Board of Medical Examiners v. Taylor

120 S.W. 574, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 291, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 491
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 3, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 120 S.W. 574 (Board of Medical Examiners v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Medical Examiners v. Taylor, 120 S.W. 574, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 291, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 491 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

LEVY, Associate Justice.

This was a proceeding by mandamus to compel the Board of Medical Examiners for the State of Texas to issue to the appellee, Mrs. E. C. Taylor, the verification license, required by the Acts of 1907, p. 224, regulating the practice of medicine, authorizing her to practice medicine in this State.

As claimed by her petition, and admitted in the record to be true in fact, appellee E. C. Taylor presented, on February 22, 1908, to the appellant Board of Medical Examiners her application for verification license, under sec. 6 of chap. 123, Acts 1907 (Laws 30th Leg., p. 224), to practice medicine, accompanying same with a legally certified copy of license granted to her by the legally constituted Board of Medical Examiners of the Sixth Judicial District of Texas on March 15, 1889, and which had been duly recorded in the district clerk’s office of Lamar County, and filing with the said appellant affidavits of reputable citizens that she had been a regular practitioner of medicine in said county from the date of the certificate up to the present time. The appellant board refused her application for verification license to "practice medicine as applied for, but, claiming that it was the only verification license she was authorized to receive, granted, issued and tendered her a verification license to practice "obstetrics only,” which she refused.

*293 The appellant board demurred to the petition, which demurrer was by the court overruled. It was then agreed in writing by the parties “that all the allegations set up in plaintiffs’ original petition are true in fact.” Upon this admission the court entered a decree in favor of appellee, awarding mandamus.

After stating the case:—All the assignments relate to the one question involved in the appeal, and are considered together. The appellant board, in passing on the application and documents presented by the appellee for a verification license to practice medicine, as it must be assumed from the facts plead and admitted to be true, determined and found that the license granted to appellee in 1889 by the district medical board was genuine and valid, and that appellee was the person named therein, and that it had been duly recorded in the office of the district clerk of Lamar County at the time of its issuance. According to the allegation, and' admitted to be true, appellee established by proof to the appellant board “that she had been a legal and regular practitioner of medicine under said certificate from its date to the present time,” and “had been recognized as a practicing physician, engaged in the practice of medicine, had a general practice in Paris, Texas, for the past sixteen to nineteen years.” By the tender of a verification license to appellee to practice “obstetrics only” it must be assumed, as is in fact true, there being no question of fraud or improper personal conduct on appellee’s part involved, that the appellant board construed the license of appellee to authorize her to practice “obstetrics only,” and for that reason alone denied her the verification license to practice medicine. This, we think, became a question of law wherein this court would have the right of review. As was said in the case of Terrell v. Greene, 88 Texas, 547, 31 S. W., 631, Justice Brown, speaking for the court, “If a judge or other officer by the construction placed upon the law deprives a citizen of an unquestioned legal right, under circumstances that the citizen has no right to appeal, and therefore no other adequate remedy, then a court having power conferred upon it by law to issue a mandamus has the right to review the judgment or decision of the court or officer upon such question.” The legal effect to be given to the license granted the appellee in 1889 by the district medical board becomes and is the principal and controlling question in the appeal. If the license in legal effect was to authorize appellee to practice medicine under the law then "in force, then it follows, under the admitted facts, that she would be a “legal practitioner of medicine in this State, practicing under the provisions of previous laws,” and be entitled to a verification license at the hands of the appellant board. Sec. 6, chap. 133, Acts 1907. The duty of verification, imposed on the appellant by the law, is to confirm or substantiate something already done. See “Verification,” Words and Phrases, vol. 8, Black’s Law Dictionary. The power involved in the verification extends to ascertainment of the genuineness and valid existence of the license previously by law granted by authorized boards, and the identity of the person named in the license to be the person claiming and presenting the same, there being no cause *294 as defined in section 11 of the Act authorizing a refusal to issue. On the other hand, if the license in legal effect was to authorize appellee to practice “obstetrics only,” then it follows, in the case, that the duty required of appellant has been performed, and appellee is not entitled to the decree entered in the case by the court. Under the law in force in 1889, art. 3784, title 82, R. S. of 1895, it was the duty of the Board of Medical Examiners “to examine thoroughly all applicants for certificates of qualification to practice medicine in any of its branches or departments, whether such applicants are furnished with medical diplomas or not, upon the following named subjects, to wit: anatomy, physiology, pathological anatomy and" pathology, surgery, obstetrics and chemistry.” By art. 3785 it was provided: “When the board shall he satisfied as to the qualifications of an applicant they shall grant him a certificate to that effect, which certificate shall entitle the person to whom granted to practice medicine in any county, when the same has been recorded” in the office of the district clerk of the county where the applicant may reside or sojourn. Females who practice midwifery strictly as such were exempted from the Acts, and neither was the board authorized to give a certificate to such. It is clear from the provisions of the law, that this district board was only authorized to examine applicants “to practice medicine.” It is further evident from provisions of the Act that in order to obtain the certificate of qualification it was incumbent upon such applicant to have knowledge of and to satisfactorily pass an examination before the hoard upon the several subjects or branches of medical science specified in the Act. It follows, from the provisions of the law, therefore, that having passed a favorable examination on the subjects or branches named, and upon a certificate of the board to that effect, such applicant, by force of law, upon duly recording such certificate, was then “authorized to practice medicine in any county.” There is no doubt, from this emphatic language of the Act, that the legal effect of a certificate granted by the board, and the rights of the holder thereof under the same, were positively declared by law. That appellee was by the district board examined “as required by the laws of the State of Texas,” which necessarily included all the subjects named in the law, appears by the language of the certificate of the board. Even if this fact does not clearly appear from the certificate, which we think it does, still the fact of the certificate’s being given at all by the board would require us to indulge the legal presumption that the official board performed its legal duty.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W. 574, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 291, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-medical-examiners-v-taylor-texapp-1909.