Prosterman v. Tennessee State Board of Dental Examiners

73 S.W.2d 687, 168 Tenn. 16, 4 Beeler 16, 1933 Tenn. LEXIS 78
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 73 S.W.2d 687 (Prosterman v. Tennessee State Board of Dental Examiners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prosterman v. Tennessee State Board of Dental Examiners, 73 S.W.2d 687, 168 Tenn. 16, 4 Beeler 16, 1933 Tenn. LEXIS 78 (Tenn. 1934).

Opinion

*18 Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Conceiving that Dr. Prosterman, a dentist practicing at Chattanooga, had been guilty of conduct violative of provisions of the act creating a state dental board, carried into the Code of 1932 as section 6941 et seq., notice was served on him to appear and answer why his license should not be revoked. He responded in person and by counsel, and, after a full hearing, was found guilty of several offenses under the statute, and his license was revoked. Thereafter, he brought this suit by bill in chancery to have this order of the board reviewed and set aside. The chancellor heard the cause on the transcript of the evidence before the board, and some additional proof by depositions, and, sustaining certain material and determinative findings of fact of the board, affirmed the order, with a modification of the suspension to thirty days.

Both sides have appealed, Dr. Prosterman insisting that his license should not be suspended at all, and the board that its action should have been affirmed by the chancellor without modification. The learned and lamented chancellor, W. B. Garvin, handed down a careful and exhaustive opinion passing on all phases of the case, to which reference is made for a fuller discussion of the facts than by reason thereof we deem it necessary to embrace herein.

Before the board the following charges, in substance, were considered and sustained: (1) That Dr. Proster-man falsely advertised that he had had twenty years’ experience in all lines or branches of dentistry; (2) that he sent out notices stating that he had been formerly a *19 professor and dean of the Southern Dental Institute of Atlanta, where he gave post graduate instruction; (3) that he falsely advertised that he; had successfully fitted plates and satisfied patients where others had failed; and (4) that he falsely advertised his “hecolite plates” as ‘ ‘ genuine and unbreakable. ’ ’

The chancellor held with Dr. Prosterman respecting the third and fourth of the foregoing specifications, and these matters are eliminated. However, he sustained the findings and action of the board touching specifications 1 and 2. He found with the board that the statement advertising that he had had “twenty years experience in all branches of dentistry” was untrue, and it appears from the admissions of Dr. Prosterman himself that this statement was untrue. He had been a practitioner for only half that time. Prior to ;that time his experience was confined to work as a helper in laboratory work. As pointed out by the chancellor, this in no sense constituted or afforded experience in all branches of dentistry. Indeed, Dr. Prosterman himself later published a correction to the effect that ten years, rather than twenty, was the true period of his experience. "We are not able to find that the board and the chancellor l were unjustified in holding this to have been a material and reprehensible misrepresentation, calculated to mislead and deceive.

Also, with respect to the second specification, while more open to dispute and difference of opinion, we are constrained to agree with the board and chancellor that the representation made to sought-after patrons,, that he was a “Dentist formerly^’Professor and Dean Southern Dental Institute, Atlanta, G-eorgia,” was misleading. He seeks to justify this statement by tes *20 timony tliat he had at one time organized a concern by this name, in Atlanta, which he operated a short time in connection with his dental office there, but the organization was little more than a name, high-sounding, hut unsubstantial, and our conclusion rests largely on his specific admission. He is asked: “So this was in the same space that you were using as your office. Did you have any instructors in there?” A. “I did not have anybody but myself.” Q'. “You were the only one?” A. “Yes, sir.” We think it too plain for argument that such a situation did not justify his holding himself out later, when even this temporary makeshift had passed out, as “formerly Professor and Dean Southern Dental Institute.” “Professor” of an “institute” implies a position of importance and recognition by others of capacity. And the term “Dean” clearly suggests an office of responsibility, and definitely denotes a group situation. It is a misleading misnomer if applied to a situation wherein but one person is engaged, acting for and directing only his own individual activities. Such circularization for the purpose of inducing patronage for an institute, college, or school would be naturally deceiving, and this is equally true of circularization of proposed patrons of his dental office.

The chancellor, as before stated, modified the order of the board suspending the license of the dentist altogether, so as to limit the suspension to thirty- days. It is of this modification that the board complains. It is said that, having found that the charges were sustained by the evidence, the chancellor should have dismissed the bill and affirmed the order; that he exceeded his authority in decreeing this modification.

*21 Counsel concede “that prior to tlie date that the Code of 193-2 became effective, the complainant would have been entitled to a trial de novo upon a writ of certiorari of the Circuit Court,” hut the argument is that, by implication, the new Code provisions, sections 9008-9018, exclude a trial de novo, but contemplate only a review of the record before the Board to determine whether the “order or judgment is erroneous. ” This court has recently considered these sections in response'to the insistence that they enlarged the right of review by certiorari of the rulings of boards and commissions. See Anderson et al. v. Memphis, 167 Tenn., 648, 72 S. W. (2d), 1059, but the contention that such rights are restricted thereby is made for the first time. We quote from the brief of counsel:

“These new statutory provisions have injected new features into the law concerning judicial supervision over the acts of inferior boards. In the first place the act provides that the petition for certiorari shall state the issues involved in the cause, ‘the substance of the order or judgment complained of,' of the respects in which the petitioner claims the order or judgment is erroneous, and praying for an accordant review.’ This language of the statute clearly indicates that the Legislature contemplated not a trial de novo, but a review of the record before the board to determine whether the ‘order or judgment is erroneous. ’ It would seem that the statute places upon the complainant the burden of showing that the judgment is erroneous and that, until such is shown, the order is presumed to be a proper one.
‘ ‘ This view of the act is strengthened by an examination of section 9012, Code 1932, which provides that the board or commission shall cause to be made, certified *22 and forwarded to tlie Court a complete transcript of the proceedings in the cause, containing also all the proof submitted before the board or commission. The circumstance that the Court reviews the same testimony that was adduced before the board indicates that the lawmakers did not contemplate a trial

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Bluebook (online)
73 S.W.2d 687, 168 Tenn. 16, 4 Beeler 16, 1933 Tenn. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prosterman-v-tennessee-state-board-of-dental-examiners-tenn-1934.