Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1966 )


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  • Hon. Frank C. Erwin         Opinion No. C-794
    Chairman
    Board of Regents             Re :   Whether the Board of Resents
    University of Texas                 of the University of Texas
    Austin, Texas                       are required to permit
    Doctors of Osteopathy who
    are licensed to practice
    medicine to participate in
    postgraduate courses at
    medical institutions of the
    Dear Mr. Erwin:                     University of Texas.
    You request an opinion of this office which is
    set out as follows:
    "In view of the provisions of Section 31,
    Article XVI of the Constitution of Texas, and
    the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment of the Constitution of the United
    States, is the Board of Regents of the University
    of Texas required to permit Doctors of Osteopathy
    who are licensed to practice medicine to partici-
    pate in the continuing education programs of the
    medical institutions of The University of Texas
    System?"
    Your letter of request reflects that the prereq-
    uisites now applicable to the postgraduate medical programs
    at those institutions governed by the board of regents
    require that participants hold the degree of Doctor of
    Medicine.  This of necessity precludes participation by
    those practitioners holding the degree of Doctor of
    Osteopathy rather than Doctor of Medicine who otherwlse
    meet the prerequisites for these programs.  Other aspects
    of the prerequisites are not inquired about and will not
    enter into our consideration.
    The government of the University of Texas is
    vested in a board of regents. Art. 2584, V.C.S.    In
    Article 2585 of Vernon's Civil Statutes the legislature
    has prescribed the powers of the board of regents:
    "They shall establish the departments of
    -3815.7
    Hon. Frank C. Erwin, page 2, (C-794)
    a first-class university, determine the offices
    and professorships, appoint a president, who
    shall, if they think it advisable, also dis-
    charge the duties of a professor
    the professors and other officer~,a!%~i``eir
    respective salaries; and they shall enact
    such by-laws, rules and regulations as may
    be necessary for the successful management
    and government of the University; they shall
    have power to regulate the course of instruction
    and prescribe, by and with the advice of the
    professors, the books and authorities used
    in the several departments, and to confer
    such degrees and to grant such diplomas as
    are usually conferred and granted by univer-
    sities."
    The powers invested in the board of regents neces-
    sarily involve the exercise of wide discretion in determing
    what class of persons shall be admitted.  In Foley v. Benedict,
    
    122 Tex. 193
    , 
    55 S.W.2d 805
    (1932) a rule adopted by the
    board of regents was challenged as being arbitrary and un-
    reasonable.  In sustaining the validity of the rule, the
    court recognized the broad powers of the board of regents
    in the government of the University of Texas.
    "Article 7, i 10, of the Constitution of
    Texas, provides that the Legislature shall es-
    tablish, organize, and provide for the main-
    tenance, support, and direction of the Uni-
    versity of the first class for the promotion of
    literature and the arts and sciences. Where
    the Legislature, acting under a constitutional
    mandate, establishes a university, the Leg-
    islature may provide certain rules and reg-
    ulations concerning the admission and ex-
    clusion of certain classes entitled tc be ad-
    mitted to all the privileges of a state univer-
    sity, and instruction therein. The Legisla-
    ture of this state not having provided who
    shall be admitted to the University, and hav--
    ing delegated the power to make rules and
    regulations necessary to the government of
    the University, to the board of regents, they
    are invested with the power of determining
    what classes of persons shall be admitted to
    the University, provided that the rules and
    regulations in that regard must be reason-
    able and not arbitrary.  The authorities sus-
    -3816-
    ,
    Hon. Frank C. Erwin, page 3,    (C-794)
    tain certain general rules with regard to
    the government of institutions supported and
    maintained b the state. In 24 R.C.L. pp.
    y;?76,    g 25, the rule is announced as fol-
    'The courts will not interfere with the
    exercise of discretion by school directors in
    matters confided by law to their judgment,
    unless there is a clear abuse of the discre-
    tion, or a violation of law. So the courts
    are usually disinclined to interfere with reg-
    ulations adopted by school boards, and they
    will not consider whether the regulations are
    wise or expedient, but merely whether they
    are a reasonable exercise of the power and
    discretion of the board. Acting reasonably
    within the powers conferred, it is the prov-
    ince of the board of education to determine
    what things are detrimental to the success-
    ful management, good order, and discipline
    of the schools and the rules required to pro-
    duce these conditions.   The presumption is
    always in favor of the reasonableness and
    propriety of a rule or regulation duly made.
    The reasonableness of regulations is a ques-
    tion of law for the courts.'" 
    55 S.W.2d 805
    , 808.
    Although Hyman v. City of Galveston, 
    273 U.S. 414
    ,
    47 s.Ct. 363, 71 L.kd '(
    14 S.W.2d 89
    (Tex.Civ.App. 1958~g``~o??e?%!i%$%~t3``th
    the validity of rules which denied to doctors of osteopathy
    the privileges of staff membership of a county hospital,
    the powers of the hospital boards with respect to the manage-
    ment and control of the hospitals in question are analogous
    to the powers of government invested in the board of regents.
    In both cited cases, the rules were challenged as being
    contrary to Section 31 of Article XVI of the Constitution
    of the State of Texas and the Fourteenth Amendment to the
    Constitution of the United States. Section 31 of Article
    XVI of the Constitution of the State of Texas reads as
    follows:
    "The Legislature may pass laws prescribing
    the qualifications of practitioners of medicine
    in this State, and to punish persons for mal-
    practice, but no preference shall ever be
    -3817-
    Hon. Frank C. Erwin, page 4,     (c-794)
    given by law to any school of medicine." 1
    The following statements by the court in Hyman v. City
    of Galveston, 
    273 U.S. 414
    , 416-418,   47 s.ct. 363, 364, 71
    kd '(14> 7 17, 718 (1927) are particularly apropos:
    ‘L**
    'However extensive that protection
    Fourteenth   Amendment7 may be In other
    Zituations, it cannoT we think, be said
    that all licensed physicians have a con-
    stitutional right to practice their profes-
    sion in s hospital maintained by a state
    or political subdivision, the use of which
    is reserved for purposes of medical instruc-
    tion. . . .
    "But it is argued that if some physicians
    are admitted to practice in the hospital all
    must be or there is a denial of the equal pro-
    tection of the laws. Even assuming that the
    arbitrary exclusion of some physicians would
    have that legal consequence, in the circumstances
    of this case, the selection complained of was
    based upon a classification not arbitrary or
    unreasonable on its face. . . . We cannot say
    that a regulation excluding from the conduct
    of a hospital the devotees of some of the
    numerous systems or methods of treating diseases
    authorized to practice in Texas, is unreason-
    able or arbitrary.   In the management of a
    hospital, quite apart from its use for education-
    al purposes, some choice in methods of treatment
    would seem inevitable, and a selection based upon
    a classification having some basis in the exercise
    1       The express limitation that 'no preference shall
    ever be given by law to any schools of medicine" applies
    only to the power of the legislature to enact "laws pre-
    scribing the qualifications of practitioners of medicine"
    and statutes     to punish persons for malpractice."   It does
    not extend to legislation dealing with other subjects.
    Dowdell v. McBride, 
    92 Tex. 240
    , 
    47 S.W. 524
    (1895).      The
    term "schools of medicine" has reference to the system or
    method which the medical practitioner employs in the treat-
    ment of disease. Ex parte Halsted, 
    147 Tex. Crim. 453
    , 
    182 S.W.2d 479
    (1944).
    -3818-
    I   .
    Hon. Frank C. Erwin, page 5,     (C-794)
    of the judgment of the state board whose action
    is challenged is not a denial of the equal pro-
    tection of the laws. . . .
    “The validity of the action of the board
    under the Texas Constitution @ec.  31, Art. XV27
    is also before us. . . .
    “The limitation of the provision is
    obviously directed to the qualifications of
    those to be admitted to the practice of their
    profession in the state and has nothing to do
    with the qualifications of those who are to be
    allowed to practice in a state hospital or to
    participate in an educational enterprise con-
    ducted by the state. . . .”
    In Buson v. Poage, 
    318 S.W.2d 89
    (Tex.Clv.App.
    1958, error ref. n.r.e.) a rule of a county hospital was
    attacked upon the same basis as the rule in the Hyman case.
    In upholding the authority of the hospital board to enact
    a rule which would exclude doctors of osteopathy from the
    hospital staff, the court quoted at length from the Hyman
    case and stated at page 94-95:
    “While the holding of that Court is not
    binding on us insofar as it interprets the
    meaning of the state constitution, the
    decision is highly persuasive, and we happen
    to be in accord with its interpretation.
    “The holding is supported by the following
    authorities from other states: Newton v. Board
    of County Com’rs of Weld County, 
    86 Colo. 446
    ,
    
    282 P. 1068
    ; Richardson v. City of Miami, 
    144 Fla. 294
    , 
    198 So. 51
    ; and Green v. City of St.
    -3819-
    .
    Hon. Frank C. Erwin, page 63 (C-794)
    Petersburg, 
    154 Fla. 339
    , 17 ~0.2~3 517." 2
    The court further observed at pages 96-97:
    "Dhe legislature7 wisely left to the
    Board of Managers very broad powers to be
    employed in the operation of the hospital. . . .
    "This en-joined upon the Board the duty
    of adopting such rules as are reasonably
    necessary to carry out the purpose of the
    Act.  The purpose of the Act was to enable
    a county to establish a hospital and operate
    it in a manner that would best serve the
    greatest number In the community. . . . One
    of the age-old problems Is the conflict between
    osteopaths and allopaths.   If in a given com-
    munity the hospital can best be operated by
    the exclusion of osteopaths, we find no Inhibi-
    tion in law to such exclusion.
    "While the Board cannot act arbitrarily,
    the mere fact that we, had we been in their
    position, might not have taken the same action
    as did they, does not make their action arbitrary
    and unreasonable."
    A rule which requires that participants in post-
    graduate medical programs of the University of Texas hold
    the degree of Doctor of Medicine does not relate to the
    qualifications for the practice of medicine within this
    2 The most recent cases reaching this result: Taylor
    v. Horn, 
    189 So. 2d 198
    (Fla. A p. 1966); Foote v. Communit
    Hospital of Beloit, 
    195 Kan. 3i
    5, 
    405 P.2d 423
    (1965); Walfing-
    ton v. Zinn, 146 W.Va. 147, 
    118 S.E.2d 526
    (1961). Contra
    Schnei -Englewobd
    r v.             Hosp. Assoc., 91 N.J. Super; 527, 
    221 A.2d 559
    ~ (~1966) an d Greisman v. Newc~omb Hospital, 
    40 N.J. 389
    ,
    
    192 A.2d 817
    t1963)wherethe     courts held that denial of ad-
    mission to-hospital slaif'   must be based upon qualification
    of applicant, not solely on fact that applicant was an
    osteopath.   Compare Blende v. Maricopa County Medical Sot.,
    
    96 Ariz. 240
    , 
    393 P.2d 926
    ( 64) and Falcone v. Middlesex
    County Medical Sot., 34 ~.~.lz82, 
    170 A.2d 791
    (1961) where
    courts held that county medical society could not exclude
    practitioner from membership solely because of being an
    osteopath where membership in society was necessary pre-
    requisite to admission to hospital staff.
    -3820-
    Hon. Frank C. Erwin, page 7,      (C-794)
    state. Therefore the rule is not within the prohibition of
    Section 31 of Article XVI of the Constitution of the State
    of Texas.
    In considering whether those holding the degree
    of Doctor of Osteopathy are denied the equal protectlon of
    the law, we cannot concern ourselves with the wisdom of the
    policy which prompted the adoption of the rule, but merely
    with whether the rule is a reasonable exercise of the power
    and discretion of the board of regents.
    The legislature created the board of regents and
    confided to its management the University of Texas. It is
    within the province of their powers to determine those
    things which are inimical to a well ordered and disciplined
    operation of the University of Texas and Its schools. This
    determination necessarily requires the exercise of dis-
    cretion, as does the promulgation of rules for the achieve-
    ment of the desired conditions.
    The Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of
    the United States does not guarantee to all the right to
    attend an educational facility maintained by the state.
    The right of attendance is a privilege extended by the
    state to those who meet the conditions imposed.
    of ~lssissippi V. Waugh, 
    105 Miss. 623
    , 62 so. 827  1913
    affirmed 
    237 U.S. 589
    , 
    35 S. Ct. 720
    , 
    59 L. Ed. 1131
                                                     7 1915 .
    The rule in question operates to exclude members of a defined
    classification; i.e., those who do not hold the degree of
    Doctor of Medicine.  We are unable to say that this classifica-
    tion is unreasonable or arbitrary as a matter of law. In
    the absence of facts to the contrarv, we must wresume that
    the board of regents acted with due"regard to the high trust
    reposed in them by law. Foley v. Benedict, 
    122 Tex. 193
    , 
    55 S.W.2d 805
    (1932).
    The principles of law pronounced In Hyman v. City
    of Galveston, 
    273 U.S. 414
    , 
    47 S. Ct. 363
    , 
    71 L. Ed. 714
    (1927)
    and Duson v. Poage, 
    318 S.W.2d 89
    (Tex.Civ.App. 1958, error
    ref. n.r.e.), apply with equal force to the rule here inquired
    about. In concluding that-the present rule of the board-of
    regents does not transcend the constitutional rights of those
    whom it excludes we have been guided solely by those principles.
    It being within the sole discretion of the board of regents to
    determine what rules are necessary to the successful manage-
    ment and government of the University of Texas and its schools,
    -3821-
    -    .
    Hon. Frank C. Erwin, page 8, (C-794)
    the rule must stand. In sustaining the validity of the
    present rule, we do not hold that the board of regents may
    not allow persons holding the degree of Doctor of Osteopathy
    rather than Doctor of Medicine to participate in postgraduate
    medical programs of the University of Texas, but that the
    participation of such persons lies within the sole discre-
    tion of the board of regents.
    SUMMARY
    __-----
    Under the provisions of Article 2585,
    V.C.S., the Board of Regents of the University
    of Texas is authorized to enact such rules and
    regulations as may be necessary to the govern-
    ment of the University of Texas. In the exercise
    of this authority, it is within the sole discre-
    tion of the Board to establish by rule the pre-
    requisites necessary for participation in post-
    graduate medical programs offered at Its medical
    institutions so as to either include or exclude
    participation by persons holding the degree of
    Doctor of Osteopathy.   The present rule of the
    Board which requires that participants in such
    programs hold a degree of Doctor of Medicine
    and thereby excludes persons holding the degree
    of Doctor of, Osteopathy is not prohibited by
    Section 31, Article  XVI, Texas Constitution
    or XIV Amendment, U.S. Constitution.
    Yours very truly,
    WAGGONER CARR
    Attorney General of Texas
    W. 0. Shultz
    Assistant Attorney
    WOS:sck
    APPROVED:
    OPINION COMMITTEE
    Ralph Rash, Chairman
    James C. McCoy, Harold Kennedy
    Robert Flowers
    APPROVED FOR THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    BY: T. B. Wright
    -3822-