Fields v. State

185 N.W. 400, 107 Neb. 91, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 26
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1921
DocketNo. 21867
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 185 N.W. 400 (Fields v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fields v. State, 185 N.W. 400, 107 Neb. 91, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 26 (Neb. 1921).

Opinion

Dean, J.

Leslie S. Fields, a practicing physician, was informed against jointly with Mrs. Minnie Deyo and charged with having produced an abortion upon the person of Ruth Ayer, an unmarried woman. The information charges that the offense was committed August 3, 1920, and that Miss Ayer died August 8, 1920, as a result of the operation. Defendant was granted a separate trial, and was convicted and sentenced to serve an indeterminate term of not less than one nor more than ten years in the penitentiary. From the sentence so imposed he prosecutes error.

On the part of the state Dr. Strickland testified that in the evening of August 3, 1920, he administered an .anaesthetic at the home of Mrs. Deyo to Ruth Ayer at defendant’s request, and that the only persons present besides himself were Dr. Fields, the patient, and Mrs. Deyo. He said that Fields then “proceeded to do a curettement” with the same instruments that are used in performing an abortion. He stated that so far as he could observe the patient was normal at the time of the operation, and that he saw no blood until after it was performed. August 5, at about 6 in the evening, Dr. Fields again operated on Ruth Ayer at the Deyo home, and he again, at his request, administered an anaesthetic with the same persons present as before. On the day that the inquest was held over the remains of decedent, Strickland said he had a conversation with Fields, and that Fields told him he would like to have him “forget about the Tuesday operation and testify about Thursday only.” Just before he testified at the coroner’s inquest, in answer to an inquiry, he told Fields that he “didn’t think he had a leg to stand on,” to which Fields replied: “ ‘What are you going to say?’ I says, ‘I won’t say any more than what I really have to.’ I don’t remember whether he asked me about [93]*93the Tuesday operation then or not, but he evidently understood that, because he says, ‘My God, don’t do it.’ ”

The offices of defendant and of Dr. Nettie Gerish are located in the same building and on the same floor. She testified that Miss Ayer came to her office Tuesday, August 3, a few minutes before the noon hour, and, upon examination, she discovered pregnancy that was about four months advanced, but that she was in all respects normal and in no need of an abortion.

Watson Alexander, ag,ed 19, was employed in a Hayes •Center store. Miss Ayer was the assistant postmistress in the same town. They were engaged to be married. Watson admitted that he caused her unfortunate condition. He was informed against as having been implicated in the alleged crime, but he waived his privilege and testified. He said they were acquainted about four years and discovered that she was pregnant in May, 1920. In July they came to Omaha together to have an abortion performed. They called on a doctor in the Bee building, whose name he did not recall, who refused to perform the operation and advised them to marry, but subsequently the doctor said “there was somebody in the building that had done such things,” and his office was in room 410 or 412. It seems that they then returned to their respective homes, at Hayes Center, with the intention on Watson’s part that they would marry, but Euth for financial and other reasons refused. Soon thereafter it was arranged that Euth should go to Omaha alone to have the operation performed, and on August 2, 1920, he gave her $110 and took her to McCook, where she took the train for Omaha about 10 that night. Subsequently he sent $70 to her at Omaha. He identified a letter addressed to him at Hayes Center, and also the envelope, both being in Euth Ayer’s handwriting. He said he received the letter at Hayes Center August 5, about 3 in the afternoon. The letter, dated August 3, 1920, was received in evidence over defendant’s objection and was read to the jury. The envelope bears this postmark, “Aug [94]*943 7 PM 1920 Nebr.” The letter and the envelope will be presently noted more in detail. The witness said he did not remember seeing Dr. Fields in July. A page from the register of the Wellington Inn and a room card purport to show that Ruth Ayer of Hayes Center, Nebraska, arrived at the hotel as a guest August 3, and that she left the same day.

Defendant testified that in the latter part of June or early in July, 1920, a young man and a young .woman, who said they were engaged to be married, came to his office and told him that they feared she was pregnant; that upon examination he discovered pregnancy, and they then expressed a desire “to be rid of the oncoming offspring;” that he told them to marry; that they were not in his office to exceed 20 minutes, and left without making an appointment for a further examination or for any purpose; that he did not learn their names nor make a charge for the examination; that when Miss Ayer came to his office in August, 1920, he did not recognize her as having called on him in July, but that subsequently, at about the time of the operation, there was something about her appearance that caused him to believe her to be the same person. He denied that he was at Mrs. Deyo’s house, as testified by Dr. Strickland, on the night of Tuesday, August 3, but said he was there the evening of August 5 and performed a curettement upon decedent. He said that Miss Ayer came to his office August 4, late in the afternoon, and that, upon examination, he discovered an incomplete abortion, a condition for which the authorities “advise a curettement.” From his office he took her in his car to Minnie Deyo’s house at 2704 North Sixty-fourth street, and on the evening of the next day, namely August 5, he said he performed the curettement operation upon deceased, and that Dr. Strickland administered the anaesthetic pursuant to appointment, that she did not readily yield to the anaesthetic and he attributed this difficulty to the loss of blood before she came to his office. Defendant denied having performed the operation [95]*95August 3, and denied that, in the operation performed Thursday, August 5, he used an instrument for dilation, as Dr. Strickland testified, because, as he said, dilation was not necessary. He denied too that he told Strickland to forget the operation of August 3 and to confine his testimony to the event of August 5. It may be added that he denied all of the state’s material evidence. Defendant introduced testimony with respect to his whereabouts on the evening of August 3, 1920, which, if true, would have established an alibi that would have been an impregnable shield of defense. It is evident that the jury did not accept the statements of the witnesses with respect to the alleged alibi.

The objection to the introduction of Ruth Ayer’s letter is the feature of the case that defendant’s counsel stress the most. They contend that but for the letter it is doubtful i: their client would have been convicted. They complain that not only was. the letter read to the jury, but the court permitted it to be taken to the jury room as an exhibit while the jury were deliberating upon the verdict. A copy of the letter,, written on a letter sheet of the Wellington Inn, follows:

“Fireproofed with Automatic Sprinklers .

“On Direct Car Lines from All Stations

“The New Wellington Inn Restful Rooms

“Reasonable Rates

“Farnam at Eighteenth Omaha F. J. Ramey, Manager

“Aug. 3, 1920.

“My dearest Watson: Oh if you were only here with me Kid I went to that fellow ‘Dr. Fields’ 412 instead of 410 and waited and waited he didn’t come. So there was a lady doctor on same floor so I went to her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 N.W. 400, 107 Neb. 91, 1921 Neb. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fields-v-state-neb-1921.