State v. Feilen

126 P. 75, 70 Wash. 65, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 1001
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1912
DocketNo. 10170
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 126 P. 75 (State v. Feilen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. Feilen, 126 P. 75, 70 Wash. 65, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 1001 (Wash. 1912).

Opinion

Crow, J.

The defendant was convicted of the crime of statutory rape, committed upon the person of a female child under the age of ten years, and was sentenced to imprisonment for life in the state penitentiary. The final judgment and sentence from which he has appealed further ordered, adjudged and decreed that:

“An operation to be performed upon said Peter Feilen for the prevention of procreation, and the warden of the penitentiary of the state of Washington is hereby directed to have this order carried into effect at the said penitentiary by some qualified and capable surgeon by the operation known as vasectomy; said operation to be carefully and scientifically performed.”

By his first assignment, appellant contends that the trial judge erred in submitting the case to the jury, for the reasons (1) that no degree of penetration was shown, and (2) that the testimony of his victim, the prosecuting witness, was not corroborated by such other evidence as tended to convict him of the crime charged. We find no merit in these contentions. The evidence will not be discussed or stated in this opinion, as no good purpose could be thereby served. We are convinced that, under the rule announced in State v. Kincaid, 69 Wash. 273, 124 Pac. 684, the evidence was sufficient to comply with the requirements of Rem. & Bal. Code, § 2437. We are also satisfied that the evidence afforded that degree and character of corroboration required by § 2155, Rem. & Bal.; and from all of the evidence we conclude that the only verdict that should have been returned was the one that the jury did return. The case was for the jury, and their verdict will not be disturbed.

Appellant was prosecuted under Rem. & Bal. Code, § 2436, [67]*67and the penalty of life imprisonment was properly imposed. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 2287, provides that:

“Whenever any person shall be adjudged guilty of carnal abuse of a female person under the age of ten years, or of rape, or shall be adjudged to be an habitual criminal, the court may, in addition to such other punishment or confinement as may be imposed, direct an operation to be performed upon such person,, for the prevention of procreation.”

It was under the authority of this section that the trial judge ordered the operation of vasectomy, and appellant, by his remaining assignments, contends that it is unconstitutional in that an operation for the prevention of procreation is a cruel punishment prohibited by art. 1, § 14 of the state constitution, which directs that “excessive bail shall not be required, excessive fines imposed, nor cruel punishment inflicted.” As the statute does not prescribe any particular operation for the prevention of procreation, the trial judge ordered that the operation known as vasectomy be carefully and skilfully performed. The question then presented for our consideration is whether the operation of vasectomy, carefully and skilfully performed, must be. judicially declared a cruel punishment forbidden by the constitution. No showing has been made to the effect that it will in fact subject appellant to any marked degree of physical torture, suffering or pain. That question was doubtless considered and passed upon by the legislature when it enacted the statute. Appellant further contends that the imposition of the alleged cruel punishment as a part of the sentence necessitates a reversal of the judgment. This would not be true, even though we were to hold the operation to be an infliction of cruel punishment, as the judgment of conviction would have to be affirmed with directions to enforce the penalty of life imprisonment. When a sentence is legal in one part and illegal in another, it is not open to controversy that the illegal, if separable, may be disregarded and the legal enforced. United [68]*68States v. Pridgeon, 153 U. S. 48; State v. Williams, 77 Mo. 310, 313.

The crime of which appellant has been convicted is brutal, heinous, and revolting, and one for which, if the legislature so determined, the death penalty might be inflicted without infringement of any constitutional inhibition. It is a crime for which, in some jurisdictions, the death penalty has been imposed. 33 Cyc. 1518. If for such a crime death would not be held a cruel punishment, then certainly any penalty less than death, devoid of physical torture, might also be inflicted. In the matter of penalties for criminal offenses, the rule is that the discretion of the legislature will not be disturbed by the courts except in extreme cases.

“It would be an interference with matters left by the constitution to the legislative department of the government, for us to undertake to weigh the propriety of this or that penalty fixed by the legislature for specific offenses. So long as they do not provide cruel and unusual punishments, such as disgraced the civilization of former ages, and make one shudder with horror to read of them, as drawing, quartering, burning, etc., the constitution does not put any limit upon legislative discretion.” Whitten v. State, 47 Ga. 297.

On the theory that modern scientific investigation shows that idiocy, insanity, imbecility, and criminality are congential and hereditary, the legislatures of California, Connecticut, Indiana, Iowa, New Jersey and perhaps other states, in the exercise of the police power, have enacted laws providing for the sterilization of idiots, insane, imbeciles, and habitual criminals. In the enforcement of these statutes, vasectomy seems to be a common operation. Dr. Clark Bell, in an article on hereditary criminality and the asexualization of criminals, found at page 134, vol. 27, Medico-Legal Journal, quotes with approval the following language from an article contributed to Pearson’s Magazine for November, 1909, by Warren W. Foster, senior judge of the court of general sessions of the peace of the county of New York:

[69]*69“Vasectomy is known to the medical profession as ‘an office operation’ painlessly performed in a few minutes, under an anaesthetic (cocaine) through a skin cut half an inch long, and entailing no wound infection, no confinement to bed. ‘It is less serious than the extraction of a tooth,’ to quote from Dr. William D. Belfield, of Chicago, one of the pioneers in the movement for the sterilization of criminals by vasectomy, an opinion that finds ample corroboration among practitioners. . . There appears to be a wonderful unanimity of favoring opinion as to the advisability of the sterilization of criminals and the prevention of their further propagation. The Journal of the American Medical Association recommends it, as does the Chicago Physicians’ Club, the Southern District Medical Society, and the Chicago Society of Social Hygiene. The Chicago Evening Post, speaking of the Indiana law, says that it is one of the most important reforms before the people, that ‘rarely has a big thing come with so little fanfare of trumpets.’ The Chicago Tribune says that ‘the sterilization of defectives and habitual criminals is a measure of social economy. The sterilization of convicts by vasectomy was actually performed for the first time in this country, so far as is known, in October, 1899, by Dr. H. C. Sharp, of Indianapolis, then physician to the Indiana State Reformatory at Jeffersonville, though the value of the operation for healing purposes had long been known. He continued to perform this operation with the consent of the convict (not by legislative authority) for some years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 P. 75, 70 Wash. 65, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 1001, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-feilen-wash-1912.