Thứ Hai, 8 tháng 4, 2013

Death & Dying Cases Before the Minnesota Supreme Court - Part I



This Wednesday, the Minnesota Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in State v. Smith.  A video of the arguments will be available here.  Here is a summary of the issues.



Eddie Smith was driving a car at a speed of more than 50 miles per hour in a residential neighborhood when he hit another car in which 93-year-old Edith Schouveller was a passenger.  Smith had an alcohol concentration of .11 shortly after the accident. 



Schouveller’s spinal cord was fractured during the accident.  She spent 13 days in the hospital and was then transferred to a nursing home and rehabilitation care center.  After two days at the nursing home, she was admitted to the hospital and diagnosed with pneumonia.  Several days later, doctors determined that Schouveller required intubation.  Schouveller, however, had executed a living will with a do-not-resuscitate order specifying that she not be intubated.  Doctors did not intubate Schouveller, and she died later that evening.



After a jury trial, Smith was convicted, in part, of criminal vehicular homicide.  The court of appeals affirmed Smith’s conviction.



On appeal to the supreme court, Smith raises the following issues in his brief:  (1)  whether the State failed to prove that Smith caused the death of Schouveller; (2) whether Schouveller’s do-not-resuscitate order was a superseding cause of Schouveller’s death; and (3) whether Smith is entitled to a new trial because the district court failed to instruct the jury on the effect of a finding that something was a superseding cause of Schouveller’s death.  



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