Jones v. Kansas State Board of Medical Registration & Examination

208 P. 639, 111 Kan. 813, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 354
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 8, 1922
DocketNo. 24,321
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 208 P. 639 (Jones v. Kansas State Board of Medical Registration & Examination) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Kansas State Board of Medical Registration & Examination, 208 P. 639, 111 Kan. 813, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 354 (kan 1922).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

The plaintiff, Albert D. Jones, jr., brought this action in the district court to compel the defendant, The Kansas State Board of Medical Registration and Examination, to permit him to take the examination for a license to practice his profession as a physician and surgeon in this state.

The district court denied the writ of mandamus prayed for, and plaintiff appeals.

The facts touching plaintiff’s qualifications are not in dispute. Jones is a resident of Topeka, 27 years old, of good moral character, and has studied medicine and surgery for four years during terms of not less than six months each year, and has paid the examination fee, and otherwise conformed to the rules prescribed by the [814]*814defendant board for candidates for examination, except on one point which will require careful statement herein.

It appears that there is in this country an unofficial organization known as the-American Medical Association, the membership of which and the purpose of which are not disclosed, but which we may presume to consist of eminent men in the medical profession who are prompted by a laudable desire to elevate the standard of their profession and the standard of medical schools; and this association has classified the medical colleges of this country into three groups, A, B, and C. Class “A” colleges are those whose entrance requirements, courses of study, teaching staffs and equipment and the like are of a satisfactory standard of excellence. Class “B” colleges are of a lower grade of excellence but which may shortly attain to first-class standards.

Class “C” medical polleges are simply those which refuse to countenance any inspection, supervision or meddling with their collegiate work by any representative of this unofficial “American Medical Association,” and,as to which colleges this so-called association has no authentic data. These class “C” colleges do permit and invite all state boards of medical examiners to visit and inspect their collegiate work, and the defendant board has that privilege.

The Kansas City College of Medicine & Surgery, which is the school plaintiff attended and from which he was graduated, is a class “C” college. It repudiates the unofficial suzerainty of the American Medical Association, but permits and invites, inspection by official boards of medical examiners, including the defendant board. The latter has not inspected this college since 1917, at which time it approved its qualifications and equipment and allowed some of its graduates to take the state examination.

In 1918 the defendant board promulgated a rule:

“That- nothing but ‘A’ class colleges be recognized after February 15, 1922, and in the meantime graduates from class 'B’ schools will be permitted to take the examination until February 15, 1922, but no recognition hereafter will be given a college in class ‘C’.”

The gist of plaintiff’s contention is that the defendant had no power to promulgate this rule, nor to prescribe qualifications for candidates for examination in addition to those prescribed by statute.

The powers conferred upon the state board are found in article [815]*81524 of chapter 108, General Statutes of 1915, §§ 10197-10206. Counsel for the state board cite a clause in section 10197 as justifying the board’s power to make the rule which bars the plaintiff from the right to take the examination. This clause reads:

“It [the board] shall formulate rules to govern its actions.”

Elsewhere in the statute we note certain powers which the legislature intended the board to exercise:

The board is required to keep a register of all applicants for licenses to practice medicine, the age of the applicants, a record of the time they have spent in the study of medicine, and the name of the institution or institutions from which the applicants may have received degrees or certificates of medical instruction. (§ 10197.) The board may refuse licenses to felons, to grossly immoral persons, and to those seriously addicted to liquor or drug habits. (§ 10198.)

The board is also authorized to grant licenses to graduates of high-grade medical colleges of this country or foreign countries without examination, and in lieu of examination the board may accept certificates of registration issued by other states or foreign countries where high standards of qualifications are required of medical practitioners; and it may grant temporary permits to practice medicine. The exercise of these powers is discretionary. The examination itself shall constitute a fair test of the. qualifications of the applicants in “all those topics and subjects a knowledge of which is generally required by reputable medical colleges of the United States for the degree of doctor of medicine.” (§ 10199.)

With these powers expressly granted, there goes also a grant of such implied powers as are necessary for the effective discharge of all the responsible duties imposed on the defendant board. In The State, ex rel.,.v. Younkin, 108 Kan. 634, 638, 196 Pac. 620, we said:

“While the powers of a public officer or board are those and those only which the law confers, yet when the law does confer a power or prescribe a duty to be performed' or exercised by a public officer, the powers granted and duties prescribed carry, with them by necessary implication such incidents of authority as are necessary for the effectual exercise of the powers conferred and duties imposed.” (p. 638.)

. The board must ascertain as best it can what are the professional branches of science and art taught and practiced in reputable medical colleges. Nor is the court disposed to impose narrow restrictions on the defendant board in their determination of this important matter. We think it may well mean more than getting [816]*816a mere list of the branches of learning — anatomy, physiology, hygiene, physics, chemistry, etc. It can hardly be said that the board is without power to determine the requisite thoroughness with which such sciences are studied and taught in these colleges, and it is difficult to say that the board may not inquire into the related question of the general educational requirements which medical students must possess before they can profitably enter upon the study of medicine and surgery; nor can it be denied that the state board can consult the proceedings of the American Medical Association, and its standards of professional scholarship, and that the board’s opinions of Kansas requirements can be at least partially founded thereon.

It is contended by plaintiff that the statute does not require an applicant for a license to be a graduate of any medical school; that he may get his medical education wherever and however he pleases, so long as he acquires it with sufficient thoroughness to pass the examination with satisfactory grades.

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Bluebook (online)
208 P. 639, 111 Kan. 813, 1922 Kan. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-kansas-state-board-of-medical-registration-examination-kan-1922.