Westmoreland v. Bragg
Westmoreland v. Bragg
Opinion of the Court
The “act to regulate the licensing of physicians to practise, and for other purposes therein mentioned,” (Acts of 1817, pp. 31, 33,) after declaring that no person shall be allowed, without a license, to practise physic or surgery, or any of the branches thereof, and the punishment to be incurred for practising without a license, provides in the 4th section, “ that all bonds, notes, promises and assumptions, made to any person or persons not licensed in manner hereafter mentioned, the consideration of which shall be services rendered as a physician or surgeon, in prescribing for the cure of diseases, shall be, and they are hereby declared, utterly void and of no effect.” The 9th section prohibits apothecaries from vending or exposing to sale any drugs or medicines, without previously obtaining a license to do so, and provides that “ every apothecary so vending or selling drugs or medicines, contrary to the provisions of this act, shall be liable to ail the penalties imposed by this act on physicians and surgeons practising without license.”
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.