Horton v. Clark

293 S.W. 362, 316 Mo. 770, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 697
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 15, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 293 S.W. 362 (Horton v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horton v. Clark, 293 S.W. 362, 316 Mo. 770, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 697 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*774 RAGLAND, J.

Injunction. On the 9th day of June, 1925, there was filed with the State Board of Health a document of which the following is a copy:

‘ ‘ COMPLAINT
“To the State Board of Health:
“Comes the undersigned Ross Hopkins and alleges and charges that one Ray Beeman Horton has been for some time and is now engaged in the practice of medicine and surgery at Purdy, Barry County, Missouri, under and by virtue of a license or certificate granted to him by the Missouri State Board of Health under the date of October 18, 1922; that said license or certificate so granted was secured by false and fraudulent statements and representations made by said Ray Beeman Horton to the Missouri State Board of Health, in that said Ray Beeman Horton stated under oath in his application to the State Board of Health for a license to practice medicine and surgery in this State dated August 29, 1922, that, among .other things, he attended the Purdy High School, Purdy, Missouri, for four years during the years 1912-13, 1913-14 and 19.15-16,' from Avhieh institution he claims to have been graduated on May 24, 1916, and that he attended the St. Louis College of Physicians and Surgeons from October 5, 1918, to May 15, 1919, from October 1, 1919, to June 2, 1920, from October 10, 1920, to May 2, 1921, and the Kansas City College of Medicine and Surgery from September, 1921 to May, 1922.
“Whereas in truth and in fact, the said Ray Beeman Horton did not attend the Purdy High School during the years 1912-13, 1913-14, 1915-16, nor was he graduated from the Purdy High School on May 24, 1916, as aforesaid, under the ordinary and regular procedure, but his record in that school upon which the Missouri State Board of Health admitted him to examination was fraudulent and pro *775 cured through fraud, and futhermore he did not continuously and regularly attend the St. Louis College of Physicians and Surgeons from October 5, 1918, to May 15, 1919, nor from October 1, 1919, to June 2, 1920, as aforesaid, which the Ray Beeman Horton then and there well knew.
“Ross Hopkins.”
Thereafter the State Board of Health caused to be issued and served upon the said Ray Beeman Horton (plaintiff herein) a written notice, in words and figures as follows:
“State Board of Health of the State of Missouri, Jefferson City, Missouri, 30th day of June, 1925.
“Notice To AppeaR:
“In the Matter of Doctor Bay Beeman Horton.
“Doctor Horton, Take Notice:
•■“That there has been filed with the State Board of Health oH Missouri, at Jefferson City, on the 9th day of June, 1925, a certain complaint a copy of wdiich is hereto attached and made part of this notice.
‘‘Wherefore, you are hereby notified to appear before the said State Board of Health at the city of St. Louis at the office of Health Commissioner on the 23rd day of July, 1925, at 9 a. m., to answer the said complaint.
“James Stewart, M. D.
“James Stewart,
“(Seal) Secretary, State Board of Health.”

The date of the service is not shovm by the record here, but after the service the hearing on the charges referred to in the1 notice was, by agreement presumably, set over until the 17th day of September, 1925.

On September 12, 1925, plaintiff instituted the present proceeding by filing in the Circuit Court of Cole County his bill in equity wherein he seeks to have the defendants, who compose the State Board of Health, “perpetually enjoined and restrained from the hearing of said purported complaint and from conducting said inquiry, hearing or trial. ’ ’ The grounds upon which the bill predicates the right to such relief are as followst: (1) The complaint is insufficient in law to confer jurisdiction; and (2) the statute under which the defendants are purporting to act is unconstitutional.

A temporary restraining order was granted, but on final hearing it was dissolved and plaintiff’s bill dismissed. From such judgment he appeals.

Other pertinent facts will be noted in the course of the opinion.

I. 1. The first point made against the complaint is that it was not verified by the oath of the complainant. The contention is based *776 upon precedents to the effect that, regardless of statutory requirements, proceedings for the disbarment of an attorney at law must be instituted by verified information. Those precedents are not binding or even persuasive in a case such as this. Disbarment proceedings are not governed exclusively by statute. Independent of any statute on the subject courts have the inherent power to disbar attorneys; and a statute, where there is one, is not regarded as restrictive, but merely as declaratory of the common law so far as it goes. [State v. Gebhardt, 87 Mo. App. 548.] The power to revoke the license of one who is thereby authorized to practice medicine and surgery, on the other hand, does not exist apart from statute. In this State the statute (Sec. 7336, R. S. 1919) is not only the sole source of the power to revoke, but it prescribes and regulates exclusively the procedure to be followed in the exercise of the power. Looking then to the statute we find no requirement that a proceeding to revoke a license to practice medicine shall be instituted by the filing of a verified complaint, or by the filing of any complaint or information whatever. Evidently it contemplates that the State Board of Health may act upon any information, from whatever source and however communicated, which it may deem trustworthy. It is only necessary that the written notice provided for “contain an exact statement of the charges.”

2. It is insisted that the complaint is insufficient in law on the further ground that its charges, if true, would not authorize the State Board of Health to revoke appellant’s license. Por a more precise statement of this insistence we quote from plaintiff’s bill:

“When he, plaintiff, made his application for examination . . . , the law did not require . . . attend-anee either at a high school or a medical college for any certain length of time . . . and therefore any statement in his application for said license', as to the time of his attendance at a medical college or a high school, could not have been required by said State Board of Health of the State of Missouri, and was not necessary in order to take said examination and to receive said license, and therefore could not have in any way been fraudulent as alleged in said complaint, and therefore said defendants, composing the State Board of Health of the State of Missouri, have no authority on account of the statement made in such application to revoke his said license.” The contention must be examined in the light of the governing statute, the relevant portions of which are as follows:

Section 7332, Revised Statutes 1919 (as amended, Laws 1921, p. 472) : “. . .

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Bluebook (online)
293 S.W. 362, 316 Mo. 770, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-clark-mo-1927.