151 P. 653 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1915
The defendant was charged by information with violating section 17 of the act of the legislature of 1913 for the regulation of the practice of medicine and surgery. He was tried, convicted, and sentenced to imprisonment and to pay a fine. This appeal is from the judgment and from an order of the court denying his motion for a new trial.
There is absolutely no merit in defendant's objection that the instructions of the court led the jury to believe that the defendant was charged with a violation of the laws of the United States; nor in the point that the title of the act under which he was prosecuted is defective. The latter question was considered and decided in the recent case of People v. Ah Fong,
Defendant contends that section 8 of the act is unconstitutional and void in that it is an unrestricted invasion of the *123 art of osteopathy, chiropractice, and mechanotherapy, in that it prevents practitioners of said systems of the healing art from practicing their profession "without in any manner severing or penetrating any of the tissues of the human being." Assuming, as asserted by defendant, that members of such schools, in practicing, as they do, by manipulation and adjustment, are constantly and continually severing tissues of human beings, and that the practice of their art is impossible without it, still it is very plain from a reading of the whole section that the word "sever" as therein used means a severance by cutting. Under one form of certificate the holders thereof, as provided in the act, may not only prescribe and use drugs, but may also sever and penetrate with a knife the tissues of human beings. The holders of other certificates are drugless practitioners, and they may not prescribe or use drugs, nor may they operate with a knife or in that way sever or penetrate the tissues of human beings, except that they may sever the umbilical cord.
The only other point seriously urged is that sections 9 and 10 of the act are unconstitutional and void, in that the board of examiners is vested with power to arbitrarily determine the fitness of applicants and the standard of colleges as a matter of mere personal discretion or approval, without regard to a standard of academic or scientific proficiency or exactness. This contention is disposed of by what is said in the cases ofEx parte Gerino,
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.