Metastatic tumors of the eye have been reported relatively few times. The uveal tract is the predominating site of such tumors. Ginsberg1states that these eye tumors may be the first visible metastases of the primary growth or may be simply part of the general seeding. Often these metastases occur simultaneously with brain involvement, which is easily explained by the fact that the ophthalmic artery arises from the internal carotid. Carcinomas are easily the most commonly occurring metastatic tumors. Ginsberg2in 1928 collected seventy case reports of metastatic carcinoma of the eye, and there have been several additional cases reported since that time. In one fourth of the cases the condition was bilateral. The primary tumor is most frequently found in the breast, and next in frequency in the stomach, lungs, liver, suprarenals, thyroid and prostate. Singer3reported a metastatic growth from a bladder tumor. Krukenberg4