I
The defendant, Chester Orsini, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, was charged with aiding and abetting Anthony Salvatore in administering to and using other means upon a female with intent to procure a miscarriage or abortion, in violation of § 53-29 of the General Statutes. 1
Salvatore and the defendant appear to have been separately informed against and represented by separate counsel, although they were jointly tried. From a separate judgment accepting a verdict of guilty against Orsini, and imposing sentence thereon, he took this appeal.
On the trial proper, the defendant chose not to testify, offered no evidence, and placed his reliance solely on the cross-examination of the state’s witnesses and certain technical defenses hereinafter discussed. The state’s claims of proof may be rather briefly summarized.
The complainant missed her period in September and October, 1964, and consulted a Dr. Saez, who performed a pregnancy test upon her. Later, she called a Dr. Walker, who was then in Trenton, New Jersey, in an attempt to procure an abortion. The name “Dr. Walker” was an alias which Salvatore used. As a result of a telephone call received
II
We first consider certain claims of error as to rulings on evidence and as to a claimed error in the charge, insofar as they appear in the finding and are pursued in the defendant’s brief.
Lucier
v.
Meriden-Wallingford Sand & Stone Co.,
(a)
At the trial, Dr. Griffin was called by the state and testified that in his opinion the complainant was either pregnant or recently had been pregnant and that she was suffering from an incomplete abortion. The defendant objected to this evidence on the ground that the opinion stated by Dr. Griffin had been based in part on the history which the patient had given him. The state claimed that the evidence was admissible, including the statements given Dr. Griffin by the complainant for purposes of treatment, under the rule of cases such as
Brown
v.
Blauvelt,
The defendant’s claim is without merit. The underlying safeguards justifying the rule, as explained in
Brown
v.
Blauvelt,
supra, 275, are equally apрlicable whether the case is civil or criminal. Indeed, unless the rule were applicable to a criminal case, expert medical opinion would often be unavailable in a criminal prosecution, since it would be unusual for any physician or surgeon to
(b)
The defendant claims that, over his objection, the complainant was allowed to testify that she was pregnant. The defendant seems to claim that the complainant herself, as a layman, could not testify as to her own pregnancy. This ruling only inferentially appears in the finding, and the question appears to have been withdrawn although after the witness had answered “Yes.” This withdrawal removed the answer although the defendant could have made a motion to strike it out. He made no such motion, however, and the court was not required to act suo motu.
Hackenson
v.
Waterbury,
In the instant case the defendant brought out on cross-examination of the complainant that she had been pregnant once before. Thus, she had prior personal experience to support her statement that she was pregnant.
(e)
The defendant claims that the court erred in admitting testimony of the complaining witness as to a statement to her by a Dr. Saez, whom she had consulted prior to her coming to Connecticut, and who had given her a pregnancy test, to the effect that she was pregnant. The short answer is that no such evidence was admitted. The witness was allowed to testify that Dr. Saez informed her of the result of the pregnancy test. What Dr. Saez told her as to the result of the test was neither asked of her nor admitted into evidence. Indeed, the defendant seemed to concede in oral argument that he was in error in claiming that the ruling complained of in his brief had been made.
(d)
The informatiоn under which the defendant was tried failed to contain any allegation negating the proviso in the statute as to an abortion “necessary to preserve . . . [the complainant’s] life or that of her unborn child”. No question was raised as to
It is unnecessary for the state, in the first instance, to negate, by affirmative evidence, the statutory proviso quoted above. The state may make out a prima facie case, as stated in
State
v.
Lee,
supra, 199, through a presumption based on common experience that “the ability to bear and bring forth children is thе rule, and . . . the necessity of procuring an abortion or miscarriage in order to save the life of mother or child is the rare exception.” If evidence is adduced to the effect that such a necessity existed, then the state has the risk of nonpersuasion in proving, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the necessity did not exist. This wаs true here even though the proviso was not negated in the information. Here there is nothing to indicate that any evidence was offered tending to prove, in the slightest degree, that either the defendant or Salvatore had any concern about saving either the complainant’s life or that of an unborn child or that they were motivated in anything they did by any such consideration. This is especially true in this case where the evidence was that the abortion was performed under unusual and clandestine circumstances, and by one who, as far as
(e)
The defendant’s claim that the verdict should have been set aside because the state failed to prove the defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt is pursued in the brief only in connection with the rulings on the trial already discussed, that is, that the state failed to prove pregnancy and to negate the necessity of saving the life of the complainant or her unborn child. This claim is without merit.
Ill
We turn now to certain technical procedural claims having no direct bearing on the factual question of the guilt or innocence of the defendant.
(a)
The defendant claims that his constitutional rights under the fifth amendment to the constitution of the United States were violated in that he was presented in the Superior Court on an information and was not indicted by a grand jury. The Connecticut constitution (now article first, § 8) requires the use оf a grand-jury indictment only when the permissible punishment for the crime involved may be death or life imprisonment. General Statutes §§ 54-45, 54-46. “[Tjhere is no federal constitutional impediment to dispensing entirely
(b)
The defendant, on October 26, 1965, the day on which the actual trial began, immediately before the presentation of evidence filed a motiоn to quash or dismiss the information on the ground that he had been denied the right to a speedy trial in violation of the sixth amendment to the constitution of the United States and what is now article first, § 8, of the Connecticut constitution.
The defendant, apparently by prearrangement, appeared at the Bethany Barracks of the Conneсticut state police, accompanied by his own, privately selected and employed attorney, Alan Solomon, on November 14, 1964, the day after the issuance of the bench warrant. Then and there the defendant submitted to arrest under the bench warrant and on November 20, 1964, was presented before the Superior Court, entered a plea of not guilty and elected trial by jury. Attorney Solomon had been retained by the defendant prior to the arrest on November 14, 1964, formally entered his appearance for the defendant on November 20/1964, and continued to represent him when he was presented for plea and throughout the trial. Nowhere doеs the defendant challenge the statement in the state’s brief that during the entire period from the date of his arrest until the present time the defendant has been free on bond.
On the day of trial, Attorney Peter J. Zaccag-nino, Jr., first filed his appearance for the defend
Connecticut has always recognized the right of an accused to a speedy trial. But what is а speedy trial depends upon the circumstances.
State
v.
Hodge,
(c)
On October 26, 1965, on the day of trial and immediately before the presentation of evidence, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss on the ground that the bench warrant under which, as previously pointed out, he, accompanied by Attornеy Solomon, had submitted to arrest about eleven months before at the Bethany Barracks on November 14,1964, was constitutionally invalid because it was issued on an information by the state’s attorney without any supporting statement of probable cause. This was the first time the validity of the bench warrant had been attacked, or any suggestion or claim of its invalidity had been made.
It is true, as the defendant points out, that the case of
State
v.
Licari,
The invalidity of the bench warrant was waived by the defendant’s failure to raise the matter during the period of almost a year which elapsed between the time of arrest and the time of trial. Indeed, the defendant submitted to his arrest under the bench warrant accompanied by his own, privately employed attorney. There is nothing in the case of
State
v.
Vars,
The conduct of the defendant amounts to a submission to the court’s jurisdiction of his person and a waiver of the defect in the bench warrant.
State
v.
Darwin,
IV
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“Sec. 53-29. attempt to procure miscarriage. Any person who gives or administers to any woman, or advises or causes her to take or use anything, or uses any means, with intent to procure upon her a miscarriage or abortion, unless the same is necessary to preserve her life or that of her unborn child, shall be fined not more than one thousand dollars or imprisoned in the State Prison not more than five years or both.”
