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Can a Fetus Be an Employee? States Are Testing the Boundaries of Personhood After 'Dobbs'

A digital illustration in watercolor and pencil shows a hand holding an ID card in the foreground of the scene. Instead of showing a picture of a person, the ID card shows a microscopic image of an embryo. The ID card reads, 鈥淐lass: embryo; name: TBD; date of birth: unknown; sex: unknown; weight: unknown; height: unknown; eyes: unknown.鈥 In the background, there is an empty chair where the person holding the ID card might have expected to see a person.
(Oona Tempest / 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News)

CLAYTON, Mo. 鈥 Kaitlyn Anderson was six months pregnant when a driver killed her and a Missouri Department of Transportation colleague in 2021 while they were doing roadwork near St. Louis. Her fetus also died.

Although Anderson鈥檚 family tried to sue the department on her behalf, workers鈥 compensation laws in Missouri and elsewhere shield employers from wrongful death lawsuits when an employee dies on the job. So the case was also filed on behalf of the 25-year-old woman鈥檚 unborn child, a son named Jaxx. This was possible because Missouri law defines life 鈥 and legal rights 鈥 as beginning at conception.

In turn, the lawyers representing the state argued that, since Jaxx was considered a person, his case should be dismissed because under workers鈥 compensation laws he met the definition of an employee.

鈥淭hat's just disgusting,鈥 said Tonya Musskopf, Anderson鈥檚 mother. 鈥淲ho would have known what he would have grown into? His whole life was ahead of him.鈥

A selfie-style photo of Kaitlyn Anderson. She smiles up at her camera while holding her belly, so the viewer can immediately tell she is pregnant.
Kaitlyn Anderson was six months pregnant when she and a Missouri Department of Transportation colleague were killed in a work zone crash in 2021. Anderson鈥檚 mother, Tonya Musskopf, has started a traffic safety awareness program in memory of Anderson and her unborn child, a son named Jaxx. (The family of Kaitlyn Anderson)

What wasn鈥檛 in question from either side was the idea that the 6-month-old fetus had legal rights under Missouri law. Every state has at least some statute or case law that considers a fetus a person, according to a , a nonprofit that advocates for the rights of pregnant people. The report lists Missouri among at least 10 states with personhood language that is so broad it could be interpreted to apply to all civil and criminal laws.

Around the country, state personhood definitions have often been restrained by laws protecting the right to abortions, according to Pregnancy Justice acting executive director Dana Sussman, because together they create an inherent inconsistency: How could a fetus be a person if abortion is legal? But now that abortion rights are no longer federally protected, personhood definitions could expand throughout state law.

鈥淪tates have more leverage and leeway to tread in these waters,鈥 said , president of Texas Right to Life, a group that opposes abortion.

The U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade, which protected abortion rights, stated that the word 鈥減erson鈥 did not include the unborn for the purposes of individual rights such as equal protection under the law. The ruling prompted a nationwide push to grant more rights to fetuses, according to , a visiting professor at St. Louis University School of Law.

Among states, Missouri's recognition of personhood for fetuses was early and consequential.

Here, a 1986 law to regulate abortion included a preamble that defined life as beginning at conception. Three years later, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Missouri鈥檚 since it was merely a 鈥渧alue judgment.鈥 A Missouri Supreme Court ruling in 1995 opened the door for the definition to .

Still, Sussman noted, Missouri courts have not applied personhood to every state statute.

In 2018, a Missouri man to appeal his conviction for child molestation by arguing the state鈥檚 personhood language required the court to calculate the age of the victim from conception, not birth, which would have made her above the statutory age limit. Sussman said it鈥檚 an example of how the limits of broad personhood language are tested.

鈥淧eople will start to utilize that and figure out ways to have it benefit their particular circumstances,鈥 Sussman said.

That type of boundary-pushing, Sussman said, is invited by inconsistencies in the law, like those created by the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 Dobbs decision last summer, which overturned Roe v. Wade without addressing the question of when personhood rights begin.

The Dobbs ruling gives states the power to regulate abortion, and in Texas it triggered an that defines an unborn child as an 鈥渋ndividual living member of the homo sapiens species from fertilization until birth.鈥 Just days later, a Texas woman was given a despite arguing that her unborn daughter counted as a second person in the vehicle.

鈥淥ne law is saying that this is a baby and now he鈥檚 telling me this baby that鈥檚 jabbing my ribs is not a baby,鈥 she said of the officer who gave her the ticket. That ticket and a second one she got for a similar incident the next month were ultimately dismissed.

Another legal boundary was pushed in early April when a U.S. District Judge in Texas ruled that the FDA had improperly approved the common abortion drug mifepristone. The that part of the ruling鈥檚 analysis 鈥渁rguably applies to the unborn humans extinguished by mifepristone 鈥 especially in the post-Dobbs era.鈥 The Supreme Court has , for now.

Seago said these kinds of legal tests are important.

鈥淭hat's the phase that we're at after undoing a court precedent that had been there for almost 50 years,鈥 Seago said. 鈥淲e're encouraged that it's forcing these important questions, like, 鈥榃hat do we owe our unborn neighbors?鈥欌

But Sussman worries about an increase in criminal charges filed against pregnant people. Pregnancy Justice in a 2021 court case challenging an Arizona law that granted personhood rights to unborn children 鈥渁t every stage of development.鈥

Citing Missouri as a cautionary tale, the brief asserts not a single woman was arrested in the state in relation to her pregnancy before the Supreme Court allowed Missouri鈥檚 personhood language to stand. The years that followed, however, brought at least 39 arrests of women 鈥渇or being pregnant and subjecting 鈥榰nborn children鈥 to perceived risks of harm including drinking alcohol, smoking marijuana, or drinking tea made with mint and marijuana leaves to treat morning sickness.鈥

The Arizona law was .

Texas鈥 new abortion case law has yet to play out, but Seago anticipated it would follow the pattern established for child abuse, in which the accused can defend themselves by establishing they didn鈥檛 intend to cause harm.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no accidental abortion in Texas,鈥 Seago said.

In Missouri, wrongful death claims for unborn children have been allowed since the 1995 state Supreme Court ruling.

Anderson鈥檚 family filed a wrongful death lawsuit in St. Louis County in 2022 against the driver, the Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission 鈥 which governs the Department of Transportation 鈥 and several of Anderson鈥檚 supervisors.

The state鈥檚 attorneys argued that Jaxx, like his mother, met the definition of an 鈥渆mployee鈥 under Missouri workers鈥 compensation law, which includes an employee鈥檚 dependents in the event the employee is dead. Because Jaxx鈥檚 rights under Missouri law began at his conception, the filing read, he should be considered Anderson鈥檚 dependent. That would prevent a wrongful death suit brought against the Department of Transportation on Jaxx鈥檚 behalf.

鈥淲ho the hell would argue that someone who hasn鈥檛 been born works for them and is a dependent?鈥 said Andrew Mundwiller, the attorney representing Anderson鈥檚 family. 鈥淚 would say it stretches the bounds of the law.鈥

Theresa Otto, an attorney representing the Department of Transportation, declined to comment about the case, saying the department does not comment on active litigation.

St. Louis University School of Law professor , who has written a book on workers鈥 compensation law, said this type of case was, 鈥渢hankfully,鈥 rare. But he did find nine cases nationwide since 1985 that examined whether workers鈥 compensation laws barred suits against companies for injuries sustained in utero. In each case, the answer was no and the lawsuit continued.

On March 29, Judge , who was assigned the case in St. Louis County Circuit Court in Clayton, issued a similar , writing that barring Jaxx鈥檚 claims would lead to an 鈥渆xtremely absurd result.鈥 A trial is set for March 2024.

Sussman, of Pregnancy Justice, said broad personhood language would allow legal boundaries to be pushed until state legislatures act to clarify the laws.

The case in Missouri prompted the introduction of a bill in the state legislature, dubbed 鈥,鈥 that would bar unborn children from being considered employees in any civil actions, including wrongful death lawsuits.

But they would still be considered people with legal rights.

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