76 Mo. App. 439 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
In arriving at the facts of this case, we are forced to rely on the deposition of one William Smith taken by the attorney-general, and as opposed thereto the deposition of E. D. and A. L. Barber taken by the respondent. While these witnesses have not in all things agreed, the following facts are not controverted: The transactions giving rise to this litigation occurred at Kansas City during the first part of August, 1897. At that time there existed, it seems, the two schools of osteopathy — one called the American School of Osteopathy at Kirksville, Missouri, and the other, this respondent, the National School of Osteopathy located at Kansas City. The Kirksville school is one of several years’ standing, and may be called the mother institution of osteopathy, while the Kansas City school was then only lately organized. The parties brought to our consideration by the proof are William Smith, a man of extensive learning in the medical profession, a graduate of two of the foremost medical colleges of Europe, as also a graduate of, and professor in, the osteopathic school at Kirksville. The other parties
Smith testified that Barber had him promise that the manner of obtaining the diploma — that it was issued without a school attendance — should be kept a secret, while Barber swore that there was no secrecy and that the diploma was issued in the usual open and public manner and after a thorough examination wherein he found Smith so very proficient in all branches taught in the school.
“Sec. 2. Any person having a diploma regularly issued by the American School of Osteopathy, of Kirksville, Missouri, or any other legally chartered and regularly conducted school of osteopathy, who shall have been in personal attendance as a student in such school for at least four terms of not less than five months each before graduation, shall be authorized to treat diseases of the human body according to such system, after having filed such diploma for record with the clerk of the county court of the county in which such person proposes to practice; and having filed with such clerk an affidavit that the diploma is genuine, and that he or she is the person to whom the same was issued and that all the provisions of this act were fully complied with before the issuing of such diploma whereupon the clerk shall record such diploma in a book to be provided by him for that purpose, and shall indorse upon such diploma the date of filing and recording same, for which he shall receive from such person a fee of $1.”
The only remaining section of the act provides for a penalty for its violation.
A careful reading of this statute forces the conclusion, that by it the legisláture meant to impose, as a condition precedent to the issue of a diploma, that the graduate must have attended the school as a student four terms of not less than five months each. The diploma, supported by the affidavit of the graduate,
A willful violation of the law has not in this case been shown by a preponderance of the evidence. As already stated the relator rests his case solely on the testimony of Smith, alias Stewart; but this is materially controverted by that of Dr. Barber, president of the Kansas City school. This witness stands before us unimpeached and unattacked by any other evidence save only the'sworn statements of Smith (or Stewart), the self-appointed detective who admits he entered into the scheme to entrap the defendant’s officers. These parties are all strangers to this court and we know nothing of their credibility or standing outside what appears of record, nor do we mean to reflect on any of them ; we have only to say that the burden of the proof
The judgment then will be for the defendant.