3 P.2d 344 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1931
After trial before the Board of Medical Examiners upon charges of unprofessional conduct, plaintiff's certificate to practice medicine and surgery in this state was revoked, and subsequently she instituted this proceeding *114 in the superior court for the purpose of annulling the order of revocation upon the ground that the accusation upon which it was based was legally insufficient to confer jurisdiction on said board to hear and determine the matter. Judgment was entered in favor of the board, and plaintiff has taken this appeal therefrom.
The sworn complaint initiating the proceedings before said board contained seven counts, and the order of revocation was based upon the board's affirmative finding that the charge set forth in the first count was sustained. The remaining counts were dismissed. The essential allegations of the first count were as follows: "Said Albert Carter further alleges and complains that since the issuance of said certificate of license to practice medicine and surgery to said Pearl Josephine Anderson by said Board of Medical Examiners, the said Pearl Josephine Anderson has been guilty of unprofessional conduct as the same is defined under the terms and provisions of subdivision 7a of section 14 of the State Medical Practice Act of the state of California, Statutes of 1913, as amended, and in that behalf alleges more particularly as follows, to wit: That on or about 16th day of December, 1927, and for some time immediately prior thereto, the said Pearl Josephine Anderson, did, in the city of Los Angeles, county of Los Angeles, state of California, aid and abet one Clodine Brown to practice a system and mode of treating the sick and afflicted, the said Clodine Brown being then and there without and not having a valid unrevoked certificate of license from the Board of Medical Examiners of the State of California, or any license, or certificate, or certificate of license, entitling her, the said Clodine Brown, to practice a, or any, system or mode of treating the sick and afflicted in the State of California, as she, the said Pearl Josephine Anderson then and there well knew." The point urged by plaintiff against the legal sufficiency of said count is that the phrase "aid and abet" as used therein is the conclusion of the pleader deduced from facts which should have been pleaded. In other words, it is contended that the accusation is fatally defective in failing to set forth the specific acts relied upon as constituting aiding and abetting.
[1] The rule followed in this state in determining the question of the legal sufficiency of accusations filed with *115
the Board of Medical Examiners seems to be that if the language of the statute upon which the accusation is based is sufficiently explicit to advise the person charged thereunder of the particular kind of unprofessional conduct of which he is accused, an accusation following the language of the statute is legally sufficient to confer jurisdiction on the board to hear and determine the matter. (Lanterman v. Anderson,
[2] Section 14 of the Medical Practice Act, as amended in 1927 (Stats. 1927, p. 99), which grants power to the Board of Medical Examiners to revoke certificates to practice for "unprofessional conduct", contains some eighteen subdivisions defining various acts which shall be deemed to constitute "unprofessional conduct"; and subdivision 7 (a) of said section, upon which the first count herein was based, declares that ". . . the aiding or abetting any unlicensed person to practice any system or mode of treating the sick or afflicted" shall constitute "unprofessional conduct". As will be noted, the accusation herein follows the language of the statute, which, construed in the light of the cases above cited, appears to be sufficiently explicit to inform the person charged of the particular kind of unprofessional conduct of which he is accused. As said in People v. Wong Hing,
Plaintiff relies mainly upon the decision in the case ofDyment v. Board of Medical Examiners, supra, wherein the accused was charged with having "procured by fraud and misrepresentation a certificate to practice medicine", and it was held that the accusation was legally insufficient to confer jurisdiction upon the board to hear and determine the matter because it did not set forth any of the facts relied upon as constituting fraud and misrepresentation. The word "fraud", however, unlike the words "aid" and "abet" has no fixed, definite meaning. It is an inference of law to be drawn from facts, and circumstances alleged and proved. (People v. McKenna,
The judgment is affirmed.
Tyler, P.J., and Cashin, J., concurred.