside the
scope of the statute as written will be retroactively brought
within it by an act of judicial construction."
378 U.S. at
378 U. S. 352.
But, as we have noted, respondent can make no claim that §
39-707 afforded no notice that his conduct might be within its
scope. Other jurisdictions had already reasonably construed
identical statutory language to apply to such acts. And given the
Tennessee court's clear pronouncements that its statute was
intended to effect broad coverage, there was nothing to indicate,
clearly or otherwise, that respondent's acts were outside the scope
of § 39-707. There is no possibility of retroactive lawmaking
here.
See 378 U.S. at
378 U. S.
353-354. Accordingly, the petition for certiorari and
respondent's motion to proceed
in forma pauperis are
granted, and the judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed.
So ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
"39-707. Crimes against nature -- Penalty. -- Crimes against
nature, either with mankind or any beast, are punishable by
imprisonment in the penitentiary not less than five (5) years nor
more than fifteen (15) years."
[
Footnote 2]
Respondent also sought relief on the theory that he was denied
due process of law because he was convicted on the uncorroborated
testimony of his victim. The District Court dismissed this ground
as failing "to state a claim of constitutional significance," and
respondent does not appear to have pursued it.
[
Footnote 3]
This is not a case in which the statute threatens a fundamental
right such as freedom of speech, so as to call for any special
judicial scrutiny,
see Smith v. Goguen, 415 U.
S. 566,
415 U. S.
572-573 (1974).
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL concurs,
dissenting.
I dissent from the Court's summary reversal. The offense of
"crimes against nature" at common law was narrowly limited to
copulation per anum. American jurisdictions, however, expanded the
term -- some broadly and some narrowly -- to include other sexual
"aberrations." Of particular significance for this case, as the
Court of Appeals accurately stated, "courts have differed
widely
Page 423 U. S. 54
in construing the reach of
crimes against nature' to
cunnilingus." 514 F.2d 570, 571.
The Court holds, however, that, because
"[o]ther jurisdictions had already reasonably construed
identical statutory language to apply to [cunnilingus] . . . given
the Tennessee court's clear pronouncements that its statute was
intended to effect broad coverage, there was nothing to indicate,
clearly or otherwise, that respondent's acts were outside the scope
of § 39-707."
Ante at
423 U. S. 53. In
other words, the traditional test of vagueness -- whether the
statute gives fair warning that one's conduct is criminal -- is
supplanted by a test of whether there is anything in the statute
"to indicate, clearly or otherwise, that respondent's acts were
outside the scope of" the statute. This stands the test of
unconstitutional vagueness on its head. And this startling change
in vagueness law is accompanied by the equally startling holding
that, although the Tennessee courts had not previously construed
"crimes against nature" to include cunnilingus, respondent cannot
be heard to claim that § 39-707 therefore afforded no notice
that his conduct fell within its scope, because he was on notice
that Tennessee courts favored a broad reach of "crimes against
nature" and other state courts favoring a broad reach had construed
their state statutes to include cunnilingus.
Yet these extraordinary distortions of the principle that the
Due Process Clause prohibits the States from holding an individual
criminally responsible for conduct when the statute did not give
fair warning that the conduct was criminal, are perpetrated without
plenary review affording the parties an opportunity to brief and
argue the issues orally. It is difficult to recall a more patent
instance of judicial irresponsibility. For without plenary review
the Court announces today, contrary to our prior decisions, that
even when the statute he is
Page 423 U. S. 55
charged with violating fails of itself to give fair warning, one
acts at his peril if the state court has indicated a tendency to
construe the pertinent statute broadly, and some other state court
of like persuasion has construed its state statute to embrace the
conduct made the subject of the charge. I simply cannot comprehend
how the fact that one state court has judicially construed its
otherwise vague criminal statute to include particular conduct can,
without explicit adoption of that state court's construction by the
courts of the charging State, render an uninterpreted statute of
the latter State also sufficiently concrete to withstand a charge
of unconstitutional vagueness. But apart from the merits of the
proposition, surely the citizens of this country are entitled to
plenary review of its soundness before being required to attempt to
conform their conduct to this drastically new standard. Today's
holding surely flies in the face of the line of our recent
decisions that have struck down statutes as vague and overbroad,
although other state courts had previously construed their like
statutes to withstand challenges of vagueness and overbreadth.
See, e.g., the "abusive language" decisions of which
Goodings v. Wilson, 405 U. S. 518
(1972), is illustrative.
Nor will the Court's assertions that the Tennessee courts had,
in any event, in effect construed the Tennessee statute to include
cunnilingus withstand analysis. The Court relies on a 1955
Tennessee decision that had held that "crimes against nature"
include fellatio, the Tennessee court rejecting the contention that
the statute was limited to the common law "copulation per anum"
scope of the phrase. The Tennessee court in that opinion cited a
Maine case, decided in 1938,
State v. Cyr, 135 Me. 513,
198 A. 743, where the Maine court had applied a "crimes against
nature" statute to fellatio.
Page 423 U. S. 56
But the Tennessee court did not also cite a 1950 Maine decision,
State v. Townsend, 145 Me. 384,
71 A.2d
517, that applied Maine's "crimes against nature" statute to
cunnilingus.
Fisher v. State, 197 Tenn. 594,
277
S.W.2d 340 (1955). Four years later, in 1959, in another
fellatio case, the Tennessee court again made no mention of
Townsend, although quoting from Cyr's holding that the
Maine statute applies to "
all unnatural copulation with mankind
or a beast, including sodomy.'" Sherrill v. State, 204
Tenn. 427, 429, 321
S.W.2d 811, 812 (1959). Despite this significant failure of the
Tennessee court to cite Townsend, and solely on the
strength of the Tennessee court's general "equating" of the Maine
statute with the Tennessee statute, this Court holds today that
respondent had sufficient notice that the Tennessee statute would
receive a "broad" interpretation that would embrace
cunnilingus.
This 1974 attempt to bootstrap 1950 Maine law for the first time
into the Tennessee statute must obviously fail if the principle of
fair warning is to have any meaning. When the Maine court in 1938
applied its statute broadly to all "unnatural copulation," nothing
said by the Maine court suggested that that phrase reached
cunnilingus. The common law "crime against nature," limited to
copulation per anum, required penetration as an essential element.
In holding that a "broad" reading of that phrase should encompass
all unnatural copulation including fellatio -- copulation per os --
Maine could not reasonably be understood as including cunnilingus
in that category. Other jurisdictions, though on their State's
particular statutory language, have drawn that distinction.
See, e.g., Riley v. Garrett, 219 Ga. 345,
133 S.E.2d 367
(1963);
State v. Tarrant, 83 Ohio App. 199, 80 N.E.2d 509
(1948). Thus, when the Tennessee court in 1955 adopted the language
of Maine's 1938
Cyr
Page 423 U. S. 57
case, a Tennessee citizen had, at most, notice of developments
in Maine law through 1938. That Maine subsequently, in 1950,
applied its statute to cunnilingus is irrelevant, for such
subsequent developments were not "adopted" by the Tennessee court
until the case before us. Indeed, the Tennessee court's failure, in
its 1955
Fisher opinion, to cite
Townsend, Maine's
1950 cunnilingus decision, although citing
Cyr, Maine's
1938 fellatio decision, more arguably was notice that the Tennessee
courts considered fellatio but not cunnilingus as within the
nebulous reach of the Tennessee statute.
Moreover, I seriously question the Court's assumption that the
"broad interpretation" of the phrase "crime against nature" is not
unconstitutionally vague. The Court's assumption rests upon two
supposed precedents: (1) this Court's dismissal for want of a
substantial federal question of the appeal in
Crawford v.
Missouri, 409 U.S. 811 (1972), and (2) the Court's per curiam
opinion in
Wainwright v. Stone, 414 U. S.
21 (1973). That reliance is plainly misplaced.
In
Crawford, the appellant had been convicted of
coercing a mentally retarded individual to perform fellatio on
appellant. The Supreme Court of Missouri did not, as the Court
implies, for the first time in that case adopt a "broad"
construction of its statute and apply that construction in
appellant's case. Rather, the Supreme Court of Missouri first noted
that the original statute, probably reaching only the common law
"crime against nature," had been legislatively amended in express
terms to expand the offense to conduct committed "with the sexual
organs or with the mouth," thereby "enlarg[ing] the common law
definition of the crime. . . ."
State v.
Crawford, 478 S.W.2d
314, 317 (Mo.1972). Moreover, the court, observing that a
"court's construction of statutory language becomes a part of the
statute
Page 423 U. S. 58
as if it had been so amended by the legislature,'"
ibid. (citations omitted), stated that, in the 60 years
since that amendment, the Missouri courts had "adjudicated" that
the statute embraced "bestiality, buggery, fellatio . . . and
cunnilingus," id. at 318, and that "[a]t least five
[Missouri] cases have specifically held that the act charged
[against appellant] is within the statute." Id. at 319. In
light of that prior judicial and legislative construction of the
statutory phrase, and its specific prior application to acts
identical to the appellant's, the dismissal in Crawford
simply cannot be treated as holding that the phrase "crime against
nature" is not, in itself, vague.
Wainwright v. Stone, as MR. JUSTICE STEWART correctly
observes, also involved a statute already construed to cover the
conduct there in question. Indeed, it was for that very reason that
we held that the "judgment of federal courts as to the vagueness or
not of a state statute must be made in the light of prior state
constructions of the statute." 414 U.S. at
414 U. S. 22.
The reversal of the Court of Appeals' holding finding the statute
unconstitutional was explicitly based on the fact that the state
statute had previously been applied to identical conduct, which
decisions "require[d] reversal" in
Wainwright, since they
put the particular conduct expressly within the statute.
Id. at 22-23.
*
Page 423 U. S. 59
No specter of increasing caseload can possibly justify today's
summary disposition of this case. The principle that due process
requires that criminal statutes give sufficient warning to enable
men to conform their conduct to avoid that which is forbidden is
one of the great bulwarks of our scheme of constitutional liberty.
The Court's erosion today of that great principle without even
plenary review reaches a dangerous level of judicial
irresponsibility. I would have denied the petition for certiorari,
but, now that the writ has been granted, would affirm the judgment
of the Court of Appeals, or at least set the case for oral
argument.
* Admittedly, as the Court notes, a holding that prior
application of a statute to identical conduct renders a statute
sufficiently definite as to that conduct does not necessarily mean
that, in the absence of such prior application, a statute must, of
necessity, be deemed vague; but such a holding just as surely
cannot be construed, as it is by the Court, as precedent deciding
that, in the absence of such construction, the phrase "crime
against nature" is not unconstitutionally vague. In any event,
Wainwright and
Crawford present the identical
situation, namely vague statutes judicially construed to narrow
them.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, with whom MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL concurs,
dissenting.
I would have denied the petition for certiorari in this case,
but, now that the writ has been granted, I would affirm the
judgment of the Court of Appeals.
This case is not of a piece with
Wainwright v. Stone,
414 U. S. 21, upon
which the Court so heavily relies. There, the Florida courts had
repeatedly and explicitly ruled that the state law in question
prohibited precisely the conduct in which the defendants were found
to have engaged. Here, by contrast, the Tennessee courts had never
ruled that the act that Locke was found to have committed was
covered by the vague and cryptic language of the Tennessee statute,
Tenn.Code Ann. § 39-707. The Court today emphasizes that a
previous Tennessee court opinion had cited a decision of a Maine
court construing a similar statute "broadly," but even the cited
Maine decision had not construed the statute to cover the conduct
in question here. And a later Tennessee decision would have
supported the inference that this conduct was not proscribed by the
Tennessee statute.
Stephens v. State, 489
S.W.2d 542 (1972).
Page 423 U. S. 60
In the
Stone case, supra, the Florida statute had
"been construed to forbid identifiable conduct so that
'interpretation by [the state court] puts these words in the
statute as definitely as if it had been so amended by the
legislature. . . .'"
414 U.S. at
414 U. S. 23. In
the present case, by contrast, the state courts had never held that
the statutory language here at issue covered the respondent's
conduct.
As the Court of Appeals pointed out, the respondent in this case
could, and probably should, be prosecuted for aggravated assault
and battery. But I think the Court of Appeals was correct in
holding that the Tennessee statute under which the defendant was,
in fact, prosecuted was unconstitutionally vague as here
applied.