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[DOWNLOAD] "Menning v. Dept. of Registration" by Supreme Court of Illinois * eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free

Menning v. Dept. of Registration

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eBook details

  • Title: Menning v. Dept. of Registration
  • Author : Supreme Court of Illinois
  • Release Date : January 18, 1958
  • Genre: Law,Books,Professional & Technical,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 70 KB

Description

Appellant, Carl Menning, appeals from a judgment of the superior court of Cook County which affirmed an order of the Director
of the Department of Registration and Education that his license to practice dentistry in this State be revoked for unprofessional
conduct. We have jurisdiction on direct appeal by virtue of section 7-h of the Dental Practice Act. Ill. Rev. Stat. 1957,
chap. 91, par. 62h. Facts appearing in appellant's testimony in the cause reveal that he was licensed to practice dentistry in 1927, that he
has resided continuously at the same Chicago address since being licensed, and that he devoted full time to the general practice
of dentistry in that city or its suburbs until interrupted by a serious illness in 1950 and 1951. Following his illness he
resumed practice on a part-time basis, his physician having advised against long hours, and, early in 1952, he located at
2936 South Cicero Avenue, some four miles from his last previous location. He made no announcement of his new location to
patients or in professional journals, his explanation being that he did not do so because his physical condition permitted
only a limited practice. His office at the Cicero Avenue address was situated on the ground floor and he shared the location
with James E. Cantwell who there operated a dental laboratory. As the premises were entered from the street there was a waiting
room and a separate rear room in which was located the usual work benches and equipment of a dental laboratory. The waiting
room itself was divided further by a partition which separated it from a small dental office which was equipped with a chair
unit and a sterilizing cabinet. Appellant, who related that he had sought out the location, rented both the dental office
space and the equipment from Cantwell under an oral lease and it was his testimony that his rental depended upon the amount
of business he would do and what he could afford, that it was never figured on a percentage basis, and that Cantwell was usually
satisfied with payments of $25 to $30 a month. He continued to practice at this location, working only a few hours daily,
until a date, apparently in March, 1954, when a man named Mendel took over the operation of the dental laboratory from Cantwell.


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