The defendant is indicted for practicing medicine in violation of
The Code,
Sections 3122 and 3132 as amended by Acts 1885, Chapters 117 and 261, by Acts 1889, Chapter 181, Sections 4 and 5, and by Acts 1891, Chapter 420. His counsel earnestly contends that the law, as it stands, is contrary to Article 1, Section 7, of the State Constitution, which forbids exclusive privileges and emoluments to any set of men, and to Section 31 of the same Article, which prohibits monopolies and perpetuities, and, further, that it is obnoxious to the 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which prohibits any State to deny to any person the equal protection of the laws. That the Statute is not in violation of the State Constitution is thoroughly discussed and held in
State
v.
VanDoran,
109
*646
N. C., 864. It is not to be questioned that the law making power of a State has the right to require an examination and certificate as to the competency of persons desiring to practice law or medicine;
Eastman
v.
State,
The defendant, however, contends that the Statute is unconstitutional on the additional ground that it exempts from its requirements those. physicians who were already practicing medicine and surgery in this State on March 7, 1885. The first Statute, making it indictable to practice medicine and surgery without an examination by the State Board of Medical Examiners and a license therefrom, was enacted at the session of 1885 and was made prospective so as to apply only to those who should begin the practice of medicine and surgery thereafter. This was not unreasonable. It was fair to assume that those already in the practice, many of whom had grown gray in the service of humanity and the alleviation of suffering, had already received that public approbation which was a sufficient guarantee of their competency, and should not be needlessly subjected to the humiliation of an examination by the side of beardless boys, who had not yet swung a scalpel or prescribed a purgative save *647 under supervision; while those already in practice who had, however, proved incompetent, it might be assumed, had been equally stamped with public disapproval at the cost to the public of much bitter experience' — -an expensive and dangerous process of distinguishing the two classes to save the public from which, in future, was the object of the new regulation requiring examination and license by a Board of competent examiners. When the Act of 1889 was enacted it recognized that the new legislation had been prospective by the Act of 1885; accordingly 7th March, 1885, was made the dividing line, those practicing medicine and surgery before that date being left to the test of the public approval or disapproval acquired by them, and those beginning practice since that date, having presumably knowledge of that Statute, wore inquired to undergo the examination and obtain the license exacted by it.
The Statute bearing alike upon all individuals of each class is not a discrimination forbidden by the State Constitution nor by the 14th Amendment.
Broadfoot
v.
Fayetteville,
at this term. It lias been frequently adjudged by the Supreme Court of the United States that the 14th Amendment does not restrict the powers of the State when the Statute applies equally to* all persons in the same class, and that ordinarily the legislature is the sole judge of the classification.
Slaughter House Cases,
The defendant, however, further presents technical objections which he is entitled to have noticed. Section 5 of Chapter 181, Acts 1889, does not repeal Section 2, Chapter 117, Acts 1885, and not being in conflict, both Sections stand, and the defendant could have been indicted under either Act. The indictment is sufficient under Section 2, Chapter 117 of the Acts 1885, but the special verdict in that view is .defective, as it does not find that the defendant practiced, “without fee or reward,” and the defendant properly excepted that it did not justify an adjudication that the defendant was guilty. If indicted under Section 5, Chapter 181 of the Acts 1889, it was not necessary to allege or prove that the defendant practiced without fee or reward, but the defendant insists that the indictment is defective in that it does not contain the negative averment in said Section “without having registered and obtained the certificate as aforesaid.” This point of the insufficiency of the indictment was not presented below, but is one of those which can be
*649
taken for the first time in this Court. Rule 27. The Act of 1889 requires a “registration and certificate” which is not exacted by the Act of 1885. An indictable offence is charged but not found by the special verdict, if the indictment is under the Act of 1885, while it is found bj^ the verdict, but not charged, if the indictment is under the Act of 1889, and the judgment must be arrested. An approved form of indictment under the Act of 1889 may be found in
State
v.
VanDoran,
109 N. C., page 864, except that the words “or a diploma issued by a regular Medical College prior to the 7th March, 1885,” should be stricken out as, by the Act of 1891, Chapter 420, that fact will no longer authorize registration, and of course the concluding words “against the peace and dignity of the State and contrary to the Statute,” &c., are now mere surplusage.
State
v.
Kirhnan,
Judgment arrested.
