Allison S. Patchell, DVM Chair, Veterinary Medical Examining Board #1 Natural Resources Drive Post Office Box 8505 Little Rock, Arkansas 72215
Dear Dr. Patchell:
I am writing in response to your request for an opinion on the following question:
May a city that owns and operates an animal shelter employ a veterinarian to offer spay and neuter services to the public?
As background for your question, you report that the City of Fayetteville Animal Shelter employs a licensed veterinarian to provide veterinary services to animals belonging to the Shelter (before they are adopted out to the general public). You further report that it has come to the attention of the Veterinary Medical Examining Board ("Board") that the city is also providing spays and neuters to animals belonging to the general public. You indicate that your question is prompted by a previous Attorney General Opinion, Ark. Op. Att'y Gen.
RESPONSE
The answer to your question is not entirely clear under the Arkansas Veterinary Medical Practice Act, A.C.A. §§Your question is principally governed by the following provisions of the Veterinary Medical Practice Act ("the Act"):
(a) No person may practice veterinary medicine in this state who is not a licensed veterinarian or the holder of a valid temporary permit issued by the Veterinary Medical Examining Board.
A.C.A. §
"Person" means any individual, firm, partnership, association, joint venture, cooperative, or corporation, or any other group or combination acting in concert, and whether or not acting as principal, trustee, fiduciary, receiver, or as any kind of legal or personal representative, or as the successor in interest, assigning agent, factor, servant, employee, director, officer, or any other representative of such a person[.]
A.C.A. §
The answer to your question turns on the determination whether a city is included within this definition of "person." If a city is a "person" under the Act, then I believe it necessarily follows that the City of Fayetteville may not employ a veterinarian to offer services to the public because the City in that instance would be practicing or offering to practice veterinary medicine without a license, contrary to the Act.1 The practice of veterinary medicine clearly may only be performed pursuant to a license, A.C.A. §
Returning, then, to the question of whether the Act's definition of "person" includes a city, it seems clear that a city is not an "individual, firm, partnership, association, joint venture" or "cooperative." The inquiry thus focuses on the word "corporation." It is somewhat difficult to determine from the plain language of the statute whether this includes municipalities, or is limited instead to non-municipal corporations. Cf. City of Ft. Smith v.Carter,
I believe it bears noting, however, that the legislature has specifically included municipal corporations under several other statutes, suggesting that it could easily have done so under A.C.A. §
I also note certain language in the Act that may suggest the term "corporation" refers to "a corporate practice," which would tend to exclude governmental entities. A.C.A. §
While it is difficult to predict with certainty how a court would view the matter, I tend to believe that if a court were faced with interpreting A.C.A. §
Deputy Attorney General Elisabeth A. Walker prepared the foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve.
Sincerely,
DUSTIN McDANIEL Attorney General
*Page 1
