State v. Shortridge

211 N.W. 336, 54 N.D. 779, 1926 N.D. LEXIS 83
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 211 N.W. 336 (State v. Shortridge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota 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. Shortridge, 211 N.W. 336, 54 N.D. 779, 1926 N.D. LEXIS 83 (N.D. 1926).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 781 The defendant was charged with the commission of murder in the second degree committed by employing an instrument or other means to procure the miscarriage of one Freda Nadler, and in that connection inflicting a wound resulting in the death of said Freda Nadler. An affidavit of prejudice against the county of Morton in which the offense is alleged to have been committed having been filed, the cause was removed to Stark county where a trial was had which resulted in a judgment of conviction.

The following facts appear in the record: The defendant was a physician, practising his profession at Flasher in Morton county. In connection with his practice he maintained a small hospital, where he lived and had his office. Flasher is situated about forty miles from *Page 783 the city of Bismarck which was the home of Freda Nadler. At the time of her death, Freda Nadler was twenty-four years of age. Her paternal home was in New Salem in Morton county. Some years prior to her death she had worked in the telephone office at Flasher, where she had become acquainted to some extent with the defendant. For several years she had lived in Bismarck and was engaged in some capacity in a dental office. From November, 1923, she had been living in an apartment with a young man named Holta. They were not married, but were engaged to be married. Upon the trial she was sometimes spoken of as Freda Holta and at other times at Freda Nadler. In November of 1923 she consulted a physician in Bismarck with reference to her physical condition, at the time describing some symptoms that would indicate an early stage of pregnancy. She desired to know of him her condition but no examination was then made. Return visits were made to this physician and, in December, at a time when in his judgment a diagnosis could be made positively, an examination was made and a condition of pregnancy found. It appears that Holta was the person responsible for her condition and that they continued living together until the 25th day of February, 1924. On that day the deceased left Bismarck and went to Flasher, going from Mandan to Flasher by train (some 70 miles by rail) and arriving at her destination about 6 o'clock in the evening. Aside from her condition of pregnancy, she was apparently in good health at the time of leaving Bismarck. On arriving in Flasher she went directly to the office of the defendant which was in his hospital, or she went directly to the hotel; which, does not clearly appear. If, however, she went to the hotel first, she remained there but a short while and gave up her room after visiting the office of the defendant, going again to the defendant's hospital. She remained in the hospital that night and the next day, meanwhile communicating with Holta by `phone and by mail. At about 11 o'clock at night on February 26th, the defendant called Holta by telephone and summoned him to Flasher, requesting him to come immediately. This Holta did. He engaged a taxicab in Bismarck and arrived in Flasher between 1:00 and 2:00 o'clock A.M. on February 27th, the distance by road being about 44 miles. At the hospital upon his arrival Holta met Mrs. Shortridge, who had been present when Miss Nadler died but did not tell him of her death. At that time the defendant was absent making *Page 784 a call and Holta awaited his return about an hour. When he came he informed Holta that his "wife" had died. Holta insisted that the body be returned to Bismarck and that arrangements be made for her burial as though she had died there. The defendant, however, expressed a preference for preparation for burial being made in Morton county but yielded to Holta's wishes. Arrangements were promptly made for transporting the body from Flasher that night, Holta returning to Bismarck in the taxicab in which he had gone there and the defendant with his driver following an hour or more behind in a Ford touring car, bringing with them the remains of the deceased in the back seat. The latter arrived in Bismarck at approximately 5 o'clock in the morning of the 27th of February, the car being stopped about a block from the apartment. From there the defendant and his driver carried the body approximately a block through an alley; then the defendant and Holta the remaining distance, or from across the street into the apartment. The body was taken into the apartment and some efforts, participated in by the defendant, were made to produce the appearance that death had taken place there. Before leaving the apartment a certificate of death was made out by the defendant, giving the name of the deceased as Freda D. Holta, the personal and statistical particulars in the certificate being supplied by Holta. The medical portion of the certificate is as follows:

"Date of death: Feb. 26, 1924.

"I hereby certify that I attended deceased from Feb. 26, 1924 to Feb. 26, 1924; that I last saw her alive on Feb. 26, 1924 and that death occurred, on the date stated, at 11:30 P.M.

The cause of death was as follows: Influenza. (duration) 3 days. Contributory: Hemorrhage and shock. (duration) 2 hours. Did an operation precede death? No. Was there an autopsy? No. What test confirmed diagnosis? . . . . . . . .

"(Signed) W.R. Shortridge, M.D. "Flasher, N.D"

The body was prepared for burial in Bismarck and in regular course burial took place at New Salem. On the 25th of the following month the body was exhumed and a post-mortem examination held. There were present at the examination the coroner and undertakers, who identified the body and its condition as being the same as at the time *Page 785 of burial, and two doctors, Dr. Bell of the medical school of the University of Minnesota, a pathologist, and Dr. Strauss of Bismarck. The doctors testified to the general condition of the body and of various vital organs. After stating the findings as to the apparently healthy condition of the body from the standpoint of nutrition, Dr. Bell stated his findings substantially as follows: That the heart was normal and not diseased; that the lungs showed no disease; that they had very little blood in them; that there was no blood in the heart; that ordinarily after death there is clotted blood in the heart; that there were no diseased organs in the body cavity — vital organs all normal; that there was no evidence of influenza; that the womb was very large, being about twice normal size; that the neck of the womb was greatly dilated; that there was a big tear on the left side about an inch and a quarter long in the long axis; that there were clots of blood around the tear, both outside and inside the womb; and that there was afterbirth present. He then testified that the cause of death was hemorrhage following induced abortion or abortion; that the absence of a blood clot in the heart, in his opinion, meant the loss of a large amount of blood before death, as the absence of such clot is not found except in such cases; that the deceased had been recently pregnant; that if she had had influenza at all, it was in mild form; that the abortion was caused by an instrument; and that there would not be a tear in the womb of the character of the tear found from a natural abortion. The testimony of Dr. Strauss followed substantially the lines indicated in the testimony of Dr. Bell. He stated his opinion to be that death was caused by hemorrhage following an induced abortion.

The first question presented on this appeal is as to the jurisdiction of the court to try the defendant because of the alleged failure of the state to arraign him in a regular or special term of the district court.

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Related

State v. Gann
244 N.W.2d 746 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1976)
State v. Hassard, Jr.
365 P.2d 202 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1961)
State v. Duffy
261 N.W. 661 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
211 N.W. 336, 54 N.D. 779, 1926 N.D. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-shortridge-nd-1926.