Authorative SourcesStudent’s Name:Institution of Affiliation:Course:Professor:Date:Authorative SourcesLegally, forcing an unwilling individual to get treatment is equal to stabbing another person with a knife. In legal terms, such an act is considered to be battery. In this regard, this act is criminal offense and could lead to a civil lawsuit ("Battery—No consent," 2009). For a case to qualify as a battery is that the unwilling person did not agree to the treatment regardless of the outcomes that the person got from the treatment. Therefore, even if the treatment did not cause any harm, the lack of consent serves as the foundation for this legal issue. This sentiment was echoed is Justice Cardozo’s opinion in Schoendorff v. Society of New York Hospital: [Schoendorff v. Society of New York Hosp., 105 N.E. 92, 93 (N.Y. 1914) ] (("Battery—No consent," 2009). Any individual of legal age and on who can make sound judgment has the right to reject or accept any medical procedure performed on their body. Other than that, a medical profession, who performs a medical procedure on a patient without the patient’s consent commits an