State v. Low

74 P.2d 458, 192 Wash. 631
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1937
DocketNo. 26763. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 74 P.2d 458 (State v. Low) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Low, 74 P.2d 458, 192 Wash. 631 (Wash. 1937).

Opinions

Millard, J.

The defendant was charged by information and convicted by a jury of the crime of practicing medicine without a license. So far as material, the information reads as follows:

“. . . and by this information do accuse H. S. Low of the crime of Practicing Medicine Without a License, committed as follows, to-wit:
“He, said H. S. Low, in the county of King, state of Washington, on or about the 18th day of February, 1937, wilfully and unlawfully did practice and hold himself out as practicing medicine in this, that he, the said H. S. Low then and there did treat and pretend to treat and heal one Pat Hughes for disease and physical condition, to-wit: by the use of drugs, medical preparations, without having at the time of so doing a valid unrevoked certificate issued by the board of state medical examiners of the state of Washington, or by the state director of licenses of the state of Washington, authorizing said H. S. Low to practice medicine within the state of Washington, and without filing such certificate in the office of the county clerk of King county.”

The defendant was sentenced to confinement in the county jail for a period of ninety days with the jail term suspended and to pay a fine of two hundred fifty dollars. The defendant appealed.

Error is first assigned on admission in evidence, over appellant’s objection, of ten issues of the Seattle Star, a daily newspaper of Seattle.

In each of the ten copies of the Seattle Star appears a one-half page advertisement of the Sing Herb Company, 611 Pine street, Seattle. In that advertisement, which is typical and so far as is material reads as follows, is a copy of a letter purportedly received by *633 the Sing Herb Company from one of its customers or patients, expressing the customer’s (or patient’s) appreciation for the remarkable relief or cure obtained through use of the herb administered by H. S. Low:

“. . . A great ever-increasing army of grateful patients now testifies for The Sing Herb Co. There is no disputing results like these. The proof is too overwhelming and convincing.
“Puyallup pioneer family says H. S. Low’s Chinese herbs are wonderful. Sinus trouble, headaches, bronchial trouble and skin diseases all disappear. Thanks to the herbs, I am well. . . .
“New Health Is Here — Act Now
“Others Gaining Health — Why Not You?
“No matter with what you are afflicted, our wonderful herb treatment will positively relieve diseases of influenza, nervousness, female complaints, throat, heart, kidney, liver, stomach, neuritis, arthritis, chronic cough weakness, constipation, dizziness, neuralgia, headache, appendicitis, rheumatism, blood poison, catarrh, swollen glands, tonsilitis, lumbago, carbuncles, ear trouble, tumor, dropsy, epilepsy, jaundice; all disorders disappear without operation.
“Consultation Free Visitors Welcome
“Office Hours: 9 to 6, Monday to Friday, inclusive. Saturday: 9 to 1 P. M.
“The Sing Herb Co. 611 Pine Street, Seattle, Washington
“H. S. Low, Directing Herbalist Lady Attendant Phone MAin-8250
“Main office in, Oakland, Calif. — 24 years of service
“All herbs in bottles will be ready to take home. Also put up in packages.
“Ground Floor — No Stairs to Climb
“Tacoma Seattle Yakima”

The business manager of the Seattle Star testified that the Star had a substantial circulation throughout the city of Seattle, and that he, as business manager of the newspaper, received advertisements which his newspaper published for compensation. The account *634 of the advertiser in question is carried by the newspaper company as the Sing Herb Company, by H. S: Low. The bill for that' advertising, which first appeared in December 16, 1936, issue of the Seattle Star and was still running in May, 1937, at the time of appellant’s trial, is sent to the Sing Herb Company, 611 Pine street. Seattle.

The newspaper’s business manager did not have any personal dealings with the appellant. All that he knew respecting this matter was that the advertisement appeared in each issue of his newspaper, that the advertising account was carried in the name of the Sing Herb Company, by H. S. Low, and that the bill for the advertising was sent to the Sing Herb Company, 611 Pine street, Seattle.

No showing was made that the appellant was the author of the advertisements. He did not testify, nor was any evidence offered in his behalf; hence, there was no admission by the appellant that he was the author, or authorized publication, of the advertisements.

No foundation was laid for admission in evidence of the newspaper advertising. The foundation of pure hearsay testimony, that of the business manager of the newspaper in which the advertising in question appears, is not a sufficient basis for admission in evidence of hearsay evidence such as the advertisements admitted in evidence in the case at bar.-

‘‘Printed matter in general bears upon itself no marks of authorship other than contents. But there is ordinarily no necessity for resting upon such evidence, since the responsibility for printed matter, under the substantive law, usually arises from the act of causing publication, not merely of writing, and hence there is usually available as much evidence of the act of printing or of handing to a printer as there would be of any other act, such as chopping a tree or building a fence. There is therefore no judicial sanction for considering *635 the contents alone as sufficient evidence: . . . ” 4 Wigmore on Evidence (2d ed.), 578, §2150.
“While newspapers may be admissible in evidence to impute to a party knowledge of a fact, or to prove current market prices, a newspaper account is merely hearsay evidence of the facts stated, and is not generally admissible in evidence to prove such facts, and the same rule applies to newspaper advertisements and notices.” 22 C. J. 929, § 1137.

When it is important to ascertain whether certain information was current in a community at a particular time so as to impute knowledge to a particular person, it may then be permissible to admit in evidence the newspaper circulating at the time in such community for the purpose of showing that the fact in question was one of common local notoriety. 2 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (10th ed.), § 541. However, when it is sought to charge a particular advertisement on a particular person as the author, it is necessary to produce the original manuscript.

“It is only when the latter is non-producible that the printed copy can be received.” 2 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence (10th ed.), §542.

In Collins v. State, 75 Tex. Crim. App. 534, 171 S. W. 729, the defendant, Ira Collins, was convicted of practicing medicine without a license.

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Bluebook (online)
74 P.2d 458, 192 Wash. 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-low-wash-1937.