There can be few questions, if any, more clearly within the police powers of the government, than the conservation of the public health. On this power rests all the doctrine of quarantine, of pest-houses, of compulsory vaccination, of sanitary s'ewerage, of many forms of public nuisance, and many other acts of precaution, not necessary to be enumerated. And a learned and qualified membership of the medical profession is one of the confessed agencies in protecting the public against the dangers of charlatanism. To prescribe rules and tests for the ascertainment of the qualifications of applicaants for authority to practice medicine as a livelihood, is clearly within the scope of legislative
We find nothing in the civil aspects of the statute which offends the State constitution.
The violation of the statute we have in hand is, however, not an offense which the law characterizes as malum in se. It is only malum prohibitum, or a wrong only because the law prohibits it. Such violation of law is not, without more, an indictable offense. Says Mr. Cooley — Const. Lim. (5th Ed.), 745 — “Whether the prohibited act or omission shall be made a criminal offense, punishable under the general laws, or subject to punishment under municipal by-laws, or, on the other hand, the party be deprived of all remedy for the right, which, but for the regulation, he might have had against other persons, are questions which the legislature must decide.” So, however much the legislature may enjoin certain duties, or interdict certain omissions of duty, unless the duty commanded, or the act prohibited, would amount to an indictable offense independent of the statute, no indictment can be maintained, unless the statute expressly authorizes it.
Section 4078 of the Code of 1886 is the statute under which it is claimed the defendant was rightly convicted. It stands in the place of section 4243 of the Code of 1876, but is materially different from it. It declares, that any person practicing medicine or surgery, except in one of four named
It was proved that, before defendant entered upon the practice of medicine in Bussell county, there was organized in said county a county medical society, in affiliation with the Medical Association of Alabama, as provided by section 1301 of the Code of 1886, and that said county medical society had kept up its organization. The State proved a prima facie case against the defendant, and rested. The defendant then read in evidence a diploma from a regular medical college in the State of Georgia, and proved that he had had said diploma recorded in the office of the Judge of Probate of Bussell county, before he entered upon the practice of medicine. The defendant was convicted — the court instructing the jury to find him guilty, if they believed the evidence.
By an examination of the Code of 1886, beginning with section 1296, it will be seen that, under our statutes, there are two organizations, or systems, under which physicians may obtain authority to practice their profession. The one system is by license from a medical board established by the court of County Commissioners, for the county in which the applicant proposes to practice. — §§ 1296, 1297. Under that system, “A regular graduate of a medical college in the United States, having a diploma,” and having that diploma properly recorded, “is.entitled (without a license) to practice medicine, in a county having only a medical board established by the court of County Commissioners.” — § 1298. Authority to practice medicine under the foregoing provisions is, however, limited to counties “in which there is no board of medical examiners organized in accordance with the constitution of the Medical Association of the State of Alabama, and in affiliation with the association; . . . but the existence and authority thereof must terminate whenever a board of medical examiners is organized in the county in accordance with the constitution of the Medical Association of the State, and in affiliation with the association.” When.
The language of the penal enactment, .§ 4708, as we have shown, excludes from its operation four specified categories. The second of the categories expressly excepted is, “not having first obtained a diploma.” Brooks had first obtained a diploma, and, therefore, if we consult only the penal section, unaided by other provisions, his case does not fall within it. We are not permitted to say that the word diploma first mentioned in this section, and copied above, must mean a diploma from a medical college of the State of Alabama, for the fourth exception makes express provision for just such case. If exception two and exception four cover the same ground, why duplicate the expressions, and why require a record to be made in one case, and not in the other? If it be objected that the interpretation we propose leads to the absurdity of requiring an Alabama graduate to record his diploma, and excuses graduates of other medical colleges from doing so, our answer must be, that we are dealing, not with our own language, but with the language of the statute as it is written.
It is contended, in favor of the ruling of the Circuit Court, that we must interpret the penal section in the light of the statute found in the civil part of the Code — § 1296 et seq.— and hold that, under its very general provisions, an indictment will lie for practicing medicine without conforming to what that somewhat comprehensive statute has enjoined as prerequisite duties. And, carrying out this idea, it is claimed that we must so construe the statute as to make its provisions applicable to every departure from statutory requirements, whether the breach be committed in a failure to obtain authority from one board of examiners, or the other;
It would, as a general proposition, be dangerous to apply such liberal rules to the interpretation of penal enactments. When the legislature enjoins several duties, some of graver, and others of minor importance, and then declares that a breach of the graver of those duties shall constitute an indictable misdemeanor, and fails to make a similar declaration as to the others, to assume that they meant more than they expressed would be treading on dangerous ground. To undertake the practice of medicine without a diploma, without a license, and without a certificate of qualification, is certainly a graver offense to society and its well-being, than to assume to practice by virtue of a medical education and diploma from a college outside of the State of Alabama, or to omit to have that diploma recorded. We can not know that the legislature intended farther than they have expressed their intention.
There is a stronger reason why we can not adopt the interpretation contended for. Under the provisions of the civil part of the statute, only certain expressed classes of persons can, without examination, obtain certificates of qualifications, from examiners acting in affiliation with the State Medical Association; and such certificate — not the diploma — must be recorded. — Code, §§ 1305 — 6. There is no provision authorizing graduates of an Alabama Medical College to practice medicine without a certificate of qualification, or- which entitles them to such certificate on the mere production of a diploma. Yet it is clearly not an indictable offense for “a regular graduate of a medical college of this State, having had his diploma legally recorded,” to engage in such practice. This demonstrates that the penal section, 4078, is not co-extensive with what are called the civil provisions.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed; and inasmuch as the defendant can not, under the facts of this case, be convicted, the cause will not be remanded. Let the defendant be discharged.