People v. Emory

192 Cal. App. 2d 814, 13 Cal. Rptr. 889, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2007
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 8, 1961
DocketCrim. 7434
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 192 Cal. App. 2d 814 (People v. Emory) 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. Emory, 192 Cal. App. 2d 814, 13 Cal. Rptr. 889, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2007 (Cal. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

VALLEE, J.

By information defendant was charged in separate counts with murder (count I) and with having unlawfully procured an abortion (count II). In a nonjury trial the court found him guilty as charged and fixed the offense in count I as murder of the second degree. Motion for new trial was denied. Defendant appeals from the judgment (order granting probation) and from the order denying a new trial.

Viola Go consulted Dr. Norman Andresen in Salinas on *817 August 11, 20, and 25, 1959. After a complete examination and a pregnancy test, he found she was pregnant and told her so. Dr. Andresen testified Viola was in good health at the time; he saw no reason why she should not go to full term; an abortion was not necessary to preserve her life.

Prior to September 4, 1959, Viola told her husband, George, she intended to have an abortion. Jean Dashut, George’s former wife, testified that in early September 1959 Viola called her about, an abortion; she (Jean) then called defendant and made an appointment to see him at 5 p.m. on September 4. On Friday, September 4, George drove Viola to Los Angeles and they went to a motel. George testified they then picked up Jean Dashut to have her take them “to a place where they could get the abortion.” They went to a cocktail lounge on Osborne Avenue in the Van Nuys area of Los Angeles. George waited there. Viola and Jean went out the back way to defendant’s office. Jean went in to see if it was all right for them to go in. Defendant told her to come back in 5 or 10 minutes. They waited and went in. Defendant asked Viola if she had eaten in the last six hours. She said yes. Defendant told her to go to his home the next morning at 7 a.m. “because sodiumpentathol or an anesthetic would make her sick.”

The next morning Viola, George, and Jean went to defendant’s home. Defendant told George to wait in the living room, “that it didn’t take very long.” Defendant, Viola, and Jean went into another room. Viola was placed on her back on a table with her feet in stirrups. Defendant gave her a “hypo.” Jean returned to the waiting room. About half an hour later she returned to the surgery room. Defendant was standing at the foot of the table. His face was very pale, and he was very nervous. Jean saw a bucket or pan on the floor containing what appeared to be tissue and blood, the product of an abortion at about two months. She had seen a similar product previously. About half an hour later defendant went into the living room and asked George, “How far along did you say your wife was ? ’ ’ George said her last period was about June 15. George testified defendant said, “ ‘There’s something real large up there. It seemed like she must be further along. ’ . . . that he would abort part of it, and that the other part could be after-birth or something else, but at any rate that he is not going to do no more, let her rest a while, and I understand that he gave her some ergot and let nature take its course. ’ ’ George glanced in the other room; Viola was on her back on a table.

George remained at defendant’s home with Viola until *818 Monday night, September 7, leaving only to eat. He returned to Salinas, arriving Tuesday morning. There he saw a Dr. Husser and told him what had happened. Dr. Husser called Dr. William C. Bradbury, a specialist in obstetrics and gynecology in Santa Monica, said a patient who was a friend of his was in a serious condition in Dr. Bradbury’s area from an abortion and asked if he would take the ease. Dr. Bradbury said he would, and made arrangements for Viola’s admission in Santa Monica Hospital. George returned to Los Angeles, arriving at defendant’s home about 11 p.m. Tuesday, the 8th, and called an ambulance. Defendant told George to say, in case something happened, that Viola had already aborted herself and had come to him because she was hemorrhaging.

Dr. Bradbury testified Viola was admitted to Santa Monica Hospital at 1 a.m. on September 9 in critical condition. On entrance to the hospital Viola gave Dr. Bradbury’s associate this history: “5 yrs ago—induced ab. Last Sat. had an induced ab. The operater knew he had perforated uterus so pt has been under med. supervision since. ... No prior surgery other than induced abs. . . . O. B. History-. L. M. P. 16 June 59.” At the hospital George talked to Dr. Bradbury and told him what had happened. At Dr. Bradbury’s suggestion George called defendant and asked him to call Dr. Bradbury and tell him what he had done to Viola to assist Dr. Bradbury in his diagnosis and treatment.

On September 10 defendant telephoned Dr. Bradbury. Defendant told him he had put a placental forceps into Viola’s uterus and it had gone all the way up to the handle, which he thought should not happen in a patient two-months pregnant; when he pulled the forceps down it had a loop of intestine attached to it; he pushed the intestine back and put the patient to bed. Dr. Bradbury asked if he thought any injury had been done to the intestine. Defendant said, “I don’t know; it might have”; he had given her some intravenous fluids and one transfusion and had transferred her to his home to take care of her.

Dr. Bradbury called in the services of Dr. David Sprong, a specialist in surgery of the bowel. Viola’s case history, as taken by Dr. Sprong on September 10, 1959, was read into the record and is quoted in footnote. 1

*819 On September 10, 1959 Dr. Sprong, assisted by Dr. Bradbury, operated on Viola. During the operation Dr. Bradbury found: a perforation in the posterior aspect of the top of the uterus with a plastic exudate over it; a laceration of the small bowel; generalized peritonitis; “quite a bit” of food and extensive contents from the bowel in the abdominal cavity; a markedly inflated bowel; an intestinal obstruction; a marked dilatation with loops of intestine throughout the abdomen; and a tear in the mesentery with some interference with the blood supply of the bowels. Dr. Bradbury testified the perforation of the uterus and the tear in the small bowel had been made within 10 days prior to the operation; at the time of the operation Viola “was suffering from severe generalized peritonitis from contents of the bowel pouring out into the abdominal cavity.” He testified further that if a woman is pregnant, it is not customary medical practice to insert instruments into the uterus; to do so is “ apt to cause an abortion. ’ ’

Dr. Sprong operated again on September 29 because of an abdominal abscess. Viola passed away on September 30. In Dr. Bradbury’s opinion “death was caused by post-abortive infection with laceration of the bowel, generalized peritonitis, multiple abscess formation in the abdomen with a secondary hemorrhage. ’ ’

An autopsy was performed. The autopsy surgeon found markings on the endoeervical canal which indicated that an instrument such as a curette or one with prongs on it had passed through the cervical canal. He found a blood clot and necrotic tissue in the uterine cavity, and hemorrhage in the posterior wall of the uterus near the top. In Ms opinion, an abortion had been done and the cause of death was intraabdominal hemorrhage and peritonitis due to an abortion with perforation of the uterus.

On October 1, 1959, Officer Mitchell of the Los Angeles Police Department went to defendant’s home.

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Bluebook (online)
192 Cal. App. 2d 814, 13 Cal. Rptr. 889, 1961 Cal. App. LEXIS 2007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-emory-calctapp-1961.