Skip to main content Skip to office menu Skip to footer
Capital IconMinnesota Legislature

Office of the Revisor of Statutes

390.33 APPOINTMENT OF MEDICAL EXAMINER; INQUEST.
    Subdivision 1. Medical examiner appointment. A county board shall appoint as permanent
county medical examiner a doctor of medicine or osteopathy licensed to practice pursuant to
chapter 147, or similar laws in any other state. A county medical examiner shall perform the
duties imposed upon medical examiners by sections 390.31 to 390.35 and serve at the pleasure of
the county board. The county board shall pay the medical examiner a salary to be determined
by the board and provide for the payment of the medical examiner's expenses incurred in the
performance of duties.
    Subd. 2. Subpoena power. The judge exercising probate jurisdiction may issue subpoenas
for witnesses, returnable immediately or at a time and place the judge directs. The persons served
with subpoenas shall be allowed the same fees, the sheriff shall enforce their attendance in the
same manner, and they shall be subject to the same penalties as if they had been served with a
subpoena in behalf of the state in a criminal case before a district court judge.
    Subd. 3. Oath. The following oath shall be administered to the witnesses by the judge: "Do
you solemnly swear that the evidence you shall give to this inquest concerning the death under
investigation shall be the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help you God?"
    Subd. 4. Proceeding records. The testimony of the inquest and all records of the proceedings
before the judge exercising probate jurisdiction must be kept as a permanent record of the court.
The record or any portion of it must be transcribed upon order of the court or upon the request of
any witness who shall pay the county treasurer the cost of the transcript or portion of it determined
by the judge. The record of the inquest proceedings and the report may not be used in evidence in
a civil action arising out of the death for which the inquest was ordered.
    Subd. 5. Witnesses. If the judge finds that murder, manslaughter, or assault has been
committed, the judge shall hold over by recognizance any witnesses the judge thinks proper to
appear and testify at the next term of the district court at which indictment for the offense can be
found. The judge shall return to the court the inquisition, written evidence, and all recognizances
and examinations taken, and may commit to the county jail any witness who refuses to recognize
as the judge directs.
    Subd. 6. Warrants. If a person charged by the inquest as having committed the offense is
not in custody, the judge may issue process for apprehension of the person. The warrant must
be made returnable before any court having jurisdiction in the case. The court shall proceed in
the same manner as in similar cases.
    Subd. 7.[Repealed, 1980 c 509 s 149]
    Subd. 8. Fingerprints; identification data. Each sheriff shall have fingerprinted all deceased
persons in the county whose identity is not immediately established. Within 24 hours, the sheriff
shall forward the fingerprints, fingerprint records, and other identification data to the Bureau of
Criminal Apprehension. The superintendent of the bureau shall prescribe the form of these reports.
    Subd. 9. Coroner duties transfer to medical examiner. Any duty of the coroner imposed
by law prior to May 18, 1971, and not transferred by sections 390.31 to 390.35 or some other
provision of law is transferred to the medical examiner of the county in which the coroner was
elected or appointed.
History: 1971 c 367 s 3; 1983 c 359 s 59,60; 1985 c 265 art 7 s 1; 1995 c 189 s 8; 1996 c
277 s 1; 2006 c 260 art 5 s 12

Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes