Plaintiff appeals from a decree dismissing its bill of complaint, in which it sought a writ of injunction against defendants, restraining them from conspiring to defeat the interstate trade and commerce of plaintiff, in violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, 15 U.S.C.A. § 1 et seq.
Plaintiff is engaged in the manufacture and shipment in interstate commerce of filled milk, that is, skimmed milk with which has been mixed coconut oil, the mixture then being evaporated. The court found and the plaintiff admits that its interstate commerce in this article is in direct violation of the United States Filled Milk Act, 21 U.S.C.A. 61 to 63 inclusive. In view of this admission, it is apparent that the appeal must fail if the act is constitutional, for it is well established that equity will not aid one who comes into court as a law violator; that it is not within the legitimate province of a court of equity to grant relief to an admitted wrongdoer, Creath v. Sims,
• Section 2 of the act, passed in 1923, 21 U.S.C.A. § 62, contains this language: “It is declared that filled milk, as herein defined, .is an adulterated article of food, injurious to the public health, and its sale constitutes a fraud upon the public. It shall be unlawful for any person to manufacture within any Territory or possession, or within the District of Columbia, or to ship or deliver for shipment in interstate or foreign commerce, any filled milk.” After declaring that the term “person” shall include a corporation, the law further, section 1 of the act, 21 U.S.C.A. § 61, provides that “the term ‘filled milk’ means any milk, cream, or skimmed milk, whether or not condensed, evaporated, concentrated, powdered, dried, or desiccated, to which has been added, or which has been blended or compounded with, any fat .or oil other than milk fat, so that the resulting product is in imitation or semblance of milk, cream or skimmed milk, whether or not condensed, evapo *204 rated, concentrated, powdered, dried, or desiccated.”
Plaintiff contends that, inasmuch as its product is a wholesome food, the law is unconstitutional, and such was the ruling of Judge FitzHenry and Judge Adair in the District Court upon indictments in that court, the reasoning being that Congress is without constitutional power to prohibit interstate commerce of an article containing no deleterious substances. The Supreme Court of Illinois, in People v. Carolene Products Co.,
The scope of the constitutional authority of Congress over interstate commerce is defined in McDermott v. Wisconsin,
We may not inquire into the motives of Congress, Hamilton v. Kentucky Distilleries Co.,
That the Congress had reliable information before it supporting the wisdom of the proposed legislation appears from the reports of its committees. Those bodies found and reported certain facts: The mixture of skimmed milk and oil is an exact imitation of pure condensed or evaporated milk; it has the same consistency, color and taste; the difference in the two products can be detected only by an expert or by chemical analysis; the compound can be made more cheaply than the regular article, and in view of the-fact that the imitation is perfect, many people buy it in the belief that they are getting full condensed or evaporated milk; manufacturers do not label it as milk but it is put up in the same sized cans as regular condensed milk and is advertised by the retail dealers as milk and evaporated milk. Storekeepers sell it with the statements that “it takes the place of milk,” “is just as good as condensed milk and much cheaper”; that there is “nothing better on the market” and “takes the place of condensed milk.” Instances were reported in which coconut fat had been mixed with milk and sold as cream and others in which the compound had been used in making ice cream. The article is sold largely in sections inhabited by people unable to read English and of limited means, and scarcely at all in the more enlightened districts. As a consequence, the label is of little or no protection to the purchasing public, in advising them that the product they buy is a mixture of milk and vegetable oils.
The scientists before the committees pointed out that milk is a food for which there is no effective substitute and upon which we have depended for generations; that the valued Vitamin A of milk occurs in no vegetable oil; that an infant fed for a few weeks on a milk substitute, such as here involved, will develop rickets, scurvy, serious eye diseases; beriberi; that even tuberculosis may be traced to the lack of the vitamins of milk in the diet; and that the chief source of such in milk is the butter fat which is removed from filled milk. Experts testified that, when rats were fed over a given period of time on identical rations except that in one pure milk was used and in the other filled milk, those fed on the first diet grew in a natural way, whereas those fed on the second grew to but half the size, developed bodily deformities contracted a fatal eye disease, and died within sixty days after the experiment began. The witnesses asserted that a nursing mother who does not receive sufficient Vitamin A in her diet supplied only by milk cannot transmit healthful milk to her offspring.
The evidence included reports from various authentic sources to the effect that butter fat possesses a biological function which cannot b.e supplied by any vegetable oil in combination with skimmed milk; that growth of the human -body and the quality of children’s teeth and their health depend largely upon milk in the diet; and that “there is rio evidence of any satisfactory substitute but every evidence against the substitution of cheap vegetable fat.”
Both committees found that constant confusion between the two articles exists; that dangerous consequences follow the sale of filled milk, not because it is deleterious in itself, but because people accept it as milk and as a result receive none of the vitamins which make of milk the most desirable food we have. They recommended that the traffic in filled milk should be “stopped now, before irreparable injury is done to the health of the Nation.”
Thus, it is evident that before it acted Congress conducted an extensive investigation, considered the facts both pro *206 and con as to the wisdom of the proposed legislation, and concluded that an evil existed which should be done away with, namely, interstate commerce in filled milk, lacking the vitamins of milk and containing a substitute which contained none of such vitamins and the use of which among uninformed people has dangerous consequences in the rearing of children. Thus the probable evil to the public welfare was established. To say that the police power of Congress over interstate commerce does not extend to prohibition of interstate trade in an article the use of which is shown to be fraught with danger to the health and growth of infants, the future generations of the nation’s citizens, is to put at naught the greatest power of any government — indeed the essential purpose of all government — to protect the public welfare; to ignore the public necessity; to place upon Congress a strait jacket and to deny adequate protection to those who create the government. In all such situations private business must give way to public necessities.
Plaintiff’s contention of unconstitutionality apparently is based upon Hammer v. Dagenhart,
Remembering that if the character or intended use of the article may, debatably, be harmful to the health of the people, the Legislature is entitled to its own judgment, not to be superseded by the personal opinions of judges or by verdicts of juries upon the issue which the Legislature has decided, it follows that the law is constitutional.
The contention that the fact that the labels tell the truth nullifies illegality is answered by Mr. Justice Holmes in Hebe v. Shaw,
So this court, bearing in mind the legislative history of this legislation, observing the facts produced therein, will not, indeed, may not, set its judgment against that of the Congress. Plaintiff came in court as the violator of the law. The action of the District Court dismissing its bill was correct. The decree is affirmed.
Notes
State ex rel. Carnation Milk Prod. Co. v. Emery,
Carolene Products Co. v. Thomson,
