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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

HECTOR CAMPBELL, ESQ.

Fined and iinprisoned, in the Year 1808, for acting as a
Physician without a Licence

MR CAMPBELL, though convicted of practising with-
out the leave of the College of Physicians, had been a
surgeon in the navy, was a man of science and skill, and,
but for a misplaced pride, might have readily passed his
examination and obtained his diploma.
   He was indicted by the Royal College of Physicians, in
Warwick Lane, for unlawfully prescribing and practising
physic, etc., in London, and within seven miles round the
same, he not having been examined by the College with
regard to his skill, or being licensed by them to practise

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these arts. In order to bottom the indictment, the charter
constituting the Royal College of Physicians by Charles II
was produced and read, and various details of the laws and
by-laws of the college were stated and proved. By one of
these by-laws, confirmed by the charter, as also by an
Act of the legislature, any person who presumed to exer-
cise the calling of a physician, etc., he not being licensed
so as to exercise that vocation, was to be summoned by a
summons and monition to appear before the College. The
defendant, having carried on these arts for some time, was
at length summoned to appear before the censor of the
College, on the 6th of March. This summons was issued
by Dr Harvey, the registrar, by authority of the censors ;
but the defendant did not appear.
   Dr Harvey deposed that on the 3rd of April he prepared
an interdiction against Dr Campbell, by authority of the
Board, which was signed by all its members on that day.
He was a witness to the signature of the interdiction, and
delivered it to Miller, the beadle. The whole Board, he
said, did not sign in cases of summonses, but in those of
interdictions they did.
   Dr Pitcairn, one of the censors, was present when the
defendant appeared before the College. The defendant
seemed to plume himself on the eminence to which he said
he had attained in the profession. He called himself Dr
Campbell, and wrote prescriptions in the style in which
physicians generally do. Campbell said the College had
not acted impartially towards him, and had been impelled
to resist him by unworthy motives ; he added that two very
eminent physicians had forced themselves into the profes-
sion by paying sums of money. On this the president
desired Mr Campbell to be silent, and to withdraw, which
the defendant refused to do, stating he had not come before
the College unadvisedly, as he had consulted his lawyer on
what conduct he ought to pursue. The defendant clapped
his hand in his pocket and asked what was to pay; and, just
before leaving the room, he was asked by the president
whether he felt inclined to relinquish the practice of surgery

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and medicine he then carried on. The defendant replied in
the negative ; when he was told by the president that legal
measures would, to a certainty, be resorted to in order to
compel him so to do. The defendant made a most gross
reply, distinguishing the Board as a set of scoundrels.
   Dr Lambe proved that he had received a letter from the
defendant after the above transaction, and Sir Lucas Pepys
deposed that the letter had been handed over to him by
Dr Lambe. The letter was expressive of the sorrow and
contrition of the defendant for the intemperate expressions
he had made use of to the College, and concluded with
offering a most humble apology for his error.
   Mr Nolan addressed the jury on the part of the defendant.
He observed that if Dr Campbell had got the advice of a
counsel, the advice he had used was false, erroneous and
unwise. The defendant, it was his duty to state, had prac-
tised from the age of eighteen as a surgeon, with great
credit and fame to himself and universal benefit to the
public. This was in the country; and the defendant's
anxiety for science and for extended knowledge in his pro-
fession induced him to take up his residence in the metro-
polis as a medical practitioner.  He was summoned before
the Royal College of Physicians, and in answer to these
summonses he wrote a letter to Dr Harvey, civil and respect-
ful in the extreme. He received an answer from the doctor
in his capacity as an individual, not in his official character ;
but upon that it was unnecessary for him to enlarge. It
was his object here to state the feelings of Dr Campbell,
when he received a letter which irritated his mind, as a man
and a gentleman. To this irritability in the defendant's
temper was attributable all that followed. His mind had
been broken by what he conceived to be asperity on the
part of the College, and he so far forgot himself as to utter
the offensive words described by Dr Pitcairn. The letter,
however, which had been sent by Dr Campbell as an ex-
piation of his offence was couched in such terms that pity
came to his aid, and he understood that learned body did
not mean to press for judgment before the Court should

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the defendant be convicted. Dr Campbell had done all that
frail man could do. He had confessed his error, and had
made a most befitting and becoming apology.
   Lord Ellenborough, in his address to the jury, said it
was impossible for him to anticipate what might be the
effect of an appeal to the Court by the Royal College of
Physicians, when the defendant might be brought up for
judgment, in his behalf. That was not the point at issue:
the jury had to consider whether, under all the circum-
stances of the case, they were convinced that the general
counts and allegations in the indictment were made out.
Were they convinced of that, they would find the defendant
guilty; if, on the contrary, they entertained any reasonable
doubt, they would give the defendant all the benefit of
those doubts. The jury found the defendant guilty, and he
was ordered to be imprisoned, and to pay a fine.

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Newgate Calendar Vol. V Table of Contents / The Complete Newgate Calendar