Robert G. Errington, whose “right name” according to testimony he gave in support of a preliminary motion is “Herman Heinrich Gotthold Helmers,” was found guilty (in a jury waived case) of practicing medicine without a license in violation of § 334.030 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S. (now repealed), a misdemeanor, and he was sentenced to confinement in the county jail for one year and a fine of $1,000. He has appealed from the ensuing judgment and *954 asserts among other things that the above statute is unconstitutional. Jurisdiction of the appeal is in this court.
The substitute information on which appellant was tried charged that “on the 29th day of May, 1959, * * * [he] did then and there unlawfully and wilfully attempt to treat one Ethel Wales Strunk, who at that time was sick, and that the said Robert G. Errington practiced medicine without being duly licensed by the Missouri State Board of Medical Examiners, * * *.” § 334.030, upon which the information was based, was repealed effective August 29, 1959, and the substance thereof was reenacted as §§ 334.010 and 334.250 RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S. cumulative supplement. The substitute information was filed October 16, 1959. The institution of the action subsequent to the repeal of the statute for a violation alleged to have occurred before its repeal is specifically authorized by § 1.160 RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S. Reference hereafter to statutes, unless otherwise stated, will be to them as they existed at the time of the alleged offense although a substantial change was made to Chapter 334 effective August 29, 1959.
Appellant maintained an office at 100 East 63rd Street, Kansas City, Missouri. He was listed in the “yellow pages” of the Kansas City telephone directory as follows: “Conservatory of Health, Dr. Robert G. Er-rington, Naturopathic Physician, Jackson 3-9201.” On May 26, 1959, Ethel Wales Strunk called in person at appellant’s office because, as she said, her condition was “run down.” After appellant talked to her he told her that “it sounded like” she was “anemic and run down,” that there was “probably something else wrong, perhaps gallstones,” that he had a series of 18 treatments which “would get rid of them” and that the cost would be “$178.00 plus vitamins.” Miss Strunk gave appellant a check for “the down payment” in the amount of $50 and was told to return on the following Friday morning, May 29, to receive a “dose of medicine.” At that time appellant and his wife, referred to as his nurse, gave Miss Strunk “a glass full of medicine” which was “sort of pinkish-white.” Miss Strunk testified that appellant said it was “a mild laxative” to “clean me out before they gave me the other dose of medicine.” That evening, after she arrived home, she was “sort of sick” at her stomach and she felt as though she had taken “quite a laxative.” By pre-arrangement appellant’s nurse went home with Miss Strunk, and the nurse gave her “a glass of sort of yellowish, oily substance to drink.” About midnight she became “real sick” and vomited a “greenish substance.” She was too sick to go to work on the following Monday and Tuesday. On June 2, 1959, she returned to appellant’s office. She was placed on a “sort of vibration table,” was given “hot and cold baths in a big tub,” and was placed in front of a series of sun lamps. Appellant then came in and gave her an “adjustment.” He “popped [her] neck and back,” which was “supposed to help * * * circulation.” Miss Strunk testified that at this time appellant “assumed” that she had gotten rid of the gallstones by reason of the previous treatment.
Miss Strunk asked appellant if he “studied to get his degree like most other licensed physicians do,” and he replied that he did and that he was a licensed doctor. She and appellant then discussed “vitamins [she] would have to have.” Appellant gave her “calcium powder” out of a gallon can for which she paid him $10.50. On June 9 she returned to appellant’s office and “went through the series of treatments of the hot and cold baths and the adjustment again.” At this time appellant gave her four bottles of vitamins, “it was A, C, D and E,” which he said would “help build [her] up,” but at the time her condition “had gotten worse.” For these vitamins Miss Strunk paid appellant $44.60.
On June 16 and again on June 23 Miss Strunk received another “series of treatments.” On June 16 appellant gave her another bottle of vitamins, “B-Complex, he called them” for which she paid $12.20. *955 By this time Miss Strunk “was wondering about him” and also about the price of the vitamins. He “mentioned he had to have a special license to administer vitamins in less than 100, because the bottles were sealed,” but the bottle he had given Miss Strunk had not been sealed. She discussed this with him but he “really didn’t have an explanation for the fact the bottles weren’t sealed.”
Miss Strunk received no further treatments from appellant, but she returned on July 1, 1959 to have him fill out an insurance form. Appellant filled in the answers on a “physician’s Statement.” In answer to the question “Your diagnosis,” he wrote in the word “Choledochitis.” He also made check marks to show that her condition was due to illness and not an accident and that the illness was a “primary condition.” He wrote the word “Indigestion” in answer to the question, “What other disease is it secondary to, complicated with, or a sequence of.” In answer to the question, “Dates you treated patient for this condition” he wrote “May 26” for treatment “at office,” and he wrote “May 27-28-29-30 June 1-2-3 — 16, 23-30” for treatments “At home.” He made a check mark indicating that the “patient [had no] chronic or constitutional disease, physical defect or deformity.” The form had a place for signature as follows: “Signed-M.D.” Here appellant wrote “Dr. Robert G. Errington,” and without marking out the printed letters “M.D.” he wrote over them what appears to be “N.D.”
There is no contention that appellant was or has been licensed by this State to engage in the practice of medicine or any of the healing arts, and it affirmatively appears that he was not licensed by the board of medical examiners referred to in § 334.020. In the latter part of 1958 appellant was enjoined by this court from the practice of medicine on the basis that he was not licensed by this State to practice medicine and that such unlicensed practice constituted a continuing public nuisance detrimental to the public health and contrary to and against the public policy of this State. See State v. Errington, Mo.Sup.,
Appellant asserts that § 334.030 does not define the term “practice of medicine” and for this reason does not proscribe any activity as a crime.
“ ‘It is, of course, true that the defendant in a criminal cause has a constitutional right to demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him, and a criminal statute must be sufficiently clear that there can be no doubt as to when such statute is being violated.’ ” State v. King, Mo.Sup., 303 S.W.2d
930,
935. In Jordan v. De George,
Appellant next contends that what he did in the treatment of Miss Strunk consisted only of “acts the Legislature of Missouri has by statute permitted osteopaths to prescribe and perform and has specifically declared the same to be not the ‘practice of medicine.’ ” Prior to August 29, 1959, § 337.010 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., provided that “The system, method or science of treating diseases of the human body, commonly known as osteopathy, * * * is hereby declared not to be the practice of medicine and surgery within the meaning of sections 334.010 to 334.180 and not subject to the provisions of said chapter.” In Atkinson v. American School of Osteopathy,
Appellant next contends that he is a naturopath; that the practice of naturop-athy is a “recognized occupation” which is not prohibited or expressly regulated by this State; and that to require appellant *957 to be a licensed physician in order to practice naturopathy denies him the right to follow such occupation in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.
In the frequently cited case of Dent v. State of West Virginia,
Appellant offered no evidence (except reading into the record the provisions of certain Missouri statutes of which we take judicial notice), and therefore the record does not tend to reveal any basis whatever for ruling or even implying that the failure of this State to make special provision for practitioners of naturopathy is arbitrary or unreasonable. It is not even established that appellant is a naturopath (except that h-e advertised as such in a telephone directory) or that he is qualified to practice naturopathy. In fact, there is nothing in the record to indicate of what the practice of naturopathy consists; that is, whether its principles are limited to some particular method of practicing the art of healing or to some limited, portion of the human body, or whether it is kindred to the principles and scope of treatment employed by an allopathic or homeopathic physician. Appellant quotes in bis brief a dictionary definition of naturopathy as “A drugless system of therapy by use of forces such as air, light, water, heat, massage, etc.” Assuming this to be a reasonably accurate definition of the principles of naturopathy, the evidence clearly establishes that appellant did not limit his activity to drugletis therapy; he administered drugs.
All the constitutional objections made by appellant were presented in Hitchcock v. Collenberg, supra, thoroughly discussed in that case, and correctly ruled adversely to appellant’s contentions. That case was later affirmed without opinion by the United States Supreme Court,
The statute under which appellant was charged, § 334.030, provides that violation thereof is a misdemeanor, but no punishment is prescribed. As previously noted, this statute was repealed before the judgment in this case was entered, but the offense of practicing medicine without a license was reenacted as §§ 334.010 and 334.025, RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S. § 1.160 provides that when a statutory provision creating an offense is repealed or amended “the trial and punishment” for such offense shall be had, in all respects, as if the provision had not been repealed or amended “except * * * that if the penalty or punishment for any offense be reduced or lessened by any alteration of the law creating the offense, such penalty or punishment shall be assessed according to the amenda-tory law.” § 334.010, as reenacted effective August 29, 1959, provides that it shall be unlawful for any person not a registered physician within the meaning of the law “to practice medicine,” and § 334.250, as reenacted, provides that any person “who violates section 334.010 shall, upon conviction, be adjudged guilty of a misdemeanor for each and every offense,” but no punishment is prescribed. Therefore, the “penalty or punishment” for the offense of practicing medicine without license was not “reduced or lessened by any alteration of the law creating the offense.” § 556.270 provides that when an offense is declared by statute to be a misdemeanor, “and no punishment is prescribed by that or any other statute” the punishment may be imprisonment in a county jail not exceeding *959 one year or a fine not exceeding one thousand dollars, or both. Apparently the punishment was administered pursuant to this statute. The Attorney General does not take the position that § SS6.270 does not prescribe the punishment, but he states that he feels “duty-bound” to invite the attention of the court to § 564.320, which is as follows: “If any person shall carry on or transact any business or occupation without license therefor, when such license is required by any law of this state, he shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and when no other punishment is prescribed for such offense, be fined in any sum not exceeding one hundred dollars or be imprisoned in the county jail not exceeding three months, or both.” This section creates an offense constituting a misdemeanor and prescribes the punishment therefor. It is general in its application and is broader than § 334.030 (before its repeal) and broader in its application than §§ 334.010 and 334.250 as reenacted. It creates a separate and distinct offense from that created by § 334.030 (before its repeal) or by §§ 334.010 and 334.250 (as reenacted) which are specific and limited in their application. § 564.320 does not purport to prescribe the punishment for the offenses created by § 334.030 (before its repeal) and it does not constitute the “other statute” referred to in § 556.270. The punishment for the violation of the offense charged is prescribed by § 556.270, and the punishment which was imposed, while constituting the maximum authorized, is within the limits therein set out.
We have examined the record and find no error in regard to the matters referred to in Supreme Court Rule 28.02, V.A.M.R., not required to be preserved by an assignment of error upon an appeal. The judgment is affirmed and the sentence pronounced shall be executed.
PER CURIAM.
The foregoing opinion by STOCK-ARD, C., is adopted as the opinion of the Court en banc.
