253 Mo. 271 | Mo. | 1913
Appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of St. Louis City sustaining the action of the State Board of Health in suspending the appellant from the practice of medicine and surgery in this State for a period of one year.
The charge upon which appellant was suspended is that he was guilty .of “unprofessional and dishonorable conduct, ’ ’ in that he offered, or was willing, to commit a criminal abortion.
Prior to October 19, 1912, appellant was engaged in the practice of medicine and surgery at Joplin, Missouri, and the evidence upon which he was suspended
First: The following advertisement inserted by appellant in a newspaper at Joplin:
DR. M. LUTHER SPRIGGS.
Practice limited to diseases of women and surgery. Office and private hospital, 417 S. Cox avenue. Consultation hours, 9 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 p. m. Home phone 411, Bell phone 517. Residence, The Connor.
After this advertisement appeared, a post office inspector caused certain letters to he written and mailed to appellant from Galena, Missouri, to which letters was affixed the name “Susie Davis.” Said letters and the appellant’s replies thereto are as follows:
“Galena, Mo., May 10, 1912.
“Doctor M. Luther Spriggs.
“Dear Sir: I cut the enclosed from a Joplin Globe of
last Sunday, and wish to write you, as I was about to go to Kansas City or somewhere away from here. > I am not married and was indiscreet to allow my beau liberties which I should not have done. The worst of it is, I am caught, I fear, and in a family way. I missed just twice. I ought to be sick the 14th of this month but I don’t know whether I will or not. I have taken all kinds of medicine without avail. I am scared every day of discovery and believe I am getting larger.
“Please let me know if you will take it away and how much it will cost. I ask no charity as I have some money and I know the young man the cause of the trouble will furnish more, if needed. We can pay you well between us. Please destroy this letter. Yours truly,
“Susie Davis,
“Galena, Mo.”
“Joplin, Mo., May 11, 1912.
“Replying to yours of the 10th inst., allow me to say that you should come here at the earliest possible moment At that time we can go fully into all of the details.
“Very truly yours,
“M. Lutheb Spbiggs.”
*280 “Galena, Mo., May 21, 1912.
“Doctor M. Luther Spriggs.
“Dear Sirj Replying to your letter in regard to my coming to Joplin for operation, I would ask what the approximate cost will be. I do not want to make the trip to Joplin without enough money to have the work done. I can get the money easier now than I can get it after I get there. I can leave here as soon as I hear from you.
“Yours truly,
“Susie Davis,
“Galena, Mo.”
“Joplin, Mo„ May 22, 1912.
“Dear Miss Davis:
“Will say in reply to yours of the 21st inst., that your bill with me will be approximately $125 and your living expenses will have to be met for something like a week or possibly ten days.
“It seems to me that $150 should be ample to take care of everything.
“Remember that it is important to act as promptly as possible. Very truly yours,
“M. Lutheb Spriggs.”
“Galena, Missouri.
“Dr. M. Luther Spriggs.
“Dear Sir: Replying to your favor of the 22nd inst., I had
no idea the price for relieving one in a family way was over $25 to $50. While I can get more than this, I much fear that I cannot raise the amount you mentioned, and unless you can do some better for me, I must make other arrangements. I can raise $100. Please write me without delay what you will do. Yours truly,
“Susie Davis,
‘Galena, Mo.
“May 26, 1912."
“Joplin, Mo., May 26, 1912.
“Dear Miss Davis:
“Replying to yours of today allow me to say that we do not ordinarily make any concessions in such matters. However, I am willing under the circumstances, to allow you the reduction you speak of, viz.: $100 professional fee. You
will of course have to defray your living expenses for a week or ten days, which will be moderate, and I will be gjad to assist you to make arrangements in this way that will be satisfactory.
“Hoping this will meet with your approval.
“Very truly yours,
“M. Lutheb Spriggs.”
*281 “Galena, Mo., May 30, 1912.
“Dr. M. Luther Spriggs.
“Dear Sir: Replying to your letter of the 26th inst., I thank you for the concession you have made, but since my last letter, I have come unwell a little. Do. you think I could be pregnant under the circumstances? I have missed a week or two before but never anything like this. Could my worrying over this matter have kept off my monthly sickness? However, the flow is not like it usually is and there is some pain which is not usual with me. Do you think I should still come to Joplin and have the work done? I can come if you think it possible that I am in a'family way and that I should come under the circumstances.
“Thanking you for your prompt attention to this matter for me, I am, Yours very truly,
“Susie Davis.”
“Joplin, Mo.
“Dear Miss Davis:
“Replying to yours of the 30th inst., will say that you should not be confused by the appearance of a discharge. By all means do not delay your coming as we are losing valuable time. There is no doubt whatever in my mind in regard to the actual condition. However, when I examine you T will be in a position to tell you definitely all about the details. It is not uncommon for women to have a menstrual discharge, which originates from the cervix, in a condition such as yours and they are sometimes deceived by it. You may be quite positive that worry and anxiety would never cause a delay such as yours. I cannot impress too forcibly on your mind’ the absolute necessity of prompt action. Assuring you of my best wishes and hoping to see you soon; very truly,
“M. Lutheb Spbiggs,”
“May 30, 1912.”
The complaint was signed by three physicians of Joplin, Missouri who describe themselves as the “Board of Censors of Jasper .County Medical Society.” Neither of those physicians testified at the trial.
The secretary of the State Board of Health testified that several physicians of Joplin, Missouri, had told him that appellant had the reputation of being a criminal abortionist.
Pour physicians residing at Joplin, Missouri, and two residing at Galena, Missouri, testified that ap
It is conceded by the respondents that “Susie Davis” had no real existence, and that her name was simply used by the post office inspector in carrying on the correspondence with appellant hereinbefore set out.
OPINION.
I. The theory of respondents is that the letters introduced prove that appellant offered, to commit the crime of criminal abortion upon the mythical “Susie Davis;” in other words, that he was possessed of evil thoughts, or a willingness to commit crime, and therefore, his license to practice medicine and surgery should be revoked.
The statute under which the Board of Health suspended the appellant is as follows:
“The board may refuse to license individuals of bad moral character, or persons guilty of unprofessional or dishonorable conduct, and they may revoke licenses, or other rights to practice, however derived, f°r tike causes, and in cases where the license has been granted upon false and fraudulent statements, after giving the accused an oppor
That portion of the statute upon which the action of the respondents in finding appellant guilty of dishonorable and unprofessional conduct must be sustained, if it can be upheld at all, is found in the last three lines before quoted, and is as follows: “but these specifications are not intended to exclude all other acts for which licenses may be revoked.”
Concretely stated, the contentions of appellant] are: (1) That the evidence does not prove that he offered to commit the crime of abortion; (2) that if it were satisfactorily proven that he offered, or was willing, to commit said crime the statute does not authorize the State Board of Health to revoke his license or suspend him from the practice of medicine and surgery, because he merely possessed a desire to do a dishonorable and unprofessional act.
II. To properly dispose of the issues we must consider the nature of the right which appellant held as a practicing physician. Is it a mere privilege? Is it a vested right? Is it property? Some of the authorities cited by respondents hold that a license to practice a profession is not property, and not a right at all, but only a privilege which the State may withdraw without the formality of a trial, and without a compliance with the constitutional guaranties (Sec. 10, art. 2, Constitution of Missouri) which protect persons, property and character. [State ex rel. v. Goodier, 195 Mo. l. c. 560.]
By analogy, it must be admitted that if the right of an attorney to practice law is a property right, then the duly licensed physician has a property right, protected at least by such safeguards as the Legislature has thrown around it. It is not a mere shadowy privilege which may be revoked regardless of whether the possessor has violated the laws of the State. By what we have said it should not be inferred that we desire to overrule the Goodier case. It is not necessary to disturb that decision in order to reach a correct conclusion in this case.
We approach the solution of this case with the understanding that the appellant, through his license to practice medicine, and through his ability and industry, has become possessed of at least a valuable privilege — perhaps a property right — which has been suspended by the action of the respondents for his alleged violations of the laws of this State.
III. The next preliminary question which arises in the case is, shall that part of section 8317, supra, which authorizes the Board of Health to revoke licenses of physicians, be adjudged a remedial or a penal statute? If remedial, it must be liberally construed in behalf of both respondents and appellant, while if it be a penal law, it must be strictly construed against the respondents, as the representatives of the State, and liberally construed in favor of appellant. [State v. Balch, 178 Mo. 392; State v. Koock, 202 Mo. l. c. 235; State v. McMahon, 234 Mo. l. c. 614.]
“Among penal laws which must be strictly construed, those most obviously included are all such acts as in terms impose a fine or corporal punishment under sentence in State prosecutions, or forfeitures to the State as a punitory consequence of violating laws made for preservation of the peace and good order of society.. But these are not the only penal laws which have to be so construed. There are to be included under that denomination also all acts which . . . take away or impair any privilege or right.”
A statute which provides for the disbarring of attorneys has been held to be a penal law. [Moutray v. People, 162 Ill. 191.]
A penal statute is construed with a degree of strictness commensurate with the severity of the penalty it imposes, and where the penalty, as in this case, is onerous, no one can be held to have violated its provisions unless his acts come within both the letter and the spirit of the law. [2 Lewis’s Sutherland’s Statutory Construction (2 Ed.), sec. 520-1; State ex inf. v. Railroad, 238 Mo. 605, l. c. 612.] All laws, however, must receive a rational, and not an arbitrary, construction.
Upon the well-considered precedents we have no hesitation in holding that the law now in judgment, in so far as it authorizes the revocation of licenses of physicians, is highly penal, and must be treated as a penal law.
IV. Coming back to the facts in this case we find no insistence in the brief of the Honorable Attorney-General that the conviction and suspension of appellant can be sustained on the advertisement which the appellant published in a newspaper, or upon the evidence of Doctor -Hiller to the effect that several physicians of Joplin had told
Y. This leaves for our consideration the letters between the appellant and the mythical “Susie Davis.” It will be observed that appellant did not directly offer to perform an abortion upon “Susie,” though the letters written to him .were cunningly worded and designed to make it appear that if he agreed to treat her at all he was willing to commit that crime. There is no expert medical testimony before us which tends to explain whether the symptoms narrated in the letters indicated the presence of a living foetus, a dead foetus, or some ailment of the womb or genital organs. The writer of the letter, after describing “her” symptoms, does not say that she is pregnant, but only that she fears she is pregnant. If the symptoms detailed in the letters indicated the presence of a dead foetus, then the replies which appellant made to said letters would not point to an evil purpose or a willingness on his part to commit criminal abortion.
The appellant proved such an .excellent reputation by his neighbors — physicians who knew him intimately —that if the letters could have been construed so as to be consistent with an innocent purpose, the Board of Health, being honorable men and learned in the medical science, would certainly have given him the benefit of the doubt and acquitted him.
The fact that they found him guilty must, under the evidence in this case, be taken by us to mean that the symptoms and conditions narrated in the Davis letters unmistakably pointed to the 'existence of a
VI. This brings us to the application of the statute to the facts proven. Did the General Assembly, by the enactment of section 8317, Revised Statutes 1909, mean to designate a mere willingness to commit the crime of abortion as dishonorable and unprofessional conduct? We may gara some light on this point by a close consideration of the specific acts designated as unprofessional conduct.
There is a well-recognized rule that where a law specifically designates several matters or things which shall be governed by its provisions, and then by general language undertakes to include other acts and things not specifically named, such law must be so construed as to apply only to things or acts of the same general nature as those definitely set out. [City of St. Louis v. Kaime, 180 Mo. 309, and State ex rel. v. Berryman, 142 Mo. App. 373.] This is but the restatement of a rule of common sense and everyday experience of mankind. When a man is speaking only of bonds and promissory notes his mind is not supposed to be dwelling on wagons and threshing machines, and we do not apply his words uttered on that occasion to any such subjects. If a man speak of wild animals his mind is not likely at the selfsame time to dwell upon domestic animals, and it would be silly to give his words such a construction.
The General Assembly cannot enact a valid law without the minds .of its members considering the things to which the law is to apply, for the legislative will is what becomes the law. In a broad, general sense we discern the legislative will by the-words it has spoken through its enactments, the same as we would interpret the language of an individual.
Our learned Attorney-General earnestly insists that it was impossible for the General Assembly to designate the numerous acts and things which would constitute “dishonorable and unprofessional conduct” on the part of physicians, and that, therefore, the general specification in section 8317, supra, should be construed to include all acts (and, inferentially, all wicked thoughts and evil desires) which, by “common judgment” are found to be dishonorable. He cites in support of this contention: People v. Apfelbaum, 251 Ill. l. c. 22; Berry v. State, 135 S. W. l. c. 631; Morse v. State Board of Medical Examiners, 122 S. W. l. c. 448; Spurgeon v. Rhodes, 167 Ind. l. c. 11, 12; and Wolf v. State Board of Medical Examiners, 109 Minn. 360.
In view of the conflicting opinions of respectable courts on this proposition we will quote what is said by the learned editors of Cyc.:
“The grounds commonly designated by the statute upon which the medical board is authorized to re.voke a physician’s license or certificate are unprofessional, dishonorable, or immoral conduct. Unprofessional or dishonorable conduct is not defined by the common law, and what conduct may be of either kind is a matter of opinion only. For this reason it has been held in several cases that such a statute is void for uncertainty. Similar statutes have been construed in other jurisdictions without the question of validity being raised, the courts merely considering what can be deemed unprofessional, dishonorable, or immoral conduct.” [30 Cyc. 1555 (B).]
There is such ‘a great divergency in judicial thought on this subject that after reading it all we find ourselves groping in a wilderness of confusing precedents. In considering precedents it is usually safest to keep an eye on the rules of common sense which often prove a safer guide than hair-splitting judicial reasoning.
We do not take judicial notice that doctors are more willing to commit crimes than men of other professions. Physicians are usually people of intelligence, with a high sense of the duties and responsibilities of good citizenship. We are, therefore, unwilling to be
By section 4739, Revised Statutes 1909, it is made a crime to offer for sale any secret drug designed to prevent conception, and it would be the rankest folly to say that it would have been more difficult to prohibit physicians from offering to commit abortion than it was to prohibit persons from offering for sale obnoxious drugs. We, therefore, hold that it would have been possible for the General Assembly to designate the particular offenses for which they intended that the licenses of physicians might be revoked.
Another theory of the Attorney-General is that the general specification in section 8317, supra, must be construed to authorize the Board of Health to determine what shall constitute dishonorable and unprofessional conduct. This point does not deserve* serious consideration. To grant the Board of Health that power would be to concede that it has the right, to enact from time to time such laws as it deems necessary to regulate the conduct of physicians and surgeons. We give the honorable members of the Board of Health credit with possessing too much good judgment to ‘attempt to assume the role of lawmakers.
If section 1, article 4, of the Constitution of Missouri, vesting in the General Assembly the power to make laws, and article 3 of said Constitution prohibiting executive officers from performing legislative functions, could both be suspended, and the Board of Health given power to legislate, the respondents would be in no better condition, so far as the facts of this case are concerned. It nowhere appears in this record that prior to the institution of this action to revoke appellant’s license the State Board of Health had ever enacted, or pretended to prescribe, a law or rule prohibiting physicians from offering to commit abortion.
The action of the State Board of Health in suspending the appellant from the practice of medicine and surgery should be quashed and for naught held; and the judgment of the circuit court of St. Louis City sustaining and upholding the action and finding of the Board of Health should be reversed. It is so ordered.