Ullman Ex Rel. Levine v. State Department of Health

10 Conn. Super. Ct. 188, 10 Conn. Supp. 188, 1941 Conn. Super. LEXIS 185
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1941
DocketFile 61734
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 Conn. Super. Ct. 188 (Ullman Ex Rel. Levine v. State Department of Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ullman Ex Rel. Levine v. State Department of Health, 10 Conn. Super. Ct. 188, 10 Conn. Supp. 188, 1941 Conn. Super. LEXIS 185 (Colo. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

*189 O’SULLIVAN, J.

On November 18, 1941, this court issued an alternative writ of mandamus in the above captioned matter. The writ alleges these facts: the relator is a licensed osteopathic physician, practicing his profession in the City of New Haven. At various times prior to November 12, 1941, he had sent to the respondent specimens of blood of some of his patients, for the purpose of having a test made for syphilis and he had asked for the findings as to the positive or negative character of the blood. On all of these occasions, the respondent honored the relator’s request. When, however, on November 12th he forwarded two specimens for examination, the respondent refused to make the tests and it still maintains this attitude up to the present time. This, says the relator, is arbitrary and illegal, in view of the statutory duty claimed to rest upon the respondent.

The return admits that the relator is properly licensed to practice osteopathy and that while the blood received prior to November 12th was tested, this was due to error and inadvertance. It further admits receiving the specimens on November 12th and its refusal to submit them to test. Then, by way of what is intended to operate as a special defense, the respondent alleges that the specimens were obtained by the relator’s using a hypodermic needle; that this process of drawing blood from the human body is surgery; that the relator has no, license to practice surgery; and finally, that were the respondent to make the desired tests, it would amount to the aiding and abetting of a violation of law by the relator.

To this so-called special defense, a demurrer has been addressed which the parties agree presents this legal question: may the relator take blood specimens from his patients through the use of a hypodermic needle, for the limited purpose outlined by section 1595c of the 1935 Cumulative Supplement to the General Statutes.

This section, passed by the Legislature in 1935, wrought a radical change in the time-honored formalities demanded of those contemplating marriage. The law now precludes a registrar of vital statistics from accepting ’ an application for a license to marry until he shall receive “a statement or statements signed by a licensed physician that each applicant has submitted” to a blood test for syphilis and that “in the opinion of such physician, the person is not infected with *190 syphilis or in a stage of that disease that may become communicable and such statements shall be accompanied by a record of the standard laboratory tests made.” (Italics added.) The section continues, “a standard laboratory blood test shall be a test for syphilis approved by the state department of health and shall be performed by said department on request of a licensed physician.” (Italics added.)

In 1937, the Legislature passed the following Act: “The term ‘licensed physician’ [as used in §1595c] shall be construed to include a licensed osteopathic physician.” (Supp. [1939] §1315e.) '

The gravamen of the respondent’s argument is this: while the Act of 1937 permits the relator to be classified as a licensed physician, his power to function in that capacity is limited in scope, and the extent of his privilege goes no further than to do what section 1595c permits, namely, to sign statements that a would-be groom or bride has submitted to the required blood test and that in his opinion the person is not infected, etc. Stated in another way, the claim is, that the,specimen of blood must be drawn by one licensed to practice surgery, such as, for example, Dr. Doe, and thereafter the relator may forward this specimen to the respondent, and upon receiving a report of the laboratory test, the former may then express his opinion in writing as to the condition of the applicant’s blood. For, continues the argument, if the relator takes such specimen, he is trespassing on the field of surgery, a right he possesses neither by virtue of his own license to practice osteopathy nor from any express authority found in section 1595c. Finally, it is urged, that to permit the osteopathic physician to perform surgery is so contrary to the art and philosophy of osteopathy and to the public policy of the State as formulated by the separation and classification of the healing arts (medicine, osteopathy, chiropractic and natureopathy) that the absence of any expressly conferred right to draw blood is highly significant of the legislative intention to preclude the relator and those of his profession from performing this surgical process.

It seems almost needless to say that the judiciary is not concerned with the wisdom of either of the Acts in question. The court’s task is neither to applaud nor condemn them. Its services have been sought for the limited purpose of determining what the Legislature meant when it said, in 1937, that *191 the term “licensed physician” as used in the 1935 Act shall be construed to include a licensed osteopathic physician.

There is no more elementary rule of statutory construction than that the intention of the Legislature must govern. The difficulty, of course, lies in discovering that intention. It is not like something tangible that has been lost and will turn up after a little searching around the house. Nonetheless, one is not without helpful aids in the form of rules by which he can eventually locate what he is after.

The intention of the Legislature must primarily be determined from the language it used. However, a court is not confined to the literal meaning of the words, because words must be subservient to intent rather than intent to words. “Where the mind labours to discover the design of the legislature, it seises every thing from which aid can be derived,” said Chief Justice Marshall. United States vs. Fisher, 2 Cranch 358, 386, 2 U.S. (L. ed.) 304, 313. Thus, a broad, general view of the statute must necessarily be taken to get an exact conception of its aim and object, bearing in mind that one ambiguously worded should be so construed as to make it effective in attaining the purpose for which it was passed. Kelly vs. Dewey, 111 Conn. 281, 291.

The object of the 1935 Act was to prevent the marriage of anyone afflicted with communicable syphilis. While the Act is, in the main, couched in negative language directed towards registrars of vital statistics and couples contemplating marriage, it sets up, at least by unquestionable inference, the machinery and the source of man power through which shall be determined the condition of the blood of those seeking a marriage license. The man power comes from the ranks of licensed physicians, who, by virtue of their license to practice medicine, needed no special grant of power to draw blood as a necessary incident to the method by which tests for syphilis were to be handled.

Then came the Act of 1937 which adds the osteopathic physician to the man power previously provided for. All osteopathic physicians must now be deemed to be licensed physicians for the limited purpose of accomplishing the object of the Act of 1935. To attain that end, blood must be tested; to test blood, it must be taken from the patient. If the right to perform this preliminary step in the process of testing blood is denied the osteopathic physician, he is, for all practicable

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 Conn. Super. Ct. 188, 10 Conn. Supp. 188, 1941 Conn. Super. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ullman-ex-rel-levine-v-state-department-of-health-connsuperct-1941.