Osborn v. Thomson

103 Misc. 23, 36 N.Y. Crim. 357
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 103 Misc. 23 (Osborn v. Thomson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborn v. Thomson, 103 Misc. 23, 36 N.Y. Crim. 357 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Rudd, J.

Chapter .445 of the Laws of 1912 is an act amending the Public Health Law by adding article 19 thereto, in relation to operations for the prevention of procreation. It provides in substance as follows:

1. The appointment of a board of examiners consisting of one surgeon, one neurologist and one practitioner of medicine to be known as the board of examiners of feeble-minded, criminals and other defectives.

2. Making it the duty of this board to examine into the mental and physical condition and the record and family history of the feeble-minded, epileptic, criminals and other defectives confined as inmates in the several state hospitals for the insane, state prisons, reformatories, and charitable and penal institutions of the state, and if, in the judgment of the majority of said board, procreation by any such person would produce children with an inherited tendency to crime, insanity, feeble-mindedness, idiocy or imbecility, and [25]*25that there is no probability that the condition of any such person will improve to such an extent as to render procreation by any such- person advisable, or if the physical or mental condition of such person will be substantially improved thereby, that then the board shall appoint one of its members to perform such operation for the prevention of procreation as shall be decided by said board to be most effective.

The criminals who shall come within the operation of this law shall be those who have been convicted of the crime of rape or of such succession of offenses against the criminal law as in the opinion of the board shall be deemed in the criminal examined to be sufficient evidence of confirmed criminal tendencies.

2. It is the duty of this board to apply to any judge of the Supreme Court or county judge of the county in which said person is confined for the appointment of counsel to represent the person to be examined. The counsel shall act for such person at a hearing before the judge or in any subsequent proceedings, and no order made by the board shall become effective until five days after it shall have been filed with the clerk of the court 'and a copy shall have been served upon the counsel appointed to represent the person examined. Orders made by the board are subject to review by the Supreme Court or any justice thereof.

Under this law a board of examiners was appointed consisting of the petitioners herein. Such board determined to perform the operation known as vasectomy upon Frank Osborn, an inmate of the Borne Custodial Asylum, twenty-two years of age, strong physically, who has been an inmate of that institution for several years, and who is in the class known as feeble-minded.

As indicated by the title above, Frank Osborn, [26]*26through counsel appointed by Mr. Justice Chester, began an action against the members constituting the board of examiners asking a permanent injunction restraining the carrying out of the determination of the board with reference to an operation upon him; and in the action thus brought are raised questions as to the constitutionality of the act.

We have under consideration the questions which have arisen in review of the determination of the board and those which result from the challenge by the counsel of Frank Osborn against the constitutionality of the act. We will first consider the determination of the board.

Dr. Lemon Thomson, one of the board of examiners, testified in substance that the board had selected Frank Osborn after learning as to his family and after submitting him to a somewhat superficial examination physically and mentally; and that such selection was made because in the opinion of the commission Osborn could not probably procreate normal offspring. His was what the board of examiners thought a bad case.

Dr. Thomson says that he has never performed the operation of vasectomy for sterilization; that in his opinion no benefit would come to the patient from the operation so far as rendering him free from the dangers of the infection of a venereal disease; that the operation would not weaken in Frank Osborn the tendency of the rapist.

Dr. Andrews, a member of the board of examiners, testified that he had never performed the operation, and that he had never seen it performed; and, while the statute required that the board should determine upon the operation which would be most effective, he stated that vasectomy would not be the most effective operation but, on the other hand, that castration would be. [27]*27He further testified that he had not given any study to any particular phase of this question.

Dr. Wansboro, of the board of examiners, was not 'called.

Dr. Bernstein, superintendent of the Borne Custodial Asylum, where Frank Osborn has been, as an inmate, since 1907, and in which there are cared for over 1,300 patients, testified that Osborn was of a higher grade of feeble-mindedness; that the actual number of feeble-minded in our state had not proportionately increased in twenty-five years; that because of the demands of society there developed many social failures; that there had been a persistent demand for the removal of such individuals from temptations in the community; and these social failures are forced upon the attention of the state, and it has been accepted as a principle that the state must care for defectivés; that such people should not be looked after by any social or political division of the state. The doctor testified that he had observed 5,000 feeble-minded patients; that Osborn could not earn his living outside of the institution if he were turned out into the world; that he had an eight year ” mental capacity; that all patients in the institution are segregated; . and upon the question of Osborn being able to procreate normal children he said, We are taught that the dominant traits appear in three-quarters of the offspring and recessive traits appear in one-quarter, when the parentage is mixed as regards traits; that it is only in cases of feeble-mindedness of both parents that you would look generally for an increase of feeble-mindedness among offspring.”

In other words, that when one parent is feeble-minded and the other of normal mental capacity that the tendency is recessive, that is, towards the normal.

[28]*28The doctor testified that vasectomy would not change any of the criminal tendencies of the feeble-minded at all; it would only eliminate the one element of procreation; that in his opinion one of the conditions which would result- from a general enforcement of the law, as is here determined, would be to tend to create a class of people by themselves who would feel that they were so different from normal humanity that they would go back to promiscuous sexual relations and that there would be known places where these people were harbored and there they would tend to collect. That among a class of such persons upon whom the operation of sterilization has been performed you should find increased sexual intercourse, and that such increased illicit intercourse is a promoter of disease and general demoralization.

Dr. Bernstein, knowing Frank Osborn as an inmate of the institution of which he was superintendent, testified that he was not in favor of the operation upon Osborn which has been recommended. He further said that he did not know of one case in the 1,300 in the institution that it would be desirable to operate upon, giving as a reason that it would not help the boy, and it would not help society.

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Bluebook (online)
103 Misc. 23, 36 N.Y. Crim. 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborn-v-thomson-nysupct-1918.