DECISION and ORDER
Following the earlier decision in this case (
Plaintiffs now move, in effect, for summary judgment reinstating the earlier decision. That decision turned on Administrative Letter 71 PWD-17 of the Commissioner of Social Services, approved and interpreted in
Matter of City of New York v. Wyman,
1972,
“ . . .it may well be that a still more fundamental right is infringed whenever an attempt is made by statute or rule to deny, or, as here, substantially to interfere with, the preg *733 nant woman’s interest in freely determining whether or not to bear a child. Abele v. Markle, D.Conn.1972,342 F.Supp. 800 , 804.” (347 F.Supp. at 500 )
The defendants were therefore ordered to cease giving effect to Administrative Letter 71 PWD-17.
The Attorney General argues that a “real case of controversy” is no longer presented. The claim is not that termination of plaintiffs’ pregnancies has mooted the class action, a contention rejected in
Wade
(
There is no occasion to depart from the earlier determination that the Administrative Letter is invalid, and that it is a denial of the equal protection of the laws to deny medical assistance and Medicaid reimbursement for lawful abortional acts to indigent women who otherwise qualify for medical assistance under Section 365-a of the Social Services Law and the regulations.
Roe v. Norton,
2d Cir. 1975,
In agreement with the earlier decision in this Court, the three-judge Court in
Roe v. Norton
determined on remand that the state could not constitutionally deny medical assistance to indigent women seeking elective abortions in the first trimester of pregnancy (Civil No. N-74-17, December 31, 1975). The same conclusion has been reached in
Wulff v. Singleton, supra,
Under the New York statute medical participation is an integral part of the procedure for legalizing an abortional act even during the first trimester.
Wade
is nevertheless clear that the generative source of right is the woman’s protected freedom in the first trimester to make the decision whether or not to bear the child. See particularly
Wade,
Further submissions on the Nassau County Medical Center residency regulations were promised but have not been submitted. That local aspect of the case, which is for the one-judge court in any case, is left open at this time.
It is, accordingly
ORDERED and ADJUDGED that Administrative Letters 71 PWD-17 and 72 PWD-27 are constitutionally invalid as written and as applied, and that the defendant Commissioner of Social Services and Department of Social Services of the State of New York cease and desist from giving effect to them in the cases of indigent women electing upon the advice of a duly licensed physician to abort their pregnancies within twenty-four weeks of the commencement of the pregnancies; and it is further
ORDERED that determination of plaintiffs’ motion respecting the Nassau County Medical Center residency regulations is held in abeyance for separate determination by the District Court.
