The State Court of Gwinnett County sustained Catherine Cole Hammett’s general demurrer to the charged offense of homicide by vehicle in the second degree, OCGA § 40-6-393 (b), and the State appeals.
Appellee lost control of her car and collided with a vehicle in which Sarah Ferguson was a passenger. Ferguson was thirty-five weeks pregnant at the time. Ferguson was transported to a hospital and gave birth, through an emergency Caesarean section, to Isaac Ferguson Tolmach. The child lived approximately eleven hours before dying from the injuries he had received in the accident, primarily internal hemorrhaging and a fractured right clavicle.
OCGA § 40-6-393 (b) provides: “Any person who causes the death of another person, without an intention to do so, by violating any provision of this title other than [certain code sections inapplicable here] commits the offense of homicide by vehicle in the second degree when such violation is the cause of said death . . . .” The tria] court, relying upon this court’s opinion in
Billingsley v. State,
Billingsley, supra, involved a conviction for vehicular homicide where the victim was an unborn fetus. This court noted that unde: the common law “an unborn fetus clearly was not considered a ‘per son’ or ‘human being’ and that the killing of an unborn child conse quently was not regarded as a homicide at common law. ([Cit.])” Id at 851-852. Construing narrowly the plain language of the statute ai required in interpreting the criminal code, this court held that “th< legislature did not intend for the term ‘person’ as used in the vehicu lar homicide statute to encompass unborn children.” (Emphasis sup *225 plied.) Id. at 852. Billingsley is thus distinguishable on its facts from the case sub judice where the victim was without question a legal “person” at the time he died from injuries received in the automobile collision.
*225
Under Georgia law, a person who injures a pregnant woman so that her fetus, though born alive, subsequently dies by reason of the injuries inflicted on it while still in its mother’s uterus, can be convicted for the felony murder of the newborn child.
Ranger v. State,
Judgment reversed.
