People v. Hodge

Decision Date01 November 2018
Docket NumberCourt of Appeals No. 18CA0710
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
Parties The PEOPLE of the State of Colorado, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Travis HODGE, Defendant-Appellee.

Daniel H. May, District Attorney, Doyle J. Baker, Senior Deputy District Attorney, Oliver A. Robinson, Deputy District Attorney, Stephanie J. Redfield, Deputy District Attorney, Colorado Springs, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellant

Megan A. Ring, Colorado State Public Defender, Megan M. Morris, Deputy State Public Defender, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellee

Opinion by JUDGE FREYRE

¶ 1 The prosecution charged Travis Hodge with three counts of sexual assault on a child and alleged that he "applied force against the victim to accomplish or facilitate the sexual contact," rendering each a class 3 felony under section 18-3-405(1) and (2)(a).

¶ 2 The People appeal the district court's order dismissing three force aggravators for three sexual assault on a child charges against defendant, Hodge, based on its finding that because the victim had consented to the force used (restraints), the prosecution did not establish probable cause for the use of force at the preliminary hearing. We resolve a novel question in Colorado by concluding that a child victim cannot consent to the use of force. Therefore, we reverse the order and remand the case for reinstatement of three sexual assault on a child charges as class 3 felonies.

I. Background

¶ 3 At the preliminary hearing, the prosecution presented testimony from a police officer and a forensic interviewer. The officer testified that Hodge, who lived out of state, met the fourteen-year-old victim in an online chat room. Hodge and the victim discussed, among other things, sexual fantasies, which included bondage and dominant and submissive sexual acts (BDSM).1 The victim told the officer that they had arranged to meet in person and had devised a plan whereby Hodge would pose as the father of one of the victim's friends and then pick him up for a purported overnight at the friend's house.

¶ 4 Hodge flew to Colorado and retrieved the victim from his home in Boulder. He drove the victim to a vacation rental home in Colorado Springs. When they arrived, Hodge asked the victim to undress to his level of comfort—the victim removed all of his clothing except his underwear. Hodge then placed a padlocked collar around the victim's neck, handcuffed the victim's hands behind his back, and placed a ball gag in the victim's mouth. According to the forensic interviewer, Hodge then sodomized the victim with his fingers, a dildo, and his penis. Hodge and the victim also performed fellatio on one other. The victim remained handcuffed throughout these acts.

¶ 5 Eventually, the victim realized the events had become "real" and wanted to end the encounter. He told Hodge he felt sick and needed to throw up. Hodge removed the restraints, and the victim suggested that they take a nap. When Hodge fell asleep, the victim left the house and contacted the police.

¶ 6 At the end of the hearing, the court concluded that the evidence supported probable cause for the sexual assault on a child charges as class 4 felonies. However, the court requested additional briefing on whether it could bind over the same charges as class 3 felonies when the undisputed evidence showed that the victim had consented to the use of the restraints.

¶ 7 After considering the parties’ arguments and briefs, the court issued a written order in which it found that the handcuffs and ball gag were "part of the sexual activity that the [victim] and the defendant agreed to, and they were not used as force in order to accomplish or facilitate the sexual contact." The court concluded there was "insufficient evidence to establish that force was used to accomplish or facilitate the sexual contact," and it bound over the relevant sexual assault charges as class 4 felonies. Thus, it was the consensual use of the restraints rather than the restraints themselves, that rendered the evidence of force insufficient.

¶ 8 The People contend that the preliminary hearing evidence was sufficient for the court to infer that Hodge facilitated sexual contact with the victim by the use of the restraints, and that the court legally erred in finding that a fourteen-year-old victim could consent to the use of restraints as part of a sexual act. We agree.

II. Sufficient Evidence Established Probable Cause for the Force Aggravator
A. Standard of Review and Law

¶ 9 A district court's dismissal of one or more counts of a charging document before trial is a final order reviewable on appeal. § 16-12-102(1), C.R.S. 2018; see also People v. Severin , 122 P.3d 1073, 1074 (Colo. App. 2005) (explaining that reducing a charge "in effect dismisses the greater charge and substitutes a lesser one" under C.A.R. 4(b)(3), and is properly appealed under C.A.R. 4.1 ).

¶ 10 A preliminary hearing is not a mini trial. People v. Jensen , 765 P.2d 1028, 1030 (Colo. 1988). Rather,

[a] preliminary hearing serves the limited purpose of determining whether there is probable cause to believe that an offense has been committed and that the person charged committed the offense. The prosecution is not required to produce evidence sufficient to support a conviction; rather, it need only present evidence sufficient to induce a person of ordinary prudence and caution to entertain a reasonable belief that the defendant committed the crime.

People v. Collins , 32 P.3d 636, 639-40 (Colo. App. 2001) ; see People v. Simpson , 2012 COA 156, ¶ 11, 292 P.3d 1153. "The court must view all evidence and draw all inferences in favor of the prosecution...." People v. Hall , 999 P.2d 207, 221 (Colo. 2000).

¶ 11 We will uphold the district court's decision that probable cause has not been established absent a showing that the court abused its discretion. Id. Only when we determine that the district court has "applied an erroneous construction of law at a preliminary hearing" will we review the record to determine whether the evidence, "when viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution, would induce a reasonably prudent and cautious person to entertain the belief that the defendant committed the crime charged." Id. We review the court's legal conclusions de novo. Id.

¶ 12 In addition, we review questions of statutory interpretation de novo. Bostelman v. People , 162 P.3d 686, 689 (Colo. 2007). "In interpreting a statute, our primary goals are to discern and give effect to the General Assembly's intent." Krol v. CF & I Steel , 2013 COA 32, ¶ 2, 307 P.3d 1116. "We look first to the statutory language, giving the words and phrases used therein their plain and ordinary meanings." Id. "When the statutory language is clear and unambiguous, there is no need to resort to interpretive rules and statutory construction." People v. Rice , 198 P.3d 1241, 1244 (Colo. App. 2008).

B. Analysis

¶ 13 Hodge contends that the use of restraints does not satisfy the definition of "force" when a child victim consents to their use. "Any actor who knowingly subjects another not his or her spouse to any sexual contact commits sexual assault on a child if the victim is less than fifteen years of age and the actor is at least four years older than the victim." § 18-3-405(1). "Sexual assault on a child is a class 4 felony, but it is a class 3 felony if ... [t]he actor applies force against the victim in order to accomplish or facilitate sexual contact...." § 18-3-405(2)(a). These statutes contain no language requiring the prosecution to prove that the defendant's conduct was against the victim's will.

¶ 14 The General Assembly has not defined "force," and the People contend that the plain and ordinary meaning of force is "violence, compulsion or constraint exerted upon or against a person or thing." They argue that the restraints Hodge used were constraints exerted upon the victim. Consistent with this argument, several divisions of this court have defined "physical force" in the adult sexual assault statute, § 18-3-402, C.R.S. 2018, as "force applied to the body," and they have defined "physical violence" as "unjust or unwarranted exercise of physical force." People v. Keene , 226 P.3d 1140, 1143 (Colo. App. 2009) (citation omitted); see also People v. Bryant , 2013 COA 28, ¶ 17, 316 P.3d 18 ; People v. Holwuttle , 155 P.3d 447, 450 (Colo. App. 2006). "Physical force," therefore, only requires that some exertion of energy (force) be applied to the body and does not require an "extra application" of force. Bryant , ¶ 17 (quoting Keene , 226 P.3d at 1143 ). Such force includes a defendant's use of his body weight to hold a victim down. See Keene , 226 P.3d at 1143. And it includes evidence that a defendant grabbed a woman's breasts and held them tightly. People ex rel. VanMeveren v. Dist. Court In and For Larimer County , 195 Colo. 1, 4-5, 575 P.2d 405, 407 (1978).

¶ 15 Hodge contends that these readings are incorrect and involve a "strained" definition. He relies on Black's Law Dictionary, which defines force as "[p]ower, violence, or pressure directed against a person or thing," Black's Law Dictionary 760 (10th ed. 2014), and on the definition cited by the People"violence, compulsion, or constraint exerted upon or against a person or thing,"—from Webster's Collegiate Dictionary 489 (11th ed. 2004). He argues that these definitions necessarily connote coercion or compulsion, which include a lack of consent, and that they foreclose any consensual actions.

¶ 16 We acknowledge that it is "not error to turn to Black's Law Dictionary to glean the most widely accepted legal meaning of" a term. Holwuttle , 155 P.3d at 450. However, we disagree with Hodge's interpretation and find persuasive the authorities noted above that require only the application of force to the body. Moreover, our reading of "force" is consistent with the adult sexual assault statute, which requires proof of nonconsent by defining sexual assault as the knowing infliction...

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1 cases
  • People v. Gulyas
    • United States
    • Colorado Court of Appeals
    • March 24, 2022
    ...¶ 17, 471 P.3d 1177 (using Black's Law Dictionary to discern meaning of the term "force"), with People v. Hodge , 2018 COA 155, ¶¶ 15-16, 488 P.3d 436 (declining to use Black's Law Dictionary to discern the meaning of the term "force" and relying instead on principles of statutory construct......
1 books & journal articles
  • ARTICLE 3
    • United States
    • Colorado Bar Association C.R.S. on Family and Juvenile Law (2022 ed.) (CBA) Title 18 Criminal Code
    • Invalid date
    ...a child cannot legally consent to sexual contact or to any conduct that facilitates that sexual contact. People v. Hodge, 2018 COA 155, 488 P.3d 436. A child victim cannot consent to the use of force. A defendant may not assert the defense of consent to the force aggravator in subsection (2......

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