OPINION
{1} The question before us is whether injuries inflicted on a fetus, which result in the death of a child born alive, support a charge for child abuse resulting in death under NMSA 1978, § 30-6-HE) (2004) (amended 2005). Based on the language of the statute, we conclude that the trial court erred by denying Defendant’s motion to dismiss the charges, and we reverse.
I. BACKGROUND
{2} The parties stipulated to the following facts for the purposes of the motion to dismiss. At the time of the incident, Defendant and Mother lived together, and Mother was 24 weeks pregnant. On September 4, 2002, Mother called the police for assistance in order to get to the hospital. She reported that someone had entered her home on the previous evening and raped her. After sheriffs deputies arrived, Mother was transported to the hospital.
{3} At the hospital, the deputies took statements from Mother and Defendant. After questioning, Defendant admitted that he had hit Mother “on top of her head with his knuckles, on the side, leg or butt with nun-chucks, and that he slapped her on the side of her face with a backhand.” He further admitted to “kicking or pushing her on the side near her left hip and that she may have hit her stomach when she fell against a table.” Hospital staff documented injuries to Mother’s head and bruising on her left flank. The next day, Mother’s water broke during a pelvic exam, and on September 10, Mother gave birth to a baby boy. He died on September 12. The Office of the Medical Examiner ruled the manner of death to be a homicide and the cause of death to be prematurity and infection due to maternal abdominal blunt trauma.
{4} The State indicted Defendant on three counts: abuse of a child resulting in death, aggravated battery with a deadly weapon of a household member, and aggravated assault against a household member with a deadly weapon. Defendant filed a motion to dismiss the child abuse charge, contending that the child abuse statute could not be read to punish for injury to a fetus. Defendant also filed a motion to suppress his oral statements to the deputies and argued that he was not advised of his constitutional rights and that his statements were involuntary and the result of coercion.
{5} On July 28, 2005, the trial court issued a letter decision denying Defendant’s motion to dismiss. The trial court summarized the State’s allegations to be that Defendant injured Mother, which resulted in the death of a child. The trial court also denied Defendant’s motion to suppress his statements. Defendant pled guilty to voluntary manslaughter and reserved the right to appeal “the legal rulings in this ease.”
II. DISCUSSION
{6} Defendant raises two issues on appeal. First, he argues that the trial court improperly denied his motion to dismiss the child abuse charge. Second, Defendant contends that the trial court should have suppressed his statements to the deputies at the hospital. Because we agree with Defendant that the child abuse charge should have been dismissed, we do not reach the suppression issue. The facts are undisputed, and Defendant maintains that the trial court erred as a matter of law. Accordingly, we review de novo the denial of the motion to dismiss. State v. Shirley,
{7} Defendant argues that the charge of child abuse resulting in death must be dismissed because it stems from injuries that Defendant allegedly inflicted on a fetus, and not on a child. This result is compelled, Defendant contends, by this Court’s decision in State v. Martinez,
{8} The State distinguishes Martinez and focuses instead on the fact that Defendant’s actions allegedly caused the death of a child, and not a fetus, because the baby was born alive. For this reason, the State urges us to apply the common law born alive rule to the facts of this ease. The born alive rule allows a homicide prosecution in the event that injuries are inflicted on a fetus, the child is born alive, and the child subsequently dies as a result of the in útero injuries. See State v. Willis,
A. Section 30-6-1
{9} “We look first to the plain language of the statute.” State v. Bennett,
B. Martinez
{10} In Martinez, a mother gave birth to a child who showed signs of cocaine withdrawal.
{11} Defendant contends that the holding in Martinez requires us to reverse the trial court. Based on our earlier discussion of the statutory language, we agree. Section 30-6-l(E) requires the State to establish that a child was abused and the child’s death resulted from the abuse. In the present case, the State has alleged that a child’s death resulted from Defendant’s abuse, because the child was born alive and subsequently died. Based on the holding in Martinez, however, the State cannot establish that a child was abused by Defendant. At the time that Defendant’s alleged acts occurred, on September 4, there was no child — because according to Martinez, a fetus is not a child for the purposes of the child abuse statute. Consequently, Defendant cannot be charged with child abuse resulting in death under Section 30-6-1.
{12} The State attempts to distinguish Martinez by providing auxiliary rationales for the holding. For example, the State suggests that the Martinez Court did not believe that the state had proven the elements of child endangerment in that case. In the alternative, the State argues that the crime of endangerment was complete when the mother in Martinez completed the act of ingesting a controlled substance, whereas in the present case, Defendant’s alleged acts were not completed until the child died. The State also contends that we should evaluate the crime of child abuse resulting in death differently from the crime of child endangerment. These distinctions disregard the analysis that was actually undertaken by the Martinez Court: to interpret the language of the child abuse statute. See
{13} Accordingly, we hold that the trial court should have granted Defendant’s motion to dismiss because, although the State alleged that Defendant’s actions resulted in the death of a child, the alleged injuries were inflicted on a fetus, which is not a child under Section 30-6-1.
C. Born Alive Rule
{14} The State contends that the trial court correctly applied the common law born alive rule. According to the State, the common law is a supplement to the criminal code, the common law acknowledges that a fetus born alive is a person, and the Legislature has not indicated that it has repealed the common law rule. With this as background, the State argues that the common law rule applies “to allow criminal prosecution for conduct causing injury to a fetus that results in injury or death to the child after birth.” We are not persuaded.
{15} The common law rule historically applies to allow homicide prosecutions. See Willis,
{16} The State, citing cases from other jurisdictions, argues that the born alive rule allows Defendant to be prosecuted for child abuse without running afoul of Martinez. In the cases cited by the State, the courts refused to prosecute pregnant women for prenatal ingestion of illegal drugs, as in Martinez, but allowed third parties to be charged with homicide where prenatal injuries resulted in the death of a live child. See State v. Cotton,
{17} These cases do not advance the State’s argument because Defendant was not charged with homicide, but, rather, with child abuse resulting in death. As we have explained, homicide is only concerned with the victim’s status at the time of death, while child abuse resulting in death requires the victim to have a certain status both at the time of the abuse and at the time of death. The construction of the word “child” to exclude a fetus under Section 30-6-1 has no bearing on homicide charges against a person who inflicts fatal prenatal injuries on a fetus who is born alive. See Cotton,
{18} In addition, the cases cited by the State construe the statutes of other states, and their holdings are not based on the distinction between injuries inflicted by a third party and actions taken by a woman during pregnancy. See Cotton,
III. CONCLUSION
{19} Section 30-6-1 controls this appeal, and Martinez construed that statute to exclude “fetus” from the definition of “child.” As a result, Defendant’s alleged infliction of injuries to a fetus, which resulted in the death of a child, is insufficient to support a charge of child abuse resulting in death under Section 30-6-1. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court.
{20} IT IS SO ORDERED.
