Duties of Council.—The council is required to make orders, regulations, or by-laws for regulating the register and fees for registration and for the guidance of the board of examiners, and may prescribe the subjects and modes of examination and the time and place of holding the same, and may make all such rules and regulations for examination not contrary to the act as they deem expedient and necessary (ib., s. 31).

Additional Qualification.—Every person registered who obtains a higher degree or other qualification is, on the payment of the fee, entitled to have it inscribed in the register in substitution for or in addition to the qualifications previously registered (ib., s. 32).

Powers of Registrar.—No qualification is to be entered on the register unless the registrar be satisfied by proper evidence that the person claiming it is entitled to it. Appeal from the decision of the registrar may be decided by the council; any entry proved to the satisfaction of the council to have been fraudulently or incorrectly made may be erased from the register by order of the council in writing (ib., s. 33 [1]).

If the registrar be dissatisfied with the evidence adduced by a person claiming to be registered, he has power, subject to appeal to the council, to refuse registration until such evidence is furnished, duly attested by oath or affidavit before a judge of the county court of any county (ib., s. 33 [2]).

Erasure and Restoration of Name.—A practitioner is liable to have his name erased from the register where he has been convicted before or after registration of an offence which, if committed in Canada, would be a felony or misdemeanor, or where he has been guilty of any infamous or disgraceful conduct in a professional respect (ib., s. 34 [1]).

The council may, and on the application of any four registered medical practitioners must, cause inquiry to be made into the case of a person alleged to be liable to have his name erased under this section, and on proof of such conviction or conduct shall cause his name to be erased from the register. The name of a person shall not be erased on account of his adopting or refraining from the practice of any particular theory of medicine or surgery; nor on account of a conviction for a political offence out of Her Majesty’s dominions, nor of conviction for an offence which ought not either from its trivial nature or its circumstances to disqualify a person from practising medicine or surgery (ib., s. 34 [2]).

The council may order to be paid out of any funds at their disposal such costs as they may deem just to any person against whom any complaint has been made, which, when finally determined, is found to have been frivolous and vexatious (ib., s. 34 [3]).

When the council direct the erasure of any name or entry, it shall not be again entered except by direction of the council or any of the divisions of the high court of justice (ib., s. 35 [1], as amended Act 1891, c. 26, s. 3).

If the council think fit, they may direct the registrar to restore any name or entry erased, without fee, or on payment of such fee not exceeding the regular fee as the council may fix (ib., s. 35 [2]).