State v. Barhorst

153 N.E.2d 514, 106 Ohio App. 335, 78 Ohio Law. Abs. 519
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 13, 1958
Docket5815
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 153 N.E.2d 514 (State v. Barhorst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Barhorst, 153 N.E.2d 514, 106 Ohio App. 335, 78 Ohio Law. Abs. 519 (Ohio Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

*520 OPINION

By BRYANT, J.

Philipp H. Barhorst, defendant-appellant herein, was tried and found guilty of practicing optometry without a license contrary to §4725:92 fit. C. The Judge of Columbus Municipal Court before whom the case was heard after Barhorst’s conviction, imposed a fine of $200 and costs. Barhorst has appealed on questions of law.

The affidavit in part charges that “* * * Phillipp H, Barharst on or about the 5 day of June, A. D. 1957, at the City of City of Columbus, County of Franklin, and State of Ohio, did unlawfully engage in the practice of optometry; or held himself out as a practitioner of optometry without having a license lawfully issued by the State Board of Optometry contrary to statute, etc.”

We note in passing that the rule against pleading in the alternative was not observed in this case and that the affidavit actually charges two violations in the alternative. The better practice is to use two affidavits or separately state and number two offenses in a single affidavit, in cases where it is necessary or proper to charge two offenses. However, our attention has not been called to a specific objection on this ground and it would appear that such objection is waived.

The prosecution appears to have proceeded on the theory that at least they had charged Barhorst with engaging in the practice of optometry without a license.

It was admitted by all concerned that Barhorst fully qualified under the law as first enacted in 1919 and that xxp until the year 1932 he was at all times in good standing. The prosecution claimed and attempted to prove that events occurring in 1932 and 1933 resulted in an irrevocable loss of license by Barhorst and that thereafter he could do nothing whatsoever to get himself in good standing!

Barhorst on the other hand took sharp issue with the claims of the prosecution. Failure to pay the annual renewal fee, originally $2 per year, later raised to $5 per year and still later to $10 a year, is the only transgression charged against Barhorst.

It was the prosecution’s theory that this amount was due and payable on January 1 of each year including 1932, that Barhorst had not paid it on April 25, 1932, on which date it apparently was the claim of the prosecution that some sort of notice was sent to Barhorst informing him for the first time of his delinquency and, without further ceremony, informing him his license was revoked and giving him sixty days in which to apply for and obtain a restoration of his license. A review of the applicable statutes is necessary.

In the first place. Section 10 of the original act (108 Ohio Laws, Part I, P. 73 at P. 77) provided that failure to pay a renewal registration fee might be made the grounds for revoking a certificate, but forbade such revocation until the giving of a sixty day notice. This section provided in part as follows:

*521 "In case of neglect to pay the renewal registration fee herein specified, the board may revoke such certificate and the holder thereof may be re-instated by complying with the conditions specified in this act. But no certificate or permit shall be revoked without giving sixty days’ notice to the delinquent, who, within such period shall have the right of renewal of stich certificate on payment of the renewal fee with a penalty of five dollars provided that retirement from practice for a period not exceeding five years shall not deprive the holder of said certificate of the right to renew his certificate on the payment of all lapsed fees.”

This section was amended in 110 Ohio Laws, P. 20, but the language above quoted was unchanged and remained so until 1949. Hence, it was that the exhibit offered by the prosecution, being an unsigned carbon copy of a letter purportedly signed by the then secretary of the Board of Optometry to Barhorst, informing him that his license was revoked and giving him sixty days in which to take steps to reinstate it or be forever barred from the practice of optometry, violated the law as then in force. Sec. 1295-24 GC, being the fourth section of the original act and as amended in 110 Ohio Laws, P. 20, contained this language:

“* * * provided, however, that it shall require the concurrence of a majority of the members of the Board to grant or to revoke a license.” Inasmuch as the Board was composed of five members, the section' above referred to required at least three members present to constitute a quorum and further required the vote of at least three members to revoke a license. There is no showing anywhere either that the Board met and considered the matter or that a quorum was present or that three members voted to revoke Barhorst’s license. This, of course, is a fatal defect in the record.

Furthermore, §1295-31 GC, originally enacted in 1919, amended in 1923 and again in 112 Ohio Laws 227, made a specific provision that in case any charges of any sort were preferred against the holder of a certificate that the defendant should be furnished with a copy of the complaint and have a hearing before the Board with legal counsel present, if desired, and the right to confront and cross-examine witnesses against him and produce witnesses on his own behalf. Said §1295-31 GC, provides in part as follows:

“Any person who is the holder of a certificate of licensure * * * against whom is preferred any charges, shall be furnished by the board with a copy of the complaint and shall have a hearing before the board, at which hearing he may be represented by counsel. At such hearing witnesses may be examined for and against the accused respecting the said charges, which examination shall be conducted in the manner usually followed in the taking of testimony before commissions in this state.”

Furthermore, section seven of the original act, being §1295-27 GC, remained in the form in which originally enacted until 1949.

That same provision in almost identical language remains in the law today and is found in §4725.07 R. C. Hence, it is that there was a complete failure of evidence to show there was a notice and a sixty *522 day waiting period given to Barhorst or that thereafter proceedings were begun against him before the Board with a quorum present, a copy furnished him, a hearing conducted and a finding of guilty and a revocation by the Board. On the contrary, for all that appears in the record to inform us as to what took place, there was no notice, no waiting period, no charge preferred or a hearing had, or evidence received or a determination of guilt, but simply a notice that his .certificate of licensure was revoked. • But that is not all.

Barhorst claims he attempted to pay each annual renewal fee as it was due that the' Board of Optometry failed and still fails to comply with the law by maintaining an office in Columbus, where the permanent records of the Board are open during business hours for public inspection, and that he only gave up tendering payments after tracking down the secretary in various cities in Ohio and having his money returned to him accompanied by a statement that it was too late, that his license was revoked and that nothing could be done about it.

We have examined the Bill of Exceptions in this case with care.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 N.E.2d 514, 106 Ohio App. 335, 78 Ohio Law. Abs. 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-barhorst-ohioctapp-1958.