State v. Lemke

290 N.W. 307, 207 Minn. 35, 1940 Minn. LEXIS 615
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 26, 1940
DocketNo. 32,189.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 290 N.W. 307 (State v. Lemke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Lemke, 290 N.W. 307, 207 Minn. 35, 1940 Minn. LEXIS 615 (Mich. 1940).

Opinions

Gallagher, Chief Justice.

Defendant was indicted for manslaughter in the first degree. The indictment charged that on December 10, 1938, at Minneapolis, defendant, intending to procure an abortion on one Rhoda Waetjen, who was then pregnant, used certain instruments upon her womb and body, thereby inflicting mortal injuries from which she died on that date. It also charged that the use of the instruments and the procuring of the miscarriage was not necessary to preserve either the life of the said Rhoda Waetjen or the unborn child. Defendant was convicted. He appeals from the order denying his motion for a new trial. On this appeal defendant is represented by counsel other than those who represented him at the trial.

. Assigned as errors are the following: (1) Insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict; (2) errors of law occurring at the trial and consisting principally of (a) failure of the trial court to grant defendant’s motion for a mistrial because of prejudicial statements made by the prosecutor in his opening statement to the jury; (b) improper admission of certain medical testimony; and (c) improper cross-examination by the state of one of its witnesses; (3) prejudicial misconduct of the prosecuting attorney; and (4) errors in the court’s charge which deprived defendant of a fair trial.

At the time involved herein defendant was a licensed physician practicing his profession in the city of Minneapolis. While engaged in general practice, he specialized in diseases and ailments of women. One Gladys Otterbeck was employed in his office. She was not a nurse, but assisted defendant generally in his work. Rhoda Waetjen, age 22, with whose death defendant is *37 charged, was employed in the Miller Hospital as a maid. She consulted defendant on December 8, 1938, and returned for treatment about noon on December 10, the day of her death. Defendant, in the presence of Miss Otterbeck and with such assistance as she was asked by him to render, performed the operation which the state claims was an illegal abortion and which resulted in Miss Waetjen’s death. It is the contention of defendant that the abortion occurred before Rhoda consulted him and that what he did was for the purpose of saving her life and preserving her health. Rhoda died at about two p. m. during the course of the operation. The coroner’s office was notified about five p. m. of the same day, and an autopsy was performed that night. This prosecution followed.

1. A careful examination of the record discloses ample evidence upon which to sustain a conviction. A detailed account of the testimony will serve no useful purpose. Reference will be made, however, to some of it which strongly indicates defendant’s guilt. Miss Otterbeck, who had been employed by defendant for more than three years, testified that after Miss Waetjen’s first visit on December 8 defendant told her that Rhoda was to return on Saturday (December 10) “for an abortion”; that on the latter date she did return, and while the girl was preparing for the operation Miss Otterbeck sterilized the instruments defendant was to use. After Rhoda was disrobed Miss Otterbeck obtained from her five ten-dollar bills which she gave defendant. We omit the gruesome details of the operation as described by her. During the course thereof Rhoda died. Miss Otterbeck also testified that defendant was engaged in the business of performing abortions and that he performed between 15 and 25 each month, for which he was paid from $50 to $500 each. She described how the $50 obtained from the girl was carefully wiped off so as to avoid any possible fingerprints and how the substances procured in the operation were disposed of. Many other details, including admonitions by defendant not to disclose what occurred and suggestions that she hide his office books, were related by Miss Otterbeck.

*38 Dr. B. J. Clawson, a pathologist from the University of Minnesota, testified that he conducted an autopsy on the body on December 10 at about -6:45 p. m.; that from his examination, which he described in considerable detail, he concluded that the foetus had been severed within five hours of the autopsy, prior to which time it had been alive; that there was, in his opinion, based on what he had found, no necessity of an induced abortion; that he believed the abortion could easily have been produced in the manner described by Miss Otterbeek. Dr. Charles A. Hobbs, a practicing physician and surgeon and deputy coroner of Hennepin county, who was present at the autopsy, testified to substantially the same effect.

For defendant, Dr. Charles Kistler testified that Miss Waetjen came to his office in Minneapolis for examination on December 1 and also on December 3. Examination made by him at that time disclosed indications of pregnancy but he ivas not certain as to whether she was with child. Rhoda told him that she had been taking bromides for about 30 days in quantities that the doctor thought would produce bromin poisoning. He recommended that she go to a hospital for observation.

Defendant admitted having performed similar operations in the past, but insisted that he had done so only when necessary to save life. With reference to the operation on Rhoda Waetjen, he testified that she was suffering from the effects of an abortion when she first came to him and that the operation which he conducted on December 10 was for the purpose of relieving her from the results of that abortion; that such an operation was necessary to save her life; that during the course thereof she had an epileptic fit and then fell into a deep coma; that her death followed.

Clearly, the testimony was for the jury as to whether defendant performed an illegal abortion or whether what he did constituted proper treatment after a previous abortion, as contended by him. Conceding that the most forceful of the witnesses for the state was an accomplice of defendant, her testimony was adequately corroborated by others not connected with the crime, including a *39 sister of the deceased, who accompanied her to defendant’s office shortly before the operation, the medical experts to whose testimony we have made reference, and Miss Emma Guth, whose testimony will hereafter be referred to. In fact, defendant himself corroborated Miss Otterbeck in many respects. Corroborating testimony is sufficient if it tends in some degree to establish the guilt of the accused. State v. Baker, 161 Minn. 1, 200 N. W. 815.

We conclude that the jury was justified in returning a verdict of guilty.

2(a) Appellant claims that the prosecutor, in his opening-statement to the jury, declared that the state was prepared to prove that defendant’s business was that of doing abortions on women; that defendant charged exorbitant prices for these abortions; and that a witness would testify that defendant sent many girls whom he had aborted out to her home for care. What was said to the jury on behalf of the state does not appear either in the record or as part of the settled case. Such being the state of the record, error is not made to appear. State v. Hankins, 193 Minn. 375, 258 N. W. 578.

(b) Dr. B. J.

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Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 307, 207 Minn. 35, 1940 Minn. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lemke-minn-1940.