SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 14–8358
_________________
AVONDALE LOCKHART, PETITIONER
v.UNITED
STATES
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the second circuit
[March 1, 2016]
Justice Kagan, with whom Justice Breyer joins,
dissenting.
Imagine a friend told you that she hoped to meet
“an actor, director, or producer involved with the new Star Wars
movie.” You would know immediately that she wanted to meet an actor
from the Star Wars cast—not an actor in, for example, the latest
Zoolander. Suppose a real estate agent promised to find a client “a
house, condo, or apartment in New York.” Wouldn’t the potential
buyer be annoyed if the agent sent him information about condos in
Maryland or California? And consider a law imposing a penalty for
the “violation of any statute, rule, or regulation relating to
insider trading.” Surely a person would have cause to protest if
punished under that provision for violating a traffic statute. The
reason in all three cases is the same: Everyone understands that
the modifying phrase—“involved with the new Star Wars movie,” “in
New York,” “relating to insider trading”—applies to each term in
the preceding list, not just the last.
That ordinary understanding of how English
works, in speech and writing alike, should decide this case.
Avondale Lockhart is subject to a 10-year mandatory minimum
sentence for possessing child pornography if, but only if, he has a
prior state-law conviction for “aggravated sexual abuse, sexual
abuse, or abusive sexual conduct involving a minor or ward.” 18
U. S. C. §2252(b)(2). The Court today, relying on what is
called the “rule of the last antecedent,” reads the phrase
“involving a minor or ward” as modifying only the final term in
that three-item list. But properly read, the modifier applies to
each of the terms—just as in the examples above. That normal
construction finds support in uncommonly clear-cut legislative
history, which states in so many words that the three predicate
crimes all involve abuse of children. And if any doubt remained,
the rule of lenity would command the same result: Lockhart’s prior
conviction for sexual abuse
of an adult does not trigger
§2252(b)(2)’s mandatory minimum penalty. I respectfully
dissent.
I
Begin where the majority does—with the rule of
the last antecedent. See
ante, at 3. This Court most fully
discussed that principle in
Barnhart v.
Thomas, 540
U. S. 20 (2003) , which considered a statute providing that an
individual qualifies as disabled if “he is not only unable to do
his previous work but cannot, considering his age, education, and
work experience, engage in any other kind of substantial gainful
work
which exists in the national economy.”
Id., at
21–22 (quoting 42 U. S. C. §423(d)(2)(A)) (emphasis
added). The Court held, invoking the last-antecedent rule, that the
italicized phrase modifies only the term “substantial gainful
work,” and not the term “previous work” occurring earlier in the
sentence. Two points are of especial note. First,
Barnhart
contained a significant caveat: The last-antecedent rule “can
assuredly be overcome by other indicia of meaning.” 540 U. S.,
at 26; see,
e.g., Nobelman v.
American Savings Bank,
508 U. S. 324 –331 (1993) (refusing to apply the rule when a
contrary interpretation was “the more reasonable one”). Second, the
grammatical structure of the provision in
Barnhart is
nothing like that of the statute in this case: The modifying phrase
does not, as here, immediately follow a list of multiple, parallel
terms. That is true as well in the other instances in which this
Court has followed the rule. See,
e.g., Jama v.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, 543 U. S. 335
(2005) ;
Batchelor v.
United States, 156 U. S.
426 (1895) ;
Sims Lessee v.
Irvine, 3 Dall. 425
(1799).
Indeed, this Court has made clear that the
last-antecedent rule does not generally apply to the grammatical
construction present here: when “[t]he modifying clause appear[s]
. . . at the end of a single, integrated list.”
Jama, 543 U. S., at 344, n. 4. Then, the exact
opposite is usually true: As in the examples beginning this
opinion, the modifying phrase refers alike to each of the list’s
terms. A leading treatise puts the point as follows: “When there is
a straightforward, parallel construction that involves all nouns or
verbs in a series,” a modifier at the end of the list “normally
applies to the entire series.” A. Scalia & B. Garner, Reading
Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 147 (2012); compare
id., at 152 (“When the syntax involves something other than
[such] a parallel series of nouns or verbs,” the modifier “normally
applies only to the nearest reasonable referent”). That
interpretive practice of applying the modifier to the whole list
boasts a fancy name—the “series-qualifier canon,” see Black’s Law
Dictionary 1574 (10th ed. 2014)—but, as my opening examples show,
it reflects the completely ordinary way that people speak and
listen, write and read.[
1]
Even the exception to the series-qualifier
principle is intuitive, emphasizing both its common-sensical basis
and its customary usage. When the nouns in a list are so disparate
that the modifying clause does not make sense when applied to them
all, then the last-antecedent rule takes over. Suppose your friend
told you not that she wants to meet “an actor, director, or
producer involved with Star Wars,” but instead that she hopes
someday to meet “a President, Supreme Court Justice, or actor
involved with Star Wars.” Presumably, you would know that she wants
to meet a President or Justice even if that person has no
connection to the famed film franchise. But so long as the
modifying clause “is applicable as much to the first and other
words as to the last,” this Court has stated, “the natural
construction of the language demands that the clause be read as
applicable to all.”
Paroline v.
United States, 572
U. S. ___, ___ (2014) (slip op., at 9) (quoting
Porto Rico
Railway, Light & Power Co. v.
Mor, 253 U. S.
345, 348 (1920) ). In other words, the modifier then qualifies not
just the last antecedent but the whole series.
As the majority itself must acknowledge, see
ante, at 7–8, this Court has repeatedly applied the
series-qualifier rule in just that manner. In
Paroline, for
example, this Court considered a statute requiring possessors of
child pornography to pay restitution to the individuals whose abuse
is recorded in those materials. The law defines such a victim’s
losses to include “medical services relating to physical,
psychiatric, or psychological care; physical and occupational
therapy or rehabilitation; necessary transportation, temporary
housing, and child care expenses; lost income; attorneys’ fees, as
well as other costs incurred; and any other losses suffered by the
victim as a proximate result of the offense.” 18 U. S. C.
§§2259(b)(3)(A)–(F) (lettering omitted). The victim bringing the
lawsuit invoked the last-antecedent rule to argue that the modifier
at the end of the provision—“as a proximate result of the
offense”—pertained only to the last item in the preceding list, and
not to any of the others. See 572 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at
9). But the Court rejected that view: It recited the “canon[ ]
of statutory construction,” derived from the “natural” use of
language, that “[w]hen several words are followed by a clause” that
can sensibly modify them all, it should be understood to do so.
Ibid. Thus, the Court read the proximate-cause requirement
to cover each and every term in the list.
United States v.
Bass, 404
U. S. 336 (1971) , to take just one other example, followed
the same rule. There, the Court confronted a statute making it a
crime for a convicted felon to “receive[ ], possess[ ],
or transport[ ] in commerce or affecting commerce
. . . any firearm.” 18 U. S. C. App. §1202(a)
(1970 ed.) (current version at 18 U. S. C. §922(g)). The
Government contended that the modifying clause—“in commerce or
affecting commerce”—applied only to“transport” and not to “receive”
or “possess.” But the Court rebuffed that argument. “[T]he natural
construction of the language,” the Court recognized, “suggests that
the clause ‘in commerce or affecting commerce’ qualifies all three
antecedents in the list.” 404 U. S., at 339 (some internal
quotation marks omitted). Relying on longstanding precedents
endorsing such a construction, the Court explained: “Since ‘in
commerce or affecting commerce’ undeniably applies to at least one
antecedent, and since it makes sense with all three, the more
plausible construction here is that it in fact applies to all
three.”
Id., at 339–340 (citing
United States v.
Standard Brewery, Inc., 251 U. S. 210, 218 (1920) ;
Porto Rico Railway, 253 U. S., at 348); see also,
e.g., Jones v.
United States, 529 U. S.
848, 853 (2000) (similarly treating the interstate commerce element
in the phrase “any building, vehicle, or other real or personal
property used in interstate or foreign commerce” as applying to
buildings and vehicles).
That analysis holds equally for §2252(b)(2), the
sentencing provision at issue here. The relevant
language—“aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, or abusive sexual
conduct involving a minor or ward”—contains a “single, integrated
list” of parallel terms (
i.e., sex crimes) followed by a
modifying clause.
Jama, 543 U. S., at 344, n. 4.
Given the close relation among the terms in the series, the
modifier makes sense “as much to the first and other words as to
the last.”
Paroline, 572 U. S., at ___ (slip op., at
9). In other words, the reference to a minor or ward applies as
well to sexual abuse and aggravated sexual abuse as to abusive
sexual conduct. (The case would be different if, for example, the
statute established a mandatory minimum for any person previously
convicted of “arson, receipt of stolen property, or abusive sexual
conduct involving a minor or ward.”) So interpreting the modifier
“as applicable to all” the preceding terms is what “the natural
construction of the language” requires.
Ibid.;
Bass,
404 U. S., at 339.
The majority responds to all this by claiming
that the “inelegant phrasing” of §2252(b)(2) renders it somehow
exempt from a grammatical rule reflecting “how people ordinarily”
use the English language.
Ante, at 10. But to begin with,
the majority is wrong to suggest that the series-qualifier canon is
only about “colloquial” or “conversational” English.
Ibid.
In fact, it applies to both speech and writing, in both their
informal and their formal varieties. Here is a way to test my
point: Pick up a journal, or a book, or for that matter a Supreme
Court opinion—most of which keep “everyday” colloquialisms at a far
distance.
Ibid. You’ll come across many sentences having the
structure of the statutory provision at issue here: a few nouns
followed by a modifying clause. And you’ll discover, again and yet
again, that the clause modifies every noun in the series, not just
the last—in other words, that even (especially?) in formal writing,
the series-qualifier principle works.[
2] And the majority is wrong too in suggesting that the
“odd repetition” in §2252(b)(2)’s list of state predicates causes
the series-qualifier principle to lose its force.
Ibid. The
majority’s own made-up sentence proves that much. If a friend asked
you “to get her tart lemons, sour lemons, or sour fruit from
Mexico,” you might well think her list of terms perplexing: You
might puzzle over the difference between tart and sour lemons, and
wonder why she had specifically mentioned lemons when she
apparently would be happy with sour fruit of any kind. But of one
thing, you would have no doubt: Your friend wants some produce
from Mexico; it would not do to get her, say, sour lemons
from Vietnam. However weird the way she listed fruits—or the way
§2252(b)(2) lists offenses—the modifying clause still refers to
them all.
The majority as well seeks refuge in the idea
that applying the series-qualifier canon to §2252(b)(2) would
violate the rule against superfluity. See
ante, at 9–10.
Says the majority: “Any conduct that would qualify as ‘aggravated
sexual abuse . . . involving a minor or ward’ or ‘sexual
abuse . . . involving a minor or ward’ would also qualify
as ‘abusive sexual conduct involving a minor or ward.’ ”
Ante, at 9. But that rejoinder doesn’t work. “[T]he canon
against superfluity,” this Court has often stated, “assists only
where a competing interpretation gives effect to every clause and
word of a statute.”
Microsoft Corp. v.
i4i Ltd.
Partnership, 564 U. S. 91, 106 (2011) (internal quotation
marks omitted); see,
e.g.,
Bruesewitz v.
Wyeth
LLC, 562 U. S. 223, 236 (2011) . And the majority’s
approach (as it admits, see
ante, at 9) produces superfluity
too—and in equal measure. Now (to rearrange the majority’s
sentence) any conduct that would qualify as “abusive sexual conduct
involving a minor or ward” or “aggravated sexual abuse” would also
qualify as “sexual abuse.” In other words, on the majority’s
reading as well, two listed crimes become subsets of a third, so
that the three could have been written as one. And indeed, the
majority’s superfluity has an especially odd quality, because it
relates to themodifying clause itself: The majority, that is, makes
the term “involving a minor or ward” wholly unnecessary. Remember
the old adage about the pot and the kettle? That is why the rule
against superfluity cannot excuse the majority from reading
§2252(b)(2)’s modifier, as ordinary usage demands, to pertain to
all the terms in the preceding series.[
3]
II
Legislative history confirms what the natural
construction of language shows: Each of the three predicate
of-fenses at issue here must involve a minor. The list of those
crimes appears in two places in §2252(b)—both in§2252(b)(1), which
contains a sentencing enhancement for those convicted of
distributing or receiving child pornography, and in §2252(b)(2),
which includes a similar enhancement for those (like Lockhart)
convicted of possessing such material. Descriptions of that list of
offenses, made at the time Congress added it to those provisions,
belie the majority’s position.
The relevant language—again, providing for a
manda-tory minimum sentence if a person has a prior
state-lawconviction for “aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, or
abusive sexual conduct involving a minor or ward”—first made its
appearance in 1996, when Congress inserted it into §2252(b)(1). See
Child Pornography Prevention Act of 1996, §121(5), 110Stat.
3009–30, 18 U. S. C. §2251 note. At that time, the Senate
Report on the legislation explained what the new language meant:
The mandatory minimum would apply to an “offender with a prior
conviction under . . . any
State child abuse law.”
S. Rep. No. 104–358, p. 9 (1996) (emphasis added). It is hard to
imagine saying any more directly that the just-added state
sexual-abuse predicates all involve minors, and minors
only.[
4]
Two years later, in urging Congress to include
the same predicate offenses in §2252(b)(2), the Department of
Justice (DOJ) itself read the list that way. In a formal bill
comment, DOJ noted that proposed legislation on child pornography
failed to fix a statutory oddity: Only §2252(b)(1), and not
§2252(b)(2), then contained the state predicates at issue here. DOJ
described that discrepancy as follows: Whereas §2252(b)(1) provided
a penalty enhancement for “individuals charged with receipt or
distribution of child pornography
and who have prior state
convictions for child molestation,” the adjacent §2252(b)(2)
contained no such enhancement for those “charged with possession of
child pornography
who have prior convictions for child
abuse.” H. R. Rep. No. 105–557, p. 31 (1998) (emphasis added).
That should change, DOJ wrote: A possessor of child pornography
should also be subject to a 2-year mandatory minimum if he had “a
prior conviction for sexual abuse of a minor.”
Ibid.
(emphasis added). DOJ thus made clear that the predicate offenses
it recom-mended adding to §2252(b)(2)—like those already
in§2252(b)(1)—related not to all sexual abuse but only to sexual
abuse of children. And Congress gave DOJ just what it wanted: Soon
after receiving the letter, Congress added the language at issue to
§2252(b)(2), resulting in the requested 2-year minimum sentence.
See Protection of Children From Sexual Predators Act of 1998,
§202(a)(2), 112Stat. 2977, 18 U. S. C. §1 note. So every
indication, in 1998 no less than in 1996, was that all the
predicate crimes relate to children alone.
The majority’s response to this history fails to
blunt its force. According to the majority, the reference to “any
state child abuse law” in the Senate Report is simply an
“incomplete[ ] descri[ption]” of “the state sexual-abuse
predicates.”
Ante, at 12. And similarly, the majority
ventures, the DOJ letter was merely noting “one of the provision’s
many salient features.”
Ibid. But suppose that you (like the
Senate Report’s or DOJ letter’s authors) had to paraphrase or
condense the statutory language at issue here, and that you (like
the majority) thought it captured
all sexual-abuse crimes.
Would you then use the phrase “any state child abuse law” as a
descriptor (as the Senate Report did)? And would you refer to the
whole list of state predicates as involving “sexual abuse of a
minor” (as the DOJ letter did)? Of course not. But you might well
use such shorthand if, alternatively, you understood the statutory
language (as I do) to cover only sexual offenses against children.
And so the authors of the Report and letter did here. Such
documents of necessity abridge statutory language; but they do not
do so by conveying an utterly false impression of what that
language is most centrally about—as by describing a provision that
(supposedly) covers all sexual abuse as one that reaches only child
molestation.[
5]
Further, the majority objects that the Senate
Report’s (and DOJ letter’s) drafters did “nothing to explain
why” Congress would have limited §2252(b)’s state
sexual-abuse predicates to those involving children when the
provision’s federal sexual-abuse predicates (as all agree) are not
so confined.
Ante, at 13 (emphasis in original). But
Congress is under no obligation to this Court to justify its
choices. (Nor is DOJ obliged to explain them to Congress itself.)
Rather, the duty is on this Court to carry out those decisions,
regardless of whether it understands all that lay behind them. The
Senate Report (and DOJ letter too) says what it says about
§2252(b)’s meaning, confirming in no uncertain terms the most
natural reading of the statutory language. Explanation or no, that
is more than sufficient.
And the majority (as it concedes) cannot claim
that Congress simply must have wanted §2252(b)(2)’s federal and
state predicates to be the same. See
ante, at 11 (“[O]ur
construction of §2252(b)(2)’s sexual-abuse predicates does not rely
on a general assumption that Congress sought full parity between
all of the federal and state predicates”). That is because both
§2252(b)(1) and §2252(b)(2) contain many federal predicates lacking
state matches. Under §2252(b)(1), for example, a person is subject
to a mandatory minimum if he previously violated 18
U. S. C. §1591, which prohibits “[s]ex trafficking of
children or [sex trafficking] by force, fraud, or coercion.” But if
the prior conviction is under state law, only sex trafficking of
children will trigger that minimum; trafficking of adults, even if
by force, fraud, or coercion, will not. That mismatch—trafficking
of both adults and children on the federal side, trafficking of
children alone on the state side—precisely parallels my view of the
sexual-abuse predicates at issue here. More generally, ten federal
obscenity crimes trigger both §2252(b)(1)’s and §2252(b)(2)’s
enhanced punishments; but equivalent state crimes do not do so. And
five federal prostitution offenses prompt mandatory minimums under
those provisions; but no such state offenses do. Noting those
disparities, the Government concedes: “[W]hen Congress adds
state-law offenses to the lists of predicate offenses triggering
child-pornography recidivist enhancements, it sometimes adds state
offenses corresponding to only a subset of the federal offenses”
previously included. Brief for United States 43. Just so. And this
Court ought to enforce that choice.
III
As against the most natural construction of
§2252(b)(2)’s language, plus unusually limpid legislative history,
the majority relies on a structural argument. See
ante, at
5–7. The federal sexual-abuse predicates in §2252(b)(2), the
majority begins, are described as crimes “under . . .
Chapter 109A,” and that chapter “criminalizes a range of
sexual-abuse offenses involving adults
or minors.”
Ante, at 5–6(emphasis in original). Once again, the majority
cannot say that this fact alone resolves the question presented,
given the many times (just discussed) that Congress opted to make
federal crimes, but not equivalent state crimes, predicates for
§2252(b)(2)’s mandatory minimums. But the majority claims to see
more than that here: The headings of the sections in Chapter 109A,
it contends, “mirror precisely the order . . . and nearly
precisely the words used to describe” the state predicate crimes at
issue.
Ante, at 6. The majority “cannot state with
certainty,” but hazards a guess that Congress thus used Chapter
109A “as a template for the list of state predicates”—or, otherwise
said, that Congress “followed” the “structure and language of
Chapter 109A” in defining those state-law offenses.
Ibid.
But §2252(b)(2)’s state predicates are not
nearly as similar to the federal crimes in Chapter 109A as the
majority claims. That Chapter includes the following offenses:
“Aggravated sexual abuse,” §2241, “Sexual abuse,”§2242, “Sexual
abuse of a minor or ward,” §2243, and “Abusive sexual contact,”
§2244. The Chapter thus contains
four crimes—one more than
found in §2252(b)(2)’s list of state offenses. If the drafters of
§2252(b)(2) meant merely to copy Chapter 109A, why would they have
left out one of its crimes? The majority has no
explanation.[
6] And there is
more. Suppose Congress, for whatever hard-to-fathom reason, wanted
to replicate only Chapter 109A’s first three offenses. It would
then have used the same language, referring to “the laws of any
State relating to aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, or sexual
abuse of a minor or ward.” (And had Congress used that language,
the phrase “of a minor or ward” would clearly have applied only to
the third term, to differentiate it from the otherwise identical
second.) But contra the majority, see
ante, at 6, 9–10, that
is not what §2252(b)(2)’s drafters did. Rather than repeating the
phrase “sexual abuse,” they used the phrase “abusive sexual
conduct” in the list’s last term—which echoes, if anything, the
separate crime of “abusive sexual contact” (included in Chapter
109A’s
fourth offense, as well as in other places in the
federal code, see,
e.g., 10 U. S. C. §920(d)). The
choice of those different words indicates, yet again, that Congress
did not mean, as the majority imagines, to duplicate Chapter 109A’s
set of offenses.
Indeed, even the Government has refused to
accept the notion that the federal and state sexual-abuse
predicates mirror each other. The Government, to be sure, has
argued that it would be “anomalous” if federal, but notstate,
convictions for sexually abusing adults trigger§2252(b)(2)’s
enhanced penalty. Brief for United States 23. (I have discussed
that more modest point above: Anomalous or not, such differences
between federal and state predicates are a recurring feature of the
statute. See
supra, at 12–13.) But the Government, in both
briefing and argument, rejected the idea that Congress wanted the
list of state predicates in §2252(b)(2) to mimic the crimes in
Chapter 109A; in other words, it denied that Congress meant for the
state and federal offenses to bear the same meaning. See Brief for
United States 22, n. 8; Tr. of Oral Arg. 26. Even in the face
of sustained questioning from Members of this Court, the Government
held fast to that position. See,
e.g., Tr. of Oral Arg.
25–26 (Justice Alito: “[W]hy do you resist the argument that what
Congress was doing was picking up basically the definitions of the
Federal offenses [in Chapter 109A] that are worded almost
identically?” Assistant to the Solicitor General: “[W]e don’t think
that Congress was trying” to do that). The listed state and federal
offenses, the Government made clear, are not intended to be
copies.
The majority seems to think that view somehow
consistent with its own hypothesis that Chapter 109A served as a
“template” for §2252(b)(2)’s state predicates,
ante, at 6;
in responding to one of Lockhart’s arguments, the majority remarks
that the state predicates might have a “generic” meaning, distinct
from Chapter 109A’s,
ante, at 14. But if that is so, the
majority’s supposed template is not much of a template after all.
The predicate state offenses would “follow” or “parallel” Chapter
109A in a single respect, but not in any others—that is, in
including sexual abuse of adults, but not in otherwise defining
wrongful sexual conduct (whether concerning adults or children).
Ante, at 6. The template, one might say, is good for this
case and this case only. And the majority has no theory for why
that should be so: It offers not the slimmest explanation of how
Chapter 109A can resolve today’s question but not the many issues
courts will face in the future involving the meaning of
§2252(b)(2)’s state predicate offenses. That is because no
rationale would make sense. The right and consistent view is that
Chapter 109A, like the other federal predicates in §2252(b)(2), is
across-the-board irrelevant in defining that provision’s state
predicates. Thus, the federal chapter’s four differently worded
crimes are independent of the three state offenses at issue
here—all of which, for the reasons I’ve given, must “involv[e] a
minor or ward.”
IV
Suppose, for a moment, that this case is not
as clear as I’ve suggested. Assume there is no way to know whether
to apply the last-antecedent or the series-qualifier rule. Imagine,
too, that the legislative history is not quite so compelling and
the majority’s “template” argument not quite so strained. Who,
then, should prevail?
This Court has a rule for how to resolve genuine
ambiguity in criminal statutes: in favor of the criminal defendant.
As the majority puts the point, the rule of lenity insists that
courts side with the defendant “when the ordinary canons of
statutory construction have revealed no satisfactory construction.”
Ante, at 14 (citing
Callanan v.
United States,
364 U. S. 587, 596 (1961) ); see also
Bifulco v.
United States, 447 U. S. 381, 387 (1980) (holding that
the rule of lenity “applies not only to interpretations of the
substantive ambit of criminal prohibitions, but also to the
penalties they impose”). At the very least, that principle should
tip the scales in Lockhart’s favor, because nothing the majority
has said shows that the modifying clause in §2252(b)(2)
unambiguously applies to only the last term in the preceding
series.
But in fact, Lockhart’s case is stronger.
Consider the following sentence, summarizing various points made
above: “The series-qualifier principle, the legislative history,
and the rule of lenity discussed in this opinion all pointin the
same direction.” Now answer the following question: Has only the
rule of lenity been discussed in this opinion, or have the
series-qualifier principle and the legislative history been
discussed as well? Even had you not read the preceding 16-plus
pages, you would know the right answer—because of the ordinary way
all of us use language. That, in the end, is why Lockhart should
win.