The plaintiff, a duly registered optometrist practising in Spencer, brought this bill “for his own benefit, for the benefit of other optometrists, and for the benefit of the public,” to restrain the defendants, a firm of opticians in Worcester not physicians nor registered optometrists, from practising optometry in competition with the plaintiff and other optometrists without being registered under the statute. Another duly registered optometrist practising in Worcester was admitted as an intervening party plaintiff. The case was reported to us on agreed facts, without decision.
No question is made of the right of the plaintiff and the intervener to relief if the defendants are practising optometry illegally. Steinberg v. McKay,
The defendants offer for public sale eyeglasses, including, frames and lenses, designed to correct defective vision, upon prescription by physicians and optometrists duly registered as practitioners in this Commonwealth. But almost all the prescriptions actually filled are those issued by a physician employed at a weekly salary by the defendants in their place 6 of business. A customer who desires eyeglasses is taken to the physician, who examines the eyes and prescribes eyeglasses if needed. Other employees of the defendants assist the customer in selecting the shape and style of frames desired, grind and fit the lenses in accordance with the prescription of the physician, and then adjust the finished eyeglasses to the eyes of the customer. We conclude that the physician is the servant of the defendants (Stuart v. Sargent,
The defendants contend that they are not practising optometry illegally, although they are not registered optometrists and yet reap all the financial reward of a practice conducted by their servant who is a physician and as such entitled to practise optometry without registration.
The statute (G. L. [¡Ter. Ed.J c. 112, §§ 66-73, as amended by St. 1934, c. 339, § 2) defines the practice of optometry as "the employment of any method or means, other than the use of drugs, for the diagnosis of any optical defect, deficiency or deformity of the human eye, or visual or muscular anomaly of the visual system, or the adaptation or prescribing of lenses, prisms or ocular exercises for the correction, relief or aid of the visual functions.” § 66. Before being registered as an optometrist, a person must possess certain educational qualifications and must pass an examination. § 68. “Whoever, not being lawfully authorized to practice optometry, practices optometry, or holds himself out as a practitioner of, or as being able to practice, optometry, ... or violates any other provision of” §§ 66-73, inclusive, “or any rule or regulation made under authority thereof,” is punishable criminally. § 72A. The restrictions of the statute “shall not apply to physicians and surgeons lawfully entitled to practice medicine in the commonwealth,” nor to persons who merely fill prescrip-' tians, or sell eyeglasses as merchandise from permanently located and established places of business without the purpose of correcting defective vision. § 73. Two other exceptions are mentioned later in this opinion. See also St. 1937, c. 287, which takes effect on January 1, 1938.
The Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution and arts. 1, 10, and 12 of the Declaration of Rights of the Constitution of this Commonwealth, protect every person in the enjoyment of his liberty and property. Within those
The requirement of license or permit before engaging in practice has been held constitutional as to physicians (Lawrence v. Board of Registration in Medicine,
Sometimes a statute has purported to require on the part of the proprietor of a business a license attesting skill in acts which he does not perform, but causes to be performed on his behalf by a duly qualified and licensed servant. In Louis K. Liggett Co. v. Baldridge,
A different rule has been applied to the learned professions. These are characterized by the need of unusual learning, the existence of confidential relations, the adherence to a standard of ethics higher than that of the market place, and in a profession like that of medicine by intimate and delicate personal ministration. Traditionally, the learned professions were theology, law and medicine; but some other occupations have climbed, and still others may climb, to the professional plane. United States v. Laws,
The rule is generally recognized that a licensed practitioner of a profession may not lawfully practise his profession among the public as the servant of an unlicensed person or a corporation; and that, if he does so, the unlicensed person or corporation employing him is guilty of practising that profession without a license. A corporation as such cannot possess the personal qualities required of a practitioner of a profession. Its servants, though professionally trained and duly licensed to practise, owe their primary allegiance and obedience to their employer rather than to the clients or patients of their employer. The rule stated recognizes the necessity of immediate and unbroken relationship between a professional man and those who engage his services. It was applied recently in this Commonwealth in the case of lawyers. The judicial branch of government to which is entrusted the regulation of practice by attorneys at law, has never relaxed the rule. Opinion of the Justices,
As to optometrists, there seems to be a conflict of authority. Undoubtedly the fitting and sale of eyeglasses began as a trade and not as a profession. There is some support in decided caces for the proposition that it must
The considerations to the contrary seem to us more weighty. In recent times abnormalities of the eye, like those of the teeth, have been found sometimes to indicate and often to result in serious impairment of the general health. The work of an optometrist approaches, though it may not quite reach, ophthalmology. The learning and the ethical standards required for that work, and the trust and confidence reposed in optometrists by those who employ them, cannot be dismissed as negligible or as not transcending the requirements of an ordinary trade. We cannot pronounce arbitrary or irrational the placing of optometry on a professional basis. This conclusion finds support in.other jurisdictions. State v. Goldman Jewelry Co.
Although the statute does not show an uncompromising determination to apply purely professional standards to optometrists, we think that they are in effect placed on a professional plane. A certificate of registration may be revoked for “unprofessional conduct” (§ 71), although the statute speaks of an “optometric practice or business.” The general principle is recognized that there should be direct professional relations between an optometrist and the members of the public who engage his services. Section 72 declares that “No optometric practice or business
On the agreed facts there must be a decree restraining the defendants from practising optometry, either personally or by any servant or employee, unless and until they shall become lawfully entitled to do so, and in that event from practising optometry, either personally or by any servant or employee, except as they may be lawfully entitled to do so; with costs against them.
Ordered accordingly.
