Commonwealth v. Jobe

91 Pa. Super. 110, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 151
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 14, 1927
DocketAppeal 139
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 91 Pa. Super. 110 (Commonwealth v. Jobe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Jobe, 91 Pa. Super. 110, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 151 (Pa. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Gawthrop, J.,

Appellant is under conviction and sentence in the Court of Quarter Sessions of Butler County under a hill of indictment containing counts charging that within the jurisdiction of that court and without first having obtained a certificate of licensure from the Board of Medical Education and Licensure, as required by *112 the Act of June 3,1911, P. L. 639, and its supplements and amendments, he (1) engaged in the practice of medicine and surgery, (2) held himself out as a practitioner in medicine and surgery, (3) assumed the title of doctor of medicine and surgery, (4) diagnosed diseases, (5) treated diseases by the use of medicine and surgery, and (6) held himself out as being able to diagnose and treat diseases. Sentence was imposed on the first count. He admits that he is a doctor of chiropractic, and as such has been engaged in the practice of medicine and surgery in the City and County of Butler for several years.

His first contention is, as we understand it, that the Act of 1911, with its supplements and amendments, does not apply to those persons who are engaged in that division of the healing art denominated chiropractic; that it provides no method by which a chiropractor may secure a license as such; and that, therefore, the penal clause cannot be invoked as to him, because he cannot properly be convicted “for not having a license which he could not get.” The contention is wholly devoid of merit. It is based upon the false premise that the legislation does not regulate the “profession” of chiropractic, or provide for licensing chiropractors. True, it does not provide for licensing chiropractors as such. But, if anything is well settled by the decisions of the Supreme Court and this Court, it is that this legislation provides a general system for the regulation of the practice of the art of healing comprised in the words medicine and surgery, taken in their most comprehensive sense, whether with aid of drugs or any other remedial agencies whatever. (See Com. v. Martindell, 82 Pa. Superior Ct. 417; Com. v. Seibert, 69 Pa. Superior Ct. 271; 262 Pa. 345; Com. v. Byrd, 64 Pa. Superior Ct. 108) As appellant concedes that he practiced the art of healing and did not prove that he is one of those who are expressly exempted from the requirements of the statute as to a *113 certificate, of licensure, the general terms of the statute applied to him. We may repeat our words in Com. v. Martindell, supra, that “the record shows no infringement of any right under the due process clause of the 14th amendment: Collins v. Texas, 223 U. S. 288, and cases there cited.” Specialists in, or advocates of, any particular branch or division of medicine or surgery, by whatever newly coined word it may be known, should know by this time that the declared policy of our laws regulating medicine and surgery is that no person shall engage in the practice of that profession in the Commonwealth without complying with the statutory requirements as to professional qualifications and that efforts to evade those requirements are engaged in at their peril.

The second contention is that the court below should have quashed the indictment. No fault is found with the information. The transcript of the alderman as filed shows these facts: Pursuant to a proper information charging appellant with the offenses laid in the indictment a warrant for his arrest was issued. He was arrested and gave bail for a hearing. At his request the hearing was adjourned until November 22,1926, at ten o ’clock A. M., when the prosecutor and the district attorney, as well as counsel for appellant, appeared. At the request of the district attorney the hearing was continued until two o’clock P. M., when the prosecutor and the district attorney again appeared, but appellant and his counsel failed to appear. Whereupon, appellant’s recognizance was forfeited and the hearing was continued until November 24th between the hours of seven and eight P. M. When that time arrived appellant and his counsel again failed to appear, but the Commonwealth called its witnesses and the alderman adjudged the testimony sufficient to hold appellant to answer at the next term of the Court of Quarter Sessions. The record shows that at the next term of said court the district attorney presented a *114 petition for leave to lay a bill of indictment before the grand jury charging appellant with the offenses named in the information. The request was granted and a true bill found. When the case came on for trial and, before plea entered, counsel for appellant moved that the district attorney “elect upon which record he stands, the district attorney’s petition or the alderman’s return.” When the district attorney answered that he stood on the entire record, the learned trial judge denied the motion and noted an exception for appellant. Then followed appellant’s motion to quash the indictment setting up, inter alia, that the district attorney’s petition for permission to lay a bill of indictment before the grand jury does not show such an emergency as to require such a proceeding; that the petition was not sworn to as required by the rules of the court below; and that the proceedings before the alderman in the absence of appellant were had without notice to him or his counsel and the return thereof to the Court of Quarter Sessions was irregular and insufficient as the basis of an indictment. It is urged upon us that the indictment should have been quashed because of a duplicity of record, that is, because the Commonwealth was not required to elect to stand upon either the return of the alderman or the district attorney’s petition for permission to lay an indictment before the grand jury. We fail to see any merit in this contention. Either the transcript of the magistrate or the order of the court is a sufficient basis for an indictment. The fact that there are two bases for the indictment, not repugnant, does not compel the abandonment of either, and the district attorney was justified in taking the position that he stood on the entire record. Nor is appellant in a position to urge the insufficiency of the proceedings before the aider-man and the transcript thereof as returned to the quarter sessions. The transcript shows that his voluntary absence prevented the alderman from bind *115 ing him over or committing him to jail in default thereof and there is no evidence to contradict it. The Commonwealth had the right to proceed with the hearing in appellant’s absence. The case is not different from that in which a defendant who is present elects to waive a preliminary hearing. Such a waiver does not prevent the Commonwealth from proceeding with the same and calling its witnesses: Com. v. Keck, 148 Pa. 639.

¡Equally without merit is the complaint that the court below was without authority to authorize the district attorney to prefer the indictment before the grand jury without a previous binding over or commitment. This power is properly exercised whenever the exigencies of the case and the public interests may reasonably require such action to be taken: Com. v. Green, 126 Pa. 531. It is a matter largely within the discretion of the court: Com. v. Ramsey, 42 Pa. Superior Ct. 25; Com. v. Rothensies, 64 Pa. Superior Ct. 395.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Strunack v. Ecker
424 A.2d 1355 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1981)
Marco Industries, Inc. v. United Steelworkers of America
401 Pa. 299 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1960)
Commonwealth v. O'BRIEN
124 A.2d 666 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1956)
Commonwealth v. Russo
111 A.2d 359 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1955)
Commonwealth ex rel. Sholter v. Claudy
90 A.2d 343 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1952)
Palmer v. O'Hara
58 A.2d 574 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1947)
Pennsylvania Chiropractors' Ass'n v. State Board of Medical Education & Licensure
41 Pa. D. & C. 519 (Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas, 1941)
Christy v. State Board of Education & Licensure
14 A.2d 292 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)
Commonwealth v. Stramara
25 Pa. D. & C. 503 (Schuylkill County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1935)
Steinbach v. Metzger
63 F.2d 74 (Third Circuit, 1933)
Commonwealth v. Freed
163 A. 679 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1932)
Commonwealth v. Allison
156 A. 812 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1931)
Commonwealth ex rel. Woods v. Pennsylvania Society of Naturopaths
15 Pa. D. & C. 798 (Dauphin County Court of Common Pleas, 1930)
Long v. Metzger, S. B. M. E., Etc.
152 A. 572 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1930)
Commonwealth v. Howard C. Long
100 Pa. Super. 150 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1930)
Commonwealth v. Heffernan
12 Pa. D. & C. 331 (Delaware County Court of Quarter Sessions, 1929)
Commonwealth v. Hastings
94 Pa. Super. 389 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 Pa. Super. 110, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-jobe-pasuperct-1927.