The plaintiff membership corporation, claiming to represent about half of the State’s chiropractors, and the individual plaintiff, a chiropractor, appeal from a judgment which dismissed their complaint in an action brought to have declared unconstitutional regulation 19 of chapter XVI of the New York State Sanitary Code and to restrain its enforcement. Concededly, such enforcement would seriously impede the practice of chiropractic.
Chapter XVT is entitled “ Ionizing Radiation” and the questioned regulation 19 thereof provides as follows :
“ Regulation 19. Limitations on application of radiation to humans. No person shall apply radiation to a human being unless such person is licensed or otherwise authorized to practice medicine, dentistry, podiatry or osteopathy under the provisions of the Education Law of the State of New York. Radiation shall be applied by a licensed or otherwise authorized person to only those parts of the human body specified in the law under which such person is licensed or authorized to diagnose and treat.
*287 “ This regulation shall not prohibit the use of radiation by a technician, nurse or other person, if such use is directed or ordered by a person licensed or authorized to practice medicine, dentistry, podiatry or osteopathy under the provisions of the Education Law of the State of New York.
“ The sale, lease, transfer or loan of X-ray or fluoroscopic equipment or the supplies appertaining thereto, except to persons engaged in an occupation where such use is permitted, and except to hospitals, infirmaries, and medical and dental schools, institutions and clinics, is prohibited. However, this restriction shall not apply to persons intending to use such equipment and supplies solely for the application of radiation to other than human beings, nor to the acquisition of such equipment or supplies by wholesalers, distributors or retailers in the regular course of their trade or business.”
The regulation was promulgated by the Public Health Council of the State of New York pursuant to section 225 of the Public Health Law, which, by subdivision 3 thereof, authorizes the council, with the approval of the Commissioner of Health, ‘ ‘ to establish, and from time to time, amend and repeal sanitary regulations, to be known as the sanitary code of the state of New York”, which may, according to paragraph (a) of subdivision 4 of the same section, “ deal with any matters affecting the security of life or health or the preservation and improvement of public health in the state of New York. ’ ’
It was found upon adequate evidence that when X rays of the full spine are taken, the gonads or reproductive organs of the male or female patient are in the direct primary beam and susceptible to damage affecting the reproductive cells by producing deleterious changes in the genes and chromosomes of those cells, leading to mutations and resulting in serious abnormalities in the offspring in future generations; that leukemia may also be a consequence of X-ray exposure; and that the effects of a patient’s exposures are additive and cumulative.
As alleged and proven, “the practice of chiropractic is a method of detecting and correcting, by manual or mechanical means, structural imbalance, distortion or subluxations in the human body for the purpose of removing nerve interferences where such interference is the result of or related to distortion, misalignment or subluxations of or in the vertebral column.” Plaintiffs further aver that it is necessary for chiropractors ‘ ‘ to use, take and interpret X-rays of the spinal column in order to detect structural imbalance, distortion, misalignment or subluxations of and in the vertebral column ’ ’. The practice of chiropractic is not forbidden in New York; nor has the State
Asserting, then, that chiropractors pursue a lawful calling, plaintiffs urge that the regulation, particularly in the light of the provision thereof which excepts from the initial prohibition “the use of-radiation by a technician, nurse or other person ”, if directed or ordered by a physician, dentist, podiatrist or osteopath, contravenes the Constitution of the State of New York and, in certain respects, that of the United States as well; as constituting an invalid delegation of legislative power (cf. N. Y. Const., art. Ill, § 1); as discriminatory against chiropractors, and so denying equal protection of the laws (U. S. Const., 14th Arndt.; N. Y. Const., art. I, § 11); and as deprivative of property without due process of law (U. S. Const., 14th Arndt.; N. Y. Const., art. I, § 6). Thus, appellants contend, the regulation delegates to members of the medical and other professions named the power to determine who may take X rays, but fails, when so doing, to set standards for such determination or for the qualifications of the taker or the conditions of the taking. It is further urged that because, in appellants’ view, a physician would not direct the use of radiation by a chiropractor, however skilled and competent, in violation of the rules of professional ethics inhibiting co-operation with cultists — the profession regarding chiropractors as such; and since, indeed, defendant Commissioner’s testimony indicated his view that, under regulation 19, chiropractors would not be permitted to take X rays; the regulation is unconstitutionally discriminatory and constitutes a denial of equal protection; and serves, in addition, to deprive chiropractors of their right to pursue their calling and of the use of their lawfully acquired X-ray equipment, without due process of law.
Turning again to the proof, it seems evident to us, but in any event the promulgators of the regulation were clearly entitled to find, that'medical knowledge and diagnostic skill are essential to evaluate the necessity of X-ray procedures in any particular case and to weigh the attendant risk as against the possible benefit to be derived. From the record itself, as from
We turn, then, to appellants’ argument, the main thrust of which is directed to the supposed exclusion of chiropractors from this latter class as well. It may be noted, parenthetically, that if exclusion exists it is not by reason of the proviso alone but as an effect of the extraneous factor of the ethical code to which we have alluded. We need not pass upon this factual issue, which appellants deem established, nor do we explore its legal effect, as we prefer to rest our decision upon the broader issues which the case presents and, accordingly, proceed to a consideration of them.
While disputing the validity of this specific regulation, and asserting its ineffectiveness to deal with the particular problem,
Appellants would, however, and by what seems to us a forced construction, read into this otherwise simple provision a more complicated purpose and effect. They contend that thereby the practitioners of the professions named are empowered ‘ ‘ to determine who may take X rays ’ this pursuant to delegation of legislative power which is unlawful as fixing no standards of qualification or any guide for administrative action. (Packer Collegiate Inst. v. University of State of N. Y., 298 N. Y. 184,
That the Public Health Council chose to approach the problem from the angle of professional analysis, direction and supervision and not from that of the mechanical operation itself, or that the council failed to utilize both approaches, does not invalidate the resulting regulation. (Cf. Radice v. New York, 264 U. S. 292; Central Lbr. Co. v. South Dakota, 226 U. S. 157.)
Since our construction of the exceptive proviso denies the creation of any classification, the case of Matter of Sausser v. Department of Health (242 N. Y. 66), upon which appellants strongly rely, is inapplicable. It is clearly distinguishable, in any event, as concerning not the validity of the regulation involved but the arbitrary action of the respondent under it.
The judgment should be affirmed.
Coon, J. P., Herlihy, Reynolds and Taylor, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to respondent.
