State v. Atwood

Mr. Justice Eakin

delivered the opinion of the court.

Defendants were indicted by the grand jury of Multnomah County for the crime of committing an act grossly disturbing the public peace and health, openly outraging public decency, and injurious to public morals; the charge-being in the following language:

“That the said C. H. Atwood and C. H. T. Atwood on the 1st day of January, 1908, then and there unlawfully conspiring, confederating and agreeing with each other thereto, did on said day, in the said county and state, willfully and wrongfuly set up, equip, furnish with apparatus, and thence continuously until the 1st day of November, 1908, keep and maintain a certain public house and public place, known as a ‘maternity hospital,’ with the intent and purpose of them, the said C. H. and C. H. T. Atwood, of willfully, wrongfully and unlawfully committing, producing and procuring abortions in said house and place upon women pregnant with child, and so having set up, furnished, equipped, kept and maintained the said house and place with the intent and for the purpose aforesaid, the said C. H. T. Atwood and C. H. Atwood, on the 4th day of September, 1908, in the said public house and place, known as the ‘maternity hospital’ aforesaid in the said county and state, did willfully and wrongfully commit and produce an abortion upon one Mahala Roberts, she, the said Mahala Roberts, then and there being a woman pregnant with child, and *529did then and there, between the said 1st day of January, 1908, and the said 1st day of November, 1908, willfully and wrongfully commit and produce upon women then and there pregnant with child, the names ana numbers of which women are to the grand jury unknown, abortions, contrary to the statutes,” etc.

The defendants were tried thereon, and a verdict of guilty returned against them, and judgment and sentence pronounced against them thereon, from which this appeal is taken.

1. But one question is raised by the assignments of error, namely, “that the indictment upon which defendants were arraigned and convicted does not state facts sufficient to constitute a misdemeanor or crime”; defendants urging, first, that the acts were lawful acts, and were not exercised in such a manner as to openly outrage public decency, or be injurious to public morals; second, that the intent and purpose charged, unless followed by a public act, does not constitute a public nuisance; third, that no facts are alleged showing an unlawful abortion; fourth, that it is not unlawful to produce an unnecessary abortion, unless the woman is quick with child.' Defendants’ counsel insists that the facts alleged do not constitute a crime, because it is not alleged that the abortions were committed upon women quick with child, contending that otherwise producing abortions is lawful. Much of his argument is based upon this assumption, and he assumes that a necessary element in a violation of Section 1748, B. & C. Comp., defining manslaughter by producing abortion, is that the woman be quick with child, and this view seems to be quite prevalent. This question has never been before this court for decision, and the writer of this opinion is not able to accept defendants’ view. It seems to be an unsettled question whether producing an abortion was an offense at common law, except when the mother was quick, with child. It is said in State v. Cooper, 22 N. J. Law, 52 (51 Am. Dec. 248) that there does not *530appear to have been any adjudication upon this point in England, and the judge in that case holds that, unless the mother was quick with child, an abortion was not an indictable offense at common law. To the same effect is Mitchell v. Commonwealth, 78 Ky. 204 (39 Am. Rep. 227; Commonwealth v. Bangs, 9 Mass. 387; Smith v. State, 33 Me. 48 (54 Am. Dec. 607). But in Mills v. Commonwealth, 13 Pa. 633, it is held that at common law the offense was punishable, whether committed before or after the woman became quick. This view was approved and followed in Wells v. New England Life Ins. Co. 191 Pa. 207 (43 Atl. 126: 53 L. R. A. 327: 71 Am. St. Rep. 763). This is Wharton’s view, also, in his Criminal Law (Sections 1220-1228). The opinion in Mills v. Commonwealth, 13 Pa. 633, is quoted with approval, and followed in State v. Slagle, 83 N. C. 632, and the opinion in State v. Cooler says that 1 Russell, Crimes (2 Eng. ed.) 540, and Roscoe’s Criminal Evidence, 190, recognize the same view, and 3 Chitty’s Criminal Law, at page 798, gives some precedents and forms which seem to sustain that view. However, this discussion relates to the offense of abortion at common law, not particularly pertinent to the interpretation of Section 1748, B. & C. Comp., except possibly in so far as it may aid in ascertaining the full meaning of the term “pregnant with child,” which does not seem to be ambiguous. That section provides that “if any person shall administer to any woman pregnant with a child any medicine, drug, or substance whatever, or shall use or employ any instruments or other means, with intent thereby to destroy such child, unless the same shall be necessary to preserve the life of such mother, such person shall, in case the death of such child or mother be thereby produced, be deemed guilty of manslaughter.” In prosecutions under this statute, if such act resulted in the death of the mother, this court only required proof of pregnancy, and not that she was quick *531with child (State v. Clements, 15 Or. 237; 14 Pac. 410), and I believe no one will contend to the contrary; and to sustain such a construction the term “pregnant with child,” as used in that section, designates the foetus throughout the period of gestation. The term, “in case of the death of such child,” which constitutes the consummation of the crime equally with the death of the mother, would seem to mean the death of the foetus, either before or after quickening. This is the view of the court in State v. Dickinson, 41 Wis. 309, under a statute identical with ours.

2. There is nothing lacking in this statute (Section 1748) that requires a reference to the common law to aid in its interpretation. It specifically sets out the acts which shall constitute the crime. The common law recognizes the civil rights of an “unborn child,” regardless of the stage of gestation. “An infant en ventre sa mere, or in its mother’s womb, is supposed in law to be born for many purposes * * and in this point the civil law agrees with ours.” “Those who are in the womb are considered by civil law to be, in the nature of things, as they are capable of being benefited”: 1 Blackstone, Comm. 130n; 1 Coke’s Litt. 100a; 2 Coke’s Litt. 244a. The term, “en ventre sa mere,” comes clearly within the description, “a child living at the time of its father’s death”: Stedfast v. Nicoll, 3 Johns. Cas. (N. Y.) 18; Barker v. Pearce, 30 Pa. 173 (72 Am. Dec. 691); Thelluson v. Woodford, 4 Ves. Jr. 227. ‘See Wharton, Crimes, §§ 1220-1228, as to when life begins.

3. A posthumous child is in esse from the time of its conception: Pearson v. Carlton, 18 S. C. 47; 6 Words and Phrases, 5475; 2 Words and Phrases, 1127. In regard to descent, our statute, Section 5590, B. & C. Comp., provides that a posthumous child shall be deemed living at the death of its parent. To the same effect is Section 5554, relating to an unborn child not named in the will, *532which includes the whole time after conception: Northrup v. Marquam, 16 Or. 173 (18 Pac. 449). And it would seem that “pregnant with child,” as used in Section 1748, can bear no other construction. But we do not deem a decision of that question necessary to a disposition of this case, and therefore proceed without deciding it.

4. The indictment does not attempt to charge a violation of any statute in the procuring of abortions mentioned. Section 1930, B. & C. Comp., upon which this indictment is drawn, provides that “if any person shall willfully and wrongfully commit any act which grossly injures the person or property of another, or which grossly disturbs the public peace or health, or which openly outrages the public decency and is injurious to public morals, such person, if no punishment is expressly prescribed therefor by this Code, upon conviction thereof, shall be punished,” etc. This section, generally known as the “nuisance .statute,” has been three times construed recently by this court, in State v. Nease, 46 Or. 433 (80 Pac. 897); State v. Ayers, 49 Or. 61 (88 Pac. 653: 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 992: 124 Am. St. Rep. 1036), and State v. Waymire, 52 Or. 281 (97 Pac. 46). In the first case it. is held that it “was evidently intended to cover such offenses against the public peace, public health, common decency and public morals, and such as grossly injure the person or property of another, which are not otherwise made punishable by the Code,” and that whatever could have been punished at common law as injurious to public morals may now be punishable under Section 1930, if not made punishable by the Code, so that it is not essential that the acts complained of be declared by the Code to be crimes. In that case the acts complained of were not crimes under the statute, nor at common law. There are some nuisances in.which the act complained of may be wrongful, but constitute a nuisance only by reason of its location or publicity, and there may be an act *533or condition that is rightful, or even necessary, but may become a nuisance by reason of its location or publicity. But there is also a class of nuisances arising from the use of real property, and from one’s personal conduct, that are such per se, irrespective of their location or publicity. 1 Woods, Nuisances, §§ 23, 24, says of acts' that are nuisances per se: “And the existence of which only need to be proved in any locality, whether near to, or far removed from cities, towns, or human habitations, to bring them within the purview of public nuisances. This latter class are those intangible injuries which affect the morality of mankind, and are in derogation of public morals and public decency.” Section 24: “Wrongs malum in se. This class of nuisances are of the aggravated class of wrongs that, being malum in se, the courts need no proof of their bad results, and require none. The experience of all mankind condemns any occupation that tampers with the public morals, tends to idleness and the promotion of evil manners, and anything that produces that result finds no encouragement from the law, but is universally regarded and condemned by it as a public nuisance.” See also Section 27. In Reaves v. Territory, 13 Okl. 397 (74 Pac. 951) : “It is enough to show that the practices indulged in are unlawful and destructive of public morals. No person has a right to carry on, upon his own premises or elsewhere, for his own gain or amusement, any public business clearly calculated to injure and destroy public morals.” In Rex v. Curl, 11 Strange, 788, it is said, quoting from Lord ’Chief Justice Hale: “I do not insist that every immoral act is indictable, such as telling a lie, or the like; but, if it is destructive of morality in general, if it does, or may, affect all the king’s subjects, it then is an offense of a public nature.” And in Commonwealth v. Shorpless, 2 Serg. & R. (Pa.) 91 (7 Am. Dec. 632), which was a prosecution for the exhibition of an obscene picture as a common law *534nuisance, in determining whether that act was a public nuisance the judge recognizes the case of King v. Curl, 11 Strange, 788, as laying down the rule that whatever tended to corrupt society was held to be a breach of the peace and punishable, adding:

“Hence it follows that an offense may be punishable, if in its nature and by its example it tends to the corruption of morals, although it be not committed in public. * * Curl was convicted of selling a book. It is true the indictment charged the act to have been in a public shop, but that can make no difference; the mischief was no greater than if he had taken the purchaser in a private room and sold him the book there. The law is not to be evaded by an artifice of that kind. If the privacy of the room was a protection, all the youth of the city might be corrupted by taking them, one by one, into a chamber, and there inflaming their passions by the exhibition of lascivious pictures. In the eyes of the law this would be a publication, and a most pernicious one.”

5. In referring to the fact that unnecessary abortions are malum in se, and tamper with the public morals, Dr. Storer quotes with approval from, another writer: “But abortion, besides being a direct crime against a positive law of God, is also an indirect crime against society. Admit its practice and you throw open a way for the most unbridled licentiousness”: Criminal Abortion, page 73. And that it tends to loose morals and habits among the unmarried. Wharton, Crim. Law (7 ed.) § 1226, in á review of this whole subject, speaking of its moral effect, says: “But if the common law, in making foeticide penal, had in view the great mischief which would result from even its qualified toleration, e. g., the removal of the chief restraint upon illicit intercourse, and the shock which would thereby be sustained by the institution of marriage and its incidents, we can have no authority now for withdrawing any epoch in gestation from the operation of the principle. Certainly the restraints upon illicit intercourse are equally removed; the inducements to *535marriage are equally diminished; the delicacy of the woman is as effectually destroyed, no matter what may be the period chosen for the operation.” And clearly the acts complained of in this indictment are injurious to public morals, and we conclude that such acts constitute a nuisance, although not performed in a public place, or may hot disturb the peace or quiet of the community or the public. They do openly outrage public decency, and are injurious to public morals, and such is the effect of the acts charged, even though not done in a public place, or in view of the public: 1 Wood, Nuisances, § 28. It is said in Commonwealth v. Shorpless, 2 Serg. & R. (Pa.) 91 (7 Am. Dec. 632), a prosecution for common law nuisance in the exhibition of an obscene picture in a certain house, “that the offense may be punishable, if in its nature and by its example it tends to the corruption of morals, although it be not committed in a public place.”

6. It is not necessary to allege that the acts of defendants in producing abortions were done in cases where the operations or procurements were unnecessary. The offense relates to a business or condition. If we had a statute authorizing the procuring of abortions in certain cases, it might be necessary, in an indictment in such a case as this, to negative such exceptions, but we have no such statute.

7. If this were a prosecution under a criminal statute and in the description of the offense certain exceptions are made, then such exceptions must be negatived in the indictment: State v. Tamler, 19 Or. 528 (25 Pac. 71; 9 L. R. A. 853). But the business of wrongfully and unlawfully committing and producing abortions can have no reference to, nor include instances in, the legitimate practice of medicine, in which an abortion may be necessary and lawful, and the charge of this offense need not negative such cases.

8. The charge is that the house was maintained with the intent and purpose of willfully, wrongfully and unlaw*536fully producing abortions. It was not the purpose of the indictment to charge that the intention of the defendants was to commit the crime of killing by producing abortions under Section 1748, B. & C. Comp., but that they were conducting a business that openly outraged the public decency and was injurious to public morals, and the business with which the defendants are charged clearly comes within those terms. Evidently it was for the purpose of condemning such a business that Congress enacted Section 2491, U. S. Rev. St. (22 Stat. 489), in which it classes “drugs and medicines for the prevention of conception, or for causing the unlawful abortion” with obscene pictures and other articles of an immoral nature, the importation of which is prohibited, and the articles made subject to seizure and forfeiture, and many authorities treat such acts as wrongful and those who make a practice of producing abortions are referred to as abortionists. Dr. Storer says the number and success of professed abortionists are notorious, and among others, of those who are accomplices with the mother in these cases he classes quacks and professed abortionists, druggists, and “worst of all, though fortunately extremely rare, physicians in regular standing.” He says, at page 60, “that the public prints, the National Medical Association, and the profession have drawn the attention of the community to the melancholy frequency and comparative impunity which marks the practice of abortionists,” and this is the conduct and business with which the indictment charges defendants, “with intent and purpose” of willfully, wrongfully and unlawfully committing, producing and procuring abortions in said house and place upon women pregnant with child.

The allegations of abortion upon Mahala Roberts and other women do not state facts that constitute a crime under Section 1748, B. & C. Comp., and are not intended to, but are only allegations of acts done in the perform*537anee of the purpose and intent charged, which are necessary elements of the nuisances, and do not charge separate offenses: State v. Waymire, 52 Or. 281 (97 Pac. 46).

From the foregoing statements of the law we conclude that the acts charged against defendants were not lawful, neither authorized by law, nor morally right, but constitute a nuisance per se, and therefore need not be shown to be performed in a public place, and we conclude that the acts charged, in the indictment are sufficient to constitute a nuisance under Section 1930, B. & C. Comp.; and the judgment of the court is affirmed.