Knoop v. State Board of Health

102 A. 609 | R.I. | 1918

This is a petition for a writ of certiorari for the purpose of quashing a record setting out the action of the members of the State Board of Health, whereby the certificate authorizing the petitioner to practice medicine and surgery in this state was revoked on the finding of said board that the petitioner had been guilty of gross unprofessional conduct and conduct making him an unfit person to practice medicine in this state. The writ was issued and on the return day thereof the respondents appeared and moved to dismiss the petition on the ground that the petitioner had a complete and adequate remedy at law under the provisions of Chapter 193, Section 5, General Laws of R.I. (1909), without the aid of a writ of certiorari.

After the issuance of this writ of certiorari and before the return day thereof, the petitioner took an appeal under the provisions of said Chapter 193 from the decision of the Board of Health to this court, which appeal is now pending in this court. At the hearing before this *563 court, decision of the motion to dismiss was reserved by the court for further consideration, and the motion and petition were heard together.

From the allegations of the petition it appears that the petitioner is a physician and surgeon in this state who is authorized to practice medicine under a certificate issued by the State Board of Health; that on October 29, 1917, said board served notice on him to appear before the board on November 1, 1917, and show cause why his certificate should not be revoked. The charges contained in the notice were general in their character and followed the language of the statute. On or about November 1, 1917, the board gave the petitioner a bill of particulars in which it was alleged that the petitioner had been dispensing and distributing narcotic drugs in violation of a specific law of the United States, the so-called "Harrison Act," and further that on May 19, 1917, the petitioner in the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island had pleaded nolo contendere to an indictment found against him for violation of said act of Congress and thereupon had been sentenced to pay a fine of $100. Also that the petitioner had violated provisions of Chapter 178, Section 14, General Laws of R.I. (1909), by illegally prescribing various narcotic drugs,etc. The petitioner appeared before the board in response to said order on the 1st, 15th and 27th days of November and it is alleged in the petition that the only evidence adduced before or by the board was the record of the indictment of the petitioner above referred to, and that the board revoked the certificate which authorized the petitioner to practice medicine on December 20, 1917. The petitioner further alleges that there was no competent or legal evidence sufficient to support the decision of the board and that consequently the board was wholly without lawful authority and jurisdiction to revoke the aforesaid certificate. *564

The first question in this case arises on the motion of the respondents to dismiss the petition.

In the recent case of Parker v. Superior Court (R.I., March 30, 1917), 100 Atl. R. 305, it was held that certiorari is a prerogative writ and its issuance and the relief to be granted under it are discretionary and that ordinarily certiorari will lie only to correct final determinations and where no other remedy is expressly provided, citing Cohen v. Superior Court,39 R.I. 272, and Hyde v. Superior Court, 28 R.I. 204.

In his brief the petitioner states that he "brings his petition for a writ of certiorari solely because the remedy which is open to him by way of appeal is utterly inadequate" because not only would he have to bear the burden of the cost of an appeal, but he must be without compensation and redress for what he styles the wrongful and summary procedure of the State Board of Health and that his situation presents just such a case of unusual hardship as should appeal to the discretionary powers of this court for relief by certiorari.

In State Board of Health v. Roy, 22 R.I. 538, which was a case on appeal from the decision of the State Board of Health revoking the certificate of a physician, and was heard on a motion to quash the proceedings, among other grounds it was urged that the board never found the charges against the defendant, nor any of the specifications thereof, to be true and without such finding said board had no authority to pass the vote and order revoking his certificate. The court speaking through Rogers, J., at p. 541, says: "If it be true that the board found no charge against the defendant — an allegation that we are not prepared to admit — that would not justify quashing the proceedings, but would only afford a good reason for the defendant's taking an appeal, just as he has done. Mere errors in proceeding do not afford ground for overthrowing or annulling the whole proceeding, so that an appeal provided to correct *565 such errors cannot be prosecuted, as would be the case if these proceedings were quashed. See Maryott v. Gardner, 50 Neb. 320. The appeal vacates the proceedings before the board, so far as results go, and brings the matter up before the Appellate Division, de novo, for trial as fully as though it had never been heard before the board, save that the original charge or petition remains as the cause of trial, and save, also, that before it can be so tried before the Appellate Division it must have been brought before the board." Again at p. 543 in regard to the efficacy of the appeal the court says: "The way provided to determine, in the first instance, whether a trial before the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court is desired is speedy and inexpensive. He whose application for a license has been refused, or whose license is proposed to be revoked, can have a judicial trial, without terms or condition, by taking an appeal, which is practically for the asking; and then his case is tried in full before the highest court in the State. If the State Board of Health decides in his favor, he gets all he asks with little trouble and expense. If the decision is not in his favor, he gets, for the asking, a trial before the highest tribunal in the commonwealth. It is difficult to see how his rights could be better protected."

Assuming simply for the purpose of this discussion that the contention of the petitioner is sound, that the record of the indictment above referred to was not proper or adequate evidence to support the decision of the board, we are of the opinion that the appropriate remedy of the petitioner is by appeal and that no such exceptional case of hardship is presented as to warrant a review of the proceedings by certiorari. From the transcript of the testimony taken in the proceedings before the Board of Health, which was used by the parties in the hearing before this court on the motion and petition and to which, as a consequence, we feel at liberty to refer, it appears that there was other evidence in addition *566 to the record of the indictment produced before the board. The petitioner who was represented by counsel testified under oath in direct examination in answer to questions of his counsel and was cross-examined by counsel for the board. Counsel for the petitioner then offered himself as a witness and testified not only as to the facts in regard to the plea and sentence on the indictment above referred to, but also in regard to certain other facts on which said indictment was found. It is true that the board apparently based its decision on the record of the plea ofnolo contendere and sentence thereon, nevertheless there was other evidence presented to the board which was relevant to the issue, and in proceedings under the act in question the remedy provided by appeal is simple and adequate; this court cannot review by certiorari the question as to the adequacy of the evidence.

As the appeal vacates the proceedings before the board, so far as results go, the case on such appeal comes before this court for a trial on the merits of the case de novo, and the fact that such trial may impose some additional expense on the petitioner does not differentiate this case from the ordinary case in which an appeal is taken from the decision of an inferior tribunal which is claimed to be erroneous.

The motion to dismiss is granted and the writ of certiorari is dismissed.

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