State v. Ausplund

167 P. 1019, 86 Or. 121, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 128
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 16, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 167 P. 1019 (State v. Ausplund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ausplund, 167 P. 1019, 86 Or. 121, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 128 (Or. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the court.

1. The first assignment of error is that there was no proof of the corpus delicti sufficient to carry the case to the jury. Substantially the testimony was that Anna Anderson, an unmarried woman about twenty-five years of age who up to that time was in good health, went to the office of the defendant, a practicing physician, on October 15, 1915. Previously she had applied to another physician who examined her and discovered that she was about three months advanced in pregnancy. She asked him to remove the foetns, which he declined to do. According to the statement of the defendant made to the officers, the decedent told him when she came to his office that there was something wrong with her and she wished him to examine her; that he laid her upon a lonnge and proceeded to make digital examination; that when he inserted his fingers in the vulva she suddenly began to gasp and he saw that she was dying; that he then went out for some stimulant and while on that errand called to his assistance a lady physician whose office was in the same building; that on their return to his office they determined to call a third physician, but the girl died despite their efforts to revive her. The coroner and other persons testified that they found the decedent with her skirts removed and the lower part of her body unclothed except for her drawers [125]*125and combination suit, and that they discovered a bloody sheet in the defendant’s office and one of his white coats upon which there were a number of blood stains. Several surgical instruments adapted for curetting the uterus were seen in his office and upon one of them was a piece of tissue which some expert witnesses said was a portion of the placental membrane. These instruments had the appearance of having been recently used. The floor in his operating-room was wet and there was a Kelly pad which was wet as though it had been lately employed in operations involving female diseases. The autopsy showed that the uterus had a number of traumatisms on its interior surface and that it was expanded to about the stage proper for three months’ pregnancy. The undertaker who embalmed the body testified in substance that in the process of withdrawing the blood from it he could get only a comparatively small quantity. There was testimony that the lesions of the uterus were made within not to exceed five to eight hours prior to the death of the girl. In our judgment all these circumstances taken together are sufficient to authorize the jury to determine whether or not the death of the young woman was caused by unlawful means and to attribute the same to the action of the defendant. These conditions take the question of proof of the corpus delicti from the court and pass it to the jury.

The defendant next contends that the Circuit Court erred in refusing to give to the jury the following instruction :

“In prosecutions under the law of the State of Oregon and under which the indictment in this case is drawn, it is required of the state that it allege and prove among other things that the employment of the [126]*126means set out in the indictment which were used to destroy the foetus were not necessary to preserve the life of the woman. Proof that a physician, in his professional treatment of a woman pregnant with a child, had used means with intent thereby to destroy the child and the death of this mother followed is not evidence that the treatment was not necessary to preserve the life of the mother. The defendant has the right to stand upon his plea of ‘not guilty’ and that the prosecution is required to prove every charge in the indictment constituting the offense, including allegations of negative matter before a conviction can be had in the case.”

2, 3. In support of this attack upon the conviction the defendant cites State v. Clements, 15 Or. 237, 248 (14 Pac. 410), where Mr. Justice Thayer used this language practically identical with some embodied in the instruction which was refused:

“Proof that a physician, in his professional treatment of a woman pregnant with a child, had used means, with the intent ■ thereby to destroy the child, and the death of the child was thereby produced, is not evidence that the treatment was not necessary to preserve the life of the mother; nor, if it produced the death of the mother, that it was not an honest effort on the part of the physician to preserve her life. ’ ’

If taken alone, this language would go far to sustain the defendant in his present contention, but this was not all that was said in that opinion on that subject. It continues:

“The experience of mankind shows that cases have often arisen in which such treatment has necessarily been resorted to, and, in the absence of other proof, the law, in its benignity, would presume that it was performed in good faith, and for a legitimate purpose. The extent of proof, to establish the negative averment in such a case, would necessarily be limited by the circumstances. It could not, in the nature of [127]*127things, be made positive, except as aided by tbe fact that the accused was able to refute it absolutely, if untrue, and had failed to attempt to do so.”

The language of the decision should be read in connection with the case then under consideration. In that instance there was little, if anything, proved beyond the bare fact that the defendant, a physician,, had employed upon the decedent means intended to destroy the child by reason of which the mother died. In the instant case there is other proof which the jury is entitled to consider taking it out of “the absence of other proof” mentioned by Mr. Justice Thayer. For instance it was in evidence that the deceased woman was in ordinary good health. It is presumed “that things have happened according to the ordinary course of nature and the ordinary habits of life ’ ’: Section 799, subdivision 28, L. O. L. Pregnancy and childbearing are not abnormal, but natural with womankind. The presumption that a pregnant woman would give birth to a child naturally and survive afterwards was sufficient to take the question to the jury on this point and would be proper for them to consider as proof of the negative that it was not necessary to perform the operation in order to preserve the life of the mother. It was of course requisite to prove that the defendant used means with intent to destroy the child, but it would be irregular to single out that particular branch of the evidence and tell the jury that it was not sufficient to establish the guilt of the defendant. It would be taking up the testimony by piecemeal and would mislead the jury if they were informed in detail that each particular part standing alone would be insufficient to justify conviction. As said by Mr. Justice Harris in Saratoga Inv. Co. v. Kern, 76 Or. 243, 249 (148 Pac. 1125):

[128]*128“It was error to advise the jury of the effect of particular acts which, because of the nature of the controversy, constituted the cynosural facts, when there was evidence in the case which could rightfully be considered in the same relation”: Stanley v. Smith, 15 Or. 505 (16 Pac. 174); Patterson v. Hayden, 17 Or. 238 (21 Pac. 129, 11 Am. St. Rep. 822, 3 L. R. A. 529); Crossen v. Oliver, 41 Or. 505 (69 Pac. 308); Kellogg v. Ford, 70 Or. 213 (139 Pac. 751).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 P. 1019, 86 Or. 121, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ausplund-or-1917.