Lucas v. Sheriff

OPINION

By the Court,

Mowbray, C. J.:

The Clark County Grand Jury returned an indictment charging the appellant-defendant, Charles Donald Lucas, with thirteen felonies as follows: COUNT III — Infamous Crime Against Nature; COUNT IV — Infamous Crime Against Nature; COUNT VI — Infamous Crime Against Nature; COUNT VII — Give Away Controlled Substance; COUNT VIII — Give Away Controlled Substance; COUNT IX — Give Away Controlled Substance; COUNT XI — Infamous Crime *62Against Nature; COUNT XII — Infamous Crime Against Nature; COUNT XIII — Infamous Crime Against Nature.

Lucas challenged the sufficiency of the charges in the court below by filing this habeas proceeding. The district judge denied his petition in toto and this appeal resulted.

We have reviewed the record before the Grand Jury. There is sufficient evidence therein to require Lucas to answer the charges set forth in Counts III, IV, VII, VIII, IX, and XI. Accordingly, he shall stand trial in the district court on those charges. NRS 172.155(1).

Counts VI, XII and XIII are focused on the sexual behavior of two minors, encouraged by Lucas, which constitutes the basis for the infamous crime charge in each count.1

At the time the offenses took place between the minors in Counts VI, XII and XIII, NRS 201.190 provided, in pertinent part; “[Ejvery person of full age who commits the infamous crime against nature shall be punished: . . . .” (Emphasis added.) See 1977 Nev. Stats, ch. 430, § 84. The current statutory definition of the crime, effective July 1, 1977, goes even further: “The ‘infamous crime against nature’ means anal intercourse, cunnilingus or fellatio between consenting adults of the same sex.” NRS 201.190(2) (Emphasis added.) Minors are not punishable under the infamous crime statute. Lucas’ infamous crime charges on the three counts are predicated on NRS 195.020. Under that statute an accused who has aided and abetted another person in the commission of a crime is subject to being charged with having committed that crime. Wills v. State, 93 Nev. 443, 566 P.2d 1138 (1977).

Although one may be charged with a crime if he aided and abetted its commission, that person may not be charged under NRS 195.020, the aiding and abetting statute, when the act or conduct is not proscribed by the statute constituting the offense charged.

As this court held in Ex Parte Smith, 33 Nev. 466, 487, 111 P. 930, 937 (1910) (emphasis added):

“[I]f the indictment does not allege any facts which would constitute an offense by a principal, it does not state sufficient facts as against an accessory before the fact so that he could be tried as a principal.” See also, State of Nevada v. Jones, 7 Nev. 408, 417 (1872); State v. Cushing, 61 Nev. 132, 145-46, 120 P.2d 208, 214 (1941); Hanley v. State, 85 Nev. 154, 160-61, 451 P.2d 852, 856 (1969).

This is not an instance in which minors are simply deemed not to have the requisite criminal intent, though their conduct *63is criminal. By its statutory scheme, the legislature has determined that their conduct does not constitute a crime under NRS 201.190, the infamous crime against nature. Indeed, the Legislature by the amendment, in 1967, of NRS 193.050, has provided that “No conduct constitutes a crime unless prohibited by some statute of this- state or by some ordinance or like enactment of a political subdivision of this state.” 1967 Nev. Stats, ch. 211, § 1, at 458.

Accordingly, Counts VI, XII and XIII of the indictment may not stand and the writ as to them must be granted; however, without prejudice to the State to refile new charges against the appellant predicated upon an appropriate statute.2

Thompson and Manoukian, JJ., concur.

The other infamous crime counts allege that Lucas personally committed the act.

Of course, we certainly do not hold, contrary to the statement in the dissenting opinion “that it is no crime to cause children to perform cunnilingus, fellatio, or anal intercourse upon each other, . . .” — only that such offenders must be charged under the statutes made and provided therefor.