In Re Revocation of Certificate or License of Reno

61 P.2d 1036, 57 Nev. 314, 1937 Nev. LEXIS 8
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1937
Docket3163
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 61 P.2d 1036 (In Re Revocation of Certificate or License of Reno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Revocation of Certificate or License of Reno, 61 P.2d 1036, 57 Nev. 314, 1937 Nev. LEXIS 8 (Neb. 1937).

Opinion

*319 OPINION

By the Court,

Taber, J.:

This is an appeal from an order of the Second judicial district court, Washoe County, affirming a decision of *320 the state board of medical examiners revoking appellant’s certificate to practice medicine and surgery in the State of Nevada.

In August 1935, the chief of police of the city of Reno filed a complaint in the justice’s court of Reno township charging appellant with a violation of that portion of section 10212 N. C. L. which provides that “any physician, or other person, knowing that any common prostitute is afflicted with any infectious or contagious venereal disease, who fails to immediately notify the police authorities of the town, city or place, where such prostitute is at the time of the discovery of the existence of such disease, is guilty of a misdemeanor.” At the trial before a jury of twelve, appellant was found guilty, the verdict recommending leniency. Appellant (defendant in the justice’s court) was sentenced to pay a fine of $250. He paid the fine and did not appeal.

In September 1935, the- district attorney of Washoe County filed a complaint against appellant with the state board of medical examiners, praying that appellant’s certificate to practice medicine and surgery be revoked. This complaint charged that appellant had been guilty of unprofessional conduct in two particulars: (1) Willful disobedience of the law; and (2) conviction of an offense involving moral turpitude. Section 4101 N.C.L., as amended, Statutes of Nevada 1931, c. 206, pp. 346, 347, provides in part that the board of medical examiners “may refuse a certificate to any applicant guilty of unprofessional conduct, and may revoke any certificate for like cause. The words ‘unprofessional conduct,’ as used in this act, are declared to mean: * * * Willful disobedience of the law, or of the rules and regulations of the state board of health; conviction of any offense involving moral turpitude.” The district attorney’s complaint charged that appellant’s willful disobedience of the law consisted in his violation of said provision of section 10212 N. C. L., and further charged that the offense of which appellant was convicted in the justice’s court, as aforesaid, was one involving moral *321 turpitude. After a hearing on said charges the board of medical examiners on the 3d day of February 1936, revoked appellant’s certificate to practice medicine and surgery in the State of Nevada. Appellant petitioned the district court to review said decision, and that court, after doing so, affirmed the decision of the board. Said proceedings in the district court were had pursuant to the following provision of section 4101 N. C. L, as amended, Statutes of Nevada 1931, c. 206, p. 348: “In all cases where a certificate is revoked the decision of the board resulting in such revocation, together with a transcript of the findings, shall be filed with the clerk of the district court of the county in which the certificate to practice has been recorded. Any person whose certificate has been revoked may, within sixty days after filing of said certified copy of said decision and findings, petition said district court to review said decision or to reverse or modify, and upon such review the burden shall be upon the petitioner to show wherein such decision is erroneous or unlawful.” It is from said district court order affirming the decision of said board that this appeal has been taken.

Appellant contends that the action of the board of examiners was and is wholly void for two reasons: First, that the word “law” as used in the expression “willful disobedience of the law” (section 4101 N. C. L., as amended) is limited in its meaning to laws included in the act to create a state board of health, sections 5235-5276 N. C. L. Second, that the offense of which he was convicted in the justice’s court was not one involving moral turpitude.

With reference to the first contention, we are not called upon to decide whether the board of examiners would have the power to revoke a physician’s certificate upon the. ground that he had willfully violated, let us say, some provision of the state fish and game law. We do hold, however, that willful disobedience of the statute requiring immediate report by a physician of a prostitute afflicted with a contagious or infectious venereal *322 disease comes within the meaning of “willful disobedience of the law,” as those word's are used in said section 4101 N. C. L., as amended, and that the word “law” in the above-quoted clause does not refer exclusively to the said act creating a state board of health. Notifying the police authorities of a prostitute afflicted with a contagious or infectious venereal disease is a matter directly connected with the professional conduct of a physician.

Whether the misdemeanor of which appellant was convicted in the justice’s court was an offense involving moral turpitude depends, in our opinion, upon the circumstances under which it was committed. It is easily conceivable that a physician of the most ethical type, knowing a prostitute to be afflicted with such a disease, and being about to report the case immediately to the police authorities, might have his attention distracted, before actually doing so, by reason of some emergency, and then forget the matter for several days. ' Under such circumstances the fact that he unintentionally overlooked reporting the case to the police authorities would not be a defense in a prosecution under the provision of said section 10212 N. C. L., because the mere failure to notify the police authorities immediately constitutes the offense, regardless of whether such failure be willful, intentional, or otherwise. No moral turpitude, however, would be involved in such a case.

It seems to us that whether the conduct complained of by the district attorney before the board of examiners constituted willful disobedience of the law depends to a large extent upon the same considerations as the question whether the offense of which appellant was convicted in the justice’s court was an offense involving moral turpitude. The offense defined in section 10212 N. C. L. does hot necessarily involve moral turpitude, nor is disobedience to that law necessarily willful. The important questions, therefore, are whether appellant’s disobedience to the aforesaid provision of *323 section 10212 N. C. L. was willful and whether the offense of which he was convicted in the justice’s court was committed under such circumstances as to involve moral turpitude.

We cannot go behind the verdict of the jury for the purpose of ascertaining whether appellant’s conviction in the justice’s court was supported by the evidence. Appellant had the right to appeal to the district court and there have the charge against him tried de novo. Having paid his fine, however, and not having appealed, the district court on review was, and this court on appeal is, foreclosed from any inquiry as to whether the evidence at the trial in the justice’s court was sufficient to support the verdict of the jury.

The law does not permit the board of examiners to arbitrarily revoke a certificate to practice medicine or surgery.

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Bluebook (online)
61 P.2d 1036, 57 Nev. 314, 1937 Nev. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-revocation-of-certificate-or-license-of-reno-nev-1937.