delivered the opinion oe the court.
The appellant, Mary A. Peoples, complains of her conviction for manslaughter upon the charge of com‘mitting an abortion upon Emma Wendelkin, resulting in her death.
The unfortunate girl was seen near the house of the accused, and when going and returning from that locality in the night time, when, as is claimed, the crime was committed. Unless this circumstance may be said to cast some suspicion upon the appellant as the perpetrator of it, there is nothing pointing to her in the least degree as the guilty offender, save the statements made by the deceased to various persons during the week that she survived the operation.
It is claimed there could be no conviction upon them, as section 241 of our Criminal Code provides: “A conviction cannot be had upon the testimony of an accomplice, unless corroborated by other evidence, tending to ■ connect the defendant with the commission of the offense; and the corroboration is not sufficient if it merely show that the offense was committed, and the circumstances thereof.”
*490True, the deceased, if not an actor, was at least a consenting party to the deed. The law does not, however, regard her as an accomplice. She could not have been indicted for it. She is looked upon rather as the victim, than as a co-offender. (Dunn v. The People, 29 N. Y., 523; Commonwealth v. Wood, 11 Gray, 85; Same v. Brown, 121 Mass., 69; State v. Owens, 22 Minn., 238; Same v. Hyer, 39 N. J. L., 598.)
The indictment is not defective in failing to aver that the deceased was “quick” with child when the injury was inflicted. The authorities are somewhat divided upon the question whether at common law it is an offense at all to procure an abortion with the consent of the woman, when she is not “quick” with child. If the charge were for abortion merely, authority might be cited in support of this objection to the indictment. Indeed, the current of authority is in this direction. (Mitchell v. Commonwealth, 78 Ky., 204; State v. Cooper, 2 Zabr., 53; Abrams v. Foshee, 66 Am. Dec., 77; Commonwealth v. Parker, 9 Met., 263; Smith v. State, 33 Me., 48.)
There is some difference of opinion, however, upon this question. (Mills v. Commonwealth, 13 Pa. St., 633.) It does not arise in this case however. Here the charge is for the death of the mother as the result of means used to procure an abortion. The distinction between the two cases must be observed.
Nor is this properly a case of involuntary homicide. The act was not only immoral, violative of the law of nature, and deliberate in character, but reckless of life, and wrongful per se. The death of the woman may not have been intended ; there may have been no *491express malice against her. Neither is there in the case of one, who, knowing that people are passing upon a street, throws a stone from a housetop, resulting in death; but yet a killing under such circumstances is not involuntary manslaughter, or a killing per infortunium.
If this were but an involuntary homicide, then at common law, and in this State, the punishment could be but a fine and jail imprisonment, or one entirely inadequate to deter evil-disposed persons from its commission. The recklessness of the act forbids its being bo regarded. Offenses and punishments must be so graded as to remedy the mischief. It has, however, never been held to be less than voluntary manslaughter. It is perhaps questionable whether even in mercy, or out of regard to the frailty of human nature, it should, under any circumstances, be so reduced as to one whose act is deliberately done, and known to the doer to be reckless of life and the interests of good society.
By at least the earlier common law it appears to have been nothing less than murder, although there may have been no intention to kill the woman. In 1 Russell on Crimes, page 539, it is said : “So where a person gave medicine to a woman to procure an abortion, and where a person put skewers into the womb of a woman for the same purpose, by which in both cases the women were killed, these acts were held clearly to be murder; for, though the death of the woman was not intended, the acts were of a nature deliberate and malicious, and necessarily attended with great danger to the persons on whom they were practiced.”
*492Blackstone says: “So also if one gives a woman with a child a medicine to procure abortion, and it operates so violently as to kill the woman, this is murder in the person who gave it.” (4 Black. Com., page 201.)
The language of another eminent writer is : “If one administers a drug to a pregnant woman, or does to her any criminal act, the object of which is merely to produce an abortion; yet if in consequence of this act, dangerous in its tendency, the mother dies, or the child is prematurely born, and dies from the too early exposure to the external world, he is guilty of murder.” (2 Bishop on Criminal Law,'section 691.)
This doctrine should not be based upon the rule of law, that whenever an unlawful act, one malum in se, is done in the prosecution of a felonious intention, or the perpetration of a collateral felony, and death ensues, it is murder; because, as we have already seen, the weight of authority is that it is no offense to procure an abortion, unless the woman be quick with child; but upon the fact that it is a deliberate act, endangering her life. It was said in Smith v. State, supra: “If medicine is given to a female to procure an abortion, which kills her, the party administering it will be guilty of her murder. This is upon the ground that the party making such an attempt, with or without the consent of the female, is guilty of murder, the act being done without lawful purpose and dangerous to life, and malice will be imputed.”
Where, however, it is done with no intent to inflict serious injury upon her, and in such a way that it is not per se likely to so result, but through negligence *493jn the operation death does ensne, we incline to the¡ opinion, but with some hesitation, that it is bnt man, slaughter.
Mr. Wharton says: ‘£Production of Abortion. Supposing this is done in a way not to inflict serious injury on the mother, and the mother dies from negligence in- the operation, there being no intent to kill, or to inflict serious injury, and no likelihood of such result, the offense, on the reasoning above given, is but manslaughter. It is otherwise when the intent is to seriously injure the mother, or the act is likely seriously to injure her. In this case her killing is murder.” (Wharton on Homicide, section 66.)
Section 318 of the same work reads thus: “A woman desires to miscarry of a child with which she is pregnant, and assents to an operation being performed oh her for this purpose; and she dies from the operation. Her assent, as we have already seen, is no defense to an indictment against the person performing the operation. If the intent was to kill or grievously injure her, the offense is murderit is manslaughter if the intent was” only to produce the miscarriage, the agency not being one from which death or great injury would be likely to result.”
Conceding it to be the common law rule that one is not indictable for the commission of an abortion unless the child has quickened, yet all the authorities agree that if, from the means used, the death of the woman results, it is either murder or manslaughter.
It is earnestly urged that the statements made by the deceased, connecting the accused with the crime, were not admissible as dying declarations.
*494It is essential to their competency that they be made in extremis, and under a sense of impending death. If any expectation or hope of recovery exists, however slight, in the mind of the injured person, they are inadmissible.
Greenleaf says: “It is the impression of almost immediate dissolution, and not the rapid succession of death in point of fact, that renders the testimony admissible. Therefore, where it appears that the deceased, at the time of the declaration, had any expectation or hope of recovery, however slight it may have been, and though death actually ensued an hour afterwards, the declaration is inadmissible.
“On the other hand, a belief that he will not recover is not in itself sufficient, unless there be also the prospect of almost immediate dissolution.” (1 Greenleaf on Evidence, section 158.)
These rules have been strictly adhered to by the courts. The declarations are admitted as evidence ex necessitate. Often there are no eye-witnesses to the commission of crime, and especially of a character like that now under investigation, save the injured party and the offender. The law has, therefore, made the statements of the deceased relative to the circumstances of the injury competent evidence, where his death is the subject of the charge, provided they are brought clearly within the rules governing their admission. This condition is imposed, among other reasons, because they are altogether ex parte, and yet of peculiar force and effectiveness as testimony. There is no cross-examination, and the conscience of the injured party alone prompts to truth. It should, therefore, act under a sense of impending dissolution.
*495In this case the deceased, upon the third day after the injury, detailed the circumstances of its commission to her physician. What she then said was admitted as testimony. It is not .clear whether he then, or not until the sixth day, informed her that she could not live. His evidence is confused in this respect. He certainly did so upon the last-named day after consulting with another physician-; and she then requested the presence of her family and a priest, but at this time made no statement as to.the planner of her injury. She, however, told the lady of the house, before she made the statement to her physician, that she knew she would die from -the- injury; and then detailed to her the circumstances of its commission; and this statement, corresponding in substance to that made to the physician, was also allowed to go to the jury as evidence. Prom the time when she did this until her death, five or six days thereafter, she constantly grew worse. Upon the fourth day after the injury she said to her nurse that she knew she was going to die, and had so known from the time the injury was inflicted. To this witness she then made the same statement, in substance, as to the manner of the injury, and it was admitted in evidence. Upon the fifth day, however, she said to one of her physicians, after being told by him that her case was a grave one, that “if she was not going to live, she wanted the truth known; but so long as there was a prospect of getting well, she wanted it suppressed; but if we thought she was going to die, she wanted the truth made known.”
It is contended that this statement shows she had *496not relinquished all hope of recovery; and that her previous declarations, indicating the accused as the offender, were, therefore, inadmissible as evidence.
Upon either the sixth day, and after she had been' informed that she must die, or the next day (the day of her death), the physician wrote out the substance, but not the detail, of what she had previously told him as to the injury to her, and upon its being read to her, she said it was correct. It was also introduced in evidence, and it states that the accused performed the operation upon her. The .physician also testifies that when this was read to her, she again detailed the circumstances of the injury, and the fair inference from his testimony is that her statement, then made, corresponded with that previously made to him, and to which he had already testified.
In our opinion, however, all of her statements above alluded to were made by her under a sense of impending death. If this were doubtful, they should be rejected.
The statement made to her physician upon the fifth day, and above quoted, does not in our opinion, in the light of all the other circumstances proven, show she in fact had any hope or expectation that she would survive the injury; but that, upon the contrary, she felt from the time when it was inflicted until her death that it must result fatally.' Whether this was so or not may be gathered from her conduct, her evident danger, the opinions of her physicians given to her, her declarations, and all the attending circumstances. The law does not require as a condition to the competency of the statement as a dying declara*497tion, that the injured party shall, in express words, Redare that he knows he is about to die, or that he shall make use of equivalent language. .His recognition of impending dissolution may be shown .in this way, but the law does not limit to this mode alone.
We do not see, however, how the accused could have been prejudiced by the evidence relative to the statements made by the deceased prior to the written ■one. It was -unquestionably competent; and it states that the accused performed the operation, from the ■effects of which it is certain the death resulted. It is true, the deceased was a party to the deed. She, however, acted from a sense of shame; and however ■censurable her conduct may have been, it can not shield the accused, who, from a purely sordid motive, •caused her death, and outraged a- law vital to the •existence of good society.
Judgment affirmed.