Lyda v. State

169 S.E. 751, 47 Ga. App. 45, 1933 Ga. App. LEXIS 286
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 27, 1933
Docket22664
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 S.E. 751 (Lyda v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyda v. State, 169 S.E. 751, 47 Ga. App. 45, 1933 Ga. App. LEXIS 286 (Ga. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

MacIntyre, J.

The indictment in this case charges G. C. Lyda "with the offense of misdemeanor,” for that the said accused, on September 20, 1930, in Cobb county, Georgia, “without having made application to the Georgia State Board of Medical Examiners through the Secretary-Treasurer of said board for license to practice medicine, and without having obtained a license from said Georgia State Board of Medical Examiners to practice medicine, did then and there practice medicine upon and for one Isaac Darby, receiving and intending to receive compensation therefor.” The jury trying the case found the defendant guilty, and his exception here is to the judgment overruling his motion for a new trial.

Isaac Darby testified, in part, as follows: "I know the defendant . . G. C. Lyda. I don’t recall at what time I went to see him, but it was about a couple of years ago. . . I can’t say what business or profession Doctor Lyda is engaged in — only just selling medicine is all I know. I went to him at his place down there, . . the Crawford Beid old home, just off the Atlanta road, in Cobb county. . . I believe I was down there twice. . . I imagine it was about an eight-room house, or a little larger. . . I guess there were as many as twenty-five there. I don’t know what they were there for. As to what arrangements I had to make before I got to see Dr. Lyda, well, some one there in the hall just gave me a ticket with a number on it. . . I didn’t go in when my number was called, but I slipped in with some others there with a number. I didn’t wait until my number came up. When I went in I saw the doctor. . . With regard to what examination he made of me, my recollection is that he just looked at my eye, pulled one lid down and looked in it. . . As to what he said was the matter with me when he looked in my eye, my recollection is that he said something about having stomach trouble. Then he [47]*47just turned around and told his sister what kind of medicine to fix up, and they wrapped it up. I paid $2.50 for that. . . He just pulled the lid of my eye down this way, but he did not then order his sister to prepare a certain kind of medicine for me. I told him when I went in and sat down how I felt, and all, and told him what I ate didn’t agree with me, and that I had the indigestion for fourteen years.”

On cross-examination the witness Darby testified in part as follows: “They [two packages of medicine] were already fixed up. I simply paid him for these two packages. I didn’t pay him for any examination; I didn’t understand it that way when I went down there. I did not promise to pay him for any services, except just for the medicine that I bought. I have never paid him for anything except for those two packages of medicine. . .”

On re-direct examination Darby testified in part: “Some of these people that went in ahead of me, or with me, reached the doctor ahead of me. What he did to them was, he just talked to them there in the room. That is all I saw him do. As to what he did in reference to prescribing for them, I never heard him say anything about it, only he told his clerk there to wrap a certain kind of medicine. Each one of the patients spoke to the doctor .first, rather than to his clerk. Each one of them that I saw consulted the doctor first, and then, after the consulation, he would tell his assistant to wrap up a certain kind of medicine.”

On re-cross-examination, Darby testified in part as follows: “I did not ask the clerk for any specific kind of medicine or have anything in mind that I wanted. After the conversation with me, and doing what I described to the jury, . . he a. . said something to her [his assistant], and she wrapped up a bottle and a box of powders, and I asked how much she charged, and she said $2.50, and I paid the money there, at that time. . . I went back another trip and he [the defendant] was gone, and I went in there and bought the same kind of medicine. At the time I went there I told him what I wanted, and I wanted medicine for my stomach. I knew at that time that he had certain patent medicines, — • or had been informed that, and I went there to buy those specific medicines for my stomach, and I didn’t go there for any purpose of getting him to prescribe for me at all. Some of them told me he sold everybody the same kind of medicine — he didn’t have but one [48]*48kind.” . On further direct examination, Darby swore: “As to why it was, if I knew what I was going to get, that I went to the doctor for it, and why I didn’t go to his assistant, — I didn’t know he had an assistant until I went there.”

Mrs. Leon Gilbert testified, in substance, that her sister, whose trouble had been diagnosed as cancer, stayed nearly two weeks at Doctor Lyda’s place; that witness’s sister knew what she wanted and asked for cancer medicine, and the doctor did not prescribe for her; that witness did not accompany her sister when she first went to see Dr. Lyda; that witness did not “remember how much was paid the doctor;” and that witness would not undertake to state how many times the doctor saw her sister.

Dr. L. L. Welsh testified that Mrs. Helen Wellands delivered to him a card, a copy of which was as follows:

“Dr. G. C. Lyda, Specialist on Cancer.

“Mt. Airy, Ga. Marietta, Ga. Rome, Ga.”

Mrs. Helen B. Wellands testified, in part, as follows: “In the last six or eight months I have been engaged most of the daytime at Ralph W. Northcutt’s Buick place. Doctor Lyda has been in that place within the last six months. He came there to buy gasoline and have work done on his ear. I remember the time that Mr. Ralph Northcutt was sick. . . Dr. Lyda on a number of times asked about Mf- Northcutt’s health; he said that he thought he could help him, and that it wouldn’t cost him one five cents.” The witness further swore that, at her request, Dr. Lyda gave her a card similar to the one delivered by her to Dr. Welsh.

Biney Davis testified in part as follows: “I knew Mr. Ernest Burton in his lifetime. I went with Mr. Burton to see Dr. Lyda to find out what was the matter with him. . . I reckon the doctor told him what was the matter with him. I was with him. As to whether or not he examined him, — he put his hand on the back of his neck here. I never saw Mr. Burton pay him anything. . . The agreement was, if he cured him he would pay him $100, and if he didn’t cure him be wouldn’t charge him anything. . . He didn’t treat him that day. When Mr. Burton was taken away from his home he went down there [to the defendant’s place]. I couldn’t tell you how long he stayed down there, not positively, but . . maybe two weeks. . . Dr. Lyda told Mr. Burton when he examined him that he had cancer, and he told him he thought he could [49]*49cure him. He told him that in my presence up in Habersham county at his home. . . I saw the doctor there [at the defendant’s place], but I never saw him about Mr. Burton though. . . Mr. Burton is now in the cemetery. . .”

R. O. Coleman, secretary of the State Examining Board, testified that he kept the records of the board and had examined them, and that there was “no record there of G. C. Lyda ever having been issued a license to practice medicine in Georgia.”

Luther Huie testified: that he carried his wife to Dr. Lyda’s place and the doctor examined her; that Lyda “didn’t prescribe any medicine for her, . . didn’t give her any medicine,” but said she had cancer and put two plasters on her.

George Hirshton testified: that he “went to him [Dr.

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7 S.E.2d 749 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
169 S.E. 751, 47 Ga. App. 45, 1933 Ga. App. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyda-v-state-gactapp-1933.