Melanson v. United States

256 F. 783, 168 C.C.A. 129, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1422
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 4, 1919
DocketNos. 3195, 3200
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 256 F. 783 (Melanson v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Melanson v. United States, 256 F. 783, 168 C.C.A. 129, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1422 (5th Cir. 1919).

Opinion

GRUBB, District Judge.

The plaintiffs in error were convicted under two separate, but similar, indictments; each charging violations of section 2 of the Harrison Narcotic Act (Act Dec. 17, 1914, c. 1, 38 Stat. 786 [Comp. St. § 6287h]), and of a conspiracy to violate that section of the act, under section 37 of the Penal Code of the United States (Act March 4, 1909, c. 321, 35 Stat. 1096 [Comp. St. § 10201]), in separate counts. The trials were separate, but the questions presented by the appeals, with one exception, are the same.

Each defendant was charged with having conspired with one M. A. Dolan, who was a druggist, and who was a joint defendant in each indictment. The plaintiffs in error were each physicians. The gist of the conspiracy charged in the first count of each indictment was that the defendants were to write prescriptions for alleged patients, calling for morphine or cocaine, which' were to be filled by their codefendant Dolan; all the defendants knowing that the alleged patients were not being treated by the physicians in the course of their legitimate practice, but were being furnished the drugs to appease their appetites for it. The first count in each indictment charged a conspiracy. The second count charged a joint sale by the physician and druggist without the use of the order form, required by the law to be used and filed in making sales, other than to patients in the regular 'practice 0f a physician on prescription, or by personal administration.

The plaintiffs in error first question the sufficiency of the indictments in two respects.

[1,2] The first count is criticized because it contains no direct averment that cocaine is a derivative of coca leaves, and that morphine and heroin are salts or derivatives of opium. It is averred in the first count of each indictment that the respective defendants, at the time of the commission of the offense, knew that cocaine was a derivative of coca leaves, and that morphine and heroin were salts and derivatives of opium. It is difficult to see how they could know this to be a fact, unless it was a fact, and the averment that it was known by them to be a fact implies the averment that it was a fact. It certainly informs the defendants sufficiently of the charge against them, and, if an imperfect averment, is a harmless imperfection, carrying no consequences, in view of R. S. § 1025 (Comp. St. § 1691).

[3] The indictments are also criticized because they do not aver facts showing that the defendants did not come within any of the exceptions of the act. In the cases of Thurston v. United States, 241 Fed. 335, 154 C. C. A. 215, and Fyke v. United States, 254 Fed. 225, - C. C. A. -, we held that the provisions of section 8 of the act (Comp. St. § 6287n) made it unnecessary for the government either to aver or prove facts excluding defendants from the excepted classes.

[4, 5] It is objected that there should have been evidence introduced by the government that cocaine was a derivative of coca leaves, and that heroin and morphine were salts of opium. In the Ellsworth Case, the plaintiff’s witness Will S. Wood testified as follows:

[786]*786“Morphine is an alkaloid of opium, and heroin is a derivative of opium, and cocaine is an alkaloid of coca leaves. Alkaloid means the principal agent of opium. Cocaine is a principal agent of coca leaves; it comes from coca ■ leaves. Morphine and heroin both come from opium.”

No transaction in' heroin was relied upon by the plaintiff as a ground for conviction. The first count of the indictment alleged that—

“morphine was a salt and derivative of opium, and that heroin was a salt and derivative of opium, and that cocaine was a salt and derivative of coca leaves.”

The second count contained this averment;

“Said morphine (referring to that charged to have been unlawfully sold) being a' salt and derivative of opium.”

We think the proof in the Ellsworth case was sufficient to show that the drugs were salts, and certainly derivatives, respectively, of coca leaves or opium. The proof as to this fact is not as specific in the Melanson case, but was sufficient to authorize submission of the issue to the jury, if, indeed, proof of such a scientific fact was required. The courts take judicial knowledge of the facts óf chemistry contained in the United States Pharmacopoeia.

[6] In the case of Melanson v. United States, objection is made to the action of the District Court in permitting the plaintiff to introduce in evidence certain order forms, used by the defendant Melanson for the procuring' of morphine from a druggist other than the one with whom Melanson is charged with having conspired in the first count, and with having made a sale jointly, in the second count. A physician, under the terms of the law, may legally dispense the drug, either by prescription or by personal administration, in the legitimate course of his practice. The issue was presented under both counts as to whether the .-drug was dispensed in the legitimate course of Melanson’s practice. The issue involved the question of the good faith of defendant as a physician in dispensing the drug. If dispensed in the legitimate course of his practice, the law was not violated. If the prescription was a cloak to cover a dispensing, not to aid a cure, but to furnish the drug to an addict to satisfy his appetite, the law was violated. The question depended upon the good or bad faith of the physician, and this involved his intent. Upon the question of intent, the quantities in which the defendant Melanson procured the drug reflected upon the question of his intent or good faith in dispensing it. The defendant Dolan entered a plea of guilty, and was not tried with Mel-anson. The issue of Melanson’s intent being involved, the plaintiff was entitled to show on that issue, if it could, that the amounts of the drugs Melanson had procured, at or about the time of the alleged commission of the offense, from all sources, exceeded what would be required for his legitimate practice.

* [7] The plaintiffs in error further complain that the court permitted the witnesses D;r. Jamison and Dr. Rogers, in the Melanson case, ■and Dr. Rogers, in the Ellsworth case, to testify that the prescribing of the drug under stated quantities and circumstances would not be in the course of a physician’s regular practice. The witnesses qualified .as medical experts, and were entitled, as such, to give opinion evidence. [787]*787The issue being whether or not the drug was dispensed in the legitimate course of defendants’ practice as physicians, the evidence was germane to that issue; and, being competent expert testimony, the District Court properly permitted it to be introduced.

[8] Both plaintiffs in error contend that the evidence of the government was insufficient to show (1) a conspiracy under the first count; or (2) an illegal sale, because not made in response to an order on an order form, as charged in the second count. In the Ellsworth case the evidence showed that the defendant Ellsworth had issued in the period three months before the prosecution was instituted 700 prescriptions for the drugs, all of which had been filled by his codefendant Dolan, or his employés, and in quantities varying from 15 grains to 60 grains.

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Bluebook (online)
256 F. 783, 168 C.C.A. 129, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melanson-v-united-states-ca5-1919.