Smith v. State ex rel. Board of Governors

1958 OK 215, 330 P.2d 366, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 572
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 30, 1958
DocketNo. 38109
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1958 OK 215 (Smith v. State ex rel. Board of Governors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. State ex rel. Board of Governors, 1958 OK 215, 330 P.2d 366, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 572 (Okla. 1958).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Justice.

Roy A. Smith commenced this action by . filing in this court, as provided by Tit. 59 O.S.1955 Supp. sec. 278, his petition to review a decision of The Board of Governors of the Registered Dentists of Oklahoma, hereinafter referred to as , the “Board”, revoking his license to practice dentistry in this State.

' The decision was based upon the ground of revocation set forth in the statute, supra, as follows:

“The Board shall have power to revoke the license of a member hereof or suspend a member from the practice or reprove said member upon the following grounds:
- (that he) * * *
“(e) has permitted, directly or indirectly, an unregistered or unlicensed person to practice dentistry and/or dental hygiene under ■ his direction; * * (Emphasis ours).

Section 271 of the same Title reads, in part, as follows:

“Any person shall be regarded as practicing dentistry within the meaning of this Act who * * *
furnishes, supplies, constructs, reproduces or repairs, or offers to furnish, supply, construct, reproduce or repair prosthetic dentures (sometimes known as plates), bridges or other substitutes for natural teeth to the user or prospective user thereof; * *

There was no question from the evidence introduced at the hearing, held before the Board last December, but that one Gilbert Crosby, who operated' Crosby’s Laboratory in the basement of a building at 1335 East 15th Street, in Tulsa, furnished to one Lawrence Ford, the principal witness in support of the complaint filed with the Board against petitioner, a partial plate or substitute for natural teeth. The crucial question, however, was whether he did this “under (the) direction” of the petitioner, within the meaning of that term as used in the first quoted section of the statute, supra.

The undisputed evidence showed, among other things, that petitioner is sixty-four years of age and has been a practicing dentist in Oklahoma since 1916,' but that he had only recently moved from Holdenville to Tulsa, where, in April of last year, he opened a dental office in the above-mentioned building, referred to as the Colonial Inn building; that the building which, besides the basement floor, has a ground, or “street level”, floor with an entry room or foyer, reception room and seven private office rooms, had previously been rented from the individual who owned it, to South Investment Company, under a long term lease, to be sublet as a clinic, which subsequently went out of business; that, thereafter South Investment Company initially leased the entire building to the laboratory operator, Crosby; that thereafter, in March, 1957, Crosby sublet five of the rooms on the hall leading from the reception room [368]*368down the center of the building’s street floor, to a physician named Dr. Walden; that when, on April 22, 1957, the petitioner rented, for his office, a room at the rear end of the hall, near the stairway leading to the basement, he required Soitth Investment Company to obtain a release, as to that room, of the previous lease to Crosby, so that petitioner could rent the room directly from the investment company; that by mutual arrangement between the interested parties, all three of the building’s tenants, used the two rooms nearest the front, or Fifteenth Street, entrance of the building as a common, or mutual, foyer and reception room, there being a telephone and desk there.

It, further appeared that the principal witness, Ford, is a Tinker Field employee, residing in Oklahoma City; that he became a participant in the matter when Mr. Harley, the Board’s attorney, contacted him and engaged him to go to Tulsa and purchase a lower partial plate for himself at the Crosby Laboratory; that he was paid $25 for each trip he made to Tulsa on said mission, and was furnished $100 to pay for the plate; that on the initial trip he, in accord with instructions, merely telephoned the Crosby Laboratory for an appointment to have an “impression” made for the plate; that a man, whom he was unable to identify, answered the phone and told him to come there at 1:00 o’clock p. m.; that when he went to the building to keep the appointment he met Crosby in the reception room, but didn’t see petitioner, or anyone else. Ford testified, in substance, that then Crosby escorted him into another room, where he took the impression; that when Harley took him back to Tulsa to get the plate, about two weeks later; or July 10, a Mr. Dempter went into the reception room with him and Dr. Smith was sitting at the desk in the next room, talking to a lady, and, according to Ford’s testimony, Smith told the witness “that they had a card from New York, or wherever they sent them (the teeth or partial plate) that they were being shipped and that they should be in on the 10:10 mail.” Ford testified further that: “ * * * we (apparently referring to him and Dempter)’ told him we was goin’ to a little tavern there close * * * it’s called the Friendly Tavern, and he said he would call us when the mail came and tell us when to come back.” Ford further testified, in substance,, that petitioner telephoned him at 10:45 and told him that the teeth had come in, that Crosby was finishing them, and to comeback at 3:00 o’clock and they would probably be ready. From the witness’ testimony, it may be deduced that he and Dempter returned to the clinic building at the appointed time and waited a few minutes in the reception room in which the petitioner and a lady were sitting; _ that then Crosby came up from his laboratory in the basement and invited them (Ford and Dempter) down there, where they, along with some woman, drank some whiskey, and' Crosby “ * * * got the teeth ready * * * Ford further testified that thereafter Crosby made “two or three trips back upstairs * * * ” and after he had come back to the basement the last time, he then accompanied the witness upstairs* to petitioner’s office room, where the witness sat in the petitioner’s dental chair,, while Crosby fitted the partial plate in his mouth. Ford further testified that by the time this trip to his office room occurred,, the petitioner had left the building.

When the petitioner was on the witness-stand, he testified, among other things, in substance, that he had no connection whatsoever with Crosby and his laboratory business and that he sent all orders for dentures for his patients to other laboratories. Petitioner also denied that he had' ascertained that Crosby was to get a partial plate in the mail on the day the witness-Ford had testified they had had two conversations about Ford’s plate coming through the mail. The petitioner also-denied that he had anything to do with Crosby’s mail. He admitted that he was-in the common reception room the day Ford testified he and Dempter were there- and that there was also a lady there, who-(as he recalled) was a patient of Dr. Wal[369]*369den; but, when asked if he remembered any conversation he and Ford had, he replied: “None whatever.” Petitioner further testified that when he left his office room, its door was unlocked; but, when asked if he knew of any act “with reference to the Dental Science” that Crosby did “under his direction”, he replied in the negative. Petitioner further testified that he “didn’t like the way things was goin’ * * * ” in the building, and, in September, 1957, he moved his office to 6420 East Tecumseh Street. Apparently, among other things he did not like, was Crosby’s “drinking too much” and coming “ * * * up in front * *

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wilson v. State ex rel. Board of Governors of Registered Dentists
1959 OK 49 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1958 OK 215, 330 P.2d 366, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-state-ex-rel-board-of-governors-okla-1958.