Mayer v. State

45 A. 624, 64 N.J.L. 323, 35 Vroom 323, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 116
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 5, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 45 A. 624 (Mayer v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayer v. State, 45 A. 624, 64 N.J.L. 323, 35 Vroom 323, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 116 (N.J. 1900).

Opinion

[325]*325The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hendrickson, J.

The matter under review in these proceedings is a conviction of the defendant below in the Hudson Quarter Sessions upon the charge of commencing the practice of medicine and surgery in this state without license first ■obtained under the act entitled “An act to regulate the practice of medicine and surgery, to license physicians and surgeons and to punish persons violating the provisions thereof,” approved May 22d, 1894.

This conviction was first brought into the Supreme Court .and was there affirmed. The opinion will be found in 34 Vroom 35.

So far as the questions raised have been discussed in the -opinion, I see no error in the conclusions, and need refer only to a single point there considered. In the ninth section of the act, upon which the indictment was founded, several -classes of persons were named, and among them “legally registered pharmacists,” who should not be subject to the ■terms of the act. The indictment had failed to insert negative averments to the effect that the defendant was not included within either of the excepted classes, and the court had been asked to quash for that reason. The Supreme •Court very properly held that the refusal to quash was not -error, and that such negative averments were not required unless the exception be in the enacting clause, and that if it be in a separate clause or in a subsequent statute it is- a matter of defence.

It was insisted before us that this statement of the law is in conflict with the rule as laid down in State v. Startup, 10 Vroom 423.

It is true that in the latter case one of the provisos which ■the courts held must be negatived was contained in a subse•quent statute, but it appears that the later statute amended the enacting clause of the original act, so that the new proviso had in fact become part of the enacting clause when the indictment was found.

The seeming confusion that has arisen in some of the cases, [326]*326in the application of this rule, has evidently grown out of the-uncertainty that has existed as to precisely what is meant by the words “ enacting clause.”

Mr. Justice Depue made this observation, in McGear et al. v. Woodruff, 4 Vroom 213, and expressed his approval of the-rule as laid down in Gould Pl., ch. 4, p. 179, § 22, which is, in substance, that where the subject of any exception is found-in the enacting or prohibitory clause, it must be excluded by averment in the pleading, but if it is found in a separate substantive clause, it need not be noticed therein. In the first case the exception is an essential part of the description of the offence or thing prohibited ; in the latter, the proviso, &c., is only distinct matter of defence.

It is contended that the trial court erred in admitting evidence against the defendant in support of an indictment under the act-of 1894, by the ninth section of which he is among the classes exempt from its provisions, or, as counsel puts it,, by trying the defendant under the act of 1895, while he is indicted under the act of 1894. The ninth section of the original act exempted the defendant, who was a legally-registered pharmacist, from its operation. By the act of 1895, the ninth section of the former act was amended so as to omit, the exemption therein of legally-registered pharmacists. It is difficult to see how the supposed error here complained of could have prejudiced the defendant in the making of his defence. The record shows that the amendatory act was known to the defendant’s counsel at the outset of the trial. But it seems to me that there was no error in the admission of evidence with reference to both of these acts, which were public-statutes. It is not denied but that the indictment described the offence in the words of the statute as thus amended.

The contention is that the recital being of the act of 1894 alone, without reference to any amendment or supplement thereto, the evidence must be strictly confined to the offenceas created by that act.

But the rule has been long settled to the contrary, it being held that there is no necessity to recite any public statute on-[327]*327which an indictment is founded, but that where it is recited with a material variance, and the indictment concludes, as in this case, with the words “ contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided,” without referring to the recited statute, the recital may be rejected as surplusage. 2 Hawk. P. C., p. 25, ¶ 101; 6 T. R. 776; 1 Arch. Cr. Pr. & Pl. 287. See, also, State v. Dewey, 55 Vt. 550.

It is further contended that there was error iii admitting in evidence over defendant’s objection his business card bearing the name, Dr. Albert Mayer, Pharmacist and Chemist,” with his business address in Jersey City attached, the reverse side of which bore a notice of a free dispensary, at which registered physicians were in attendance daily to give medical and surgical advice free of charge, and also in admitting the publication by him in a newspaper of a business card of like purport. The indictment charged the defendant with the practice of medicine and surgery in this state without license, &c., “ by then and there prescribing for one Charles Hendrick a certain medicine,” &e.

After the state had rested the defendant gave evidence tending to prove that the medicine he gave Mr. Hendrick, the prosecuting witness, was compounded as directed by the latter, who was known to defendant to be a physician; that he, defendant, was not .acting as a physician but as a pharmacist in his own store.

Upon the cross-examination the card and advertisement were shown to the defendant and were admitted to have been circulated and published by him 'in the year 1895 for the purpose of advertising his business, and defendant gave further evidence tending to prove that he had continued the business of a free dispensary as late as January 1st, 1897, which was within nine months of the date of the offence charged. The objection raised to this evidence is that to admit it was in violation of the rule that evidence of extraneous crimes is not admissible to prove the one for which defendant is on trial.

But the evidence objected to does not, in my judgment, [328]*328•come within the category suggested. It is rather in the • nature of the declaration of the defendant tending to show that during a part at least of the preceding two years he had been engaged in carrying on the prohibited business, for a specific exercise of which, at a later period, he stood charged in the indictment and to thereby corroborate that charge. It also tended to rebut the evidence which the defendant had given. The effect of this evidence was not given any wider scope by the learned trial judge than the one I have suggested, for when he came to charge the jury he directed them to confine their consideration of the evidence to the period named in the indictment and to the acts of the defendant which constituted the alleged offence.

Within the scope I have suggested, the principle I have alluded to finds support in the cases.

In Clark v. State, 18 Vroom 556,

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Bluebook (online)
45 A. 624, 64 N.J.L. 323, 35 Vroom 323, 1900 N.J. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayer-v-state-nj-1900.