Court Opinion

ID: 5386565
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 09:28:20.350366+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:30:14.228265
License: Public Domain

Per Curiam.

The series of medical treatments illegally rendered by defendants to the persons named in the indictment, with the exception of a single treatment by defendant Michael Scallon, were rendered in New York County. The single treatment administered by defendant Michael Scallon, at Port Washington, in the county of Nassau, to the patient Hildegarde Hutchings, had to be proven in order to complete the narrative of the course of medical treatments illegally given to this patient, the rest of which occurred in New York County. In People v. Devinny (227 N. Y. 397) the indictment, which was held to have been insufficient, failed to name the persons charged with, having been treated, and the Court of Appeals pointed out that whenever an offender has held himself ont as able to and has offered to treat a patient, there has been a completed *784offense. It is urged that the one treatment given by defendant Michael Scallon to this patient in Nassau County was a separate crime, committed exclusively in that county, and that it therefore could not be tried or given in evidence in a trial in New York County. That is not true where a course of treatments has been given to the same individual. The People ought not to be precluded from pleading and proving the whole course of treatments, so as to make a full disclosure of what occurred, merely because one of the treatments happens to have been administered by one of the defendants in another county. "Section 134 of the Code of Criminal Procedure was designed to obviate that difficulty. Counsel for the defendants did not object to the admission, as against defendant Kathryn Scallon, of the testimony concerning the treatment rendered in Nassau County by defendant Michael Scallon, nor did he regard it as of sufficient importance to make a, request that the jury be instructed to consider it only as against the defendant Michael Scallon. Such a request would have been proper, but failure to give such an insi ruction was not prejudicial and did not affect the substantial rights of defendant. Kathryn Scallon (Code Grim. Pro., § 542).
The judgments of conviction should be affirmed.