145 A. 570 | Conn. | 1929
In 1926, § 2906 of the Chapter of the General Statutes dealing with the practice of dentistry provided that all unlicensed assistants who registered their names with the dental commissioners prior to October 1st, 1907, might continue to practice as assistants, provided they performed dental operations on patients in the office and in the immediate presence of a registered or licensed dentist and directly under *75 his supervision, but that the commissioners might cancel the registration of any person so practicing for any of the reasons set forth in § 2901. One of these reasons was a violation of any provision of the dentistry law. One of the provisions of that law forbade any person to engage in the practice of dentistry unless legally qualified or duly licensed by the commissioners to do so. General Statutes, § 2899. The appellant, as an unlicensed assistant, had registered his name with the dental commissioners prior to October 1st, 1907, and thereafter continued to practice dentistry under the terms of the statute. On June 10th, 1926, the commissioners cancelled his registration; he appealed to the Superior Court as authorized by the statute, and, the appeal being dismissed and the order of the commissioners being affirmed, he now has appealed to this court.
On January 27th, 1926, a private detective went to the office of a registered dentist where the appellant was located to get him to do some work for her. He did drill a tooth and sprayed it and directed her to return the next day for further treatment. This she did and then paid him $3 for his services. At the time he worked upon her tooth, no registered or licensed dentist was present and he acted without supervision by any such dentist. The appellant contends that this one item of work does not constitute the practice of dentistry so as to involve a violation of the statute. Under the definition given in State v.Faatz,
The appellant contends that the method of procuring the evidence upon the basis of which his registration was cancelled constituted an entrapment such that the proceedings ought to be dismissed. In order to present this claim more effectively he seeks some changes in the finding but none of these could be of any consequence, except that it does appear from the testimony of the detective herself that when she went to the office to secure the appellant to work upon her teeth she knew that the dentist in whose office he practiced was not there. The strongest case the appellant can make out is that knowing the appellant was alone in the office the detective went there to get him to do some work on her teeth and submitted herself to his ministrations, with a view to affording means for proceedings against him. Such conduct is not so repugnant to good morals and sound policy as to require the *77
dismissal of the proceedings based upon it; indeed, if it were not for similar conduct on the part of investigators employed by public authorities the conviction of persons notoriously guilty of offenses against the law would oftentimes be most difficult or impossible.Grimm v. United States,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.