123 Ky. 95 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1906
Opinion by
Reversing.
The appellant was indicted by the grand jury of Campbell county and tried in the circuit court of that county for involuntary manslaughter, alleged to have been committed by willfully neglecting to furnish his wife, then pregnant and about to be delivered of a child, with such care and attention as wére necessary during her confinement in childbirth, thereby causing her death. Upon the trial the jury found appellant guilty as charged and fixed his punishment at imprisonment in the county jail eight months, in. conformity to which judgment was duly entered.
Waiving consideration of the objections made by appellant to the indictment, we will rest our decision of the case upon the second contention presented by the motion and grounds for a new trial, and now relied
According to the evidence, appellant’s wife, Flor
It is manifest from the evidence that the confinement of appellant’s wife came five days sooner than they expected it; that she had resolved to do without the services of a physician in her confinement, and had influenced appellant to adopt her opinion that the services of a physician would be unnecessary at such a time; that during her labor he dutifully remained with her, and assisted her to the best of his ability, and as she directed him; that when he discovered her peril he called in two women living in the same house to assist him in caring for both mother and babe; and that upon the suggestion of one of them he immediately, and over his wife’s objection, sent for a competent physician to minister to her, and that the latter, in spite of her protestations, apparently did what he could, and all she would allow him to do, to relieve her, but failed to preserve her life. In view of the foregoing facts, and the further facts that appellant was an affectionate husband, and had never appeared indifferent to his wife or neglectful of any conjugal duty, and that in failing to earlier c'all in a physician he acted in good faith and at her request, though he doubtless erred in so doing, we fail to find any just or reasonable ground for the verdict of the jury; indeed, we think it wholly without support from the evidence. It is manifest that the prosecution was bottomed upon the failure of the appellant to earlier provide his wife with a physician. Those of us who reverence the medical profession and implicitly trust the learning and skill of the family physician may be disposed to attribute to ignorance or prejudice such a lack of confidence in that profession as was manifested by appellant’s wife, and wonder that he, in the face of such a crisis as confronted them, should have allowed himself to be influenced to trust to nature’s laws, or supernatural aid, rather
"We may concede that appellant’s wife made a grievous mistake in adhering to her purpose of rejecting medical aid, yet in view of the suffering, and, in the end, death, to which she subjected herself, her sincerity cannot be doubted. And certainly there was nothing in the evidence which tended to prove that appellant, though making the same mistake, was any less sincere than she, unless it was the fact of his sending for a physician after the birth of the child. This act, however, appears from the evidence to have resulted more from his desire to leave nothing undone for her relief than from a belief that benefit would result to the wife from the physician’s presence or treatment. In any event, it was the very r opposite of neglect, and should go to the credit, in-| stead of the debit side in appellant’s accounting fort the offense charged in the indictment. One cannot! be said in any manner to neglect or refuse to perj form a duty unless he has knowledge of the conditio^ of things which require performance at his hands!) In volume 21, p. 199, Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, it is said: “Under the common law no conviction of manslaughter predicated upon an ommission to provide medical attendance upon conscientious motives has been reported, and none can probably be had or sustained. Opinions have widely differed in all ages as to the proper mode of ministering to the sick, and, in the absence of a statute declaring it a positive duty upon a parent to call in a medical practitioner, the ommssion to do so can scarcely be considered negligence so grosa_ and wanton as to be criminal, when the factTsTadmitted that the defendant acted in all good faith, doing the best he could according to his lights.” In a note at the bottom of the same page
It was argued for the commonwealth on the trial that the life of appellant’s wife might or could have been saved if she had been attended by the physician during the birth of the child. We cannot say whether or not such would have been the result. It may also be claimed that if the .physician had not been sent for at all she might have lived to rear her child, which is still alive and likely to continue so; for who can say that the hemorrhage of which the mother died was not caused by the attempt of the physician to remove the afterbirth without.his instruments, or that if he had not returned to his office for the instruments he would have been present when the hemorrhage occurred, and might have' prevented or checked it. The testimony throws no light,on these matters. Therefore they cannot be solved, and to attempt to do so would be as idle as to invade the realm of
Wherefore the judgment is reversed,'and case remanded for a new trial and further proceedings as directed by the opinion.