Where the party attacking the constitutionality of a statute has
not suffered, the court will not speculate whether others may
suffer.
Under its police power, a state may constitutionally prescribe
conditions to insure competence in those practicing the healing art
in its various branches, including those in which drugs are not
administered -- such as osteopathy.
Dent v. West Virginia,
129 U. S. 114.
The Texas statute of 1907, establishing a Board of Medical
Examiners, and conditions under which persons will be licensed to
practice osteopathy, does not deprive one who refuses to apply for
a license thereunder of his property without due process of law, or
deny him the equal protection of the law.
In this case, the writ of error to review a judgment denying
plaintiff in error his release on habeas corpus is not dismissed,
but determined on the merits, as the single constitutional question
goes to the jurisdiction of the state court, and has arisen as
plainly as it ever will.
Bailey v. Alabama, 211 U.
S. 452, distinguished.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality of certain
provisions of the statute of Texas establishing the Board of
Medical Examiners, are stated in the opinion.
Page 223 U. S. 294
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to the Texas court of Criminal Appeals
upon a judgment denying the plaintiff in error a release by habeas
corpus. The plaintiff in error is held upon an information charging
him with practicing medicine for money by treating a named patient
for hay fever by osteopathy without having registered his
authority, as required by a Texas statute of 1907, c. 123. He
denies the constitutionality of the act.
The statute establishes a Board of Medical Examiners, and
requires
"all legal practitioners of medicine in this state who,
practicing under the provisions of previous laws, or under diplomas
of a reputable and legal college of medicine, have not already
received license from a state medical examining board of this
state,"
to prove their diplomas, or existing license, or exemption
existing under any law, whereupon they are to receive a
verification license. § 6. By § 7, applicants not licensed under §
6 must pass an examination, conditioned, among other things, on
their being graduates of "
bona fide reputable medical
schools," to be considered reputable
"whose entrance requirements and courses of instruction are as
high as those adopted by the better class of medical schools of the
United States, whose course of instruction shall embrace not less
than four terms of five months each."
By § 9, the examinations are to be fair to every school of
medicine, are to be conducted on the scientific branches of
medicine only, and are to include anatomy, physiology, chemistry,
histology, pathology, bacteriology, physical diagnosis, surgery,
obstetrics, gynecology, hygiene, and
Page 223 U. S. 295
medical jurisprudence. Those who pass are to be granted licenses
to practice medicine. By § 10, nothing in the act is to be
construed to discriminate against any particular system, and the
act is not to apply to dentists legally registered and confining
themselves to dentistry, nurses who practice only nursing,
masseurs, or surgeons of the United States Army, Navy, etc., in the
performance of their duties.
The only other material sections of the act are §§ 13 and 14,
the former of which declares that
"any person shall be regarded as practicing medicine within the
meaning of this act. . . . (2) or who shall treat or offer to treat
any disease or disorder, mental or physical, or any physical
deformity or injury, by any system or method, or to effect cures
thereof, and charge therefor, directly or indirectly, money or
other compensation."
By § 14, any person practicing medicine in violation of the act
is punished by fine and imprisonment, and is not to recover
anything for the services rendered.
The facts charged against the plaintiff in error are admitted.
It also is admitted that, before the passage of the statute, he had
spent $5,000 in fitting up his place, and was deriving a net income
from his calling of at least the same sum. He held a diploma from
the chartered American School of Osteopathy, Kirksville, Missouri,
after a full two-years' course of study there, but it does not
appear that he presented this diploma to the Board of Medical
Examiners, or attempted to secure either a verification license or
license in any form. The Board, in passing upon qualifications,
does not examine in therapeutics or
materia medica, which,
it will be observed, are not mentioned in the act. On these facts,
we are of opinion that the plaintiff in error fails to show that
the statute inflicts any wrong upon him, contrary to the Fourteenth
Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. If he has not
suffered, we are not called upon to speculate upon other cases,
or
Page 223 U. S. 296
to decide whether the followers of Christian Science or other
people might, in some event, have cause to complain.
We are far from agreeing with the plaintiff in error that the
definition of practicing medicine in § 13 is arbitrary or
irrational, but it would be immaterial if it were, as its only
object is to explain who fall within the purview of the act. That
it does, and, of course, we follow the Texas court in its decision
that the plaintiff in error is included. It is true that he does
not administer drugs, but he practices what at least purports to be
the healing art. The state constitutionally may prescribe
conditions to such practice considered by it to be necessary or
useful to secure competence in those who follow it. We should
presume, until the Texas courts say otherwise, that the reference
in § 4 to the diploma of a reputable and legal college of medicine,
and the confining in § 7 of examinations to graduates of reputable
medical schools, use the words "medicine" and "medical" with the
same broad sense as § 13, and that the diploma of the plaintiff in
error would not be rejected merely because it came from a school of
osteopathy. In short, the statute says that, if you want to do what
it calls practicing medicine, you must have gone to a reputable
school in that kind of practice. Whatever may be the osteopathic
dislike of medicines, neither the school nor the plaintiff in error
suffers a constitutional wrong if his place of tuition is called a
medical school by the act for the purpose of showing that it
satisfies the statutory requirements. He cannot say that it would
not have been regarded as doing so, because he has not tried.
Dent v. West Virginia, 129 U. S. 114,
129 U. S.
124.
An osteopath professes -- the plaintiff in error professes, as
we understand it -- to help certain ailments by scientific
manipulation affecting the nerve centers. It is intelligible
therefore that the state should require of him a scientific
training.
Dent v. West Virginia, 129 U.
S. 114;
Watson v. Maryland, 218 U.
S. 173. He, like others,
Page 223 U. S. 297
must begin by a diagnosis. It is no answer to say that, in many
instances, the diagnosis is easy -- that a man knows it when he has
a cold or a toothache. For a general practice, science is needed.
An osteopath undertakes to be something more than a nurse or a
masseur, and the difference rests precisely in a claim to greater
science, which the state requires him to prove. The same
considerations that justify including him justify excluding the
lower grades from the law.
Watson v. Maryland,
218 U. S. 173,
218 U. S. 179.
Again, it is not an answer to say that the plaintiff in error is
prosecuted for a single case. If the legislature may prohibit a
general practice for money except on the condition stated, it may
attach the same conditions to a single transaction of a kind not
likely to occur otherwise than as an instance of a general
practice. A distinction between gratuitous and paid-for services
was made in the Maryland statute sustained in
Watson v.
Maryland, 218 U. S. 173,
218 U. S. 178.
Finally, the law is not made invalid as against the plaintiff in
error by the fact that he had an established business when the law
was passed.
Dent v. West Virginia, 129 U.
S. 114;
Reetz v. Michigan, 188 U.
S. 505,
188 U. S. 510.
The objections that prevailed against a writ of error like this
in
Bailey v. Alabama, 211 U. S. 452, do
not exist here. There, as here, it was attempted to interrupt the
ordinary course of a trial by habeas corpus, and there, as here,
the state allowed the attempt, and discharged the writ on the
merits. But in that case it did not appear that the constitutional
question relied upon had arisen or necessarily would arise,
although afterwards it did. 219 U.S.
219 U. S. 219. But
here, the facts are admitted, the question appears as plainly as it
ever will, and is supposed to go to the jurisdiction of the court.
Therefore, we have discussed the case on the merits -- perhaps more
than it needed in view of the decisions cited and others that
establish the right of the state to adopt a policy even upon
Page 223 U. S. 298
medical matters concerning which there is difference of opinion
and dispute.
Hawker v. New York, 170 U.
S. 189;
Meffert v. Packer, 195 U.S. 625;
Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U. S.
11.
See also Williams v. Arkansas, 217 U. S.
79.
Judgment affirmed.