The defendants, as and constituting the Board of Medical Examiners of the State of California, made an order cancelling and revoking the license authorizing the petitioner to practice medicine. He applied for a writ of mandamus directing the defendants to cancel said order. The trial court granted his application and made findings in his favor. From the judgment of the trial court based on said findings the defendants have appealed.
The controversy arises out of the fоllowing facts. On the 18th day of December, 1930, the defendant Board of Medical Examiners issued to the petitioner a license authorizing him *734 to practice medicine. Thereafter, charges were filed against the petitioner, bnt the record before us does not show the nature thereof. However, on the 23d day of October, 1940, the defendant Board of Medical Examiners purported to make an order placing the petitioner on probation for a period of five yeаrs from and after that date.
On the 29th day of May, 1942, Joseph W. Williams, an investigator for the Board of Medical Examiners, filed with the defendant board a charge which among other things alleged as follows:
“That on or about the 5th day of March, 1942, the said Thomas Daniel Wyatt, did, . . . provide, supply, administer, use or employ an instrument or substances or other means upon the person of one, Matilda Hope, a woman, with the . . . intent ... to procure a miscarriage . . . said use or employment of said instruments or substаnces, or other means to procure said miscarriage . . . not then and there being necessary to preserve the life of the said Matilda Hope.”
In another count said charge did specify as follows:
“That on or about the 24th day of March, 1942, the said Thomas Daniel Wyatt, did, . . . provide, supply, administer, use or employ an instrument or substances or other means upon the person of one, Mary Gribble, a woman, with the . . . intent ... to procure a miscarriage . . . said use or employment of said instruments or substances, or other means to procure said miscarriage . . . not then and there being necessary to preserve the life of the said Mary Gribble. ’ ’
On the same date another charge was filed against the petitioner which alleged among other things the following:
“(e) That he has since said оrder of probation violated section 2383 of the Business and Professions Code of the State of California, said violation being a misdemeanor, more particularly in that on or about the 17th day of November, 1941, said Thomas Daniel Wyatt was adjudged guilty of the offense of maliciously and wilfully disturbing the public peace and quiet by the use of profane and indecent language and challenging to fight and interfering with an officer of the law in the performance of his duties, by a judgment of the Justice of the Peace of Big Valley Township of the County of Lassen, State of California, upon a verdict of guilty of such charge in a proceeding in said Justice’s court entitled ‘The People of the State of California, Plaintiff vs. Thomas D. Wyatt, Defendant.’ ”
Based on said charges, on the 29th day of May, 1942, an *735 ordеr to show cause was issued directing the petitioner to appear and show cause, if any he had, why his license should not be revoked. The petitioner appeared and filed an answer denying the material allegations of said charges and a trial was had on the issues as framed before the Board of Medical Examiners. At said hearing evidence both oral and documentary, was presented to said board by both parties and the proceedings before the said board were taken down in shorthand. Thereafter, on July 1, 1942, the defendant board rendered and caused to be entered its judgment and determination revoking said license theretofore issued to this petitioner. On the 4th day of February, 1943, the petitioner commenced this proceeding in the Superior Court of the State of California in and for the City and County of San Francisco. In due time the appellants made a return and filed an answer to said petition for a writ of mandamus. Later a hearing was had on February 16, 1943, and thereafter the trial court being fully advised of the law and the facts made findings in favor of the petitioner and against the appellants. Thereupon the trial court directed that a peremptory writ of mandamus be issued directing appellants to cease and desist from any act tending to prevent petitioner from practicing medicine and surgery within this state; and directing them forthwith to make an order restoring petitioner’s certificate theretofore issued authоrizing him to practice as a physician and surgeon; and also ordering that said petitioner recover his costs and disbursements. From that judgment the appellants have taken this appeal.
The controversy presented to this court involvеs few questions of fact and they will be specifically set forth as we proceed. However, the controversy is a serious dispute as to the procedure in a mandamus ease when the subject under attack is a determination of a board having statewide jurisdiction.
(Laisne
v.
California St. Bd. of Optometry,
Not to prolong this decision it may be stated that the appellants do not contend that the trial court violated any rule in the cases we have just cited except as will herein be noted. *736 Indeed, it is conceded that the trial court followed said rules with meticulous care.
Speaking of assignments of error, the appellants make one contention, “It is respectfully submitted that the trial court erred in permitting evidence additional to that considered by appellant board to be introduced at the hearing on the petition for writ of mandate. In this connection it is pertinent to observe that the trial court was greatly influenced by the testimony of Dr. Bolin, a witness who did not testify at the proceedings of the appellant board.” In support of that contention the appellants state, “The opinions of the supreme court in the Dare, Russell and Sipper cases above сited indicate that evidence additional to that received by the administrative agency may be considered by the reviewing court only in the following instances: (1) where evidence has been offered and improperly rejected by the administrative
agency;
(2) where pertinent evidence was in existence at the time of the hearing before the administrative agency but could not have been at that time produced by the exercise of due diligence; and (3) evidence discoverеd subsequent to the hearing before the administrative agency.” That is the appellants base their contention specifically on what is said by the Supreme Court in
Dare
v.
Board of Medical Examiners,
Hereinabove we referred to conflicts in the evidence. As we understand the appellants they do not claim that they are not bound by the findings of the trial court—except as follows: It is their claim that the trial court should not have received the testimony of Dr. Bolin and if it had not received such testimony there would be no conflict. Hence they argue that the reception of Dr. Bolin’s testimony was error, that the record can bе treated as though such testimony was not received and, under those circumstances, there was no conflict. However, we have shown above that the trial court did not err in receiving the testimony of Dr. Bolin. Moreover, as we view the record his testimony created a conflict as to certain factors and that it was the only evidence on certain other material factors.
Of course as to Mrs. Hope and also as to Mrs. Gribble, the defendants were bound to prove that bоth women were pregnant when Dr. Wyatt rendered services to them on the dates alleged in the complaint. On the witness stand both denied they were pregnant. Each had given birth to children and knew the symptoms of pregnancy but neither admitted she was prеgnant. Miss Malone, the nurse who assisted Dr. Wyatt in performing said operations, gave testimony regarding what she claimed to have seen. She claimed that the doctor curetted the womb of Mrs. Hope. She testified that the doctor operated on Mrs. Gribble and removed a fetus which she said showed the form of a human being. She also testified that before the operation Mrs. Gribble stated to her that she was pregnant. All of those statements about the removal of a fetus were denied by Dr. Wyatt. Dr. Bоlin, the witness men *738 tioned above, testified that a fetus of an age of four weeks, the age of the one removed, would be the size of a buckshot and the nature of the substance could be ascertained only by the use of a microscope. It thus appears there were conflicts in the evidence, that the trial court has decided those conflicts against the appellants, and that a court of review may not disturb those findings.
Regarding the charge of disturbing the peace аt Bieber, it was the theory of the defendants that under the record as made before the defendant board it was shown that the petitioner did, during his probation period, violate section 415 of the Penal Code, that such act was one of morаl turpitude and therefore the petitioner was guilty of an act of unprofessional conduct. (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 2383.) The vice in that contention is that it assumes the offense of disturbing the peace is an act of “moral turpitude.” That it is an act of turpitude may be conceded, however it is equally clear that it is not
ipso facto
an immoral act.
(In re Rothrock,
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Nourse, P. J., and Spence, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied August 3, 1944. Gibson, C. J., Edmonds, J,, and Traynor, J., voted for a hearing. Carter, J., did not participate therein. Appellants’ petition to set aside order denying hearing was denied August 4, 1944. Edmonds, J., voted to grant petition.
