State v. Munson

201 N.W.2d 123, 86 S.D. 663, 1972 S.D. LEXIS 159
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1972
DocketFile 10828
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 201 N.W.2d 123 (State v. Munson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota 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. Munson, 201 N.W.2d 123, 86 S.D. 663, 1972 S.D. LEXIS 159 (S.D. 1972).

Opinion

HANSON, Presiding Judge.

Defendant H. Benjamin Munson, a licensed physician, was charged with the crime of abortion in an Information filed by the State's Attorney of Pennington County. Defendant's motion to dismiss was granted by the trial court upon the grounds the abortion statute constitutes an unconstitutional invasion of individual right without a compelling interest in the State.

Our abortion law was first enacted in 1887. It has remained substantially unchanged since territorial days and now appears in SDCL 22-17-1 as follows:

"Every person who administers to any pregnant woman or who prescribes for any such woman or advises or procures any such woman to take any medicine, drug, or substance or uses or employs any instrument or other means with intent thereby to procure the miscarriage of such woman, unless the same is necessary to preserve her life, is punishable by imprisonment in the state penitentiary not exceeding three years or in a county jail not exceeding one year."

To sustain and justify the dismissal of the Information defendant asserts the abortion law is unconstitutional because of numerous alleged infringements on his rights and also the rights of married and unmarried mothers as follows:

1. It interferes with a physician's right to practice medicine and care for his patients according to the highest professional standards;
*665 2. It invades the right of individual privacy including the right to obtain an abortion for an unwanted pregnancy;
3. The statutory phrase "unless the same is necessary to preserve her life" is vague and indefinite; and
4. It is overly broad and an unwarranted exercise of the police power in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment in absence of a compelling state interest in the subject.

The present action follows a pattern of attack made against similar abortion laws in other states. On one or more of the above grounds challenges to the abortion laws of California, Texas, Florida, Illinois, Georgia, and Wisconsin have been sustained in the following cases: People v. Belous, 71 Cal.2d 954, 80 Cal.Rptr. 354, 458 P.2d 194, cert. den., 397 U.S. 915, 90 S.Ct. 920, 25 L.Ed.2d 96 (1969); Doe v. Wade, 314 F.Supp. 1217 (N.D.Tex.1970); State v. Barquet, Fla., 262 So.2d 431 (1972); Doe v. Scott, 321 F.Supp. 1385 (N.D.Ill.1971); Doe v. Bolton, 319 F.Supp. 1048 (N.D.Ga.1970); Babbitz v. McCann, 310 F.Supp. 293 (E.D.Wis.1970).

On the other hand, challenges to the abortion laws of Ohio, North Carolina, Mississippi, Louisiana, District of Columbia, and Iowa have been denied in Steinberg v. Brown, 321 F.Supp. 741, (N.D.Ohio 1970); Corkey v. Edwards, 322 F.Supp. 1248 (W.D.N.C. 1971); Spears v. State (Miss.Sup.Ct.), 257 So.2d 876 (1972); Rosen v. Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners, 318 F.Supp. 1217 (E.D.La. 1970); United States v. Vuitch, 402 U.S. 62, 91 S.Ct. 1294, 28 L.Ed.2d 601 (1971); State v. Abodeely, 179 N.W.2d 347 (Iowa 1970).

The root case in this area of constitutional law is Griswold v. State of Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 85 S.Ct. 1678, 14 L.Ed.2d 510, in which the Supreme Court held the Connecticut law forbidding the use of contraceptives was an impermissible intrusion upon the constitutionally protected peripheral or penumbral right of marital privacy. In doing so the court relaxed the general rule that a litigant has standing to assert only his own constitutional *666 rights or immunities by allowing the appellants, one of whom was a doctor, to raise the constitutional rights of the married people with whom they had a professional relationship.

The Griswold doctrine was recently extended in Eisenstadt v. Baird, 405 U.S. 438, 92 S.Ct. 1029, 31 L.Ed.2d 349, by declaring a Massachusetts statute which permitted married persons to obtain contraceptives but denied the same right to single persons to be invalid as a violation of the equal protection clause. In speaking of the right of privacy the court said if it means anything "it is the right of the individual, married or single, to be free from unwarranted governmental intrusion into matters so fundamentally affecting a person as the decision whether to bear or beget a child."

The extension of the Griswold doctrine to the right of a woman to terminate an unwanted pregnancy is illustrated by the reasoning employed by the three-judge Federal Court in Doe v. Scott, D.C., 321 F.Supp. 1385, in which the Illinois abortion law was determined to be unconstitutional:

"We cannot distinguish the interests asserted by the plaintiffs in this case from those asserted in Griswold. In both, '[t]he essence of the interest sought to be protected * * * is the right of choice over events which, by their character and consequences, bear in a fundamental manner on the privacy of individuals.' It is as true after conception as before that 'there is no topic more closely interwoven with the intimacy of the home and marriage than that which relates to the conception and bearing of progeny.' We believe that Griswold and related cases establish that matters pertaining to procreation, as well as to marriage, the family, and sex are surrounded by a zone of privacy which protects activities concerning such matters from unjustified governmental intrusion.
We do not agree with the defendants that the choice whether to have a child is protected before conception but is not so protected immediately after conception has *667 occurred. A woman's interest in privacy and in control over her body is just as seriously interfered with by a law which prohibits abortions as it is by a law which prohibits the use of contraceptives. The majority of courts which have considered the question have so held, concluding that a woman has a fundamental interest in choosing to terminate a pregnancy. In People v. Belous, supra, the California Supreme Court struck down that state's abortion statute, holding:
The fundamental right of the woman to choose whether to bear children follows from the Supreme Court's and this court's repeated acknowledgment of a 'right of privacy' or 'liberty' in matters related to marriage, family, and sex.
Moreover, a statute which forces the birth of every fetus, no matter how defective or how intensely unwanted by its future parents, displays no legitimately compelling state interest in fetal life, especially when viewed with regard for the countervailing rights of pregnant women. We do not believe that the state has a compelling interest in preserving all fetal life which justifies the gross intrusion on a woman's privacy which is involved in forcing her to bear an unwanted child.

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Related

State v. Bowers
498 N.W.2d 202 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1993)
Pueblo v. Duarte Mendoza
109 P.R. Dec. 596 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1980)
State v. Munson
206 N.W.2d 434 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1973)
Nelson v. Planned Parenthood Center of Tucson, Inc.
505 P.2d 580 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1973)
Roe v. Wade
410 U.S. 113 (Supreme Court, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
201 N.W.2d 123, 86 S.D. 663, 1972 S.D. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-munson-sd-1972.