By this action for declaratory and injunctive relief, the Attorney General presents the question whether a licensed dispensing optician may continue to fit contact lenses to the human eye. Like the trial judge, we hold that until the Legislature speaks further the practice is not illegal. The action should not have been dismissed, however; we order a new judgment declaring the rights of the parties.
The Attorney General brought the action in the Superior Court in 1970. Demurrers were overruled in 1971, and the case was tried in December, 1974, on a stipulation of facts, oral testimony and exhibits. The judge filed a document entitled “Findings, Rulings, and Decree,” and judgment was entered dismissing the action. The defendants appealed from the interlocutory decree overruling their demurrers, the plaintiff appealed from the judgment, and the appeals were consolidated. We allowed the plaintiff’s application for direct appellate review.
We summarize the judge’s findings. The individual defendant, a registered dispensing optician, is president and sole stockholder of the corporate defendant, which is in the business of dispensing optician. As part of their *414 work they fit contact lenses to the human eye. Contact lenses have been used throughout the United States since well before 1950. The individual defendant has been an optician since 1955; since 1959 he has fitted contact lenses to at least 8,000 people, with no complaint of injury. There is no indication that the health, safety or welfare of the residents of Massachusetts has been in any way endangered by any activity of the defendants. Customarily, a person who wants contact lenses in Massachusetts is examined by an ophthalmologist or an optometrist and a prescription is secured. The ophthalmologist rarely fits the contact lenses. Fittings may be made by the optometrist, or either the ophthalmologist or the optometrist may send the person with a prescription to an optician for fitting. Optometrists feel that they are better qualified than opticians to fit contact lenses to the human eye. Forty-eight ophthalmologists in the Boston-Lynn area have referred patients to the individual defendant for such fitting, as have the Boston University Medical Center Eye Clinic, the Boston City Hospital Eye Clinic, and the Harvard University Health Services.
The judge ruled that the public in Massachusetts has the choice of having a prescription for contact lenses filled by an optician, and that nothing in the applicable statutes prevents duly licensed dispensing opticians in Massachusetts from fitting contact lenses to the human eye on written prescription.
1. Parties. The defendants argue that the action should have been dismissed because the Attorney General failed to join all registered opticians as defendants. He sought a declaration that the fitting of contact lenses to the human eye by “all” persons other than licensed optometrists, physicians and surgeons is illegal. Hence, the defendants argue, all opticians have an interest “which would be affected by the declaration,” and G. L. c. 231A, § 8, requires that all persons who have such an interest be made parties.
*415
The action was not brought as a class action under Mass. R. Civ. P. 23,
2.
Equity jurisdiction.
The defendants argue that the action should have been dismissed because the Attorney General sought an injunction against conduct subject to criminal sanctions. Cf".
Revere
v.
Aucella, ante,
138, 146-147 (1975);
Commonwealth
v.
Stratton Fin. Co.,
3.
Opticians v. optometrists.
The basic legal issue in this case has been a matter of public record for more than fifteen years, during which the governing statutes have remained substantially the same. In
Massachusetts Soc’y of Optometrists
v.
Waddick,
The governing statutes provide separately for licensing optometrists, G. L. c. 112, §§ 66-73B, and for licensing dispensing opticians, G. L. c. 112, §§ 73C-73L. The practice of optometry is defined to include “the adaptation or prescribing of lenses . . . for the correction, relief or aid of the visual functions.” § 66. There is no *417 separate reference to “contact lenses.” No person is to practice optometry until he is registered as an optometrist. § 68. But the statutes on registration of optometrists do not apply “to persons who neither practice nor profess to practice optometry, but who sell . . . lenses, either on prescription from such physicians or surgeons, or from optometrists authorized to practice in the commonwealth.” § 73. We have read this provision as exempting from the optometry statutes “opticians engaged in rendering their services.” Kelley v. Board of Registration in Optometry, supra at 188.
“A dispensing optician ... is a person who prepares and dispenses lenses ... to the intended wearer thereof on written prescriptions from a duly registered physician or optometrist, and, in accordance with such prescriptions, interprets, measures, adapts, fits and adjusts such lenses ... to the human face for the aid or correction of visual or ocular anomalies of the human eyes.” § 73C. We think that if “lenses” in § 66 include contact lenses then “lenses” in § 73G equally include contact lenses. We further think that “the human face” in § 73C includes the human eye, just as we think it includes the human nose and human ears. We recognize that the statutes are not entirely free from ambiguity in these respects, but we think that if the Legislature wishes to treat contact lenses as something other than lenses or to distinguish the eyes from the face it must say so more clearly. Accord,
Florida Ass’n of Dispensing Opticians
v.
Florida State Bd. of Optometry,
*418
1008 (1975) (opticians not licensed);
Commonwealth ex rel. Kentucky Bd. of Optometric Examiners
v.
Economy Optical Co.,
4.
Disposition.
When an action for declaratory relief is properly brought and relief is denied on the merits, the action should not be dismissed.
Haverhill Manor, Inc.
v.
Comrñissioner of Pub. Welfare,
So ordered.
