Proceeding pursuant to article 78 of the Civil Practice Act to review a determination of the respondent, Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York. Petitioner’s license to practice medicine has been revoked by the Board of Regents which sustained and adopted findings of its Medical Grievance Committee. The essential portions of those findings are that the “ respondent had issued false and fraudulent medical bills and reports for patients referred to him by the attorney I. Frank Miller and had permitted the said attorney to use his stationery for the issuance of additional false and fraudulent medical bills and reports, all in furtherance of an understanding and agreement between them to that end and that the respondent was paid therefor”; and that “respondent knew that these false and fraudulent medical bills and reports would be used by the attorney for the purpose of enhancing the claims of said attorney’s clients for compensation arising out of injuries for which respondent allegedly had rendered treatment, and that these false and fraudulent bills and reports would be submitted to insurance companies for that purpose.” We are of opinion that these findings are supported by substantial evidence. In the case of one Leonard, two entirely disparate bills and medical reports were issued on petitioner’s stationery, one report being in petitioner’s handwriting and the other .over his signature. Although each refers to a different date of accident, the periods of injury and diagnosis overlap. For an accident given as February 4, 1954, petitioner wrote a statement of diagnosis on April 30, 1954, describing contusions of the right arm and right shoulder, a rupture of the acromioclavicular ligaments of the shoulder with acromioclavicular separation, and he signed a bill dated May 31, 1954 for $162. But he also signed a report dated February 27, 1954 (i.e., between the date of the February 4, 1954 accident and the
