DocketNumber: C-800107
Judges: Shannon, Keefe, Doan
Filed Date: 2/25/1981
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
This cause came on to be heard upon an appeal from the Hamilton County Municipal Court.
On February 1, 1980, a jury sitting in the Hamilton County Municipal Court returned a verdict finding the defendant-appellant, Robert H. Baylor, guilty as he stood charged upon the evidence presented at trial of practicing medicine without a license in violation of R.C.
The issues raised in the three assignments of error before us are whether the evidence adduced at trial required that the cause be arrested from the jury's consideration by virtue of the appellant's Crim. R. 29(A) motion for acquittal and whether the judge presiding erroneously failed to instruct the jury on matters relating to the essential elements of the charged offense and to a statutory exception permitting medical practice in emergency situations.
The statute under which the appellant was tried and convicted sets forth the proscribed conduct in general terms as follows: "No person shall practice medicine or surgery, or any of its branches without a certificate from the state medical board * * *." (R.C.
The appellant argues in his first two assignments of error that the receipt of compensation is an essential element of the offense of practicing medicine without a license. He concludes, therefore, that his motion for acquittal should have been granted because there was no evidence at trial indicating that he ever received such compensation, and that, by electing to submit the cause to the jury, the judge presiding should have issued an instruction to the effect that a finding of compensation was necessary to support a guilty verdict.
After reviewing the testimony and the exhibits admitted in evidence, we are convinced that there was nothing of substance upon which to bottom a finding either that the appellant had actively engaged in the treatment or diagnosis of patients, or that he had ever received compensation for any alleged acts of medical practice. Although we concede that this aspect of the appellant's argument is valid, it is our view that the absence of such evidence is not fatal to his conviction. Under our reading of R.C.
Accordingly, we must reject the appellant's position thatMirsa, Inc., v. State Medical Board (1975),
Having determined, then, that the element of compensation had no place in the litigation and disposition of the instant cause in the court below, we conclude that the appellant's first two assignments of error are without merit.
In his final assignment of error, the appellant contends that the judge presiding below improperly failed to instruct the jury during the course of his general charge that the statutory prohibition against the unlicensed practice of medicine did not apply to persons rendering emergency service by virtue of R.C.
We hereby affirm the judgment and sentence of the Hamilton County Municipal Court.
Judgment affirmed.
SHANNON, P. J., KEEFE and DOAN, JJ., concur.