109 A. 65 | Md. | 1919
The appellant is duly licensed and registered under the laws of Maryland for the practice of osteopathy. In his pending petition for mandamus he claims the right to be registered with the Register of Vital Statistics of Baltimore City *321 as a physician entitled to file certificates of births and deaths notwithstanding the provision of the statute relating to osteopathy, that nothing therein contained shall authorize any State or municipal officer "to accept from any osteopathic practitioner any birth or death certificate." Code, Art. 43, Sec. 301. The question to be determined is whether that provision is constitutional.
The argument on behalf of the appellant was largely directed to the support of the contention that osteopaths are physicians and as such are required and entitled to register with the local Registrar of Vital Statistics, and to furnish him certificates of birth and death, under statutory provisions by which "physicians" are charged with such duties. Code, Art. 43, Secs. 12, 14, 21. The express terms of the statute dispose of this contention. It is not material in this case to inquire whether osteopaths are to be regarded as physicians within the accepted meaning of that term. There are numerous cases dealing with questions as to whether various regulations of the practice of physicians apply to ostepaths. A collection of such cases may be found in a note to People v. Cole (
The vital question in the case is whether the prohibition against the acceptance of birth or death certificates from licensed osteopaths is a violation of any of their constitutional rights. It is contended that this provision is a denial of the equal protection of the law to those practicing osteopathy, and is therefore in contravention of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution.
The enactment in question forms part of the Code article entitled "Health," and its relation to that subject is obvious. It is therefore within the scope of the police power of the State, and should be sustained as an exercise of that power unless the discrimination it makes can be held to be plainly arbitrary and without any perceptible relation to the objects sought to be accomplished. All reasonable presumptions must be made in favor of the validity of the provision. The judgment of the Legislature that such a regulation is proper and desirable should be respected and enforced by the courts if there is any rational theory upon which it can be supported.
The separate classification, for licensing purposes, of practitioners of medicine and surgery and those practicing by manipulation only cannot be held to be unreasonable. Practitioners of the former class were licensed in this State many years before such a provision was made as to osteopaths. The *323 methods of treatment, and the prescribed qualifications, differ in important particulars for the two classes of practitioners, and the differences by which they are actually distinguished suggest an adequate reason for their separate classification by statute.
Prior to the enactment in 1914 of the provisions relating to osteopathy, it seems clear that no practitioner of that form of treatment, unless he was qualified and licensed as a practitioner of medicine and surgery, could have found any basis for the contention that he was entitled to be registered by the Registrar of Vital Statistics to furnish the birth and death certificates for which the pre-existing statutes provided. It was certainly competent at that time for the Legislature to direct that the certificates of birth and death, from which the vital statistics of the State were to be obtained, should be furnished primarily by duly licensed medical practitioners. It did in effect so provide, with supplemental directions that if a death occurs without medical attendance, the certificate shall be prepared by the Health Officer, or Local Registrar, and that in the case of a birth when no physician is in attendance, the birth certificate shall be made out by the midwife, if one is present, otherwise the father, coroner, householder, keeper of an institution, officer of a ship, or conductor of a train, in which a birth occurs, is charged with the duty of reporting the facts to the Local Registrar, who must thereupon make an investigation and prepare the certificate of birth in due form. Midwives are required to be examined, registered and licensed. Code, Art. 43, Secs. 69-83. If the Legislature had determined not to regulate the practice of osteopathy, it is clear that the appellant could not have claimed the right as an unlicensed physician to give the certificates of birth and death which the statute designs to have furnished. Not having been licensed as a practitioner of medicine or surgery, under the terms of the statute, but having procured a license which limits his practice to treatment by manipulations only, under provisions of law which exclude him from the class of practitioners from whom birth and *324 death certificates may be accepted, the question is whether he can justly complain that he has thereby been subjected to an arbitrary and unconstitutional discrimination.
The certificates of birth and death to which the statute refers are required to contain such "items of information as the State Registrar of Vital Statistics shall deem important or necessary," in addition to such facts as the date and place of a birth or death, the name, sex and color of a child reported born, the name, age, color, occupation, condition and birthplace of a person reported to have died, the cause of death, duration of illness, and the name and address of the attending physician. It was the evident theory of the Legislature that some of the information which the law directed, or the State Registrar of Vital Statistics might deem necessary, to be included in the birth or death certificates, could be furnished more satisfactorily by a physician having the qualifications demanded by the statute of practitioners of medicine and surgery than by those who were licensed to practice osteopathy exclusively. As to the real necessity for making such a distinction this Court has no right to decide. The only inquiry we are authorized to make is whether the action of the Legislature in restricting the means and agencies by which vital statistics are to be obtained is clearly unreasonable.
In the case of Watson v. State,
In our opinion the discrimination we are considering in the present case is not so clearly arbitrary as to justify the Court in declaring it void. It relates solely to the collection of vital statistics. The Legislature has the undoubted right to determine as to the methods to be employed in obtaining such information for the use of the public. Its designation of certain agencies for that purpose, in the statute under consideration, is not such an obvious abuse of its discretion as to authorize the Court to substitute its own for the legislative judgment and to refuse to recognize the provision as a valid enactment.
The order dismissing the petition for mandamus will be affirmed.
Order affirmed, with costs. *326