People v. Smith

59 Cal. App. 3d 751, 129 Cal. Rptr. 498, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1668
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1976
DocketCrim. 27772
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 59 Cal. App. 3d 751 (People v. Smith) 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. Smith, 59 Cal. App. 3d 751, 129 Cal. Rptr. 498, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1668 (Cal. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Opinion

FLEMING, J.

The People appeal the dismissal in an amended information of a count which charged that defendant Karl Andrew *753 Smith “did . . . with malice aforethought murder a human.fetus.” (Pen. Code, § 187.) 1 Defendant was charged in three other counts with assault with force likely to produce great bodily injury (Pen. Code, § 245, subd. (a)); wife-beating (Pen. Code, § 273d); and criminal abortion (Pen. Code, § 274). He was tried and convicted on these other counts and sentenced to prison for the forceful assault.

I

At the preliminary hearing, Jolene Smith testified she lived with defendant, her husband of five months, in an Inglewood apartment. In April 1975 she believed she was pregnant. After an examination at a clinic on 24 April 1975, Jolene told defendant she was pregnant. He seemed happy to hear it, and Jolene began saving mqney for the baby.

On the morning of May 7 Jolene went to her doctor for treatment of a back injury and for advice about her pregnancy. Because defendant did not want to get up to take her to the hospital, she was taken by her father. Jolene returned to the apartment in the late afternoon, and about 7 p.m. defendant telephoned to say he, was coming home and she better have good news. Jolene did not know what he meant. About 15 minutes later defendant fumbled with his door key, entered the apartment, and slammed the door. He had been drinking.

Defendant accused Jolene of lying to him, of getting an abortion, and of performing 'lewd interracial acts. He grabbed her and threw her around the apartment, he choked and pushed her with his fists, he said he would kill Jolene’s parents, and he said the baby had no right to live with her as its mother. While Jolene knelt on the floor, defendant kicked *754 her in the stomach and back, saying he did not want the baby to live and repeating “Bleed, baby, bleed.”

The beating continued for more than an hour, while Jolene tried unsuccessfully to escape. Once, when defendant answered the telephoñe, Jolene ran to the balcony and called for help, but defendant pulled her back into the apartment. When police officers knocked at the apartment door, defendant told Jolene to tell the officers they were making, love. Instead, Jolene called for help, and the officers broke through the door. They dragged defendant, beserk and arms swinging at all angles, away from Jolene. It was stipulated that defendant later told one of the officers that Jolene deserved to be beaten for having had interracial intercourse.

Following the beating, the lower part of Jolene’s stomach began to hurt and continued to hurt. On May 24, some two-and-one-half weeks after the beating, Jolene experienced a heavy vaginal flow of blood and clots, and she was treated at the hospital emergency room at UCLA Medical Center for severe pain, bleeding, and contractions. She went home but the pain continued, and next morning bleeding and contractions resumed. On her return to the hospital and while being treated, she felt something come out of her, which she described as an incomplete abortion.

Judith Safford, a medical student employed in the surgical pathology department of the hospital, testified her .department received no specimen of a fetus but it did receive a specimen of uterine contents (blo.od, mucus, and endometrium) which was a product of conception and which indicated that Jolene was 12 to 15 weeks pregnant at the time of the miscarriage. It was stipulated that the product of conception was nonviable.

The superior court found reasonable cause to believe defendant procured an abortion by violent means and with malice. However, the court concluded that only a viable fetus could become an object of murder, and dismissed the murder charge.

II

1. The evidence sufficiently established Jolene’s pregnancy and defendant’s conduct as the cause of the abortion. Jolene, an adult woman who had experienced prior pregnancy and miscarriage, was competent to testify about her pregnancy and abortion. (See Frederick v. Federal Life *755 Ins. Co., 13 Cal.App.2d 585, 589-590 [57 P.2d 235].) Expert testimony was not required to support the logical inference, drawn from common experience, that the beating given to Jolene brought about the abortion. (Greene v. Anders (Tex.Civ.App.) 473 S.W.2d 622, 625-626.)

2. The People contend the court erred in dismissing the murder charge, in that an embryo becomes a fetus no later than the 12th week of pregnancy and section 187 applies to the violent and malicious destruction of all fetuses older than 12 weeks.

Respondent argues that the murder statute must be reasonably and constitutionally limited to the destruction of a fetus that is viable, i.e., having the potentiality for survival outside the body of the parent, and that destruction of a nonviable fetus is not murder but only, a violent and unconsented abortion. The difference in the position" of the parties is relatively narrow, in that the People, in effect, admit that a fetus does not come into existence until about 12 weeks after conception, while respondent, who relies on the concept of viability, concedes that viability can occur as early as the 24th week of pregnancy. The issue presented is whether the murder statute applies to the destruction of a product of conception subsequent to the time its organs and tissues have become differentiated but before it has reached the poténtiality for' survival outside the body of its parent. Put another way, the issue is whether violent and unconsented abortion of a nonviable fetus is murder.

The history of abortion as murder in California is quickly told. At common law, abortion did not amount to murder, even when violent, malicious, and performed on a woman quick with child. Hale, Pleas of the Crown (1678) 53; 1 Blackstone, Commentaries (1765) 129-130. California followed the common law rule, and live.birth was required to support a charge of murder, although killing in the course of the birth itself could amount to murder. (People v. Chavez, 11 Cal.App.2d 621 [176 P.2d 92].) In 1970 the rule requiring birth as a prerequisite to murder was applied in a case of extreme brutality involving the destruction of a fully viable child carried by a woman in an advanced state of pregnancy (35 weeks). (Keeler v. Superior Court, 2 Cal.3d 619 [87 Cal.Rptr. 481, 470 P.2d 617, 40 A.L.R.3d 420]). Keeler held that an unborn but viable fetus was not a human being within the meaning of section 187, which then read: ‘‘Murder is the unlawful killing of a human being, with malice aforethought.” The legislative reaction to the case brought about the amendment of section 187 into its present form. (Stat. 1970, ch. 1311, p. 2440.) (See People v. Carlson,

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Bluebook (online)
59 Cal. App. 3d 751, 129 Cal. Rptr. 498, 1976 Cal. App. LEXIS 1668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-smith-calctapp-1976.