State v. Dent

25 W. Va. 1, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 114
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 25 W. Va. 1 (State v. Dent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Dent, 25 W. Va. 1, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 114 (W. Va. 1884).

Opinion

G-REen, Judge :

The only question involved in this case is: Are sections 9 and 15 of chapter 93 of the Acts of 1882 constitutional? Ihave not examined critically the indictment to determine whether in form or in substance it -was fatally defective, because the counsel for the plaintiff in error in his brief expressly waives, as he states he did in the circuit court, all objections to such defects in form or substance in the indictment, if any such exist, and bases his claim to have the judgment of the circuit court reviewed solely on the ground that the indictment was based on an unconstitutional and void act of the legislature and should for that reason have been quashed. Sections 9 and 15 of chapter 93 of the Acts of 1882 claimed thus to be unconstitutional are in these words:

“9. The following persons and no others shall hereafter be permitted to practice medicine in this State, viz :
“First: All persons who are graduates of a reputable medical college in the schools of medicine to which the person desiring to practice belongs. Every such person shall, if he has not already done so, and obtained the certificate hereinafter mentioned, present' his diploma to the State board of health, or to the two members thereof in his congressional district, and if the same is found to be genuine and was issued by such medical college as is hereinafter [4]*4mentioned, and the person presenting the same be the graduate named therein the said board or said two members thereof (as the ease may be) shall issue and deliver to him a certificate to that effect, and such diploma and certificate shall entitle the person named in such diploma to practice medicine in all its departments in this State.
“Second: All persons who have practiced medicine in this State continuously for the period of ten years prior to the eighth day of March, one thousand eight'hundred and eighty-one. Every such person shall make’ and file with the two members of the State board of health in the congressional district in which he resides, or if he resides out of the State, in the district nearest his residence, an affidavit of the number of years he has continuously practiced in this State, and if the number of years therein stated be ten or more, the said board or said two members thereof, shall, unless they ascertain such affidavit to be false, give him a certificate to that fact, and authorizing him to .practice medicine in all its departments in this State.
“Ihird,: A person who is not such graduate and who has not so practiced in this State for a period of ten years, desiring to practice medicine in this State, shall, if he has not already done so, present himself for examination before the State board of health or before the said two members thereof in the congressional district in which he resides, or if he resides out of this State, to the said two members of the State board of health in the congressional district nearest his place of residence, who, together with a member of the local board of health who is a physician (if there is such member of the local board), of the county in which the examination is held, shall examine him as herein provided; and if, upon full examination, they find him qualified to practice medicine in all its departments, they, or a majority of them, shall grant him a certificate to that effect, and thereafter he shall have the right to practice medicine in this State to the same extent as if he had the diploma and certificate hereinbefore mentioned. The members of the State board of health in each congressional district shall, by publication in some newspaper printed in the county in which their meeting is to be held, or if no such paper is [5]*5printed therein, in some newspaper of general circulation in such district, give at least twenty-one days notice of the time and place at which they will meet for the examination of applicants lor permission to practice medicine, which notice shall be published at least once in each-week for three successive weeks before the day of such meeting. But this section shall not apply to a physician or surgeon who is called from another State to treat a particular case or to perform a particular surgical operation in this State, and who does not otherwuse practice in this State.
“15. If any person shall practice, or attenpt to practice, medicine, surgery, or obstetrics in this State, without having complied with the provisions of section 9 of this chapter, except as therein provided, he shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined iorevery such offensenotless than fifty nor more than five hundred dollars, or imprisoned in the county jail not less than one month nor more than twelve months, or to be punished by both such fine and imprisonment, at the discretion of the court. And if any person shall file, or attempt to file, as his own, the diploma or certificate of another, or shall file, or attempt to file, a false or forged affidavit of his identity, or shall wilfully swear falsely to any question which may be propounded to him on his examination, as herein provided for, or to any affidavit herein required to be made or filed by him, he shall, upon conviction thereof, be confined in the penitentiary not less than one nor more than three years, or imprisoned in the county jail not less than six nor more than twelve months and fined not less than one hundred nor more than five hundred dollars, at the discretion of the court.”

These sections, the counsel for the plaintiff in error insists, are unconstitutional, null and void. In an elaborate argument he claims, that they* are inconsistent with Article X, and with section 1 of Article XIV of the Amendments to the constitution of the United States; and that they are also inconsistent with sections 1, 2, 4, 10 and 11 of our bill of rights, Article III of our constitution (Acts of 1872-3, p. 5). He claims, that the various provisions contained in the constitution of the United States and our constitution were intended to incorporate as fundamental principles in our gov-[6]*6eminent certain general views of tbe objects, ends and purpose of all governments laid down by certain text-writers, the correctness of which I do not question. I will here quote a number of these general views, selecting those upon which the counsel of the. plaintiff must place his principal reliance:

“Every wanton and causeless restraint of the subject, whether practiced by a monarch, a nobility or a popular assembly is a degree of tyranny; nay even laws themselves whether made with or without our consent if they regulate and constrain our conduct in matters of mere indifference without a good end in view are regulations destructive of liberty.”
“That constitution or form of government, that system of laws is alone calculated to maintain civil liberty, which leaves the subject entire master of his own conduct except on those points where the public good requires some direction or restraint.”
“Wherever laws attempt to secure alike to every man, weak or strong, rich or poor, ignorant or instructed, the right, the moral power of seeking his own happiness in his own way, they invade natural liberty of which they ought to be the bulwork.”

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Bluebook (online)
25 W. Va. 1, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dent-wva-1884.