People v. Card

180 P. 53, 40 Cal. App. 22, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 95
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 19, 1919
DocketCrim. No. 817.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 180 P. 53 (People v. Card) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Card, 180 P. 53, 40 Cal. App. 22, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 95 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

*23 RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment upon conviction of the defendant of the crime of murder in the second degree, claimed to have been committed by the defendant in the performánce of an abortion upon the person of one Mabel Solomonson, who died shortly thereafter.

The main facts of the case which it is the claim of the prosecution were sufficiently established by the evidence to justify the defendant’s conviction are these: On May 21, 1918, the deceased girl, accompanied by a female friend named Edna Swanson, came from Turlock to San Francisco, registering at the Argonaut Hotel, where they remained overnight, occupying the same bed. The following morning they removed to the Keystone Hotel, where they took a room. While there the decedent disrobed in the presence of her companion-and took a sponge bath. She was then apparently in good physical condition and had no menstrual flow. At about half-past 11 in the morning of that day the two girls went to the West-bank Building, in this city, where the defendant, who is a physician, had his offices. They entered his reception-room and were there met by an assistant of the defendant, named Mrs. Hunt, who, being informed which of them was the patient, directed Miss Solomonson to go to another room down the corridor, said to be the defendant’s private office. In a few moments the deceased returned and asked her friend for $20, upon receiving which she went back in the direction whence she had come. This was shortly before 12 o’clock. At 1 o’clock Mabel Solomonson was assisted into the reception-room from an adjoining room by a nurse named Mrs. Morgan, who was also one of the defendant’s assistants on that day, and was delivered into the care of Miss Swanson, with the instruction to take her to her home or room and give her a dose of salts, which instruction the defendant had just directed her to give. At this time the Solomonson girl was greatly distressed, was weak and pale, moved with great difficulty, and had to be assisted to her room in the hotel which was about half a block away. Upon reaching her room she was so weak that her companion helped her into bed. She was then discovered to be bleeding profusely; a towel, identified as being of the same kind used in the defendant’s office, was found upon her person. Her condition being alarming, another physician was called in, who recommended that the girl *24 be taken to the Emergency Hospital. Before the ambulance arrived the girl died, and the autopsy surgeon found that she had bled to death as a result of an operation for abortion which had very recently been performed upon her. The defendant’s arrest and trial for murder followed, and resulted in his conviction of murder, in the second degree.

[1] The appellant makes several points upon each of which he relies for a reversal. His first contention is that the corpus delicti was not proved. This contention is without merit. The autopsy surgeon who conducted the autopsy on the day of her death testified that except for her pregnancy and the abortion she was in the normal healthy physical condition for a young woman of her years, and that she had died as the résult of the operation performed only a few hours before her decease. Miss Swanson, her companion during every hour of the time she was in San Francisco, except the hour or so when she was in the private office of the defendant, testified that the deceased was in good health and was not flowing up to the time she entered the defendant’s offices, and that she emerged therefrom weak and distressed and hardly able to walk, and that on reaching her room a short distance away her bandages and clothing were saturated with blood. We think this evidence abundantly sufficient to establish that the death of this girl was due tó an operation performed upon her which was criminal in its character as not necessary to preserve her life.

[2] The next contention of the appellant is that there was no sufficient evidence connecting the defendant with the commission of the crime. It is true that the deceased went from the offices of the defendant to an all too speedy death to permit her statement as to what had occurred while she was in the defendant’s offices to be given in the form of a dying declaration, but we think that there is sufficient evidence otherwise to point unerringly to the defendant as the person performing the operation which produced her death. The evidence shows that the defendant maintained offices as a physician and surgeon in the Westbank Building with several connecting rooms, one of which was his private office and another was his reception-room, to which those seeking his services were in the first instance admitted; that between these two rooms was a system of bells so arranged that a button *25 touched in the reception-room conveyed the information to the occupant of the private office that a patient was in waiting, and the touching of a button in the private office by its occupant informed the assistant in the reception-room that the patient should be sent to the private office. The evidence shows that these responding bells were rung shortly after the deceased and her companion were admitted to the defendant’s reception-room. The evidence further showed that no other physician than the defendant occupied his private office. The evidence proceeds to show that when the defendant’s assistant was thus advised that the defendant was in his private office and ready for the patient, the deceased' was directed to his door; that she returned in a few moments to the reception-room to get a sum of money, upon receiving which she went back into the defendant’s private office; that she remained away from the reception-room, where her friend remained in waiting, for the space of about an hour, when she was helped into the reception-room by one of the defendant’s assistants, and there given over to her friend with the instruction that the patient was to be taken to her home or room and given a dose of salts. She was then in a condition indicating to the point of certainty that during the hour spent in the defendant’s private office something had been done to her which had destroyed her immediately preceding state of normal health, and left her weak, distressed, hardly able to walk, and bleeding to an extent which within a short while sapped her life; upon reaching her room, less than a block away, she had to be put to bed, and there was then found upon her a towel identical with those in use in the defendant’s office; she died within a very few hours, and, as we have seen, her death was due to an abortion performed that day. When the defendant was interviewed by a detective officer, shortly after the girl’s death, his demeanor, words, and actions were very far from those of an innocent man. We think this evidence was sufficient to justify the finding of the jury holding the defendant responsible for the decedent’s death by means of a criminal abortion.

[3] The appellant’s next contention is that the witness Edna Swanson was an accomplice of the defendant in procuring the operation to be performed upon her friend, and that her testimony was not sufficiently corroborated to have *26 justified its acceptance by the jury as the basis of its verdict.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 P. 53, 40 Cal. App. 22, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-card-calctapp-1919.