State v. Anderson

250 S.W. 68, 298 Mo. 382, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 172
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 9, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 250 S.W. 68 (State v. Anderson) 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 v. Anderson, 250 S.W. 68, 298 Mo. 382, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 172 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

*385 WHITE, J.

The appellant, a practising physician 'in Kansas City, was tried before a jury in the Circuit 'Court of Jackson County, and on May 28, 1920, was found guilty of manslaughter in that he caused the death of Margaret Marts in attempting to produce an abortion *386 upon her, in violation of Section 3239, Bevised Statutes <1919.

Appellant assert that the evidence was insufficient to support a conviction, and we find it necessary to set it out at some length.

On the nineteenth day of August, 1919, Mrs. Marts gave birth to a child. Her recovery was good. The baby was fed from a bottle, and the mother’s menstrual period returned in about a month. Those periods had stopped some six weeks before the time of the alleged offense, January 20, 1920. Doctor Davis, the family physician, was called and saw her on the nineteenth day of January, 1920', and made an examination because she told him that she had made some effort to produce an abortion by using a catheter upon herself. There was nothing out of normal in her condition except some irritation produced by her use of the catheter, and a slight enlargement of the womb which he decided to be caused by pregnancy. Her health was good and she needed no treatment except such as he administered in douches.

In order to ease the woman’s mind he told her that she was not pregnant, and explained that he was attempting to get her mind away from her morbid purpose to produce a miscarriage. He was called again on the twenty-fourth — five days later — and found her condition serious. At Dr. Davis’s first call Mrs. Marts told him that if he would not relieve her she would find someone wbo would; that she would rather die than go through childbirth again. When he returned on the twenty-fourth he found her -in bed with an offensive odor and emitting blood and pus. He found from examination that some violence had been done to the womb, and infection had ensued. He treated her for the trouble; she was after-wards taken to the hospital, was brought home again, and died February 15, 1920.

It appears from the uncontradicted evidence that Mrs. Marts called upon Dr. Anderson on the afternoon of the nineteenth, after Dr. Davis’s first visit. He made no examination of her, but made an engagement with her to call at her house the next day, about noon, and *387 instructed her about preparations for what was termed an operation.

Mrs. Mattie Wallace testified that she was at the home of her sister, Mrs. Blythe, on the twentieth of January when Mrs. Marts called by telephone and ashed to have Mrs. Blythe come to Mrs. Mart’s house, stating that she was going to be chloroformed. Mrs. Blythe and Mrs. Wallace accordingly went to the home of Mrs. Marts. Dr. Anderson was there, also a colored woman by the name of Ida Bush. They found Mrs. Marts in bed; the defendant was in the kitchen fixing tools to operate on her. Dr. Anderson sent the colored woman out with a prescription for chloroform. Mrs. Blythe remained out of the room, because she was herself in a delicate condition, but Mrs. Wallace assisted in the administration of chloroform. The witness did not notice particularly what was done; she noticed that the doctor used two instruments, one of which appeared to be a speculum, and the other was about a foot long resembling scissors. The operation lasted about fifteen minutes. Dr. Anderson used water and used cotton, and as the doctor was leaving, the witness mentions this conversation:

“She asked him — said, ‘Now what time will this pass'?’ He says, ‘That will be all right about four or five o ’clock. ’ But what it was she didn’t say. ’ ’

This conversation occurred between twelve and one o’clock. Mrs. Marts then told Mrs. Blythe to call up Mr. Marts and tell him that she had been operated upon and was getting along all right. The witness further said that she did not know what the instruments were used for; she didn’t know whether the physician was cutting her or just washing her out.

In a dying statement to which Mr. Marts testified, Mrs. Marts two or three days before her death told him she could -live only a few days longer, she had given up all hope of recovery; that Dr. Anderson had lied to her and that she was going to die on- account of it; he told her the operation would not be very severe and that she would be sick only three or four days; she was sorry she wont over there. And at that time she told her husband *388 what she wanted done in reference to taking care of her children.

Dr. J. S. Snider conducted an autopsy oh the body of Mrs. Marts February fifteenth, and found that she died of septic poisoning. Ue found the placenta or afterbirth in the uterus, and it was the decomposition of the placenta which caused the death, and this followed an abortion. This physician said that, while an afterbirth might remain for a good while after the birth of a child, it could hardly have remained from the birth of the child in August; that she could not have become pregnant again with the placenta present. He testified from his examination at the autopsy that a miscarriage had been performed by means of an instrument; that the opening in the cervix was too large to have been made with a catheter.

Dr. Davis testified that his opinion on his examination January twenty-fourth was that she had been pregnant and an abortion had be'en performed.

The defendant testified on his own behalf that Mrs. Marts called to see him on the nineteenth of January and made an engagement with him to come to her home and malee an examination on the twentieth. She gave her name as Mrs. Crooks, told him that she was two months advanced in pregnancy, and told him about buying an instrument in a drug store which she had used without success for the purpose of producing an abortion. He treated her for the infection which ensued from the injuries, which, he inferred, had been inflicted by herself. He testified that all he did for her was proper treatment in such cases; he went to see her the next day. He said that he used no instrument that would be injurious. He said further that Mr. Marts tried to collect five hundred dollars from him, assaulted him and choked him; he said at the time he first visited Mrs. Marts he used chloroform at her suggestion and not because he thought it necessary.

Defendant further introduced testimony to show that he had a good reputation as a practising physician, and for truth and veracity and honesty. He also in *389 troduced evidence to show that the treatment of Mrs. Marts by the defendant, as described by the defendant, was the proper treatment.

Ida Bush, the colored girl, testified she was present at the time of the alleged operation, described the instruments which she saw and said she boiled the water for sterilizing them, but she was sent out of the room; they told her she was too young and wouldn’t understand things.

Mrs. Stella Blythe, a witness for the State, corroborated the statements of her sister, Mrs. .Wallace, mentioned above. She described the incidents very much the same as Mrs. Wallace had done.

Dr. Coffey testified for the State. He was present at the autopsy.

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Bluebook (online)
250 S.W. 68, 298 Mo. 382, 1923 Mo. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-anderson-mo-1923.