Opinion
276 A.D. 230 93 N.Y.S.2d 636 PEOPLE v. KIGHTLINGER et al. Supreme Court of New York, First Department December 20, 1949
Proceeding by the People against Craig Kightlinger and others, wherein the defendants were indicted on two counts, the first count charging the use of name and other matters which indicated that they were carrying on a school of medicine in violation of the Education Law.
The Court of General Sessions for the County of New York, John J. Sullivan, J., dismissed the indictment, 194 Misc. 607, 89 N.Y.S.2d 755, and the People appealed.
The Appellate Division, Dore, J., held that the first count was good, and modified the order by dismissing only the second count, and as to modified the order was affirmed. Whitman Knapp, New York City, of counsel (Edwin C. Hoyt, Jr., New York City, with him on the brief; Frank S. Hogan, District Attorney, New York City), for appellant.
Irving Galt, New York City, of counsel (David B. Stillman and Joseph D. Stim, New York City, with him on the brief; Menahem Stim, New York City, attorney), for respondents.
Before GLENNON, Justice Presiding, and DORE, COHN, VAN VOORHIS and SHIENTAG, JJ.
DORE, Justice.
The People appeal from an order of the Court of General Sessions dismissing on the Grand Jury minutes a two count indictment against the four defendants herein. As the People have abandoned the second count of the indictment, the sole issue on appeal is whether the Court of General Sessions properly dismissed the first count charging defendants with unlawfully using a name, title and descriptive material which indicated and implied that they were carrying on a school of medicine in violation of Education Law, sec. 224, subd. 1, a violation of which is made a misdemeanor by sec. 224, subd. 3.
The defendants are principle officers and teachers of a school known as ‘ The Chiropractic Institute of New York’ , which is concededly unlicensed and has received no charter to carry on a school of medicine. Under Education Law, § 6501, subd. 3, a medical school is defined as ‘ any medical school, college or department of a university, registered by the regents as maintaining a proper medical standard and as legally incorporated.’ The same section, subd. 4, so far as relevant defines the practice of ‘ medicine’ as holding oneself out as being able ‘ to diagnose, treat, operate or prescribe for any human disease, pain, injury, deformity or physical condition’ and undertaking ‘ by any means or method’ to diagnose or treat the same.
‘ Medicine’ has been defined as the ‘ department of knowledge and practice which is concerned with the cure, alleviation and prevention of diseases in human beings and with the restoration and preservation of health.’ New English Dictionary, edited by Murray, Vol. VI, Pt. I, L-M. In a more restricted sense, as distinguished, e. g., from surgery or obstetrics, medicine is defined by the same authority as ‘ the art of restoring and preserving health by the administration of remedial substances.’ Stedman's Medical Dictionary, 14 Rev.Ed., defines medicine as ‘ the art of preventing or curing disease, the science which treats of disease in all its relations.’ In People v. Ellis, 162 A.D. 288, 289, 147 N.Y.S. 681, 682, quoting the definition of the new Standard Dictionary, the Second Department said: " Medicine,' according to the new Standard Dictionary, is ‘ the healing art; the science of the preservation of health and of treating disease for the purpose of cure." The catalogue received in evidence before the Grand Jury states that ‘ the chiropractor analyzes the mechanical imperfections of the human body, determines where they interfere with nerves and adjusts the body parts back to normal position. This adjustment frees the nerves and puts the cells back under control. Health is the natural result.’ After setting forth the names of the faculty and the courses, many of which the Grand Jury evidence indicated were courses usually taught in recognized medical schools, the catalogue then sets forth the hours and the type of training in various departments of the school; e. g., anatomy, neurology, chemistry, pathology, diagnosis, chiropractic and special clinical subjects.
Under the heading ‘ Department of Anatomy’ the catalogue represents that a series of lectures will be given to the students ‘ on human anatomy designed to acquaint the beginning student with the relative location of structures' and ‘ a complete study of the bones of the vertebral column, pelvis, thorax and the extremities, their descriptions and characteristics with relation to function. * * *’ ; ‘ a complete study of the cranium, osteologically * * *’ ; lectures upon ‘ the anatomy of the heart, arteries, veins and lymphatics, and their anatomical relationships'; ‘ study of the circulation of blood, including the systemic, portal, pulmonary and foetal branches.’ Under ‘ Histology’ it is stated that lectures and a laboratory course are given ‘ in the study of the cells and tissues of the human body.’
Under the heading ‘ Department of Neurology’ the catalogue shows that a lecture and discussion course is given ‘ comprising a general introduction to neurology, the study of the brain and its component parts, the ventricles of the brain and adjacent structures, the twelve pairs of cranial nerves and the vertebral cord; ’ also a course of lectures and demonstrations covering the subject of neurology, ‘ nervous diseases, their diagnoses, the determination of the location of lesions and neurological examination; ’ and also advanced ‘ lectures and demonstrations to aid the student in grasping the practical application of neurological principles in relation to chiropractic.’ $Under ‘ Department of Pathology’ the catalogue sets forth that lectures and demonstrations in laboratory work will be given at the school ‘ in which the tissue changes due to disturbances of normal functions are studied. The study of disease in all its nature, especially the functional and structural changes caused by it.’ Under ‘ Department of Diagnosis' the catalogue states that lectures will be given on a ‘ sequential consideration of the symptoms of disease, particularly designed to enable the student to recognize and classify by group, type and name, all the diseases.’ Under ‘ Clinical Diagnosis' the catalogue includes lectures and demonstrations of ‘ methods of diagnosis. * * * the examination of patients, subjective and objective symptoms, * * * and the prognosis of diseases.’
It is true that a number of the subjects mentioned in the catalogue as subjects of instruction in the school, are also taught in courses of psychology or biology in colleges and high schools and if that were all the catalogue set forth there would be no adequate proof sufficient to sustain the indictment. Similarly, the mere use of the name ‘ Chiropractic Institute of New York’ on the pamphlet or otherwise would be insufficient. But the descriptive material in the catalogue read as a whole, as it must be, and considered in all its parts and their relations to each other, together with the claimed admissions of defendants in the Grand Jury minutes showing the use of the catalogue, are sufficient in our opinion, as the above analysis of the catalogue shows, to indicate that the school and the defendants held themselves out as teaching the diagnosis and treatment of human diseases with a view to a cure and accordingly conducting a school of medicine in violation of Sec. 224. It is true the treatment is not by drugs or medicines as such but through chiropractic methods; that is, through what the catalogue calls the principles and practice of ‘ chiropractic’ or ‘ the therapeutic science of body mechanics'. But the statute forbids the practice of medicine without a license ‘ by any means or method’ or conducting a school of ‘ medicine’ without proper authorization.
Section 224 is a part of Article 5 of the Education Law, the title of which article is ‘ University of the State of New York.’ Section 6501 is in article 131 of the Education Law, the title of which is ‘ Medicine; Osteopathy; Phsysiotherapy.’ The heading of Section 6501 is ‘ Definitions. As used in this article:’ Subdivision 4 of Section 6501 defining the practice of ‘ medicine’ contains the phrase ‘ within the meaning of this article’ . Defendants, accordingly, contend that the definition of the practice of medicine contained in Section 6501, Article 131, may not be applied to the prohibitions contained in Section 224, Article 5. Article 131 relates specifically to ‘ Medicine’ ; Article 5 to the organization, constitution and powers of ‘ [The] University of the State of New York’ and Section 224 is headed ‘ Prohibitions.’ In view of the titles and purposes of the two articles, we think the legislature did not intend to exclude the definitions under Article 131 from any bearing on the prohibitions contained in Section 224 of Article 5.
The statute, in our opinion, was passed not merely, as defendants contend, to prevent any candidate or student from being deceived or defrauded into thinking he would get the degree of ‘ M. D.’ from the school, but the limitations and standards set by the legislature were for the protection of the public in the interest of public health. On adequate factual proof showing that defendants in the records in question were actually diagnosing and treating human diseases, the courts have frequently held that unlicensed practitioners of chiropractic are subject to penalties for the illegal practice of medicine, People v. Scallon, 1st Dept., 1948, 274 A.D. 783, 79 N.Y.S.2d 819,affirmed 298 N.Y. 805, 83 N.E.2d 699; People v. Ellis, 2nd Dept., 1914, 162 A.D. 288, 147 N.Y.S. 681; Wendel v. Board of Regents of Univ. of State of N. Y., 275 A.D. 661, 86 N.Y.S.2d 921; Brown v. Shyne, 242 N.Y. 176, 178, 151 N.E. 197, 44 A.L.R. 1407.The Court of Appeals in People ex rel. Bennett v. Laman, 277 N.Y. 368, 384, 14 N.E.2d 439, 445, sustained a complaint for an injunction to restrain a defendant, a chiropractor, from practicing medicine unlawfully on the ground that the facts alleged showed that the unlicensed defendant therein would imperil the health of the people of the community.
Each case depends upon its own particular facts. This court, in People v. Maybrook, 276 A.D. 192, 93 N.Y.S.2d 633, decided herewith, held that the mere use of the word ‘ chiropractic’ or ‘ chiropractor’ in an advertisement is not in and of itself, without further proof of what the person actually does , sufficient to sustain a count in an indictment charging the unlawful practice of medicine. In that same case, however, on the basis of the Grand Jury minutes factually showing what the defendant therein actually did , we reinstated the first count charging the defendant with unlawfully practicing medicine without authorization. In the case before us the first count of the indictment is based not on the mere use of the words ‘ Chiropractic Institute’ but on corroborative proof in the Grand Jury minutes, read with the catalogue, all of which shows that the school and defendants, as its principal officers and teachers, held themselves out to teach the students attending therein the diagnosis and treatment of human diseases with a view to a cure, and, accordingly, held themselves out as a school of ‘ medicine’ within the meaning of Education Law, § 224, subds. 1 and 3. As the school was concededly unlicensed, sufficient was shown to support the first count herein.
The order dismissing the indictment should be modified by dismissing only the second count and as so modified, affirmed, without costs. Order dismissing the indictment modified by dismissing only the second count and, as so modified, affirmed without costs. Settle order on notice.
GLENNON, Justice Presiding, and VAN VOORHIS and SHIENTAG, JJ. concur.
COHN, J., dissents in part.
COHN, Justice (dissenting in part).
The pertinent portion of the Education Law, § 224, subd. 1, forbids, without a license theretofore obtained, a person, corporation or an association from conducting a school of medicine. The name adopted by defendants clearly indicates the field occupied. The use of the name ‘ Chiropractice Institute of New York’ on the pamphlet is concededly insufficient to sustain the first count of the indictment. The Institute does not purport to be a school of medicine nor is there any representation anywhere made in the catalogue in evidence that it is. One of the purposes of the statute is to prevent the practice of deception by use of a name such as would induce a belief that the completion of a course of study would qualify one to practice medicine. Institute of the Metropolis, Inc., v. University of State of New York, 249 A.D. 33, 291 N.Y.S. 893,affirmed 274 N.Y. 504, 10 N.E.2d 521.Here there is no such false representation or deception.
Though the published curriculum of the school includes some subjects taught in medical or pre-medical schools, it does not include medicine, surgery or pharmacology. The four defendants are faculty members of the unincorporated, non-profit association conducting the school, which it appears has been functioning with its predecessors for twenty-five years or more in the State of New York. It is apparently designed to prepare students to become chiropractors in one of the forty-four states where chiropractic has been given a legal status.
A statute such as this, which is penal in nature, must be strictly construed and in a manner not to embrace cases which do not clearly fall within its terms. A purely statutory offence cannot be established by implication, and acts otherwise innocent and lawful do not become crimes unless there is a clear and positive expression of the legislative intent to make them criminal. People v. Benc, 288 N.Y. 318, 323, 43 N.E.2d 61, 63; People v. Briggs,193 N.E. 457, 86 N.E. 522; People v. Phyfe, 136 N.Y. 554, 559,32 N.E. 978, 979,19 L.R.A. 141.A chiropractic school excluding from its studies pharmacology, obstetrics, surgery and the use and administration of drugs and medicine and not representing itself as a school of medicine may not by implication be regarded as such. Nelson v. State Board of Health, 108 Ky. 769,51 S.W. 501,50 L.R.A. 383.
Accordingly, I dissent and vote to affirm as to each of the two counts of the indictment.