State ex rel. Sorensen v. Lake

236 N.W. 762, 121 Neb. 331, 1931 Neb. LEXIS 144
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1931
DocketNo. 27634
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 236 N.W. 762 (State ex rel. Sorensen v. Lake) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Sorensen v. Lake, 236 N.W. 762, 121 Neb. 331, 1931 Neb. LEXIS 144 (Neb. 1931).

Opinion

Paine, J.

This was an action brought by the state of Nebraska, on relation of the attorney general, as a result of which the secretary of the department of public welfare of the state of Nebraska revoked the license of the defendant to practice medicine.

The petition charged that Lilburn B. Lake, the defendant, was licensed by the department of public welfare of the state of Nebraska to practice the profession of medicine and surgery in the state of Nebraska and was engaged in such practice in Omaha by virtue of such license. The petition also charged that said defendant, Lake, was guilty of an act and offense for which his said license to practice the profession of medicine and surgery in Nebraska should be revoked, to wit, immoral, unprofessional, and dishonorable conduct, in that said defendant did,' on or about the 12th day of January, 1929, procure or aid in procuring a criminal abortion upon Mrs. Rhoda Hoyt, of Omaha, Douglas county, Nebraska. The defendant filed a general denial.

A hearing was had before Ernest M. Pollard, secretary of the department of public welfare of Nebraska, and an order revoking and canceling the license of said defendant to practice his profession was duly entered.

[333]*333Thereupon appeal was taken to the district court for Douglas county, a trial had to the court, and on April 24, 1930, a decree was rendered herein, affirming the order of the department of public welfare. Motion for new trial was overruled by the court, and a .notice of appeal was filed and the case was brought before this court for review.

There is little agreement on the facts in this case, but the plaintiff insists that the evidence shows that Mrs. Rhoda Hoyt died at the Methodist Hospital in Omaha on February 16, 1929, from general septicemia which resulted from an abortion performed by the defendant; that she. left surviving her an adopted boy and her husband, who has since remarried.

It appears .that Mrs. Hoyt first called' at the office of’ her family physician, Dr. Glenn Miller, on January 8, 1929, who found her about five weeks along in pregnancy, but said she needed no medicine and that her condition was entirely normal.

Three nights later Mrs. Hoyt told her husband that she had visited Dr. Lake, the defendant in this case, and had told him of her great difficulty, the winter before, in having a child born dead, and that the defendant had told her he did not blame her for not wanting to go through pregnancy again, and that he would charge $35. On the next evening, January 12, Mrs. Hoyt told her husband that she had had the abortion performed that day. She described the instruments that he used and the technique of the operation, but her husband refused to give her money to pay for it. On leaving home in the afternoon, she had left her adopted boy with a neighbor, Mrs. Brown, to whom she had already told of her pregnancy, and this neighbor in that conversation had advised her against having an abortion performed. She reported that on her return from her first trip to the defendant there was “nothing doing,” and when she returned from her second trip she said there had been “something done.” At 4:30 [334]*334on the morning of January 23 Mrs. Brown was called, and Mrs. Hoyt had had a uterine hemorrhage and later faint,ed, and after her husband went to work at 6:30 a. m., Mrs. Brown called Dr. Lake from a neighbor’s telephone, as they had none in the house. In response thereto Dr. Lake arrived with his instruments, ■yvhich Mrs. Brown helped him sterilize in a dishpan, and he gave Mrs. Hoyt a surgical packing; while the defendant insists that this is the first time that he had been called on the case, that he knew nothing about the nature of the case and brought no instruments with him. He made repeated visits to her home, and on January 27 she had another hemorrhage upon her return from church and went to Dr. Lake’s office that afternoon with her husband, at which time he paid Dr. Lake $5 on his bill. Her condition changed for the worse and upon the evening of February 1 Dr. Lake recommended that she be taken to a hospital, at which time the husband discharged Dr. Lake, who had nothing further to do with the case. The family physician, Dr. Miller, was called and found her temperature 105 and had her given the best of hospital care. In spite of several blood transfusions she grew steadily worse and died February 16, 1929. For the last ten days of her life she was too weak even to move her hands without assistance. She had lost the entire sight of one eye by an abscess from the infection, and during this time she made statements that she believed she was about to die. She said to Albert Hanna, “Goodbye, Mr. Hanna, it is all over with me now.” On February 6, and at other dates thereafter, she said she gave up the ship, and asked her husband what they would do with the adopted boy.

1. In the assignments of error it is insisted that the court erred in admitting into evidence testimony as to alleged dying statements made by Rhoda Hoyt, covering the circumstances leading up to the cause of her sickness and her resulting death, being statements by certain witnesses as to conversations had with decedent, which defend[335]*335ant claims did not in fact and in law constitute dying statements, insisting that, this not being a criminal prosecution involving manslaughter or murder charges, said purported dying statements are not admissible in evidence.

Defendant cites from a case in which a defendant poisoned his daughter-in-law: “A statement made by one who is ill and vomiting, but who had said nothing to indicate that he realized that he was dying, was not admissible as a dying declaration.” State v. Swenson, 26 S. Dak. 589. He also cites from 30 C. J. 255, sec. 498: “The fact that the declarant believes himself in great danger and entertains a fear that he must die is not sufficient.” And he calls attention to the case of Thrasher v. Board of Medical Examiners, 185 Pac. 1006 (44 Cal. App. 26), wherein the; following pertinent syllabus occurs in a similar case, also* brought to revoke a license for an abortion: “Dying declarations are not admissible in a proceeding before the' board of medical examiners to revoke a license to practice: medicine, or in any other proceeding, except in criminal cases of homicide.”

It may be granted that ordinarily such evidence is only admissible in criminal cases, yet in 10 Boston University Law Review, 470-487, it is stated that many exceptions have been made to this rule, and that as early as 1761 the dying statement, made three weeks before his death, of a scrivener of a will, to the effect that the will was a forgery, was admitted in evidence. Many courts have evinced a strong tendency to admit dying declarations as part of the res gestse when they are not too remote in time, and the writer of this article insists that there is a drift in recent years to more liberality in the admission of such statements, and that the probative force of a dying declaration should be no greater in a prosecution for homicide than in a civil action for wrongful death growing out of the same facts, and insists that the rule should be extended to allow dying declarations to be admitted in civil actions when they are made before the action is begun.

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Bluebook (online)
236 N.W. 762, 121 Neb. 331, 1931 Neb. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-sorensen-v-lake-neb-1931.