Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released,
as is being done in connection with this case, at the time the
opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but
has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience
of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co.,
200 U.S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
KANSAS v. CRANE
CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF KANSAS
No. 00—957. Argued October 30, 2001–Decided January 22, 2002
In upholding the constitutionality of the Kansas Sexually Violent
Predator Act, this Court characterized a dangerous sexual offender’s
confinement as civil rather than criminal, Kansas v. Hendricks, 521
U.S. 346, 369, and held that the confinement criterion embodied
in the statute’s words “mental abnormality or personality disorder”
satisfied substantive due process, id., at 356, 360.
Here, the Kansas District Court ordered the civil commitment
of respondent Crane, a previously convicted sexual offender.
In reversing, the State Supreme Court concluded that Hendricks requires
a finding that the defendant cannot control his dangerous behavior–even
if (as provided by Kansas law) problems of emotional, and not
volitional, capacity prove the source of behavior warranting
commitment. And the trial court had made no such finding.
Held: Hendricks set forth no requirement of total or complete lack
of control, but the Constitution does not permit commitment of the
type of dangerous sexual offender considered in Hendricks without any lack-of-control
determination. Hendricks referred to the Act as requiring
an abnormality or disorder that makes it “difficult, if
not impossible, for the [dangerous] person to control his dangerous
behavior.” Id., at 358 (emphasis added). The word “difficult”
indicates that the lack of control was not absolute. Indeed, an absolutist
approach is unworkable and would risk barring the civil commitment
of highly dangerous persons suffering severe mental abnormalities.
Yet a distinction between a dangerous sexual offender subject to
civil commitment and “other dangerous persons who are perhaps more
properly dealt with exclusively through criminal proceedings,” id., at
360, is necessary lest “civil commitment” become a “mechanism for
retribution or general deterrence,” id., at 372—373. In Hendricks,
this Court did not give “lack of control” a particularly narrow or
technical meaning, and in cases where it is at issue, “inability
to control behavior” will not be demonstrable with mathematical precision.
It is enough to say that there must be proof of serious difficulty
in controlling behavior. The Constitution’s liberty safeguards in
the area of mental illness are not always best enforced through precise
bright-line rules. States retain considerable leeway in defining
the mental abnormalities and personality disorders that make an individual
eligible for commitment; and psychiatry, which informs but does not
control ultimate legal determinations, is an ever-advancing science,
whose distinctions do not seek precisely to mirror those of the law.
Consequently, the Court has sought to provide constitutional guidance
in this area by proceeding deliberately and contextually, elaborating
generally stated constitutional standards and objectives as specific
circumstances require, the approach embodied in Henricks.
That Hendricks limited its discussion to volitional disabilities
is not surprising, as the case involved pedophilia–a mental abnormality
involving what a lay person might describe as a lack of control.
But when considering civil commitment, the Court has not ordinarily
distinguished for constitutional purposes between volitional, emotional,
and cognitive impairments. See, e.g., Jones v. United
States, 463
U.S. 354. The Court in Hendricks had no occasion to
consider whether confinement based solely on “emotional” abnormality
would be constitutional, and has no occasion to do so here. Pp. 4—8.
269 Kan. 578, 7 P.3d 285, vacated and remanded.
Breyer, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Rehnquist,
C. J., and Stevens, O’Connor, Kennedy, Souter, and Ginsburg, JJ.,
joined. Scalia, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Thomas,
J., joined.
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication
in the preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers
are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court
of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical
or other formal errors, in order that corrections may be made
before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
No. 00—957
KANSAS, PETITIONER v. MICHAEL T. CRANE
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF KANSAS
[January 22, 2002]
Justice Breyer delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case concerns the constitutional requirements substantively
limiting the civil commitment of a dangerous sexual offender–a
matter that this Court considered in Kansas v. Hendricks, 521
U.S. 346 (1997). The State of Kansas argues that the Kansas
Supreme Court has interpreted our decision in Hendricks in an overly restrictive manner. We agree and vacate the Kansas court’s judgment.
I
In Hendricks, this Court upheld the Kansas Sexually Violent
Predator Act, Kan. Stat. Ann. §59—29a01 et seq. (1994),
against constitutional challenge. 521 U.S., at 371. In doing so,
the Court characterized the confinement at issue as civil, not criminal,
confinement. Id., at 369. And it held that the statutory
criterion for confinement embodied in the statute’s words “mental
abnormality or personality disorder” satisfied “ ‘substantive’ due
process requirements.” Id., at 356, 360.
In reaching its conclusion, the Court’s opinion pointed out that
“States have in certain narrow circumstances provided for the
forcible civil detainment of people who are unable to control
their behavior and who thereby pose a danger to the public health
and safety.” Id., at 357. It said that “we have consistently
upheld such involuntary commitment statutes” when (1) “the confinement
takes place pursuant to proper procedures and evidentiary standards,”
(2) there is a finding of “dangerousness either to one’s self
or to others,” and (3) proof of dangerousness is “coupled … with
the proof of some additional factor, such as a ‘mental illness’
or ‘mental abnormality.’ ” Id., at 357—358. It noted
that the Kansas “Act unambiguously requires a finding of dangerousness
either to one’s self or to others,” id., at 357, and
then “links that finding to the existence of a ‘mental abnormality’
or ‘personality disorder’ that makes it difficult, if not impossible,
for the person to control his dangerous behavior,” id., at
358 (citing Kan. Stat. Ann. §59—29a02(b) (1994)). And the Court
ultimately determined that the statute’s “requirement of a ‘mental
abnormality’ or ‘personality disorder’ is consistent with the
requirements of … other statutes that we have upheld in that
it narrows the class of persons eligible for confinement to those
who are unable to control their dangerousness.” 521 U.S., at
358.
The Court went on to respond to Hendricks’ claim that earlier cases
had required a finding, not of “mental abnormality” or “personality
disorder,” but of “mental illness.” Id., at 358—359.
In doing so, the Court pointed out that we “have traditionally
left to legislators the task of defining [such] terms.” Id., at
359. It then held that, to “the extent that the civil commitment
statutes we have considered set forth criteria relating to an
individual’s inability to control his dangerousness, the Kansas
Act sets forth comparable criteria.” Id., at 360. It
added that Hendricks’ own condition “doubtless satisfies those
criteria,” for (1) he suffers from pedophilia, (2) “the psychiatric
profession itself classifies” that condition “as a serious mental
disorder,” and (3) Hendricks conceded that he cannot “ ‘control
the urge’ ” to molest children. And it concluded that this “admitted
lack of volitional control, coupled with a prediction of future
dangerousness, adequately distinguishes Hendricks from other
dangerous persons who are perhaps more properly dealt with exclusively
through criminal proceedings.” Ibid.
II
In the present case the State of Kansas asks us to review the Kansas
Supreme Court’s application of Hendricks. The State
here seeks the civil commitment of Michael Crane, a previously
convicted sexual offender who, according to at least one of the
State’s psychiatric witnesses, suffers from both exhibitionism
and antisocial personality disorder. In re Crane, 269
Kan. 578, 580—581, 7 P.3d 285, 287 (2000); cf. also American
Psychiatric Association, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders 569 (rev. 4th ed. 2000) (DSM—IV) (detailing
exhibitionism), 701—706 (detailing antisocial personality disorder).
After a jury trial, the Kansas District Court ordered Crane’s
civil commitment. 269 Kan., at 579—584, 7 P.3d, at 286—288. But
the Kansas Supreme Court reversed. Id., at 586, 7 P.3d,
at 290. In that court’s view, the Federal Constitution as interpreted
in Hendricks insists upon “a finding that the defendant
cannot control his dangerous behavior”–even if (as provided by
Kansas law) problems of “emotional capacity” and not “volitional
capacity” prove the “source of bad behavior” warranting commitment. Ibid., see
also Kan. Stat. Ann. §59—29a02(b) (2000 Cum. Supp.) (defining
“[m]ental abnormality” as a condition that affects an individual’s
emotional or volitional capacity). And the trial court
had made no such finding.
Kansas now argues that the Kansas Supreme Court wrongly read Hendricks as
requiring the State always to prove that a dangerous individual
is completely unable to control his behavior. That reading,
says Kansas, is far too rigid.
III
We agree with Kansas insofar as it argues that Hendricks set
forth no requirement of total or complete lack
of control. Hendricks referred to the Kansas Act as requiring
a “mental abnormality” or “personality disorder” that makes it “difficult,
if not impossible, for the [dangerous] person to control his dangerous
behavior.” 521 U.S., at 358 (emphasis added). The word “difficult”
indicates that the lack of control to which this Court referred was
not absolute. Indeed, as different amici on opposite sides
of this case agree, an absolutist approach is unworkable. Brief for
Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers as Amicus Curiae 3;
cf. Brief for American Psychiatric Association et al. as Amici
Curiae 10; cf. also American Psychiatric Association, Statement
on the Insanity Defense 11 (1982), reprinted in G. Melton, J. Petrila,
N. Poythress, & C. Slobogin, Psychological Evaluations for the
Courts 200 (2d ed. 1997) (“ ‘The line between an irresistible impulse
and an impulse not resisted is probably no sharper than that between
twilight and dusk’ ”). Moreover, most severely ill people–even those
commonly termed “psychopaths”–retain some ability to control their
behavior. See Morse, Culpability and Control, 142 U. Pa. L. Rev.
1587, 1634—1635 (1994); cf. Winick, Sex Offender Law in the 1990s:
A Therapeutic Jurisprudence Analysis, Hence, 4 Psychol. Pub. Pol’y & L.
505, 520—525 (1998). Insistence upon absolute lack of control would
risk barring the civil commitment of highly dangerous persons suffering
severe mental abnormalities.
We do not agree with the State, however, insofar as it seeks to claim
that the Constitution permits commitment of the type of dangerous
sexual offender considered in Hendricks without any lack-of-control
determination. See Brief for Petitioner 17; Tr. of Oral Arg.
22, 30—31. Hendricks underscored the constitutional
importance of distinguishing a dangerous sexual offender subject
to civil commitment “from other dangerous persons who are perhaps
more properly dealt with exclusively through criminal proceedings.”
521 U.S.,at 360. That distinction is necessary lest “civil commitment”
become a “mechanism for retribution or general deterrence”–functions
properly those of criminal law, not civil commitment. Id., at
372—373 (Kennedy, J., concurring); cf. also Moran, The Epidemiology
of Antisocial Personality Disorder, 34 Social Psychiatry & Psychiatric
Epidemiology 231, 234 (1999) (noting that 40%—60% of the male
prison population is diagnosable with Antisocial Personality
Disorder). The presence of what the “psychiatric profession itself
classifie[d] … as a serious mental disorder” helped to make that
distinction in Hendricks. And a critical distinguishing
feature of that “serious … disorder” there consisted of a special
and serious lack of ability to control behavior.
In recognizing that fact, we did not give to the phrase “lack of
control” a particularly narrow or technical meaning. And we recognize
that in cases where lack of control is at issue, “inability to
control behavior” will not be demonstrable with mathematical
precision. It is enough to say that there must be proof of serious
difficulty in controlling behavior. And this, when viewed in
light of such features of the case as the nature of the psychiatric
diagnosis, and the severity of the mental abnormality itself,
must be sufficient to distinguish the dangerous sexual offender
whose serious mental illness, abnormality, or disorder subjects
him to civil commitment from the dangerous but typical recidivist
convicted in an ordinary criminal case. 521 U.S., at 357—358;
see also Foucha v. Louisiana, 504
U.S. 71, 82—83 (1992) (rejecting an approach to civil commitment
that would permit the indefinite confinement “of any convicted
criminal” after completion of a prison term).
We recognize that Hendricks as so read provides a less precise
constitutional standard than would those more definite rules for
which the parties have argued. But the Constitution’s safeguards
of human liberty in the area of mental illness and the law are not
always best enforced through precise bright-line rules. For one thing,
the States retain considerable leeway in defining the mental abnormalities
and personality disorders that make an individual eligible for commitment. Hendricks,521
U.S., at 359; id., at 374—375 (Breyer, J., dissenting).
For another, the science of psychiatry, which informs but does not
control ultimate legal determinations, is an ever-advancing science,
whose distinctions do not seek precisely to mirror those of the law.
See id., at 359. See also, e.g., Ake v. Oklahoma, 470
U.S. 68, 81 (1985) (psychiatry not “an exact science”); DSM—IV
xxx (“concept of mental disorder … lacks a consistent operational
definition”); id., at xxxii—xxxiii (noting the “imperfect
fit between the questions of ultimate concern to the law and the
information contained in [the DSM’s] clinical diagnosis”). Consequently,
we have sought to provide constitutional guidance in this area by
proceeding deliberately and contextually, elaborating generally stated
constitutional standards and objectives as specific circumstances
require. Hendricks embodied that approach.
IV
The State also questions how often a volitional problem lies at the
heart of a dangerous sexual offender’s serious mental abnormality
or disorder. It points out that the Kansas Supreme Court characterized
its state statute as permitting commitment of dangerous sexual
offenders who (1) suffered from a mental abnormality properly
characterized by an “emotional” impairment and (2) suffered no
“volitional” impairment. 269 Kan., at 583, 7 P.3d, at 289. It
adds that, in the Kansas court’s view, Hendricks absolutely
forbids the commitment of any such person. 269 Kan., at 585—586,
7 P.3d, at 290. And the State argues that it was wrong to read Hendricks in
this way. Brief for Petitioner 11; Tr. of Oral Arg. 5.
We agree that Hendricks limited its discussion to volitional
disabilities. And that fact is not surprising. The case involved
an individual suffering from pedophilia–a mental abnormality that
critically involves what a lay person might describe as a lack of
control. DSM—IV 571—572 (listing as a diagnostic criterion for pedophilia
that an individual have acted on, or been affected by, “sexual urges”
toward children). Hendricks himself stated that he could not “ ‘control
the urge’ ” to molest children. 521 U.S., at 360. In addition, our
cases suggest that civil commitment of dangerous sexual offenders
will normally involve individuals who find it particularly difficult
to control their behavior–in the general sense described above. Cf. Seling v. Young, 531
U.S. 250, 256 (2001); cf. also Abel & Rouleau, Male Sex Offenders,
in Handbook of Outpatient Treatment of Adults: Nonpsychotic Mental
Disorders 271 (M. Thase, B. Edelstein, & M. Hersen eds. 1990)
(sex offenders’ “compulsive, repetitive, driven behavior … appears
to fit the criteria of an emotional or psychiatric illness”). And
it is often appropriate to say of such individuals, in ordinary English,
that they are “unable to control their dangerousness.” Hendricks, supra, at
358.
Regardless, Hendricks must be read in context. The Court
did not draw a clear distinction between the purely “emotional” sexually
related mental abnormality and the “volitional.” Here, as in other
areas of psychiatry, there may be “considerable overlap between a
… defective understanding or appreciation and … [an] ability to control
… behavior.” American Psychiatric Association Statement on the Insanity
Defense, 140 Am. J. Psychiatry 681, 685 (1983) (discussing “psychotic”
individuals). Nor, when considering civil commitment, have we ordinarily
distinguished for constitutional purposes among volitional, emotional,
and cognitive impairments. See, e.g., Jones v. United
States, 463
U.S. 354 (1983); Addington v. Texas, 441
U.S. 418 (1979). The Court in Hendricks had no occasion
to consider whether confinement based solely on “emotional” abnormality
would be constitutional, and we likewise have no occasion to do so
in the present case.
* * *
For these reasons, the judgment of the Kansas Supreme Court is vacated,
and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent
with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Scalia, J., dissenting
Justice Scalia, with whom Justice Thomas joins, dissenting.
Today the Court holds that the Kansas Sexually Violent Predator Act
(SVPA) cannot, consistent with so-called substantive due process,
be applied as written. It does so even though, less than five
years ago, we upheld the very same statute against the very same
contention in an appeal by the very same petitioner (the State
of Kansas) from the judgment of the very same court. Not only
is the new law that the Court announces today wrong, but the
Court’s manner of promulgating it–snatching back from the State
of Kansas a victory so recently awarded–cheapens the currency
of our judgments. I would reverse, rather than vacate, the judgment
of the Kansas Supreme Court.
I
Respondent was convicted of lewd and lascivious behavior and pleaded
guilty to aggravated sexual battery for two incidents that took
place on the same day in 1993. In the first, respondent exposed
himself to a tanning salon attendant. In the second, 30 minutes
later, respondent entered a video store, waited until he was
the only customer present, and then exposed himself to the clerk.
Not stopping there, he grabbed the clerk by the neck, demanded
she perform oral sex on him, and threatened to rape her, before
running out of the store. Following respondent’s plea to aggravated
sexual battery, the State filed a petition in State District
Court to have respondent evaluated and adjudicated a sexual predator
under the SVPA. That Act permits the civil detention of a person
convicted of any of several enumerated sexual offenses, if it
is proven beyond a reasonable doubt that he suffers from a “mental
abnormality”–a disorder affecting his “emotional or volitional
capacity which predisposes the person to commit sexually violent
offenses”–or a “personality disorder,” either of “which makes
the person likely to engage in repeat acts of sexual violence.”
Kan. Stat. Ann. §§59—29a02(a), (b) (2000 Cum. Supp.).
Several psychologists examined respondent and determined he suffers
from exhibitionism and antisocial personality disorder. Though
exhibitionism alone would not support classification as a sexual
predator, a psychologist concluded that the two in combination
did place respondent’s condition within the range of disorders
covered by the SVPA, “cit[ing] the increasing frequency of incidents
involving [respondent], increasing intensity of the incidents,
[respondent’s] increasing disregard for the rights of others,
and his increasing daring and aggressiveness.” In re Crane, 269
Kan. 578, 579, 7 P.3d 285, 287 (2000). Another psychologist testified
that respondent’s behavior was marked by “impulsivity or failure
to plan ahead,” indicating his unlawfulness “was a combination
of willful and uncontrollable behavior,” id., at 584—585,
7 P.3d, at 290. The State’s experts agreed, however, that “[r]espondent’s
mental disorder does not impair his volitional control to the
degree he cannot control his dangerous behavior.” Id.,
at 581, 7 P.3d, at 288.
Respondent moved for summary judgment, arguing that for his detention
to comport with substantive due process the State was required
to prove not merely what the statute requires–that by reason
of his mental disorder he is “likely to engage in repeat acts
of sexual violence”–but also that he is unable to control his
violent behavior. The trial court denied this motion, and instructed
the jury pursuant to the terms of the statute. Id., at
581, 7 P.3d, at 287—288. The jury found, beyond a reasonable
doubt, that respondent was a sexual predator as defined by the
SVPA. The Kansas Supreme Court reversed, holding the SVPA unconstitutional
as applied to someone, like respondent, who has only an emotional
or personality disorder within the meaning of the Act, rather
than a volitional impairment. For such a person, it held, the
State must show not merely a likelihood that the defendant would
engage in repeat acts of sexual violence, but also an inability
to control violent behavior. It based this holding solely on
our decision in Kansas v. Hendricks, 521
U.S. 346 (1997).
II
Hendricks also involved the SVPA, and, as in this case,
the Kansas Supreme Court had found that the SVPA swept too broadly.
On the basis of considerable evidence showing that Hendricks suffered
from pedophilia, the jury had found, beyond a reasonable doubt, that
Hendricks met the statutory standard for commitment. See id., at
355; In re Hendricks, 259 Kan. 246, 247, 912 P.2d 129, 130
(1996). This standard (to repeat) was that he suffered from a “mental
abnormality”–a disorder affecting his “emotional or volitional capacity
which predisposes [him] to commit sexually violent offenses”–or a
“personality disorder,” either of which “makes [him] likely to engage
in repeat acts of sexual violence.” Kan. Stat. Ann. §§59—29a02(a),
(b) (2000 Cum. Supp.). The trial court, after determining as a matter
of state law that pedophilia was a “mental abnormality” within the
meaning of the Act, ordered Hendricks committed. See 521 U.S., at
355—356. The Kansas Supreme Court held the jury finding to be constitutionally
inadequate. “Absent … a finding [of mental illness],” it said, “the
Act does not satisfy … constitutional standard[s],” 259 Kan., at
261, 912 P.2d, at 138. (Mental illness, as it had been defined by
Kansas law, required a showing that the detainee “[i]s suffering
from a severe mental disorder”; “lacks capacity to make an informed
decision concerning treatment”; and “is likely to cause harm to self
or others.” Kan. Stat. Ann. §59—2902(h) (1994).) We granted the State
of Kansas’s petition for certiorari.
The first words of our opinion dealing with the merits of the case
were as follows: “Kansas argues that the Act’s definition of
‘mental abnormality’ satisfies ‘substantive’ due process requirements.
We agree.” Hendricks,521 U.S., at 356. And the reason it
found substantive due process satisfied was clearly stated:
“The Kansas Act is plainly of a kind with these other civil commitment
statutes [that we have approved]: It requires a finding of future
dangerousness [viz., that the person committed is “likely to
engage in repeat acts of sexual violence”], and then links that
finding to the existence of a ‘mental abnormality’ or ‘personality
disorder’ that makes it difficult, if not impossible, for
the person to control his dangerous behavior. Kan. Stat.
Ann. §59—29a02(b) (1994).” Id., at 358 (emphasis added).
It is the italicized language in the foregoing excerpt that today’s
majority relies upon as establishing the requirement of a separate finding of
inability to control behavior. Ante, at 4.
That is simply not a permissible reading of the passage, for several
reasons. First, because the authority cited for the statement–in
the immediately following reference to the Kansas Statutes Annotated–is
the section of the SVPA that defines “mental abnormality,” which
contains no requirement of inability to control. What the
opinion was obviously saying was that the SVPA’s required finding
of a causal connection between the likelihood of repeat
acts of sexual violence and the existence of a “mental abnormality”
or “personality disorder” necessarily establishes “difficulty
if not impossibility” in controlling behavior. This is clearly
confirmed by the very next sentence of the opinion, which reads
as follows:
“The precommitment requirement of a ‘mental abnormality’ or ‘personality
disorder’ is consistent with the requirements of … other statutes
that we have upheld in that it narrows the class of persons eligible
for confinement to those who are unable to control their dangerousness.”
521 U.S., at 358.
It could not be clearer that, in the Court’s estimation, the very
existence of a mental abnormality or personality disorder that
causes a likelihood of repeat sexual violence in itself establishes the
requisite “difficulty if not impossibility” of control. Moreover,
the passage in question cannot possibly be read as today’s majority
would read it because nowhere did the jury verdict of commitment
that we reinstated in Hendricks contain a separate finding
of “difficulty, if not impossibility, to control behavior.” That
finding must (as I have said) have been embraced within the finding
of mental abnormality causing future dangerousness.
And finally, the notion that the Constitution requires in every
case a finding of “difficulty if not impossibility” of control
does not fit comfortably with the broader holding of Hendricks,
which was that “we have never required state legislatures to
adopt any particular nomenclature in drafting civil commitment
statutes. Rather, we have traditionally left to legislators the
task of defining terms of a medical nature that have legal significance.” Id., at
359.
The Court relies upon the fact that “Hendricks underscored
the constitutional importance of distinguishing a dangerous sexual
offender subject to civil commitment ‘from other dangerous persons
who are perhaps more properly dealt with exclusively through criminal
proceedings.’ ” Ante, at 4—5 (quoting 521 U.S., at 360).
But the SVPA as written–without benefit of a supplemental control
finding–already achieves that objective. It conditions civil commitment
not upon a mere finding that the sex offender is likely to reoffend,
but only upon the additional finding (beyond a reasonable doubt)
that the cause of the likelihood of recidivism is a “mental
abnormality or personality disorder.” Kan. Stat. Ann. §59—29a02(a)
(2000 Cum. Supp.). Ordinary recidivists choose to reoffend
and are therefore amenable to deterrence through the criminal law;
those subject to civil commitment under the SVPA, because their mental
illness is an affliction and not a choice, are unlikely to be deterred.
We specifically pointed this out in Hendricks. “Those persons
committed under the Act,” we said, “are, by definition, suffering
from a ‘mental abnormality’ or a ‘personality disorder’ that prevents
them from exercising adequate control over their behavior. Such persons
are therefore unlikely to be deterred by the threat of confinement.”
521 U.S., at 362—363.
III
Not content with holding that the SVPA cannot be applied as written
because it does not require a separate “lack-of-control determination,” ante,
at 4, the Court also reopens a question closed by Hendricks: whether
the SVPA also cannot be applied as written because it allows
for the commitment of people who have mental illnesses other
than volitional impairments. “Hendricks,” the Court
says, “had no occasion to consider” this question. Ante,
at 8.
But how could the Court possibly have avoided it? The jury whose
commitment we affirmed in Hendricks had not been asked
to find a volitional impairment, but had been charged in the
language of the statute, which quite clearly covers nonvolitional
impairments. And the fact that it did so had not escaped our
attention. To the contrary, our Hendricks opinion explicitly
and repeatedly recognized that the SVPA reaches individuals with
personality disorders, 521 U.S., at 352, 353, 357, 358, and quoted
the Act’s definition of mental abnormality (§59—29a02(b)), which
makes plain that it embraces both emotional and volitional impairments, id., at
352. It is true that we repeatedly referred to Hendricks’s “volitional”
problems–because that was evidently the sort of mental abnormality
that he had. But we nowhere accorded any legal significance to
that fact–as we could not have done, since it was not a fact
that the jury had been asked to determine. We held, without any
qualification, “that the Kansas Sexually Violent Predator Act
comports with [substantive] due process requirements,” id., at
371, because its “precommitment requirement of a ‘mental abnormality’
or ‘personality disorder’ is consistent with the requirements
of … other statutes that we have upheld in that it narrows the
class of persons eligible for confinement to those who are unable
to control their dangerousness,” id., at 358.
The Court appears to argue that, because Hendricks involved
a defendant who indeed had a volitional impairment (even
though we made nothing of that fact), its narrowest holding covers
only that application of the SVPA, and our statement that
the SVPA in its entirety was constitutional can be ignored. See ante,
at 7—8. This cannot be correct. The narrowest holding of Hendricks affirmed
the constitutionality of commitment on the basis of the jury charge
given in that case (to wit, the language of the SVPA); and since
that charge did not require
a finding of volitional impairment, neither does the
Constitution.
I cannot resist observing that the distinctive status of volitional
impairment which the Court mangles Hendricks to preserve
would not even be worth preserving by more legitimate means.
There is good reason why, as the Court accurately says, “when
considering civil commitment … we [have not] ordinarily distinguished
for constitutional purposes between volitional, emotional, and
cognitive impairments,” ante, at 7. We have not done
so because it makes no sense. It is obvious that a person may
be able to exercise volition and yet be unfit to turn loose upon
society. The man who has a will of steel, but who delusionally
believes that every woman he meets is inviting crude sexual advances,
is surely a dangerous sexual predator.
IV
I not only disagree with the Court’s gutting of our holding in Hendricks; I
also doubt the desirability, and indeed even the coherence, of the
new constitutional test which (on the basis of no analysis except
a misreading of Hendricks) it substitutes. Under our holding
in Hendricks, a jury in an SVPA commitment case would be
required to find, beyond a reasonable doubt, (1) that the person
previously convicted of one of the enumerated sexual offenses is
suffering from a mental abnormality or personality disorder, and
(2) that this condition renders him likely to commit future acts
of sexual violence. Both of these findings are coherent, and (with
the assistance of expert testimony) well within the capacity of a
normal jury. Today’s opinion says that the Constitution requires
the addition of a third finding: (3) that the subject suffers from
an inability to control behavior–not utter inability, ante,
at 4, and not even inability in a particular constant degree, but
rather inability in a degree that will vary “in light of such features
of the case as the nature of the psychiatric diagnosis, and the severity
of the mental abnormality itself,” ante, at 5.
This formulation of the new requirement certainly displays an elegant
subtlety of mind. Unfortunately, it gives trial courts, in future
cases under the many commitment statutes similar to Kansas’s
SVPA, not a clue as to how they are supposed to charge
the jury! Indeed, it does not even provide a clue to the trial
court, on remand, in this very case. What is the judge
to ask the jury to find? It is fine and good to talk about the
desirability of our “proceeding deliberately and contextually,
elaborating generally stated constitutional standards and objectives
as specific circumstances require,” ante, at 6, but
one would think that this plan would at least produce the “elaboration”
of what the jury charge should be in the “specific circumstances”
of the present case. “Proceeding deliberately” is not synonymous
with not proceeding at all.
I suspect that the reason the Court avoids any elaboration is that
elaboration which passes the laugh test is impossible. How is one
to frame for a jury the degree of “inability to control” which,
in the particular case, “the nature of the psychiatric diagnosis,
and the severity of the mental abnormality” require? Will it
be a percentage (“Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, you may commit
Mr. Crane under the SVPA only if you find, beyond a reasonable
doubt, that he is 42% unable to control his penchant for sexual
violence”)? Or a frequency ratio (“Ladies and gentlemen of the
jury, you may commit Mr. Crane under the SVPA only if you find,
beyond a reasonable doubt, that he is unable to control his penchant
for sexual violence 3 times out of 10”)? Or merely an adverb
(“Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, you may commit Mr. Crane
under the SVPA only if you find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that
he is appreciably–or moderately, or substantially, or almost
totally–unable to control his penchant for sexual violence”)?
None of these seems to me satisfactory.
But if it is indeed possible to “elaborate” upon the Court’s novel
test, surely the Court has an obligation to do so in the “specific
circumstances” of the present case, so that the trial court will
know what is expected of it on remand. It is irresponsible to
leave the law in such a state of utter indeterminacy.
* * *
Today’s holding would make bad law in any circumstances. In the circumstances
under which it is pronounced, however, it both distorts our law
and degrades our authority. The State of Kansas, unable to apply
its legislature’s sexual predator legislation as written because
of the Kansas Supreme Court’s erroneous view of the Federal Constitution,
sought and received certiorari in Hendricks, and achieved
a reversal, in an opinion holding that “the Kansas Sexually Violent
Predator Act comports with [substantive] due process requirements,”
521 U.S., at 371. The Kansas Supreme Court still did not like
the law and prevented its operation, on substantive due process
grounds, once again. The State of Kansas again sought certiorari,
asking nothing more than reaffirmation of our 5-year-old opinion–only
to be told that what we said then we now unsay. There is an obvious
lesson here for state supreme courts that do not agree with our
jurisprudence: ignoring it is worth a try.
A jury determined beyond a reasonable doubt that respondent suffers
from antisocial personality disorder combined with exhibitionism,
and that this is either a mental abnormality or a personality
disorder making it likely he will commit repeat acts of sexual
violence. That is all the SVPA requires, and all the Constitution
demands. Since we have already held precisely that in another
case (which, by a remarkable feat of jurisprudential jujitsu
the Court relies upon as the only authority for its decision),
I would reverse the judgment below.
Notes
*. As
quoted earlier in the Hendricks opinion, see 521 U.S., at
352, §59—29a02(b) defines “mental abnormality” as a “congenital or
acquired condition affecting the emotional or volitional capacity
which predisposes the person to commit sexually violent offenses
in a degree constituting such person a menace to the health and safety
of others.”