State v. Frutiger

167 Iowa 550
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 28, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 167 Iowa 550 (State v. Frutiger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Frutiger, 167 Iowa 550 (iowa 1914).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

The abstract of record presented upon this appeal makes no attempt to embody or state therein the testi mony offered or produced upon the trial, and, such being thu ease, no question can here be made or raised upon the suffi[552]*552ciency of the evidence to justify the conviction. The errors assigned are as follows:

I. The defendant moved to quash the indictment on the grounds: (1) That the indictment fails to show facts sufficient to give the court jurisdiction to try him for the alleged offense; (2) that the indictment is defective because of duplicity of statement, and joins several offenses in one count, and is indefinite and uncertain; and (3) that the statute, with violation of which, defendant is charged, is unconstitutional. The trial court overruled the motion, and error is assigned thereon. The defendant thereafter pleaded not guilty, and there was a trial and verdict as stated.

The constitutional question suggested by the motion is not argued in this court, and we are not called upon to consider or decide it.

i ckiminaj, ment'': piicity. Counsel’s position upon the alleged duplicity in the indictment is. not quite clear, but, if we understand the argument, it is that the charge in the indictment that defendant wrongfully assumed to act as a physician, “without having obtained from the State Board of Medical Examiners of the State of Iowa and recording the same in the office of the recorder of Adair county, Iowa, a certificate authorizing him to practice as such,” is an accusation of two distinct offenses, to wit, the unlawful act of assuming the duties or functions of a physician without having obtained the proper certificate; and, second, the unlawful failure to file such certificate in the office of the recorder of Adair county. The question here raised has been decided by this court adversely to the contention of the appellant in the recent case of State v. Zechman, 138 Iowa, 387. There, as here, the charge was made that the defendant unlawfully practiced and held himself out to be a physician without having procured the required certificate and without filing such certificate in the office of the county named, but omitted to allege that defendant was a resident of said county. It was there conceded by us that the indictment was tech[553]*553nically insufficient to charge the offense of practicing as a physician without filing the required certificate with the recorder of the proper county, but it did charge, in sufficiently apt terms, that defendant had assumed to practice medicine in said county without obtaining the certificate-prescribed by law, and that such act constituted an offense against the statute, without regard to the failure to file a certificate in the proper office. In other words, the indictment could omit all reference to the fact of filing or failure to file the certificate, and conviction could be had and upheld on the charge and proof that no such certificate had ever been obtained. Adhering to the rule of the cited case, it follows there is no duplicity in the indictment. The only charge of public offense made therein is the act of assuming to practice as a physician.in Adair county without obtaining the proper certificate, and the further statement with reference to an alleged failure to file the same in said county may be disregarded as surplusage.

faiiiu'é toPpresent the evisumption1'6' The appellant not having seen fit to preserve and present to us the testimony in the ease, we are bound to assume it was sufficient to justify the court . . . in suDmittmg to the jury the issue raised upon the material allegations of the indictment by defendant’s plea of not guilty.

What we have here said necessarily disposes of the further contention of the defendant that the indictment charges no offense against the statute. It is true that under a similar statute the Supreme Court of Nebraska has held an indictment in this form to be fatally defective. Wilson v. State, 89 Neb. 258 (131 N. W. 223); Jones v. State, 49 Neb. 609 (68 N. W. 1034). The theory of such holding seems to be that an allegation that the defendant assumed to act and practice as a physician, without having obtained the proper certificate, and without having recorded the same in a certain county, is not equivalent to or does not embody a charge that the accused had obtained no certificate. Without attempting any criticism upon the view thus maintained, we are inclined [554]*554to think the conclusion reached by us in the Zechmcm ease does no violence to the language of such indictment or to any established rule intended for the protection of the accused.

3. Same: indictment surplusage. It is moreover in strict harmony with our earlier holdings to the effect that the unessential portion of . . an indictment may be rejected as surplusage. See State v. Freeman, 8 Iowa, 428, and other eases cited in note to Code, section 5290.

4. Same: eviof1 courtmarks II. The abstract recites that, at different times in the examination of a witness by the county attorJ 31 e^’ ^-eienda:at objected to the prosecutor’s use of the word “treatment,” because it had not been used by the witness, whereupon the court remarked:

Gentlemen of the jury, it does not make any difference by what name they refer to matters along that line, nor by what name they are called in the examination of the witness. You will not be governed by whatever name they may be called in the examination of the witness. It is the facts that we are trying to get at, without reference to what they are called, and the court will-instruct you as to what constitutes the offense charged here.

Error is assigned upon this statement by the court. The record presents nothing upon which we can say the court erred. The evidence is not before us. There is no attempt to quote either the words or the substance of the testimony of the witness in question. The interrogatories to which objection is made do not appear further than the fact that the prosecutor frequently used the word “treatment,” but in what connection or with what application there is no showing. In the absence of such record, we cannot undertake to question the propriety of the court’s admonition to the jury that the issue to be decided was not one of mere names but of sub: stantial fact, concerning which they would be duly instructed in the court’s charge.

[555]*5555 Sams • crossrevSw^on:11: appeal. [554]*554The abstract further recites that, upon cross-examination [555]*555of one of the state’s witnesses, counsel for the defense asked him, “You have not had anything to do with starting this prosecution, have you ? ’ ’ and, upon objection by the state as to its materiality, the answer was excluded No offer was made to show the interest or bias of the witness or to disclose to the court the nature or substance of the testimony sought to be elicited by the question. And, what is still more pertinent in this connection, there is not the slightest showing as to what the witness had testified to on his direct examination. So far as this court can tell, the testimony of the witness, though called by the state, may have had no tendency whatever to sustain the charge made in the indictment, and any attempt to show bias or interest on his part may for that reason have been entirely immaterial.

III.

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Related

State v. Stoddard
245 N.W. 273 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1932)
State v. Baker
235 N.W. 313 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1931)
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198 Iowa 573 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1924)
State v. Fortune
196 Iowa 995 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1923)
State v. Barnes
112 S.E. 62 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
167 Iowa 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-frutiger-iowa-1914.