57 S.E. 441 | N.C. | 1907
The defendant was prosecuted in the Court below upon a warrant (690) issued by a justice of the peace charging him with having, in October, 1906, "unlawfully and wilfully practiced dentistry without having passed the examination and obtained the certificate required by law, contrary to the form of the statute." He was convicted by the justice, and appealed to the Superior Court. There the defendant moved to quash the warrant because, first, the act of the Legislature under which it was issued is unconstitutional, and, second, it is not alleged that the defendant was not engaged in the practice of dentistry in this State before March 7, 1879. The warrant was amended by permission of the Court so as to meet the last objection, and the motion to quash was then overruled.
It was admitted that the defendant had not passed an examination before the State Board of Dental Examiners and received a certificate. There was evidence tending to show that he was engaged in the practice of dentistry in Catawba County, where he resided, and in other counties of this State on and prior to 7 March, 1879, and had continuously since been so engaged, and was practising in Cleveland County at the time mentioned in the warrant. There was also evidence tending to show that he was not so engaged before the year 1884. Evidence was also introduced which tended to prove that the defendant went with his attorney to the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court of Catawba County, where he resided, on 15 July, 1889, and made and filed with the Clerk an affidavit to the effect that he was lawfully engaged in the practice of dentistry before 3 March, 1887, in said county, and that he paid the Clerk his fee for a transcript of the same. This affidavit was filed *509 in a book known as the Registry of Dentists. It was further in evidence that blanks for registration had not been furnished to the Clerk by the State Board of Examiners, as required by law. (691)
At the close of the testimony the Court charged the jury that if they believed the evidence and were satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt of the existence of all the facts testified to by the witnesses, they should convict the defendant. The jury returned a verdict of guilty; judgment was entered thereon, and the defendant appealed, having duly reserved his exception to the charge of the Court.
The course of legislation upon the subject of dentistry has been somewhat eccentric. The Acts of 1879, ch. 139, made it unlawful and a misdemeanor for any person but an authorized physician and surgeon to practice dentistry, unless he had graduated and received a diploma from some reputable dental institution or had received a certificate from the Board of Examiners of the State Dental Society. Persons who had engaged in the practice of dentistry prior to the ratification of the Act of 7 March, 1879, were excepted from its operation. The provisions of that law were inserted substantially in The Code of 1883, and will be found in secs. 3148 to 3156, inclusive. The Legislature, on 3 March, 1887 (Laws 1887, ch. 178, sec. 4), amended the law by requiring all dentists within six months from the ratification of the act to be registered as therein provided with the Secretary of the State Board of Dental Examiners in a book for the purpose, and also specially required that the registration should follow a form to be prescribed by the said board, which should, upon application, provide blanks prepared by it. It was also required that the secretary of the board should furnish a certified list of those who had registered to the Clerk of the Superior Court of each county, to be entered by him in a book or registry kept for the purpose. Failure (692) to register as required by the act was made unlawful and a misdemeanor. Laws 1889, ch. 238, extended the time allowed for registration twelve months from the date of its ratification, which was 25 February, 1889, or until 25 February, 1890, and then provided as follows: "The State Board of Examiners shall within the above-prescribed time forward the necessary blanks for registration to the Clerks of the Superior Courts of the respective counties, whose duty it shall be to notify all persons practicing dentistry of the said requirements in said counties." There were other amendments of the law not material to the point discussed in this case. The substance of the law was *510
inserted in the Revisal of 1905 as secs. 4468, 4469, 4470, 3642, and 3643, except that sec. 4, ch. 178, Laws 1887, does not seem to have been brought forward, though a somewhat similar enactment in regard to physicians and surgeons is to be found in the Revisal as sec. 3646. The omission of that section of the Act of 1887 is perhaps substantially supplied by other sections of the Revisal already mentioned. Section 4468 of the Revisal forbids any person to practise dentistry who has not graduated at a reputable dental school and who has not received a certificate of proficiency or qualification from the Board of Examiners. This certificate must be registered, and a failure to have it registered works a forfeiture of the certificate, which will not be restored except upon the payment of a penalty of twenty dollars to the board for the general school fund. Section 4470 provides that section 4468 shall not apply to any person who was a dental practitioner in this State before 7 March, 1879, if on or before 25 February, 1890, he had filed a verified statement with the Board of Dental Examiners showing his name, residence, date of diploma or license, and date of commencing the practice of dentistry. Section 3642 makes it a misdemeanor to (693) practice dentistry without having first passed the required examination and received a certificate. This is the substance of what has been done in the way of securing the proficiency of those engaged in the practice of dentistry. Legislation of a similar kind has been held to be valid in several comparatively recent decisions of this Court. S. v.Call,
The offense denounced by the statute as criminal is practising dentistry without having first passed an examination and received a certificate as provided by law. Revisal, sec. 3642. It is, then, a violation of section 4468 that is made a misdemeanor, and the subsequent section (4470) was intended to segregate all those who had practised dentistry prior to 7 March, 1879, into a distinct class and except them from the operation of section 4468, and consequently from the penal provision of section 3642, if (or provided that) they had complied with the Acts of 1887, ch. 178, sec. 4, by filing a verified statement with the secretary of the Board of Dental Examiners on or before 25 February, 1890. This is the plain meaning of the law, and while of a penal nature and to be construed strictly, yet it must at the same time receive a reasonable interpretation so as to discover the real intention of the Legislature and to execute its will. If any hardship results, it is not of our making. Under this construction and the relative position of the several sections *511
we have mentioned, the settled rule of law is that "the excepted cases need not be negatived in the indictment or warrant, nor is proof required to be made in the first instance on the part of the prosecution. In such circumstances, a defendant charged with the crime, who seeks protection by reason of the exception, has the burden of (694) proving that he comes within the same." S. v. Connor,
But he assigns as an excuse for non-compliance, that the board was required to prescribe the manner of verifying the statement required to be filed by him and the secretary to furnish a blank upon which it could be made (Laws 1887, ch. 178, sec. 3; Laws 1889, ch. 228, sec. 2), neither of which duties was performed by the officers designated. We would accept this as a valid, legal excuse, if he had filed a properly worded written statement with the secretary of the board. The statute states clearly what the statement shall contain, and it was (695) easy for him to have complied with it. But he did not do so, or attempt to do so. The authorities are to the effect that he had no right to practise simply because the officers had not performed their duty, as they could have been compelled by mandamus to do so. Their failure to comply with the law, in the language of Brickell, C. J., "affords to the appellant no excuse or justification for continuing to do business without the license." Carpet Co. v. State, 118 Ala.,
A case which seems to be directly in point is Gosnell v. State,
The defendant, having admitted that he had not passed the requisite examination and received a certificate from the State Board of Dental Examiners, was guilty, unless he came within the exemption, and of this there was no evidence, as we have shown.
No Error.
Cited: S. v. R. R.,
145 N.C. 556 ; St. George v. Hardie,147 N.C. 96 . *513 (697)