151 Ga. 371 | Ga. | 1921
(After stating the foregoing facts.) The chancellor did not pass upon any issue of fact raised by the pleadings. He based his order enjoining the plaintiff in error from practicing his profession as a chiropractor expressly upon the ground that the act of the General Assembly, approved August 18, 1913 (Acts 1913, p. 101), and the several acts amendatory thereof, were valid statutes of this State and applicable to the plaintiff in error; and that the practice of his profession by the plaintiff in error without having complied with the provisions of the statutes aforesaid constituted a violation of the criminal law of the State. Since the chancellor did not exercise his discretion upon the disputed issues
For the purposes of this ease, and for the purposes of this case onty, the validity of the statutes involved, as construed and applied by the chancellor, will be conceded. Section six of the act approved August 18, 1913 (Acts 1913, pp. 1Ó1, 103), declares that it shall be unlawful for any person to practice medicine in this State without having first taken the prescribed examination and obtained a license from the State board of medical examiners authorizing him so to do. Section sixteen of the act declares that any person practicing medicine in this State without complying with the provisions of the act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be punished as prescribed in section 1065 of the Penal Code of 1910. Neither the act approved August 18, 1913, nor any of the acts amendatory thereof, declares one who engages in the practice of medicine in this State without having first taken the prescribed examination and obtained a license from the State board of medical examiners to be a public or common nuisance. None of the medical acts of this State undertake to extend the jurisdiction of equity over nuisances or to enlarge the category of public nuisances. The unlawful practice of medicine in this State is simply declared to be a misdemeanor. The question is, therefore, whether equity, at the instance of the State, will enjoin as a common nuisance one who is engaged in the practice of medicine (conceding that the plaintiff in error is engaged in the practice of medicine) who has not taken-the prescribed examination and obtained a license from the State board of medical examiners authorizing him to engage in the practice of medicine in this State. The question may be stated as follows: will equity, at the instance of the State, enjoin a person from practicing the profession of medicine simply because such person has failed to take the prescribed examination and to obtain a license from the State board of medical examiners authorizing him so to do, in violation of the penal laws of the State? To state tbe question is to answer it. The chancellor did not find that the practice of plaintiff in error’s profession worked hurt, inconvenience or damage to any particular person or to the public or to any particular part of the public. If the plaintiff in error had obtained tbe license required of practitioners of medicine, the same acts and
Judgment reversed.