dissenting.
Rape is punishable by imprisonment for life. Today the majority holds that this serious felony has been committed when two persons engage in consensual intercourse and the male is reasonably mistaken in an honest belief that the female is eighteen years of age or older. To the majority, such a reasonable mistake of fact is irrelevant. I respectfully disagree.
The majority opinion invokes a policy of protecting young women from sexual exploitation. I emphatically support that policy. Indeed, the public policy of our state should be to protect all persons from sexual exploitation, regardless of age or gender. But today’s case does not present a question of policy. It presents a question of statutory application.
Idaho Code § 18-114 provides that “[i]n every crime or public offense there must exist a union, or joint operation, of act and intent, or criminal negligence.” (Emphasis supplied.) Idaho Code § 18-201(1) further provides that no criminal responsibility shall attach to “[pjersons who committed the act ... charged, under an ignorance or mistake of fact which disproves any criminal intent.” These statutes are plain and unambiguous. They make no exception for rape. Neither does any subsection of the rape statute, I.C. § 18-6101, enunciate such an exception. Consequently, the crime of rape under I.C. § 18-6101(1) requires “a union ... of ... intent, or criminal negligence[,]” and the act of having sexual intercourse with a woman less than eighteen years old. A reasonable mistake of fact concerning the woman’s age may “[disprove] any criminal intent” or criminal negligence.
Nevertheless, my colleagues refuse to recognize a defense based on reasonable mistake in a statutory rape case. They note that such a defense was specifically mentioned by the Model Penal Code, enacted in 1971 but repealed a few months after it became effective in 1972. They suggest that if the Legislature had desired to establish a reasonable mistake defense, it could have done so at that time. This suggestion begs the underlying question of whether a reasonable mistake defense was already available under I.C. §§ 18-114 and 18-201(1). Moreover, I submit that by enacting and repealing the Model Penal Code in toto, the Legislature evinced no particularized intent as to any discrete provision. The Legislature simply changed its mind about a sweeping change in Idaho criminal law, and it reinstated the prior statutes. Two of those statutes, of course, were I.C. §§ 18-114 and 18-201(1).
My colleagues cite several cases from other jurisdictions where a reasonable mistake defense has been rejected. However, in none of those cases did a court discuss statutes similar to I.C. §§ 18-114 and 18-201(1). Rather, each court held that a rea*939sonable mistake defense was not available under the common law or under the federal constitution. But those sources of law are not at issue in this case. We are concerned here with Idaho statutes. The only case mentioned by today’s majority, in which a court considered a statute similar to I.C. § 18-114, is People v. Hernandez, 61 Cal.2d 529, 39 Cal.Rptr. 361, 393 P.2d 673 (1964). There, a unanimous California Supreme Court upheld the defense of reasonable mistake.1
The majority further relies upon an Idaho case, State v. Herr, 97 Idaho 783, 554 P.2d 961 (1976), in which our Supreme Court rejected a reasonable mistake defense in a prosecution for lewd conduct. With due respect, I submit that Herr suffers from several maladies. First, the Herr opinion states that no jurisdiction other than California has followed Hernandez. This statement is of little value because most states do not have statutes like the California counterpart to I.C. § 18-114. In any event, several states (albeit still a minority) have adopted Hernandez since Herr was decided. See Annot., Mistake or Lack of Information as to Victim’s Age as Defense to Statutory Rape, 8 A.L.R.3d 1100 (1966) (including 1988 supplement). The second deficiency in Herr is its heavy reliance upon a Washington case, State v. Randolph, 12 Wash.App. 138, 528 P.2d 1008 (1974), which rejected a reasonable mistake defense. The Randolph decision is inapposite because it contains no discussion of a statute like I.C. § 18-114 or § 18-201(1). Finally, the Herr opinion characterizes an earlier Idaho case, State v. Suennen, 36 Idaho 219, 209 P. 1072 (1922), as having disapproved of the reasonable mistake defense. In reality, the Suennen court expressly declined to decide this issue. The Suennen court noted that the defendant, charged with “statutory rape,” was given the benefit of a jury instruction recognizing a defense based upon an honest mistake of fact regarding the victim’s age. The jury convicted the defendant anyway. The Supreme Court upheld the jury’s verdict “[i]n view of that instruction, and the record____” Id. at 222, 209 P.2d at 1073.
The instruction given in Suennen actually was more favorable to the defendant than required by I.C. §§ 18-114 and 18-201(1). The instruction referred only to an honest mistake, without also requiring the mistake to be reasonable. Nevertheless, Suennen illustrated the correct procedure for resolving an issue concerning mistake of fact under I.C. §§ 18-114 and 18-201(1). The issue should be tendered to the jury upon a proper instruction. The jury should decide, in light of all the circumstances, whether the defendant’s alleged mistake was subjectively honest and objectively reasonable.2 I have faith in the ability of jurors to make this determination. Today’s majority, however, takes the issue away from Idaho juries.
My colleagues offer two additional rationales for their unfortunate decision. They contend that I.C. §§ 18-114 and 18-201(1) do not require criminal “intent” and that, regardless of these statutes, statutory rape is a “strict liability” offense. I am unable to accept either of these contentions.
On the question of intent, the majority declares that the Idaho statutes require only the “knowing or conscious performance of an act.” Ante at 937, 763 P.2d at 310. Although there is some authority for this proposition, the better view, I submit, *940is that Idaho criminal law requires the union of an act and a culpable state of mind —a mens rea. It requires a criminal intent rather than the mere intent to do a particular act. I recently discussed this requirement, and some of the authorities supporting it, in State v. McDougall, 113 Idaho 900, 905, 749 P.2d 1025, 1030 (Ct.App.1988) (concurring opinion). I will not burden the reader by repeating that discussion here.
On the question of “strict liability,” I would simply note that the application of this doctrine in criminal law is ordinarily limited to statutes imposing mandatory duties in such areas as economic regulation and social welfare. Examples include statutes prescribing, or authorizing administrative agencies to prescribe, standards for job safety and pollution control. These statutes create new duties; they do not deal with intrinsically bad acts that have long been prohibited as felonies. Rape, including so-called “statutory rape,” falls in the latter category. It is an intrinsically bad act condemned throughout history as a felony. Moreover, Idaho’s rape statute, I.C. § 18-6101, has been held to establish a single felony which may take various forms depending on the age of the victim, the use of force or threats, and other factors. State v. Banks, 113 Idaho 54, 740 P.2d 1039 (Ct.App.1987). It is conceptually unsound to isolate one form of this unified felony and to characterize it as a crime of “strict liability,” for which no criminal intent is required.
In the present case, I would allow the defendant to make his claim of a reasonable mistake regarding the age of the young woman with whom he had consensual intercourse. The case should be remanded for a trial at which a properly instructed jury could determine whether an honest mistake truly occurred and, if so, whether it was reasonable. If a jury accepted the defendant’s claim, he would not be guilty of rape. However, he still might be found guilty of the lesser crime of fornication. I.C. § 18-6603. See generally State v. Guest, 583 P.2d 836 (Alaska 1978). Such a finding would achieve a rational correlation between crime and culpability. It would make greater sense, in my view, than finding the defendant guilty of a serious felony punishable by life imprisonment, but then withholding judgment and granting probation in order to avoid injustice.
. The majority attempts to undercut Hernandez by noting that the California Supreme Court later declined to apply the reasonable mistake defense in a lewd conduct case. See People v. Olsen, 36 Cal.3d 638, 205 Cal.Rptr. 492, 685 P.2d 52 (1984). However, a close reading of that case discloses that the California Legislature had enacted a specific statute eliminating reasonable mistake as a defense, and redefining it as a ground for allowing probation, in lewd conduct cases. Idaho has no such statute modifying the effect of I.C. § 18-114.
. To state the obvious, an issue of reasonable mistake is unlikely to arise unless the female is old enough, and mature enough, to appear eighteen years of age. In the instant case, for example, the magistrate who conducted the preliminary hearing expressed "surprise” at the victim’s actual age. If Idaho's age of consent were lower than eighteen, as it is in many other states, the issue of reasonable mistake would arise less frequently.