State v. Morrill

5 Ohio N.P. 133
CourtHuron County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 133 (State v. Morrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Huron County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Morrill, 5 Ohio N.P. 133 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1897).

Opinion

WILDMAN, J.

In the case of the State against E. C. Morrill, the defendant moves to quash the indictment upon the ground that the same is too indefinite and uncertain to apprise the defendant of the nature of the charge against him, and that it sets forth the evidence to sustain the charge, and not the charge itself.

The indictment alleges in terms that the defendant, at the time and in the county stated, did “knowingly, wilfully and unlawfully practice medicine without having first complied with the provisions of an act of the General Assembly of the state of Ohio, entitled, ‘An act j to regulate the practice of medicine in the State of Ohio,’ passed February 27, 1896, in this, to-wit: — He, the said E. O. Morrill, not having then and there and theretofore obtained or received from the state board of medical registration and examination of the state of Ohio, a certificate as required by the act aforesaid, entitling him to practice medicine in the state of Ohio, and he, the said E. O. Morrill, then and there being a resi dent of said Huron county, Ohio, and not having then and there and theretofore left with the probate judge of said Huron county, Ohio, for record, any certificate to practice medicine, issued to him, the said E. O. Morrill, by authority of the board of medical registration and examination of the state of Ohio, unlawfully did then and there in ail inquest of lunacy of one Henry B. Williams, make out a certain certificate of insanity such as is provided for in see. 701, of the Bev. Stat., of Ohio, and did then and there append his name and signature to said certificate, and did then and there append the letters M. D. to his name so signed as aforesaid, to said certificate aforesaid.”

It does not appear by this indictment whether the claim is made by the state that the defendant was a person who had been engaged in the practice of medicine for ans^ period,long or short, without a diploma from some legally chartered medical college or institution, and within the terms of that provision of the law of 1896, requiring certain persons to apply to the state medical board of registration for the purpose of examination to obtain certificates entitling them to practice medicine. Indeed, the indictment does not disclose to which of the three classes of persons described in the act, the indictment is intended to apply. I do not say that it is indefinite in this respect, or that there is any requirement in the law that an indictment should state, to which of these classes it is intended 'to apply. But I call attention to the fact, in view of the argument that is made that the statute,while held by our supreme court to be constitutional in certain respects,has not been, as it is claimed, held to be constitutional in respect to persons who are embraced in the class to which, it is assumed in argument, that this defendant belongs.

In the discussion, though not specifically in the motion, the indictment is assailed upon the ground that the act, in so far as it could apply to this defendant, is unconstitutional as an interference with vested rights; that it is in contravention of the provision of the constitution of the United States, that no state shall pass any ex post facto law, or any law impairing the obligation of contracts.

j I have examined the recent case of France against the State, 57 O. S., 1, i (Advance Sheets). The statement of facts does not apprise us of the particular class to which the man indicted there, belonged.

The statement briefly is, that plaintiff in error was indicted by the grand jury of Sandusky county,for practicing- medicine in that county without having obtained from the board of medical registration and examination, the certificate required, to entitle a person to practice medicine in this state. He was tried and convicted at the April term, 1897, of the court of common pleas and sentenced to pay a fine and costs, to reverse which judgment he, on leave granted him,filed his petition in error in "the court above.

It does not appear whether he was a person practicing under a diploma previously obtained from any medical college; or whether he was a person practicing- and entitled to practice under«the previously existing laws of 'the state of Ohio without a diploma; or whether he was included in the third class of persons not entitled to practice by virtue of any previous law, and required under this new law if constitutional and valid as to him,- to make application to the state board and receive a certificate entitling- him to practice.

While in the France case, the question was not particularly discussed, whether this statute is' unconstitutional as being an inhibition of the provision of the constitution of the United States, prohibiting states from passing ex post facto laws, or laws impairing the obligation of contracts, the suggestion was made to the court in argument by counsel, as one .of the grounds for holding the statute to be invalid, that (quoting the language of the argument of counsel as given on page 5), “an act of the legislature that divests rights, that violates contracts, or that assumes to control or exercise judicial power is unconstitutional.”

The supreme court, I believe, does not decide this precise question as to whether the act violates the provision of the federal constitution referred to; but Judge Williams, speaking for the court, says: “If the statute is constitutional, it is not claimed there is any er[135]*135ror in the record for which the judgment below should be reversed. The contention is, that the act, in some of its provisions is repugnant to the constitution of this state, and in others, to the constitution of the United States; and that the remaining provisions [of the statute are so dependent, in their practical operation, upon those which are subject to these constitutional infirmities that the whole act becomes invalid.”

So it appears that the attention of the court was invited to the consideration of the question whether there was a violation of the provision of the eo istitution of the United States,inhibiting any act of the state legislature impairing the obligation of contracts.

One of the main arguments here presented is, that this statute is unconstitutional on the same ground. The supreme court in the France case, held the act to be constitutional at least, in so far as it was necessary so to hold it. (See 2nd and 3rd syllabi). The supreme court seem to have passed more particularly upon the other asserted ground of error, viz: That the state board was acting in a judicial capacity, and, in overruling that point, held that they were acting rather in an administrative one, and that there was no violation of any constitutional provision limiting judicial acts to judicial bodies or tribunals provided for by the constitution and the law.

I am inclined to think, however, even without the aid of this decision of the supreme court, but in entire harmony therewith, that the act is consitutional; that it does not impair the obligation of any contract. It is not argued in the case before me, especially, that the act is an ex post facto law, and perhaps it is conceded by counsel that it is not such. It looks to the future. It does not make-an act criminal which was committed before the passage of the act. It does not punish a man for practicing medicine prior to its passage, so that it'is not ex post facto in the sense of being retroactive. Nor do I think that this act can be held to be one impairing the obligation of a contract.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio N.P. 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-morrill-ohctcomplhuron-1897.