Ahh, so I found further details on the agreement to concede non-viability of the fetus which was reached hours before oral arguments were heard.
The signed agreement is here:
http://media.star-telegram.com/smedia/2014/01/24/15/46/1jI4ZN.So.58.pdf
So BB is seemingly correct on the point, and it clears up some of the confusion, since non-viability was considered by the judge as a factor (see text below, in the judge's own words), and if the fetus were viable it possibly could've been used as a factor to reach a different outcome:
http://thescoopblog.dallasnews.com/2014/01/fort-worth-hospital-acknowledges-pregnant-woman-is-brain-dead.html/
Update at 4:05 p.m.:
District Judge R.H. Wallace listened to an hour of arguments Friday afternoon, and both sides agree that Marlise Muñoz’s fetus is not viable and she is dead. It’s whether she’s been “pronounced” dead that appears to be the sticking point.
“I respect JPS’ arguments in trying to follow the law,” the judge said, “but every section doesn’t apply to someone who is dead.”
Attorneys for John Peter Smith Hospital and Erick Muñoz presented their cases about the right of the fetus to live and the right of the mother to die. But despite Marlise Muñoz being brain dead, the hospital argues, she has never been pronounced dead.
Both sides also agree that the fetus is not viable, and the judge noted that the mother could elect to have an abortion if she were able to make such a decision.
“As I understand the ruling of the U.S. Supreme Court that if this fetus were not viable [and] Ms. Muñoz were alive … she could abort the child.”
Wallace has ordered a brief recess, after which he could make a ruling in the case.
Update at 3:07 p.m.: About two hours before today’s hearing, attorneys representing Erick Munoz and John Peter Smith Hospital filed a joint document in which they agree that “at the time of this hearing, the fetus gestating inside Mrs. Munoz is not viable.” It is the first time the hospital has acknowledged what Erick Munoz has maintained all along.
A breakthrough came when the hospital and the Munoz family agreed on crucial facts listed in a court document: that Marlise Munoz, 33, has "met the clinical criteria for brain death since November 28" and that "the fetus gestating inside Mrs. Munoz is not viable."
The woman's husband repeatedly made these claims in his efforts to have her removed from the machines.
SNR said- Buzy bee, no the hospital could only do what they did with the law behind them and the law was CLEARLY refering to a living pregnant women.
Have you ever heard of the fallacy from informal logic called, "begging the question"?
You're doing it right now, since the judge had to rule on the matter in order to show that 166.049 didn't apply. The JUDGE even commented on that issue with the words I put in BOLD RED above.