State v. Pierce

88 A. 740, 87 Vt. 144, 1913 Vt. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 13, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 88 A. 740 (State v. Pierce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Pierce, 88 A. 740, 87 Vt. 144, 1913 Vt. LEXIS 180 (Vt. 1913).

Opinion

Powers, J.

This respondent was convicted under P. S. 5454, which requires an attending physician to report to the health officer known or suspected cases of communicable diseases, dangerous to the public health. The illness directly involved was that of Pearl, infant daughter of William S. Newton, of Tyson, a small village in the town of Plymouth, who was attended by the respondent on several occasions between January 3rd and 8th, 1911, and who died on the 9th, from diphtheria — ■ as the evidence tended to show.

Prom the very necessities of the case, the State was obliged to rely upon circumstantial evidence to prove that the respondent knew or suspected that Pearl Newton’s case was one of diph[147]*147theria. It was therefore proper and legitimate to show that other cases of this disease had existed in Tyson in the previous months of October and November; that the houses wherein these cases existed were quarantined with a placard thereon bearing in large letters the word “Diphtheria”; provided, of course, that there was evidence tending to show that the respondent knew about it, or that the circumstances were such that the jury could reasonably draw therefrom the inference that he knew about it. ITis knowledge of these facts was not the ultimate fact to be proved, but if established bore directly upon what his subsequent knowledge or suspicion would be when called to treat the Pearl Newton ease. So the evidence regarding the eases of diphtheria in the Coolidge and Merrill houses and elsewhere in the community, and that the houses were placarded as stated, was properly received, for the evidence abundantly showed that the respondent was in the village at the time and in such circumstances as to make it almost unbelievable that he failed to observe the diphtheria placards. Whether he did in fact see them was a question for the jury. But the fact that positive evidence thereof was not at hand, did not render the evidence referred to inadmissible.

In disposing of this matter in this general way, we are treating the questions as though sufficiently raised by the exceptions saved. It is proper to state, however, that these are all or nearly all entirely inadequate, for they are mere general objections not specifying any ground therefor. State v. Comstock, 86 Vt. 42; Paige v. McCarthy, 86 Vt. 127. The court did say, however, that this line of evidence might be received subject to respondent’s exceptions, and lest this statement may have been regarded as an assurance that specific grounds need not be stated, we have deemed it best, — without intending thereby to establish a precedent — to make this brief disposition of the points argued.

Dr. Haselton was a witness for the state. He was asked a hypothetical question, as follows: “If you should be called into a family where one of the family complained of a sore throat, the mother, and there was a child two years old that was ill, had difficulty in breathing, and there had been eases of diphtheria in the immediate vicinity from four to six weeks before, and one member of the family with whom another member of the family had been at the time, had died of diphtheria, would [148]*148you naturally suspect the presence of any particular disease, and if so, what?”

To this question the respondent objected as not warranted by the testimony. This meant, of course, that the evidence did not sustain the assumed facts. The witness was used out of time for special reasons, and the state assured the court that the foundation would be supplied. The court suggested that it was not a question what the witness would naturally suspect, and the state’s attorney modified the question by asking, “What would an ordinary practicing physician naturally suspect if under such circumstances?” Thereupon, respondent’s counsel said, “We desire an exception because it is not a proper question as framed.” The witness answered that he thought he would suspect diphtheria. To the question as finally admitted, the only objection was to its form. But this is a matter within the discretion of the court and not subject to review. Besides, the particular in which the question was improper was not pointed out, so there was nothing specific for the court to rule upon. Nor would the matter be affected if we regard the objection for want of a foundation to "follow along; for the evidence fairly tended to establish each of the facts assumed in the question,— save only slight and unimportant details, like the age of the child which was two years and five months instead of as stated.

It appeared that Myrtie Newton, a sister of Pearl, was sick at the house of a neighbor and died there November 8, 1910. After her burial and before Pearl’s sickness, by direction of the state authorities, Drs. Stone and Dalton of Burlington caused her body to be exhumed, and in the presence of the respondent, performed an autopsy thereon, and showed the respondent the condition of the throat. This was on November 19. The organs removed from the body were shown Dr. Kidder, a witness for the state and a member of the state board of health, and he testified as to what the organs were and that the larynx showed a diphtheritic membrane. This answer was objected to, but no ground of objection was stated, so we take no time with it. The witness was then asked, “Would that (diphtheritic membrane) be apparent to an ordinary practicing physician?” This question was objected to because it was “having the witness take the place of the jury.” The question was then modified slightly, and subject to exception, the witness answered that he thought it would.

[149]*149The specific objection to this testimony is not briefed, and so, under our familiar rule, is waived. But the respondent claims that it came in under a general exception allowed by the court to all the evidence regarding prior eases of diphtheria at Tyson. Assuming this to be so, we find the admission of the testimony to be without error. As we have seen, the autopsy was about ten days after the death of Myrtie Newton. "We must assume that the organs had been in a preservative liquid since, for it is common knowledge of which we may take notice, that such is the means employed by the medical profession. The respondent was present when they were removed, and had a fair chance to observe their condition and form a judgment as to what it indicated. That appearance might mean nothing to an ordinary man and yet be highly significant, to a physician. There is no doubt whatever that the witness could state what the appearance of the larynx indicated to him; the only question on which there can be any doubt is whether it was permissible to allow the expert to add the statement which, fairly interpreted, meant that the indications of a diphtheritic condition were so plain as to be apparent to an ordinary practitioner. That the answer was an inference drawn from the organ before him, coupled with his knowledge of the state of professional attainment in that vicinity, may be admitted, without putting the trial court in error. Inferences from observed facts are admissible when the inferred fact itself is relevant, and the constituent facts cannot adequately be placed before the jury. Clifford v. Richardson, 18 Vt. 620; Williams v. Norton Bros., 81 Vt. 1, Here the fact itself was relevant, because, if this larynx on November 19 indicated that Myrtie had had diphtheria, it rendered more probable the ultimate fact that in January following the respondent knew or suspected that Pearl had it. That the constituent facts could not adequately be placed before the jury is equally plain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A. 740, 87 Vt. 144, 1913 Vt. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pierce-vt-1913.