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In this Reply Brief, we expose all of the sneaky, underhanded ways that the Attorney General's Office tried to misrepresent both the facts and the law in its brief. I'm proud of how this turned out.
Citation preview
WD75162
IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS,
WESTERN DISTRICT
MISSOURI VETERINARY MEDICAL BOARD,
Petitioner-Respondent,
v.
BROOKE GRAY and B & B EQUINE DENTISTRY,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
APPEAL FROM THE FORTY-THIRD CIRCUIT COURT
The Honorable Thomas Chapman, Judge
________________________________________________________________
APPELLANTS’ REPLY BRIEF
________________________________________________________________
DAVID E. ROLAND, MBE #60548
Freedom Center of Missouri
5938 De Giverville Ave.
Saint Louis, MO 63112
Phone: 314-604-6621
Fax: 314-720-0989
Email: [email protected]
Attorney for Appellants
ORAL ARGUMENT REQUESTED
-1-
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES………………………………………….. 3
ARGUMENT…………………………………………………………… 35
I. U.S. And Missouri Courts Have Always Acknowledged
That Government’s Ability To Restrict Constitutional
Rights Via The Police Power Is Limited…………………… 5
II. This Case Requires The Court To Address The
Government’s Application Of A Specific, Existing Law,
Not A Hypothetical Alternative………………………..…… 5
A. Forbidding A Non-Veterinarian To Accept Payment
For Work They Could Do For Free Does Nothing To
Protect The Public Health And Safety………………….. 8
B. Enforcing This Law Against Non-Veterinarian Tooth
Floaters Would Diminish Horse Health, Not Improve
It. ………………………………………………………….. 9
C. The Existing Licensing Requirements Do Not Guarantee
That Veterinarians Have The Education, Experience,
Or Qualifications Necessary To Safely Float Horses’
Teeth. ……………………………………………………… 9
D. The Existing Licensing Requirements Do Not Ensure
That Those Offering To Float Horses’ Teeth For Hire
-2-
Will Have Liability Insurance Or Must Post A
Bond……………………………………………………….. 11
III. The Respondent’s Brief Is Replete With Misrepresentations
And Falsehoods……………………………………………..... 12
CONCLUSION………………………………………………………….. 22
APPELLANT’S RULE 84.06 STATEMENT AND
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE………………………………………… 23
-3-
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
CASES PAGE(S)
Cornwell v. Hamilton,
80 F.Supp 2d 1101 (S.D. Cal 1999)……………………………… 19-20
Gurley v. Missouri Bd. of Private Investigator Examiners,
361 S.W.3d 406 (Mo. banc 2012)……………………………….. 17-18
Marbury v. Madison,
5 U.S. 137 (1803)…………………………………………………. 5
Merrifield v. Lockyer,
547 F.3d 978 (9th
Cir. 2007)………………………………………. 22
Moler v. Whisman,
147 S.W. 985 (Mo. 1912)……..………………………………….. 8, 15-16
Mugler v. Kansas,
123 U.S. 623 (1887)……………………………………………… 5
Powers v. Harris,
379 F.3d 1208 (10th
Cir. 2004)…………………………………… 18-19
State ex rel. Kansas City v. Public Service Comm’n,
524 S.W.2d 855 (Mo. banc 1975)..………………………………. 6-7
State ex rel. Scott v. Roper¸
688 S.W.2d 757 (Mo. 1985)……………………………………… 17
-4-
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS
Revised Statutes of the State of Missouri, 1879.………………………….. 16
Chapter 340, RSMo.………………………………………………………. 11
Section 340.216.1(5), RSMo……………………………………………....
20 CSR 2270………………………………………………………………. 11
OTHER AUTHORITIES
Louis Adolph Merillat, Veterinary Surgery, Vol. 1, Daniels Co. Press,
Chicago, 1905……………………………………………………… 14
-5-
ARGUMENT
I. U.S. And Missouri Courts Have Always Acknowledged That
Government’s Ability To Restrict Constitutional Rights Via The Police
Power Is Limited.
From this nation’s earliest days the United States Supreme Court made clear that
courts have “a solemn duty” to safeguard citizens’ constitutional liberties against
government intrusion. “That the people have an original right to establish, for their future
government, such principles as, in their opinion, shall most conduce to their own
happiness, is the basis on which the whole American fabric has been erected.” Marbury
v. Madison, 5 U.S. 137, 176 (1803). If a constitutional provision may be disregarded at
the whim of the legislature “then written constitutions are absurd attempts, on the part of
the people, to limit a power, in its own nature illimitable.” Id. at 177. The U.S. Supreme
Court has rejected the notion that constitutional rights may be so easily set aside, holding
that if “a statute purporting to have been enacted to protect the public health, the public
morals, or the public safety, [has] no real or substantial relation to those objects, or is a
palpable invasion of rights secured by the fundamental law, it is the duty of the courts to
so adjudge, and thereby give effect to the Constitution.” Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U.S.
623, 661 (1887).
Missouri courts have long followed this rule. The Missouri Supreme Court has
held that although the Government may curtail individual liberty where necessary for true
exercises of the police power, that power is and must be limited if the Constitution is to
-6-
have any legitimacy. “[T]he police power is essential to the achievement of such
objective as protecting the health and safety of the public and… is as broad as need be to
achieve those objectives. At the same time… the police power is not so powerful that it
impairs [constitutional rights] where such impairment is not necessary to achievement of
the objective for which the power is being exercised.” State ex rel. Kansas City v. Public
Service Comm’n, 524 S.W.2d 855, 864 (Mo. banc 1975).
In State ex rel. Kansas City, the Public Service Commission had ordered work to
be done on certain viaducts and the Commission ordered the City of Kansas City to split
the costs of the repairs with the Kansas City Railway Terminal Company. The City
argued that the Commission’s order would violate the Missouri Constitution by
disregarding a contractual agreement under which the Terminal Company was
responsible for all such costs. The Commission responded that even if the contract at
issue was valid, the Commission’s order was an exercise of the state’s police power for
the protection of the public health and safety and was therefore sufficient to justify any
infringement upon the constitutional right to contract. The Missouri Supreme Court
disagreed with the Commission, determining that the Commission had not proven that the
question of who might pay for the work was substantially related to any legitimate health
or safety concerns. Id. at 861. The court held that although the police power allowed the
Commission to mandate how a particular public project should be pursued to advance the
public health and safety, the police power could only justify the infringement of a
constitutional right if the Government first showed that the impairment of that right was
“necessary to achievement of the objective for which the power is being exercised.” Id.
-7-
at 864. Thus, the police power of the state is limited and courts must preserve
constitutional rights unless the Government has demonstrated that the contested
restriction is necessary to achieve the objectives of the police power.
II. This Case Requires The Court To Address The Government’s Application
Of A Specific, Existing Law, Not A Hypothetical Alternative.
This case addresses the Government’s application of a specific, existing law to
specific, existing Missourian. In spite of this fact, the Government argued in its brief that
the Court should rule in its favor because some of the witnesses expressed the opinion
that it might be advisable for the Government to develop a different, purely hypothetical
licensing scheme specifically designed to address horse teeth floaters. Essentially, the
Government has invited the Court to issue an advisory opinion based on laws and
regulations that do not even exist. This is completely unsupported by any precedent.
The only question before the Court is whether it is rational for the Government to enforce
the existing law’s requirements against Brooke Gray, forcing her to take 3,400 hours’
worth of veterinary classes (an infinitesimally small percentage of which actually teach
horse teeth floating or equine dentistry), to incur massive student debt, and to pass the
exams necessary to obtain a veterinarian’s license– all so Gray can accept payment for
work she can already do for free.
For the following reasons, the Government’s application of the law to Brooke
Gray is not rational:
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A. Forbidding A Non-Veterinarian To Accept Payment For Work They Could
Do For Free Does Nothing To Protect The Public Health And Safety.
Although the Government spent a significant part of its brief arguing that it had no
obligation to show that its regulations advance the public health and safety, it ultimately
did make a convoluted suggestion that the public health and safety would be imperiled if
the Government could not prohibit non-veterinarians from getting paid for work they
could otherwise do for free. The record, however, is devoid of any suggestion that
paying a non-veterinarian floater increases the likelihood that they might injure a horse.
To the contrary, both the testimony in this case and the Missouri Supreme Court’s
opinion in Moler v. Whisman¸ 147 S.W. 985 (Mo. 1912), suggest that a worker “who
receives compensation for his toil will take a deeper interest in his work[.]” Id. at 988.
It is also important to note that the law at issue in this case plainly allows non-
veterinarian horse teeth floaters to accept payment for their work – even without any
supervision from licensed veterinarians – if they are full-time employees of the horse’s
owner. Section 340.216.1(5), RSMo. The law imposes no other additional educational,
training, or competency requirements on non-veterinarians who might happen to be horse
owners’ full-time employees. It is inconceivable that the Government would allow
untrained, unsupervised, non-veterinarian full-time employees to accept payment for
floating horses’ teeth if there was, in fact, any genuine health or safety concern associated
with being compensated for this service. This restriction does not advance the public
health or safety in any way.
-9-
B. Enforcing This Law Against Non-Veterinarian Tooth Floaters Would
Diminish Horse Health, Not Improve It.
The Government argued that preventing non-veterinarian teeth floaters from being
paid to provide work they could do for free might somehow improve the quality of care
that horses receive; this assertion is contradicted by the evidence presented at trial. All of
the experts agreed that the cost of veterinary care is escalating and Dr. Messer testified
that many horse owners are finding it impossible to afford providing care for their
animals. Tr. at 304-07. Dr. Allen pointed out that if horse owners cannot afford dental
care for their animals, it would negatively impact horses’ health. Tr. at 480. The record
shows not only that non-veterinarians tend to do a better, more thorough job floating
horses’ teeth, Tr. at 449, but they generally do so more cheaply and conveniently than
licensed veterinarians. Because the evidence in this case shows that the Government’s
enforcement of the law against non-veterinarian teeth floaters would actually harm
horses’ health by lowering both the quality and quantity of their dental care, the
Government cannot argue that its enforcement of the policy is rationally related to
improving horses’ health.
C. The Existing Licensing Requirements Do Not Guarantee That Veterinarians
Have The Education, Experience, Or Qualifications Necessary To Safely
Float Horses’ Teeth.
The Government asserted that preventing non-veterinarian teeth floaters from
accepting payment for work they could otherwise lawfully provide will assure horse
owners that only those with the education, experience, or qualifications necessary to
-10-
safely float horses’ teeth will be able to offer their skills for hire. However, one of the
points upon which the veterinarian witnesses all agreed is that even after completing
3,400 hours of veterinary school and passing the necessary licensing exams, veterinarians
would not be competent to float horses’ teeth without additional training. A licensed
veterinarian could go her entire career (including satisfying every continuing education
requirement)1 without ever developing competence as a horse teeth floater – but if the
veterinarian ever cared to try her hand at it (and presuming she could find a horse owner
willing to entrust his animals to her) the law would nonetheless allow the horse owner to
pay the veterinarian for her efforts. Clearly, the fact that one holds a veterinary license in
no way indicates that such a person has the education, experience, or skills necessary to
safely float horses’ teeth. Indeed, one of the great ironies of this case is that the record
shows that Brooke Gray actually is a highly skilled floater who has demonstrated her
qualifications to and earned the respect of veterinarians and horse owners alike, yet the
Government’s action against her was prompted by a complaint from Dr. Leighr, a
veterinarian who happens to be the only identifiable person shown to have actually
injured horses and people (including himself) while attempting to float teeth. But Dr.
Leighr may lawfully offer his services for hire to Missouri’s horse owners, but Brooke
1 The Respondent urges that continuing education requirements are an important reason
why the Government must be allowed to require horse teeth floaters to become
veterinarians, but nothing in the law or regulations requires a veterinarian to take
continuing education classes related to floating horses’ teeth.
-11-
Gray is a criminal if she does the same without first becoming the horse owners’ full-
time employee.2 That is completely irrational.
D. The Existing Licensing Requirements Do Not Ensure That Those Offering To
Float Horses’ Teeth For Hire Will Have Liability Insurance Or Must Post A
Bond.
At one point in its brief the Government argued that its application of the law
against non-veterinarian tooth floaters assures horse owners that those offering to float
horses’ teeth for hire will have liability insurance or bonding. Resp. Br. at 20. But
nothing in Chapter 340, RSMo., or 20 CSR 2270 currently requires licensed veterinarians
to hold liability insurance or post a bond before they may lawfully accept compensation
for floating horses’ teeth, nor does the law impose such a requirement on non-
veterinarian full-time employees who might float the teeth of their employers’ horses.
Additionally, the record is devoid of any evidence suggesting that the absence of this sort
of requirement is harming or burdening horse owners in any way that might justify such a
governmental mandate. The Government’s argument is a solution in search of a problem.
2 Gray contends that, as is the case with business people of almost every stripe, the most
important people to whom she needs to demonstrate her qualifications are those people
who wish to have her help their horses. She also contends that the risk of losing
customers as a result of providing bad service is a more compelling motivation to do a
good job than a state-run disciplinary system that has allowed Dr. Leighr to continue
offering services even after injuring multiple horses and their owners.
-12-
III. The Respondent’s Brief Is Replete With Misrepresentations And
Falsehoods.
In its effort to manipulate the Court’s thinking on this case, the Respondent’s Brief
introduced several ideas that are not supported by the record. First, the Government
persistently attempted to suggest that one cannot float horses’ teeth according to the
professional definition of that term without engaging in other forms of equine dentistry.
Rather than using the phrase “floater,” as was done by all witnesses and parties
throughout this litigation, the Government hoped to confuse the Court by introducing the
phrase “non-veterinary equine dental practitioner,” which was never used by any of the
parties or witnesses prior to the Respondent’s Brief. The Government further tried to
imply that “floating” is a more comprehensive term than the record suggests by
selectively editing the professional definition offered by its own expert witness. Dr.
Galloway (as well as all the other veterinarian witnesses) stated that the professional
definition of teeth floating is limited to rasping sharp enamel points from cheek teeth, the
horse equivalent of human molars.3 Compare Resp. Br. at 1 with Tr. at 108-09. Dr.
3 The Government also fabricated the notion that floating teeth involves “cutting.” No
witness in the record ever described the process in this manner and the Government’s use
of that term implies something far more invasive and dangerous than the actual process,
which one of the Government’s own experts described as moving rasps or rotary burrs
across the surface of the molars, “almost like you’re filing wood with a wood rasp.” Tr. at
259.
-13-
Galloway explicitly testified that floating does not include work on canine teeth or
incisors. Tr. at 196. Furthermore, when at trial the Government attempted to suggest a
broader definition, Gray objected because (as the Government actually admitted) the
additional practices the Government wished to address went beyond the Appellant’s
conduct; the trial judge sustained Gray’s objection. Tr. at 132-34. This is a vitally
important point because the trial court did not find that Gray engaged in any unlawful
practice other than accepting payment for tooth floating.4 L.F. at 154. And yet the
Respondent’s brief repeatedly attempted to suggest that floating could not be
distinguished from other, more invasive – and more potentially dangerous – equine dental
practices.
Building on its attempt to conflate floating with other equine dental practices, the
Government’s brief also misconstrued Dr. Galloway’s testimony regarding the horses
known as Breeze, Colors, and Lady, incorrectly suggesting that these animals had
suffered injury due to tooth floating. Resp. Br. at 5. The evidence related to the horse
known as Breeze focused on excessive reduction of canine teeth and incisors, which (as
noted above) Dr. Galloway explicitly stated does not constitute tooth floating. Also, Dr.
Galloway did not testify that Colors and Lady were harmed by non-veterinarians floating
their teeth. He specifically testified that the person who had floated Colors’ teeth “did
4 Despite the Respondent’s strenuous efforts to prove otherwise, the trial court quite
pointedly did not find that Gray had improperly sedated horses.
-14-
not do the damage” and stated that Lady was suffering from a “long-standing… fungal
infection” the cause of which Dr. Galloway could not identify. Tr. at 156.
It is unclear why the Government claimed that it is “false” that neither of the
Government’s expert witnesses said they had ever personally seen injuries that had
resulted from floating. It that statement was false, the Government could have identified
testimony from one of its experts stating that they had personally seen injuries that had
resulted from floating. But, in fact, Dr. Galloway specifically stated that aside from Dr.
Leighr’s admission about injuring horses while attempting to float their teeth Dr.
Galloway could not name one specific example of a horse being injured as a result of
basic floating. Tr. at 190. When Dr. Galloway was asked, “Have you personally
encountered an injury caused by a non-veterinarian floating teeth,” his response was,
“Not in a non-veterinarian floating. A non-veterinarian trying to extract a tooth, I’ve
personally seen that. Personally seen misdiagnosis. So from the specific procedure of
floating, I don’t know. I can’t say specifically, no.” Tr. at 188.
The Appellant has made clear that she does not dispute that floating may be
considered a tiny twig on the giant tree of veterinary medicine, and neither does she
dispute that the twig may spring from a branch of that tree that encompasses veterinary
dentistry. But the record shows that for hundreds of years teeth floating has been
separated into its own niche practice, a point most clearly demonstrated by a century-old
veterinary textbook stating that non-veterinarians were called upon to float horses’ teeth
because veterinarians found it “beneath their dignity” to waste their time on “a trifling
-15-
accomplishment that the uneducated can master.” Veterinary Surgery, Vol. 1, by Louis
Adolph Merillat p. 16-17, Daniels Co. Press, Chicago, 1905. Indeed, Missouri has
regulated the practice of veterinary dentistry for more than one hundred years and non-
veterinarian floaters (and other non-veterinarian animal husbandry workers) have been
active in the state that entire time – yet this is the very first lawsuit in which the
Government has suggested that non-veterinarians may be prohibited from earning money
from their labor. It is completely disingenuous and ahistorical to suggest that tooth
floating cannot be considered a well-defined, limited niche profession.
Regarding Gray’s Gains of Industry Argument
Of all the misstatements the Government made about the Missouri Supreme
Court’s decision in Moler v. Whisman, 147 S.W. 985 (Mo. 1912), the most dramatic is
the idea that the law at issue in that case forced anyone to do work for free. To the
contrary, all would-be barbers were free to choose a different line of work or they could
even have avoided the statute’s restrictions by choosing to cut hair in municipalities with
fewer than 5,000 inhabitants. The law at issue in Moler stated that if someone desired to
cut hair in municipalities with more than 5,000 inhabitants they could only do so after
satisfying certain requirements and obtaining a license from the state, and the law forbade
anyone learning or teaching the trade to earn any money from the student’s work. Again,
it was entirely up to the individual to decide if they were willing to provide those
services.5
5 Compare this to the situation in State ex rel. Scott v. Roper¸ 688 S.W.2d 757 (Mo.
-16-
Although it is true that the Appellant’s circumstances in the instant case are
somewhat different from the plaintiffs in Moler – the plaintiffs in that case wanted to
become licensed barbers, while Gray has no interest in becoming a licensed veterinarian
– that factual distinction is irrelevant to the constitutional claim the Appellant is asserting.
Nothing in the text or history of the Gains of Industry clause suggests that it only protects
those who are attempting to follow state-established procedures for licensure in a given
occupation. In fact, this cannot be what the people of Missouri intended in adopting the
Gains of Industry clause, because at the time of its ratification the state legislature did not
require licensure for any profession other than the practice of law. See Revised Statutes
of the State of Missouri, 1879. The Gains of Industry clause anticipated that, left
unchecked, the government might try to deprive citizens of their right to earn money by
applying their skills in a lawful, useful trade, and, as is reflected by the Missouri Supreme
Court’s decision in Moler, the people of Missouri ratified the clause in order to prevent
the government from restricting that right unless the Government had shown that such a
restriction was necessary to protect the public health and safety.
The Respondent’s Brief also implies that a constitutional provision or court
precedent may lose its force if it is not commonly invoked or, in the alternative, that a
law or policy may be immune from a constitutional challenge simply by virtue of the fact
that it has been on the books for a long time. Resp. Br. at 12-13. This suggestion is made
1985), in which a judge relied on a state statute to issue an order forcing an attorney to
provide legal services to represent a client pro bono.
-17-
all the more curious in that the Government immediately discusses State ex rel. Scott v.
Roper¸ 688 S.W.2d 757 (Mo. 1985), in which the Missouri Supreme Court applied the
little-used Gains of Industry clause to invalidate a policy that dated “as far back as
Fifteenth-Century England and pre-Revolutionary America.” Id. at 762. The Missouri
Supreme Court’s decision in Roper demonstrates that if the facts of a case reveal that a
longstanding policy is inconsistent with the rights the people have preserved in their
constitution, it is the policy that must give way, not the constitution.
The Government also severely mischaracterized the Missouri Supreme Court’s
recent holding in Gurley v. Missouri Bd. of Private Investigator Examiners, 361 S.W.3d
406 (Mo. banc 2012). Although the Government depicted that case as a challenge to the
state’s authority to prohibit individuals from earning money for things they could
lawfully do for free, this was not at all the focus of the case. Gurley did not challenge the
Government’s power to create a licensing scheme for private investigators; he explicitly
conceded “both that the state may regulate private investigators’ businesses and that this
particular statute is constitutional as applied to private investigators.” Id. at 411. Thus,
the Missouri Supreme Court had no basis to address that question, nor did it have any
basis to address the Gains of Industry clause. The question before the Gurley court was
whether the First Amendment allowed the private investigators’ licensing scheme to be
applied against those not earning any money for their actions. The court concluded that
the statute was not intended to apply to those who were not being compensated, which is
why it ruled that the law was not overbroad. Id. at 413. That conclusion, along with any
-18-
other conclusion that might be drawn from Gurley, has no applicability whatsoever to the
instant case.
Regarding Gray’s Substantive Due Process Argument
The Government also severely misrepresented several of the cases cited in the
Appellant’s Brief. The Government claims that the cases in which federal courts struck
down state laws limiting the sale of caskets to licensed funeral professionals are not
relevant because those cases dealt with selling a product, not with practicing a licensed
occupation. But in fact the legislatures in each of those cases had made the determination
that selling caskets was the practice of a licensed occupation and should be limited to
persons who had fulfilled those states’ requirements for licensure. In each of those cases
the governments’ attorneys presented almost precisely the same justifications for their
laws that the Government has offered in this case, which is why it is so telling that almost
all of those courts rejected the governments’ arguments. In Powers v. Harris, 379 F.3d
1208 (10th
Cir. 2004), the one case that the Government (correctly) holds up as an
example of a court upholding a licensing requirement for casket sales, the court based its
outcome on the notion that state and local governments have a legitimate state interest in
“dishing out special economic benefits to certain in-state industries,” and suggesting that
this sort of practice is the equivalent of governments’ “national pastime.” Id. at 1221.
Although the Government’s application of the law in this case seems a perfect example of
the use of law to protect a powerful interest group from economic competition, the
Respondent has made no suggestion that this would constitute a “legitimate interest” that
-19-
might justify depriving Gray of her right to earn a living by floating horses’ teeth. Thus,
Powers is inapplicable to the instant case, while the courts’ reasoning in the other casket
sales cases is both on-point and persuasive.
The Respondent’s Brief acknowledges – as it must – that the African hair braiding
cases are even more closely analogous to the instant case. The Government then goes on
to try to distinguish Cornwell v. Hamilton, 80 F.Supp. 2d 1101 (S.D. Cal. 199), by
claiming that the court in that case ruled that African hair braiding “was not
cosmetology” and suggesting that this Court should not follow Cornwell because
Missouri law defines “veterinary dentistry” as “veterinary medicine.” Of course, the
Cornwell court came to exactly the opposite conclusion of what the Respondent’s Brief
suggested, stating: “The Court finds that the profession of natural hair care is a significant
and legitimate branch of cosmetology[.]” Id. at 1107 (emphasis added). The court ruled
that California could not require Cornwell to obtain a cosmetologist license because her
activities constituted such a tiny fraction of the broader field of cosmetology that the
state’s onerous licensing requirements could not rationally be applied to her:
“Assume the range of every possible hair care act to involve tasks A
through Z. From the Court’s perspective, Cornwell’s activities would cover
tasks A, B, and some of C. The State’s cosmetology program mandates
instruction in tasks B through Z. The overlap areas are B and part of C.
This minimal overlap is not sufficient to force Cornwell to attend a
cosmetology school in order to be exposed to D through Z, when she only
-20-
needs B and a portion of C. In sum, the Court finds that the Act as
implemented through regulations is irrational when applied to Dr.
Cornwell.” Id. at 1108.
This is precisely the situation before this Court in the instant case. Even though
the Government has defined “veterinary medicine” broadly enough to include Gray’s
profession, the vast, onerous licensing requirements are so disconnected from the limited
practice of teeth floating that all of the veterinarians who testified in this case stated that
even someone who has fulfilled those requirements will require additional training before
they would be competent to float horses’ teeth. The Cornwell decision is well-reasoned
and directly on point; this Court should find it persuasive and should rule that there is no
rational basis for requiring Gray to obtain a veterinarian’s license before she may
lawfully accept payment for work she may already perform for free.
Regarding the Appellant’s Equal Protection Argument
The Respondent’s Brief argued that in the absence of a formal policy establishing
that a law will be applied differently to different groups of people, courts are entirely
powerless to find an equal protection violation. The implication of the Government’s
argument can be explored by way of an analogy:
The Fraternal Order of Police sometimes gives out special bumper stickers to
citizens who donate to their charity. Imagine that the troopers in the Missouri Highway
Patrol decided amongst themselves that they would refrain from pursuing or ticketing any
-21-
driver who displays one of these bumper stickers. Anyone without one of those bumper
stickers would not receive any such leniency. One person ticketed for driving two miles
per hour over the speed limit challenges the way the Highway Patrol is selectively
enforcing the law, and the evidence in the case makes clear that the Highway Patrol is
aware of and routinely ignores bumper-stickered drivers moving at more dangerous
speeds – but there is no formal policy for the ticketed driver to target. Is there an equal
protection violation?
The Government argues that there is not. Even if it is clear that law enforcement
is turning a blind eye to violations committed by an identifiable group of people, and
even if the record shows that the behaviors being tolerated are more dangerous to the
public health and safety than the behaviors for which other drivers are being ticketed, the
Government contends that this sort of selective application of the law is a matter left to
the discretion of those tasked with enforcing it and therefore is beyond the Court’s
authority to review. But if this is correct, it would allow the Government to engage in an
enormous range of favoritism while evading any sort of judicial review. In a state and
nation that demand that laws treat citizens equally, this outcome is intolerable.
The record in this case shows that virtually everyone in the horse world is aware
that for centuries non-veterinarian farriers have been paid to provide services
significantly more dangerous to both horse and rider than the services provided by other
animal husbandry workers. Yet when the Veterinary Medical Board decided to take
action against animal husbandry workers, they ignored the ones who pose the greatest
-22-
legitimate threat to the public health and safety and instead targeted those whose services
pose very little threat to the public health and safety. Merrifield v. Lockyer, 547 F.3d 978
(9th
Cir. 2007), makes clear that in such a circumstance courts have the authority to forbid
the Government from continuing with such selective enforcement of the laws. The
Government may either take action to prevent non-veterinarian farriers from accepting
payment for their services, or it may return to the century-long status quo in which it did
not target animal husbandry workers at all, but it may not target those earning a living by
providing relatively harmless services while at the same time turning a blind eye to those
whose services pose a greater risk to the public health or safety.
CONCLUSION
For all of the reasons above, this Court should reverse the trial court’s judgment
and should rule that the government may not require Brooke Gray to obtain a veterinary
license before accepting payment for floating horses’ teeth.
Respectfully submitted,
_ /s/David Roland______________
David E. Roland, MBE #60548
Freedom Center of Missouri
5938 De Giverville Ave.
St. Louis, Missouri 63112
Telephone: (314) 604-6621
Facsimile: (314) 720-0989
Email: [email protected]
Attorney for the Appellant
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RULE 84.06(c) CERTIFICATION AND CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that this brief complies with the type-volume limitation of Rule
84.06(b) of the Missouri Rules of Civil Procedure. This brief was prepared in Microsoft
Word 2007 and contains no more than 5,087 words, excluding those portions of the brief
listed in Rule 84.06(b) of the Missouri Rules of Civil Procedure (less than the 5,115 word
limit in the rules). The font is Times New Roman, double-spacing, 13-point type.
I hereby certify that I electronically filed the foregoing with the Clerk of the
Missouri Court of Appeals, Western District, by using the Electronic Filing System, and
that a copy will be served by the Electronic Filing System upon those parties indicated by
the Electronic Filing System and that the following parties shall be served a copy hereof
by first class mail on the date the foregoing document was filed with the Clerk: None.
Respectfully submitted,
__/s/ David Roland_____________
David E. Roland, MBE #60548
Freedom Center of Missouri
5938 De Giverville Ave.
St. Louis, Missouri 63112
Telephone: (314) 604-6621
Facsimile: (314) 720-0989
Email: [email protected]
Attorney for the Appellant