Deborah J.Z. appeals from an order denying her motion to dismiss the information the State filed against her for attempted first-degree intentional homicide and first-degree reckless injury contrary to §§ 939.32, 940.01 and 940.23(1), STATS. Deborah argues that the State did not establish at the preliminary hearing that it had probable cause to charge her with these crimes. She contends that her alleged act of consuming alcohol while pregnant does not satisfy the statutes' requirement that the act be perpetrated against another "human being." We are persuaded that the term "human being" as used in §§ 940.01 and 940.23(1) was not intended to refer to an unborn child and that Deborah's prenatal conduct does not constitute attempted first-degree intentional homicide and first-degree reckless injury. Therefore, we reverse.
FACTS
One week before her due date, Deborah was drinking in a local tavern when she believed she was going to *471 have her baby. Deborah's mother came and took her to St. Luke's Hospital for medical treatment. At the hospital, Deborah was uncooperative, belligerent at times and very intoxicated. Her blood alcohol concentration exceeded 0.30%. Deborah allegedly told a nurse that "if you don't keep me here, I'm just going to go home and keep drinking and drink myself to death and I'm going to kill this thing because I don't want it anyways." Deborah also expressed fear about the baby's race, an abusive relationship she was in and the pain of giving birth.
After consulting with her physician, Deborah consented to a cesarean section and gave birth to a baby girl, M.M.Z. At birth, M.M.Z. was extremely small, she had no significant subcutaneous fat and her physical features — mild dysmorphic abnormalities — presented fetal alcohol effects. M.M.Z.'s blood alcohol level was 0.199% at birth. After a few weeks, M.M.Z. was gaining weight, had no significant jaundice and was able to tolerate temperature outside the incubator. Consequently, she was discharged to a foster family.
On June 10, 1996, the State filed a criminal complaint against Deborah charging her with attempted first-degree intentional homicide and first-degree reckless injury. See §§ 939.32, 940.01, 940.23(1), STATS. After a preliminary hearing, the circuit court found probable cause to charge Deborah and bound her over for trial. The State filed a two-count information to which Deborah pled not guilty. Deborah brought a motion to dismiss which was denied. We accepted Deborah's petition to review the nonfinal order denying her motion to dismiss the information for lack of probable cause at the preliminary examination. 1
*472 DISCUSSION
Deborah argues that the State's allegations against her do not constitute a criminal offense. She objects to the circuit court's decision to bind her over for trial because she contends that the State failed to establish probable cause at the preliminary hearing that she committed the charged crimes.
See
§ 970.03(1), Stats. In other words, Deborah asserts that it is not reasonable or plausible that she committed either crime.
See State v. Dunn,
The question presented by this appeal — whether an unborn child is a "human being" within the statutes for attempted first-degree homicide and first-degree reckless injury — is an issue of statutory construction. Statutory construction is a question of law that we review de novo.
See State v. C.A.J.,
This appeal concerns the following statutes. First-degree intentional homicide is defined in § 940.01(l)(a), Stats., as "caus[ing] the death of another human being with intent to kill that person." And § 940.23(l)(a), Stats., provides that "[w]hoever recklessly causes great bodily harm to another human being under circumstances which show utter disregard for human life" commits first-degree reckless injury. These sections both require that actions be taken against a "human being." "Human being" is defined in § 939.22(16), Stats., as "one who has been born alive." 2 *474 Therefore, the issue we need to address is whether when an unborn child, is a "human being" according to § 939.22(16).
Deborah's principal argument is that the legislature did not intend to include the actions of a pregnant woman vis á vis her unborn child under either statute because they apply only to one who causes death or injury to another human being who has been born alive. Any intent or indifference that she may have manifested by her continued dependence on, and abuse of, alcohol during her pregnancy was directed toward her own body and the unborn child she carried within her, not toward another human being.
Conversely, the State's position
3
is that the plain language of the homicide and reckless injury statutes makes them applicable to Deborah. Under the State's interpretation, the definition of a human being does not specifically exclude an unborn child when the alleged perpetrator is the mother. As support, it argues that while
Roe v. Wade,
We pause briefly to note that our analysis of this case is not about the propriety or morality of Deborah's *475 conduct while pregnant. Nor is it about her constitutional right to reproductive choice guaranteed in Roe. On the contrary, this appeal is one of statutory construction. Both parties assert that the statutes in question are unambiguous and clearly set forth the legislature's intent. We agree and, accordingly, proceed with considering the plain language of the statutes.
We determine that according to the plain language of the first-degree intentional homicide and first-degree reckless injury statutes, the legislature did not intend for these statutes to apply to actions directed against an unborn child. The legislature clearly intended to exclude an unborn child when it limited the definition of a "human being" to include only "one who has been born alive." See § 939.22(16), Stats.
For example, in ninety-one different sections of the Wisconsin Statutes the legislature has specifically included the words "unborn child."
See, e.g.,
chs. 48, 940, and § 940.195, Stats. This illustrates that the legislature is in the practice of considering and protecting the rights of unborn children in this state. Particularly noteworthy is the fact that other subsections within the very sections with which Deborah is charged contain protections for an unborn child.
See
§§ 940.01(1)(b), 940.23(1)(b), Stats.
4
If a statute contains a given provision, "the omission of such provision from a similar
*476
statute concerning a related subject is significant in showing that a different intention existed."
Kimberly-Clark Corp. v. Public Serv. Comm'n,
Moreover, we reject the State's contention that a "human being" can be an unborn child where the alleged perpetrator is the mother. There is no support for this argument in the statutory language. We are obligated to avoid construing a statute in a manner that produces absurd results.
See Jungbluth v. Hometown,
Inc.,
*477
Additionally, in
State ex rel. Angela M.W. v. Kruzicki,
Even though Deborah's actions were egregious, we decline the State's overture to give the statute such a broad construction. Under such a construction, a woman could risk criminal charges for any perceived self-destructive behavior during her pregnancy that may result in injuries to her unborn child. Any reckless or dangerous conduct, such as smoking heavily or abus
*478
ing legal medications, could become criminal behavior because the actions were taken while the woman was pregnant. "Taken to its extreme, prohibitions during pregnancy could also include the failure to act, such as the failure to secure adequate prenatal medical care, and overzealous behavior, such as excessive exercising or dieting."
Hillman v. Georgia,
Additionally, the prosecution of a pregnant woman for prenatal behavior which affects the health of the unborn child reveals significant public policy implications. Many health officials agree that substance abuse in pregnant women is better addressed through treatment rather than the threat of punishment.
6
Another area of concern is that the imposition of criminal sanctions on pregnant women for prenatal conduct may hinder many women from seeking prenatal care and needed medical treatment because any act or omission on their part may render them criminally liable to the subsequently born child.
7
Obviously, these are complex
*479
and controversial public policy considerations; therefore, it is appropriate for the courts to defer to the legislature. We do so because "the legislature is in a better position than the courts to gather, weigh, and reconcile the competing policy proposals addressed to this sensitive area of the law."
Kruzicki,
Furthermore, the conclusion that these statutes were not intended to apply to conduct harming an unborn child is supported by the existence of abortion statutes that prohibit prosecuting a mother for aborting her unborn child. See §§ 940.13, 940.15(7), Stats. These statutes more appropriately address the present situation — one where a mother intends to harm her unborn child — and exempt a pregnant woman from prosecution. 8
In the alternative, if the plain language of the statutes does not apply to an unborn child, the State asserts that because the unborn child survived and was successfully delivered, the "born alive" doctrine permits prosecution. Thirty-one states, by judicial decision, have adopted the "born alive" rule that if an unborn child suffers a prenatal injury at the hands of a third party and is born alive, certain civil or criminal charges may be brought against the third party. See Tony Hartsoe, Person or Thing — In Search of the Legal Status of a Fetus: A Survey of North Carolina Law, 17 Campbell L. Rev. 169, 212 & n.233 (1995) (listing *480 cases). Accordingly, the State argues that after the birth of M.M.Z., the applicable criminal statutes for a "born alive" child take effect. However, the State fails to point to a case with a situation, similar to this, in which the rule has been applied for self-abuse by the mother which negatively impacts an unborn child, later "born alive."
Specifically, the State posits that holding mothers accountable for injuries they inflict on their children prenatally is the next logical step beyond the courts' application of the "born alive" rule to third parties in
State v. Cornelius,
In
Cornelius,
we relied upon § 939.22(16), Stats., to reach our conclusion and therefore did not apply the
*481
"born alive" rule in that case.
See Cornelius,
Simply put, to be convicted of attempted first-degree intentional homicide and first-degree reckless injury, Deborah must attempt to kill or injure someone who has been born alive. This is not what Deborah was charged with doing. The decision whether to include an unborn child in the definition of a "human being" is a policy issue best addressed by our legislature. We read § 939.22(16), STATS., to have definitively answered this question; the legislature clearly intended to exclude an unborn child by defining a "human being" as one who has been born alive.
CONCLUSION
We determine that an unborn child is not a "human being" because it is not one who has been born alive as required in § 939.22(16), Stats., and probable cause did not exist to charge Deborah with the crimes of attempted first-degree intentional homicide and *482 first-degree reckless injury. As a result, we reverse the circuit court's denial of the motion to dismiss the information.
By the Court. — Order reversed.
Notes
Because this is an issue of first impression in this state, we certified this appeal to the supreme court.
See
Rule 809.61,
*472
Stats. The supreme court accepted the certification of this appeal.
See State v. Deborah J.Z.,
We note that the complete definition of "human being" found in § 939.22(16), Stats., also states that the definition should be applied "when used in the homicide sections." This appeal asks us to apply this definition to a homicide section, § 940.01, Stats., and a reckless injury section, § 940.23, Stats. There is not a separate definition for "human being" in the reckless injury context. However, both sections are found in ch. 940, STATS. — titled, "Crimes Against Life and Bodily Security." We address this controversy by considering the statutory scheme as a whole and harmonizing the sections within it in a consistent manner.
See State v. Williams,
The state attorney general's office declined the opportunity to submit briefing on this case.
The legislature recently created § 939.75, Stats. See 1997 Wis. Act 295, § 12. This section deals with "[d]eath or harm to an unborn child" and refers to both §§ 940.01(1)(b) and 940.23(1)(b), Stats. See § 939.75(2)(b). It states that these two sections do not apply to: "An act by a woman who is pregnant with an unborn child that results in the death of or great bodily harm, substantial bodily harm or bodily harm to that unborn child." Section 939.75(2)(b)3.
Numerous states have addressed whether maternal conduct before the birth of a child can be criminally prosecuted under the state child abuse/endangerment or drug distribution statutes. Our research reveals only one state court of last appeal which has upheld a conviction for criminal child neglect against the mother for taking cocaine during her pregnancy.
See Whitner v. South Carolina,
The American Medical Association reported: "Many health and public welfare officials feel that the most effective way of preventing substance abuse in pregnant women is through education about potential harms and the provision of comprehensive treatment for their abuse. . . . [C]riminal penalties may exacerbate the harm done to fetal health by deterring .. . [the women] from obtaining help or care . . . ." Report of the American Medical Association Board of Trustees, Legal Interventions During Pregnancy, 264 JAMA 2663, 2667-68 (1990) [hereinafter JAMA]; but cf. Edgar Horger et al., Cocaine in Pregnancy: Confronting the Problem, 86 J. S.C. Med. Ass'N 527, 530 (1990) (results show that aggressive medical/legal approach to combat rising problem of cocaine in pregnancy may have merit).
See, e.g.,
JAMA,
supra
note 6, at 2666 (discussing the large variety of factors that can adversely affect the fetus);
Reines to v.
*479
Superior Court,
This state's antiabortion statute, § 940.04, Stats., was rendered unenforceable by
Roe v. Wade,
Deborah also argues that her prosecution under these statutes would violate the privacy, equal protection and liberty constitutional guarantees. Because we are reversing the order denying her motion to dismiss the information on statutory grounds, we need not consider these issues.
See Gross v. Hoffman,
