61 Pa. Super. 367 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1915
Opinion by
The Act of May 8, 1909, P. L. 470, is entitled, “An act to prevent the manufacture and sale of adulterated or misbranded drugs; defining the word ‘drug’; prescribing penalties for violation of this act, and the method of its enforcement.” The statute therefore be
The first section declares it to be unlawful for anyone to sell, offer for sale or have in possession, with intent to sell, any drug adulterated or misbranded within the meaning of the act. The second section defines the word “drug” and states what shall be included within that term as used in the statute. The first clause of section three which gives rise to this controversy we quote: “That for the purpose of this act, an article shall be deemed to be adulterated: First: If a drug is sold under or by any name recognized by the United States Pharmacopoeia, the National Formulary, or the American Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia, it differs from the standard of strength, quality or purity as determined by the test or formula laid down in” the standard works already mentioned, etc.
The defendant in the present case was indicted for a violation of this statute. The indictment charges that the defendant “did have in his possession, with intent to sell, and did sell and offer to sell adulterated and misbranded drugs, to wit, essence of ginger, the same not being of the standard of strength, quality and purity by the test or formulae laid down in the United States Pharmacopoeia, etc., contrary to the form of the act of assembly,” etc. When the case was called for trial defendant’s counsel moved to quash the indictment because the
We will briefly consider the two reasons assigned in the order in which they are stated:
(1) If the statute does in fact contain a delegation of legislative power, it ought to be apparent to what person or body such power is delegated. It should also be clear, that without the exercise of legislative power by the person or body to whom the delegation has been made, the statute remained incomplete, so that the .legislative will had not yet been fully made known. In considering a similar objection to an earlier statute, this court said, in Foster Township Road Case, 32 Pa. Superior Ct. 51: “Did not the act, upon its approval by the governor, become immediately effective in every township of its class throughout the Commonwealth? Did it need or invite the aid of any other power or authority to make its commands and prohibitions binding and obligatory on every municipality, officer or taxpayer within the sweep of its provisions? Did the law come from the hands of its creator, the legislature, in a state of suspended animation, thus to continue, until some affirmative act of Foster Township or its taxpayers gave to it the force and vitality of a living enactment?”
When we examine the statute now before us in the light of these considerations, we must necessarily reach the. conclusion affopted in the case just cited. Can it be fairly argued that the proprietor or compiler of the
(2) Has the legislature undertaken to revive or amend any law or extend or confer its provisions by reference to its title only? An examination of the act itself reveals to our vision no such attempt. There is nothing in the legislative language disclosing an intent to write into its provisions any former law of the state or the United States; or to stamp with legislative power and authority any future act of the editors or compilers of the standard works referred to. The argument that such compilers would be at liberty from time to time, at their pleasure, to issue new editions of the several works in which the formulas for compounding certain drugs might be changed from those in existence at the time of
But we are earnestly urged to say that the question now under consideration is ruled by our own case of Commonwealth v. Dougherty, 39 Pa. Superior Ct. 338. There is, however, a broad and marked distinction between the two cases. Leaving out of consideration entirely one of the two separate and distinct grounds on which the judgment in that case rested and confining our attention to the remaining one, it is to be observed, (a) that the statute there in question did in terms undertake to read into itself, by reference only to its title, an entire act of the federal Congress known as the “Food and Drugs Act of June 30, 1906.” Now an act of the federal Congress is a law. Where its terms are applicable, it is as much the law of Pennsylvania as it is of Maine or California. To attempt to write in bulk the entire terms and provisions of such a law into a statute of Pennsylvania, by a reference only to its title, would be a legislative act clearly and expressly forbidden by the very lánguage of our own Constitution. It is to be further noticed (b) that the operation of the statute which was in part stricken down in that case not only attempted to re-enact, by a reference to its title merely, the entire provisions of an act of the federal Congress, but as well to incorporate in our statute “the rules and regulations promulgated from time to time for the en
We are of opinion, therefore, that the Act of 1909, under which the defendant was indicted, cannot be stricken down on the ground that in its enactment the legislature had gone outside the constitutional limitations on the legislative power. The assignment of error is sustained.
The order or decree quashing the indictment is reversed and set aside and a procedendo awarded.