21 Or. 301 | Or. | 1891
This litigation grows out of the act of 1889 to regulate the practice of medicine and surgery in this state and the act of 1891 amendatory thereof.
The first section of the act of 1889, (Session Acts, 1889, 144,) among other things provides: “ Every person practicing medicine or surgery in any of their departments shall possess the qualification required by this act. If a graduate of medicine, he shall present his diploma to the board of
By the amendatory act, (Session Acts, 1891, 153, 154,) section 3 of the original act is amended. As amended it is made the duty of the State Board of Examiners to issue certificates to all who shall furnish satisfactory proof of having received diplomas or licenses from legally chartered medical institutions in good standing of whatever school or system of medicine. They shall prepare three forms of certificates — one for persons in possession of diplomas or licenses, one for candidates examined by the board, and one for those who are practicing medicine or surgery in the state of Oregon and have registered their names and places
The construction of the Illinois statute came before the supreme court of that state in People ex rel. v. State Board of Dental Examiners, 110 Ill. 180. In the Illinois act the word reputable was used instead of the words good standing as in our and the Missouri acts; and in reaching the conclusion as to the powers of the board to determine what college was reputable within the meaning of the act, the court said: “As a part of the current history of the times, and as an aid in arriving at the legislative intention, we know there were colleges of different kinds authorized by the laws of states in which they were located in which there were pretended to be annually delivered full courses of lectures and instruction upon arts and sciences professed to be taught that were not reputable because they graduated for money frequently without any reference to scholarship. A diploma from such an institution afforded no evidence of scholarship or attainments in its holder. It was a fraud and deserved no respect from anybody, and it was against such diplomas the law was intended to protect the public, and therefore required the colleges to be reputable. Whether a college be reputable or not, is not a legal question but a question of fact. So, also, are the requirements in regard to the annual delivery of full courses of lectures and instruction. These questions of fact are by the act submitted to the decision of the hoard — not in so many words, but by the plainest and
The same question was again before the supreme court in Board of Dental Examiners v. People, 123 Ill. 227. In that case the board adopted a rule for its guidance in such cases, identical in principle with the one adopted by the appellant board. The resolution adopted by the Illinois board is as follows: “Resolved, That after June, 1885, the Illinois State Board of Dental Examiners will recognize as reputable only such dental colleges as require as a requisite of graduation attendance upon two full regular courses of lectures and practical instruction, which courses shall each be of not less than five months’ duration, and shall be held in separate years, with practical instruction intervening between the courses. Such colleges must also require a preliminary examination before admitting students to matriculation, provided that no certificates from a high or normal school or other literary institution is presented by the candidate.” In this case, People ex rel. v. State Board of Dental Examiners, supra, was approved, but it was held under the peculiar facts developed by the pleadings that the board had abused the discretion which the statute had vested in it, and for that reason the alternative writ was made peremptory. The opinion of the appellate court in this case is found in 20 Ill. App. 457.
So in State ex rel. v. Gregory, 83 Mo. 123; 53 Am. Rep. 565, the same construction was given a very similar statute in the state of Missouri. In that case it was held that the granting of certificates to holders of diplomas involved matters of judgment and discretion on the part of the state board of health, and would not be enforced by mandamus.
A similar question came before the supreme court of Minnesota in State ex rel. v. State Medical Examining Board, 32 Minn.
This class of legislation has its origin in the police power of the state. Its object is to protect the inhabitants of the state from imposition by presumptious pretenders, and it has been upheld and sustained in Massachusetts, Maine, New York, Ohio, Illinois, Alabama, Georgia, Missouri, and Texas. To render such a law effective, the 'power to grant certificates must be lodged in some recognized body of men learned in the science of medicine, with a supervisory power vested in the courts to review their acts, if the discretion which the law gives them shall be abused. But before the courts will interfere, it must be made to appear that there has been an abuse of discretion. It is not enough that there may be found men in the same profession who would have decided the other way.
We are the better satisfied with the result in this case, for the reason that th§ return of the board to the writ shows that after the certificate was refused on the ground that the college issuing the diploma was not one in good standing, the appellant submitted himself to an examination by the board and fell below the general average required, and for' that reason also a certificate was refused. There was no abuse .of discretion on the part of the board alleged or shown; and feeling ourselves bound by the authorities cited, we have only to reverse the judgment and dismiss the writ, and it is so ordered.