THE RESULT OF THE LEGISLATION.
It is doubtless due to considerations of public policy that the statutes changing the common-law rule have been enacted;[486] but they have not proved an unalloyed benefit, and some of their features have brought about conditions which in some cases have embarrassed the administration of justice. The law in New York may be taken for illustration; it formerly cut off the safest means of ascertaining the mental condition and competency of a testator;[487] it now precludes a physician from disclosing the condition of his patient who is a lunatic or habitual drunkard,[488] though it be the most satisfactory evidence; it shuts out much testimony tending to show fraud in insurance cases;[489] it precludes a physician from stating the cause of his patient’s death,[490] though there is no longer any secrecy connected with it, for the law makes it the duty of the physician to make, for filing with the local board of health, a certificate of the probable cause of the death of a patient.[491] It has been the subject of much adverse criticism,[492] but all such considerations are properly to be addressed to the legislature and not to the courts. It seems to be the most far-reaching in its exclusion, and though it has been the longest in existence, was modified at the legislative sessions of 1891, 1892, and 1893, a fact which tends to show that there was sound reason in the criticisms.
A SYNOPSIS OF THE LAWS
OF THE
SEVERAL STATES AND TERRITORIES OF THE UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA, AND OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND, AND
OF THE NORTH AMERICAN PROVINCES OF GREAT
BRITAIN, REGULATING THE PRACTICE
OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY,
PREPARED FROM THE LATEST STATUTES.
BY
WILLIAM A. POSTE,
Late First Deputy Attorney-General of the State of New York,
AND
CHARLES A. BOSTON, Esq.,
of the New York City Bar.