80 Ala. 412 | Ala. | 1885
By the Code of 1852, the medical boards, then existing, were continued. They were required to examine all applicants for practice, and their diplomas or licenses, which, in all cases, were required to be from a respectable college, or institution, and if the applicants were qualified, and of good moral character, the board must grant a license to practice physic, surgery, and dental surgery, or any one or more of such branches. Every contract, the consideration of which was founded on services rendered as a physician, surgeon, or dentist was declared void, unless the person rendering such services had obtained a license to practice in such capacity from one of
The Code of 1876 was adopted February 1, 1877; and by the act adopting it, it was provided, “but .no act of the General Assembly, passed at the present session, shall be repealed or otherwise affected by the adoption of the Code.” On February 9, 1877, seven days after the adoption of the Code, and at the same session, “An act to regulate the practice of medicine • in the State of Alabama,” was passed, the provisions of which are embodied in sections 1528 to 1535, inclusive, and sections 4244 of the Code 1876. Sections 1528 and 1529 prohibit any person to practice, either the regular or irregular systems, as a profession and means of livelihood, without having obtained a certificate of qualification from some authorized board of medical examiners, as provided by the statute. And section 1532 requires, that every diploma or certificate of qualification, issued by any authorized board of medical examiners, shall be presented to the judge of probate of the county in which the person to whom issued resides, who shall officially endorse the same, seal it with the seal of the county, and cause a full and fair copy to be made in a well bound book, to be kept for the purpose, and called the register of licensed practitioners of medicine.
It is insisted, that all the sections of the Code from 1516 to 1535 inclusive, being incorporated therein, must be construed in pari materia, as constituting .one entire system; prescribing not only the mode of qualification, and the proof of the same, but also the keeping of a register of licensed practitioners of medicine, and regulating the validity of their contracts for services; and, that when thus construed, graduates of any medical college in the United States are still authorized to practice their profession, and recover for their services, without obtaining a certificate of qualification, and complying with the requirements of section 1532. A casual examination of the act of •February 9, 1877, will suffice to show, that the purpose of the legislature was to organize a complete and entire system, regulating the practice of medicine in this State, and to supersede
The act of February 9, 1877, was not adopted with, and as a part of the Code. It was put in the Code in pursuance of the legislative direction, that the codifiers should incorporate in the Code all the acts of a public and general nature passed at that session. While it is true, that all laws embodied in the Code, as reported to the legislature were re-enacted by its adoption, yet an act passed at a later date of the same session will repeal by implication a section of the Code, when there is an irreconcilable conflict and repugnance. By section 1534, the provisions of the six preceding sections take effect in any county, whenever the board of medical examiners for the county shall have been organized, and such organization officially communicated to the judge of probate. While the previous statutes are in force in those, in which no such board of medical examiners has been organized, the provisions of the later statute are utterly inconsistent with the theory, that any medical college is authorized to determine and certify the qualifications required of persons desiring to practice medicine in the counties, where such authorized boards exist; and repeals, by clear implication, section 1522 of the Code as to such counties.
It being admitted, that there had been organized prior to, and was in existence during the period the services were rendered by the plaintiff, an authorized board of medical examiners in Butler county ; and it appearing, that the plaintiff never obtained, but declined to accept, a certificate of qualification from such board, though one was prepared for him;
There is no error in the record.
Affirmed.