State v. Broadwell

136 N.E.2d 72, 104 Ohio App. 37, 75 Ohio Law. Abs. 47
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 11, 1956
Docket23837
StatusPublished

This text of 136 N.E.2d 72 (State v. Broadwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Broadwell, 136 N.E.2d 72, 104 Ohio App. 37, 75 Ohio Law. Abs. 47 (Ohio Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

OPINION

By HURD, J:

This action originated in the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County where the defendants-appellants were indicted under §4731.47 R. C., which reads as follows:

“No person shall make, issue, or publish, for the purpose of sale, barter, or gift, a certificate, diploma, or other writing or document falsely representing the holder or receiver thereof to be a graduate of a *48 medical school, college, or educational institution of medicine and entitled to the powers, privileges, or degrees thereby pretended to be conferred, or sell or dispose of, or offer, to sell or dispose of such diploma, certificate, writing, or document containing such false representation or use his name, or permit it to be used, as a subscriber to such false and fictitious diploma, certificate, writing, or document or engage in the practice of medicine and surgery under and by virtue of such fraudulent diploma, certificate, writing, or document.” (Emphasis added.)

The indictment contained two counts. The pertinent parts of the first count are as follows:

“1. ... Do Find and Present, That Robert Broadwell and E. M. B. Ownen on or about the 22nd day of September 1953, at the County aforesaid, unlawfully and fraudulently published and offered to sell one Joseph M. Centanni a Diploma in Homeopathic Medicine for the sum of $1500 without examination, attendance or study, and that said Diploma would represent the said Joseph M. Centanni to be a graduate of a Medical School and entitled to the powers and privileges thereby pretended to be conferred and did further falsely represent that said Diploma would admit the Holder to the practice of Medicine, the said Robert Broadwell and E. M. B. Ownen well knew said representations to be false and were made with intent to defraud.” (Emphasis added.)

The second count of the indictment is similar to the foregoing except as to the date of the offense.

The jury returned a verdict finding both defendants guilty as charged on two counts and they were then sentenced to the Ohio Penitentiary, the sentences on each count as to each defendant to run concurrently. Motions for new trial were filed and overruled and the case is here appealed on questions of law.

A brief condensation of the evidence presented by the State, as appears in the record, is as follows: On September 22, 1953, Robert J. Broadwell, who had come to Cleveland a few months previously, and E. M. B. Ownen, of Arcadia, Missouri, conducted a meeting at the Hollenden Hotel, in Cleveland, attended by seven local chiropractors, whose presence was the result of certain solicitations and representations theretofore made by Broadwell. Broadwell and Ownen both outlined a plan whereby by paying $1500, local chiropractors could obtain degrees in homeopathic medicine and licenses to practice in Ohio as doctors of medicine. Broadwell was to handle this “deal” in the Cleveland area, and the same program was being duplicated in other States.

Dr. Ownen stated that he had recently acquired a new charter for the American Non-Allopathic University, Incorporated of Arcadia, Missouri, as the result of which his school was then in a position to issue diplomas in homeopathic medicine; that those chiropractors accepting his introductory offer were to pay $500 down and $1,000 not later than December 1, 1953, and furnish photostatic copies of their degrees and licenses in chiropractic or mechanotherapy and individual college credits; that if such applicants did not have college credits, he, Ownen, would supply the deficiencies through a certain McKinley-Roosevelt School in Chicago, where for an additional $1,000, a four-year *49 college degree would be supplied without any attendance being required; that when their money and credits had been received, the applicants would be placed on Ownen’s “preferred list,” thus reserving one of thirty-six “select” places. They would immediately receive diplomas in homeopathic medicine from the American Non-Allopathic University of Arcadia, Missouri, without attendance or study, after which they would automatically receive licenses, issued in either Massachusetts, Connecticut, or Rhode Island, according to the applicant’s choice, to practice as doctors in homeopathic medicine. Following this and after the applicant had taken a “fixed” total examination in four simple subjects: namely, public health, hygiene, prescription writing and homeopathic medicine, a license to practice homeopathic medicine would be issued by the Ohio State Medical Board.

Following this Hotel Hollenden meeting; namely, on October 30, 1953, Broadwall visited Dr. Centanni at his office and again went over the details of the “deal” in the presence of Robert Drake, a Cleveland Plain Dealer reporter, who was represented as being a chiropractor and interested in getting in on the deal. Broadwell instructed Dr. Centanni to draw a check for $500 payable to the American Non-Allopathic University and to submit therewith a list of his college credits. Dr. Centanni gave Broadwell a check for $500 as instructed, in an envelope on the outside of which were listed Dr. Centanni’s college credits. Broadwell put the check and envelope in his pocket and left the office. By prearrangement with the police, he was arrested immediately, and when searched, the $500 check and the envelope were found on his person.

The police then questioned Broadwell, who admitted that he had visited Dr. Centanni at his office; that he was representing a school for the purpose of helping chiropractors obtain medical degrees; that he was from Missouri and was presently working at the Forest Hill Clinic in Cleveland; that he did not have a medical degree; that he was not licensed by the State of Ohio to practice as a Doctor; that he had the title of “Doctor” by reason of having attended a school in Missouri for a couple of weeks; that he was a representative of a certain Dr. Ownen, of Missouri “from the American Non-Allopathic University” and was here to recruit students and offer a course to help them obtain medical degrees; that the papers and credentials of such students were to be sent through the State of New Jersey, following which Néw Jersey would return the papers to Ohio for processing through the Ohio Medical Board so that the students could obtain doctors’ medical licenses.”

Defendant Broadwell testified in his own defense, but defendant Ownen did not testify.

While there are fifteen assignments of error attacking inter alia the sufficiency of the indictment, the rulings of the trial judge on motions, the admission or rejection of evidence, the charge of the court, the claims of error, both by way of brief and oral argument, principally involve the proposition urged by counsel for defendants throughout the trial, namely, that since there was no actual diploma published by the defendants, they could not be guilty of offering to sell something which was not theretofore in existence.

It is conceded by the State that there was no actual diploma de *50 livered to any of the State’s witnesses nor was any diploma actually exhibited to them. However, the gist of the crime charged by the State is that defendant “offered to sell false medical diplomats)” in violation of §4731.47 JR. C. Thus the question arises as to whether this is a crime within the prohibition of that section.

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Bluebook (online)
136 N.E.2d 72, 104 Ohio App. 37, 75 Ohio Law. Abs. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-broadwell-ohioctapp-1956.