People v. Collins

182 P.2d 585, 80 Cal. App. 2d 526, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 987
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 23, 1947
DocketCrim. 4061
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 182 P.2d 585 (People v. Collins) 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. Collins, 182 P.2d 585, 80 Cal. App. 2d 526, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 987 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

KINCAID, J. pro tern.

Defendant was charged by information with two counts of abortion and one count of murder, felonies. Count I charged the commission of an abortion on *528 the person of one Crystal Louise Hawkins, on or about July 3, 1945. Count II charged the commission of an abortion on the person of one Helen Thompson on or about June 29, 1945. Margie F. Wilson was charged as being the victim of the crime of murder under count III on or about July 27, 1945. Each count of the information contained the additional charge of a prior conviction of abortion, a felony. Defendant pleaded not guilty to all counts and denied the prior conviction, but subsequently, and before the trial, admitted the prior conviction of abortion as charged. Following a trial by jury defendant was convicted of each of the crimes as charged in the information, and following a denial of his motions for a new trial he now appeals therefrom and from the judgments of conviction. Among other grounds of appeal defendant contends that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdicts and judgments. Such being the case, a review of the evidence relied upon by the prosecution to support the verdicts and judgments is necessitated.

Mrs. Crystal Louise Hawkins, a married woman and the mother of other children, was living in the same house with Mrs. Helen Thompson. On July 3, 1945, accompanied by Helen, she went to defendant’s combination home and office in Los Angeles by virtue of a previously made appointment with him. A sign over the front porch of the residence and fully visible from the street read: “Dr. S. D. Collins, D. C.” Helen introduced Crystal to defendant, whereupon he took her alone into an adjacent office where Crystal told him that she was pregnant and did not want the child. Defendant then asked her if she knew how much it would cost and she thereupon paid him and he accepted the sum of $50. Defendant, while she was there, made no record of the transaction or any case history, but gave Crystal a piece of paper upon which to write her name and address, which she did. Defendant thereupon took Crystal upstairs into a bedroom, telling her to remove her underclothing, whereupon she was taken into an adjacent room which was fitted out with an examination table, a sink, a smaller table and cabinets with various instruments in them. After placing her upon the examining table defendant internally examined her private parts, telling her that she had been pregnant four months. After the examination she heard some metallic sound, he inserted something in her which felt like small scissors but from which she felt no pain. He then packed her internally with cotton, using an instrument therefor. Defendant told *529 her she could remove the packing the following morning. Crystal then went downstairs, met Helen who had been waiting for her, and proceeded to her mother’s home. On the following day the packing came out without assistance by her, together with a long rubber tube with a string attached to it. She thereupon passed blood and a partly-formed fetus. She became seriously ill, went to bed, and for about a month bled heavily and passed tissue. On August 4, 1945, she telephoned defendant, made an appointment with him and went to his office, arriving there about 2:30 p. m. She then told him that Helen Thompson, the subject of count II against defendant, was in the hospital. Some conversation ensued and defendant said that they would not do anything to him except revoke his license.

Law enforcement officers had previously planted concealed microphones in defendant’s residence, one in the office downstairs, and the other in his upstairs office that has been heretobefore described. Recording instruments were set up in a nearby house. Police officers had been listening to conversation through this source for several days, and Officer Lynn Slaten and Lorna Adams, a district attorney’s shorthand reporter, testified, the latter from her transcribed notes, as to conversations heard over their instruments which took place in defendant’s residence. Slaten had known defendant for some months and knew and recognized his voice through this apparatus. The substance of their testimony is that about 2:20 p. m., August 4, 1945, they heard defendant’s doorbell ring and although part of the ensuing conversation which then took place between a man and a woman was indistinguishable, the woman’s voice said something about blood poisoning. The man said “did you give my name! ... in the first place she came to me ... I told her her uterus is not good ... I don’t think she would tell. She has a lot of fortitude . . . have you seen her to talk to her?” Woman; “I talked to her Wednesday.” Man: “Ton tell her I appreciate it. She is a good little woman ... I took care of her.” Woman: “I thought possibly they were going to scare her into it.” Man: “Just tell her that they can’t do a thing. Even if she did talk they could arrest me and cause a lot of trouble.” Woman: “After all, you would be willing to save her life, I guess.”

Crystal was then again examined by defendant and he found her to be bleeding heavily. He again packed her in *530 ternal organs but removed the packing because of the heavy bleeding. Defendant then advised Crystal that he must take her to the Georgia Street Receiving Hospital, not to bring his name into it but to tell that she had inserted the packing herself. Slaten, having heard this conversation, left the equipment and proceeded to the receiving hospital to await the coming of defendant and Crystal. They arrived a few minutes later and Crystal fainted en route from defendant’s automobile to the receiving room and was carried in. She was then examined by Dr. George W. Nador, M. D., at the receiving hospital, who diagnosed her condition as an abortion one month ago, and that she had a “perforated uterus hemorrhaging into the abdominal cavity. Instrumentation twenty minutes ago, severe primary anemia, mild shock.” The resident physician at the General Hospital, Dr. Hill, testified that his examination brought substantially the same diagnosis, including an induced abortion. The hospital records were likewise introduced in evidence.

After leaving Crystal at the receiving hospital, Officer Slaten and defendant returned to the latter’s house where they were met by other police officers. They all proceeded to the second floor treatment room where photographs of that room and others were made which were introduced in evidence. A pan at the end of the treatment table was partially filled with blood and tampons. Surgical instruments, including catheters, a bottle of ergot, a bottle of pills, and other articles there located were confiscated. The telephone in the residence, with an extension to the treatment room, was noted to be number Exposition 6551. The surgical instruments were described by Dr. Prank R. Webb as being of a type primarily used in obstetrical cases; that ergot is used to cause contraction of the muscles of the wall of the uterus, and in large doses can be used to create an abortion. Crystal was the mother of a previous child and she knew of no reason why she could not have another baby.

With reference to count II, the evidence discloses that on June 29, 1945, Mrs. Helen Thompson, the mother of four children, visited defendant at his office-home, having previously made an appointment with him by telephone. She had known defendant for about three years. Her health was good at this date, excepting for some nausea.

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Bluebook (online)
182 P.2d 585, 80 Cal. App. 2d 526, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-collins-calctapp-1947.