125 N.E. 543 | NY | 1919
The defendant has been convicted of practicing medicine without a license. The questions which it is necessary for us to consider spring from the form of the indictment which by demurrer and otherwise has been challenged as insufficient.
At all the times in question it was provided by the Public Health Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 45) (§ 161) that "No person shall practice medicine, unless registered and legally authorized * * * or unless licensed by the Regents and registered" as in said section provided. By other sections the violation of this one is made a misdemeanor. Section 160, subdivision 7, of the *400 same act provides as follows: "The practice of medicine is defined as follows: A person practices medicine within the meaning of this article, except as hereinafter stated, who holds himself out as being able to diagnose, treat, operate or prescribe for any human disease, pain, injury, deformity or physical condition, and who shall either offer or undertake, by any means or method, to diagnose, treat, operate or prescribe for any human disease, pain, injury, deformity or physical condition." Section 173, being the one referred to in the last section, enacts that the article in which such latter section is found "shall not be construed to affect" a large number of specified persons.
The indictment accused the defendant "of the crime of practicing medicine without being registered and legally authorized (as in section 161 required) committed as follows:
"The said * * * Devinny, on May 27, 1918, and for a considerable time immediately prior thereto, at Albany, in this county, unlawfully practiced medicine, he not being then registered and legally authorized" as in the statute required and provided. Under this indictment evidence was given tending to show that the defendant held himself out as being able to diagnose, etc., diseases, and that on three separate occasions he offered and undertook to diagnose and treat the complaint of a certain individual.
Two objections, fundamental in nature, are urged to this indictment. In the first place it is contended that the indictment, in addition to charging in the language of section 161 that Devinny unlawfully practiced medicine without being registered, etc., should have specified under the language of section 160 the specific acts performed by him constituting such unlawful practice, and secondly it is argued that the provision making it unlawful to practice medicine is affected and modified by exceptions and that, therefore, the *401 indictment should have negatived these exceptions. These objections will be considered in the inverse order from that in which they have been stated.
The general rule is that in dealing with a statutory crime exceptions must be negatived by the prosecution and provisos utilized as a matter of defense. Attempts to apply this general rule and distinguish between exceptions and provisos have resulted in many technicalities and in much sublety. The two classes of provisions — exceptions and provisos — frequently come closely together and the rule of differentiation ought to be so applied as to comply with the requirements of common sense and reasonable pleading. In the case at bar if it should be held that an indictment must negative all of the cases referred to in the statute as not being unlawful, it would be drawn out to intolerable lengths and even after that had been done, the burden doubtless would rest upon the defendant of proving that he came within the excepted cases. In addition, section 173, which enumerates the cases where compliance with section 160 will not be required, provides: "This article (which includes section 160) shall not be construed to affect" the cases there enumerated. This language, which should be considered with that of section 160, is quite as appropriate for the statement of a proviso as of an exception.
Under these circumstances we think that the provision in question assumes more the nature of a proviso than of an exception and that the indictment is not defective because it does not negative all of the cases set forth in section 173. (Fleming v. People,
The second proposition urged by the defendant that the indictment, aside from the foregoing alleged defect, does not state with sufficient particularity the facts constituting the alleged crime presents more difficulty. *402
The rule is applied in many cases that an indictment which charges a statutory crime in the words of the statute is sufficient. (People v. Ellis,
It has been held, however, directly or in effect, in several jurisdictions in the cases of indictments or informations similar to the present one that the above rule does not apply and that it is necessary to set forth the details of the alleged offense. (State v. Carey,
Without finding it necessary to determine whether we should go as far as these cases go, we think that it was necessary for the present indictment to set forth one detail of the alleged offense which in this particular case would very likely involve and lead to setting forth generally the details of the offense.
It is abundantly established that in charging an offense committed upon or in respect of an individual — as diagnosing treating or offering to diagnose or treat a disease — it is necessary to name, or excuse naming by proper allegation, such individual. (People v. Corbalis,
There is an exception to this general rule which is thought to include the present case and excuse naming the person to or upon whom treatment was offered or applied. Where the crime consists of a series of acts continuous in their nature, such as carrying on a prohibited business, or keeping an unlawful resort, a general description reasonably including and describing the series will be sufficient. It is not necessary in such cases to set forth each act going to make up the offense, for, as said inCommonwealth v. Pray (13 Pick. 359, 362), "it is not each
or all the acts of themselves, but the practice or habit which produces the principal evil and constitutes the crime." (Ledbetter v. U.S.,
In our opinion, however, this indictment does not come within that exception. It does not seem to us that the statute was intended to define or constitute the *404 prohibited offense as consisting of a continuous series of acts amounting to the conduct of a business within the decisions referred to. It may be that if we had nothing but section 161 prohibiting the "practice" of medicine and were relegated to the dictionary or common usage for a definition of that word we should be compelled to interpret it as meaning a continued and habitual performance of acts. But we are not thus left to these means of reaching a definition. Section 160 defines what "practice" means. Its meaning is satisfied whenever and as often as an individual "holds himself out as being able to * * * and offers or undertakes to diagnose, treat," etc. Whenever within the fair meaning of those terms on a single occasion an offender has held himself out as able to and has offered to treat a patient there has been a completed offense and it is not necessary to show that this operation has been repeated so many times that it has ripened into a habit or business. We think that the indictment and proofs in this case confirm this view.
If this is the correct interpretation, there is no question that the individual operated upon should have been named or proper excuse given for not naming him even within what has been said in cases applying the "business" rule. (Ledbetter v.U.S.,
The judgment should be reversed and the indictment dismissed.
COLLIN, HOGAN and ANDREWS, JJ., concur; CHASE, CARDOZO and CRANE, JJ., dissent.
Judgment reversed, etc. *405