Foster, J.
Relator invokes the original jurisdiction of this court in mandamus to compel respondent director of licenses to issue her a license to practice medicine. With commendable candor, the attorney general concedes the truth of relator’s factual allegations. She alleges American citizenship and that she received the degree of doctor of medicine from the University of Vienna in 1937, and has
served the required statutory internship and met all other statutory requirements for the license, except the respondent denies accreditation by the Association of American Medical Colleges, and the council of medical education and hospitals of the American Medical Association, of the medical school in question at the time of relator’s graduation.
Until 1956, the respondent refused to allow relator to take the basic science examination because of lack of accreditation in the year in question; but in 1956, relator was conditionally permitted to take both the basic science examination and the medical examination, without prejudice, however, to the respondent’s right to a judicial determination of the accreditation of the Vienna medical school in the year in question. It is admitted that relator passed both examinations.
Relator alleges that both she and her husband graduated from the University of Vienna medical school in 1937. Her husband was licensed to practice in Washington in 1941, but she did not then apply for license because of the tender age of their children, requiring her personal care, and the then limited availability of internships for women in Seattle hospitals.
It is admitted that, at the time of relator’s graduation in 1937, the Association of American Medical Colleges and the council of medical education and hospitals of the American Medical Association had no accredited or approved list of foreign medical schools and such list did not come into being until three years after the enactment of the statute in question; or 1950.
In 1941, the existing statute, presently noticed, required graduation from a regular medical school, which, at the diploma date, maintained standards not less than those prescribed by the Association of American Medical Colleges.
The controversy presents the constitutionality of the Laws of 1947, chapter 168, p. 781, set out in the margin.
That act amended Laws of 1909, chapter 192, § 6, p. 679, as amended by Laws of 1919, chapter 134, § 3, p. 373, set out in the margin.
The original compilers
of the Revised Code of
Washington codified a fragment of the 1947 amendment in RCW 18.71.050, which, so far as material, is set out in the
margin,
substituting the compiler’s notion of what the legislature should have enacted for the text of the law as enacted by the legislature. The compilers were not and could not be endowed with such power.
The board of medical examiners established in 1909
was abolished in 1921, and the duties transferred to the director of licenses.
The 1947 amendment vests the powers of licensing medical applicants in the nonexistent board of medical examiners.
It would have been proper for the legislature to have enacted that accredited schools were only those on a list then in being, whether prescribed by the American Medical Association, or some other learned society; but it was not within permissible constitutional limits to define accredited institutions as those on a list not then in existence, irrespective of the standing of the society which might compile such future list.
Legislative power is nondelegable. When the legislature declares that schools on an existing list are accredited schools and those not on an existing list are not, it is legislating; but when it declares that accredited schools shall be those on a list thereafter to be promulgated, irrespective of the authority promulgating such list, it is attempting to delegate legislative power, and such an act is unconstitutional.
The vice in the statute is not that it adopts a standard of accreditation fixed by recognized medical societies, but that there was no such list in existence at the time of the enactment in question. The first list of accredited foreign medical colleges was not made by those societies until three years after the enactment of the statute.
The national electrical code, compiled by the National Board of Fire Underwriters and the Underwriters’ National Electric Association, is revised every two years. Without identifying which edition was meant, the legislature of Kansas enacted a statute requiring all electrical wiring within that state to conform to the national electrical code; and this, the supreme court of Kansas said, was an unlawful attempt to delegate legislative power. Had the act provided that all electrical wiring conform to the national electrical code of 1915, or to any then existing edition thereof, no question would arise; but the use of future editions was held unconstitutional in
State v.
Crawford, 104 Kan. 141, 177 Pac. 360,
2
A. L. R. 880.
That case is brought into sharper focus when compared with the corresponding act in this state,
which enacted the then current edition of that code verbatim.
Similarly, the supreme court of Wisconsin in
Wagner v.
Milwaukee, 177 Wis. 410, 188 N. W. 487, held unconstitutional a Milwaukee ordinance providing that in city contracts, labor should be paid not less than the prevailing wage to be determined by the wage paid to members of any recognized organization of skilled laborers, as an unlawful delegation of the legislative power.
State v. Emery,
55 Ohio St. 364, 45 N. E. 319, involved an act regulating the strength and purity of drugs as prescribed
by the United States Pharmacopoeia. At the time of the enactment of the statute in question, the edition then in use was published in 1880. A revised edition appeared in 1894, which made numerous changes. A conviction for the sale of drugs, legal under the standard promulgated by the earlier edition of the United States Pharmacopoeia but illegal under the latest revision thereof, was reversed because the legislature of 1880 could not adopt rules not then in existence.
Statutes adopting existing Federal rules, regulations, or statutes, are valid, but attempts to adopt future Federal rules, regulations, or statutes, are unconstitutional and void.
Brock v. Superior Court,
9 Cal.
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Foster, J.
Relator invokes the original jurisdiction of this court in mandamus to compel respondent director of licenses to issue her a license to practice medicine. With commendable candor, the attorney general concedes the truth of relator’s factual allegations. She alleges American citizenship and that she received the degree of doctor of medicine from the University of Vienna in 1937, and has
served the required statutory internship and met all other statutory requirements for the license, except the respondent denies accreditation by the Association of American Medical Colleges, and the council of medical education and hospitals of the American Medical Association, of the medical school in question at the time of relator’s graduation.
Until 1956, the respondent refused to allow relator to take the basic science examination because of lack of accreditation in the year in question; but in 1956, relator was conditionally permitted to take both the basic science examination and the medical examination, without prejudice, however, to the respondent’s right to a judicial determination of the accreditation of the Vienna medical school in the year in question. It is admitted that relator passed both examinations.
Relator alleges that both she and her husband graduated from the University of Vienna medical school in 1937. Her husband was licensed to practice in Washington in 1941, but she did not then apply for license because of the tender age of their children, requiring her personal care, and the then limited availability of internships for women in Seattle hospitals.
It is admitted that, at the time of relator’s graduation in 1937, the Association of American Medical Colleges and the council of medical education and hospitals of the American Medical Association had no accredited or approved list of foreign medical schools and such list did not come into being until three years after the enactment of the statute in question; or 1950.
In 1941, the existing statute, presently noticed, required graduation from a regular medical school, which, at the diploma date, maintained standards not less than those prescribed by the Association of American Medical Colleges.
The controversy presents the constitutionality of the Laws of 1947, chapter 168, p. 781, set out in the margin.
That act amended Laws of 1909, chapter 192, § 6, p. 679, as amended by Laws of 1919, chapter 134, § 3, p. 373, set out in the margin.
The original compilers
of the Revised Code of
Washington codified a fragment of the 1947 amendment in RCW 18.71.050, which, so far as material, is set out in the
margin,
substituting the compiler’s notion of what the legislature should have enacted for the text of the law as enacted by the legislature. The compilers were not and could not be endowed with such power.
The board of medical examiners established in 1909
was abolished in 1921, and the duties transferred to the director of licenses.
The 1947 amendment vests the powers of licensing medical applicants in the nonexistent board of medical examiners.
It would have been proper for the legislature to have enacted that accredited schools were only those on a list then in being, whether prescribed by the American Medical Association, or some other learned society; but it was not within permissible constitutional limits to define accredited institutions as those on a list not then in existence, irrespective of the standing of the society which might compile such future list.
Legislative power is nondelegable. When the legislature declares that schools on an existing list are accredited schools and those not on an existing list are not, it is legislating; but when it declares that accredited schools shall be those on a list thereafter to be promulgated, irrespective of the authority promulgating such list, it is attempting to delegate legislative power, and such an act is unconstitutional.
The vice in the statute is not that it adopts a standard of accreditation fixed by recognized medical societies, but that there was no such list in existence at the time of the enactment in question. The first list of accredited foreign medical colleges was not made by those societies until three years after the enactment of the statute.
The national electrical code, compiled by the National Board of Fire Underwriters and the Underwriters’ National Electric Association, is revised every two years. Without identifying which edition was meant, the legislature of Kansas enacted a statute requiring all electrical wiring within that state to conform to the national electrical code; and this, the supreme court of Kansas said, was an unlawful attempt to delegate legislative power. Had the act provided that all electrical wiring conform to the national electrical code of 1915, or to any then existing edition thereof, no question would arise; but the use of future editions was held unconstitutional in
State v.
Crawford, 104 Kan. 141, 177 Pac. 360,
2
A. L. R. 880.
That case is brought into sharper focus when compared with the corresponding act in this state,
which enacted the then current edition of that code verbatim.
Similarly, the supreme court of Wisconsin in
Wagner v.
Milwaukee, 177 Wis. 410, 188 N. W. 487, held unconstitutional a Milwaukee ordinance providing that in city contracts, labor should be paid not less than the prevailing wage to be determined by the wage paid to members of any recognized organization of skilled laborers, as an unlawful delegation of the legislative power.
State v. Emery,
55 Ohio St. 364, 45 N. E. 319, involved an act regulating the strength and purity of drugs as prescribed
by the United States Pharmacopoeia. At the time of the enactment of the statute in question, the edition then in use was published in 1880. A revised edition appeared in 1894, which made numerous changes. A conviction for the sale of drugs, legal under the standard promulgated by the earlier edition of the United States Pharmacopoeia but illegal under the latest revision thereof, was reversed because the legislature of 1880 could not adopt rules not then in existence.
Statutes adopting existing Federal rules, regulations, or statutes, are valid, but attempts to adopt future Federal rules, regulations, or statutes, are unconstitutional and void.
Brock v. Superior Court,
9 Cal. (2d) 291, 71 P. (2d) 209, 114 A. L. R. 127;
Florida Industrial Comm. v. State ex rel. Orange State Oil Co.,
155 Fla. 772, 21 So. (2d) 599;
Florida Industrial Comm. v. Peninsular Life Ins. Co.,
152 Fla. 55, 10 So. (2d) 793;
State v. Webber,
125 Me. 319, 133 Atl. 738;
State v. Gauthier,
121 Me. 522, 118 Atl. 380, 26 A. L. R. 652;
State v. Intoxicating Liquors, Vino Medical Co.,
121 Me. 438, 117 Atl. 588;
In re Opinion of the Justices,
239 Mass. 606, 133 N. E. 453;
Dearborn Independent, Inc. v. City of Dearborn,
331 Mich. 447, 49 N. W. (2d) 370;
Smithberger v. Banning,
129 Neb. 651, 262 N. W. 492, 100 A. L. R. 686;
Holgate Bros. Co. v. Bashore,
45 Dauph. Co. 274;
In re Lasswell,
1 Cal. App. (2d) 183, 36 P. (2d) 678.
Subsequent changes do not invalidate past adopted Federal statutes, regulations, or rules. 27 Va. L. Rev. 700.
It is not lightly to be assumed that the legislature intended to prohibit all who prior to 1950 graduated from foreign medical schools from practicing here. Certainly, no such assumption can be indulged in the absence of unequivocal language, but such is the inevitable consequence of the respondent’s interpretation of the 1947 amendment. It is stipulated that there was no accreditation of any foreign
medical school in 1947; consequently, under the terms of the 1947 amendment, no graduate of any foreign medical school could ever be licensed.
The amendment of 1919, previously noticed, promulgated a valid standard of accreditation of all medical schools; that is, such schools must, at the time of the issuance of the diploma then in question, have maintained a standard equivalent to those prescribed by the American Medical Association. It is admitted the medical school of the University of Vienna conformed to such standards at the time of the relator’s graduation in 1937.
From what has been said, it is plain that the attempted delegation of future accreditation of foreign medical colleges to private agencies is void; consequently, relator’s license application to practice medicine is governed by the valid prior statute.
The writ will issue commanding respondent to- determine relator’s application for a license to practice medicine as provided by Laws of 1909, chapter 192, § 6, as amended by Laws of 1919, chapter 134, § 3.
Relator’s other contentions need not be considered.
Hill, C. J., Mallery, Schwellenbach, Donworth, Finley, Weaver, and Ott, JJ., concur.
Rosellini, J., concurs in the result.