Fealy v. City of Birmingham

73 So. 296, 15 Ala. App. 367, 1916 Ala. App. LEXIS 202
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 19, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 73 So. 296 (Fealy v. City of Birmingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fealy v. City of Birmingham, 73 So. 296, 15 Ala. App. 367, 1916 Ala. App. LEXIS 202 (Ala. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

*371 EVANS, J.

This appeal is prosecuted from a judgment convicting appellant of practicing medicine without having first obtained a certificate from the state board of medical examiners, contrary to an ordinance of appellee.

(1) Numerous errors are assigned upon the record; but a number of them are not noticed in the brief of appellant. Such assignments as counsel ignore, we treat as having been waived and pretermit discussion thereof. — -Johnson’s Case, 152 Ala. 93, 44 South. 671; Rosenau v. Powell, 184 Ala. 396, 63 South. 1020.

(2-7) Error cannot be predicated upon the refusal of the trial court to quash an indictment or complaint, as it is within the irrevisable discretion of the court whether it will put defendant to his demurrer or plea in abatement, as the case may be.— Josiah Clark’s Case, 14 Ala. App. 633, 71 South. 291; Johnson’s Case, 134 Ala. 54, 32 South. 724. The appellant had the benefit, however, of the same questions on demurrer that were urged on the motion to quash. We are of opinion that the complaint set forth an offense sufficiently pleaded, and is not subject to the infirmities claimed in the demurrers.

(8) By a blanket, or omnibus, provision of Ordinance No. 181, city of Birmingham, all misdemeanors against the laws of the state are also made offenses against that city. This same ordinance (No. 181) was upheld in Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Smith, 175 Ala. 260, 57 South. 29. The statute against practicing medicine without having obtained a certificate from the state board of medical examiners is to be found in Code, § 7564, which makes it a misdemeanor for any person, without such certificate, “to treat or offer to treat diseases of human beings by any system of treatment -whatsoever.” The charge here (omitting time and venue) is that appellant “did treat or offer to treat N. R. Keeling, a human being, of and for gallstones, organic heart trouble, or other diseases of human beings without having first obtained a certificate of qualification from the state board of medical examiners, against the laws and ordinances of the city of Birmingham.” It has been frequently held that in charging a statutory offense, the offense is sufficiently pleaded if set forth in the language of its creation. — Mason and Franklin’s Case, 42 Ala. 543; Yancy’s Case, 63 Ala. 141; Trayler’s Case, 100 Ala. 142, 14 South. 634; Johnson’s Case, 152 Ala. 46, 44 South. 670; Kimbell’s Case, 165 Ala. 118, 51 South. 16.

*372 (9) It is objected that the complaint was not sworn to. The record does not disclose the affidavit before the recorder of the-city of Birmingham; but the complaint filed in the circuit court. The procedure in misdemeanor appeals from county courts or justices of the peace (and appeals from recorders’ courts, in the-.absence of special provision, fall within the latter classification) is that the case is tried de novo, at which “a brief statement of the cause of complaint” signed by the solicitor shall be filed. Seethe following sections of the Code, in the order named: 1451, 6744, 6730. The design and purpose of such complaint is to definitely apprise the defendant of the nature and cause of the accusation, and it is not intended that it should be verified. The procedure presupposes a valid affidavit in the recorder’s court; at least it was the right of the defendant to demand a verified complaint in that forum, and his failure in that behalf has been construed as a waiver, and that the objection came too late upon the trial in the circuit court.- — Vide Aderhold v. Anniston, 99 Ala. 521, 12 South. 472; McKinstry v. Tuscaloosa, 172 Ala. 344, 54 South. 629; Turner v. Lineville, 2 Ala. App. 454, 56 South. 603.

(10) Wé are not impressed with the demurrers challenging the constitutionality of the ordinance; the regulation of the practice of medicine is a valid exercise of the police power. — 30 Cyc. 1547 (A), 8 Cyc. 900 (i) ; Brook’s Case, 88 Ala. 122, 6 South. 902; Bell’s Case, 104 Ala. 79, 15 South. 557.

(11-13) It is insisted that the trial court erred in sustaining demurrers to defendant’s special pleas numbered second and third. (The reporter will set the pleas out.) The matter raised by these special pleas was equally available under the plea of not guilty; and, even assumnig, for the sake of argument, that the demurrers were improperly sustained, the error would be without injury (Beauvoir Club v. State, 148 Ala. 643, 652, 12 South. 1040, 121 Am. St. Rep. 82) ; but we do not think the demurrers were improperly sustained. The question to be determined is not whether defendant practiced his religion in treating Keeling, but whether defendant practiced medicine, within the meaning of the statute. Assuming that one brings himself within the statute and practices medicine without a certificate of qualification, he is none the less guilty because in so doing he also practiced his religion. The regulation of the practice of medicine is a police regulation for the protection of the public; it does not interfere with the exercise of religious liberty; it merely safeguards the *373 lives and health of the public against the use and employment of dangerous agencies in the hands of the unlearned and unpracticed in the science and art of medicine. Whether an act is or is not embraced within the act as practicing medicine depends upon the latitude of interpretation of the act. Our statute is extremely broad; its language is: “Any person who treats or offers to treat disease of human beings * * * by any system of treatment whatsoever.”

Under this statute, I apprehend, any agency of supposed therapeutic value set in motion with the design to cure, prevent, or alleviate human disease or suffering of body or mind by one who receives a quid pro quo for such service, would be comprehended within its terms; not necessarily that there should be an employment of drugs or surgical or mechanical appliances. Physicians in some cases ascribe a therapeutic value or efficiency to. the power of mental suggestion; would the physician, in employing such agency, be any the less practicing his profession? We think not. In those cases, however, where no charge is made for the service, and recourse is had merely to prayer, without the employment of material or human agencies, it cannot be said that the person invoking divine interposition in behalf of another is treating or offering to treat diseases of human beings by any system within the meaning of the statute, and cannot be said to be practicing medicine.

(14) In the instant case, defendant not only employed prayer and the laying on of hands, but, if Keeling’s version be accepted,, defendant put his ear over Keeling’s heart and examined him somewhat in the region of the kidneys and liver, and rubbed him about the affected parts.

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Bluebook (online)
73 So. 296, 15 Ala. App. 367, 1916 Ala. App. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fealy-v-city-of-birmingham-alactapp-1916.