People v. Phillips

414 P.2d 353, 64 Cal. 2d 574, 51 Cal. Rptr. 225, 1966 Cal. LEXIS 288
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1966
DocketCrim. 8914
StatusPublished
Cited by268 cases

This text of 414 P.2d 353 (People v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Phillips, 414 P.2d 353, 64 Cal. 2d 574, 51 Cal. Rptr. 225, 1966 Cal. LEXIS 288 (Cal. 1966).

Opinions

TOBRINER, J.

Defendant, a doctor of chiropractic, appeals from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles [577]*577County convicting him of second degree murder in connection with the death from cancer of one of his patients. We reverse solely on the ground that the trial court erred in giving a felony-murder instruction.

Linda Epping died on December 29, 1961, at the age of 8, from a rare and fast-growing form of eye cancer. Linda’s mother first observed a swelling over the girl’s left eye in June of that year. The doctor whom she consulted recommended that Linda be taken to Dr. Straatsma, an opthalmol-ogist at the UCLA Medical Center. On July 10th Dr. Straats-ma first saw Linda; on July 17th the girl, suffering great pain, was admitted to the center. Dr. Straatsma performed an exploratory operation and the resulting biopsy established the nature of the child’s affliction.

Dr. Straatsma advised Linda’s parents that her only hope for survival lay in immediate surgical removal of the affected eye. The Eppings were loath to permit such surgery, but on the morning of July 21st Mr. Epping called the hospital and gave his oral consent. The Eppings arrived at the hospital that afternoon to consult with the surgeon. While waiting they encountered a Mrs. Eaton who told them that defendant had cured her son of a brain tumor without surgery.

Mrs. Epping called defendant at his office. According to the Eppings, defendant repeatedly assured them that he could cure Linda without surgery. They testified that defendant urged them to take Linda out of the hospital, claiming that the hospital was “an experimental place,” that the doctors there would use Linda as “ a human guinea pig ’ ’ and would relieve the Eppings of their money as well.

The Eppings testified that in reliance upon defendant’s statements they took Linda out of the hospital and placed her under defendant’s care. They stated that if defendant had not represented to them that he could cure the child without surgery and that the UCLA doctors were only interested in experimentation, they would have proceeded with the scheduled operation. The prosecution introduced medical testimony which tended to prove that if Linda had undergone surgery on July 21st her life would have been prolonged or she would have been completely cured.

Defendant treated Linda from July 22 to August 12, 1961. He charged an advance fee of $500 for three months’ care as well as a sum exceeding $200 for pills and medicines. On August 13th Linda’s condition had not improved; the Epp-ings dismissed defendant.

[578]*578Later the Eppings sought to cure Linda by means of a Mexican herbal drug known as yerba mansa and, about the 1st of September, they placed her under the care of the Christian Science movement. They did not take her back to the hospital for treatment.

Defendant testified that he knew that he could not cure cancer, that he did not represent to the Eppings that he could do so, that he urged them to return Linda to the hospital and that he agreed to treat her only when it became clear that the Eppings would never consent to surgery. He further testified that in administering treatment he sought to build up Linda’s general health and so prolong her life. He insisted that he had never purported to “treat” cancer as such, but only to give “supportive” care to the body as a whole. He variously described his purpose as being “to build up her resistance,” “assisting the body to overcome its own deficiencies” and “supporting the body defenses. ’’

As we have noted, the trial court gave an instruction on felony murder; we point out that, although defendant could, of course, be prosecuted for grand theft, such a crime, not an inherently dangerous felony, does not support an instruction on felony murder. The giving of that instruction caused defendant prejudice and compels reversal. Initially, however, we dispose of defendant’s argument that the prosecution failed to establish such causal relationship between defendant’s conduct and the death as is requisite to his criminal responsibility.

Legal Cause

We cannot accept defendant’s contention that his conduct did not proximately cause Linda’s death. Defendant’s argument rests upon either of two unsupportable propositions: (1) that the testimony failed as a matter of law to establish a causal relationship between the absence of surgery on July 21st and any shortening of Linda’s life; (2) that the conduct of Linda’s parents subsequent to defendant’s dismissal constituted an “independent intervening force” between the misrepresentation and Linda’s death.

The fact that defendant represented that he could cure Linda without surgery and that such representation caused the Eppings to remove Linda from the hospital finds ample substantiation in the record. The medical evidence likewise supports the jury’s conclusion that the cancellation of the operation had the effect of shortening the child’s life.1

[579]*579Dr. Straatsma testified with “reasonable medical certainty ’ ’2 that the performance of the operation on July 21st would have extended Linda’s life by a minimum of two months, He also gave his opinion that surgery on that date could have effected a complete cure.

Although defendant maintains that Dr. Straatsma on cross-examination disclaimed his testimony as to the beneficial effect of the operation planned for July 21st, the record does not support that contention. Dr. Straatsma merely acknowledged that he could not say with certainty whether the course of the disease had become irreversible on July 21st. The doctor also testified that he could not state the exact period of time by which surgery on that date would have lengthened Linda ⅛ life. Neither aspect of the doctor’s cross-examination in any way reduced the force of his earlier testimony that if the girl had received the scheduled operation, her life would have been extended by a substantial period.

The showing that the length of Linda’s life had thus been limited sufficed for this aspect of the prosecution’s case; no burden rested upon the prosecution to prove that the operation would have cured the disease. Murder is never more than the shortening of life; if a defendant’s culpable act has significantly decreased the span of a human life, the law will not hear him say that his victim would thereafter have died in any event. (People v. Moan (1884) 65 Cal. 532, 537 [4 P. 545] ; People v. Ah Fat (1874) 48 Cal. 61, 64; Perkins, Criminal Law, pp. 27-28.) The jury could properly have found that defendant’s conduct proximately caused Linda’s death.

[580]*580As we have stated, defendant secondly contends that the actions of Linda’s parents subsequent to his dismissal operated as an “independent intervening force” to relieve him of criminal responsibility for her death. He urges that no act of his caused the Eppings to abstain from surgery beyond August 13th, the date of his discharge.3

In pressing this argument, defendant assumes that if the surgery had been performed after Linda left his care, it would have been as efficacious in arresting or retarding the cancer as surgery performed on July 21st. The record refutes this assumption. The evidence established that the tumor grew dramatically during the period in which Linda submitted to defendant’s ministrations; Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
414 P.2d 353, 64 Cal. 2d 574, 51 Cal. Rptr. 225, 1966 Cal. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-phillips-cal-1966.