People v. Hoyt

34 N.Y. Crim. 70, 166 N.Y.S. 953
CourtNew York Court of Special Session
DecidedDecember 31, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 34 N.Y. Crim. 70 (People v. Hoyt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Special Session primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Hoyt, 34 N.Y. Crim. 70, 166 N.Y.S. 953 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Fbeschi, J.:

The defendant has been tried upon two informations, one charging that he, “ being a duly licensed physician, unlawfully sold and delivered to Elizabeth Day a quantity of heroin without first making a physical examination of her for the treatment of injury, disease or deformity.” This information was drawn under that portion of section 246 of the Public Health Law, as amended by Chap. 327, Laws 1915, which states that “ it shall be unlawful * ® * for any duly licensed physician to dispense, give or deliver any of the said drugs * ® * except after a physical examination of any person for the treatment of disease, injury or deformity.”

The second information charges that the defendant unlawfully failed to keep on record the name of said Elizabeth Day to whom he then, dispensed, gave and delivered such drug in violation of section 248 of the said Public Health Law. A violation of any of these sections is made a misdemeanor punishable as such.

Both cases were tried together under stipulation.

The evidence produced by the People upon the trial was that the defendant on July 20th, 1915, while the husband of said Elizabeth Day was in custody of the police, she went to the office of the defendant, who is a licensed physician; that he gave her a package containing heroin; that upon leaving the premises she was apprehended by a police officer and taken back into the defendant’s office; that the defendant admitted that he had supplied the woman with this drug, delivered to her on behalf of her husband, without a physical examination of said Mrs. Day, claiming that the same was for her husband, who had been under defendant’s treatment for the drug habit.

" An examination made at the time by the police of the records of the defendant showed an entry of the quantity of the drug given Mrs. Day; but instead of her name being recorded, that of her husband was noted in the book.

The defendant, in his own behalf, testified that he was a duly [72]*72licensed physician; that he had been treating the husband of the Day woman for about three months for a disease known as drug addiction; that he had made an examination of Mr. Day approximately'three months prior to his (defendant’s) arrest; that he had seen Edward Day on July 19th, 1915, the day previous to his arrest, and examined him then, gave him a drug, and that the medicine in question was delivered on July 20th, the following day to his wife, as a part of his treatment for her husband.

This case is the first prosecution, I believe, under this section of the Public Health Law, and may be treated as a test case. And, inasmuch as it may be treated and regarded as a precedent, it might be well to have an expression of opinion on the law governing under these facts. The record presents, it seems to me, these points: (1) Is a physician required to make a physical examination of the same patient to whom he delivers the drug on each occasion before such delivery; (2) Can such delivery be lawfully made to the agent or representative of the patient within a reasonable time after the examination; and, if so, (3) is an entry in the doctor’s record of the patient’s name instead of that of the agent, a compliance with the requirements of the law? Of course, the question of fact and the bona fides of the defendant in .making the diagnosis and the delivery are always in question in a case of this character.

Does the delivery of the heroin in question, and making the record thereof in the manner above indicated constitute these acts a misdemeanor within the purview of the statute now under consideration ?

The People contend that the intention of the Legislature was that the drugs, heroin included, enumerated in section 245 of the Public Health Law should not be supplied to any person to whom the same should be supplied through any messenger, and only after a physical examination of the person to whom the same should be supplied as required by section 246 thereof. [73]*73And in this connection, the District Attorney argues that in cases where liquor dealers have attempted to defend themselves for delivering liquor to minors on the theory that the child was its parents’ messenger, the courts have held that this is no defense, as they also have, in the sale of tobacco to children where the defense offered was that the same was delivered to them as messengers for their parents or some adult person. (See sec. 484, Penal Law). This statute is not applicable to the case at bar, nor are the cases decided thereunder. This latter statute was enacted as Chap. 41, Laws 1906, after the decision of the Court of Appeals in People v. Zabor, 183 N. Y. 242. The Court held in that case that a conviction under the section of the Penal Code, which made it a misdemeanor for a person to furnish tobacco in any form to any child actually or apparently under the age of sixteen years, was not warranted where the evidence discloses that the boy to whom the defendant sold a package of cigars was sent to the store and furnished with money by his mother for the purpose of procuring cigars for a person who boarded with her; that he told the defendant whom they were for, and that the defendant knew the fact, the boy having been sent on a similar errand many times before, since in the circumstances the cigars were sold, not to the boy, but to the person for whom he was directed to procure them, the boy acting merely as his agent. The burden of proving the agency in all such cases, I think, is properly with the defendant. (People v. McGuire, 113 App. Div. 631). Section 484 (Penal Law), permitting children to attend certain resorts, makes the acts therein inhibited a misdemeanor, and then provides: “ It shall be no defense to a prosecution for a violation of subdivisions three, four, five or six of this section, that in the transaction upon which the prosecution is based the child acted as the agent or representative of another, or that the defendant dealt with such child as the agent or representative of another.” The Public Health Law (supra) contains no provision what[74]*74soever of fhis sort limiting the defense of agency or rendering it nugatory. Had the Legislature seen fit to do so, is it not reasonable to say that the law would have, in some way, indicated that it shall not be a defense to any prosecution for a delivery of heroin to the person or representative of the patient? The absence of any such provision is a significant and potent circumstance indicative that the Legislature did not seek to make it a crime for anyone to deliver heroin to a representative of his patient as was done by Dr. Hoyt. The intendment of the Legislature is the pivotal point of the case. It is perfectly clear that the legislative intent is to prevent physicians from delivering any of said drugs to any person before a physical examination ; but, in establishing this as a condition precedent, I cannot hold that physicians, in dealing with the problem of narcotic drug addiction and the treatment of it as a medical disease, which, as appears from the testimony in this case, is somewhat unsettled as a medical proposition, must make a physical examination of his patient each time that the drug is delivered.

I recognize that a great deal of crime is being committed in connection with the illicit traffic in habit forming narcotic drugs, and that the drug addict is at the mercy of the illicit trafficker (whether professional or otherwise), who is willing to exploit the unfortunate victim.

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Related

People v. . Zabor
76 N.E. 17 (New York Court of Appeals, 1905)
People v. McGuire
113 A.D. 631 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 N.Y. Crim. 70, 166 N.Y.S. 953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hoyt-nyspecsessct-1915.