- After being convicted under the Medical Practice Act of Texas a Doctor of Chiropractic thereafter takes his case to the US Supreme Court. The court declined to act.
One chiropractic doctor convicted under the Medical Practice Act of Texas in 1933 was so enraged that he thereafter sued the Texas Medical Association for malicious prosecution.
The suit was dismissed, but he carried the constitutionality of the Medical Practice Act of Texas to the U.S. Supreme Court.
The U.S. Supreme Court declined to act on his suit, and organized medicine continued to disparage those new-school practitioners that were not of its membership.
The thirteenth President of the Texas Chiropractic Association, M. B. McCoy, serves a second term.