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State ex Rel. Kennedy v. Lepon

Supreme Court of Indiana
Sep 17, 1941
219 Ind. 1 (Ind. 1941)

Opinion

No. 27,545.

Filed September 17, 1941.

1. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS — Dentistry — Authority to Practice — Statute — Construction. — The statute, which provides that any person shall be said to be practicing dentistry who advertises that he can or will attempt to perform dental operations of any kind or supplies artificial teeth as substitutes for natural teeth, does not require that the teeth be fitted nor does it forbid sale directly to the user. p. 3.

2. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS — Dentistry — Authority to Practice — Statute — Sale of Artificial Teeth Not a Dental Operation. — Sale of artificial teeth is not a dental operation, and their manufacture from inanimate impressions is permitted by the proviso to the statute which defines the practicing of dentistry. p. 3.

3. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS — Dentistry — Authority to Practice — Statute — Dental Supply House Not in Violation of Law. — Where defendant maintained a display room where customers selected plates, bridges, or artificial teeth desired from samples, the customer procuring an impression of the oral cavity from a licensed dentist, which impression with the customer's order was sent outside the state where the artificial teeth were manufactured, after which they were delivered by defendant to the customer, who paid both the defendant and the dentist, and defendant had no direct physical contact with the mouth of the customer, defendant was not practicing dentistry within any prohibition of the statute defining the practice of dentistry. p. 3.

From the Lake Superior Court; Charles E. Greenwald, Special Judge.

Action by the State of Indiana on the relation of Ross R. Kennedy and others, as members of the Indiana State Board of Dental Examiners, against Sam Lepon, doing business as the Federal Dental Laboratory, for an injunction restraining defendant from practicing dentistry without a license and advertising to supply artificial teeth directly to the public. From a judgment denying the injunction, plaintiff appealed.

Affirmed.

George N. Beamer, Attorney General, Thomas Longfellow, Deputy Attorney General, and J. Edwin Smith, of Gary, for appellants.

Abe S. Hyman, of Gary, for appellee.


Appellant, after hearing, was denied an injunction restraining appellee from practicing dentistry in Gary without a license and advertising to supply artificial teeth directly to the public.

Most of the facts were stipulated. Appellee maintains a display room where the customer selects from samples the kind of plates, bridges or artificial teeth desired. The customer procures an impression of the oral cavity from a licensed dentist. This impression with the customer's order is sent to Chicago where the artificial teeth are manufactured. They are delivered by appellee to the customer who pays both appellee and the dentist. Appellee has no direct physical contact with the mouth of the customer. The record is silent as to who fits the teeth if fitting is required. The advertising is in line with this practice.

The only question presented is whether upon the facts in evidence appellee's method of doing business and the advertising thereof were within the definition of the practice of dentistry contained in § 63-522, Burns' 1933, § 5607, Baldwin's 1934, the pertinent portions of which are:

"Any person shall be said to be practicing dentistry . . . who . . . advertises . . . that he can or will attempt to perform dental operations of any kind, . . . or supplies artificial teeth as substitutes for natural teeth . . . And, provided, further, That nothing in this act shall interfere with the performance of mechanical work on inanimate objects by any person employed in or operating a dental laboratory . . ."

Appellant concedes that an unlicensed laboratory may sell its product to a licensed dentist but asks us to read into the statute a prohibition against sale to the user, or, in 1. appellant's language, "directly to the public." Artificial teeth which do not fit may be detrimental to the health of the user. If the sale were to a licensed dentist he would be expected to make necessary adjustments after the laboratory had finished its work. But the statute does not require that the teeth be fitted nor does it forbid sale directly to the user. Such an amendment may be desirable but the remedy is with the Legislature.

Sale of artificial teeth is not a dental operation. Their manufacture from inanimate impressions is permitted by the proviso which would be ineffective if they could not be 2, 3. sold. Upon the facts in the record appellee is not within any prohibition of the statute.

The Illinois statute is dissimilar and the cited cases interpreting it are inapplicable.

The judgment is affirmed.

NOTE. — Reported in 36 N.E.2d 276.


Summaries of

State ex Rel. Kennedy v. Lepon

Supreme Court of Indiana
Sep 17, 1941
219 Ind. 1 (Ind. 1941)
Case details for

State ex Rel. Kennedy v. Lepon

Case Details

Full title:STATE EX REL. KENNEDY ET AL v. LEPON ETC

Court:Supreme Court of Indiana

Date published: Sep 17, 1941

Citations

219 Ind. 1 (Ind. 1941)
36 N.E.2d 276

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