Opinion
Plaintiffs challenge the constitutionality of Business and Professions Code section 2141, which prohibits the unlicensed practice of the healing arts. (Unless otherwise indicated, all statutoiy references are to the Business and Professions Code.) They are charged with violations of section 2141 in that as unlicensed persons they have practiced or held themselves out as practicing midwifery. The plaintiffs, defendants in the criminal proceedings pending against them in the Municipal Court of Santa Cruz County Judicial District, interposed a demurrеr to the second amended complaint which was overruled. As plaintiffs they then sought mandate in the Santa Cruz Superior Court, directing the municipal court to sustain their demurrer. After initially issuing its alternative writ, the superior court held a hearing and denied a peremptory writ. Further criminal proceedings in Santa Cruz Municipal Court have been stayed pending final disposition of the appeal.
The charging allegation of the People’s complaint is that on or about October 25, 1973, to March 6, 1974, each plaintiff “did willfully and unlawfully hold herself оut as practicing a system or mode of treating the sick or afflicted to wit: such practices as undertaking to assist and treat a woman in childbirth as authorized in Sections 2137 and 2140 of the Business and Professions Code, and treat for a physical condition of a *485 person, to wit: Terry Johnson, by such practices without having at the time of doing so a valid unrevoked certificate as provided in Chapter V, Division 2 of the Business and Professions Code.”
We consider the two applicable statutes, namely sections 2140 and 2141. Section 2140 recites: “The certificate to practice midwifery authorizes the holder to attend cases of normal childbirth. [If] As used in this chapter, the practice of midwifery constitutes the furthering or undertaking by any person to assist a woman in normal childbirth. But it does not include the use of any instrument at any childbirth, except such instrument as is necessary in severing the umbilical cord, nor does it include the assisting of childbirth by any artificial, forcible, or mechanical means, nor the performance of any version, nor the removal of adherent placenta, nor the administering, prescribing, advising, or employing, either before or after any childbirth, of any drug, other than a disinfectant or cathartic. [1Í] A midwife is not authorized to practice medicine and surgery by the provisions of this chapter.”
Section 2141 provides in full: “Any person, who practices or attempts to practice, or who advertises or holds himself out as practicing, any system or mode of treating the sick or afflicted in this state, or who diagnoses, treats, operates for, or prescribes for any ailment, blemish, deformity, disease, disfigurement, disorder, injury or other mental or physical condition of any person, without having at the time of so doing a valid, unrevoked certificate as provided in this chapter, or without being authorized to perform such act pursuant to a certificate obtained in accordance with some other provision of law, is guilty of a misdemean- or.”
It may be seen that the latter section appears to proscribe two types of medically related activities. It is unlawful, first, for an unlicensed person to practice or hold himself out as practicing any “system or mode of treating the sick or afflicted;” second, the prohibition extends to any actual diagnosis, treatment, surgery or prescription for a “mental or physical condition,” whether or not such activities comprise a system or mode of treating the sick or afflicted. Initially, plaintiffs assert that the complaint is so worded as to charge only violations of the first statutory prohibition relating to “sickness or affliction.” We conclude, however, that the comрlaint, reasonably read, charges also, as the People contend, that plaintiffs not only held themselves out as practicing a medical system, but engaged in the treatment of a particular physical condition as well, in violation of the second part of section 2141.
*486
The purpose of a criminal pleading is to give to defendant fair and adequate notice of the nature of the offense charged. Although the language of the complaint in question is not a model of precision and clarity, it follоws roughly the wording of section 2141. Penal Code section 952 provides that in an accusatory pleading, a statement that the accused has committed some public offense “ ‘may be in the words of the enactment describing the offense, . . .’ ” (See
Ratner
v.
Municipal Court
(1967)
The preliminary issues resolved, four central questions remain. (1) Does section 2141 prohibit the treatment of, or holding oneself out to treat and assist, a woman during childbirth? (2) Is the section unconstitutionally vague, failing to give adequate notice of the particular conduct it proscribes? (3) Is the section’s prohibition overbroad, encompassing constitutionally protected conduct? (4) Does the section, construed to prohibit the assisting of a woman in normal childbirth, violate a woman’s right to privacy?
We have concluded that although pregnancy is not a “sickness or affliction,” it is a “physical condition” within the contemplation of section 2141. So construed, that section prohibits unlicensed persons from diagnosing, treating, operating upon or prescribing for a woman undergoing normal pregnancy or childbirth, and the reference in the complaint to those of рlaintiffs’ alleged practices which, under section 2140, are to be performed only by certificated midwives, gives adequate notice of the acts constituting the offense charged. We hold further that section 2141 is not unconstitutionally broad or vague, nor does it violate the prospective mother’s right to privacy.
1. Construction of Section 2141
As we have seen, section 2141 prohibits practicing or holding oneself out to practice “any system or mode of treating the sick or afflicted in this state . . . .” (Italics added.) Plaintiffs are charged with violating this provision by undertaking to аssist a woman in childbirth, thereby engaging in those acts and practices which, under sections 2137 and 2140, *487 are authorized when performed by persons holding medical or midwifery licenses. Section 2137 permits those with a valid certificate to practice surgery and other modes of medical treatment, while section 2140 authorizes those with a valid certificate to practice midwifery, defined as attendance upon normal childbirth without use of drugs or instruments.
Plaintiffs assert that a woman who is pregnant or undergoing childbirth is neither “sick” nor “afflicted,” within the contemplation of the first part of section 2141. We agree that practices authorized by section 2140, which relate only to normal childbirth, cannot be deemed treatment of “the sick or afflicted.” To the extent that the complaint in question charges only that plaintiffs’ practice of midwifery constituted a violation of section 2141 as treatment of the “sick or afflicted,” it does not state a cause of action.
This conclusion, however, is founded on due process considerations, not on a conviction that the phrase “sick or afflicted” must logically and necessarily exclude “normal” physiological conditions. Plaintiffs cite numerous decisions characterizing childbirth as a normal biological function of women rather than a disease or sickness. (See, e.g.,
Cleveland Board of Education
v.
LaFleur
(1974)
The question is close. Generally, the provisions of a penal statute “are to be construed according to the fair import of their terms, with a view to effect its objects and to promote justice.” (Pen. Code, § 4;
*488
see
People
v.
Fair
(1967)
The People allege, however, that in the matter before us plaintiffs did more than purport to practice midwifery. By reference to section 2137, the complaint charges that plaintiffs held themselves out as competent to perform acts not within the “normal childbirth” limitations of section 2140. As to these latter practices, the complaint does state a cause of action.
The reference to practices authorized under section 2137 for a certificated physician and surgeon encompasses surgery, use of instruments and drugs, and other acts not permitted under section 2140 in connection with a midwife’s attendance upon normal childbirth. Complications of pregnancy that require the kind of procedures authorized only under section 2137 unquestionably do qualify as “sicknesses” or “afflictions.” Consequently, an allegation that plaintiffs represented themselves as capable of undertaking activities not related to normal childbirth is sufficient to state a cause of action under the provision of section 2141 prohibiting holding oneself out to treat the “sick or afflicted.”
The second part of the complaint, as noted above, alleges that plaintiffs actually treated one Terry Johnson for a “physical condition.” This part parallels the language of the second portion of section 2141, which provides that a person “who diagnoses, treats, operates for, or prescribes for any ailment, blemish, deformity, disease, disfigurement, disorder, injury or other mental or physical condition of any person, without having at the time of so doing a valid, unrevoked certificate ... is guilty of a misdemeanor.” (Italics added.) This clause by its own terms applies to a wider set of circumstances than does the first portion of the statute which deals only with treating or holding oneself out to treat the sick or afflicted. The term “physical condition” is broad and, unlike the *489 phrase “sick and afflicted,” does not necessarily imply the existence of an abnormality or disease. It seems readily to encompass.pregnancy and childbirth.
In interpreting this language we аre aided by certain accepted rules of statutory construction. It is well established that a specific provision should be construed with reference to the entire statutory system of which it is a part, in such a way that the various elements of the overall scheme are harmonized.
(Merrill
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles
(1969)
Section 2141 is part of a general statutory scheme contained in division 2 of the Business and Professions Code and entitled “Healing Arts.” As originally enacted, section 2135 authorized the issuance of certificates to practice medicine or surgery, podiatry, and midwifery. (Stats. 1937, ch. 399, p. 1258; see also Stats. 1917, ch. 81, pp. 96-97.) The precise acts authorized under each certificate were specified in separate sections. (Stats. 1937, ch. 399, pp. 1258-1259, 1277-1279; §§ 2137-2140.) Midwifery, for example, was and still is defined as “the furthering or undertaking by any person to assist a woman in normal childbirth.” (§ 2140, reеnacted as § 2350.)
Following the licensing provision is section 2141 which makes it a misdemeanor to engage in various types of acts without the required certificate. Because of its place in the statutory scheme, and given its language, section 2141 appears to be specifically intended to prohibit uncertificated persons from engaging in the practices authorized under the various certificates described in the chapter, including the midwifery certificate. Any other interpretation would render much of this scheme unnecessary and ineffective, authorizing certificates for activities in which it was already proper and legal to engage. We have generally been exceedingly reluctant to attach an interpretation to a particular statute which renders other existing provisions unnecessary. (See, e.g.,
People
v.
Gilbert
(1969)
In 1949, section 2135 was amended to exclude midwifeiy from that group of practices for which new certificates could be issued. (Stats. 1949, ch. 898, p. 1670.) Significantly, the sections defining midwifery and the practices authorized under a midwifery certificate were retained in the statutory scheme (§ 2140, reenacted as § 2350), as were the provisions designating the conditions under which a midwife’s certificate could be revoked. (§§ 2400-2408, reenacted as §§ 2351-2359.) The obvious inference to be drawn from the retention of these provisions is that the Legislature intended that the practice of midwifery without a certificate be prohibited under section 2141. While new certificates could not be issued, midwifeiy could continue to be lawfully practiced under an unrevoked сertificate issued before 1949.
In 1975, new legislation became effective which again provided for the certification of midwives. (§§ 2350, 2746-2746.8.) Like the sections discussed above, these provisions would be without effect unless the practice of midwifery without a valid certificate be considered a violation of section 2141.
Prior California case law also supports the conclusion that the treatment of pregnancy and childbirth without a valid certificate is proscribed by section 2141. In
Crees
v.
California State Board of Medical Examiners, supra,
Plaintiffs find significance in the existence of statutes such as Business and Professions Code section 551, imposing the duty of treating a newborn child’s eyes not only upon physicians and midwives, but also upon “any person” assisting in the birth. (See also Health & Saf. Code, *491 § 305.) It is argued that such statutes, extant both during the periods when midwifery certificates were available and when they were not, evidence legislative recognition that unlicensed persons may lawfully attend and assist a childbirth.
In the absence of other indications of legislative intent, plaintiffs’ argument might have some validity. However, in the light of the overall statutory licensing pattern and those specific provisions which prohibit practices relating to the healing arts, it seems fair to conclude that these sections, while imposing duties, do not thereby authorize conduct which is otherwise unauthorized. In short, the statutes simply provide that a person who may be assisting a childbirth under emergency circumstances (§ 2144), or whose attendance is unlаwful under section 2140, may violate a second duty by failing to comply with procedures necessary to ensure the welfare of the infant.
Thus, although normal childbirth is not a “sickness or affliction” within the meaning of section 2141, we conclude, in light of the total statutory scheme governing the practice of the “healing arts,” that section 2141 ’s prohibition against unlicensed persons treating a “physical condition” was intended to encompass the practice of midwifery.
2. Constitutionality of Section 2141
(a) Vagueness. Plaintiffs assert that section 2141 is so ambiguous and uncertain that it cannоt reasonably be determined whether its prohibition against unlicensed diagnosis and treatment forbids various forms of otherwise innocent conduct such as the possession by a public library of a medical textbook; the statement by an unlicensed person to a friend that the friend sounds like he has a cold; the suggestion that a grief be assuaged by a long trip; or advice by an unlicensed person that one suffering from a cold administer to himself aspirin and orange juice.
It is an established principle of constitutional law that “. . . a statute which either forbids or requires the doing of an act in terms so vague that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application, violates the first essential of due process of law.”
(Connally
v.
General Const. Co.
(1926)
In examining statutes challenged on vagueness grounds, courts have looked not merely at the hypothetical cases to which the statute has uncertain applicability, but also at the act allegedly committed by the charged defendant. The presumptive validity of a legislative act militatеs against invalidating a statute merely “. . . because difficulty is found in determining whether certain marginal offenses fall within . . . [its] language. [H] Void for vagueness simply means that criminal responsibility should not attach where one could not reasonably understand that
his
contemplated conduct is proscribed.”
(United States
v.
National Dairy Corp.
(1963)
It is apparent that the Legislature intended section 2141 to apply only to persons actually purporting to practice the “healing arts.” Medical services rendered by unlicensed persons in an emergency situation are expressly exempted from the operation of section 2141, along with “the domestic administration of family remedies” (§ 2144) and therapy consisting solely of prayer (§ 2146). Informal recommendation among friends as to the efficacy of nonprescription vitamin compounds or ocean cruises seems akin to sharing a “family remedy,” as does the presence during childbirth of a husband, friend or relative who merely offers verbal reassurance, soothing massage, or assistance in breathing exercises. Midwifery, however, is characterized by the Legislature as a “healing art,” and the aсtivities of midwives are not properly analogous to the peripheral services of an attending husband or family member, precisely because the midwife is consulted for her expertise or experience as an advisor and assistant. Thus, an unlicensed person *493 violates section 2141 in undertaking to render skilled, material assistance in the birth process, to recognize the development of certain problems that may occur (see, e.g., §§ 2400, 2402-2408, reenacted as §§ 2353-2359), to cut the umbilical cord, or to engage in аny other acts that involve assumption of responsibility for the delivery of the child. The conduct with which plaintiffs are charged—rendering or offering to render services authorized under sections 2140 and 2137—unquestionably falls within this category.
Greater precision of statutory language might well be required if First Amendment rights were involved. (See
Smith
v.
Goguen, supra,
(b) Overbreadth. Plaintiffs contend further that because section 2141 purports to regulate nondiseased as well as diseased conditions, the statute is unconstitutionally overbroad. Arguing that the language “or other mental or physical condition of any person” embraces, among other things, grief, backaches, acne, and colds, they assert that the right of privacy of prospective patients and the free speech rights of unlicensed persons wishing to advise others concerning these conditions, are infringed by the breadth of the statutory language.
Statutes which prohibit constitutionally protected conduct are said to be overbroad and their enforcement may
constitute
a denial of due process.
(Gooding
v.
Wilson
(1972)
It does not appear that the phrase “other mental or physical condition,” read in the context of the entire section, is overbroad. The prоscription of section 2141 applies to one who “diagnoses, treats, operates for, or prescribes” without a valid certificate. These verbs have obvious reference to the title of the statutory scheme, “Healing Arts.” (See
People
v.
Navarro, supra,
(c) Right of Privacy. Plaintiffs assert that if section 2141 is construed to prohibit attending and assisting a pregnant woman in childbirth, it violates the expectant mother’s right оf privacy. They argue that a woman’s right to privacy encompasses the liberty to choose whomever, she wants to assist in the deliveiy of her child.
In recent years the constitutional right to privacy, derived from the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments, has been substantially, expanded to protect certain personal choices pertaining to child-rearing, marriage, procreation and abortion. (E.g.,
Roe
v.
Wade
(1973)
It is true that the Legislature has never attempted to require women to give birth in a hospital or with a physician in attendance, just as it has not generally sought to compel adults to obtain medical treatment. But the state has a recognized interest in the life and well-being of an unborn child.
(Roe
v.
Wade, supra,
As we have concluded that normal childbirth, while not a sickness or affliction, is a “physical condition” within the meaning of the second part of Business and Professions Code section 2141, it is clear that the practice of midwifery without a certificate is prohibited, and thát the complaint herein does state a cause of action by reference to both sections.2137 and 2140. Accordingly, the superior court properly denied a writ of mandate, and trial in the municipal court should proceed in accord with the views expressed herein.
The judgment is affirmed.
Wright, C. J., McComb, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Sullivan, J., and Clark, J., concurred..
Appellants’ petition for a rehearing was denied January 5, 1977.
