Alexander v. Bennett

298 P.2d 823, 5 Utah 2d 163, 1956 Utah LEXIS 186
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1956
DocketNo. 8471
StatusPublished

This text of 298 P.2d 823 (Alexander v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Bennett, 298 P.2d 823, 5 Utah 2d 163, 1956 Utah LEXIS 186 (Utah 1956).

Opinion

VAN COTT, District Judge.

The petitioners in this matter have filed with this Court their petition seeking to prohibit the defendants from revoking, cancel-ling, or calling in their licenses heretofore issued to them as naturopathic physicians. There are, however, two of the plaintiffs who have passed the requisite examinations as naturopathic physicians and are seeking to have issued to them licenses similar in scope to those held by the other petitioners. The stipulation of facts as set forth by the parties hereto show that the main group of plaintiffs or petitioners have held licenses for a great number of years which allow them to practice their profession as nature pathic physicians together with the privi[165]*165lege, and what they claim is their right, to use in their professional capacity the use of drugs and to perform minor surgery and the practice of obstetrics.

Over the years from 1939 there have been opinions from the Attorney General’s Office which have interpreted the statutes involved in this matter in a manner that is favorable to the position of the petitioners and pursuant to these opinions the Department of Registration has issued the licenses heretofore mentioned. Prior, however, to said time the Department took a contrary view of the statutes and issued the licenses in accordance therewith. It is because of this practice since 1939 that the petitioners assert that the doctrine of contemporaneous interpretation should apply to the construction given to the statutes in question and that their rights in the licenses as they now exist should be recognized by this Court as being a property right not subject to change or interruption.

While the doctrine as advocated by counsel for petitioners is recognized as a fundamental principle of law and has the force of raising a strong presumption, that such construction, if uniform and long acquiesced in, rightly interprets the statute we find that such interpretation has not always been uniform as above mentioned and therefore has not been long acquiesced in,1 nor are the statutes in question ambiguous and of doubtful meaning.2

For an answer to the problem presented it is necessary to construe the statutory law applicable to the matter at hand.

Covering the matter of who is entitled to practice medicine in its broadest sense is the following statute, Title 58, Chapter 12, Section 3, Utah Code Annotated, 1953.

“License — Several classes. — The following classes of licenses shall be issued:

"(1) To practice medicine and surgery in all branches thereof.

“(2) (a) To practice as an osteopathic physician without operative surgery in accordance with the tenets of a professional school of osteopathy recognized by the department of registration.

“(b) To practice as an osteopathic physician and surgeon in accordance with the tenets of a professional school of osteopathy recognized by the department of registration.

“(3) To practice the treatment of human ailments without the use of drugs or medicine and without operative surgery in accordance with the tenets of the professional school, college or institution of which the applicant is a graduate as designated in his application for license; if the applicant for a license under subsection (2) or under this subsection successfully passes the examination in obstetrics the license shall also set forth this right to practice obstetrics.

“(4) To practice obstetrics.”

It will be observed that section 3 thereof deals with the general and overall right of [166]*166the petitioners to follow their profession. It will be noted that the right to treat human ailments is confined to such methods as are known and practiced by these practitioners without the use of drugs or medicine and without the use of operative surgery (be it minor or major).3 It is then provided that in addition to the right to practice as aforesaid and if the practitioner successfully passes the examination in obstetrics the license shall then include this subject.

From a reading of the statute it is apparent that the use of drugs and medicine and operative surgery is explicitly forbidden to these petitioners except as they may qualify for the use thereof by some method otherwise provided.

It is the contention of the petitioners that the tenets of their profession have opened up the field of naturopathy to the extent that they are qualified to use drugs and perform minor surgery and to practice obstetrics. To say this is to leave in the hands of this profession the right to repeal the statute which governs their practice and thereby customize and shape the statute to fit them, rather than to require them to fit section 1 of the statute covering the “practice of medicine and surgery in all branches thereof.” It is a doctrine advanced by a profession of bending the law to their determination of what shall be the tenets and requirements of a profession in place of the individual conforming to the prerequisites of the legislature. It is fallacious in its principle and we are unable and unwilling to lend our approval thereto.

The defendants do not deny that the petitioners have as a part of their license as naturopathic physicians the privilege of practicing obstetrics, provided they meet the prerequisite condition of passing the examination necessary to the carrying on of this part of treating human ailments. The contention between the parties arises when it comes to who shall give the examination and the scope of its coverage.

The petitioners assert that the examination should be given by their committee of naturopaths and as a part of the examination on that subject. It is the belief of the defendants that the subject of obstetrics should be examined upon as though it were being given to an applicant on the subject of obstetrics only. We believe that the legislature has answered this problem by the statutes pertinent to the matter.

Title 58, Chapter 1, Section 5 of the Utah Code Annotated, 1953, covers the mode of examination for professions by a committee of their own respective professions and is so far as applicable as follows:

“Exercise of department functions — By director — Assistance of representative committees for professions, trades, or occupations — Number and qualifications of members.

“The functions of the department of registration shall be exercised by the director of registration under the supervision of the [167]*167commission of the department of business regulation and, when so provided, in collaboration with and with the assistance of representative committees of the several professions, trades and occupations as follows : * * *

“(9) For practitioners of medicine and surgery in all branches thereof, and for the practice of obstetrics only, a committee of five persons each of whom shall be a licensed practitioner of medicine and surgery in all branches thereof in this state and a graduate of a chartered medical college of recognized standing. * * *

“(11) For practitioners of naturopathy, a committee of three members, each of whom shall be a graduate of a school of natur-opathy of standing recognized by the department of registration.”

The above two subsections of the statute deal directly with the method of examining naturopaths and those desiring to practice obstetrics only.

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298 P.2d 531 (Utah Supreme Court, 1956)
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203 P. 651 (Utah Supreme Court, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 P.2d 823, 5 Utah 2d 163, 1956 Utah LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-bennett-utah-1956.