[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 784 Reversing.
The State Board of Health revoked the license of Harry G. Beiling to practice optometry upon the ground that he had aided and abetted a person not holding such a license to practice that profession. Sections 2615, 2018a-6, 2618a-9, now KRS
The facts are not in dispute. Beiling was employed by the Kay Jewelry Company, a corporation, whose charter does not, as it could not, authorize it to practice optometry. He has been paid a specified salary and bonus. He had the exclusive control of this department of the company's business and his professional judgments and acts were not interfered with. He made examinations and tests of patients and prescribed lenses as needed, which were manufactured by another company for the Kay Jewelry Company. Beiling fitted the glasses which were sold for the company. All fees and charges, whether any merchandise was sold or not, have been paid directly to the company which keeps the records and accounts. It advertises this department of business as "Our modern Optical Department," sometimes naming its employed optometrist and sometimes not. It gives a credit of $1 to each patient or customer who brings in $10 of additional business to this department. Its charges include fees for Dr. Beiling's professional services. This practice and the relationship is regarded by the State Board of Health as within the statute, now KRS
The authority of the court as well as the propriety of the procedure is questioned. When the Board of Health had notified Beiling to appear for a hearing of *Page 785 the charges that he had violated this provision of the Statutes, he filed a petition praying for a declaration of rights in the premises and appropriate injunctive protection. The court overruled special and general demurrers to the petition and the Board of Health filed an answer. The special demurrer challenged the jurisdiction of the court upon the ground that the Statutes place the power to determine such cases in the Board of Health initially and the Governor on appeal. The answer denied allegations of a prevailing custom, recognized by the Board as being legitimate, and traversed certain charges and legal conclusions. It averred that the defendant had received his license as an optometrist after the effective date of the statute invoked, namely, in 1938; described his relationship to his employer, and alleged the intention and legal interpretation of the statute in respect thereof. The Board of Examiners in Optometry followed the answer of the Board of Health and by a cross petition called upon that body to enforce the optometry law.
After the court had heard evidence, he ruled that the case was not a proper one for a declaratory judgment, since the plaintiff was seeking to have the court lay down "a code of conduct." The court recognized that the statute contemplates hearing and decision by the Board of Health and appeal to the Governor; also that the right to resort to the courts by any aggrieved party thereafter is inherent in the law, although the statute is silent in respect thereof. Being reluctant to interfere prior to completion of the administrative action, the court referred the record to the Board of Health for determination of the facts and decision. A temporary injunction issued restraining any final act of revocation of the plaintiff's license pending a disposition of the case. Jurisdiction was reserved for further consideration if the plaintiff should be dissatisfied with the decision of the Board and of the Governor.
Dr. Beiling appeared with counsel before the Board, and though it was agreed that other testimony could be offered, only the record made in the court was presented. Upon that record the Board ordered the license revoked. When the Governor had affirmed the decision he sent the record to the circuit court. The court again considered the case after a hearing and rendered the judgment stated.
The appellants argue that the court was without jurisdiction, *Page 786 first, because the legislature has conferred the exclusive power to revoke licenses of medical practitioners, including optometrists, upon the State Board of Health, and confined the right of appeal to the Governor; and, secondly, no appellate jurisdiction could be acquired by bringing the case before the court by a writ of certiorari.
It is settled that it was proper for the legislature to commit to the State Board of Health the authority to investigate and try a licensee coming under its authority and, acting justly, reasonably and fairly, to revoke his license under a statute sufficiently definitive in its regulation. Forman v. State Board of Health,
Although there has been a phenomenal expansion of regulatory law administered through boards and bureaus in the past 35 or 40 years, it is not a new branch of jurisprudence, and from time immemorial courts have been reviewing administrative decisions, principally as to tax assessments. Constitutional courts are not subservient to statutory boards of administration. Bloemer v. Turner,
Most of our statutes empowering various administrative boards and officers to exercise quasi judicial power make special provision for an appeal or review by the courts at the instance of an aggrieved party. For example, a dentist dissatisfied with the action of the State Board of Dental Examiners in relation to his license may appeal to a court within thirty days. KRS
As to procedure. Since the allegations of the petition seem to have been sufficient in relation to the charges of unlawful discrimination and threats by the State Board of Health, with resulting irreparable injury to the plaintiff, we think the court properly overruled the special and general demurrers. But the evidence submitted to the court did not sustain those particular charges. It did disclose a condition within the power of the Board to investigate and dispose of. Out of regard for that statutory power we think the court at that stage of the proceeding properly refused to interfere. Courts will not render a decree in advance where there is no more than an apprehension that a Board will perform its duty wrongfully. 42 Am. Jur., Public Administrative Law, Section 195, 197. The law respecting the adequacy and *Page 788
exclusiveness of remedies in administrative tribunals as related to injunctions to prevent a wrong is thus stated in the Restatement of the Law of Torts, Section 948 b: "If the statutes relating to the administrative tribunal validly and in specific terms give it exclusive primary jurisdiction over the controversy involved in the injunction action, they may thereby deprive the courts of power to award injunction or any other remedy until the tribunal has passed upon the matter, and then only by way of ancillary enforcement of the tribunal's order. The same result may follow if upon a fair construction of the statutes, it appears that the legislative policy would be defeated by judicial interference in the province of the tribunal." See Kentucky Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Chenault Orear,
Reference is made in the trial court's opinion to bringing or returning the record upon a writ of certiorari, and the appellant argues that the Code does not permit a court to obtain or keep appellate jurisdiction over an administrative tribunal by such writ. Ordinarily that method is not recognized here for this purpose although it is in other jurisdictions. See State Board of Dental Examiners v. Savelle,
Kentucky Revised Statutes
While a corporation is considered a person for many purposes, see KRS
The late Doctor A.T. McCormack, who served Kentucky for so many years as Secretary of the State Board of Health, and whose eminence in matters of public health is well-known among the profession throughout the country, testified in this case to the gradual evolution *Page 791
and development of optometry and to its progressive rise as a profession in the art of healing. Along with that progress, as he described, came legislative regulation, sponsored by the state association of optometrists, culminating in the Act of 1938, 1st Ex. Sess. c. 11, which has been carried into the Revised Statutes as a part of the chapter dealing with the practice of medicine. A section of that statute,
"(a) 'Practice of optometry' means the examination of the human eye without the use of drugs, medicines or surgery to ascertain the presence of defects or abnormal conditions that can be corrected by the use of lenses, prisms or ocular exercises and their adaptation for the aid thereof and the correction or attempt to correct defects of the eye by any means, except upon the prescription of a physician.
"(b) Opening an office, or announcing to the public a readiness to do any of the acts mentioned in this subsection constitutes practicing optometry.
"(c) The practice of optometry does not include the sale of spectacles, eyeglasses or lenses only as merchandise in a duly established mercantile establishment."
To obtain a license as an optometrist one is required to pass an examination before the State Board of Health, like in kind but not to the extent of that required of doctors of medicine, the subjects in which the applicant for a license in this particular branch of the healing art (as the statute classifies optometry) has been trained being limited to special parts of the body. Our statutes, therefore, place the practice of optometry upon a rather high professional plane. It is of interest to observe that after the Supreme Court of Arkansas had ruled optometry not to be a learned profession, the legislature of the state expressly declared it to be and enacted regulatory statutes based upon that declaration, a provision of which prohibits advertising and authorizes the revocation of the license of an optometrist who accepts employment from a person or corporation not licensed to assist such employer in practicing optometry, which acts were held valid and constitutional. Melton v. Carter,
In McMurdo v. Getter,
The Supreme Court of Florida, following the Massachusetts court, points out that in the situation the responsibility of the employee in the performance of services is so important to those whose eyes are abnormal that it ought not to be confused with his loyalty to the unskilled employer who is accountable to the patients to whom he is not personally permitted to minister; so the result is a broken relationship "between a professional man and those who engage his services." State Board of Optometry v. Gilmore,
Other reasons for the same conclusion are given in several of the following cases: Kay Jewelry Co. v. Board of Registration,
In the case at bar it was proved, as we have described, that the corporation did more than sell eyeglasses and lenses as merchandise. Other than the condition and acts related, its activities came within the specific terms of Subsection 3(b) of the statute, KRS
We cannot accept the premise of the argument or agree with the reasoning of the learned chancellor that the corporation did nothing which can be regarded as practicing optometry other than what its employee did or that he was only acting as an individual in collaboration with himself as an agent. Surely the doctrine of respondeat superior would have applied had he committed a tort in and during the course of his employment. Optometry was one of the corporation's departments of business and Beiling was its agent. His services are clearly within the meaning of aiding and abetting it in carrying on that business of which his professional services were only a necessary part. Nearly if not all of the cases above cited were proceedings directed against a corporation or an employer to enjoin it from practicing the profession.
The essential element of aiding and abetting the commission of any act is assisting and taking an active part in it. Certainly, Dr. Beiling did that in the unlawful practice by his employer. Dentists are deemed to be within the terms of a statute authorizing suspension or revocation of their licenses for unprofessional conduct by accepting employment and practicing under the direction of corporations. Homan v. Board of Dental Examiners,
We are of opinion, therefore, that the circuit court should have refused to set aside the action of the State Board of Health. We are constrained to observe, perhaps gratuitously, that the permanent revocation of this young man's license seems to be severe under the circumstances, where the evil sought to be struck was apparently the unlawful practice by the corporation, which might have been done by a direct proceeding. But the legislature vested such discretion and power in the State Board of Health and the court has no right to modify that decision, that also being within the province of the Board.
Judgment reversed.