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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> University of Glasgow - Sir William Follett v. The Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons - Lord Advocate Murray [1835] UKHL 2_SM_275 (28 August 1835) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1835/2_SM_275.html Cite as: [1835] UKHL 2_SM_275 |
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Page: 275↓
(1835) 2 S&M 275
CASES DECIDED IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS, ON APPEAL FROM THE COURTS OF SCOTLAND. 1835.
2d Division.
No. 8.
[
Subject_Corporation — Exclusive Privilege — College. —
The Court of Session having held, 1. That the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons in Glasgow are a legal corporation. 2. That the Faculty by virtue of the charter 1599, ratified by parliament in 1672, have power to debar from the practice of surgery persons who have not submitted to examination before them, or who have not attained their licence to practise. 3. That the degree of doctor of physic from a university where medicine is taught does not entitle the possessor to practise surgery within the bounds specified in the charter, unless he obtains a licence from the faculty. 4. That a testimonial of skill in surgery from a university where surgery is taught, or the degree of master in surgery recently introduced in the University of Glasgow, does not entitle the possessor to practise surgery within these bounds, unless he submits to examination by the Faculty and is licensed by them; and the University of Glasgow having appealed this judgment, the House of Lords remitted the cause to the Court of Session with directions to consider whether the Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow are a corporation capable in law of possessing and in fact clothed with the rights for which they contend in this action.
The Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow was originally constituted by virtue of a grant from
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“James, &c. Wit ye us, with advise of oure counsell, understanding the grit abuses quhilk hes bene comitted in time bygane and zit daylie contineuis be ignorant, unskillit, and unlearnit personis, quha under the collour of chirurgeans abusis the people to thair plesuir, passing away but tryel or punishment, and thairby destroy is infinite number of our subjects, quhair with na ordour hes bene tane in tyme bigane, specially within oure burgh and baronie of Glasgow, Renfrew, Dumbartane, and oure sherifdomes of Clidsdale, Renfrew, Lanerk, Kyll, Carrick, Air, and Cuninghame; for avoiding of sik ineonvenientis, and for gude ordoure to be tane in tyme cuming, to have maid, constitut, and ordanit, and be the tenoure of thir oure letteris makis, constitutis, and ordainis, Maister Peter Low, our chirurgiane, and chief chirurgiane to oure dearest son the prince, with the assistance of Maister Robert Hamilton, professoure of medicine, and thair successouris, indwelleris of our citie of Glasgow, gevand and grantand to thame and thair successoures full power to call, summond, and convene before thame, within the said burgh of Glasgow or any otheris of ouir said burrows or publict places of the foirsaid boundis, all personis professing or using the said art of chirurgie, to examine thame upon thair literature, knawledge, and practize; gif they be fund wordie, to admit, allow, and approve thame, give thame testimonial according to the airt and knawledge that they sal be fund wordie to exercise
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thaireftir, resave thair aithis, and authorize thame as accordis, and to discharge thame to use onie farder nor they have knawledg passing thair capacity, laists our subjectis be abusit; and that every ane citat report testimonial of the minister and elders or magistratis of the parochin whair they dwell of thair life and conversatione; and in case they be contumax, being lauchfullie citat, everie ane to be unlawit in the soume of fortie punds, toties quoties, half to the judges, other half to be disponit at the visitoures plesure; and for payment thair of the said Mr. Peter and Mr. Robert, or visitoures, to have oure other letteris of horning on the partie or magistrates whair the contemptuous person dwellis, chargeing thame to poind thairfor within twentie-four houris under the pain of horning; and the partie not have and geir poindable, the magistrates, under the same pain, to incarcerate thame, quhill cautioun responsall be fund that the contumax persone shall compeir at sick day and place as the saidis visitouris sall appoint, gevand trial of their qualifications: Nixt, That the saidis visitouris sall visit every hurt, murtherit, poisonit, or onie other persoun tane awa extraordinary, and to report to the magistratis of the fact as it is: Thirdlie, That it sall be leisum to the saidis visitouris, with the advice of thair bretheren, to make statutis for the common well of oure subjectis anent the saidis airtis and using thairof faithfullie, and the breakeris thairof to be punishit and unlawit be the visitouris according to thair fait: Fordlie, It sal not be leisum to onie manner of personis within the forsaidis boundis to exercise medicine without ane testimonial of ane famous universitie quhair medicine is taught, or at Page: 278↓
the leave of oure and oure dearest spouse chief medicinaris; and in case they failzie, it sail be leisum to the saidis visitouris to challenge, perseu, and inhibit thame throw useing and exercing of the said airt of medicine, under the pain of fortie punds, to be distributed, half to the judges, half to the pure, toties quoties they be fund in useing and exercising of the same, ay and quhill they bring sufficient testimonial as said is: Fyfthlie, That na manir of personis sell onie droggis within the citie of Glasgow except the sam be sichtit be the saidis visitouris and be William Spang, apothecar, under the pane of confiscatioune of the droggis: Sextlie, That nane sell rattoun poison, asenick, or sublemate, under the pane of ane hundred merkis, except onlie the apothecaries who sall be bound to take cautioun of the byaris for coast, scaith, and damage: Seventlie, That the saidis visitouris, with thair bretheren and successouris, sall convene every first Mononday of ilk moneth at some convenient place to visite and give counsill to pure disasit folks gratis: And, last of all, gevand and gran tand to the saidis visitouris, indwellers of Glasgow, professouris of the saidis airtis, and thair bretheren, present and to cume, immunite and exemption from all wappin shawings, raidis, oistis, beiring of armour, watching, wairding, stenting, taxationis, passing on assizes, nquestis, justice courtis, scherriff or burrow courtis, in actions criminal or civil, notwithstanding of oure actis, lawis, and constitutionis thairof, except in giving their counsill in materis appertaining to the saidis airtis: ordaining you all the foresaidis provestis, baillies of burrowis, sheriffis, stewartis, baillies of regalities, and otheris ministeris of justice within the Page: 279↓
saidis boundis, and zoure deputis, to assist, fortifie, concur, and defend the said visitouris and thair posteritie, professouris of the saidis artis, and put the saidis acts maid and to be maid to execution; and that oure other letteris of our session be granted thereupon to charge thame to that effect within twentie-four houris nixt after they be chargit thairto. Gevin under oure previe seall at Haliruid house, the penult day of November, the year of God javc. and fourscore nynetein zeiris, and of oure reign the thirty-three year.”
In 1600 this letter was recorded in the burgh books, the authority of the magistrates being interponed thereto; and, of date 3d June 1602, the following took place, thus recorded in the minutes of the Faculty:—
“The qulk day, w t in the Blackfrier Kirk of Glasgow, in presence of Sir George Elphistoune of Blaithswood, Knight, provest, James Forrest, John Andersoune, Will. Andersoune, baillies thereof, compeirt Mr. Peter Low and Mr. Robert Hamiltoune, whilk producit ane gift of our Soverayne Lord anent their liberties, w t the provest and baillies authoritie interponit thereto, as the samyn at length beires, and made convention with y r breithren, videlicet, Adam Fleming, Mr. Rob t Allasone, William Spang, Thomas Thomsone, John Lowe; and the samyn being red, the said Mr. Peter and Mr. Rob t was content, of their ane consents, notwithstanding of their nomination of gift, that ilk yeir aince at Michelmes the samyn shall be lytit amongst the brethrine, and wha be manniest vottis beis elected to remaine visitor for ane year y refter, and so forth yearly in all tyme coming; and also is content y t the fores ds persons, brethren of
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craft presentlie admitted by them, shall have power and libertie to use the craft and calling as free as themselves efter their knowledge, and that they shall not visit any of the foirs brethren patients being on cuir w tout their aune consents and the patients first had and obtained thereto; qulk brethren being present consents to concure, assist, and had hand to; and, therefter the said Mr. Robert, present visitor, whill Michalmese, be consent of the brethren hes elected Robert Herberstone, notar, dark to them, who hes given his oath of fidelitie, and also creat George Bonnell officer quill Michelmes, and hes given his oath, and the said brethren, to conveine all such tymes as shall be appoynted, being warned be the officer, under the paines conteinit in the ordinance to be set doune thereanent; the brethren hes p'ntly given their oathes, and ordained the rest, and John Hall, to be conveined, and y t they shall concur and assist y r w t uthers as becomes.”
On the 22d of the same month the members met and fixed the fees of entry, and inter alia ordained “that barbers, being a pendicle of chyrurgerie, shall pay at their admission fortie punds Scots, and ilk zeir twentie shilling to the puir, and limitit not to meddle with any thing farder belonging to chyrurgerie, under the paine of five pundes toties quoties.” In 1656 the Faculty agreed to purchase from the town council a seal of cause or letter of deaconry, “but prejudice of the old gift grantit them by the deceast King James;” and accordingly on the 16th August of that year they obtained from the magistrates and council a letter of deaconry in favour of the surgeons and barbers, constituting them a burghal corporation. In 1722, however,
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_________________ Footnote _________________
1 Faculty of Physicians and Surgeons v. Steele, &c. Feb. 26, 1819.
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The University of Glasgow, by which these new degrees were granted, had originated in the following bull from Pope Nicholas V., in the year 1450:
“Nicolaus Episcopus, servus servorum Dei ad perpetuam rei memoriam. Inter cæteras felicitates quas mortalis homo in hac labili vita ex dono Dei nancisci potest, ea non in ultimis computan meretur quod per assiduum studium adipisci valet scientiæ margaritam, quæ bene beateque vivendi viam præbet, ac peritum ab imperito sui pretiositate longe facit excellere, et ad mundi arcana cognoscenda dilucide introducit. Suffragatur indoctis, et in infimo loco natos vehit in sublimi, et propterea sedes apostolica rerum spiritualium et etiam temporalium provida ministratrix, et cujusvis commendabilis exercitii perpetua consultans adjutrix, ut eo facilius homines ad tam excelsum humanæ conditionis fastigium acquirendum, et acquisitum in alios refundendum semper cum augmento ducantur, illos hortatur, eis loca preparat, illos juvat et fovet, ac favoribus prosequitur gratiosis. Cum itaque sicut pro parte carissimi in Christo filii nostri Jacobi Scotorum regis illustris nuper fuisset expositum nobis quod ipse rex non solum ad utilitatem reipublicæ, ac incolarum et habitatorum terrarum sibi subjectarum, sed et aliarum partium vicinarum laudabiliter intendens, in ej us civitate Glasguensi, tanquam in loco insigni et valde accommodo, in quo aeris viget temperies, victualium ubertas, cæterarumque rerum ad usum human um pertinentium copia reperitur, desideret
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plurimum fieri et ordinari per sedem apostolicum studium generale in qualibet licita facultate, ut ibidem fides Catholica dilatetur, erudiantur simplices, equitas servetur, judicii vigeat ratio, illuminentur mentes, et intellectus hominum illustrentur, nos præmissa, et etiam eximiam fidei et devotionis sinceritatem quam idem Rex ad nos et Romanam ecclesiam gerere comprobatur, attente considerantes, ferventi desiderio ducimur quod civitas ipsa scientiarum ornetur muneribus ita ut viros producat consilii maturitate conspicuos, virtutum redimitos ornatibus, et diversarum facultatum dignitatibus eruditos, sitque ibi scientiarum fons irrigans, de cujus plenitudine haurient universi literarum cupientes imbui. Documentis hiis igitur omnibus, et præsertim ydoneitatem ejusdem civitatis, quæ, ut accepimus, ad multiplicanda doctrinas semina et germina salutaria producenda valde congrua et accomoda fore dicitur, diligenti examinatione pensatis, non solum ad ipsius civitatis, sed etiam incolarum et habitatorum totius regrni Scotiœ et regnorum circumjacentium, commodum atque proficuum paternis affectibus excitati, necnon ipsius regis in hac parte supplicationibus inclinati ad laudem divini nominis et orthodoxæ fidei propagationem, in eadem civitate generale studium auctoritate apostolica erigimus et statuimus, et etiam ordinamus ut in ipsa civitate de cætero studium hujusmodi perpetuis futuris temporibus vigeat, tam in theologia ac jure Canonico et civili quam artibus et quavis alia licita facultate, quodque doctores, magistri, legentes, et studentes ibidem omnibus et singulis privilegiis, libertatibus, honoribus, exemptionibus, immunitatibus per sedem apostolicam vel alias quomodolibet magistris, Page: 284↓
doctoribus, et studentibus in studio nostræ civitatis Bononiensis concessis gaudeant et utantur; ac venerabilis frater noster Willielmus Episcopus Glasg. ac successores sui qui pro tempore fuerint Glasgn. episcopi prasfati studii Glasg is sint rectores cancellarii nuncupati, qui habeant supra doctores, magistros, et scolares ac alios de universitate studii hujusmodi similem facultatem et potestatem quam habent rectores scolarum dicti studii Bononiensis, quodq. illi qui processu temporis bravium meruerint in facultate illa in qua studuerint ob tinere ac docendi licentiam ut alios erudire valeant, nec non magisterii seu doctoratus honorem petierint eis elargiri per doctorem seu doctores, magistrum seu magistros facultatis ejusdem in qua examinatio fienda fuer it, Epo. Glasgsi. nunc et pro tempore existenti et Glasg. ecclesia pastoris solatio destituta vicario seu officiali in spiritualibus delictorem filiorum capituli dictæ ecclesiæ presententur; qui quidem episcopus vel vicarius seu officialis, aliis doctoribus et magistris. ibidem tunc legentibus convocatis, promovendos eosdem in hiis quæ ad magisterii seu doctoratus honorem quomodolibet requiruntur per se vel alium juxta morem seu consuetudinem in aliis studiis observari solitos; examinare studeant diligenter, eisque, si ad hoc sufficientes et idonei reperti fuerint, hujusmodi licentiam tribuant seu magisterii impendant honorem; illi vero qui in eodem studio civitatis Glasguen. examinad et approbati fuerint, ac docendi licentiam et honorem hujusmodi obtinuerint ut præfertur, ex tunc absque alia examinatione et approbatione deinceps regendi et docendi, tarn in eadem civitate quam in singulis studiis generalibus in quibus regere et docere voluerint, plenam Page: 285↓
et liberam h abeant facultatem, statutis et consuetudinibus, etiam juramento, confirmatione apostolica vel quacunque alia firmitate, vallatis cæterisque contrariis non obstantibus quibuscunque. Nulli ergo omnino hominum liceat hanc paginam nostræ erectionis, constitutionis, et ordinationis infringere vel ei ausu temerario contrahire. Si quis autem hoc attemptare presumpserit, indignationem Omnipotentis Dei, et Beatorum Petri ac Pauli Apostolorum ejus, se noverit incursurum. Datum Romæ apud S'tum Petrum, anno incarnationis Dominicæ millesimo quadringentessimo quinquagesimo, septimo idus Januarii, pontificatus nostri anno quarto.”
James II., by charter in 1453, granted various civil privileges to the university thus constituted, and after the Reformation James VI., in 1577, granted a charter, generally termed Nova Erectio, containing inter alia as follows:—
“Cum Divina Providentia nos iis temporibus ad regni gubernacula perduxerit in quibus Evangelii lucem, expulsis papismi tenebris, Scotiæ nostræ prælucere voluit, nosque imprimis solicitos esse oporteat ut tantum Dei beneficium ad posteros nostros propagetur; neque id alia ratione commodius fieri possit quam proba educatione et juventutis recta informatione in bonis literis, quæ, nisi honoribus et præmiis alantur, prorsus sunt interituræ: hinc est quod nos, dum rem literariam passim per regnum nostrum in Dei gloriam promovere studeremus, animum etiam nostrum adjecerimus ad colligendum reliquias academiæ Glasguensis quam præ inopia languescentem ac jam pene confectam reperimus; et, cum concilio et consensu dilecti nostri consanguinei Jacobi Comitis
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de Mortoun, Domini Dalkeith, tutoris nostri et proiregis charissimi, ei malo prospicere volentes, ad tela paupertatis delenda quæ bonarum artium studiosis maximopere infesta esse soient, dederimus et concesserimus, prout per præsentes damus et concedimus, et pro nobis ac successoribus nostris pro perpetuo confirmamus, et ad mortuam manum perpetuo unimus et confirmamus, collegio nostro Glasguensi totam et integram rectoriam de Govane, cum vicaria ejusdem, jacen. in diœcesi Glasguen. et vicecomitatu nostro de Renfrew, vacan, per decessum magistri Stephani Betoun rectoris ejusdem, non ita pridem vita functi, cum omnibus decimis, emolumentis, et fructibus, gleba et mansionibus, omnibusque aliis commodis quæ de jure aut consuetudine regni quomodolibet pertinere queant. Volumus autem in dicto nostro collegio duodecim personas ordinarias residere ad gymnasii commoda procuranda et juventutem bonis literis informandum, quæ ex impensis et fructibus ejusdem alantur et sustententur, pro modo ac facultate redituum dicto collegio assignalorum, secundum discretionem gymnasiarchæ et regentium subscriptorum; nimirum, gym nasiarcham, tres regentes, œconomum, quatuor pauperes studentes, servum gymnasiarchæ, coquum, et janitorem; quorum singulos in suis muneribus obeundis sedulos esse volumus, et pro laboribus honoraria ac stipendia percipere, quo majore alacritate suis officiis invigilent.”
After a series of regulations, the charter concludes thus:—
“Insuper cum Sathanæ astum percipiamus nullibi non dantis operam ut juventutem ab evangelii professione ad plusquam cimerias papismi tenebras
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abducet, districte mandamus, ut singuli qui in hanc nostram academiam fuerint cooptati, fidei professionem edant; eadem nimirum quæ e Dei verbo petita et transcripta a nobis in regni nostri conventibus edita atque publicata est, idque faciant semel ad minimum quotannis, ut profligato humani generis hoste collegium nostrum virtute, eruditione, et piis moribus efflorescat in Dei sempiternam gloriam, quam nostra hac fundatione solummodo ob oculos nostros proposuimus utpote unicam nostrarum omnium actionum metam. Volumus autem nostrum hoc collegium et academiam Glasguensem iis omnibus immunitatibus et privilegiis gaudere quæ a majoribus nostris, aut nobis, aut alias quovismodo concessa sunt ulli aliarum in regno nostro academiarum, tam libere, pacifice, et quiete ac si eadem ab antiquis retro temporibus ultra hominum memoriam ulli obvenissent.”
The university had always been accustomed to grant degrees in divinity, law, and medicine, but previous to 1816 there was no chair of surgery, and it was only then that they commenced to give degrees in surgery. The degree of master in surgery having been obtained from the university by the respondents M'Millan and others, and they having in virtue thereof assumed the privilege of practising surgery within the city of Glasgow, the Faculty raised a suspension and interdict to have them prohibited from so doing without examination and admission by them; whereupon, on the other hand, the university instituted a process of declarator against the Faculty, concluding to have it found and declared “that all persons holding diplomas, degrees, licences, or testimonials from the University of Glasgow, empowering them to practise the art of surgery and its
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On the cases being reported to the Inner House, their Lordships appointed them to be laid before the other judges, requesting their opinion on the following question; viz.—
“Whether persons holding diplomas, degrees, licences, or testimonials from the said university, empowering them to practise the art of surgery and its different branches, are entitled and authorized so to do within the bounds over which the defenders claim the privilege to grant licences, as pleaded by them; and are so entitled to practise without undergoing any examination by the Faculty of physicians and surgeons in Glasgow, and without payment of any sums of money in name of freedom fines or otherwise?”
Lords President, Balgray, Gillies, Mackenzie, Medwyn, Corehouse, and Fullerton returned the following opinions;—
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“1. That the Faculty of physicians and surgeons in Glasgow are a legal corporation.
2. That the Faculty, by virtue of the charter 1599, ratified by parliament in 1672, have power to debar from the practice of surgery persons who have not submitted to examination before them, or who have not obtained their licence to practise.
3. That the degree of doctor of physic from a university where medicine is taught does not entitle the graduate to practise surgery within the bounds specified in the charter, unless he obtains a licence from the Faculty.
4. In like manner that a testimonial of skill in surgery from a university where surgery is taught, or the degree of master in surgery, recently introduced in the university of Glasgow, does not entitle the possessor to practise surgery within these bounds, unless he submits to examination by the Faculty, and is licensed by them.
To these observations it may be proper to add, that we entertain no doubt that there is a university at Glasgow, with as ample power to confer degrees as any other university in the kingdom. It has been recognized in grants from the Crown, by royal visitations, in public statutes, and in decisions of this Court, in a great number of instances. The mistake of the defenders on this point seems to have arisen from their confounding the University of Glasgow with the College of Glasgow; but those bodies are distinct, as was found by the decision of this Court in the case of Muirhead against the College of Glasgow, 16th May 1809.
We think it unnecessaiy to inquire whether the University of Glasgow has power to grant degrees or
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testimonials of skill in surgery. Admitting that the university possesses that power, and supposing it had been exercised from the date of the erection in 1450, we are of opinion, on the grounds above stated, that such degrees or testimonials would be of no avail in a question with the Faculty. If they had been in use at the date of the charter, it is possible that James VI. might have admitted an exception in their favour with regard to the practice of surgery, as he has done in favour of medical degrees with regard to the practice of medicine; and as they are now granted, they may perhaps induce the legislature to restrict the privileges of the defenders. But as the law stands at present, we are of opinion they cannot control the express and ambiguous terms of the charter 1599, ratified in parliament, and uniformly acted upon. We have not taken into view the plea of prescription urged by the defenders; their case would certainly have been much more doubtful if they had been compelled to resort exclusively to that plea. Although they had from time immemorial exercised the power of debarring from the practice of surgery those who had not submitted to examination, even including graduates in medicine, yet, agreeably to the maxim tantum præscriptum quantum possessum, that usage would not have conferred a right to exclude those who had the university's diploma of skill in surgery, recently introduced, assuming that the university has power to grant it, which the pursuers maintain on very plausible grounds. But the defenders, standing on their charter, are entitled to plead that their privilege strikes at every person not expressly excepted, and the charter contains
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no exception applicable to the practice of surgery.” 1
I entertain no doubt that the defenders are a corporation entitled to exercise exclusive privileges, according to the terms and true meaning of the original charter in their favour in 1599. But I am of opinion that, except in so far as they acquired such rights by that charter, and by the subsequent ratification of it in parliament, they cannot maintain any prescriptive title in the particular matter in question to the prejudice of whatever rights and privileges may be vested in the university of Glasgow.
I can entertain no doubt that the pursuers constitute a university in the amplest sense of that term; with the fullest powers of conferring degrees in all the departments of arts and science in which it is competent for any other university to grant degrees.
Considering this to be clear, I am farther of opinion that the university of Glasgow have power to grant degrees
_________________ Footnote _________________
1 Note by Lord Medwyn.—“I entirely agree in this opinion. When this cause was pleaded before me in the Outer House I early formed this opinion, and would have so decided; but I thought as the case had been very anxiously and elaborately pleaded, and as a great variety of documents had been founded on, that it would be presented for review in a more convenient form by having written pleadings on both sides. Afterwards, when the university appeared to support the effect claimed for their degrees in surgery, I thought it more becoming the respect due to that learned body to obtain at once the decision of the Court, although my own views of the case were not in any wise altered by their appearance or pleading. I therefore made avizandum with the cause, and, according to my usual practice in such cases, without presuming to offer any opinion of my own,”
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It farther appears to me to admit of no reasonable question that the art of surgery is a branch of the general science of medicine, which it is perfectly competent for any royal university to teach, and in which upon due examination they may grant degrees; which will be equally effectual as licences for practice generally as any other medical degree which it is in their power to grant. Nor do I think that it at all militates against cither the competency or the effect of such degrees in surgery, that until lately, and since the establishment of a regular teacher of that art within the university of Glasgow, they had not been in the use of granting similar degrees; seeing that the power appears to me to be inherent in their general character as a university, and such as could not be lost by the lapse of any length of time during which it might not be exercised.
Having this opinion on the general points agitated in these papers, I think that the question between the parties depends on the construction of the charter 1599, on which the title of the defenders rests. If that had been a simple and absolute grant of exclusive privileges in a branch of science not then regularly taught in the university, it must have been effectual, at least when
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It has already been determined in the case of Steele, in 1819, 1st, That the privileges of the defenders as a faculty or corporation do not affect the holders of degrees of medicinæ doctores in the practice of medicine or physic, in the limited sense of the term, as ordinarily understood; and, 2d, That the holders of such degrees are not by virtue thereof entitled to practise surgery within the bounds of the charter without submitting to examination by the defenders. The question which remains is, whether, on a sound construction of the charter, when the university of Glasgow, having a regular school of surgery established, do grant degrees in that special branch of the healing art, the persons holding them must still be subject to examination by the defenders before they can practise within the limited bounds.
The commission constituted by the charter consisted of the king's surgeon and Mr. Robert Hamilton, professor of medicine, and their successors; and it does appear a little singular, that, if surgery was regarded as so perfectly distinct from medicine as not to be comprehended within the latter term in any sense, a professor of medicine should be one of the two commissioners appointed to examine persons in their knowledge of the art of surgery, and grant licences to practise it. He at
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The fourth article of the charter prohibits all persons within the bounds “to exercise medicine without ane testimonial of ane famous university where medicine is taught, or at the leave of our and our dearest spouse chief medicinaris,” and authorizes the commissioners to challenge, pursue, and inhibit such persons from the practice of medicine under the pain of 40 l., &c. It is clear enough that here no power is given to the visitors to examine persons in medicine as different from surgery, the right of practising it being made to depend solely on a testimonial by a famous university or the leave of the king's physicians; and so far there is a marked distinction between that case and the case of the practice of surgery. But still this express acknowledgment in the body of the charter of the rights and privileges of the universities appears to me to be of very great importance in the question, whether it was intended in this
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It is clear that the rights and privileges of the universities were not overlooked; and if it be granted, as I think it must be, that if at that time surgery had been specially taught in the university, the university might then have granted degrees in surgery. The question appears to me to be, whether the right to grant such degrees, with their ordinary legal effects, shall be held to have been taken away, or in this case excluded by implication; or, in other words, whether it required an express clause reserving them, to save them from the operation of the first article of the charter?
The view of the general scope of the charter which I should be inclined to take is this: That the art of surgery, though of great importance to the public, was considered as an inferior branch of the science of medicine. That to prevent the abuses referred to in regard to surgery, and also to prevent unauthorized persons from practising medicine generally, it was expedient to institute the commission, with this effect, that no one could practise medicine generally without a testimonial from a university where medicine was taught, or the leave of the king's physician; and no one could practise the inferior art of surgery without a licence from these commissioners, as things then stood; but that as the superior powers of the universities were here expressly recognized in regard to medicine, it was implied that as soon as they chose to exercise their privileges by teaching, examining, and granting degrees in surgery, such degrees would form a title to practise at least co-ordinate
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The difficulty therefore which I have, is to see how, while the privileges of the university generally with regard to medicine as then taught are expressly recognized in the charter, and their power to grant degrees in surgery cannot in my opinion be doubted, it can be held on a sound construction of this charter, that it was intended to have the effect, or can legally produce such effect, of excluding or impairing the efficacy of such degrees in surgery when legally granted.
I must however distrust my own judgment, seeing that the same difficulties have not been felt by the other consulted judges.
On the 15th November 1834, the Court pronounced the following interlocutor:—
“In the suspension and interdict, sustain the reasons of suspension; suspend the letters impliciter; interdict, prohibit, and discharge in terms thereof; find and declare the interdict perpetual; and in the declarator, sustain the defences, assoilzie the defenders from the conclusions of that action, and decern; reserving the question respecting the amount of the fees which the suspenders are entitled to charge, and all competent actions thereanent: Find the chargers liable in expenses: Find also the university liable in expenses since their appearance in the action; allow an account,” &c.
Against this interlocutor the university of Glasgow appealed.
Appellants —1. The university of Glasgow is a proper university, originally created, as other similar bodies in
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2. The degrees in medicine and surgery granted by a university afford a sufficient warrant to practise the arts of medicine and surgery in every part of the realm.
3. The King had no power to erect a corporation with privileges inconsistent with those of the existing universities.
4. The letter of King James in favour of Messrs. Low and Hamilton is not so framed as to create a proper permanent corporation with exclusive privileges, and in particular it contains no power to prohibit from practising persons not examined and admitted by them.
5. The exceptions in the King's letter in favour of persons holding a university diploma to practise medicine, must extend to the practice of surgery, which is a branch of medicine.
For the Faculty.—1. The present college of Glasgow is not a proper university, but a mere pedagogium under the nova erectio by James VI., to which alone it can refer for its present constitution; and, farther, even if it were entitled to go back to the bull of the pope, which was entirely derelinquished when the college was re-erected after the Reformation on a new footing, they could not give degrees as a university, as understood by that bull, seeing they have no faculties of the different sciences by the members of which degrees may be given; but
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2. University degrees are merely in themselves testimonials of skill, but can receive no civil effect, except in so far as conceded by the municipal authority of the state in which they may have been established.
3. The civil privilege of an exclusive right to practise an art, as arising from examination and admission, by any particular body, can only be conferred by grant from the King. A university degree cannot convey this privilege, unless in virtue of such grant; so that the university which did not possess this had no privileges wherewith the charter to the Faculty could interfere; and the King may undoubtedly confer an exclusive privilege of this nature on any body, though not a university.
4. The terms of the royal letter are clearly such as to constitute a permanent corporation, with powers of examination and admission, and an express power to discharge all persons not admitted by them from practising surgery within the bounds specified. This grant was farther confirmed in parliament, and has been followed by uninterrupted possession under it, so that it is impossible to dispute the title of the Faculty as a corporation, which has indeed been repeatedly sustained by the courts of law.
5. The exception in the letter is expressly limited to medicine, which is pointedly contradistinguished from surgery, the latter indeed being then considered rather as a craft or trade than as a science; and, besides, in the case of Steele it was determined that a degree of
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The letter of 1599 under the Privy Seal, and which is called a charter, is the first ground of the Faculty's claim. It is a singular instrument; it assumes to bestow upon two individuals, Low the King's surgeon, and Hamilton a physician, and their successors, power to examine all surgical practitioners, and license them to practise if they found them qualified, to fine all who practise without their licence, to take their goods and incarcerate their persons in cases of contumacy; and it exempts them and their brethren from watch and ward and stented taxes. There are other powers of a lesser kind, and the jurisdiction thus conferred extends over Glasgow, Renfrew, Dumbarton, Lanarkshire, and Ayrshire, over which I do not understand the present claim to extend or ever to have been extended.
Now the first thing that strikes us here is the entire want of any mode of electing or continuing the corporate
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Again, a power of making bye-laws is said to be given. I cannot discern any such thing. The two persons, with advice of their brethren (and who these were is no where pointed out), are to make statutes for the public good concerning surgery and the practice of it; and the breach of these rules is to be punished by them; but this is a power given, and most unlawfully given them, to make general laws for governing surgical practice, and not laws for regulating their own corporate proceedings, which is the meaning of a bye-law. It is therefore nothing like a power to make bye-laws.
Another very extraordinary power is given, or rather given to some persons, who may or may not be those persons. There is a prohibition against all persons
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But an act was passed after the restoration in 1672. Does that remove the difficulty? It may render lawful the powers illegally given by the grant of 1559. But does it supply the great defect of corporate character? First, it continues the power of licensing to practise medicine, giving that to the successors of the grantees, and not to the king's and queen's physicians. It is said by the learned judges that this is a mistake; but it is new to me to find a parliamentary enactment which is quite plain altered by suggestion. The act, if it is good for any thing, gives the power to the persons whoever it names, and not to those whom the grant of 1599 names. But next, it does not show who are to be the corporators, or how those are to be chosen; and, lastly, it gives ratification to the grant only so far as it can be extended to surgeons, apothecaries, and barbers, and their successors alternately, and no further. Now these surgeons, apothecaries, and barbers are no longer in the Faculty; they have nothing to do with it, and consequently I cannot see how, allowing the act 1672 to have supplied the defects in the grant 1599, and to have created a corporation, that corporation can now be said to exist.
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The cases and precedents referred to are not sufficient to enable us to get over these difficulties without much more discussion of them than they have received below. All the precedents are those of recognition where the point was not made; and some of them, as the orders made by the Court of Justiciary, are without any competent jurisdiction, for it certainly cannot be contended that the supreme Criminal Court has any jurisdiction to decide whether or not this Faculty is a corporation. But even the case of Steel, in 1827 and 1829, is any thing rather than decision. The question never was distinctly brought before the Court; and though one or two of the learned judges express themselves satisfied of the title to pursue, yet they clearly assume rather t han decide that the Faculty was a corporation. The Lord Justice Clerk relies on the recognition, as his Lordship terms it, in the 55 Geo. 3, c. 69, which can hardly be said to have any such force, as it merely directs the certificate of the Faculty to be taken, without giving any force.
A claim of this kind had been recognized on behalf of the writers to the signet by the Court below, and it came before your Lordships while Lord Gifford sat here upon appeals, in a case decided in 1825.
Some of the learned judges in the Court below in that case had assumed it as clear that the universities were no corporation, and had referred to the case of Gardiner in 1814, stating that the Court there had taken this fact for granted as well as their right to make bye-laws; whereas it is plain from the report of the case that those points were neither decided nor taken for granted, but in express terms saved, and that the
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I cannot easily bring my mind to understand how there can be a corporation created without providing in some way for its perpetuity,—without indicating of whom it is to consist. But this cannot be gathered in any way from the grant, and the act leaves the difficulty where it found it; beside the other objection, that its provisions only extend to a corporation composed of surgeons, apothecaries, and barbers.
Although for these reasons I am unable to recommend an affirmance of this decree, yet, considering the importance of the case both to the parties and to the law,—considering the influence which its decision may have on the rights or claims of other corporations,—and considering that this view of the question was never distinctly taken below and received no judicial discussion,—it appears to me that your Lordships should remit, with these remarks, to call their Lordships attention to it.
The House of Lords ordered and adjudged, That the said cause be remitted back to the Second Division of the Court of Session in Scotland, with directions to the judges of that division to consider and to take the opinions of the whole other judges of the Court of Session, including the Lords Ordinary, whether the respondents, as the Faculty
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