Kowenstrot v. State

4 Ohio N.P. 257
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio N.P. 257 (Kowenstrot v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kowenstrot v. State, 4 Ohio N.P. 257 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

PRAIT, J.

March 9, 1897, one Cady Markley made an •affidavit before the clerk of the police court •of the city of Toledo, in which he charged that on or about the 19th day of January, 1897, at Toledo, in said county and state, Kowenstrot, the plaintiff in error here, did knowingly and unlawfully practice medicine within the state of Ohio, without first having complied with the provisions of an act •of the general assembly entitled “An act to •regulate the practice of medicine within the state of Ohio, passed Februar 27, 1896,” and the specific acts charged as having been so in violation, were that he did “for a fee, lo-wit, the sum of twenty-five dollars, prescribe, direct and recommend for the use of •one Kresentia Wissenberger, a certain drug, medicine or agency, to-wit, one bottle of •dark liquid and one bottle of whitish liquid, the name and composition whereof is unknown to affiant, for the treatment, care and relief of a certain bodily infirmity or disease, the name and nature whereof, is to the’ affiant unknown;” and the affidavit charged that at the time of such prescription, the accused had not received from the State Board of Medical Registration and Examination, a certificate entitling him to practice medicine in accordance with the provisions of such act of the legislature. It •• will be seen that this affidavit charges:

1. That the offense complained of was committed on, or about the 19th day of January, 1897, at Toledo, in the county of Lucas, and state of Ohio.

2. That the offense charged was, The unlawful practice of medicine.

3. It sets forth specifically the acts so charged to have been done by the accused; and.

4. That such acts were done without the accused having first received the required certificate

A warrant was issued upon this affidavit, upon which the accused was arrested and he appeared on the 16th of March, when an information was filed by the prosecuting attorney, in form substantially following the affidavit. A motion to quash was filed, overruled by the court; a plea in abatement filed and denied; a demurrer filed,and overruled. Motion to require affidavit to be made more specific, made and overruled. Thereupon a jury was demanded, impaneled, a trial had, a verdict of “guilty” rendered, the accused fined; motion made in arrest of judgment and fora new trial; overruled, and a bill of exceptions filed, embodying all he evidence introduced in the case, all the offers of evidence refused together with the charge of the court.

Without going into particulars, it may be . said that the defendant in the police court availed himslef of every objection and took every exception possible, and the whole record is here now before the court, upon this petition in error, the petition covering every possible allegation of error. The bill of exceptions alone, covers some fifty pages of type-written matter. The case has been fully argued orally, and counsel have filed extensive briefs with a multitude of citations, authorities and decisions.

I have examined the record and briefs of counsel carefully. I have not considered it necessary, nor would it' be possible with

e opportunities allowed me in the press of other duties — to examine all the authorities cited and do I not think it now either necessary or profitable to review all the points discussed by counsel in the order of their discussion.

An examination of the different provisions of the statute on the question, and the consideration of .these, in the light afforded by the Ohio decisions, will be, as I think, all that will be necessary as a proper basis of my action in this case.

The Statute.

A statute, in some form, providing restrictions upon the practice of medicine in Ohio, has been in force nearly, if not quite the entire existence of the state. The statute, as it stood immediately prior to the enactment of the one here under consideration, is found in the revision of 1890, an was passed in the year 1885, and, so far as necessary to be here considered, is found under the head of Sec. 4403, as it^then stood, jvith [258]*258two supplementary sections. — a and b — neither of which,however, is it necessary to particularly consider in this connection. Sec. 4403 as it then stood, required that in order to practice medicine within the state, the practitioner should be a graduate of a reputable school of medicine, or that he should have a certificate of qualification from a state or county medical society, with certain exceptions as to length of time of practice, &c.

The statute under which this prosecution is had, was passed in February, 1896, and is embodied in this section 4403, as then amended, 4403 a and b, as they were before, and new sections 4403 c, d, f and g. Secs, a and b are not applicable to this case, and e relates to midwifery. The amended Sec. 4403 establishes a board of medical registration, and provides for the appointment of the members of that board, the board to consist of seven members, who should all be physicians in good standing in their profession, representation being to the different schools of practice in the state, no one of whom should have a majority of the whole board.

See. 4403c provides as to the requirements for the practice of medicine and surgery, for the granting of a certificate for such practice by the board, and the evidence upon which, and the circumstances under which it should be granted. See. 4403d provides for the record of the certificate in the office of the probate judge of the county in which the practitioner resides, and that it shall be left for record before he enters upon the practice, and makes a certified copy of such entry prima facie evidence of all the matters and facts contained therein. Sec. 4403f provides as to who shall be regarded as practicing within the meaning of the act, and provides certain limitations as to the applicability of the provisions of the statute to certain persons, and under certain circumstances. Sec. 4403g provides the penalty and provides specifically as follows:

“Any person practicing medicine or surgery as defined in Section 4403f in this state without having first complied with the provisions of 4403c and 4403d, except as therein provided, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor.”

In order to determine whether errors were committed by the police court in the proceedings and judgment now under review, and considering only what appears upon this record, I find that the questions made naturally fall into two classes:

1. What was it necessary for the state in the prosecution, under these provisions of the statute, to allege and prove in order to maintain the prosecution?

2. What was it competent for the accused to show upon his defense?

I.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio N.P. 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kowenstrot-v-state-ohctcompllucas-1897.