Smith v. State

33 Me. 48
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 33 Me. 48 (Smith v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. State, 33 Me. 48 (Me. 1851).

Opinion

Tennet, J.

— The record shows that the jury found a ver[54]*54diet of guilty of murder in the second degree against the prisoner, upon the third comat of the indictment. Thereupon judgment was rendered, and sentence, that he be punished by confinement to hard labor for the term of his natural life, in the state prison, was pronounced.

The seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth causes of error assigned are, that the charge in the third count of the indictment is manslaughter, and not murder in the second degree, and that the judgment and. sentence thereupon are erroneous.

The third count in the indictment charges the prisoner with having feloniously, wilfully, knowingly, maliciously and inhumanly forced and thrust a wire up into the womh and body of one Beringera D. Caswell, she being then pregnant and quick with child, with a wicked and malicious and felonious intent to cause and procure her to miscarry and bring forth the child, of which she was then pregnant and quick. And it is charged that by the means of forcing and thrust-hag the said wire, into her womb and body, she did bring forth the said child of which she was pregnant and quick, dead. And it is further charged that by the forcing and thrusting of the said wire by the defendant into her womb and body, she afterwards became sickened and distempered ha her body, and by the same means so ■ used, she suffered and languished, and afterwards by reason thereof, she died. And it is averred, ha the same count of the indictment, that the defendant in manner and form as aforesaid, feloniously, wickedly and of his malice aforethought, did kill and murder, contrary to the form of the statute, &c.

It is important to decide, whether in this count, the prisoner is directly accused of having inflicted violence upon the mother, and thereby caused her death, or whether ha putting into execution an unlawful design, death took place collaterally, or beside the principal intention.

If medicine is given to a female to procure an abortion, which kills her, the party administering it, will be guilty of her murder. 2 Chitty’s Cr. Law, 729; 1 Hale’s P. C. 429. [55]*55This is upon the ground, that the party making such an attempt with or without the consent of the female, is guilty of murder, the act being done without lawful purpose and dangerous to life, and malice will be imputed. Commonwealth v. Parker, 9 Metc. 263 ; 1 Russell on Cr. 454.

When death ensues in the pursuit of an unlawful design, without any intention to kill, it will be either murder or manslaughter, as the intended offence is felony or only a misdemeanor. Foster, 268. Thus if a man shoot at poultry of another, with intent merely to kill them, which is only a trespass, and slay a man by accident, it will be manslaughter : but if he intended to steal them, when dead, which is felony, he will be guilty of murder. Kel. 117; 2 Chitty’s Cr. Law, 729.

At common law, it was no offence to perform an operation upon a pregnant woman by her consent, for the purpose of procuring an abortion, and thereby succeed in the intention, unless the woman was “ quick with child.” Commonwealth v. Bangs, 9 Mass. 387; Commonwealth v. Parker, before cited. And under the ancient common law, if a woman be “ quick with child” and by a potion or otherwise, killeth it in her womb ; or if a man beat her, whereby the child dielh in her body, and she be delivered of a dead child, this is a great misprision but no murder.” 3 Inst. 50. In both these instances the acts may be those of the mother herself and they are criminal only as they are intended to affect injuriously, and do so affect the unborn child. If, before the mother had become sensible of its motion in the womb, it was not a crime ; if afterwards, when it was considered by the common law, that the child had a separate and independent existence, it was held highly criminal.

Similar acts with similar intentions by another than the mother, were precisely alike, criminal or otherwise, according as they were done before or after quickening, there being in neither, the least intention of taking the life of the mother. If in the performance of these operations and with these designs, an abortion took place, and in consequence of the abor[56]*56tion, the mother became sick, and death thereupon followed, it was not murder, because the death was collateral, and aside of the principal design, and success in the principal design did not constitute a felony. This distinction is very clearly expressed, in the case of the United States v. Ross, 1 Gal. 624.

“ If a number of persons conspire together, to do any unlawful act, and death happen from any thing done, in the prosecution of the design, it is murder in all, who taire part, in the same transaction., If the design be to commit a trespass, the death must ensue in prosecution, of the original design, to make it murder in all. If to commit a felony, it is murder in all, although the death take place collaterally or beside the principal design. More especially will the death be murder, if it happen in the execution of an unlawful design, which if not felony is of so desperate a character, that it must ordinarily be attended with great hazard to life ; and a fortiori, if death be one of the events, within the obvious expectation of the conspirators.”

In the third count of the indictment, the prisoner is charged with no assault upon the mother of the child. There is therein no allegation that any wound of any description had been inflicted upon her, or any injury done, suited of itself to cause death. It is manifest, that of whatever he is accused in reference to the intention of causing miscarriage, and the measures employed to carry out that intention, and the success attending it, it was by the consent of the mother, if not by her procurement.

This count alleges the design to cause the miscarriage, by means of the forcing and thrusting up into the womb, of the wire, and the subsequent miscarriage ; also the sickness and distemper ensuing immediately afterwards, followed by the death of the mother. It is alleged that the means used to procure the miscarriage were the cause of death; but it was evidently intended to be charged as the remote cause. The charge substantially is, that the miscarriage was the proximate cause of the death.

In the case of Commonwealth v. Parker, the indictment is [57]*57in very nearly the same language as that employed in the count we are now considering, as touching the charge of the subordinate offence, excepting in that, there was no allegation, that the mother was “ quick with child,” whereas in this, it is so alleged. By reason of that omission, it was held, and we think properly, that no offence at common law was charged. Consequently in this, so far as it regards the subordinate offence, the defendant is charged with what at common law was an offence, by causing the abortion of a child, so far advanced in its uterine life, that it was supposed capable of an existence separate from the mother; and not with any crime arising from an injury to the mother herself.

The conclusion is, therefore, that in this count the defendant is accused of causing death in the pursuit of an unlawful design, without intending to kill; and that the death was not in the execution of that unlawful design, but was collateral or beside the same.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Me. 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-me-1851.