35 Del. Ch. 507 | New York Court of Chancery | 1956
Plaintiffs seek a permanent injunction against those activities of defendants which have to do with the fitting of contact lenses to the human eye. They contend that defendants are practicing
It is implicit in plaintiffs’ case that it is impossible for an optician legally to fit a customer with contact lenses even when the formal prescription for such glasses is furnished by a doctor of medicine who thereafter maintains indirect supervision of the actual fitting. According to the evidence introduced by plaintiffs, an optician must not only examine the eye and determine its refractive powers and anomalies but must otherwise deal directly with the human eye in ways permitted only to doctors of medicine and optometrists in order to fashion
At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ case, defendants moved to dismiss and because defendants’ motions questioned this Court’s jurisdiction to grant injunctive relief on the basis of the facts adduced in plaintiffs’ case, trial was suspended pending disposal of the motions under Rule 41(b), Rules of Court of Chancery, Del.C.Ann.
Sec. 2119 of Chapter 21, Title 24, Del.C. provides that the Attorney General shall prosecute for violations of provisions of the chapter and that any person found guilty shall pay a fine of not less than $100 nor more than $500. In default of payment of fine an offender may be imprisoned not less than one year. Defendants contend that if they have in fact violated any of the statutory provisions regulating the practice of optometry, plaintiffs have the right to demand that defendants be prosecuted and that this method of bringing defendants to account for their alleged offenses (a method which plaintiffs have not invoked) constitutes an
Plaintiffs in reply cite cases from a number of states including Pennsylvania, Ohio and South Carolina in support of the view that even where criminal sanctions are available the public and the licensed optometrist are entitled to be protected by injunction against the activities of those practicing optometry without a license. In certain of these
It is established in Delaware that whether or not a nuisance is technically a crime, this Court may
While there is evidence that plaintiffs’ investigator,
There is no doubt but that optometry has a status which clearly distinguishes it from the trade of an optician. In order to be licensed in Delaware an optometrist must have graduated from a school or college approved by the State Board of Examiners in Optometry. Before being admitted to practice by the State Board, Sec. 2108 of Chapter 21, Title 24, Del.C., an optometrist must also pass examinations in various aspects of optics, optometry and orthoptics as well as general and ocular anatomy, physiology, pathology and hygiene. A would be optician on the other hand is not examined or licensed by a board, and there appears to be no official prerequisite to setting oneself up as an optician other than that of paying for a business license. It is obvious, however, that defendants and opticians generally, although they lack the schooling of optometrists, must undergo training
Despite modern statutory rcognition of the fact that optometrists perform an important service and bear a heavy public responsibility, plaintiffs’ right, if any, to the equitable relief sought, must necessarily be derived from the chapter of the Delaware Code regulating optometry. While the privileges and duties of the clergyman, the doctor, and the lawyer have their roots deep in history, those of optometrists are purely statutory, Dvorine v. Castelberg Jewelry Corp., 170 Md. 661, 185 A. 562, Georgia State Board, etc. v. Friedman’s Jewelers, 183 Ga. 669, 189 S.E. 238. Whatever may be decided in Delaware as to the common law property right of those in the so-called
While the optometry law sets high standards of professional conduct in addition to fixing rigid requirements for admission to practice including a six months internship, it is the State Board of Examiners, § 2102 (a) which “* * * shall carry out and enforce the provisions * * *” of Chapter 21. There is no language in the chapter which can be construed as conferring enforcement powers on an individual licensed optometrist or on a corporation formed to protect the interests of licensed optometrists. Prior to the passage of the various laws regulating the practice of optometry, which are now codified in Chapter 21, the field was open to anyone wishing to take
As noted earlier in this opinion, Title 24 of Del.C. regulates seventeen professions and occupations. Thirteen of these
On the basis of the facts adduced by plaintiffs, defendants’ motion to dismiss must be granted. The purpose of the Delaware Optometry Law is to afford protection for the public and no showing has been made that defendants’ activities in fitting contact lenses in any way constitute a public nuisance. In view of this holding, defendants’ other defenses of unclean hands, the nature of the injury or damage suffered by plaintiffs, the alleged control of defendants’ activities by physicians, absence of an indispensable party in the case against the defendant, Kuhwald, and whether a prima facie case of statutory violation has been established against such defendant, need not be considered.
Order on notice.
. The individual plaintiffs are optometrists and the purpose of the corporate plaintiff is to promote the interests of its member optometrists. Defendants are opticians who purport merely to fill the prescriptions of opthalmologists. These three callings have been recently defined as follows: “An opthalmologist is a duly licensed physician who specializes in the care of the eyes. An optometrist examines eyes for refractive error, recognizes (but does not treat) diseases of the eye, and fills prescriptions for eyeglasses. The optician is an artisan qualified to grind lenses, fill prescriptions, and fit frames.” Williamson v. Lee Optical Co., 348 US. 483, 75 S.Ct. 461, 463, 99 L.Ed. 563.
. Title 24 is entitled "Professions and Occupations” and consists of 17 chapters regulating that number of callings.
. Sec. 2101(a) (3) includes in the definition- of acts of optometry: “The prescribing and application of * * * contact lenses * * * ”.
. Sec 342 of Title 10 Del.C. provides: “the Court of Chancery shall not have jurisdiction to determine any matter wherein sufficient remedy may be had by common law, or statute, before any other court or jurisdiction of this State.”
. In cases where injunctive relief has been granted to plaintiff-optometrists there is often a blurring of the actual basis for the relief granted, the courts speaking not only of a professional property right, but also of the element of public nuisance in the commercialized practice of optometry by department stores and other business corporations, Neill v. Chaby, 86 Pa.Dist. & Co.R. 457. In Pennsylvania, the nuisance element has been stressed in suits by members of a variety of professions, Boggs v. Werner, 372 Pa. 312, 94 A.2d 50.
. Conversely equity should not interfere by injunction with the enforcement of criminal laws, Economy Cleaners, Inc. v. Green, 21 Del.Ch. 170, 184 A. 225. There is no criminal action pending against defendants under Chapter 21 nor have plaintiffs sought to have such instituted.....;> : .
. Mrs. DeLellis, an employee of the Brandywine Investigative Agency, was hired to undergo contact lens fittings in order to develop proof in support of plaintiffs’ case. Defendants were unaware of each other’s simultaneous activities in regards to Mrs. DeLellis.
. The only Delaware cases which consider the subject of unfair competition have to do with trade marks, trade names and the Pair Trade Law, Chapter 19, Title 6, Del.C. There is no evidence that defendants profess to be licensed optometrists.
. Lawyers are generally considered to be entitled to injunctive relief against unauthorized practice of law, however, in the case of Wollitzer v. National Title Guaranty Co., 148 Misc. 529, 266 N.Y.S. 184, affirmed 241 App. Div. 757, 270 N.Y.S. 978, it was held that attorneys in the absence of a showing of special injury or damage have no common law right to ask that illegal practice be enjoined. Apparently by statute alternative remedies including injunctive relief after request of the Attorney General are now available to lawyers against unauthorized practice. In re New York County Lawyers Ass’n, 273 App. Div. 524, 78N.Y.S.2d 209, 9 A.L.R.2d 787.
. The other four are concerned with the mere licensing of the following occupations: Deadly Weapons Dealers, Detective (Private), Hotels, Restaurants, and Places of Entertainment, and Pawnbrokers and Junk Dealers.