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Born alive rule

The born alive rule is a common law legal principle that holds that various criminal laws, such as homicide and assault, apply only to a child that is "born alive". U.S. courts have overturned this rule, citing recent advances in science and medicine, and in several states feticide statutes have been explicitly framed or amended to include fetuses in utero. Abortion in Canada is still governed by the born alive rule, as courts continue to hold to its foundational principles. In 1996, the Law Lords confirmed that the rule applied in English law but that alternative charges existed in lieu, such as a charge of unlawful or negligent manslaughter instead of murder.[1]

History edit

The born alive rule was originally a principle at common law in England that was carried to the United States and other former colonies of the British Empire. First formulated by William Staunford, it was later set down by Edward Coke in his Institutes of the Laws of England. It follows the language used for cases of murder in English law, identifying three salient characteristics: a reasonable creature, in rerum natura (in natural being), and in the King's peace.[2] Coke says: "If a woman be quick with childe, and by a potion or otherwise killeth it in her wombe, or if a man beat her, whereby the child dyeth in her body, and she is delivered of a dead childe, this is great misprision, and no murder; but if he childe be born alive and dyeth of the potion, battery, or other cause, this is murder; for in law it is accounted a reasonable creature, in rerum natura, when it is born alive.[3][4]

The term "reasonable creature" echoes the language of an influential strand Catholic doctrine on the nature of the soul and the beginning of human personhood which generally adopted Aristotle in holding that it is the "rational soul" that infuses the fetus with "human beingness". There was disagreement as to whether this occurred at the moment of conception, or at the moment of quickening, as Aristotle had held.[5] As for rerum natura, William Staunford had explained "the thing killed must be in part of the world of physical beings (in rerum natura). This has been interpreted as meaning completely expelled from the womb.[6] Finally, the "thing killed" must be in the King's peace, i.e. in a situation where the protection of the King's peace applied. An outlaw, for instance, was not in the King's peace, and not subject to protection of the law.

The designation "misprision, and no murder", can be traced to the Leges Henrici Primi of 1115, which designated abortion "quasi homicide".[citation needed] Here, we find the penalties for abortion were varying lengths of penance, indicating it was dealt with by ecclesiastical courts, while homicide, being a breach of the King's peace, was dealt with in secular courts. Penalties for abortion varied depending on whether the fetus was formed or unformed, that is before or after quickening, and were only imposed on women who had aborted the product of "fornication" (illicit sex), a distinction previously made by the Venerable Bede.[7]

The personhood status of the fetus once born is a matter of speculation, as children had little recognition at law prior to the Offences against the Person Act 1828, and today are still not considered full persons until they reach the age of majority and are deemed capable of entering into legally binding contracts.[8] As the Eliza Armstrong case shows, however, it was still legal for a father to sell his child as late as 1885, long after the slave trade had been abolished in England.

In the nineteenth century, some began to argue for legal recognition of the moment of conception as the beginning of a human being, basing their argument on growing awareness of the processes of pregnancy and fetal development.[9][10][self-published source] They succeeded in drafting laws which criminalized abortion in all forms and made it punishable in secular courts.

Current state of the law edit

Advances in the state of the art in medical science, including medical knowledge related to the viability of the fetus, and the ease with which the fetus can be observed in the womb as a living being, treated clinically as a human being, and (by certain stages) demonstrate neural and other processes considered as human, have led a number of jurisdictions – in particular in the United States – to supplant or abolish this common law principle.[9]

Examples of the evidence cited can be found within studies in ultrasonography, fetal heart monitoring, fetoscopy, and behavioral neuroscience. Studies in Neonatal perception suggest that the physiology required for consciousness does not exist prior to the 28th week, as this is when the thalamic afferents begin to enter the cerebral cortex. How long it takes for the requisite connection to be properly established is unknown at this time. Additionally, it is unclear whether the presence of certain hormones may keep the fetal brain sedated until birth.[11]

United Kingdom edit

The rule forms the foundation of UK law related to the fetus. In the case Attorney General's Reference No. 3 of 1994 Lord Mustill noted that the legal position of the unborn, and other pertinent rules related to transferred malice, were very strongly embedded in the structure of the law and had been considered relatively recently by the courts.[1] The Law Lords concurred that a fetus, although protected by the law in a number of ways, is legally not a separate person from its mother in English law. They described this as outdated and misconceived but legally established as a principle, adding that the fetus might be or not be a person for legal purposes, but could not in modern times be described as a part of its mother. The concept of transferred malice and general malice were also not without difficulties; these are the legal principles that say when a person engages in an unlawful act, they are responsible for its consequences, including (a) harm to others unintended to be harmed, and (b) types of harm they did not intend.[1] For example, the concept of transferred malice was applied where an assault caused a child to die not because it injured the child, but because it caused the child's premature birth.[12] It was also applied where manslaughter through a midwife's gross negligence caused a child to die before its complete birth.[13]

In Attorney General's Reference No. 3 of 1994 where a husband stabbed his pregnant wife, causing premature birth, and the baby died due to that premature birth, in English law no murder took place. "Until she had been born alive and acquired a separate existence she could not be the victim of homicide". The requirement for murder under English law, involving transfer of malice to a fetus, and then (notionally) from a fetus to the born child with legal personality, who died as a child at a later time despite never having suffered harm as a child with legal personality, nor even as a fetus having suffered any fatal wound (the injury sustained as a fetus was not a contributory cause), nor having malice deliberately directed at it, was described as legally "too far" to support a murder charge.[1] They noted that English law allowed for alternative remedies in some cases, specifically those based on "unlawful act" and "gross negligence" manslaughter and other offenses which do not require intent to harm the victim (manslaughter in English law is capable of a sentence up to and including life imprisonment): "Lord Hope has, however, ... [directed]... attention to the foreseeability on the part of the accused that his act would create a risk ... All that it [sic] is needed, once causation is established, is an act creating a risk to anyone; and such a risk is obviously established in the case of any violent assault ... The unlawful and dangerous act of B changed the maternal environment of the foetus in such a way that when born the child died when she would otherwise have lived. The requirements of causation and death were thus satisfied, and the four attributes of 'unlawful act' manslaughter were complete."[1]

In the same ruling, Lord Hope drew attention to the parallel case of Regina v. Mitchell ([1983] Q.B. 741) where a blow aimed at one person caused another to suffer harm leading to later death, and summarized the legal position of the 1994 case: "The intention which must be discovered is an intention to do an act which is unlawful and dangerous ... irrespective of who was the ultimate victim of it. The fact that the child whom the mother was carrying at the time was born alive and then died as a result of the stabbing is all that was needed for the offence of manslaughter when actus reus for that crime was completed by the child's death. The question, once all the other elements are satisfied, is simply one of causation. The defendant must accept all the consequences of his act, so long as the jury are satisfied that he did what he did intentionally, that what he did was unlawful and that, applying the correct test, it was also dangerous. The death of the child was unintentional, but the nature and quality of the act which caused it was such that it was criminal and therefore punishable. In my opinion that is sufficient for the offence of manslaughter. There is no need to look to the doctrine of transferred malice ... ."[1] In other cases where the fetus has not achieved independent existence, an act causing harm to an unborn child may be treated legally as harm to the mother herself. For example, in the case St George's Healthcare NHS Trust v S; R v Collins & Ors, ex parte S[14] it was held a trespass to the person when a hospital terminated a pregnancy involuntarily because the mother was diagnosed with severe pre-eclampsia. The court held that an unborn child's need for medical assistance does not prevail over the mother's autonomy and she is entitled to refuse consent to treatment, whether her own life or that of her unborn child depends on it.[citation needed]

United States edit

 
Fetal homicide laws in the United States:
  "Homicide" or "murder"
  Other crime against fetus
  Depends on age of fetus
  Assaulting mother
  No law on feticide

As of 2002, 23 states in the United States still employed the rule, to lesser or greater extent.[10] The abolition of the rule has proceeded piecemeal, from case to case and from statute to statute, rather than wholesale. One such landmark case with respect to the rule was Commonwealth vs. Cass, in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, where the court held that the stillbirth of an eight-month-old fetus, whose mother had been injured by a motorist, constituted vehicular homicide. By a majority decision, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts held that a viable fetus constituted a "person" for the purposes of vehicular homicide law. In the opinion of the justices, "We think that the better rule is that infliction of perinatal injuries resulting in the death of a viable fetus, before or after it is born, is homicide."[15]

Several courts have held that it is not their function to revise statute law by abolishing the born alive rule, and have stated that such changes in the law should come from the legislature. In 1970 in Keeler v. Superior Court of Amador County, the California Supreme Court dismissed a murder indictment against a man who had caused the stillbirth of the child of his estranged pregnant wife, stating that "the courts cannot go so far as to create an offense by enlarging a statute, by inserting or deleting words, or by giving the terms used false or unusual meanings ... Whether to extend liability for murder in California is a determination solely within the province of the Legislature."[15][16] Several legislatures have, as a consequence, revised their statutes to explicitly include deaths and injuries to fetuses in utero. The general policy has been that an attacker who causes the stillbirth of a fetus should be punished for the destruction of that fetus in the same way as an attacker who attacks a person and causes their death. Some legislatures have simply expanded their existing offences to explicitly include fetuses in utero. Others have created wholly new, and separate, offences.[15]

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Emma Cave (2004). The Mother of All Crimes: Human Rights, Criminalization and the Child Born Alive. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 43, 48. ISBN 0-7546-2366-1.
  • Kerr, Ian R. (2000). "Pregnant Women and the "Born Alive" Rule in Canada". Tort Law Review. 8: 713–719. SSRN 902453.
  • Gerard Casey (May 2005). Born Alive: The Legal Status of the Unborn Child in England and the U. S. A. Barry Rose Law Publishers Limited. ISBN 1-902681-46-0.
  • Ranson D. (February 2006). "The "born alive" rule". J Law Med. 13 (3): 285–288. PMID 16506720.
  • Massachusetts. Supreme Judicial Court, Barnstable. (August 1984). "Commonwealth v. Cass". North East Rep. Second Series. 467: 1324–1330. PMID 12041184.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Attorney General's Reference No 3 of 1994 Attorney General's Reference No 3 of 1994 [1997] UKHL 31, [1998] 1 Cr App Rep 91, [1997] 3 All ER 936, [1997] 3 WLR 421, [1997] Crim LR 829, [1998] AC 245 (24 July 1997), House of Lords
  2. ^ Murder [1], definition found at Law Teacher
  3. ^ Edward Coke, First Part of the Institutes on the Laws of England
  4. ^ Cited in "The New "Fetal Protection": The Wrong Answer to the Crisis of Inadequate Health Care for Women and Children" 2011-07-20 at the Wayback Machine, Linda Fentiman, 2006, note 119, (abstract and download link)
  5. ^ [2] 2016-11-17 at the Wayback Machine On the Generation of Animals, book II
  6. ^ [3] Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Murder
  7. ^ Spivack, Carla, To Bring Down the Flowers: The Cultural Context of Abortion Law in Early Modern England. Available at SSRN: [4]
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-09-23. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
  9. ^ a b Sheena Meredith (2005). Policing Pregnancy: The Law And Ethics of Obstetric Conflict. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 182. ISBN 0-7546-4412-X.
  10. ^ a b William M. Connolly (2002). One Life: How the U.S. Supreme Court Deliberately Distorted the History, Science and Law of Abortion. Xlibris Corporation. ISBN 1-4010-3786-0.
  11. ^ Mellor DJ, Diesch TJ, Gunn AJ, Bennet L (November 2005). "The importance of 'awareness' for understanding fetal pain". Brain Research Reviews. 49 (3): 455–71. doi:10.1016/j.brainresrev.2005.01.006. PMID 16269314. S2CID 9833426.
  12. ^ R v West (1848) 175 ER 329
  13. ^ R v Senior (1832) 1 Mood CC 346
  14. ^ [1998] 3 All ER
  15. ^ a b c John (John A.) Seymour (2000). Childbirth and the Law. Oxford University Press. pp. 140–143. ISBN 0-19-826468-2.
  16. ^ David C. Brody; James R. Acker; Wayne A. Logan (2001). "Criminal Homicide". Criminal Law. Jones and Bartlett. p. 411. ISBN 0-8342-1083-5.

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The born alive rule is a common law legal principle that holds that various criminal laws such as homicide and assault apply only to a child that is born alive U S courts have overturned this rule citing recent advances in science and medicine and in several states feticide statutes have been explicitly framed or amended to include fetuses in utero Abortion in Canada is still governed by the born alive rule as courts continue to hold to its foundational principles In 1996 the Law Lords confirmed that the rule applied in English law but that alternative charges existed in lieu such as a charge of unlawful or negligent manslaughter instead of murder 1 Contents 1 History 2 Current state of the law 2 1 United Kingdom 2 2 United States 3 See also 4 Further reading 5 ReferencesHistory editThe born alive rule was originally a principle at common law in England that was carried to the United States and other former colonies of the British Empire First formulated by William Staunford it was later set down by Edward Coke in his Institutes of the Laws of England It follows the language used for cases of murder in English law identifying three salient characteristics a reasonable creature in rerum natura in natural being and in the King s peace 2 Coke says If a woman be quick with childe and by a potion or otherwise killeth it in her wombe or if a man beat her whereby the child dyeth in her body and she is delivered of a dead childe this is great misprision and no murder but if he childe be born alive and dyeth of the potion battery or other cause this is murder for in law it is accounted a reasonable creature in rerum natura when it is born alive 3 4 The term reasonable creature echoes the language of an influential strand Catholic doctrine on the nature of the soul and the beginning of human personhood which generally adopted Aristotle in holding that it is the rational soul that infuses the fetus with human beingness There was disagreement as to whether this occurred at the moment of conception or at the moment of quickening as Aristotle had held 5 As for rerum natura William Staunford had explained the thing killed must be in part of the world of physical beings in rerum natura This has been interpreted as meaning completely expelled from the womb 6 Finally the thing killed must be in the King s peace i e in a situation where the protection of the King s peace applied An outlaw for instance was not in the King s peace and not subject to protection of the law The designation misprision and no murder can be traced to the Leges Henrici Primi of 1115 which designated abortion quasi homicide citation needed Here we find the penalties for abortion were varying lengths of penance indicating it was dealt with by ecclesiastical courts while homicide being a breach of the King s peace was dealt with in secular courts Penalties for abortion varied depending on whether the fetus was formed or unformed that is before or after quickening and were only imposed on women who had aborted the product of fornication illicit sex a distinction previously made by the Venerable Bede 7 The personhood status of the fetus once born is a matter of speculation as children had little recognition at law prior to the Offences against the Person Act 1828 and today are still not considered full persons until they reach the age of majority and are deemed capable of entering into legally binding contracts 8 As the Eliza Armstrong case shows however it was still legal for a father to sell his child as late as 1885 long after the slave trade had been abolished in England In the nineteenth century some began to argue for legal recognition of the moment of conception as the beginning of a human being basing their argument on growing awareness of the processes of pregnancy and fetal development 9 10 self published source They succeeded in drafting laws which criminalized abortion in all forms and made it punishable in secular courts Current state of the law editAdvances in the state of the art in medical science including medical knowledge related to the viability of the fetus and the ease with which the fetus can be observed in the womb as a living being treated clinically as a human being and by certain stages demonstrate neural and other processes considered as human have led a number of jurisdictions in particular in the United States to supplant or abolish this common law principle 9 Examples of the evidence cited can be found within studies in ultrasonography fetal heart monitoring fetoscopy and behavioral neuroscience Studies in Neonatal perception suggest that the physiology required for consciousness does not exist prior to the 28th week as this is when the thalamic afferents begin to enter the cerebral cortex How long it takes for the requisite connection to be properly established is unknown at this time Additionally it is unclear whether the presence of certain hormones may keep the fetal brain sedated until birth 11 United Kingdom edit The rule forms the foundation of UK law related to the fetus In the case Attorney General s Reference No 3 of 1994 Lord Mustill noted that the legal position of the unborn and other pertinent rules related to transferred malice were very strongly embedded in the structure of the law and had been considered relatively recently by the courts 1 The Law Lords concurred that a fetus although protected by the law in a number of ways is legally not a separate person from its mother in English law They described this as outdated and misconceived but legally established as a principle adding that the fetus might be or not be a person for legal purposes but could not in modern times be described as a part of its mother The concept of transferred malice and general malice were also not without difficulties these are the legal principles that say when a person engages in an unlawful act they are responsible for its consequences including a harm to others unintended to be harmed and b types of harm they did not intend 1 For example the concept of transferred malice was applied where an assault caused a child to die not because it injured the child but because it caused the child s premature birth 12 It was also applied where manslaughter through a midwife s gross negligence caused a child to die before its complete birth 13 In Attorney General s Reference No 3 of 1994 where a husband stabbed his pregnant wife causing premature birth and the baby died due to that premature birth in English law no murder took place Until she had been born alive and acquired a separate existence she could not be the victim of homicide The requirement for murder under English law involving transfer of malice to a fetus and then notionally from a fetus to the born child with legal personality who died as a child at a later time despite never having suffered harm as a child with legal personality nor even as a fetus having suffered any fatal wound the injury sustained as a fetus was not a contributory cause nor having malice deliberately directed at it was described as legally too far to support a murder charge 1 They noted that English law allowed for alternative remedies in some cases specifically those based on unlawful act and gross negligence manslaughter and other offenses which do not require intent to harm the victim manslaughter in English law is capable of a sentence up to and including life imprisonment Lord Hope has however directed attention to the foreseeability on the part of the accused that his act would create a risk All that it sic is needed once causation is established is an act creating a risk to anyone and such a risk is obviously established in the case of any violent assault The unlawful and dangerous act of B changed the maternal environment of the foetus in such a way that when born the child died when she would otherwise have lived The requirements of causation and death were thus satisfied and the four attributes of unlawful act manslaughter were complete 1 In the same ruling Lord Hope drew attention to the parallel case of Regina v Mitchell 1983 Q B 741 where a blow aimed at one person caused another to suffer harm leading to later death and summarized the legal position of the 1994 case The intention which must be discovered is an intention to do an act which is unlawful and dangerous irrespective of who was the ultimate victim of it The fact that the child whom the mother was carrying at the time was born alive and then died as a result of the stabbing is all that was needed for the offence of manslaughter when actus reus for that crime was completed by the child s death The question once all the other elements are satisfied is simply one of causation The defendant must accept all the consequences of his act so long as the jury are satisfied that he did what he did intentionally that what he did was unlawful and that applying the correct test it was also dangerous The death of the child was unintentional but the nature and quality of the act which caused it was such that it was criminal and therefore punishable In my opinion that is sufficient for the offence of manslaughter There is no need to look to the doctrine of transferred malice 1 In other cases where the fetus has not achieved independent existence an act causing harm to an unborn child may be treated legally as harm to the mother herself For example in the case St George s Healthcare NHS Trust v S R v Collins amp Ors ex parte S 14 it was held a trespass to the person when a hospital terminated a pregnancy involuntarily because the mother was diagnosed with severe pre eclampsia The court held that an unborn child s need for medical assistance does not prevail over the mother s autonomy and she is entitled to refuse consent to treatment whether her own life or that of her unborn child depends on it citation needed United States edit nbsp Fetal homicide laws in the United States Homicide or murder Other crime against fetus Depends on age of fetus Assaulting mother No law on feticideMain article Born alive laws in the United States As of 2002 23 states in the United States still employed the rule to lesser or greater extent 10 The abolition of the rule has proceeded piecemeal from case to case and from statute to statute rather than wholesale One such landmark case with respect to the rule was Commonwealth vs Cass in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts where the court held that the stillbirth of an eight month old fetus whose mother had been injured by a motorist constituted vehicular homicide By a majority decision the Supreme Court of Massachusetts held that a viable fetus constituted a person for the purposes of vehicular homicide law In the opinion of the justices We think that the better rule is that infliction of perinatal injuries resulting in the death of a viable fetus before or after it is born is homicide 15 Several courts have held that it is not their function to revise statute law by abolishing the born alive rule and have stated that such changes in the law should come from the legislature In 1970 in Keeler v Superior Court of Amador County the California Supreme Court dismissed a murder indictment against a man who had caused the stillbirth of the child of his estranged pregnant wife stating that the courts cannot go so far as to create an offense by enlarging a statute by inserting or deleting words or by giving the terms used false or unusual meanings Whether to extend liability for murder in California is a determination solely within the province of the Legislature 15 16 Several legislatures have as a consequence revised their statutes to explicitly include deaths and injuries to fetuses in utero The general policy has been that an attacker who causes the stillbirth of a fetus should be punished for the destruction of that fetus in the same way as an attacker who attacks a person and causes their death Some legislatures have simply expanded their existing offences to explicitly include fetuses in utero Others have created wholly new and separate offences 15 See also editBorn Alive Infants Protection Act Unborn Victims of Violence Act Fetal rightsFurther reading editEmma Cave 2004 The Mother of All Crimes Human Rights Criminalization and the Child Born Alive Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 43 48 ISBN 0 7546 2366 1 Kerr Ian R 2000 Pregnant Women and the Born Alive Rule in Canada Tort Law Review 8 713 719 SSRN 902453 Gerard Casey May 2005 Born Alive The Legal Status of the Unborn Child in England and the U S A Barry Rose Law Publishers Limited ISBN 1 902681 46 0 Ranson D February 2006 The born alive rule J Law Med 13 3 285 288 PMID 16506720 Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Barnstable August 1984 Commonwealth v Cass North East Rep Second Series 467 1324 1330 PMID 12041184 References edit a b c d e f Attorney General s Reference No 3 of 1994 Attorney General s Reference No 3 of 1994 1997 UKHL 31 1998 1 Cr App Rep 91 1997 3 All ER 936 1997 3 WLR 421 1997 Crim LR 829 1998 AC 245 24 July 1997 House of Lords Murder 1 definition found at Law Teacher Edward Coke First Part of the Institutes on the Laws of England Cited in The New Fetal Protection The Wrong Answer to the Crisis of Inadequate Health Care for Women and Children Archived 2011 07 20 at the Wayback Machine Linda Fentiman 2006 note 119 abstract and download link 2 Archived 2016 11 17 at the Wayback Machine On the Generation of Animals book II 3 Bouvier s Law Dictionary Murder Spivack Carla To Bring Down the Flowers The Cultural Context of Abortion Law in Early Modern England Available at SSRN 4 Person Archived from the original on 2010 09 23 Retrieved 2010 09 30 a b Sheena Meredith 2005 Policing Pregnancy The Law And Ethics of Obstetric Conflict Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 182 ISBN 0 7546 4412 X a b William M Connolly 2002 One Life How the U S Supreme Court Deliberately Distorted the History Science and Law of Abortion Xlibris Corporation ISBN 1 4010 3786 0 Mellor DJ Diesch TJ Gunn AJ Bennet L November 2005 The importance of awareness for understanding fetal pain Brain Research Reviews 49 3 455 71 doi 10 1016 j brainresrev 2005 01 006 PMID 16269314 S2CID 9833426 R v West 1848 175 ER 329 R v Senior 1832 1 Mood CC 346 1998 3 All ER a b c John John A Seymour 2000 Childbirth and the Law Oxford University Press pp 140 143 ISBN 0 19 826468 2 David C Brody James R Acker Wayne A Logan 2001 Criminal Homicide Criminal Law Jones and Bartlett p 411 ISBN 0 8342 1083 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Born alive rule amp oldid 1183962502, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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