State v. Anderson

972 P.2d 86, 359 Utah Adv. Rep. 8, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 127, 1998 WL 894532
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 24, 1998
Docket971426-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 972 P.2d 86 (State v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Anderson, 972 P.2d 86, 359 Utah Adv. Rep. 8, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 127, 1998 WL 894532 (Utah Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

BENCH, Judge:

Defendant appeals his conviction on fourteen counts of fraudulently obtaining controlled substances by prescription, a third degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 58-37-8 (Supp.1993). Defendant claims that admitting the testimony of his doctors violated the physician-patient privilege. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

The State charged defendant with twenty felony counts of fraudulently obtaining controlled substances by prescription. The information alleged that on various occasions between March and November of 1994, defendant fraudulently acquired the controlled substance Tussionex by failing to disclose he was receiving the substance from other sources. During the preliminary hearing, the State called each of the six physicians defendant had visited during the relevant period. Defendant did not object to the admissibility of the doctors’ testimony or their records on grounds of physician-patient privilege. At the conclusion of the preliminary hearing, the court bound defendant over to stand trial on all counts.

Before trial, defendant filed a Motion in Limine requesting the trial court to suppress evidence under the physician-patient privilege found in Utah Code Ann. § 78-24-8 (1996) and Rule 506 of the Utah Rules of Evidence. The motion sought to exclude the records and testimony of defendant’s various physicians. At the motion hearing, the State acknowledged that the physician-patient privilege provided by rule 506 applied to this ease. The State asserted, however, that the physicians would not be asked to testify to any confidential communications by the patient to the physician. Furthermore, the State argued that defendant had waived the privilege because he never asserted it at the preliminary hearing. The State took the position that, by failing to assert the privilege at the preliminary hearing, the information to which the physicians would testify had already been disclosed.

The court found that the statutory privilege, Utah Code Ann. § 78-24-8, did not apply in this case because it was expressly limited to civil proceedings. The court also found that preventing any testimony from the various doctors would be inconsistent with Utah Code Ann. § 58-37-8, which criminalizes fraudulent acquisition of controlled substances by prescription through non-disclosure or misrepresentation. Therefore, the court ruled that the State could examine the physicians regarding whether they had prescribed a controlled substance to defendant, *88 whether defendant disclosed that another doctor had issued a prescription, whether this information would have caused the physician not to issue the prescription, and other “logical extensions” of those questions.

At trial, the six physicians that treated defendant all testified that, during the same relevant time period, they each prescribed the controlled substance Tussionex, and other controlled substances containing narcotics; that defendant did not tell them that he was receiving the same controlled substances from another doctor; and that they would not have issued the prescriptions if defendant had disclosed that information. In addition to the physicians’ testimony, the State submitted the records from seven pharmacies to establish that defendant had obtained the prescribed narcotics. The jury convicted defendant on fourteen of the twenty counts charged.

ANALYSIS

The physician-patient privilege never existed at common law.

Under the common law a physician called to testify as a witness was competent to disclose any information required by, or communicated to, him in the course of his attendance upon, or treatment of his patient in a professional capacity, nor could the physician refuse to give, nor the patient by objection exclude, such testimony.

State v. Dean, 69 Utah 268, 272-73, 254 P. 142, 143 (1927). In Utah, as in many states, the common law has been modified, and the privilege is now recognized in both the Utah Code and the Utah Rules of Evidence. See Utah Code Ann. § 78-24-8(4) (1996); Utah R. Evid. 506.

Defendant argued below, and in his brief on appeal, that admitting the doctors’ testimony violated the statutory physician-patient privilege found in Utah Code Ann. § 78-24-8(4). The trial court fotind that the statute did not apply in a criminal case. At oral argument before this court, defendant conceded that the statute, by its plain language, does not apply in a criminal case. We agree.

Section 78-24-8 provides, in pertinent part: “A physician or surgeon cannot, without the consent of his patient, be examined in a civil action as to any information acquired in attending the patient which was necessary to enable him to prescribe or act for the patient.” Utah Code Ann. § 78-24-8(4) (1996) (emphasis added). The plain language of the statute has remained unchanged since appearing in the Compiled Laws of Utah 1917, and explicitly limits its application to civil actions. Furthermore, the Utah Supreme Court has expressly held that this statute does not apply in criminal cases. See Dean, 254 P. at 143 (applying Comp. Laws 1917, § 7124, subd. 4, currently codified verbatim at § 78-24-8). The trial court therefore correctly ruled that permitting the doctors to testify at defendant’s criminal trial did not violate the statutory physician-patient privilege as codified in section 78-24-8.

Defendant next argues that admitting the doctors’ testimony violated the physician-patient privilege found in Rule 506 of the Utah Rules of Evidence. The State asserts that because defendant consulted the various doctors to fraudulently obtain controlled substances, his communications with those doctors are not protected by the privilege. “The existence of a privilege is a question of law for the court, which we review for correctness, giving no deference to the trial court’s determination.” Price v. Armour, 949 P.2d 1251, 1254 (Utah 1997).

Rule 506(b) states, in pertinent part:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
972 P.2d 86, 359 Utah Adv. Rep. 8, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 127, 1998 WL 894532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-anderson-utahctapp-1998.