THE STATE v. L. W. VAN DORAN
In the Supreme Court of North Carolina
September Term, 1891
109 N.C. 864
- An indictment which charges that the defendant did practice, or attempt to practice, medicine, etc., is not defective because of the use of the disjunctive conjunction.
- To constitute the offence of practicing medicine under the Act of 1881, without registration, etc., it is not necessary to allege or prove the person practiced upon; it is sufficient if the defendant held himself out to the public as a physician.
- That act is constitutional, being the exercise of the police power of the State, and the proviso that it shall not apply to midwives nor to non-resident consulting physicians does not bring it within the inhibition of
Const., Art. 1, § 7 , prohibiting exclusive privileges. - While a patent medicine vendor is not within the statute, yet one who holds himself out to the public as a physician, makes diagnoses of diseases, etc., cannot protect himself because he administers medicines prepared by himself.
- The abandonment of exceptions to a bill of indictment for a misdemeanor, by а statement in defendant‘s brief, is a waiver of the defects.
SHEPHERD, J., dissenting.
This was a CRIMINAL ACTION for the statutory offence created by
The indictment was in form as follows:
“The jurors for the State, etc., * * * present that L. W. Van Doran, in Washington County, on the 1st day of March, 1891, unlawfully and wilfully did practice, or attempt to practice, medicine or surgery, the said L. W. Van Doran not then and there having produced and exhibited before the Clerk of the Superior Court of said county a license obtained from the Board of Medical Examiners of the State of North Caro-
It was in evidence that the defendant claimed to have graduated at a medical college in Chicago, and to have lost his diploma. There was no evidence of a license from the Medical Board of North Carolina, but the defendant had applied to the Clerk to be registered as a physician, and his application had been refused.
The Attorney General, for the State.
Mr. A. O. Gaylord (by brief), for defendant.
AVERY, J.—after stating the facts: Where a statute makes two or more distinct acts, constituting separate stages of the same transaction, indictable (as in the case at bar, the acts of practicing, or attempting to practice, medicine), both or all may be charged in a single count of the indictment. 1 Wharton Cr. Law (7th Ed.), § 390; 10 Am. & Eng. Enc., p. 599d; State v. Bordeaux, 93 N. C., 560; State v. Parish, 104 N. C., 680.
If the distinсt acts, representing the successive stages of the transaction, were connected in the statute by the word “or,” it was in accordance with the settled precedents in drawing the indictment to couple the independent clauses by using the word “and” instead of following closely the language of the statute and using “or.” Bish. on Stat. Cr., § 244; State v. Harper, 64 N. C., 129.
But upon the maxim, cessante ratione cessat et ipsa lex, the better rule seems now to be that “or” is only fatal when the use of it renders the statement of the offence uncertain, and not so when one term is used only as еxplaining or illustrating the other, or where the language of the law makes either an attempt or procurement of an act, or the act itself, in the alternative, indictable. 1 Wharton, C. L., § 294; U. S. v. Potter, 6 McLean, 186. Where it is manifest that the defendant cannot be embarrassed by uncertainty in preparing his defence by reason of the use of the disjunctive instead of the conjunctive, if the form ordinarily used in drawing the indictment should be treated as an established precedent essential in all cases, it would be an arbitrary and unreasonable rule. Taking the language of the statute, under which the indictment in U. S. v. Potter, supra, was drawn, as an illustration, it would be difficult to explain how the accused would be put to disadvantage or left in doubt in making his preparatiоn to meet the accusation, because he was charged with “cutting or causing to be cut,” and was uncertain whether the State would offer testimony tending to prove the commission of the one act or the other, when all the authorities concur in stating the rule to be that if the usual precedent had been followed, and the language emplоyed in the indictment had been “cutting and causing to be cut,” the prosecution could
But if we admit (as many authorities tend to prove) that where no statute affecting procedure has been passed to modify it, it is a rule of law that charges of the aсts representing the different stages of the same transaction must be coupled by the word “and” in the indictment, still giving a fair interpretation to our curative act (
Where the very nature of a charge is such as to involve the idea of attempting to engage in a business, or unlawfully engaging in a business prohibited by statute, there is not the same reason for specifying thе act, as where the allegation is, and the specific proof must be that the accused was guilty
It is too late to question the constitutional validity of a statute enacted in the exercise of the police power of a State, and purporting to рrotect the public against imposition and injury to health by requiring that persons who engage in the practice of medicine shall submit to an examination conducted by learned physicians, and shall produce a license from such competent masters of the medical science. Cooley Const. Lim., 596 (Star page.)
The proviso to
We think that the instruction embodied the law applicable to the testimony bearing upon the charge. An unlicensed person, claiming to be a physician and holding himself out to the world as such, cannot, after examining a patient who has asked his services, diagnosing the disease, fixing an amount or price for which he will cure the patient and giving him a prescription, evade the law by proving that the medicine administered was a proprietary remedy
We think that the evidence warranted the Judge in giving the instructions asked by the Solicitor, and in adding that if “the defendant had practiced in the county (Washington) within two years without first having registered and obtained a certificate, that is, prescribed for siсk persons, or held himself out to the public as a physician or surgeon, he was guilty.” State v. Bryan, supra.
Defendant‘s counsel, in his brief, says, after enumerating the exceptions to which we have adverted, that all others are abandoned. He does not insist upon the motion to quash for want of the negative averments that the defendant was not a reputable physician, еtc., and his abandonment must be considered as complete a waiver as an agreement to cure the defect, if any, except by amendment, would have been.
SHEPHERD, J. (dissenting): Fully sympathizing as I do in all reasonable efforts to free the administration of the crim-
The offences being distinct, it seems quite clear to me that they cannot be charged with the alternative, and I am unable to find a single authority in which such an indictment has ever been sustained. In addition to the elementary works on the criminal law, we have an express decision of this Court that such a bill is fatally defective. State v. Harper, 64 N. C., 130. Even the very statute (
It is true that there are some authorities which hold that the use of the disjunctive is not fatal when the acts represеnt successive stages of one criminal transaction, as when the charge is “cutting or causing to be cut,” but it must be noted that these cases relate only to one distinct offence, and
Mr. Wharton (Crim. Law, § 294) shows that the weight of authority is even against this practice, for he says thаt if the charge is “in the disjunctive, as that he murdered or caused to be murdered, forged or caused to be forged, burned or caused to be burned, sold spirituous or intoxicating liquors * * * * it is bad for uncertainty.” After citing some few American decisions to the contrary, he remarks that “the principle in those cases seems to be that ‘or’ is only fatal when it renders the stаtement of the offence uncertain, and not so when one term is used only as explanatory of or illustrating the other.” It is very difficult to understand how the mere charge that one attempted to do an act can explain or illustrate that act when already completed.
I think that we should adhere to the well settled rule that alternative charges of distinct offences ought not to be sustained.
Per curiam. No error.
