This is an appeal from a judgment of the superior court for King county affirming the decision of the state board of medical examiners revoking the license of appellant, M. C. Macy, as a licensed osteopathic physician practicing his profession in Seattle.
It is first contended by counsel for appellant that the complaint filed against him, and upon which the аction for the revocation of his license was tried before the state board of medical examiners and thereafter upon appeal in the superior court, does not state facts constituting cause for the revocation of his license. There is nothing in the record before us indicating that the sufficiency of the complaint was in any manner challenged before the state board of medical examiners or in the superior court, so we conclude that its sufficiency is challenged in this court for the first time. This fact calls for a most liberal construction of its allegations looking to the sustaining of the judgment, even if the proceedings should be regarded as purely judicial. Mosher v. Bruhn,
The complaint, after charging that appellant “advertised his medical business” in certain named newspapers in Seattle and Tacoma upon certain specified dates, charges:
“That such advertising of his' medical business was intended and has a tendency to deceive the public and impose upon credulous and ignorant persons and so be harmful and injurious to public morals or safety.
“That such advertisements consist in part in advertising оf medicine or of means whereby the monthly periods of women can be regulated or the menses re-established if suppressed.”
Among the seven definitions of acts declared to constitute unprofessional conduct for which a practitioner’s license may be revoked, found in Rem. & Bal. Code, § 8397%, is the following :
“Third. All advertising of medical business which is intended or has a tendency to deceive the public or impose upon credulous or ignorant persons, and so be harmful or injurious to public morals or safеty.”
This portion of the statute, it is contended in appellant’s behalf, is unconstitutional, in that it is so vague and uncertain as to leave the acts constituting unprofessional conduct, attempted to be so defined, subject to the mere personal opinion of the members of the state board of medical examiners, before whom the question of the unprofessional conduct is to be tried, and furnishes no standard for the guidance of the board in determining what is unprofessional conduct so attempted to be defined by the statute. This contention touches a question with reference to which the courts are not in entire harmony, but we are constrained to adopt the view that this definition of unprofessional conduct is not void or unconstitutional becаuse of its vagueness or uncertainty, in harmony with what we regard as the weight of authority and better reason, in view of the fact that this is not a criminal statute enacted with any purpose of imposing penalties as such.
In State ex rel. Williams v. Purl,
In State Medical Board of Arkansas Medical Soc. v. McCrary, supra, the same conclusion was reached by the court, having under consideration alleged unprofessional conduct of a physician defined by the statute as “publicly advertising special ability to treat and cure chronic and incurable diseases.”
In State v. State Medical Examining Board, 32 Minn. 324, 20 N. W. 238, 50 Am. Rep. 575, and State v. State Board of Medical Examiners, supra, unprofessional conduct warranting the refusal to issue or to revoke a license, defined by the statute as “unprofessional or dishonorable conduct,” was recognized as being constitutional.
In Berry v. State (Tex. Civ. App.),
“The terms ‘unprofessional’ or ‘dishonorable’ conduct used in the law of 1907 are qualified and modified by the language ‘of a character likely to deceive or defraud the public,’ to*619 distinguish them from acts that arе unprofessional or dishonorable under the code of ethics prescribed by the honorable profession of medicine that would not, directly at least, react to the disadvantage of the public, such as not advertising, of not entering into a consultation with an attending physician without his consent, and other acts that go to form and constitute the code of the honorаble and upright practitioner of medicine. The law leaves the enforcement to the medical profession of its rules of ethics, and, however conducive they may be to creating and preserving the high standard of one of the most important and honored professions in the world, takes no cognizance of them, and does not seek to enforce them, excеpt in so far as their infraction may infringe upon the rights and welfare of the public. But when the unprofessional • conduct of the member of the medical profession is of such a character as to deceive or defraud the public, then the law denounces such conduct, and strips the offender of the means which make it possible to impose upon the credulous and unwаry. Such unprofessional conduct would necessarily be closely allied to crime, because it is defrauding the public, and yet it was never intended to confine such conduct to the kind or class of offense that is denounced by the Criminal Code of Texas. That is provided for in a different subdivision of the statute from the one under which this case is prosecuted.”
In Richardson v. Simpson,
In Aiton v. Board of Medical Examiners,
The only decisions of the courts coming to our attention which we regard as lending support to appellant’s conten
We conclude that the definition of unprofessional conduct fоund in the third subdivision of § 8397%, Rem. & Bal. Code, above quoted, is not void or unconstitutional for vagueness or uncertainty. The same contention is made by counsel for appellant against the constitutionality of the fourth subdivision of § 8397%, upon which the judgment of the state board of medical examiners and the superior court seems to have been also rested. We think there is much less ground for the contention of counsel for appellant to rest upon with regard to the fourth subdivision than with respect to the one we have above discussed, and that what we have already said disposes of that contention against appellant.
It is contended by counsel for appellant that he was entitled to a jury trial in the superior court, his counsel having made demand therefor prior to the trial therein. This contention rests apparently upon the theory that, since Rem. & Bal. Code, § 8399, provides for a trial de novo upon appeal to the superior court, he is entitled to a jury trial therein. That section, among other things, provides:
*620 “The clerk of such court shall thereupon [upon filing of the appeals] docket such appeal causes, and they shall stand for trial in all respects as ordinary civil actions, and like
In State Board of Health v. Roy, 22 R. I. 538,
“In Mathews v. Tripp, 12 R. I. 256, 258, Durfee, C. J., says: ‘Trial by jury is a well known kind of trial. The right of trial by jury, as secured by the constitution, is in our opinion simply the right to that kind of trial. And the right remains inviolate so long as the jury continues to be constituted substantially as the jury was constituted when the constitution was adopted, and so long as all such cases as were then triable by jury continue to be so triable without any restrictiоns or conditions which materially hamper or burden the right.’
“A jury trial is not required by the law of the land in all civil cases, and unless it can be shown that previous to the adoption of the constitution of the state cases of the'class now under consideration were required to be tried by a jury, the provision of the statute in question would not be invalid because of not providing for such a trial. It is clear that this is not one of the classes of cases in which jury trial is reserved by the constitution, as it belongs to a class which has arisen since the adoption of the constitution.”
We are of the opinion that there is no constitutional right of trial by jury in proceedings of this nature.
Was appellant entitled to a trial by jury because of the provision of § 8399, that cases on appeаl to the superior court involving the revocation of licenses of osteopaths and other practitioners “shall stand for trial in all respects as ordinary civil actions, and like proceedings be had thereon?” In other words, is this a statutory awarding of a jury trial in such cases? Manifestly not, unless the words “civil actions” used in the statute compel such a conclusion. The decisiоn of the Rhode Island court in the Roy case, above noticed, seems to argue against the contention that such statutory provision has the effect of awarding a jury trial. The exact terms of the statute involved in that case do not appear in the opinion of the court, but it does appear from remarks of the court therein that if the decision of the board is against the defendant upon the question of the
Counsel for appellant call our attention to, and rely principally upon, the decision of the supreme court of Indiana in Reilly v. Cavanaugh,
Counsel for appellant alsо cite and place some reliance upon decisions of the supreme court of Louisiana in Chevalon v. Schmidt, 11 Rob. (La.) 91, and Turner v. Walsh, 12 Rob. (La.) 383. These decisions, however, hold the defendant entitled to a jury trial in proceedings seeking his disbarment, because of the peculiar language of the statute there involved and upon the theory that it was there, in effect, a criminal proceeding. In view of the nature of the proceeding in this state, we conclude that the statute does not mean that appellant is entitled to trial by jury in the superior court.
We find no error prejudicial to appellant — the evidence is not before us presenting the merits of the case, so we conclude that the judgment of the superior court affirming the decision of the state board of medical examiners must be affirmed. It is so ordered.
