Horner v. State Bd. of Engineering Examiners
Decision Date | 15 August 1961 |
Docket Number | No. 50386,50386 |
Citation | 253 Iowa 1,110 N.W.2d 371 |
Parties | Jack Bradley HORNER, Appellant, v. STATE BOARD OF ENGINEERING EXAMINERS and Marvin O. Kruse, C. J. Posey, L. M. Clauson, Ralph H. Wallace, and Joseph M. Dean, as members of the State Board of Engineering Examiners, Appellees. |
Court | Iowa Supreme Court |
Webster, Frederick & Jordan, Winterset, for appellant.
Evan L. Hultman, Atty. Gen., and Theodor W. Rehmann, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellees.
Plaintiff's petition in substance alleges that he is entitled to registration in Iowa as a professional engineer, under the provisions of Chapter 114 of the Code of 1958, I.C.A., and that the defendant State Board of Engineering Examiners, hereafter referred to as the board, has wrongfully refused to so register him. His action is for declaratory relief. He prays that his right to registration be established and that the board be required to register him and issue him a certificate of such registration. The trial court, after a hearing, denied relief and dismissed his petition. From the judgment so entered we have this appeal.
It is evident that the real controversy concerns the claimed right of the plaintiff to be registered as a professional engineer without the examination demanded by the board. The is no dispute as to the facts involved, which were stipulated; and so far as the record shows this was the only evidence before the trial court. We set out the stipulation verbatim: 'It is stipulated between the parties hereto as follows:
'It is further stipulated that the only issue in this cause for determination by the Court is whether or not the Defendants under the stipulated set of facts herein can require the Plaintiff to submit to a written examination before being registered as a professional engineer under the provisions of Chapter 114 of the Iowa Code.'
The major contention arises over the proper interpretation of Section 114.14 of the Code. That part pertaining to the registration of professional engineers is set out herewith: 'General requirements for registration. The following shall be considered as minimum evidence satisfactory to the board that the applicant is qualified for registration as a professional engineer, or land surveyor, respectively, to wit:
'1. As a professional engineer:
Some claim is made to a right to registration under Section 114.20; and we we think other sections of the chapter are important. These will be discussed as they become material.
I. As we understand plaintiff's contention under Section 114.14, supra, it is that subd. 1, par. a thereof gives him an absolute right to registration. Under the stipulation he is a graduate of an approved course in an approved engineering college; and he meets all of the qualifications therein set out. It is his thought that 1. b does not apply to him, the board has no right to apply it, and he has an absolute right to registration without taking an examination, which the board has required. We must therefore consider and interpret the statute.
It will be observed that subd. 1, par. a, and subd. 1, par. b, of the section are stated in the first sentence of the statute as 'minimum evidence satisfactory to the board' of qualification for registration. Plaintiff's interpretation would eliminate the word 'minimum' entirely, and make the qualification set out in subd. 1, par. a, the maximum requirement that the board could exact. Plaintiff thinks subd. 1, par. b, has no application to his situation, but is to be used only in the case of those who have not graduated from an approved course in an approved engineering college. With this we are unable to agree. We think the board is given the right to use either subd. 1, par. a, or subd. 1, par. b, in determining the minimum standard of qualification which it will accept. We were faced with an identical situation in State v. Mosher, 78 Iowa 321, 43 N.W. 202. This concerned the prosecution of the defendant for practicing medicine without a license. At that time the law provided three tests of qualification to practice medicine in Iowa. They were: 1, a written examination by the board of medical examiners; or 2, that the applicant was a graduate in medicine; or 3, that he had been in continuous practice in the state for five years, three of which must have been in one locality. The defendant contended that he had shown he had practiced for the required time, under , the board of medical examiners had the right to inquire into his competency by an examination. The court referred to a provision in the statutes giving the board a right to revoke a certificate for incompetency, which it thought pointed to the legislative intent to permit it to require an examination under '1' even though the defendant there met the test set up by '3'. We have a similar provision for revocation for incompetency in Chapter 114, supra, Section 114.21. State v. Mosher, supra, was cited with approval on the point in question in State v. Bair, 112 Iowa 466, 469, 84 N.W. 532, 533, 51 L.R.A. 776. It is true the word 'or' does not appear between subd. 1, par. a and subd. 1, par. b, supra; but it will not avail the plaintiff here to urge that the two paragraphs should be read conjunctively, with 'and' instead of 'or', since he would then have both requirements to meet as 'minimum' evidence.
II. The plaintiff asks us to construe Section 114.14, subd. 1, par. a, as though the word 'minimum' did not appear in the statute. This we cannot do. The word is there; the legislature put it there; and we must assume it had a purpose in so doing. If it intended the provisions of subd. 1, par. a, to mean that no other test than graduation from an approved engineering college and a record of at least four years of practical experience should be required, no possible reason for inclusion of 'minimum' appears. The statute does not admit of a construction which would eliminate this word. When the language of a statute is plain and unambiguous, there is no room for interpretation by the courts. Dingman v. City of Council Bluffs, 249 Iowa 1121, 1126, 90 N.E.2d 742, 746; Cook v. Bornholdt, 250 Iowa 696, 699, 95 N.W.2d 749, 751. Many other cases have so held.
It is plain the legislature intended to give the board discretion in determining the qualification of applicants for registration. This it might do. Ross v. City Council of Sioux City, 136 Iowa 125, 127, 113 N.W. 474, 475; State ex rel. Bintz v. Nebraska State Board of Engineering Examiners, 155 Neb. 99, 50 N.W.2d 784, 786. Under a statute much like our own, the Nebraska Supreme Court held in the last cited case the board had discretion to examine evidence and exercise a discretion based thereon.
III. At this point the plaintiff attacks the constitutionality of the statute, if it is construed to mean that the board has discretion;...
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