Abortion in Themiclesia

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Abortion in Themiclesia is a legal, political, and social topic, characterized by social stigma and affected by changing attitudes and developing legal theories. Today, abortions are legal at any point in pregnancy, under the doctrine that a fetus is not a person, but arguments have varied in the past as to the legality of abortions and the rights of parents.

History

Premodern

The legal discourse about abortion in Themiclesia has historically been virtually exclusive of any argument other than family and inheritance law. In no known case controverted before a court of law was a fetus ever treated as a independent entity that exists outside of the family's interest to have a source of productivity or male person's interest to have an heir to his clan name, titles, and property. In this light, most legal scholars concur that to ancient Themiclesian jurists, fetuses were property that belonged to others and not persons capable of humanity. Themiclesian law formerly allowed persons to be property of others, such as slaves were property to their owners but possessed certain personal rights against arbitrary homicide or mutilation, even by their owners. However, fetuses were considered inanimate entities, capable of being of value to others but not capable of personhood.

Most cases controverting the legality of abortion prior to 1800 arise over a male person's "offspring of the body" as his legal heir. Once the heir inherits, his mother had a number of obligations placed as the legal widow of the deceased. For a variety of reasons, pregnant mothers may not wish to undertake these obligations and thus abort the fetus. Traditionally, Themiclesians place much value on continuation of the family line, and any offspring of the body, legitimate or not, had a place as a successor to his male progenitor's family, social, and sometimes political status. Legally speaking, killing a person's established heir was an offence against the person and his family, and the killer could be ordered to pay as much money as will be required to find or rear another suitable heir. For instance, if a farming family had some productive farmland and an heir who was expected to become the proprietor of said land and the main source of agricultural productivity, killing such an heir would indebt the killer to find another suitable (i.e. equally productive) heir to the land or, where it is not possible, to pay for the expense of raising another male child until he could take over from the ageing father; if the land were to fall to waste in the meantime, the killer would have to ensure its previous level of productivity, as though the killed heir was alive, until the new heir was able to be as productive, or at any rate make payment to the same effect.

The controversy then lies in whether a fetus is capable of being an heir to such familial and personal interests and obligations. If the fetus is recognized as heir, then the party that destroyed it would be financially responsible for its replacement. Peripheral to this question frequently were others, such as whether the heir was presumptively or positively established, or whether the pregnant mother was a stranger, legal spouse, concubine, or slave to the male that impregnated her. Unfortunately, judgments were not consistent through history. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]

18th and 19th centuries

Starting in the 1700s, foreign notions about abortion, mostly from Casaterra, were voiced Themiclesia. While chattel slavery (私臣妾, sji-gljing-ts′jap) had been abolished for centuries, penal slavery (隸臣妾, rebh-gljing-ts′jap) remained in practice, and advanced thinkers began to advocate for their rights as human beings.  Conservatives, especially in jurisprudence, initially dismissed such assertions. Liberals at court held the view that humanity was not created by laws, and therefore legislators should not seek to define what it is. As far as abortions were concerned, they saw that fetuses developed into infants and conceived of fetuses as even more vulnerable versions of infants, i.e. as deserving to be defended.

Some early Liberal jurists compared abortion to homicide and were ready to prosecute pregnant women seeking and doctors offering abortive remedies as such. Socially, this ran against the customary power of parents to regulate their family's composition, though this argument weakened as the household head gradually lost legal powers over its members. The judicature never accepted the idea that fetuses constituted human beings in criminal cases. Trjang CJ pointed out in 1879 that fetuses were incapable of survival unless connected to another living person and led the Supreme Court to reject the idea that it could be deemed alive; this was affirmed by the Court of Appeal in 1880. Trjang's opinion is not based on fetal viability; he answered not whether the fetus could survive, but whether it is alive. Later, an opinion was delivered by To CJ that a fetus becomes a human being when it begins breathing.

On the other hand, compelling a woman to undergo an abortive procedure was formally recognized as a crime in 1869. It was formerly the right of parents to terminate an umarried daughter's pregnancy. Offenders were sentenced to 10 years of hard labour. Husbands retained the right to terminate his wife's pregnancy until 1877. The courts recognized such actions as assault against a person's body well before the modern period but did not apply it to abortions because the fetus did not appear to constitute a functional part of the mother's body.

20th century

In the early 20th century, the progressive wing of the Liberal Party argued that abortions reduced population and thus harmed economic output. Their opponents thought that unwanted fetuses not aborted usually were abandoned after birth and became orphans, few of whom became productive later in life. This debate was quagmired in the lack of information, as it is difficult to know why infants were abandoned.

In 1911, the Liberal government passed the Abortions Act banning abortions except in cases where the mother's life was at risk. The pregnant mother was not punished, but the physician administering the procedure was sentenced to two years in prison and ejected from his professional association. While the superior courts interpreted risks to the mother's life as broadly as possible, the government conducted several dozen successful prosecutions in the 1910s and 20s. Defence lawyers argued successfully that women with eclampsia and other potentially-life-threatening complications are within the definition of the Act, while prosecutors asserted that women undertook this risk by engaging in intercourse. However, enforcement of this law was exceptionally difficult, since neither physician nor patient would report the procedure. Extremist groups sometimes harrassed pregnant women visiting private clinics even for other medical reasons, which generated much indignation in early feminist circles. In 1915, it became a criminal offence for police and private detectives to probe privileged information, unless empowered by a court. In 1927, the Abortions Act was abolished due to difficulty prosecuting.

Controversies

Infanticide

As Themiclesia law permitted abortions at any point up to delivery, it became a question when exactly a fetus became a human being. Legal precedent held that a fetus remained one as long as it was in the pregnant mother's womb, and as soon as it was delivered it became a human being. An argument in 1712 relied on philology to establish this rule—the word for "birth" in Shinasthana is the same as "to live", in an inchoative sense, so the fetus becomes an infant as soon as it is delivered. After Trjang CJ made his judgment in 1879 fetuses were not humans because they could not live, courts have held that a fetus was not a person as long as it did not start breathing. Foreign observers made note of this and claimed that midwives regularly dashed unwanted newborns on the ground, and this was legal since the fetus had not breathed yet; or if it had, nobody could testify otherwise. This claim seems suspect, since midwives in Themiclesia generally shut all men and women outside of the pregnant mother's family away during delivery, so that their skills would not be observed, and all indeed such claims have been made by men. This belief that Themiclesians dashed infants at birth became a myth in many Casaterran and Columbian countries, despite scholarly skepticism. Most notably, C. R. Nelsen of Camia wrote in 1920, "What are the chances of a pregnant mother deciding to abort her fetus after delivery, having suffered to carry it to term?"

Notes

  1. In 244, a civil servant sued his divorced wife for destroying a fetus that he claims is his heir, claiming the expenses of raising and educating a boy to be a civil servant. The judge said that the fetus must be male for this damage to be real, and there is no evidence that the fetus was male. The judgement was for the defendant.
  2. In 470, a wife was sued by her husband for aborting a fetus he claims is his heir. The wife averred that the child was with her husband's servant, who seduced and had sex with her. The judge said that since the husband could not prove the fetus' parentage, he had no right to sue.
  3. In 482, a man who bought a slavewomen allowed her to drive a vehicle, but she ran over a boy. Sued at court, judgment was for the family of the boy killed, the slavewomen to be strangled. But during trial she was found pregnant, and the owner of the slavewomen agreed with the grieved party to surrender the slavewomen's future child as compensation for their boy, amongst other goods. However, the man who sold the slavewomen to her current owner claimed that the fetus was his heir and must not be handed over. He argues that the fetus did not belong to the criminal slavewomen but to him instead, and since he had no part in runing over the boy, he should not lose his property to the case at hand. The owner of the slavewomen denied that she was pregnant when he acquired her. This particular case stirred public attention in Kien-k'ang but never reached a conclusion; the slavewomen miscarried and died in prison after six years.
  4. In 525, a woman from a wealth family married with a considerable dowry into a poorer man's family. One day he caused injury to her fetus and demanded she visit a physician at her own expense. She refused, and eventually the fetus miscarried. The husband brought her family to court, arguing that she had not obeyed him to seek a physician's treatment. Her family argued that the husband was not willing to pay for the treatment and had demanded her to use her dowry for treatment, which she was not obliged to do. Judgment was for the wife's family. The husband appealed to the Council of Lords that he had a legal interest to have an heir that was damnified by his wife's refusal to see a physician. The Council affirmed the court below that the man's own property was smaller than his wife's, so the principal legal interest to have an heir belonged to the wife, since her dowry would pass to her son upon her death.
  5. In 531, a man bought what he and the seller thought was a slavewomen and copulated with her with the intention of producing a child as a secondary heir. The slavewomen actually turned out to be a slave sold by the government as a concubine of a convicted prisoner. However, the conviction was overturned soon after the copulation, and the slavewomen was restored to freedom. The man clandestinely negotiated with the slavewomen to conceal her from her former master and disguise her as his former, deceased spouse, meaning the fetus conceived as a secondary heir would be elevated to a primary heir, displacing his current spouse's infant. This was possible since a former spouse's child automatically was preferred as heir. For the slavewomen, she agreed because her former master was violent. The wife's brothers found out about this deception and brought the slavewomen to court, and the slavewomen's former owner came forth to reclaim her. The former owner was persuaded to disclaim her by a monetary payment. The court, however, ordered that the fetus must be destroyed as a tool used to defraud the spouse's family's legal interest in having their offspring, via the spouse, inherit the man's estate, as well as disrupting a union of two clans.

See also