264 Mass. 564 | Mass. | 1928
The defendant was found guilty upon an indictment charging that she did unlawfully use a certain instrument upon the body of Elizabeth Bobbins with the intent to procure a miscarriage, which resulted in the death of said Bobbins. One Frosti was tried with the defendant as an accessory before the fact, and was found guilty.
The jury could have found on the evidence that the defendant occupied a house in Springfield and had at least two rooms therein for the care of the sick; that she had cared for women recuperating from miscarriages; that Frosti, who had been intimate with the Bobbins girl, saw the defendant at her home, told her the girl was pregnant, and asked if she would care for her; that the defendant requested that the girl be sent to her; that on the day following, Frosti and the Bobbins girl went to the defendant’s house, and after an interview between the defendant and the girl she left the house with Frosti; that later the girl went to the defendant’s house and remained there about three days. According to the statement of Miss Bobbins just before her death, the defendant inserted into her a rubber instrument “six or 'seven times.” There was medical testimony that Miss Bobbins died of peritonitis caused by an abortion produced by some instrument. We need not review the evidence in detail. The jury were warranted in finding that the de
The case is properly before us on the defendant’s appeal. A stenographer was sworn and the court announced that the indictment was to be tried subject to G. L. c. 278 and all acts in amendment thereto. Under St. 1926, c. 329, §§ 1, 6, the practice as to trials for murder or manslaughter was extended to proceedings or trials upon indictment or complaint for a felony, by order of the presiding judge. It was decided in Commonwealth v. McDonald, ante, 324, that trials for-felonies other than murder or manslaughter were to be in accordance with the new practice only upon the order of the presiding judge that the trial was to follow this practice. The presiding judge made this order and he specially directed that the trial was to be conducted according to G. L. c. 278 and all acts in amendment thereto. The defendant therefore was not required to proceed according to the former practice and file a bill of exceptions.
Early in the morning of the day Miss Robbins died the defendant was taken to the hospital where Miss Robbins lay dying; in the defendant’s presence Miss Robbins accused her of having performed the abortion. One of the assignments of error is to the admission of this testimony of the deceased. It appeared that when the condition of Miss Robbins became known to the authorities certain police officers went to the house of the defendant about two o’clock in the morning. One of the police officers testified that at this time he “told her . . . [Tie] was going to take her to the Springfield Hospital to see a girl there that had an abortion performed upon her and stated that Mrs. Hamel had committed the abortion. She said she did not know the girl”; that he said the girl’s name was Robbins, and she replied she did not know her; that while the defendant was at the bedside of Miss Robbins she said she knew Mrs. Hamel, that she lived at 503 State Street, that Mrs. Hamel “put some instrument that looked as if it might be rubber into her. . . . she did it on a number of occasions and she also said she packed her with cotton
The defendant testified that when the officers called at her home one of them said to her “she [Miss Bobbins] is at the hospital and we want you to come with us”; that she replied she did not want to go and the officer said that “ . . . [she] must dress up and come.” She further testified that while at the hospital and before being brought into the presence of Miss Bobbins, one of the officers said “We won’t make any noise,” that “He turned to . . . [her] and said, 'You must not do any talking. You must not make any noise.’ ”
In the first assignment of error the defendant contends there was error in the remark by the presiding judge, “This woman [the defendant] was not under arrest, she was not there by compulsion.” It did not appear that this statement was made in the presence of the jury; it was made while counsel were present at the bench discussing certain aspects of the evidence, and, further, no exception appears to have been taken to the statement. This contention is without merit.
Under the first assignment of error, the defendant has argued that the.testimony of Police Lieutenant McNeil “was insufficient for the court to make a ruling that the evidence of the statement of Miss Bobbins was admissible”; and that the evidence of conversations in the hospital in the room where Miss Bobbins was under treatment was improperly admitted. Assuming, but without deciding, that Mrs. Hamel was under arrest when she was brought into the presence of Miss Bobbins, and assuming also that she excepted to all of the testimony from several witnesses, the statements of Miss Bobbins were admissible as admissions against the defendant if her replies to the declarations of ■ Miss Bobbins were equivocal. It is not contended that
When the police officers called at the Hamel house, the defendant denied that she knew Miss Robbins; when taken into her presence she admitted that she knew Miss Robbins as a girl who at one time worked in the Woman’s Shop; and at the conclusion of the victim’s statement the defendant said that the “girl was out of her head, she did not know what she was talking about.” These statements of the defendant were equivocal. Her remarks that she knew the girl as an employee of the Woman’s Shop and that the girl did not know what she was talking about were of such a nature that the entire conversation was admissible against the defendant. Commonwealth v. Spiropoulos, supra. Commonwealth v. Festo, supra. Commonwealth v. Madeiros, supra. It appeared that something was said, when the defendant came to the hospital,
The second assignment of error is to the refusal of the judge to strike out the testimony showing the statements of Miss Robbins in the presence of the defendant and her replies to the charge. This testimony was properly before the jury for the reasons already stated; the motion to strike it out was rightly denied. The nurses and police officers heard what the Robbins girl said; Mrs. Hamel was present; it was for the jury to say whether the statements of Miss Robbins were made in the presence and hearing of the defendant. See Commonwealth v. Klosowski, 252 Mass. 149, 151.
There was no error in denying the defendant’s motion for a new trial. The granting of a new trial is a matter of judicial discretion, and there is nothing here to show any abuse of this discretion. Commonwealth v. Cero, ante, 264, 272, 275.
There was evidence for the jury that the offence was committed within the jurisdiction of the court. They could find that the illegal abortion was performed by the defendant at her house in Springfield; that she inserted into the body of the victim a rubber instrument and by this means accomplished an unlawful abortion.
Judgment affirmed.