State v. . Siler

84 S.E. 1015, 169 N.C. 314
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 14, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 84 S.E. 1015 (State v. . Siler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Siler, 84 S.E. 1015, 169 N.C. 314 (N.C. 1915).

Opinion

Clare:, C. J.

The defendant was tried and found guilty in the municipal court of Greensboro for practicing for fee and reward, without license, as “a nondrug-giving physician.” On appeal to the Superior Court of Guilford,- upon a special verdict finding the facts, the judge held the defendant not guilty, and the State appealed.

The special verdict states that the defendant was tried under the act of 8 March, 1907, being chapter 764, as amended by chapter 92, Laws 1913. It is agreed that the defendant was resident in Greensboro 14 April, 1914, and on that day was engaged in the practice of “chiropractic and suggesto-therapy” as a nondrug-giving physician, and received compensation therefor; that chiropractic is a system of treating human diseases without use of drugs, by manipulating the spine, and that suggesto-therapy is a system of treating nervous diseases without the use of drugs, by mental suggestion; that the defendant has not been examined nor licensed as an osteopath under chapter 764, Laws 1907, or chapter 92, Laws 1913, amendatory thereof.

It is further agreed and found as a part of the special verdict that “the defendant was not practicing osteopathy nor wás he practicing, pretending or attempting to practice or use the science or system of osteopathy in treating diseases of the human body, and that he did not hold himself out in any manner as engaged in the practice of osteopathy.”

The State contends that section 2, chapter 764, Laws 1907, makes it unlawful to practice any nondrug healing system as an osteopath without taking the required examination and being licensed thereunder, and that chapter 92, Laws 1913, requires examination and license of “all nondrug practitioners, by whatever name known and of whatever school they claim -to be graduate of,” and that the defendant is guilty of a misdemeanor by virtue of said act of 1913.

The defendant contends that the act of 1907 as amended by the act of 1913 does not require nondrug-giving physicians other than osteopaths to pass examination or take out license, and that if it did, such act would be unconstitutional.

Laws .1907, eh. 764, sec. 8, now Pell’s Revisal, 4505a, defines osteopathy to be “the science of healing without the use of drugs, as taught by the various colleges recognized by the American Osteopathic Association.” Section 2 of said act, now Pell’s Revisal, sec. 4505h, requires “any person, before engaging in the practice of osteopathy in this State, to obtain a certificate and license to practice osteopathy from the board” therein designated. Section 9 of said act, now Pell’s Revisal, 4505m, provides that that chapter shall not prevent or interfere with “any person engaging in the act of healing in any manner taught by any school of medicine *316 or science, except such, as claim to be osteopaths or practice osteopathy as herein defined.”

Laws 1913, ch. 92, amends the aforesaid chapter 764, Laws 1907, in several particulars, and especially strikes out above cited section 9, Pell’s Revisal, 4505m, and adds to section 2, now Pell’s Revisa!, 4505h, the following : “The provisions of this section shall apply to all other nondrug-giving practitioners, by whatever name known or calling themselves, or of whatever school they claim to be graduates, .or hold diplomas, and to any one who holds himself or herself out as being able to diagnose, treat, operate, or prescribe for any human disease, pain, injury, deformity, or physical condition, and who shall offer or undertake by any means or method to diagnose, treat, operate, or prescribe for any human disease, pain, injury, deformity, or physical condition without the use of drugs, but shall not apply to those practicing their profession as licensed physicians, nor to Christian Scientists or masseurs or any one following in his or her practice the orders of licensed drug-giving physicians: Provided, however, that all persons so applying to said board for examination shall be examined only on the subjects of anatomy, physiology, pathology, and diagnosis, by said board, but no license shall be issued by said board to those who claim to be correspondence school course graduates, to practice in this State.”

Chapter 764, Laws 1907, provided that any person who should practice or attempt to practice that particular method of healing (osteopathy) without having complied with the provisions of the act should be guilty of misdemeanor. - Laws 1913, ch. 92, sec. 5, after inserting above amendment to section 6, which brought under the provisions of the act of 1907 “all other nondrug-giving practitioners, by whatever name known or calling themselves,” added the following at the end of said section 6 of the act of 1907: “and the punishment prescribed in this section shall likewise apply to others embraced in the provisions of this amended act and violating any of its provisions.” This simply makes the violation of the act, as amended, a misdemeanor.

There are other amendments to the act of 1907, set out in said chapter 92, Laws 1913. But the above shows the purport of the legislation. In chapter 764, Laws 1907, the General Assembly provided for the examination and licensing of nondrug-giving physicians known as osteopaths, in order to protect the public against incompetents and imposters professing to be osteopaths. The act of 1913, cli. 92, simply extends the act of 1907 to require the examination and licensing of “all other nondrug-giving practitioners, by whatever name known,” and makes those violating this statute guilty of misdemeanor to the same extent as those had been who practiced as osteopaths without complying with the requirements of the act of 1907.

*317 Tbe power of tbe Legislature to pass such statutes bas been fully discussed and settled in S. v. Xall, 121 N. C., 643, and S. v. Van Doran, 109 N. C., 864, as to practitioners of medicine and surgeons. In S. v. Call, supra (p. 646), are enumerated many “other callings, whether skilled trades or professions, affecting tbe public and which require skill and proficiency,” whose members must be examined and licensed. Since then the Legislature has required examination and license for following many other vocations.

The subject has been fully and more recently discussed, in sustaining the constitutional authority of the Legislature to regulate the practice of dentistry, by Mr. Justice Walker, S. v. Hicks, 143 N. C., 689.

In S. v. Biggs, 133 N. C., 729, and in S. v. MacKnight, 131 N. C., 723, this Court held that the object of such legislation was not to give special or exclusive privileges to any special body of men, but solely for the protection of the public, and to prohibit imposition by any one passing himself off as competent to engage in a practice or calling of a public nature when he was incompetent to do so. Therefore, it was held that the act in regard to the practice of medicine and the examination prescribed therefor could not embrace osteopaths, who did not prescribe drugs or other medicine.

By the act of 1907, Laws 764, it was intended to protect the public against imposition by those claiming to heal diseases without the use of drugs as osteopaths.

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84 S.E. 1015, 169 N.C. 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-siler-nc-1915.