delivered the opinion of the court:
Uрon a trial before a jury in the circuit court of Winnebago county, plaintiff in error was found guilty of the crime of abortion. After overruling motions for a new trial and in arrest, judgment was entered on the verdict. Plaintiff in error was sentеnced to the penitentiary. She has sued out a writ of error in this cause to review that judgment. The errors assigned relate to the sufficiency of the evidence; the action of the court in refusing to order and declаre a mistrial; the giving of instructions; the argument of the State’s Attorney to the jury, and the conduct of the court during the trial.
In view of the conclusion which we have reached, we express no opinion on the weight of the evidence. The record shows that the trial was commenced on April 9, 1945. On the adjournment for the day, the jury was permitted to separate overnight. On the convening of court on the morning of April 10, plaintiff in error, by her attorney, рresented a motion in which the court was asked to order and declare a mistrial. To the motion was attached the affidavit of her attorney. By the affidavit it was shown that in the morning issue of a local newspaper, published and circulated in the city of Rockford on April 10, 1945, a certain article appeared concerning the proceedings' of the trial on the previous day; that the article referred to certain alleged criminal charges made against the defendant on prior occasions, and was highly prejudicial to the defendant. It was further stated in the affidavit that the newspaper in which this article appearеd had a general circulation in the community covering approximately a radius of sixty miles from the city of Rockford; that during the examination of the jurors on their voir dire, on April 9, 1946, in answer to questions propounded by both thе State’s Attorney and the attorney for the defendant, several of the jurors stated that they were accustomed to reading this particular newspaper in their homes; that thousands of copies of the issue of April 10, 1945, were delivered to the respective home of the residents of Winnebago county and the city of Rockford; -that copies were also sold on the newsstands throughout the city, and that said paper was the оnly daily morning newspaper published-in the city of Rockford and vicinity. To the motion there was also attached, as exhibit A, a copy of the article complained of.' Insofar as material, this published article is аs follows:
“Mrs. Murawski, who has her home and place of business at 829 South Winnebago St. is licensed as a midwife. According to the records in the state’s attorney’s office, she was first indicted in 1924 on a charge of murder by abortion aftеr a woman had died as a result of an abortion. Mrs. Murawski, however, was never brought to trial.
“Twice in 1929, according to the records, she was indicted. The first 1929 indictment was for attempted abortion, again in connection with a death. In the second case that year, according to Weston, she was indicted for performing an abortion on Ivy Plager, widow of Vernon Plager, the man Paul Reed killed. Reed was sent to the penitentiary for murder. He wаs reported to have been responsible for taking Mrs. Plager to Mrs. Murawski. In neither of the 1929 cases was Mrs. Murawski brought to trial.”
It clearly appears from the record that the “Weston” referred to in the article was the Stаte’s Attorney engaged in the prosecution of the case. The court overruled the motion for a mistrial, and ordered the trial of the cause to proceed. The action of the court in overruling the motion was duly objected to at that time, and was also challenged by the motion for a new trial. The jurors were not admonished, either by the instructions or otherwise, that they could not properly consider anything they may have rеad about the case.
Defendant in error seeks to justify the action of the court in refusing to declare a mistrial on the ground that there is no positive proof in the record that any of the jurors had read the pаrticular article complained of. As pointed out by this court in People v. Marmon,
Whether the denial of the motion for a mistrial in this particular case constituted an abuse of the discretion vested in the trial cоurt depends upon whether the record fairly shows that at least some of the jurors read the article, and the character of the article itself. We think the record sufficiently shows that the jurors had access to thе issue of the paper in which the article appeared and that it cannot be said that none of the jurors read the article. The newspaper in which it appeared was the only morning newspaper published in the city of Rockford. It would be a violent presumption to say that no one of twelve men and women, having the intelligence of average jurors, would read the only local morning paper. According tо the affidavit attached to the motion, the paper had an extensive circulation in the city of Rockford and the surrounding community. It is further shown by the affidavit that the examination of the jurors on their voir dire disclosed the fact that several of the jurors were accustomed to reading this particular newspaper in" their homes. We think it is not too much to say that most every juror who had access to the particular issue of the pаper in which the article appeared would undoubtedly have read the account concerning the trial in which he was serving as juror. Particularly is this true where the article appeared in the home paper of the juror, which he was accustomed to reading.
As said in Griffin v. United States,
No one can plausibly contend that the published article was not calculated to prejudice the jury against plaintiff in error and deprive her of a fair trial. The particular vice of thе published article is that it purports to quote from an interview with the State’s Attorney, and to present facts stated by him and stated to be shown by the records in his office concerning other charges of crime made agаinst plaintiff in error over a period of jrears. That the facts set out in the article would have been wholly incompetent and improper to be brought to the attention of the jury by evidence, argument, or otherwise, during the trial, is too clear to admit of controversy. Nevertheless, those facts were brought to the knowledge and attention of the jurors who read the article, as statements made by the State’s Attorney, and as faсts appearing from the records in his office.
Moreover, the State’s Attorney made use of those facts in his argument to the jury by insinuating that plaintiff in error was “trafficking in this illicit business of killing babies before they are born.” The word “trafficking” imputes the carrying on or engaging in a business. The only facts justifying this imputation were those contained in the newspaper article. This argument was highly improper and it was made more vicious by the fact that it was based upоn the published article, which improperly brought such facts to thé attention of the jurors. We do not think that this is a case in which it may be said that there was no evidence that at least some of the jurors had read the article. It is, therefore, clearly distinguishable from the cases relied upon by the defendant in error.
Objection is also made to instructions Nos. 27 and 28, given on behalf of the People. The particular objection to these instruсtions is that they assume one of the elements of the crime with'which the defendant was charged, without requiring proof of such element beyond a reasonable doubt. We think the objection is well taken. It is true instruction No. 27 was аpplicable only to the second count of the indictment under which the defendant was found not guilty. No harm resulted from the giving of this instruction. The instructions are long and somewhat involved. They did not, in all respects, properly limit the jury to the facts found by it from the evidence. They were well calculated to mislead the jury. They should not have been given in the form in which they were given.
Some criticism is made of the conduct of the trial court during the progrеss of the trial. From a careful examination of the record, however, we are of the opinion that such criticism is unfounded.
Other errors are assigned, but, inasmuch as the cause must be remanded for a new trial, it is unnecеssary to pass upon other alleged errors appearing in the record. The bases for these objections will undoubtedly be obviated upon another trial.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment of the circuit court of Winnebago county is reversed and the cause is remanded to that court for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Mr. Justice Wilson dissenting.
