It is argued by counsel for petitioner, that the Act of April 3rd, 1876, “ to regulate the practice of medicine,” as amended in 1878, (Laws 1877-8, p. 918) is void, because a violation of the provisions of the late Constitution: “ Corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by special act.”
The second section of the act confers the exclusive power to appoint Boards of Examiners upon three medical societies, and prohibits such appointment by any other corporation, society, person, or persons. The eighth section of the amendatory act makes it a misdemeanor for any person (except an appointee of one of the three societies named) to sign, seal, or issue a certificate purporting to authorize the practice of medicine.
It is claimed by petitioner, that the power to appoint is a franchise which the act attempts to confer upon the three named *96incorporations, and which is not enjoyed by other medical societies incorporated under the general laws ; that the act is, therefore, violative of the provisions of the Constitution above recited, as the same was construed in San Francisco v. Spring Valley Water Works, 48 Cal. 493.
I. We shall assume that the State, in the exercise of the police power, may provide for boards authorized to examine persons seeking to be admitted to practice medicine, to be appointed by any citizen or citizens named.
There is nothing in the language of the law to indicate tnat it was the purpose to confer this power of appointment - upon the particular corporations. If it should be made to appear that the societies named had never been incorporated, the power of appointment would still remain to be employed by the societies or aggregations of individuals who had adopted the society names mentioned in the act. The assumption of the power by these individuals or societies would be the assumption of a public duty, and the performance of the duty simply would not be profitable or beneficial to them, as societies, nor, should they happen to be incorporated, as private corporations. The second section of the act confers the power of appointing Boards of Examiners upon the three named societies, which are said to be “ existing corporations ” ; but, as we have seen, this designation does not oblige us to declare that it was intended to confer the power of appointment on the three societies as corporations. The words “ existing corporations ” may be treated as merely “ descriptio per sonar umV
II. We need not inquire whether certain other portions of the act are unconstitutional. This may be assumed, without being decided.
The portions of the act thus assumed to be invalid are not so connected with the rest as to render invalid any other portion.
The title of the act sufficiently indicates its main purpose and design. Its general framework shows, that it was intended to require, of those alone authorized to practice the profession, that knowledge of pathology, anatomy, and physiology recognized as necessary by every school of the science of medicine. The *97portions of the act assumed to he unconstitutional are not inseparably connected with, nor do they necessarily depend upon, other portions of the same act. It is well settled, that if a provision, which is not obnoxious to objection, is found even in the same section with another, which is repugnant to the Constitution, the one in itself valid and complete must be sustained, unless the two are so united as that it must be presumed the Legislature would not have adopted the one without the other. (People v. Nally, 49 Cal. 482; Robinson v. Bidwell, 22 Id. 379; Com. v. Hutchings, 5 Gray, 485.) The parts of the statute assumed to be unconstitutional, and those portions of it to which no such objection can be taken, are wholly independent of each other, and the latter may be maintained and carried into effect, without reference to the former. In such cases, the portions which are constitutional are not affected by the portions which are invalid. (Warren v. Mayor of Charlestown, 2 Gray, 98; French v. Teschemaker, 24 Cal. 548.)
Our conclusion is, that by conferring the authority and imposing the duty of appointing Boards of Examiners on the three societies named in the act, and prohibiting the issuing of certificates by others than the appointees of such societies, the Legislature did not exceed the limitation of its powers contained in the provision above quoted, and that it is unnecessary herein to express any opinion as to the other portions of the law, since, even if it be assumed that such other portions are unconstitutional, the remaining parts are stated independently, and of themselves contain a complete scheme for the examination of diplomas and applicants, and for the prohibition of certificates by others than those empowered by the act to issue them.
The petitioner must be remanded. So ordered.
Morrison, C. J., Ross, J., Thornton, J., and Myricic, J., concurred,
Sharpstein, J., being disqualified, took no part in the decision of this case.