Court Opinion

ID: 3964168
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:24:03.086386+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:25:34.128938
License: Public Domain

This is an application for bail under an indictment for murder. Bail was refused, and appellant appealed. The theory of the State is, that appellant's daughter was pregnant by him. That he inserted a knitting needle in the womb for the purpose of killing the fœtus or child. This was done to procure an abortion. That the daughter died from this attempt to commit an abortion, and hence the father (appellant) was guilty of the murder of his daughter, as charged in the indictment. If these facts were proven, or in other words, if this thing was in fact true, applicant would be guilty of murder. When the daughter died, and at the time the needle was inserted into her womb, appellant was married to Emma Fatheree. When this trial was had, they were divorced. The prosecution relied almost entirely upon the dying declarations of the deceased for evidence to sustain the charge. Her mother, and former wife of appellant, over objections of appellant, related to the court these declarations of the deceased. Could the dying declarations of deceased be proved by the wife of the appellant? They could after the marriage had been dissolved, but not while it existed. The statements made by deceased to her mother (dying declarations) were not communications made by the husband (appellant) to his wife, Emma Fatheree. In view of the trial to come, we call attention to no matters pertaining to the dying declarations of the deceased. That the appellant was the father of the child can not be proved by dying declarations. If, at the time he was inflicting the injury upon deceased, he had stated that he was the father of the child, this fact could be proved by dying declarations. There was no evidence adduced relative to the mental condition of the deceased when she made her dying statements. "It must be satisfactorily proved that she was of sane mind at the time of making the declarations." It is true that if the death of the mother was occasioned by an abortion so produced, or by an attempt to effect the same, it is murder, but it does not follow by any means that it would be murder in the first degree. This murder was not committed by poison or torture or in the attempt at the perpetration of arson, rape, robbery, or burglary. There is no law making it murder in the first degree per se if the homicide was committed in procuring or attempting to procure an abortion. Appellant did not intend to kill the deceased, which is a necessary element of murder in the first degree, unless committed *Page 596 
in the perpetration of certain offenses named in the code. We are not to be understood as holding that in no case could murder in the first degree be committed in procuring an abortion. Abortion is not one of those named offenses. Hence the State, to sustain the charge of murder in the first degree, must establish the fact that the killing was upon express malice. This must be evident from the proof.
Judgment reversed, and the applicant allowed bail in the sum of $5000.
Reversed, and bail allowed.
Judges all present and concurring.