State v. Fray

241 N.W. 663, 214 Iowa 53
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 8, 1932
DocketNo. 41274.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 241 N.W. 663 (State v. Fray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fray, 241 N.W. 663, 214 Iowa 53 (iowa 1932).

Opinions

Evans, J.

The allegation that the defendant was practising medicine without a license, is admitted by the defendant.

His defense is predicated purely on legal ground. The defendant devotes some argument to the broad proposition that equity' has no criminal jurisdiction, and that in any event a court of equity will not award an injunction if the complainant has an adequate remedy at law. The complete answer to this line of argument is that this procedure is statutory and is authorized by the express terms of the statute. Unless, therefore, the statute be for some reason invalid, the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action is undebatable. The appellant recognizes the force of this argument and meets it by challenging the constitutionality of the statute. Such is the ultimate, and indeed the only, defense presented herein. Section 2519 provides:

"2519. Injunction against illegal practice. Any person engaging in any business or in the practice of any profession for which a license is required by this title without such license may be restrained by permanent injunction.”

The infirmity charged against it is that it is penal; that it provides a punishment for its violation; that this procedure is the equivalent of a prosecution thereunder; that the practical effect of this procedure is to deprive the defendant of a jury trial, and thereby deprives him of due process of law. The following quotation from appellant’s brief indicates concisely his general theory of defense:

"Title VIII of the 1927 Code, known as the ‘Practice Acts, ’ contemplates that one who seeks to practice medicine, regardless of his qualifications so to do, must first obtain a license, and the practice of medicine without such license is by express statute, Code Section 2522, made punishable by both fine and *55 imprisonment; therefore, the act of practicing medicine without such a license is criminal. We assume that no argument will be required to convince this Court that the penalties prescribed by Section 2522 could be imposed only in a Court of law, under the procedure known to such Court. If such be the fact, then how can the same act, criminal in character, be punishable in two different, distinct ways, and by two different, distinct methods of procedure? If Sections 2519 and 2522 are to be reconciled, then a single act may result in a double procedure, one in the criminal Court, to impose the penalty, one in the equity Court, to restrain the commission of an act long since fully consummated. The fallacy of such a procedure becomes apparent. ’ ’

As will presently be made to appear, the question thus raised by the appellant has been necessarily involved in many of our previous cases and has been taken for granted therein without challenge either by counsel or by ourselves. The justification for such an attitude in our own cases may be readily found in many decisions of other courts, wherein the question has been raised, argued, and settled. Many of these cases from other jurisdictions are cited in the brief for the State. We shall content ourselves with two or three quotations from as many cases from other jurisdictions, which are cited in the brief of the appellee.

The case of Board of Medical Examiners v. Blair, 196 Pac. 221 (Utah), involved statutory procedure under a statute that was a fair equivalent of our statute, Section 2519. We quote therefrom :

“Comp. Laws Utah 1917, Section 4451, being one of the sections of the chapter creating the Board of Medical Examiners and defining what shall constitute the practice of medicine, makes the practice of medicine, surgery, or obstetrics within the state without a license a misdemeanor and provides a penalty therefore. It is therefore contended that one charged with a violation of that section is entitled to a trial by jury; that authorizing the court to enjoin the practice of medicine as set out in section 4449, supra, is an indirect way of enforcing a penal statute, and that therefore the defendant in this case was entitled to a jury trial; that jury trials are guaranteed to defendants in all criminal prosecutions by article 1, section 12, of *56 the state Constitution. It is further insisted that the result or effect of a judgment enjoining the practice of medicine would lead to contempt proceedings if violated and would result, or might result, in the imprisonment of the defendant. It is also urged that courts will not enjoin the threatened commission of a crime, and that such proceedings are unknown to the common law. It may be conceded that the power to enjoin the threatened commission of ordinary crimes has never been recognized by the courts. But we are here dealing with the right or power of the Legislature to enact and to provide means for the enforcement of regulations looking to the health of the community. If no other or worse results would or could follow the violation of the penal provisions of a statute than the arrest and punishment of any one violating such provisions, it might well be that the Legislature would not have the authority to provide a remedy by injunction. As indicated, the statute was enacted, not to provide a means of punishing those violating its provisions, but to protect the community from what, in the judgment of the Legislature, was or might be detrimental to the public health. The power of the Court, while not often called into force, to prevent such an injury, has been repeatedly recognized in the decisions of the courts of this country.”

The case of New Orleans v. Liberty Shop, 157 La. 26, 40 A. L. R. 1136, 1149, was a similar case. ¥e quote from the opinion:

“ ‘The criminality of the act, it is said, neither gives nor ousts jurisdiction in chancery. Especially are the foregoing principles applicable where a statute on which the suit is based contains a provision for its enforcement by injunction. In granting the injunction, the court acts solely for the purpose of protecting property rights from damage, and in no way interferes with the enforcement of the criminal laws. The remedy given is purely preventive; defendant is not punished for what he has done; this is left to the criminal courts. ® * * Where an injunction is necessary for the protection of public rights, property or welfare, the criminality of the acts complained of does not bar the remedy by injunction. ’ ’ ’

From the State Board of Dental Examiners v. Payne, 281 S. W. (Ky.) 188, we quote:

*57 Moreover, we are unable to see why the remedy would prevail in eases where purely property rights are involved and withheld in eases where health, and possibly life, is involved, since to hazard the latter is as much a nuisance as it is to imperil and impair the former, even if we were compelled to place the grounds of our decision upon the right of. the commonwealth to abate a nuisance. But we are not convinced that the right to maintain this action rests solely upon that ground. The statute involved here is not purely a criminal one. It was enacted, as we have seen, under the police power of the state and in furtherance of a wholesome public policy. The purpose was not to create a crime, but to provide for the public welfare.

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Bluebook (online)
241 N.W. 663, 214 Iowa 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fray-iowa-1932.