State Ex Rel. Johnson v. State Board of Health

232 S.W. 1031, 288 Mo. 659, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 8, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 232 S.W. 1031 (State Ex Rel. Johnson v. State Board of Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Johnson v. State Board of Health, 232 S.W. 1031, 288 Mo. 659, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 230 (Mo. 1921).

Opinion

ELDER, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of Cole County upon a writ of certiorari directed to respondents as mémbers of the State Board of Health of Missouri, which judgment affirmed the action of the said board in suspending, for a period of five years from Decmber 3, 1290, the license of relator herein to practice medicine and surgery. The pleadings and facts involved are substantially as follows:

Relator is a duly licensed and practicing physician of Jefferson City, Missouri. On September 14, 1920, Honorable H. J. ‘Wosthues, Prosecuting Attorney of Cole County, filed a complaint before the State Board of Health, charging that relator had been and was guilty of unprofessional and dishonorable conduct in this, to-wit: “That he, the said Herbert E. Johnson, on or about the 26th day of August, 1920', in the City of Jefferson City, State of Missouri, unlawfully produced a criminal abortion upon one Edna Boothby, a pregnant woman; he, the said Herbert E. Johnson, being then and there aforesaid a licensed physician and then and there not intending necessary medical or surgical treatment; not being then and there engaged in an act necessary to preserve the life of said Edna Boothby, or that of an unborn child, and not then and there intending any injury other than the destruction of the pregnancy.” The said complaint prayed that an inquiry be had and that relator’s license to practice medicine and surgery in this State be revoked.

Pursuant to such complaint notice was served upon relator that a hearing upon the charges preferred would be held before the said Board of Health, and, on October 28, 1920, such hearing was had at the City of Jefferson, when and where relator appeared in person and by attorney.

*664 The evidence for respondents consisted of the oral testimony of Doctors J. E. Jose, Prank W. Grillham and James A. Hill, all of Jefferson City.

Dr. Jose, upon direct examination, testified that he had known Edna Boothby for the last eighteen months or two years; that he treated her in her last illness; that he was called to her home on August 30th, reached there about ten o’clock in the morning and found her trying to expel an afterbirth; that he knew from the afterbirth that there must have been a baby, but that he did not see a baby. Over the objection of counsel for relator the witness was permitted to testify as follows :

“Q. Did she tell you whether or not an abortion was performed upion her? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Did she state to you who performed the abortion? A. She said Dr. Johnson performed the abortion on her on Thursday before.

“Q. Was anyone else present at the time? A. No, sir.”

The witness further testified that he called in Doctors Grillham and Hill, but that Dr. Hill did not arrive until the girl was dead; that about one o’clock the next morning he telephoned the relator “that the girl had died and that she made a confession before she died; that if he wanted to know any of the particulars he could see me in the morning.”

On cross-examination Dr. Jose testified that Miss Boothby died on August 31st about eleven or eleven-thirty o’clock at night, while he was present; that on the day before, at the time she made the statement with reference to relator, she was rational.

“Q. Say anything about that she realized the end was near, or say anything about dying? A. No.

“Q. Or any words to that effect? A. No, nothing said about that, neither by her nor me. . . .

“Q. And outside of the girl’s statement to you, you know nothing about the trouble at all? A. I know *665 the girl was in a family way. .... I know that the girl came to me and told me she was that way and wanted to know what she conld do to get shut of it, but that was some month or so before this. . . . And I told her I couldn’t do it, and she wanted to know what to do, and I told her to go to a maternity hospital at St. Louis. . . . She told me she knew where she could have it done here, but she didn’t like to go to the man. . . .

“Q. Did she call the man’s name? A.' Yes, sir.

“Q. Whose name did she mention, if she mentioned it? (Objection by counsel for relator. Objection overruled. . Exception saved). A. Dr. Johnson was the man that she said she could go to.”

Dr. Gillham testified that on or about August 3-Oth or 31st he was called to the home of Miss Boothby by Dr. Jose; that he found the girl “in an unconscious condition, just at the point of death; in fact, she died in an hour or forty-five minutes after I arrived on the scene.

“Q. Well, what was the cause of her death? A. Apparently a general peritonitis.

“Q. What had happened to the girl? A.- I did not make an examination, that is, a vaginal examination; her abdomen was swollen up, she was pulseless, in a state of coma; just in the last — just dying in fact.

“Q. Those things happen in an abortion performed sometimes? A. Prom the history of the case I think so. . . .

“Q. Dr. Gillham, do you know whether or not there was a great deal of belief and talk that this man did cause abortions? A. I do.” (Objection by counsel for relator).

Dr. Hill testified that he was called to attend Miss Boothby on or about August 30th or 31st and “found her breathing her last; she was practically gone when I reached there; she died in about five minutes, I judge.

“Q. Doctor, I will ask you this, do you know the *666 reputation of Dr. Johnson with reference to committing abortions? A. Yes.

“Mr. Haleys I object to that question, because he is not charged here with committing more than on abortion; it is seeking to charge him with offenses not mentioned in the complaint or-information.

“Dr. Clark Answer the question, Doctor.” (Exception by relator). A. The reputation in regard to Dr. Johnson as to abortions I have — from patients of mine I have been very positive he has been doing it.

Mr, Haley : I move that the answer be stricken out, for the reasons assigned in the objection.” (No ruling on the motion.)

Dr. Johnson, the relator, testified in his own behalf, that he was a regular licensed physician and had been practicing in Jefferson City since 1907; that the last time Edna Boothby was at his office was “about between 9:30 and 10:30 o’clock on the twenty-seventh day of August ’ ’ and that ‘ ‘ she was there, though, on the twenty-sixth also.

“Q. On the twenty-sixth when she was there just tell the board what took place. A. She came to my office and asked me to examine her. I examined her and told her she was about five or six months pregnant. She told me that her womb was inflamed and asked me to examine her womb. I put her on the table and took my speculum and inserted it, and took a pair of dressing forceps and examined her womb, and found that her womb was inflamed about the size of a half dollar. I let her off my table and told her that her womb was inflamed and someone had been fooling with her, else she had been fooling with her. I told her I couldn’t do anything for her, because her womb was inflamed and I couldn’t fool with her.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W. 1031, 288 Mo. 659, 1921 Mo. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-johnson-v-state-board-of-health-mo-1921.