State v. Maxfield

285 P.2d 887, 46 Wash. 2d 822, 1955 Wash. LEXIS 553
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1955
Docket32581
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 285 P.2d 887 (State v. Maxfield) 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. Maxfield, 285 P.2d 887, 46 Wash. 2d 822, 1955 Wash. LEXIS 553 (Wash. 1955).

Opinions

Weaver, J.

Defendant was charged by three separate counts with the crimes of (1) manslaughter, (2) practicing medicine without a license, and (3) practicing chiropractic without a license. The jury found him guilty on all three counts. Judgment and sentence have been entered on counts II and III, from which there is no appeal.

The trial court granted defendant’s motion for a new trial on count I (manslaughter) on the ground that the last sentence of instruction No. 17 to the jury did not correctly state the law. The state appeals.

Lucile Pedersen Cook died November 17, 1952, of a diabetic acidosis. She was twenty-eight years old and had suffered from diabetes since she was thirteen. For almost fifteen years, she had received treatment and was under [824]*824the care of one or more doctors of medicine. She was on a special diabetic diet, prescribed by the Virginia Mason clinic in Seattle, and had been taking prescribed amounts of insulin ever since she was afflicted with the disease.

Mrs. Cook became dissatisfied with the treatment prescribed for her by the medical profession, and on September 13, 1952, accompanied by her husband, she consulted the defendant. She gave him a history of her life as a diabetic and sought his aid in combating her disease. He informed Mrs. Cook and her husband that he had treated a number of people for diabetes and that some of his patients had responded so well that they were no longer required to take insulin. A series of three treatments a week was arranged, which involved manipulations of the spine. He allowed her to reduce her intake of insulin, which resulted in an unfavorable reaction in her blood-sugar tests. Defendant gave her an herb tea and suggested that it, in conjunction with his manipulations, would bring her blood-sugar count under control.

Upon reducing the insulin intake, and under defendant’s treatments, she became groggy and listless, acquired a tremendous thirst, had difficulty breathing, and vomited frequently. Defendant told Mr. Cook not to be concerned over his wife’s condition, since her body was combating the poisons and foreign matter in her system, of which insulin was one.

On the morning of November 16, 1952, Mr. Cook was unable to arouse his wife and called defendant, who attempted to arouse her by manipulating her spine and rubbing her legs and arms. Decedent’s husband gave her chicken broth and insulin. Defendant declined Mr. Cook’s suggestions, during the day, to summon an ambulance to take his wife to the hospital, although twice during the day defendant could not feel her pulse. Finally, about seven o’clock, an ambulance was called and she was taken to the hospital in a diabetic coma. She was immediately given three hundred fifty units of insulin, and intravenous fluids. Five or six hours after admission, she died of diabetic acidosis.

[825]*825From the testimony of doctors of medicine, called by the state as expert witnesses, it appears that diabetic acidosis is caused by an imbalance between the need and the supply of insulin in the body of a diabetic; that the decedent was in a diabetic coma when she arrived at the hospital, and had been in that condition for about twenty-four hours prior to her admittance.

The trial court granted a motion for a new trial on count I of the information on the sole ground that the italicized portion of instruction No. 17, infra, did not correctly state the law and was prejudicial to the defendant.

Instruction No. 17 is as follows:

“There is no implied warranty on the part of any practitioner of any of the healing arts, who, within the limits of his own field, undertakes to cure, other than the use of such ordinary skill and care as are generally possessed and exercised by practitioners in the same field in the locality where he practices. You are further instructed that when any practitioner of any of the healing arts steps outside the limits of his field, he must exercise that degree of skill and care which is ordinarily possessed by the practitioner into whose field he has entered. You are further instructed that if, in the highest level of medical science, there is a generally recognized treatment for the disease or organic disorder which he undertakes to cure, he must in the exercise of ordinary skill and care adopt and use with ordinary skill and care such generally recognized treatment.”

The objection taken to the instruction, at the time of trial, was that there was no showing that there is anything called “the highest level of medical science” and the phrase is a “misleading and improper designation, and . . . brings in a highly prejudicial phase into the jury’s deliberations

The gravamen of count I of the information is that defendant, representing himself as a person qualified to treat the disease known as diabetes, unlawfully and feloniously caused the death of decedent “through culpable negligence, gross ignorance and the lack of ordinary knowledge of medicine and surgery . . . ”

[826]*826Doctors of medicine testified that the recognized treatment for diabetes, in the field of medicine in the community in which defendant held himself out as capable and qualified to treat this disease, is the use of insulin and diet control.

Defendant admitted that he did not hold a license from the state of Washington to practice any of the healing arts. (He was licensed by the city of Seattle “to perform manipulations and gymnastics; scientific manipulation and remedial massage upon the bodies of individuals.”)

However, under the allegations of count I, whether or not defendant is licensed to practice any of the healing arts is not an element of the charge, nor is it a defense thereto, for the absence of such a license could not create negligence where none exists, nor could it negate negligence where it does exist.

Further, it matters not, under the charge of count I, whether the accused holds the highest academic degree in the field of the healing arts and sciences, or holds no degree at all; if there is evidence to support the material allegations of the grievance, a question of fact is presented for the jury.

In addition, it is not material whether the accused purports to practice in one or another of the various fields of the healing arts, as recognized by the statutes of this state. If there is evidence (as there is here) from which the jury can find (as it did in this case) that the accused purported to practice medicine then “he must exercise that degree of skill and care which is ordinarily possessed by the practitioner into whose field he has entered.”

In this state, only physicians and surgeons, commonly called “doctors of medicine,” have unlimited licenses to practice medicine and surgery. Such practice is defined in Rem. Supp. 1947, § 10008 [cf. RCW 18.71.010]. All other licenses for practicing the healing arts are limited in scope.

This is not a civil action for damages based upon alleged malpractice. See Kelly v. Carroll, 36 Wn. (2d) 482, 219 P. (2d) 79, 19 A. L. R. (2d) 1174 (1950), and cases cited. We [827]*827are concerned here with the standard of care which must be exercised and the criminal liability which may flow from a failure to exercise it, by one who is charged with acting within that field of medicine,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 P.2d 887, 46 Wash. 2d 822, 1955 Wash. LEXIS 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-maxfield-wash-1955.