In this case, the sufficiency of the following indictment is drawn in question:
“In the criminal court of Pettis county, Missouri, April term, 1892.
“State op Missouri, U County of Pettis.
“The grand jurors for the state of Missouri, duly empaneled, sworn and charged to enquire within and for the county of Pettis, and state aforesaid,, upon their oath present and charge, that heretofore, to wit: On the first day of .April, 1892, at the county of Pettis, and state of Missouri, one M. L. Smith did unlawfully practice medicine by then and there prescribing for and treating the sick without first having recorded in 'the office of the county clerk of Pettis county, Missouri, the county in which the said M. L. Smith resides, a certificate issued by the Missouri state board of health, *286authorizing him to practice medicine, contrary to the statutes in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the state.
“George E. Longan,
“Prosecuting Attorney of Pettis County, Missouri.”
The defendant filed in the court below a motion to quash this indictment, basing the same on these grounds: First, because -it did not specify any person for whom defendant prescribed; second, because it was not charged that defendant professed publicly to be a physician or had appended to his name the letters M. D.; third, because it was not alleged that defendant had not been practicing medicine in this state five years before the law under which he was indicted' went into effect, etc.
This motion was sustained, and from a judgment quashing the indictment the state has appealed.
In the absence of any brief in defendant’s behalf, we are left to conjecture as to the particular ground or grounds on which the motion to quash was sustained. It seeins to us that the prosecuting attorney has, in a very satisfactory manner, met every objection appearing on the face of the motion.
(1) As to the first ground on which the indictment is assailed, it is well settled that the indictment need not name the particular individual treated or prescribed for. State v. Ladd, 15 Mo. 430; State v. Miller, 24 Mo. 532; State v. Jaques, 68 Mo. 260; State v. Houts, 35 Mo. App. 265.
(2) The second objection, set out in the motion to quash is equally untenable. Section 6879, Revised Statutes, 1889, contained in the article relative to the practice of medicine, etc., provides, that “any person shall be regarded as practicing medicine within the meaning of this article, who shall profess, publicly-, to be a physician, and to prescribe for the sick, or who *287shall append to his name the letters “M. D.,” etc. This is simply a provision relating to the force and competency of certain evidence and need not be pleaded.
(3) In the year 1883 this law was enacted providing for the qualification of' persons practicing medicine in the state, for examination before the state board of health, from whom the .party should receive a certificate, etc., and which should be recorded in the officeofthe county clerk. R. S.1889, secs. 6871 to 6892. In section 6881 penalties are provided for the violation of the same, closing with the proviso, “that the provisions of the article shall not apply to those persons who 'have been practicing medicine for five years in this state.” By the third clause in defendant’s motion to quash, objection is made that the indictment did not negative this proviso and was faulty in not declaring that defendant did not come within this exception. This position is not maintainable. In State v. O’Brien, (74 Mo. 549) it is said, that “whenever an exception is contained in the section defining an .offense, and constitutes a part of the description of the offense sought to be charged, the indictment must negative the exception, otherwise no offense is charged. But where, as in this case, the section which defines the offense contains a proviso exempting a class therein referred to from the operation of the statute, it is unnecessary to negative the proviso, but the exemption therein contained, must be insisted on by way of defense by the party accused.” See also State v. Crenshaw, 41 Mo. App. 24; State v. Seal, 47 Mo. App. 603.
We fail to discover any fault, substantial or otherwise, in this indictment. The defendant was charged with a statutory offense and practically, too, in the words of the statute. ■ The trial court erroneously sustained the motion to quash. Its judgment then must be reversed and the cause remanded.
All concur.