State v. Sweeney

214 N.W. 735, 203 Iowa 1305
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 16, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 214 N.W. 735 (State v. Sweeney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Sweeney, 214 N.W. 735, 203 Iowa 1305 (iowa 1926).

Opinion

Albert, J.

A rehearing having been granted in this case, the original opinion filed (210 N. W. 804) is withdrawn.

The first question presented for our- consideration is the ■question of venue. The indictment alleges that Mrs. Bertha Munger, the woman for whose death the defendant is sought to be held responsible, was a resident of Waterloo, r ’ Iowa; that the abortion charged occurred m p0pc County, in the city of Des Moines, on or about the 25th day of August, 1924, and was performed by one Dr. Ada Fuller; that, after the operation, Mrs. Munger returned to Waterloo, in Black Hawk County, where she died on the 7th day of September following. It is .very seriously contended that, *1307 under these circumstances, the district court of Black Hawk County had no jurisdiction to put the defendant on trial, because the crime, if any, was committed in Polk County, and not in Black Hawk County.

Section 13451, Code of 1924, reads as follows:

“When a public offense is committed partly in one county and partly in another, or when the acts or effects constituting or requisite to the consummation of the offense occur in two or more counties, jurisdiction is in either county, exeept as otherwise provided by law.”

The storm center of this contention is in the interpretation of this section of the statute.

Chapter 47, Section 42, of the Revised Statutes of the Territory of Iowa, 1843, reads as follows:

“Where a criminal act has been committed in one county, and the crime consummated in another (as where the mortal blow was given in one county, and the death took place in another), the offender may be indicted in either county.”

Under this section of the statute, which became tlié law of the state of Iowa on its admission to the Union, in December, 1846, one case was decided, Nash v. State, 2 G. Greene 286. The defendant in that case was indicted for murder, occurring on a steamboat on the Mississippi River, within- the jurisdiction of Scott County. The victim was carried on the boat to Muscatine County, where he died. An indictment was returned against the defendant, and he was placed on trial in Muscatine County. The conclusion reached in that case, after the above cited statute had been quoted, was:

‘ ‘ The application of this act to the case at bar is too obvious to allow of any discussion. ‘The mortal blow was given’ in Scott County, ‘and the death took place in’ the adjoining county of Muscatine. The statute, therefore, conferred - jurisdiction of the case on Muscatine County.”

In the Code of 1851, the above-quoted section of the-1843 Code was amended, and in lieu thereof was enacted the following:

“Section 2806: When a public offense is committed in part in one county and in part within another, or when the acts or effects constituting or requisite to the consummation of the of *1308 fense occur in two or more counties, jurisdiction is in either county. ’'

This section was re-a,dopted in the Code of 1873, as Section 4159, and in the Code of 1897, as Section 5157, except that there was added at the close of said section the words "except as otherwise provided by law; ’7 and the above section, Code of 1924 (Section 13451), is identical with this section as it appears in the Code of 1897. Under these sections, our decisions are not very numerous. Following the Nash case, the next decision in which this section is touched is State v. Hollenbeck, 36 Iowa 112. In that case the defendant was indicted under Section 4221, Revision of 1860, which reads as follows:

"That every person who shall willfully administer to any pregnant woman any medicine, drug, substance or things whatever, or shall use or employ any instrument or other means whatever, with the intent thereby to procure the miscarriage of any such woman, unless the same shall be necessary to preserve the life of such woman, shall upon conviction thereof be punished * * #>>

The indictment in that case was found in Calhoun County. It alleged that the drugs or other substance were administered in Carroll County, but that the miscarriage actually occurred in Calhoun County. The court there said:

‘ ‘ The offense defined by this statute consists in willfully administering' the medicine, etc., with the intent to procure miscarriage. When the medicine is administered with that intent, the offense is complete, regardless of the result. If death ensue, the party may be guilty of murder or other crime, but that question is not involved in this case. The offense charged in this indictment being completed by administering the medicine, with the intent specified in Carroll County, it follows that the district court of Calhoun County had no jurisdiction of the offense. ’ ’

That the Hollenbeck case has no application to the case at bar is too apparent to need discussion. Later, we had occasion to touch upon this question in the case of State v. Standard Oil Co., 150 Iowa 46, where this company was indicted for unlawfully, intentionally, and for the purpose of destroying the business of a competitor and creating a monopoly, discriminating between different communities, to wit, the town of Alton in the county of Sioux in said state, and the town of Doon in the *1309 county of Lyon in said state, by charging a lower rate for the same grade of gasoline in the town of Alton than in the town of Doon, etc. The indictment was returned in Lyon County, and it was held that, if the indictment charged any crime, it was a crime committed in Sioux County, and no prosecution could be had therefor in the county of Lyon. We there said:

“The offense is not one punishable in one of two or more counties, at the election of the prosecution. It was not complete until the defendant sold at a lower rate in one community than the rate charged in another, and, when the unlawful act of selling at a lower rate was committed, then the crime was complete. ’ ’

The point in that case was that the indictment charged the selling at a lower rate in Sioux County; hence the holding that no prosecution could be had in Lyon County.

These cases seem to be the sum total of our expressions with reference to this section of the statute. The question generally is quite elaborately treated in 16 Corpus Juris 195, but, as usual under such circumstances, few states have statutes similar to ours; hence, on an interpretation of the statute, many decisions cited in the notes to the above section of Corpus Juris are of little value.

The point most seriously urged by appellant is that this section of the statute has no application to the case at bar, because the crime was complete by the abortion in Polk County, and the death of the woman was only an incident thereto. The trouble with this argument is that the defendant is not being tried for an attempted abortion, under Section 12973, Code of 1924, which provides a penalty for such attempted abortion, but is here charged with murder in the second degree.

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Bluebook (online)
214 N.W. 735, 203 Iowa 1305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sweeney-iowa-1926.