57 P. 376 | Or. | 1899
delivered the opinion of the court.
On September 13, 1898, the petitioner was held to answer, by a committing magistrate, for a violation of section 11 of the act of February 28, 1889, regulating the practice of medicine and surgery (Laws, 1889, p. 144), as amended by the act of 1891 (Laws, 1891, p. 153) , and in default of bail was committed to the custody of the defendant, the Sheriff of Umatilla County. He thereupon applied to the circuit court for his discharge under a writ of habeas corpus, on the ground that the section of the act under which he was committed is unconstitu
The act of 1889 is entitled “An act to regulate the practice of medicine and surgery in the State of Oregon.” It provides for the appointment of a board of examiners of three persons, from among the physicians of the state, and for the punishment of any person practicing medicine or surgery without a license from such board, unless he was practicing within the state at the time of the passage of the act. It prescribes in detail the qualifications necessary to entitle an applicant to a license, and the duties of the board of examiners, and declares who shall be regarded as practicing medicine, within the meaning of the act. Section 11, as amended in 1891, and under which the petitioner was arrested and committed, provides that “any itinerant vendor of any drug, nostrum, medicine, ointment or appliance of any kind intended for* the treatment of disease or injury, who shall by writing or printing, .or any other method, publicly profess to cure or treat diseases, injuries, deformities or ailments of any kind by any drug, nostrum, medicine or other application, shall pay to the Secretary of State a license of $100 per month to be collected by said Secretary of State or by his lawfully authorized attorney. Any person who shall violate the provisions of this section shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by a fine not to exceed five hundred dollars ($500) or imprisonment in the county jail not to exceed six months, or by both such fine and imprisonment.”
The contention of the petitioner is that this section is unconstitutional and void, because not within the sub