Opternative v. South Carolina Optometric Physicians Association

CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 21, 2026
Docket2024-001321
StatusPublished

This text of Opternative v. South Carolina Optometric Physicians Association (Opternative v. South Carolina Optometric Physicians Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opternative v. South Carolina Optometric Physicians Association, (S.C. 2026).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Supreme Court

Opternative, Inc., Appellant,

v.

South Carolina Board of Medical Examiners and the South Carolina Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation, Respondents,

and

South Carolina Optometric Physicians Association, Respondent-Intervenor.

Appellate Case No. 2024-001321

Appeal from Richland County Kristi F. Curtis, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 28310 Heard June 3, 2025 – Filed January 21, 2026

AFFIRMED

Joshua A. Windham and Robert J. McNamara, of the Institute for Justice, of Arlington, VA; Miles Edward Coleman, of Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, LLP, of Greenville, all for Appellant Opternative, Inc.

Kirby Darr Shealy III, of Adams and Reese LLP, of Columbia, for Respondent-Intervenor South Carolina Optometric Physicians Association; Eugene Hamilton Matthews, of Richardson Plowden & Robinson, PA, of Columbia, for Respondents South Carolina Board of Medical Examiners and South Carolina Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation.

JUSTICE FEW: In this direct appeal from the circuit court, Opternative, Inc. challenges the Eye Care Consumer Protection Law—sections 40-24-10 and 40-24- 20 of the South Carolina Code (Supp. 2025)—as violative of equal protection and due process under article I, section 3 of the South Carolina Constitution. The Act prohibits eye doctors from prescribing "spectacles" or "contact lenses"—both defined terms—based solely on information generated by automated equipment designed to measure refractive error. §§ 40-24-10 to -20.

The specific language at issue is, "A person in this State may not dispense spectacles or contact lenses to a patient without a valid prescription from a provider," § 40-24- 20(A), and "A prescription for spectacles or contact lenses may not be based solely on the refractive eye error of the human eye or be generated by a kiosk," § 40-24- 20(C). The term "Kiosk" is defined as "automated equipment or an automated application, which is designed to be used on a phone, computer, or Internet-based device that can be used in person or remotely to provide refractive data or information." § 40-24-10(4).

Opternative is a telehealth company that developed automated software which allows individuals to use a computer or smartphone to determine the refractive error of their eyesight without the need for an in-person visit to an optometrist or ophthalmologist. Opternative concedes the deferential rational basis test applies to its constitutional challenges, but it argues the Act fails to rationally further any goal beyond mere economic protectionism. We disagree and affirm the circuit court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants.

I. Facts and Procedural History

Opternative is a Chicago-based company that developed an eye test by which people can use a computer or smartphone to determine the refractive error of their eyesight. Opternative's test is FDA approved, and it currently offers its technology in thirty- five states. Opternative provided its test in South Carolina from 2014 until 2016, when the Eye Care Consumer Protection Law went into effect. Opternative's test is free for users to complete. Users must be between the ages of eighteen and fifty-five and have previously received a lens prescription to be able to take the test.

When users visit Opternative's website and want to take the test, they must first fill out a medical history form, which includes information about their previously received lens prescription. Opternative's website provides a disclaimer: "The [test] does not perform or replace a comprehensive eye examination, nor does it assess eye health. Consult an eye care professional for a comprehensive eye examination yearly or any time you are experiencing pain or discomfort. This test is not intended to diagnose, treat, mitigate, or cure disease."

Users complete the test by standing ten feet away from a computer screen and using their voice or cell phone to answer the questions provided by the vision test. The test is similar to what a user would experience taking an eye exam using an eye chart.

Once a user completes the test, he or she can pay $35 to send the results to a licensed optometrist or ophthalmologist in the user's state for review. The eye doctors can see the results of the Opternative test through software provided by a third-party company—Optimized Eye Care—which partners with Opternative and contracts with optometrists and ophthalmologists. When an optometrist or ophthalmologist receives a user's information, they can either decide to write a lens prescription for the user or decide it is not medically appropriate to write a prescription. Opternative's partnering eye doctors do not use Opternative to diagnose customers' underlying health conditions or symptoms (other than visual acuity) or to perform a contact lens fitting. If the eye doctor decides it is appropriate to write a prescription, the customer will typically receive that prescription through Opternative's website within twenty-four hours.

Opternative contracts with various online contact lens retailers, who link to Opternative's test on their websites to allow the users to easily access the test, receive a prescription, and buy contacts from the online retailers. Opternative also wholly owns an online contact lens retailer—Next Day Contacts, LLC—which links to Opternative's online test.

On May 11, 2016, the South Carolina General Assembly ratified the Eye Care Consumer Protection Law. Act No. 173, 2016 S.C. Acts 1372. The Act provides: (A) A person in this State may not dispense spectacles or contact lenses to a patient without a valid prescription from a provider.

(B) To be valid, a prescription must contain an expiration date on spectacles or contact lenses of one year from the date of examination by the provider or a statement of the reasons why a shorter time is appropriate based on the medical needs of the patient. The prescription must take into consideration medical findings made and refractive error discovered during the eye examination. . . .

§ 40-24-20 (A-B). The Act also provides that "[a] prescription for spectacles or contact lenses may not be based solely on the refractive eye error of the human eye or be generated by a kiosk." § 40-24-20(C). The Act defines a "Kiosk" as "automated equipment or an automated application, which is designed to be used on a phone, computer, or Internet-based device that can be used in person or remotely to provide refractive data or information." § 40-24-10(4).

The South Carolina Optometric Physicians Association (SCOPA)—an association of optometrists practicing in South Carolina—lobbied for the General Assembly to pass the bill. Governor Nikki Haley vetoed the bill after it was ratified because she believed "it uses health practice mandates to stifle competition for the benefit of a single industry." S.C. State Library (Digital Collections), Veto of S.1016, https://tinyurl.com/a7w4kfdy (last visited Jan. 5, 2025). On May 19, 2016, the General Assembly overrode Governor Haley's veto by a vote of 98 to 1 in the House and 39 to 3 in the Senate. After the Act went into effect, Opternative stopped providing its service in South Carolina because "South Carolina eye doctors were no longer willing to use [Opternative's] online vision test to collect information from patients remotely and to prescribe corrective lenses for patients based on that information."1

On October 20, 2016, Opternative sued the South Carolina Board of Medical Examiners and the South Carolina Department of Labor, Licensing, and Regulation,

1 The Act prohibits eye doctors from writing lens prescriptions based solely on automated equipment. § 40-24-20(C).

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Opternative v. South Carolina Optometric Physicians Association, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opternative-v-south-carolina-optometric-physicians-association-sc-2026.