People v. Balkwell

76 P. 1017, 143 Cal. 259, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 809
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1904
DocketCrim. No. 1074.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 76 P. 1017 (People v. Balkwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Balkwell, 76 P. 1017, 143 Cal. 259, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 809 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

Defendant, charged with murder, was found guilty of murder in the second degree. She appeals from the judgment and from the order refusing her motion for a new trial. The specific offense of which she was found *261 guilty was the performing of an illegal abortion upon one Lottie Peterson, who died from the effect thereof. The evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury.

1. The deceased, with a friend, Martha T. Byrne, to whom she had declared her condition, went to the house of defendant to have an abortion performed. When they entered the house the defendant asked which one of the girls was “up against it,” and Miss.Byrne replied, “It is my lady friend,” referring to deceased. The deceased then took off her hat and coat, and defendant said, “Come with me.” The two left the room together, leaving Miss Byrne alone. They were gone about five minutes, and upon their return defendant said, “It is all over”; advised the deceased upon reaching home to take some medicine, not to walk too much, and if she got worse to come back upon the following Monday. The deceased then asked the defendant what her charges were, and she replied two dollars and fifty cents, which the deceased paid and then left the house with Miss Byrne. It was proved by the autopsy surgeon that an abortion had been performed upon the deceased, and that death was due to such abortion, that an instrument had been used in performing the operation, and that the operation could readily be performed in five minutes.

2. It is urged that the evidence of the people fails to show, in accordance with section 274 of the Penal Code, that the abortion was not necessary to preserve the life of the pregnant woman. There is a wide divergence of authority upon the question as to whether under a statute such as ours the burden of establishing that the abortion was actually necessary is an affirmative defense, or whether the proposition is to be negatived in the first instance by the prosecution. But conceding that it was for the prosecution to establish the fact that the operation was not necessary to preserve the life of the pregnant woman, that was sufficiently done in this instance. The evidence shows that the deceased was a healthy woman, nineteen years of age, unmarried, and with child; that she applied to defendant and solicited her to perform an abortion on her; that defendant granted the request and performed the operation; that the day after the operation she was delivered of a foetus; that she was attacked with peritonitis, from which she died the day after such delivery. *262 It is further shown by the testimony of her friend, Miss Byrne, that the latter endeavored to dissuade her from having the operation performed, but the deceased insisted upon it. As was said in Hatchard v. State, 79 Wis. 361, in summing up a case presenting a similar condition of facts: ‘ ‘ The irresistible inference from the testimony is that it was not necessary to destroy the child to preserve the life of the mother.” Moreover, there is the affirmative evidence of the autopsy surgeon, Dr. Bacigalupi, who, in testifying that death was produced by an abortion,.stated that when he used the word “abortion” he meant a case where the act was done with criminal intent, which is in its effect a declaration that the operation was not necessary to preserve life.

3. It is next urged that the corpus delicti was not established, and that there was absolutely no proof that the conditions disclosed by the autopsy were not the result of an accident, or of some means used without criminal intent. But even the brief statement of the evidence above given completely disposes of this contention.

4. It is further urged that the conviction was had upon the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice, Miss Byrne; but there is no word of evidence to show that Miss Byrne was such an accomplice. She accompanied deceased, it is true, to the home of the defendant, where the abortion was performed, but at all times endeavored to dissuade her from undergoing the operation. She says: “I didn’t tell her I would help her in any way, shape, or manner to have it done. I told her not to have it done, and that was before I went out with her. I told her it was foolish to have it done. That all took place before we went out there at all. I did not make any engagement with the defendant to have this abortion performed on Lottie Peterson, and I advised Lottie Peterson not to have it done. She insisted upon having it done. I again advised her not to have it done on Friday, when the matter was brought up, the day we met the defendant upon the street. I did not at any time or place in any manner whatever do anything toward having this operation performed. I advised her not to have it done, but she insisted. When we got out there I did nothing to help it or anything of that kind.” The fact that the witness, an intimate friend of the deceased, and her confidant, accompanied her, did not place *263 her in the relationship of an accomplice to the crime, for, as is said in Underhill on Criminal Evidence (see. 346): “Nor is a woman an accomplice, who, being an intimate friend and confidant of the deceased, knew of her pregnancy and her desire for relief, and accompanied her to the defendant’s house, when she did not aid or advise the defendant, and was not present when the crime was committed.”

5. Under the facts of this case the court did not err in refusing to give an instruction to the effect that the jury might convict of manslaughter. (People v. Huntington, 138 Cal. 261.)

6. It is urged that the court in its instructions gave “an elaborate exposition of every kind of murder except the kind charged against the defendant.” A reading of the instructions discloses that the jury was fully and carefully instructed upon the subject of murder in all its degrees. The court instructed the jury on the definition and meaning of the phrase “malice aforethought,” and in the course of its instructions used the following language: “Malice aforethought, either express or implied, is manifested by the doing of an unlawful and felonious act intentionally and without legal cause or excuse. It does not imply a pre-existing hatred or enmity toward the individual injured.” These instructions were clearly correct in point of law.

7. Complaint is made of an instruction which charged the jury that “An inference must be founded on a fact legally proved; and on such a deduction from that fact as is warranted by a consideration of the usual propensities or passions of men,” etc., but as this instruction was given in the exact language of section 1960 of the Code of Civil Procedure, no just criticism can be made upon it.

8. After having instructed upon the abstract principles of law to be used in governing their determination, the court then told the jury as follows: “It will be proper, therefore, for you, in determining the question as to whether or not the defendant in this case is guilty of murder of the second degree, to consider the following propositions: Is Lottie Peterson, the person referred to by that name in the information in this case, dead ? If she be dead, did she die as the result of an act committed by some other person? If so, did she die within a year and a day from the time of the commission of *264

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 P. 1017, 143 Cal. 259, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-balkwell-cal-1904.