50 Pa. Super. 55 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1912
Opinion by
The defendant was convicted on the first and second counts of an indictment which charged him with selling
The statute under consideration is a police regulation. It has to do with the public health which is one of the chief objects of government, and a proper subject of legislative control. The power of the legislature to promote the general welfare is extensive and it may exercise a large discretion in determining how that power shall be employed. What the interests of the public require and what measures are necessary to protect them are subjects for the exercise of this discretion. Whether in a given instance the manufacture and sale of an article intended for human consumption is deleterious to health and whether the public welfare demands that such business be prohibited are questions of fact and policy exclusively for the determination of the legislature. It is an elementary proposition that all property in this state is held under the implied obligation that the owner shall not use it to the injury of the community. The legislature has declared that sulphur dioxide is deleterious to health and has forbidden its use in the manufacture of confectionery. We must assume that this determination was reached after full examination and on reasonable grounds and that in the judgment of a body having control of the subject such prohibition was necessary to promote the public health.
It is contended, however, that the statute discriminates as to all other food except confectionery and in favor of dried fruits and molasses and that it violates sec. 3 of art. Ill of the constitution of Pennsylvania for that reason. Whether these distinctions should have been incorporated in the statute was a legislative question. It was clearly within the power of the legislature to prohibit the use of sulphur dioxide or any other poison in all of the articles entering into the food supply of the citizens of the commonwealth, and under the same power it might limit the prohibition to one class of food and not to another: Crowley v. Christensen, 137 U. S. 86; Davis v. Mass., 167 U. S. 43. It is not necessary in the exercise of
Objection is made to the enforcement of the statute because of that part of sec. 5 which provides: “But no prosecution shall be sustained, under the provisions of this act, against a retail dealer for the selling, offering for sale, exposing for sale, or having in possession with intent to sell, of any adulterated ‘or misbranded article of food as defined herein, if the retail dealer from whom the said article of food, sample, or portion thereof, was obtained by the Dairy and Food Commissioner or his agent, can establish a guaranty, signed by the manufacturer or wholesale dealer, or jobber or distributor, residing in the United States, from whom such article of food was purchased or procured, to the effect that the same is not adulterated or misbranded within the meaning of this act designating it.” This is said to be classification and discrimination. It will be observed, however, that it is not discrimination in favor of the sale of the adulterated products. The prohibition of them is general. It applies to all classes of dealers and declares the use of the poisonous ingredient to be unlawful. The reason for this exemption from prosecution is apparent. The transactions of manufacturers and wholesale dealers are with large quantities and
The judgment is reversed and the record remitted to the court below to the end that sentence be imposed on the verdict in accordance with the law.