State Ex Rel. Londerholm v. Doolin

497 P.2d 138, 209 Kan. 244, 1972 Kan. LEXIS 567
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 6, 1972
Docket46,218
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 497 P.2d 138 (State Ex Rel. Londerholm v. Doolin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Londerholm v. Doolin, 497 P.2d 138, 209 Kan. 244, 1972 Kan. LEXIS 567 (kan 1972).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Owsley, J.:

This is an action brought by the State of Kansas and the Board of Examiners in Optometry against Charles E. Doolin and Loren B. Shaw doing business as Doolin-Shaw Optical Dispensers and George S. Wallace, their employee, seeking a permanent injunction and ouster on account of defendants’ fitting contact lenses under direction of licensed physicians, which was alleged to be violative of the optometry law of the State of Kansas. The defendants prevailed and the plaintiffs appeal.

The petition in this case was filed on March 4, 1964, and alleged in substance that the defendants were violating the optometry law of the State of Kansas (K. S. A. 65-1501, et seq.) by the unlawful practice of optometry. The unlawful practice of optometry was said to consist of: (a) the examination and testing of the human eye with and without the use of drugs and medicine to ascertain the presence of defects or abnormal conditions which can be corrected by the use of lenses; (b) the adaptation and fitting of lenses to the human eye; and (c) the furnishing of optometrical services and the holding out by them of an office where optometrical services are furnished.

The petition charged defendants with being “common and public nuisances to the State of Kansas and the various vicinities and neighborhoods thereof” and sought a permanent injunction against the defendants from unlawfully engaging in the practice of optometry within the State of Kansas. Upon motion by defendants, the Board of Examiners in Optometry for the State of Kansas was held to be an indispensable party to the action and was thereafter added as an additional party plaintiff.

The defendants timely filed their answer denying the allegations of the petition and also filed a counterclaim in which the right and authority of the optometrists under the optometry law of Kansas to prescribe and fit contact lenses, without first obtaining a written prescription therefor from a duly licensed physician, was questioned.

On or about April 1, 1966, the Kansas Medical Society, upon proper motion, was allowed to intervene as a defendant in the case and to file pleadings. The Kansas Medical Society adopted by reference the answer and counterclaim of the defendants and further *246 charged that the prescription of contact lenses by optometrists was a violation of the Healing Arts Act of the State of Kansas. (K. S. A. 65-2801, et seq.)

Trial to the court commenced on October 2, 1967, and consumed eleven days terminating on October 17, 1967. Thereafter the parties submitted lengthy requests for findings of fact and conclusions of law. On August 15,1968, the court entered its memorandum opinion including 82 findings of fact and 35 conclusions of law. The court found generally for defendants and against plaintiffs on the main action and against the defendants and for the plaintiffs on the defendants’ counterclaim.

Although defendants perfected their cross-appeal, it has now been abandoned.

Generally, the development of the contact lens has proceeded from the use of glass to plastic, and has proceeded from a lens covering the entire sclera to one covering the cornea only. After the development of the corneal lens the diameter and the thickness of the lens were both reduced to make a much lighter, thinner lens which could be worn with comfort by the average contact lens patient. After the development of the microlens in 1954 the use of contact lenses quickly gained wide acceptance and use by the general public.

For many years optical dispensers were known as “opticians” and usually confined their activities to the grinding of lenses and the fitting of spectacles to the human eye upon prescription of a physician. In the latter part of the nineteenth century some of these dispensing opticians took upon themselves the additional responsibility and function of refracting human eyes to determine the amount of power correction needed by the patient. Until that time it had been assumed that the refraction of human eyes was exclusively a medical responsibility. Thus, opticians in the latter part of the nineteenth century were divided into “dispensing opticians” and “refracting opticians.”

As the “refracting opticians” extended their sphere of influence they successfully obtained legislation in various states recognizing their right to examine eyes for the purpose of determining refractive error. Around the turn of the century the “refracting opticians” took upon themselves the name of “optometrists” and in 1904 formed the American Optical Association. This in turn became the American Optometric Association in 1918.

*247 Meanwhile, the “dispensing opticians” continued their historic functions of grinding lenses and fitting spectacles to the eyes of patients referred to them by both medical doctors and “refracting opticians.” As the field of human eye care became more and more complex and thus more specialized, the dispensing opticians secured licensing legislation in several states in the early to middle part of the twentieth century. Kansas does not have a licensing statute regulating the practice of dispensing opticians.

As the optometry laws developed in the United States, it was generally recognized that dispensing opticians could, without license, maintain their historic function of grinding and dispensing lenses. This is evident in the optometry law passed in the State of Kansas in 1923 which allows the dispensing optician to dispense ophthalmic lenses upon the prescription of an optometrist or other person legally qualified to prescribe ophthalmic lenses. (K. S. A. 65-1504b.)

Defendants are unlicensed dispensing opticians and have been engaged in that business since 1947. Prior to that time both Mr. Doolin and Mr. Shaw had years of experience as opticians with the American Optical Company. In 1947 they established then- own optical dispensing company and have been in business continuously since that date.

In the year 1958 when contact lenses were first becoming popular in the State of Kansas, defendants were requested to commence the service of contact lens fitting by the ophthalmologists and medical doctors for whom they filled prescriptions. In preparation for this service each of the defendants attended a special contact lens fitting course given by Precision-Cosmet Company in Minneapolis, Minnesota. At this course defendants were taught the use of the keratometer and trial contact lenses. Upon their return they conferred and consulted with ophthalmologists practicing in Wichita, Kansas, determined the techniques and procedures which they should use in the fitting of contact lenses and adopted, at the suggestion of the ophthalmologists, certain wearing schedules and other procedures necessary to fit contact lenses completely and adequately.

Shortly after defendants’ entry into the business of fitting contact lenses the Kansas Optometric Association, in 1959, began an investigation of defendants to determine whether or not they were practicing optometry. The association authorized its attorneys (who are the present counsel for the plaintiffs) to take whatever steps were necessary to investigate these activities, and to bring suit against *248

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Bluebook (online)
497 P.2d 138, 209 Kan. 244, 1972 Kan. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-londerholm-v-doolin-kan-1972.