192 Ind. 592 | Ind. | 1922
Appellant, by indictment, was charged with the crime of murder, §2235 Burns 1914, Acts 190.5 p. 584, .§347. She was tried by a jury and convicted of manslaughter. From a judgment that she be imprisoned in the Indiana Women’s Prison for a term of not less than two years nor more than twenty-one years, she prosecuted this appeal, assigning as error the overruling of her motion for a new trial. The causes assigned and properly presented as reasons for a new trial are, that the verdict of the jury was not sustained by sufficient evidence and was contrary to law; error of the court in admitting certain testimony offered by the state, and in refusing to admit certain testimony offered by appellant. The questions which we will consider were
The first two causes in support of the motion for a new trial rely upon insufficient evidence to sustain the verdict. We have carefully examined the evidence, especially that pertaining to appellant’s claim of self-defense. In that respect the evidence before us so strongly supports her contention that if we were permitted to weigh and pass upon it, we wo'uld not hesitate to say that it was sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt which would justify an acquittal of the accused. Trogdon v. State (1892), 133 Ind. 1, 32 N. E. 725; Plummer v. State (1893), 135 Ind. 308, 34 N. E. 968; Clark v. State (1902), 159 Ind. 60, 65, 64 N. E. 589. But we cannot weigh the evidence nor say what inferences the jury might reasonably draw from the evidence or circumstances pertaining to her possession of a deadly weapon, or her action in remaining in the room with a person whom she knew to be a dangerous character without sooner attempting to depart, and when she reasonably might have expected trouble with him. These and any other surroundings bearing upon the necessity or apparent necessity, as well as the amount of force necessary to employ to resist an attack, can only be determined from the standpoint of the appellant at the time and under all the existing circumstances, and were all proper matters for the jury alone to consider and weigh in determining whether or not she committed the homicide in the reasonable exercise of the right of self-defense, and its conclusion thereon the record before us will not allow us to disturb. King v. State (1918), 187 Ind. 220, 118 N. E. 809; Ellis v. State (1898), 152 Ind. 326, 52 N. E. 82.
On the evening of the homicide, it will not be claimed that appellant was in a place where she had no right to be, and there is no evidence that she brought on the controversy which ended in the fatality.
A few facts and some of appellant’s undisputed testimony pertaining to the homicide may be instructive. The accused and her adversary were husband and wife and both were engaged in the business of photography. Their studio was in an upstairs room of their dwelling. The homicide took place in this room. In October before the homicide, she commenced an action for a divorce and the papers in that proceeding were, on the evening of the homicide, in the hands of her husband. After the evening meal, of which her husband ate a small portion, he went up to the studio. Later she followed to finish some work she had left in the dark room. On coming out of the dark room she noticed her husband had a knife in his hand and was just finishing eating an apple. He called her to his desk, where he was sitting, and read to her portions of the complaint which she had filed, and demanded that certain statements included therein should be stricken out, because proof of some of them she proposed to make by using his son by a former marriage as a witness; that he would not have his own flesh and blood go upon the stand against him, and, unless she consented to the elimination of certain allegations of the complaint, he said, “you will never live to get a divorce if you go ahead with it.” In her
This evidence may also serve to illustrate the probable importance of erroneously admitted or erroneously refused testimony, bearing upon the question whether or not the rulings of the trial court in these matters may or may not have been harmful to the accused.
The court admitted certain evidence over appellant’s objection, and refused to strike it out. The state, as a part of its original case, offered and was permit-ted to prove by a police officer, a conversation he had with another witness who, at the time of the tragedy, was in a downstairs room of the Myers home, and was supposed to relate what she heard and saw, as also that which she did not hear and see. This conversation took place the same evening at a neighbor’s home, but some time after the homicide. . It wag not offered as impeaching testimony, but was admitted on the theory that accused’s silence regarding declarations made in her presence must be regarded as admissions. This conversation took place in a room adjacent to one in which appellant was sitting. She was nervous and greatly excited, and some witnesses testified that she was crying and hysterical. The door between the two rooms was open and appellant was about ten or twelve feet distant from the place where the conversation took place. This preliminary showing was not sufficient to justify the court in permitting the officer to testify to a conversation he had with a third party, and to thus bind the accused on the theory of an admission. The witness related a narrative of a past transaction given him by a third party. It was no part of the res gestae and therefore must be regarded as hearsay, and therefore inadmissible.
Dr. G. F. Lee, a witness called by appellant, was asked to state what he heard the deceased say on a cer
Prior to the question calling for the excluded testimony, the witness testified that he was the family physician of Myers and was called to the Myers home to attend Mrs. Myers (appellant) whom he found very nervous, with ecchymosis covering a large area of her back, and suffering pain in that part of her body. This condition confined her in bed for several days. From other testimony it appears that this call was made in the fall of 1919. In November before the, homicide the witness was called to the Myers home on account of the sudden illness of Mr. Myers.
Q. “On that occasion, when you started to go home, did you hear him making any threats or any statement against her life?” A. “Yes.” Q. “State to .the jury what he said about taking her life, threatening to take her life.” A. “I went in the room where he was, and I talked to him a little bit, and came out of that room, which opened into another room, and a door opening into the hallway that led to the upstairs, a door that came out on the porch. When I came out of the room, the front room, I opened the door going into the hallway that led up the stairway, and I closed the door; I opened that door and closed the outside door, and of course he supposed that I had left. I stopped there in the stairway.” At this point the witness was stopped by the state, and in answer to questions put to him by the prosecuting attorney, it appears that he went there in the capacity of
At common law, communications between physician and patient, while the physician was in attendance upon his patient, were not privileged. Towles v. McCurdy (1904), 163 Ind. 12, 71 N. E. 129; Wm. Laurie Co. v. McCullough (1910), 174 Ind. 477, 488, 90 N. E. 1014, 92 N.E. 337; People v. Austin (1909), 199 N. Y. 446, 93 N. E. 57; People v. DeFrance (1895), 104 Mich. 563, 62 N. W. 709, 28 L. R. A. 139; Wharton, Criminal Evidence §516; Underhill, Criminal Evidence (2d ed.) §179. However, by statute, §520 Burns 1914, §497 R. S. 1881, “physicians, as to matters communicated to them, as such, by patients, in the course of their professional business, or advice given in such cases,” are privileged, except by consent of the patient. This statute, being in derogation of the common law, under all rules of statutory construction, should not be enlarged by intendment to include as privileged information entirely aside from that “necessary to communicate to enable the physician or surgeon to act or prescribe.” Underhill, Criminal Evidence (2d ed.) §179. Nor does it assume to do so merely because the relation of physician and patient exists.
Without stopping to discuss when and under what circumstances communications of a patient to his physician may or may not be privileged, it is sufficient at this time, and for the purposes of this case, to say, that, contrary to the strict rules for construing statutes, the one in question has been somewhat broadened to include as privileged, not only communications by the patient to his physician, but any other information the physician may obtain from a physical
According to the decisions last cited, the words “matters communicated,” as used in the statute to cover privileged information, may be defined as information obtained in the sick room, heard or observed by the physician, or of which he is otherwise informed pertaining to the patient and upon which he is persuaded to do some act or give some direction or advice in the discharge of his professional obligation.
Looking to the evidence in the instant case most favorable to the state, it appears that the witness, on the occasion of the alleged statéments, was called professionally to attend Frederick Myers. After examining and treating the patient he departed from the sick room and left the home of the patient, but while making his departure and while in the hall or room adjoining the sick room he heard the patient use
The general rule governing privileged communications between attorneys and client is applicable to physician and patient. Springer, by Next Friend, v. Byram, supra; Masonic, etc., Ass’n. v. Beck (1881), 77 Ind. 203, 210, 40 Am. Rep. 295.
With respect to this rule, this court, in McDonald v. McDonald- (1895), 142 Ind. 55, 78, 41 N. E. 336, 344, said: “To come under the protection of the rule, in question, the communications claimed to be privileged must be addressed to an attorney in his professional character of a legal adviser, with a view to legal advice which as an attorney it was his duty to give.” And again, in Bower v. Bower (1895), 142 Ind. 194, 202, 41 N. E. 523, 524, it was held that, “While, it is true that the rule which forbids a physician to disclose in evidence, matters communicated to him in the course of his profession, is a salutary one, nevertheless it cannot
Questions of a similar character are discussed in the briefs, but as they will not likely arise on a retrial, we do not consider them.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment is reversed, with instructions that the trial court grant appellant a new trial.