COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
Present: Judges Petty, O’Brien and Russell
Argued at Lexington, Virginia
PUBLISHED
ARTHUR ANDERSON WARREN
OPINION BY
v. Record No. 2086-17-3 JUDGE WESLEY G. RUSSELL, JR.
JANUARY 15, 2019
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY
Stacey W. Moreau, Judge
Glenn L. Berger (Berger & Thornhill, on brief), for appellant.
Eugene Murphy, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R.
Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.
Arthur Anderson Warren was convicted in a bench trial of soliciting another person “to
carnally know a brute animal or to submit to carnal knowledge with a brute animal” in violation
of Code §§ 18.2-291 and 18.2-361(A). He asserts on appeal that the trial court erred in failing to
dismiss the indictment because Code § 18.2-361(A) is unconstitutional in that it criminalizes
“private sexual conduct of consenting adults.” For the reasons that follow, we disagree and
affirm the judgment of the trial court.
BACKGROUND
We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth as the prevailing
party below. Tucker v. Commonwealth, 268 Va. 490, 492 (2004). So viewed, the evidence
established that, in October of 2016, Warren videotaped on his cellphone encounters he had with
1
In pertinent part, Code § 18.2-29 provides that “[a]ny person who commands, entreats,
or otherwise attempts to persuade another person to commit a felony other than murder, shall be
guilty of a Class 6 felony.” In this case, Warren was convicted of soliciting a person to violate
Code § 18.2-361(A).
K.H. and her dog. The videos were sexual in nature and showed, among other things, the dog’s
tongue penetrating K.H.’s vagina while K.H. performed oral sex on Warren.2 Warren can be
heard on the videos encouraging the dog and directing K.H. to position her legs so as to give the
dog improved access to her body. The videos were played at trial.
In March of 2017, Deputy Sheriff Adam Reynolds spoke with Warren on an unrelated
matter. Unprompted, Warren asked Reynolds if “bestiality type stuff” was “legal or illegal,”
described the cellphone videos, and offered to show them to Reynolds. Reynolds did not view
the videos, but contacted Investigator Janet Sergeant. Although Warren volunteered to show the
videos to the officers, they obtained a search warrant before removing the videos from Warren’s
cellphone. Sergeant testified that she viewed the videos and recognized the voices of K.H. and
Warren.
Warren moved to dismiss the indictment on constitutional grounds. Specifically, he
argued that Code § 18.2-361(A) was both facially unconstitutional and unconstitutional as
applied to him after the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S.
558 (2003). He argued that the conduct depicted in the videos could not be subject to criminal
sanction because it amounted to nothing more than consensual sexual conduct involving adults.
The trial court held a hearing on the motion on August 14, 2017. After hearing the
arguments of the parties, the trial court denied the motion.
The matter proceeded to trial. Warren did not offer any evidence. Instead, in addition to
his constitutional arguments, he argued that the activities depicted in the videos were insufficient
to establish a violation of Code §§ 18.2-29 and 18.2-361(A). The trial court rejected his
arguments, finding that the videos demonstrated that Warren had solicited K.H. to engage in
2
K.H. was charged for her role in the offense. She pled guilty to a misdemeanor and was
sentenced to probation.
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sexual conduct with an animal and that she had done so. Accordingly, the trial court convicted
Warren of the charged offense.
On appeal, Warren does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support his
conviction. Rather, he limits his challenge to the constitutionality of Code § 18.2-361(A),
asserting that it violates his due process rights. He argues that the statute is both facially
unconstitutional and unconstitutional as applied to his conduct depicted in the videos, which he
contends is nothing more than “private sexual conduct of consenting adults.”
ANALYSIS
I. Standard of Review
In challenging the constitutionality of Code § 18.2-361(A), Warren raises a question of
law subject to de novo review. Shivaee v. Commonwealth, 270 Va. 112, 119 (2005). Our
review of such questions begins with the presumption that the enactments of the General
Assembly are constitutional. Marshall v. N. Va. Transp. Auth., 275 Va. 419, 427 (2008).
“[E]very reasonable doubt regarding the constitutionality of a legislative enactment must be
resolved in favor of its validity.” Id. at 428. Although Congress may act only pursuant to a grant
of enumerated power, United States v. Comstock, 560 U.S. 126, 133 (2010), the General
Assembly is not so limited, Harrison v. Day, 201 Va. 386, 396 (1959) (“The Constitution of the
State is not a grant of legislative powers to the General Assembly, but is a restraining instrument
only, and, except as to matters ceded to the federal government, the legislative powers of the
General Assembly are without limit.”). Thus, “unless [a] statute clearly violates a provision of
the United States or Virginia Constitutions[,]” the General Assembly has the power to enact it.
Marshall, 275 Va. at 427.
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II. Code § 18.2-361(A)
At the time of the offense, Code § 18.2-361(A) provided that “[i]f any person carnally
knows in any manner any brute animal or voluntarily submits to such carnal knowledge, he is
guilty of a Class 6 felony.” This version, which is currently in force, was adopted by the General
Assembly in 2014. 2014 Va. Acts 794.
Although Warren was charged under the 2014 version of the statute, his constitutional
challenge partially turns on cases dealing with an earlier version. Because it is necessary to fully
explain the issues and authorities raised by Warren, we note that, prior to the 2014 amendment,
Code § 18.2-361(A) was broader, providing that “[i]f any person carnally knows in any manner
any brute animal, or carnally knows any male or female person by the anus or by or with the
mouth, or voluntarily submits to such carnal knowledge, he . . . is guilty of a Class 6 felony . . . .”
See id.
III. Warren’s constitutional challenge to Code § 18.2-361(A)
Warren argues that both the prior version of Code § 18.2-361(A) and the 2014 version are
unconstitutional in light of the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Lawrence, which
addressed a constitutional challenge to a Texas statute that criminalized acts of same-sex
sodomy. 539 U.S. at 563. Although the petitioners in Lawrence raised multiple constitutional
arguments, the Lawrence majority decided that “the case should be resolved” on whether the
sexual conduct at issue was a protected “liberty under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the Constitution.” Id. at 564.
After noting that there was “no longstanding history in this country of laws directed at
homosexual conduct as a distinct matter[,]” id. at 568, the majority concluded that the conduct at
issue, “two adults who, with full and mutual consent from each other, engaged in sexual
practices common to a homosexual lifestyle[]” in private, id. at 578, was protected by the due
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process clause. In so holding, the majority wrote that the “State cannot demean [the petitioners’]
existence or control their destiny by making their private sexual conduct a crime.” Id.
Although the Lawrence majority made clear its view that the liberty interests protected by
the due process clause prevented a state from criminalizing private, noncommercial, consensual
acts of sodomy, whether heterosexual or same-sex, id. at 575, it did not address the extent to
which those liberty interests might protect other sexual conduct. Specifically, the opinion does
not explicitly address whether longstanding prohibitions on other activities with a sexual
component, such as bestiality or prostitution, similarly violate the liberty interests protected by
the due process clause.3
Warren argues that the reasoning of the Lawrence majority applies with equal force to his
case, analogizing private acts of sodomy between consenting adults to private sexual activity by
adults involving animals. He contends that, after Lawrence, the Commonwealth simply may not
criminalize such sexual activities, and therefore, Code § 18.2-361(A) is both facially
unconstitutional and unconstitutional as applied to him. We address each argument in turn.
A. Warren’s facial challenge
“A facially unconstitutional statute is invalid.” Toghill v. Commonwealth, 289 Va. 220,
231 (2015). Thus, a litigant challenging the constitutionality of a statute “can only succeed in a
facial challenge by ‘establish[ing] that no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would
be valid,’ i.e., that the law is unconstitutional in all of its applications.” Wash. State Grange v.
3
The Lawrence majority does discuss historic prosecutions for bestiality in its discussion
of the history of what it identifies as “sodomy, buggery, and crimes-against-nature statutes,” 539
U.S. at 568-69, and specifically notes that Lawrence did “not involve . . . prostitution.” Id. at
578. In criticizing the majority’s rationale, Justice Scalia in dissent asserted that many
longstanding criminal prohibitions involving some form of sexual conduct, including laws
against bestiality, incest, and prostitution, are “called into question by today’s decision[.]” Id. at
590 (Scalia, J., dissenting). However, the majority never expressly took a position regarding
such statutes.
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Wash. State Republican Party, 552 U.S. 442, 449 (2008) (alteration in original) (quoting United
States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 745 (1987)).
In support of his argument that, after Lawrence, Code § 18.2-361(A) is facially
unconstitutional, Warren cites to the decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the
Fourth Circuit in MacDonald v. Moose, 710 F.3d 154 (4th Cir. 2013), a federal habeas corpus
proceeding challenging the constitutionality of the pre-2014 version of Code § 18.2-361(A).
Like Warren, MacDonald was charged with violating Code § 18.2-29 by soliciting
someone to violate Code § 18.2-361(A). Unlike Warren, MacDonald was not charged for
soliciting someone to commit bestiality, but rather, the underlying “predicate felony for
MacDonald’s criminal solicitation offense was the Commonwealth’s ‘Crimes Against Nature’
statute, which criminalizes, inter alia, ‘carnal knowledge’ by one person of another by the anus
or mouth, an act commonly known as sodomy.” Moose, 710 F.3d at 156. Specifically,
MacDonald was convicted as a result of using a telephone to solicit a minor to meet him in a
Home Depot parking lot and, after further discussions and travel, seeking to have her perform
oral sex on him. Id. at 156-57. Despite the fact that the solicitation was of a minor and at least
partially occurred in public as opposed to in the privacy of a home, the Fourth Circuit struck
down what it characterized as the “anti-sodomy provision” of Code § 18.2-361(A) as facially
unconstitutional. Id. at 156.
Although it used the facial label to describe its ruling regarding Code § 18.2-361(A), the
Fourth Circuit made clear its view that Lawrence did not necessarily prevent states from
criminalizing sexual conduct involving something other than consenting adults in private. In
explaining the limits of its decision, the Moose court noted that it “could be that a statute closely
related to the anti-sodomy provision—for example, Virginia Code section 18.2-361(B), which
criminalizes incestuous sodomy involving both minors and adults—might well survive review
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under Lawrence, as may that part of section 18.2-361(A) that outlaws bestiality.” Id. at 167. In
fact, in a footnote, the court disclaimed that its decision had any effect on Virginia’s prohibition
on bestiality, writing that “[t]he constitutionality of the bestiality portion of subsection (A) is not
challenged in this proceeding nor affected by today’s decision.” Id. at 156 n.2.
Warren now presents us with such a challenge to the anti-bestiality provision left
unaddressed by the Fourth Circuit in Moose. We need not, however, determine whether the
logic of Moose requires a finding of unconstitutionality because Moose, which is not binding
authority, was not the final word on the constitutionality of the pre-2014 version of Code
§ 18.2‐361(A).
In Toghill, the Virginia Supreme Court was faced with a constitutional challenge to the
pre-2014 version of Code § 18.2-361(A) in a case in which the defendant had used the Internet to
solicit oral sex from someone he believed to be a minor. 289 Va. at 224. In arguing his
conviction was in error, Toghill asserted that the predicate felony for his solicitation offense,
Code § 18.2-361(A), was unconstitutional and cited the Fourth Circuit’s decision in Moose as
support for his position. Id.
Acknowledging what the Fourth Circuit had ruled in Moose, our Supreme Court
emphasized that “[w]hile this Court considers Fourth Circuit decisions as persuasive authority,
such decisions are not binding precedent for” the courts of the Commonwealth. Id. at 227
(citations omitted). Conducting its own analysis, our Supreme Court found that the Lawrence
majority had acknowledged “contexts in which a state can criminalize sodomy[,]” id. at 234
(citing Lawrence, 539 U.S. at 578), and thus, concluded that there were constitutional
applications of what the Fourth Circuit had termed the “anti-sodomy provision” of
Code § 18.2-361(A), id. at 231. Recognizing that, although there were constitutional
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applications of the statute, Lawrence rendered some applications of Code § 18.2-361(A)
unconstitutional, our Supreme Court adopted a limiting construction of the statute, holding that
Code § 18.2-361(A) cannot criminalize private, noncommercial
sodomy between consenting adults, but it can continue to regulate
other forms of sodomy, such as sodomy involving children,
forcible sodomy, prostitution involving sodomy and sodomy in
public. The easy to articulate remedy is that Code § 18.2-361(A) is
invalid to the extent its provisions apply to private, noncommercial
and consensual sodomy involving only adults.
Id. at 234.4
The Virginia Supreme Court’s conclusion that the pre-2014 version of
Code § 18.2-361(A) was not facially unconstitutional is dispositive of Warren’s facial challenge
to the current version. We are, of course, “bound by the decisions of the Supreme Court of
Virginia and are without authority to overrule” them. O’Malley v. Commonwealth, 66 Va. App.
296, 301 (2016) (quoting Roane v. Roane, 12 Va. App. 989, 993 (1991)). If Lawrence, which
involved a prohibition on same-sex sodomy, did not facially invalidate the anti-sodomy
provision of then Code § 18.2-361(A), it defies logic that it facially invalidates the bestiality
portion of the statute that existed before the 2014 amendment and is all that remains after that
amendment. Certainly, if the anti-sodomy provision constitutionally could have been enforced in
the context of public, non-consensual, or commercial sodomy, and/or in instances involving
minors, the anti-bestiality provision can be enforced in similar circumstances. Because,
consistent with Toghill, there are constitutional applications of the Virginia bestiality statute,
Warren’s facial challenge to Code § 18.2-361(A) fails.
4
In adopting this limiting construction, the Virginia Supreme Court permissibly
“construe[d] the plain language of a statute to have limited application if such a construction will
tailor the statute to a constitutional fit.” Va. Soc. for Human Life, Inc. v. Caldwell, 256 Va. 151,
157 n.3 (1998).
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Although Toghill provides the rule of decision regarding Warren’s facial challenge, we
note that, after the Virginia Supreme Court decided Toghill, the Fourth Circuit revisited its
conclusion that the anti-sodomy provision of the pre-2014 version of Code § 18.2-361(A) was
facially unconstitutional. In addressing Toghill’s federal habeas challenge to his Virginia
conviction under the appropriate standard, the Fourth Circuit held that
this panel is informed by the decision in Moose. But we, unlike
the panel in Moose, are also bound by the Supreme Court of
Virginia’s post-Moose authoritative, narrowing construction of the
anti-sodomy statute, and we are now limited to considering
whether the statute, as construed by the state court, is still facially
unconstitutional. Clearly, Virginia’s anti-sodomy statute, as
authoritatively construed by the Supreme Court of Virginia, does
not criminalize conduct that Lawrence declared to be protected by
the liberty interests guaranteed by the Due Process Clause, and it
is, therefore, not facially unconstitutional. And we cannot say that
the Supreme Court of Virginia’s decision to adopt this narrowing
construction, under its jurisprudence, was contrary to or an
unreasonable application of applicable Supreme Court precedent.
Toghill v. Clarke, 877 F.3d 547, 559 (4th Cir. 2017) (internal citations omitted), cert. denied, 139
S. Ct. 223 (2018). Accordingly, we find Warren’s facial challenge to the bestiality statute to be
wholly without merit.
B. Warren’s as applied challenge
We now turn to Warren’s as applied challenge to Code § 18.2-361(A). Given that none
of the decisions discussed above directly addressed an as-applied challenge to the bestiality
statute on due process grounds, we conduct the analysis in the first instance.
The United States Supreme Court long has recognized that “[t]he Due Process Clause
guarantees more than fair process, and the ‘liberty’ it protects includes more than the absence of
physical restraint.” Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 719 (1997). Over the last century,
the high court has “held that, in addition to the specific freedoms protected by the Bill of Rights,
the ‘liberty’ specially protected by the Due Process Clause includes” many rights that Americans
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historically have viewed as fundamental. Id. at 720. In addition to protecting fundamental
rights, “[t]he Constitution also requires” that state prohibitions on certain conduct “be rationally
related to legitimate government interests.” Id. at 728. We analyze Warren’s claim against this
backdrop.
1. Warren claims a right to engage in bestiality
In addressing claims based upon substantive due process, a court must begin with “a
careful description of the asserted fundamental liberty interest.” Id. at 721 (internal quotation
marks and citations omitted). Here, although Warren characterizes the claimed right as “the right
[of adults] to engage in consensual private conduct without intervention of the government,” we
conclude that the right he actually asserts is a right to engage in bestiality.
Despite Warren’s characterization of the claimed right, it is unquestionably true that
Code § 18.2-361(A), as it presently exists, does not place any limitation on the rights of
consenting adults to engage in private, consensual, noncommercial, sexual acts with each other.
By its terms, it only prohibits sexual conduct involving a “brute animal[.]” Because the statute
prohibits only sexual activity between people and animals, the only right which it could possibly
infringe would be a right to engage in such conduct, that is, a right to engage in bestiality.
This conclusion finds support in the limiting construction adopted by our Supreme Court
in Toghill for the prior version of Code § 18.2-361(A). There, the Court held that the
anti-sodomy provision could not “apply to private, noncommercial and consensual sodomy
involving only adults.” Toghill, 289 Va. at 234 (emphasis added). The conduct at issue here
involved something other than “only” consenting adults—it involved sexual activity with a dog.
The addition of the dog fundamentally alters the equation, and thus, the claimed right is broader
than the right of consenting adults to engage in noncommercial sex acts in private; it necessarily
includes the claim of a right to engage in sexual acts with animals.
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2. There is no fundamental right to engage in bestiality
To qualify for heightened protection under the due process clause, a claimed right must
be “deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition[.]” Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 721 (internal
quotation marks and citations omitted). It must be “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of
our people as to be ranked as fundamental.” Reno v. Flores, 507 U.S. 292, 303 (1993) (internal
quotation marks and citations omitted). The claimed right must belong to the class of rights
“long recognized at common law as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.”
Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390, 399 (1923).
A claimed right to engage in sexual conduct with animals simply fails this historical test.
Bestiality was a crime at common law. 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries 216 (1769). In one
form or another, it has been criminalized in Virginia by statute since at least 1792. 1 Rev. Code
1803 at 179 (listing 1792 Virginia statute criminalizing “[b]uggery” with a “beast”); see also
Commonwealth v. Thomas, 1 Va. Cas. 307, 3 Va. 307 (1812) (recognizing crime of buggery for
sex with a horse). Although we recognize these same authorities also may have prohibited acts
of sodomy that Lawrence held may no longer be criminalized, we reject the attempt to equate
private sexual acts among consenting adults with sexual acts between humans and animals.
Warren has not identified any court that has concluded that bestiality is a fundamental liberty
interest protected by the due process clause, and we decline his invitation to recognize bestiality
as a fundamental right.
3. Rational reasons support the statute
As noted above, the due process clause not only prohibits states from infringing on
fundamental rights, it requires that state prohibitions on certain conduct “be rationally related to
legitimate government interests.” Glucksberg, 521 U.S at 728. Virginia’s ban on bestiality
passes this test as well.
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Assuming without deciding that Warren is correct that Lawrence removed morality as a
legitimate reason for criminalizing certain sexual conduct such as bestiality, additional rationales
exist for the General Assembly’s decision to ban sex with animals.5 First, there can be no
serious argument that the Commonwealth does not have a legitimate interest in preventing
cruelty to animals. “[B]estiality [can be] considered animal abuse because the sexual
molestation of animals by humans may physically injure or kill the animal victim.” Emily
Malhiot, Chapter 86: Nevada Finally Outlaws Bestiality, 49 U. Pac. L. Rev 555, 561 (2018)
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Most “[r]ecent bestiality laws . . . are
categorized as ‘animal cruelty statutes,’ demonstrating the belief that bestiality is a crime against
an animal.” Id. at 563.
The General Assembly’s interest in protecting public health also provides a justification
for the ban on bestiality. “Scientists estimate that more than 6 out of every 10 known infectious
diseases in people are spread from animals, and 3 out of every 4 new or emerging infectious
diseases in people are spread from animals.” Center for Disease Control, Zoonotic Diseases,
https://www.cdc.gov/onehealth/basics/zoonotic-diseases.html (last visited Jan. 2, 2018).
Although not all of these diseases are or were transmitted by sexual contact, interspecies sexual
contact does provide a means of such transmission. Accordingly, numerous commentators have
recognized that there is a public health justification for bestiality prohibitions. See, e.g., Malhiot,
49 U. Pac. L. Rev at 563; E. Benton Keatley, The Liberty of Innocent Delights: Obscene
5
It does not matter whether any member of the General Assembly voted for the ban on
bestiality for any of these reasons. The existence of these possible, legitimate reasons for such a
ban place the subject within the powers of the General Assembly. Cf. F.C.C. v. Beach
Commc’ns, Inc., 508 U.S. 307, 315 (1993) (In conducting rational basis review of a statute for
equal protection purposes, “it is entirely irrelevant for constitutional purposes whether the
conceived reason for the challenged distinction actually motivated the legislature.”).
Furthermore, “a legislative choice is not subject to courtroom fact-finding and may be based on
rational speculation unsupported by evidence or empirical data.” Id.
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Devices and the Limits of State Power After Lawrence v. Texas, 16 Wash. & Lee J. Civil Rts. &
Soc. Just. 257, 295 (2009); Justin P. Nichols, The Hidden Dichotomy in the Law of Morality, 31
Campbell L. Rev. 591, 605 (2009); and Mitchell F. Park, Defining One’s Own Concept of
Existence and the Meaning of the Universe: The Presumption of Liberty in Lawrence v. Texas,
2006 B.Y.U. L. Rev. 837, 883 (2006).
Given that Virginia’s ban on bestiality is rationally related to these legitimate state
interests and does not intrude upon a fundamental right, the General Assembly did not offend the
due process clause when it adopted the current version of Code § 18.2-361(A) in 2014.
Accordingly, Warren’s as applied challenge to Code § 18.2-361(A) fails.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the General Assembly’s prohibition of bestiality does not
violate the Due Process Clause of the Constitution. Accordingly, we reject Warren’s challenge
to the constitutionality of Code § 18.2-361(A) and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Affirmed.
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