Garnett v. State — Quick Summary

Garnett v. State

Garnett v. State, 332 Md. 571, 632 A.2d 797 (Court of Appeals of Maryland 1993)

In Brief

Garnett v. State is a cornerstone case in criminal law on the question whether a reasonable mistake of fact—specifically, a mistake about a victim's age—can negate criminal liability in statutory rape prosecutions.

Key Issue

Does Maryland's second-degree rape statute, Md. Code Ann., art. 27, § 463(a)(3), permit a defense based on an honest and reasonable mistake as to the victim's age, or does it impose strict liability for the age element?

The Rule

Under Md. Code Ann., art. 27, § 463(a)(3) (second-degree rape), the State need not prove that the defendant knew, or was reckless or negligent regarding, the victim's being under 14 years of age; the statute imposes strict liability as to the age element. A mistake-of-age defense is therefore unavailable.

Bottom Line

No. The statute imposes strict liability as to the victim's age, and an honest and reasonable mistake-of-age is not a defense to second-degree rape under § 463(a)(3). Garnett's conviction was affirmed.

Why It Matters

Garnett is a leading case on strict liability for attendant circumstances and the unavailability of a mistake-of-fact defense where the legislature has made age an absolute element. It teaches the methodology of statutory interpretation in criminal law: looking to text, structure, and history to decide whether mens rea applies to a given element. It also highlights the policy tradeoffs in status-based offenses, the interaction between culpability and protection of vulnerable groups, and the limits of using mental disability to negate elements in strict liability crimes. For exam purposes, the case is frequently paired with Mens Rea and mistake-of-fact doctrines and contrasted with Model Penal Code approaches.

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