State ex rel. Johnson v. Wagner

297 N.W. 906, 139 Neb. 471, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 95
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1941
DocketNo. 30980
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 297 N.W. 906 (State ex rel. Johnson v. Wagner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Johnson v. Wagner, 297 N.W. 906, 139 Neb. 471, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 95 (Neb. 1941).

Opinion

Carter, J.

This is a suit brought by the attorney general to enjoin the defendant, Roy Jackson Gable, an osteopathic physician, from engaging in the practice of medicine and operative surgery within this state and from publicly professing to be a physician, surgeon, or obstetrician. The defendant filed an answer in which he denied that he had ever engaged in the practice of medicine, or professed publicly any right to do so. He alleges, however, that he is an osteopathic physician, surgeon and obstetrician and asserts a right to engage in the practice of operative surgery and obstetrics and to hold himself out to the public as one qualified to do so. The attorney general thereupon moved for a judgment on the pleadings, which was overruled by the trial court, and a judgment entered in favor of the defendant. The state thereupon appealed.

The question whether the defendant may lawfully engage in the practice and dispensing of medicine is not an issue on this appeal.' Whether defendant may lawfully engage in the practice of operative surgery and obstetrics and engage in the use of anesthetics in the manner alleged in defendant’s answer are the questions presented by the motion for judgment on the pleadings. The correctness of the trial court’s ruling on this motion is the controlling factor in this appeal.

The defendant alleges that he is a graduate of the American School of Osteopathy at Kirksville, Missouri, a school of osteopathy recognized by the American Osteopathic Association. On June 13, 1922, defendant was issued a license to practice as an osteopathic physician and surgeon by the department of public welfare of the state of Nebraska. The answer admits and alleges that defendant has performed surgical operations, including tonsillectomies, appendectomies, circumcisions, an amputation of a toe, rectal [474]*474operations, hysterectomies, operations for hooded clitoris and laparotomies, all of such operations being performed with instruments and by incisions of-the patients’ bodies; that he has engaged in the practice of obstetrics and has used anesthetics; all of which the defendant alleges that he will continue to do under claim of right.

It cannot be questioned that a person engaging in the practice of medicine and surgery without the required statutory license may be restrained by injunction. Comp. St. 1929, sec. 71-801. If, therefore, the admissions and allegations of defendant’s answer constitute the practice of medicine and surgery as defined by section 71-1401, Comp. St. 1929, the defendant should be enjoined from so doing. If said acts are within the scope of the practice of osteopathy as defined by our statutes on the subject, the defendant is then within his rights and not subject to restraint for so doing.

The question is raised whether the character and general duties of occupations classed as professions are determined as questions of law or fact. We think the rule is that they are questions of fact of which the courts will take judicial notice. Certainly, the question whether a specific act constitutes the practice of osteopathy is not subject to proof by expert witnesses. The absurdities which would be certain to follow such a construction of the rule in question are too obvious to require an exposition here. The general rule of pleading, which admits as true all facts well pleaded upon the filing of a general demurrer or a motion for a judgment on the pleadings, has no application to facts of which a court may take judicial notice, and such demurrer or motion does not therefore admit a conclusion of law deduced from such facts.

The general rule seems to be: “There is apparently no dissent from the proposition that in the consideration of a pleading the courts must read the same as if it contained a statement of all matters of which they are required to take judicial notice, even when the pleading contains an express allegation to the contrary.” Chavez v. Times-Mirror [475]*475Co., 185 Cal. 20, 195 Pac. 666. See, also, Livermore v. Beal, 18 Cal. App. (2d) 535, 64 Pac. (2d) 987; Verde River Irrigation & Power District v. Salt River Valley Water Users Ass’n, 94 Fed. (2d) 936; Hinds v. Federal Land Bank of New Orleans, 235 Ala. 360, 179 So. 194; Richter v. City of Lincoln, 136 Neb. 289, 285 N. W. 593.

Applying this rule to the pleadings before us, the allegations of defendant’s answer to the effect that the acts admitted constitute the practice of osteopathy are mere conclusions of law. The allegation of a sound conclusion of law is always treated as superfluous and the allegation of an unsound conclusion is entirely disregarded. It matters not in the instant case whether the conclusions pleaded are true or not, for that which is judicially known may not be successfully controverted by pleadings, or made issuable by them. National Supply Co. v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 108 Neb. 326, 187 N. W. 917; State v. Rolio, 71 Utah, 91, 262 Pac. 987.

This court is therefore required to determine the meaning of the term “osteopathy” in the same manner as any other fact of which it is required to take judicial notice. It may resort to the definition and description of it given by the founder of the practice, by those who teach and practice it, and by the lexicographers who define it as a science. State v. Bonham, 93 Wash. 489, 161 Pac. 377.

Much has been written by the founder of osteopathy, and others learned in the practice of its profession, as to the fundamentals of the science of osteopathy. To give a resume of these writings would unduly lengthen this opinion. We think a fair conclusion to be drawn from all of them was ably expressed in Bragg v. State, 134 Ala. 165, 32 So. 767, where the supreme court of Alabama said: “The method of treatment by the practitioners of osteopathy is a system of manipulation of the limbs and body of the patient with the hands, by kneading, rubbing or pressing upon the parts of the body. In the treatment, no drug, medicine or other substance is administered or applied, either internally or externally; nor is the knife used or any form of surgery [476]*476resorted to in the treatment. The practitioner himself performs the manipulations. The teaching and theory of those skilled in osteopathy are, that it is a system of treatment of disease by adjustment of all the parts of the body mechanically. It is taught that any minute or gross derangement of bony parts; contracting and hardening of muscles or other tissues; or other mechanical derangements of the anatomical parts of the body which must be in perfect order mechanically, in order that it may perform its function aright, nerve centers, arteries, veins and lymphatics, which must function properly in order that health may be maintained. It is taught that such interferences lend to congestion, obstructed circulation of blood and lymph, irritation of nerves and abnormal state of nerve centers; that the result is disease which can be cured only by righting what is mechanically wrong. * * * The essential things taught in the schools of osteopathy are anatomy, physiology, hygiene, histology, pathology and the treatment of diseases by manipulation. The repudiation of drugs and medicine in the treatment of diseases is a basic principle of osteopathy and a knowledge of drugs or medicines, their administration for the cure of diseases, the writing and giving of prescriptions, are not essential to the graduation of, and the issuance of diplomas to, students of osteopathy.”

The well-settled definitions of osteopathy, in the writings of Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
297 N.W. 906, 139 Neb. 471, 1941 Neb. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-johnson-v-wagner-neb-1941.