Graff v. People

65 Colo. 489
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1918
DocketNo. 9031
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 Colo. 489 (Graff v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graff v. People, 65 Colo. 489 (Colo. 1918).

Opinion

Chief Justice Hill

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff in error, a licensed physician, hereafter called the defendant, was convicted of procuring the miscarriage of one Mrs. Ruth Kamp, which it is claimed caused her death. He was sentenced to the penitentiary for from eleven to thirteen years, and brings the case here for review upon error.

In his motion for a new trial, the defendant, among other • things, alleges newly discovered evidence. To sustain this claim, he presented the affidavit of Mrs. Kate Dunn to the effect that she was and had been, since 1898, a trained nurse, residing in Denver about fifteen years; that from about the middle of January, 1916, until after the 20th, following, she had occasion to call on a Mrs. Lewis at her rooms, known as No. 5, 827 Sixteenth Street, Denver; that as nearly as she could fix the date, on January 19th, 1916, a young woman came to said rooms to see the woman, who had inserted an advertisement relative to women’s diseases; that Mrs. Lewis was then absent; that while waiting the young woman confided to affiant that she was in a family way; that she had taken drug's, at least $20.00 worth, and got no relief and was told by parties that nothing but a surgical operation could relieve her; that affiant told her it was dangerous, and that she being young and strong, ought to go through to pregnancy; that she replied she would rather die than have the child; that she was going to get rid of it; that she asked affiant if she would nurse her; that affiant said “No”; that the young woman was about five feet three inches in height, weig'hed from one hundred thirty to one hundred thirty-five pounds, was light complexioned, brown eyes, brown hair, rather inclined to be fair, and in her manner was set and determined; that no [491]*491reasoning of affiant could move her from her determination to see some person who could relieve her, as she called it; that on the next day, or as affiant believes, on the 20th of January, 1916, in the afternoon, and between two and four o’clock, the same woman called again, and came into Mrs. Lewis’ rooms and told her troubles, when affiant then stepped out into the waiting room, and Mrs. Lewis closed the door and continued to talk with the woman some minutes; that later Mrs. Lewis came out of the room where she was talking with the young woman, and went to a closet leading off from the room where affiant was sitting, and procured a speculum, a probe, and a pair of forceps, and put them in a bag or satchel, and went back into the room where the young woman was; that she was absent in the room with the young woman about forty to fifty minutes; that when Mrs. Lewis came into the room where affiant was, she said to affiant, “I have an A B case and I want you to nurse her,” to which affiant replied, “I can not do that”; that then Mrs. Lewis stepped out of the room, and affiant heard ier at the telephone, and heard her try to get several persons, but did not distinguish the names; that about an hour later, or about 5 p. m., Dr. Bennett Graff called at the rooms; that affiant remembered him from the fact that about ten years prior affiant had nursed a case under him, a surgical case involving a fractured arm; that Dr. Graff went into the room where the young woman was, and about fifteen minutes later he came out with the young woman, who was very pale, weak, and seemed distressed, and Dr. Graff took the young woman away with him; that affiant paid no further attention to the matter until afterwards, when, on reading the paper, affiant saw that Dr. Graff had been convicted of abortion upon Ruth Kamp; that it was stated that Dr. Graff had come to the rooms of Mrs. Lewis to get the girl, and the affiant recalled the circumstances and saw the attorneys for Dr. Graff on July 4th, 1916, communicating the facts to them; that affiant further recalls that no one was in the room while Mrs. [492]*492Lewis was with the young woman, and that affiant only remained in the sitting room because she expected to get back into Mrs. Lewis’ room where the electric battery was, which affiant was using and had been using for several days to get relief from a tumor with which affiant is troubled; that after Dr. Graff left with the young woman, affiant went back into Mrs. Lewis’ room, and finished her treatment with the battery. Affiant further says that the expression, “An A B case,” is used and means an abortion case, and that when Mrs. Lewis said to affiant that she had “An A B case” for affiant to nurse, affiant knew that it was a case of abortion, and therefore refused the same.

There is testimony to the effect that Mrs. Kamp, the young woman in question, was at Mrs. Lewis’, as stated in this affidavit, and that the defendant was phoned to come there by Mrs. Lewis; that he came and, after consultation with the young woman, took her away; that Dr. Brown, a witness for the people, had, a short time prior thereto, examined her; that he found she was about four and one-half months pregnant. The defendant testified that the deceased told him that she was married; that she was in a family way; that she had taken numerous drugs, and done many ' other things to bring on a miscarriage; that she had consulted two doctors, a Dr. Brown, and one other whose name she did not care to divulge; that upon being called, he told her that her condition was serious, advised that her husband be sent for at once (which it is agreed was done), and that he administered to her the necessary treatments to ward off the effects of her acts and that of others, if such had been committed, and if possible to prevent a miscarriage ; that regardless of all that he could do, her condition became worse, and the premature birth commenced to come ‘on, when, in order to save her life, it became necessary to assist it. There is testimony of several other physicians that if the conditions were as the defendant testified, that his treatment was proper throughout. In such circumstances, the testimony of the nurse to the facts stated in [493]*493her affidavit were important and material in aid of defendant’s contention that previous attempts had been made to procure a miscarriage before he was called to attend the case. The fact alone, if it be true, that Mrs. Dunn saw the deceased twice in the rooms of Mrs. Lewis, which was shown to be several blocks distance from the defendant’s office, coupled with the fact of Mrs. Lewis taking instruments used in such cases into the room where the deceased was at the time, and remaining there alone with her for some time, and immediately afterwards telling the affiant the kind of a case it was, all tend to sustain the defendant’s contention that an abortion had been attempted before he was called. This was new and a different line of testimony on that subject, and all of which, outside of the statements of the deceased, was not cumulative testimony of any fact that had been testified to at the trial. For these reasons it was proper to be considered on the sufficiency of the motion for a new trial. Garcia v. The People, 59 Colo. 434, 149 Pac. 614; Vol. 2, Thompson on Trials (2nd ed.), Sec. 2762.

The Attorney General does not dispute the correctness of the position above outlined, but contends that it ought not be considered, for the reason that there is no showing on the part of the defendant that he used reasonable diligence to procure this testimony prior to the trial. In this we can not agree. In his motion for a new trial, the defendant alleges that this evidence could not, by any reasonable diligence, have been discovered at the time of trial.

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65 Colo. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graff-v-people-colo-1918.