144 Wis. 371 | Wis. | 1911
Plaintiff, a farmer residing in Waukesha county and owning a number of cows and engaged in shipping milk from said cows to the city of Milwaukee to dealers in that city, brings this suit in his own behalf and in behalf of other producers and dealers in milk similarly situated and engaged, against the city of Milwaukee and its commissioner of health to enjoin the enforcement of an ordinance, the material provisions of which are as follows:
“PTo person shall bring into the city of Milwaukee for sale, either by wagon, cart, train, or any other kind of vehicle, or keep, have or offer for sale or sell in said city, any milk or cream drawn from cows outside of said city, contained in cans, bottles or packages, unless such cans, bottles or other packages containing such milk or cream for sale, shall be marked with a legible stamp, tag or impression bearing the name of the owner of such cow from which such milk was drawn, giving his place of business, including the name of city, street and number, or other proper address, and unless the owner or owners of such cows shall, within one year from thepassage of this ordinance, file in the office of the commissioner of health a certificate of a duly licensed veterinary surgeon, or of any other person given authority by the State Livestock Sanitary Board to make tuberculin tests, stating that such cows have been tested with tuberculin and found free from tuberculosis or other contagious diseases. . . . Such certificate shall be good for one year from date of its issuance, . . . must be renewed annually, . . . shall show in each case that the animals from which such milk was drawn are free from tuberculosis or*374 other contagious diseases. All milk and cream from sick and diseased cows, ... or which does not conform to all other provisions of this chapter, shall, upon discovery thereof, be confiscated, forfeited and immediately destroyed by or under the direction of the commissioner of health, bacteriologist, or officer detailed, who shall, if done in good faith, be held harmless in damage therefor.”
Considerable difference of opinion appears to exist among those having a reputation for learning with respect to the efficacy of the tuberculin test for ascertaining the presence of tuberculosis in cattle. This test is made by an hypodermic injection of a toxic product of the tubercle bacilli, which causes a described and recognized rise of temperature in the animal afflicted with tuberculosis, but has no effect, or a different effect, upon cattle not so afflicted. It seems to be agreed, at least in this case, that the bovine type of tubercle bacillus is in form and otherwise distinguishable from the human type by miscroscopie examination. It is claimed by some that the bovine type of tuberculosis is not ordinarily communicable to the human system, in the absence of abrasion, through the alimentary canal. There is also a lack of evidence to establish that tuberculosis of the human lungs, or consumption as it is commonly called, in its ordinary form is-caused by the bovine type of bacillus. Nevertheless the prevention of this common and usually fatal disease is by some of the experts put forward as a ground of support for the ordinance in question. There is evidence, and also findings, to-the effect that tuberculosis generally is a disease caused by micro-organisms known as tubercle bacilli; that there is a mammalian type of these bacteria subdivided into bovine and human bacilli, and that human beings are susceptible to infection from the bovine tubercle bacilli by ingestion, inhalation, or inoculation. This bovine tuberculosis is communicable to the human being through the medium of milk or its products taken as food. Bovine tuberculosis prevails among cattle in the country adjacent to Milwaukee. The tuberculin
The evidence and findings in the instant case, this legislation, and these decisions, go to show a widespread recognition of the danger of infection from bovine tuberculosis and of the efficacy of the tuberculin test. When there are conflicting
It is next contended that this ordinance is void as contrary to the constitution of the United States and of this state, in that it is partial and unequal in its operation. It applies to dealers in milk drawn from cows outside of the city of Milwaukee, while dealers in milk drawn from cows within the city are not included in the terms of the ordinance or subject to its requirements. It is not denied that reasonable classification may be resorted to, but it is argued that this is not reasonable classification. If we should consider only the danger to health or the liability to communicate tuberculosis from the bovine to the human animal this position would be unanswerable. ' But when we consider these two classes of milk dealers from the viewpoint of facility for inspection and regulation, important differences are at once perceptible. The city officials intrusted with the preservation of the public health cannot visit or exercise authority on the farms lying outside of the city limits and in other counties. Milk so brought into the city is a mixture, the product of many different cows mixed in the same can or other receptacle. The bacillus of bovine tuberculosis is a micro-organism invisible to the naked eye, and its presence in milk is difficult of detection by microscopic examination. With the required high-power miscroscope a very small quantity of the milk will exceed in area the entire
It appears from other sections of the ordinance in evidence relating to cows within the city that the sale of milk from sick or diseased cows is forbidden, and that if in the opinion of the commissioner of health, bacteriologist, or any inspector any cow is afflicted with a contagious or infectious disease, such cow is to be removed to a place where it will not spread the infection. It also appears that cows within the city and the milk and cream therefrom are under the authority of the commissioner of health and subject to strict inspection. Under these ordinances the commissioner of health has very general authority and may no doubt apply any effective and known test to determine whether the animal so inspected is afflicted with tuberculosis or other disease. These differences in the situation of the milk-producing animals and in the facilities for inspection and investigation are sufficient to authorize the common council to legislate with reference to milk shipped into the city and make police regulations applying to
It is next contended that the ordinance is void because authorizing the taking of private property without due process, of law, contrary to the XIVth amendment to the federal constitution and to see. 13, art. I, of the state constitution. In support of this it is urged that the findings of the court below establish that the plaintiff maintains a cleanly dairy farm and. sells the milk from healthy cows, and that the ordinance requires the confiscation and destruction of this milk without, judicial determination of its unwholesomeness or judicial determination that the milk is in fact unwholesome or produced from diseased cows. When authorized by legislation, whether-contained in the municipal charter or in general statutes, municipal corporations may enact and enforce ordinances for the-abatement of public nuisances and the preservation of the public health. .When the nuisance is abated by destruction of' property there must exist a necessity for resorting to this drastic and unusual method of enforcement. A case must be presented in which the usual sanction of fine or imprisonment, or-the abatement by suit in court, or indeed any milder or slower-mode of dealing with the offender than destruction of his property, would be inadequate to preserve the public health or-safety. Salus populi suprema lex. And in all ordinary cases of destruction of property under such authority the property owner may resort to the courts and recover his damages, by proving that the property which was destroyed as a nuisance or as dangerous to the public health or safety was not. such in fact. Fath v. Koeppel, 72 Wis. 289, 39 N. W. 539, as explained and limited in Lowe v. Conroy, 120 Wis. 151, 97 N. W. 942, 66 L. R A. 907; Hubbell v. Goodrich, 37 Wis. 84; Godsell v. Fleming, 59 Wis. 52, 17 N. W. 679; 1 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.) 93. In this way the law at
We do not find it necessary to decide in this case whether the plaintiff could recover from the health commissioner or from the city for the destruction of his milk in case he should be able to prove that the milk was in fact clean, healthful, and free from the bacilli of tuberculosis. ■ In determining the validity of this portion of the ordinance which provides for the destruction of property we must assume that the ordinance is otherwise valid. The plaintiff himself must by his own act expose his property to confiscation before this portion of the
With reference to the rulings on the admission of hearsay evidence from books and reports of scientific bodies: Where the trial is before the court without a jury the admission of such evidence is merely a mode in which the court may inform itself upon scientific subjects. The books, reports, etc., may be consulted without having been offered in evidence and it can do no harm to receive them in evidence. We cannot presume that the court gave them undue credence merely because they were formally offered in evidence. We find no ground for reversal of the judgment.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.