DocketNumber: No. 26,878.
Citation Numbers: 13 N.E.2d 562, 214 Ind. 169
Judges: Fansler
Filed Date: 3/10/1938
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The appellant, a practicing physician, was charged in two separate affidavits with selling morphine to a young woman therein named. The cases were consolidated for trial, there was a trial, and a verdict of guilty in both cases. In one case the punishment was fixed at a fine of $100, and in the other a fine of $1.00, and there was judgment accordingly.
Error is assigned upon the overruling of appellant's motions for a new trial.
Appellant contends that the giving of the following instruction was error: *Page 171
"I instruct you that the term ``good faith' as used in the 1. act, means an honest intention on the part of the physician or person selling or administering the drug, that the person to whom the narcotics are sold or administered, is actually suffering from a physical condition which would suggest that narcotics might be used in accordance with good medicinal practice."
The affidavits charge that the sales of the narcotics were not made in "selling, dispensing, prescribing or administering said narcotic drugs in good faith and in the course of his professional practice." As we understand appellant's contention, it is that "good faith" is not defined in the statute, and is nowhere judicially described. We see nothing erroneous or prejudicial in the instruction. Three other instructions on the same subject were tendered by the appellant and given. From these instructions, the jury must have clearly understood that criminal intent was involved; and the defendant's rights in that respect were fully protected.
The appellant complains of an instruction concerning the testimony of character witnesses, which is in all substantial respects identical with the one set out and approved in 2. Ross v. State (1933),
The appellant tendered an instruction upon the question of entrapment. There was no conflict in the evidence upon this question. Local police and federal narcotic agents 3-5. furnished funds which the young woman, to whom the narcotics were sold, used in their purchase. She went to the appellant, with the knowledge of the officers, and one of them was secreted in her home on one of the occasions when narcotics were furnished. There is some evidence that the appellant had sold narcotics, or furnished them, to the same young woman on a previous occasion, and had been warned not to do so again. There is a sharp conflict in the evidence, but we are concerned only with that most favorable to the State. The entrapment rule, for which the appellant contends, does not require an acquittal in every case where public officers have provided the means which induced the offense. There are many cases in which officers have purchased intoxicating liquor, which was sold in violation of law, and in which the conviction was affirmed. See Shacklett v. State (1926),
The appellant tendered an instruction regarding good character, which characterized it as an "important fact with every man and never more so than when he is put on trial, charged with 6-8. an offense which is rendered improbable by a uniform course of life, wholly inconsistent with such crime," and containing statements that, "where it becomes a man's sole dependence," it "may prove sufficient to outweigh evidence of the most positive character," and that "the most clear and satisfactory cases are some times rebutted by it." The language of the instruction is argumentative. A proper instruction was given, which authorized the jury to consider good character, together with all of the other facts and circumstances in the case, in determining the guilt or innocence of the defendant. The weight to which it is entitled is for the jury. It is proper for counsel to argue concerning the weight that it should be given, but it is improper for the court to do so. There are many statements in the decisions stressing the importance of good character, and the fact that it may in some cases outweigh positive evidence, but these statements are only made arguendo for the purpose of demonstrating the necessity for the admission of evidence of good character. The instruction was properly rejected.
It is contended that the verdict is contrary to law because of lack of evidence of an essential element of the crime charged; that there is no proof that the sale was not authorized by 9. the laws of the United States. No law of the United States is pointed to as authorizing the sale. It is again contended that the act does not define "good faith"; that it has never been judicially defined; that, in determining whether the appellant had reasonable cause to entertain the belief that the administration and sale of the drug were required because *Page 174 of the illness of the person to whom it was sold, he must be judged from the standpoint of the defendant himself. There is evidence that the appellant told the young woman to whom the narcotics were sold that she could re-sell some of them and thus get money with which to pay for more; and there are other circumstances in evidence from which the jury could have concluded that the appellant was not administering drugs in the good-faith practice of his profession. "Good faith" needs no definition other than that implied by the words themselves. The jury was instructed that, when a physician attends a patient, it is presumed that whatever treatment he gives is given in good faith; that good faith means "good intentions and the honest exercise of his best judgment as to the need of his patient"; that errors of judgment are not evidence of lack of good faith. From these instructions, the jury must have clearly understood that the good-faith sale or administration of narcotics means without unlawful intention.
Judgment affirmed.