If fraudulent or not owned by the possessor, $20 (ib., s. 6,873).

To the clerk, for recording, the usual fees (ib., s. 6,875).

Montana.

Board of Examiners.—The governor, with the advice and consent of the council, appoints seven learned, skilled, and capable physicians who have been residents for not less than two years, no more than two from the same county, to constitute the board of examiners (Act of February 28th, 1889, s. 1).

Meetings of the board for examination are required to be held at the capital and such other central points as the board may select, on the first Tuesday of April and October in each year, and at other times as the board may determine. The board must keep a record of all applicants for a certificate, with their age, time spent in the study of medicine, name, and the location of all institutions granting to applicants degrees or certificates of lectures in medicine or surgery, and whether the applicant was rejected or received a certificate, and the register is prima facie evidence of matters therein recorded (ib., s. 2).

Qualification.—Every person wishing to practise medicine or surgery in any of their departments shall do so only upon complying with the requisites of this act. If a graduate in medicine, he must present his diploma to the board for verification as to its genuineness. If it be found genuine and issued by a medical school legally organized and in good standing, whose teachers are graduates of a legally organized school, which fact the board determines, and if the person presenting and claiming the diploma be the person to whom it was originally granted, the board must issue its certificate, which shall be conclusive of the holder’s right to practise. Any person coming to the State may present his diploma to any member of the board, who may issue a certificate good till the board’s next regular meeting. If not a graduate, the person must present himself to the board for such examination as may be required, unless he shall have been in continuous practice in the State for not less than ten years, of which fact he must present satisfactory evidence in the form of affidavits to the board (ib., s. 3).

All persons entitled to practise under the ten-year provision and all persons commencing the practice of medicine and surgery in any of its branches shall apply to the board for a certificate, and at the time and place designated by the board, or at the regular meeting, be examined in anatomy, physiology, chemistry, histology, materia medica, therapeutics, preventive medicines, practice of medicine, surgery, obstetrics, diseases of women and children, diseases of the nervous system, diseases of the eye and ear, medical jurisprudence, and such other branches as the board may deem advisable, and present evidence of having practised the required term of ten years, or of having attended three courses of lectures of at least four months each; the examination must be both scientific and practical, and of sufficient thoroughness and severity to test the candidate’s fitness to practise medicine and surgery. The examination may be held in the presence of the dean of any medical school or of the president of any medical society of the State. After the examination, the board must grant to a candidate who is found qualified, a certificate to practise medicine and surgery. The board may refuse or revoke a certificate for unprofessional, dishonorable, or immoral conduct, or may refuse a certificate to any one who may publicly profess to cure or treat diseases, injuries, or deformities in such manner as to deceive the public. In cases of refusal or revocation, the aggrieved applicant may appeal to the district court of the county of his application (ib., s. 4).

Certificates must be recorded within sixty days after their date in the office of the county recorder in the county where the holder resides; or in case of removal certificates must be recorded in the county to which the holder removes. The county recorder must indorse on the certificate the date of its record (ib., s. 5).

Exceptions.—The act does not apply to midwives of skill and experience attending cases of confinement, nor to commissioned surgeons of the United States army or navy in the discharge of their official duties, nor to physicians or surgeons in actual consultation from other States and Territories, nor to students practising medicine under the direct supervision of a preceptor, nor to gratuitous services in cases of emergency (ib., s. 6).

Penalty.—Violation of the act is a misdemeanor, punishable with a fine of from $100 to $500, or imprisonment in the county jail from thirty to ninety days, or both.