State Board of Medical Examiners v. Friedman

150 Tenn. 152
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 150 Tenn. 152 (State Board of Medical Examiners v. Friedman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Board of Medical Examiners v. Friedman, 150 Tenn. 152 (Tenn. 1923).

Opinion

Me. MaloNe, Special Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The original bill in this case was filed by Dr. Ben Friedman, a citizen of Memphis, Term., to review the action of the state board of medical examiners in revoking his license to practice medicine, and to compel his reinstatement as a practitioner.

The board demurred to the bill on various grounds, hereinafter to be noted, and the chancellor overruled the demurrer.

The members of the board thereupon refused to plead further, standing on their demurrer, and a final decree was entered in the case, adjudging that the action of the defendants in revoking the license of complainant was unwarranted by law, and of no binding force and effect, and directing that the clerk and master issue an order to the defendants, directing them to reinstate the complainant upon their records as a practitioner of medicine in the State of Tennessee.

[157]*157Inasmuch as complainant raises certain constitutional questions in the original bill, and by amended bill disputes the constitutionality of the statute (chapter 78, of the Acts of 1901), under which the board was organized, and from which its authority was derived, the case comes direct to this court.

The allegations of the original bill are, in substance, as follows:

That on April 26, 1918, complainant received notice that the state board of medical examiners had revoked his license to practice medicine, on account of his conviction in the district court of the United States, for violation of the Harrison Anti-Narcotic Act (U. S. Comp. St., sections 6287g-6287q). This action, it is alleged, was taken without any notice to complainant.

That on May 23,1918, complainant filed his original bill in the chancery court at Memphis, seeking a review of this action, by certiorari, and for other relief.

That on June 14,1918, the board of medical examiners, by their solicitor, agreed to a decree in the case, reciting that the statements contained in the original bill were true, and that complainant was entitled to have the order of the board vacated, and his license restored, as prayed in the bill. It was thereupon so decreed; the order, however, reciting that nothing therein contained should affect the question whether complainant had been convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude.

That thereafter, on the-day of-, 1918, the defendants composing the state board gave complainant notice to appear, together with a copy of the charge against him, viz., that he had been convicted in a court of the United States of an offense involving moral turpi[158]*158tude. The hearing- was set before the board at Nashville, Tenn., on the-day of --, 1918.

► The bill then proceeds as follows:

“Complainant appealed before said board and resisted said charge on the ground that the offense of which he had been convicted was not one involving moral turpitude, but said board revoked his license to practice medicine in Tennessee, and said revocation is still in force against him; and said board, through its secretary, Dr. A. B. De Loach, of Memphis, refused to vacate the same and restore to complainant his license to practice medicine in Tennessee, without which complainant cannot practice medicine in Tennessee without violating the law.,
“Complainant believed he was right and within the law in what he .did, which was writing prescriptions for incurable narcotic addicts to procure the drug, and felt so strongly he was right that he contested the conviction to the supreme court of the United States, where it was affirmed, and soon after the revocation of his license by said defendant board he commenced serving his sentence, and served twenty-eight months in the federal prison in Atlanta, Ga., being released a short while only, and this is the reason complainant has not sooner taken proceedings to vacate the action of said board, and have his license restored to him. However, complainant did, a short while before commencing serving his sentence in the federal prison in Atlanta, Ga., file a petition for cer-tiorari and supersedeas for a review of the action of said board by the circuit court of Davidson county in Nashville, and while complainant was confined in the federal prison at Atlanta, and unable to prosecute or look after his said case, the same was on the 10th day of July, 1920, [159]*159dismissed by the circuit court in Nashville, and of which complainant knew nothing until his release from prison a short while ago.
“After complainant’s conviction in the federal court of a violation of the Harrison Narcotic Act, he was indicted, under the State law, in the criminal court of Shelby county for a similar offense, and was convicted in the criminal court of Shelby county, but upon appeal to the supreme court the case was reversed and dismissed on the ground that what complainant did (write a prescription for five bottles of morphine) for an addict did not constitute a violation of the State law.
Complainant desired to make application to the State board for a restoration of his license, and applied to its secretary in Memphis, Dr. A. B. De Loach, and was informed to (by) him that he would be advised ten days in advance of the meeting of the board; after waiting some time, complainant wrote two letters to Dr. De Loach again, inquiring when the board would meet, but received no reply to either of his letters, and he then had his brother call up Dr. De Loach for the information, and he was informed by Dr. De Loach that the board had met and adjourned until next year. Complainant then had a friend make inquiry, and ascertained that the board was to meet on the 3d day of July, 1922, in Nashville. He at once went to Nashville, and applied to the board of medical examiners for a restoration of his license, and was informed later in the day, by its secretary, Dr. De Loach that the board had refused his application.”

After setting forth the grounds prescribed in the act (Acts of 1901, chapter 78), for the revocation of a practitioner’s license, one of which is “conviction of any [160]*160offense involving moral turpitude,” complainant alleges that a conviction in the federal courts for a violation of the Harrison Anti-Narcotic Act is not an offense involving moral turpitude.

Complainant claims:

(a) That the right to practice a profession is a property right.

(b) That the meaning of the phrase “moral turpitude” is-well settled in law, and said board has no right to place its own interpretation upon it, thereby depriving complainant of his property right.

(c) That the illegal and unwarranted action of the board in so doing is a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.

Complainant then alleges that “he is not guilty of anything that would authorize or justify said defendant board to revoke or cancel his license to practice medicine in Tennessee.”

It is further alleged: “There being no provision in said act creating said defendant board, for an appeal from its findings, unless the same be reviewed and relief granted, or its judgments annulled and quashed, as void without force and effect and complainant placed in statu quo, a great, permanent, and irreparable damage and injury will have been done complainant, from which he would otherwise have no relief.”

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Bluebook (online)
150 Tenn. 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-board-of-medical-examiners-v-friedman-tenn-1923.