Ex parte Mason

22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 21, 30 Ohio Dec. 139, 1919 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 31
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedJune 14, 1919
StatusPublished

This text of 22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 21 (Ex parte Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Mason, 22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 21, 30 Ohio Dec. 139, 1919 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 31 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1919).

Opinion

Darby, J.

Mabel Mason, the petitioner, alleges that she is unlawfully restrained of her liberty by Dr. A. C. Bachmeyer, superintendent of the Cincinnati General Hospital.

The respondent files his' answer admitting the detention of Mabel Mason and justifying it for the following reasons: that she had been admitted to the said hospital upon a quarantine order issued by the health officer of the city of Cincinnati acting under the directions of the acting health commissioner of Ohio. A copy of the quarantine order of the health officer of .Cincinnati is attached to the answer, and sets forth that the respondent was ordered to quarantine the said petitioner by reason of the directions of the commissioner of health, and that the said petitioner had been found or is reasonably suspected of [22]*22having a venereal disease. Also attached to the answer is the direction of the state commissioner of health to the health officer of Cincinnati directing the quarantine of the petitioner.

The state department of health was created by the act of March 31, 1917 (107.Ohio Laws, 522), and has conferred upon it “all the powers and (shall) perform all the duties now conferred and imposed by law upon the state board of health.”

The powers of the state board of health are set forth in General Code, Section 1237, as follows:

“The state board of health shall have supervision of all matters relating to the preservation of the life and health of the people, and have supreme authority in matters of quarantine which it may declare and enforce when none exists, and modify, relax or abolish when it has been established. It may make special or standing orders or regulations for preventing the spread of contagious or infectious diseases * * * and for such other sanitary matters as it deems best to control by a general rule. It may make and enforce orders in local matters when emergency exists or when the local board of health has neglected or refused to act with sufficient promptness or efficiency, or when such board has not been established as provided by law. ’1

Acting under the authority conferred upon it, the state department of health, on May 2, 1918, adopted certain rules and regulations for the prevention of venereal diseases. These rules define what are designated as venereal diseases, provide for reports of known or suspected cases of such, for instruction to patients and investigation of casés by local health officers. Buie Y is as follows:

“Examination of cases; enforcement. — City, village and township health officers are hereby empowered and directed to make or cause to be made such examinations of persons reasonably suspected of having a venereal disease as may be necessary for carrying out these regulations. Such- examinations shall be made only by regularly licensed physicians. All known prostitutes and persons associating with them shall be considered as reasonably suspected of having a venereal disease. Boards of health and health officers shall cooperate with the proper officials whose duty it is to enforce the laws against prostitution, and shall oth[23]*23erwise use every proper means for tbe repression of prostitution which, is hereby declared to be a prolific source of venereál disease. ”

It was shown upon the hearing that the petitioner is a known and common prostitute, making her livelihood by such practice in the city of Cincinnati, and that she was at the time of the h&aring infected with venereal diseases.

Rule VI of the regulations of the state board provides as follows:

“Quarantine of diseased persons. — The health officers, when directed by the state commissioner of health, shall immediately institute measures for the protection of other persons from infection by any venereally diseased person, and shall quarantine any person who has, or is reasonably suspected of having, a venereal disease whenever, in the opinion of the state commissioner of health, quarantine is necessary for the protection of the public health. In establishing quarantine the health officer shall designate and define the limits of the area in which the person known to have or reasonably suspected of having a venereal disease is to be quarantined, and no other person than the attending physician, dentist, or necessary attendant shall enter or leave the area of quarantine without the permission of the health officer.”

The order of the health officer established the quarantine in this case to be that of the area of the Cincinnati General Hospital.

On behalf of the petitioner it is claimed that the provision ■authorizing the quarantine and examination provided for by the regulations is in contravention of Article XIV, Section 1, of the Constitution of the United States, and also that it violates Article I, Section 5, of the Constitution of Ohio, which latter provides that the right of trial by jury shall be inviolate.

In Board of Health v. Greenville, 86 O. S., 1, the Supreme Court sustained an act authorizing the state board of health to require the purification of sewage and public water supplies as a valid and constitutional exercise of the police power of the state. On page 20 of the opinion the court, speaking of the propriety of declaring a law unconstitutional, uses this language:

[24]*24“A court is not authorized to adjudge a statute unconstitutional where the question of its constitutionality is at all doubtful. The question of the constitutionality of every law being first determined by the Legislature, every presumption is in favor of its constitutionality. It must therefore clearly appear that the law is in direct conflict with inhibitions of the Constitution before the court will declare it unconstitutional.”

Section 1237 heretofore referred to which fixes the general powers and duties of the state board of health gives such board and its successor, in matters pertaining to the prevention of the spread of contagious and infectious diseases and quarantine, as broad powers as could be well granted. 'While the term with reference to quarantine “supreme authority” is used, that must be understood as meaning supreme legal discretion or authority and not arbitrary power.

The question as to whether or not a jury trial should be required in such case is settled in Prescott v. State, 19 O. S., 184. The statute under consideration in that case authorized a grand jury to commit a youthful offender to the house of refuge or reform farm, instead of indicting him and causing his prosecution by the ordinary methods. It was objected in that ease that this was violative of the Constitution of Ohio and the Federal Constitution. The court said on page 197:

! ‘ The amendment to the Constitution referred to has no bearing on the case. That provision does not operate as a limitation of the power of the state governments over their own citizens, but is exclusively a ‘restriction upon federal power. This has been repeatedly decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, and in the late case of Twitchell v. Commonwealth, 7 Wall., 321, was not regarded as an open question.
“The provisions referred to in our state Constitution relate to the preservation of the right of trial by jury and the rights of the accused in criminal prosecutions. We do not regard this case as coming within the operation of either of these provisions.

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Related

Twitchell v. Commonwealth
74 U.S. 321 (Supreme Court, 1869)
State Board of Health v. Board of Trustees
110 P. 137 (California Court of Appeal, 1910)
State v. Racskowski
86 A. 606 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 21, 30 Ohio Dec. 139, 1919 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-mason-ohctcomplhamilt-1919.