Gоvernor Lincoln Almond has appealed a district court judgment, permanently enjoining enforcement of Rhode Island’s bаn on partial birth abortions, R.I. Gen. Laws § 23-4.12 (“the Act”).
See Rhode Island Med. Soc’y v. Whitehouse,
Appellant does not contend that the Act differs in any significant way from the Nebraska statute at issue in
Stenberg v. Carhart,
*106
Contrary to appellant’s contention, this court’s decision in
Rodos v. Michaelson,
Severability is a matter of state law.
Leavitt v. Jane L.,
It appears that the Rhode Island Legislаture’s purpose and intent was to ban the partial birth abortion procedure for all fetuses, nonviable and viable, аs the Act draws no line between viability and nonvia-bility. Would the Legislature have passed the Act banning the partial birth abortion procedure absent its application to a nonviable fetus? There is doubt on that score, in light of the fact that the “quick child” statute, banning all abortion procedures on a viable fetus (save to preserve the life of the mother), still stands on the books.
The Act does contain a severability provision, § 23-^4.12-6. But, “[s]ever-ability clauses, though probative of legislative intent, are not conclusive.”
Ackerley Communications of Mass. Inc., v. Cambridge,
Even if what appellant would have this court do is sever an
application
of the Act, rather than any
section
of the Act, we may impose a limiting construction on a statute “only if it is readily susceptible to such a cоnstruction.”
Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union,
*107 [T]he language of the ban simply makes it not susceptible to severance. Post-viability application of the ban cannot be separated from pre-viability application of the ban so that it may stand alone. There is no clause or word dealing with post-viability аpplication of the ban. We essentially would have to rewrite the Act in order to create a provision which could stand by itself. This we cannot do. Accordingly, the entire ban on the D & X procedure must be struck down.
Women’s Med. Prof'l Corp. v. Voinovich,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant's citation to
City News and Novelty, Inc. v. City of
Waukesha, - U.S. -,
The instant case presents no similar posture. The appellees had standing to challenge the Act because the murkiness of whether the Act described a constitutionally-pеrmissible procedure chilled both their constitutional rights and the constitutional rights of their patients and potentially expоsed them to criminal prosecution and civil liability.
See Rhode Island Med. Soc’y,
