Wert v. Clutter
Wert v. Clutter
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Section 1 of the statute makes it unlawful for any person to practice, or attempt to practice, medicine, for reward or compensation, without having the qualifications therein prescribed. By the proviso two classes of persons are excepted from the operation of the act: (1) persons who lime been continuously engaged in the practice of medicine for a period of ten years; (2) persons who hme been in the continuous practice of medicine for a period of five years. The last named class is allowed two years within which to comply with the prescribed provisions. The second section of the act declares the practice, or attempt to practice, in violation of
Opinion of the Court
The only questions for decision in this ease
“ Section II. Any person living in the state of Ohio, or any person coming into said state, who shall practice medicine, or attempt to practice medicine in any of its departments, or perform or attempt to perform any surgical operation upon any person within the limits of said state, in violation of section one of this act, shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined not less than fifty nor more than one hundred dollars for such offense, and upon conviction of a second violation of this act, shall, in addition to the above fine, be imprisoned in the county jail of the county in which said offense shall have been committed, for the term of thirty days, and in no case wherein this act shall have been violated, shall any person so violating receive a compensation for services rendered; provided, that nothing herein contained shall in any way be construed to apply to any person practising dentistry.
“ Section III. This act shall take effect and be in force on and after the first day of October, 1868.”
The defendant in error claims, that the admission of his
The principal question in the case, however, is: In order to entitle the medical practitioner to a reward or compensation for his services, under the proviso in the first section, must it be shown that the period of ten years of continuous practice elapsed prior to the taking effect of the act, • or is it sufficient to show that the period was complete at the time of rendering the service for which compensation is claimed % By the purview of the first section it is made unlawful for any person to practice medicine or surgery in the state of Ohio for reward or compensation, without having graduated at a school of medicine, or producing a certificate of qualification from some state or county medical society.
The evidence of qualification here prescribed is without limit as to date—it is sufficient that it can be shown to exist at the time when the right to practice is drawn in question. By the proviso, a period of ten years’ continuous practice is made exactly equivalent to the evidence of qualification prescribed in the purview; and there is no reason, as far as the protection of the public is concerned, why a different rule should prevail as to the time when a person may qualify himself for the practice of medicine. If the experience of an empiric,
The latter clause of the proviso, “ that where persons have been in continuous practice of medicine for five years or more, they shall be allowed two years in which to comply with such provisions,” does not conflict with this view. We admit that the five years here referred to must antedate the taking effect of the act. But the case here provided for does not exclude the empiric from practicing for reward or compensation during the two years of probation, while the empiric seeking to qualify himself by continuous practice subsequent to the taking effect of the act is debarred from reward or compensation until the whole period of ten years is completed.
It must be observed that this statute does not declare the practice of an empiric, ipsofaoto, unlawful, but only such practice for reward or compensation. The provision in the penal section of the act (section 2) that “in no case wherein this act shall have been violated, shall any person so violating receive a compensation for services rendered,” does not extend the inhibitions of the first section. Hence, for this reason, the judgments below could not be disturbed, as the record does not show that the plaintiff below practiced for reward or compensation, after the passage of the act, until his period of ten years’ continuous practice was complete.
But, a majority of the court do not put their judgment of affirmance on this ground; but on the broader grounds that ten
We fully appreciate the force of the argument on the other side, that a statute should not be so construed as to create a right in one who acts in violation of its provisions. But that rule of construction does not apply in this case. This statute was not intended to create a right in any one to practice medicine. It was simply intended to prohibit the exercise of the right (which before was universal) by unqualified persons. The right remains in all persons exeejff those from whom it is taken away by the statute, and it is not taken away from a person who, at any time, has been in the continuous practice for ten years or more. Such, we think, is the manifest intent and purpose of the act when considered as a whole, and a manifest purpose cannot be defeated by any general rule of construction.
Judgment affirmed.
The term “ empiric ” is here used, as in the statute, to mean a medical practitioner who has not graduated in a medical college, or has a certificate of qualification from a medical society, or has not been engaged in the continuous practice for the period prescribed in the statute.
Reference
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