Jurisdiction of this case is vested in the court through the presence of federal questions and the diverse citizenship of the parties litigant. Rail & River Coal Co. v. Yaple (D. C.) 214 Fed. 273, 277; Ohio River & W. Ry. Co. v. Dittey (D. C.) 203 Fed. 537, 539, and authorities there cited. Both of the plaintiffs are foreign corporations. The defendants are Calvert, Chief of Division of Daily and Food of the Board of Agriculture of Ohio, and other officers and agents of such board. The plaintiffs were authorized by Calvert’s predecessor in office to sell in Ohio- their food product known as “Hebe,” if appropriately labeled. One-half of the label adopted and thereafter used is as follows, the remaining half being the same as the portion here shown:
The terms “evaporated” and “condensed,” as applied to milk, are, as generally understood, synonymous, and they will for the purposes of this opinion be so regarded. “Hebe” is recognized by the Bureau of Chemistry of the National Department,of Agriculture as a compound. Ninety-four per cent, of it is evaporated skimmed milk; the remaining 6 per cent, is cocoanut oil, highly refined and of good quality, which in its properties, as disclosed by the record, more nearly resembles butter fat than any other known substance. The two ingredients are by an undisclosed process so brought together as to remain properly qom-bined until the food product is ready for consumption. There is no claim that the product, or either of its ingredients, is impure or unwholesome. The article is produced in and shipped from Wisconsin by the plaintiffs to jobbers in various states, including Ohio, on orders accepted in the state of Washington, and reaches consumers through retailers who purchase of such jobbers. It is transported in cans which are packed in inclosing, sealed, fiber shipping cases, completely concealing the cans and their labels; each case containing either 48 cans of one pound each or 96 cans of six ounces each. When shipped in carload lots, the shipping cases bear only the name of the consignee and other data 'appropriate for identification and delivery. When such cases are received by the retailer, he removes the cans and exposes them for sale to his customers. The plaintiffs’ position is that their food product, being plainly and fairly labeled in a conspicuous manner, is not within the condemnation of the Ohio statute and may be'lawfully sold and offered for sale in such state. It is further claimed that if the Ohio statute, correctly construed, prohibits the sale of
“That this section shall not apply to mixtures or compounds recognized as ordinary articles or ingredients of articles of food or drink, if each package sold or offered for sale is distinctly labeled in words of the English language as mixtures or compounds, with the name and percentage, in terms of one hundred per cent, of each ingredient therein. The word ‘compound’ or ‘mixture’ shall be printed in letters and figures not smaller in height or width than one-half of the largest letter upon any label on the package, and the formula shall be printed in letters and figures not smaller in height or width than one-fourth the largest upon any label on the package, and such compound or mixture must not contain an ingredient that is poisonous or injurious to health.”
Certain of the provisions of chapter 6, found in “Part 4, Title 1, Felonies and Misdemeanors,” and dealing with “Offenses Against Public Health,” are also pertinent to the subject-matter under consideration. It declares milk to be standard or unadulterated, if it contains not more than 88 per cent, of watery fluid, and not less than 12 per cent, of solids or 3 per cent, of fats. Section 12716. Whoever sells, exchanges, or delivers, or has in his custody or possession with intent to sell or exchange, or exposes or offers for sale or exchange, adulterated milk, is subject to a fine for his first offense, to a fine or imprisonment for his second offense (section 12717), and to both a fine and imprison
“Whoever manufactures, sells, exchanges, exposes or offers for sale or exchange, condensed milk unless it has been made from pure, clean, fresh, healthy, unadulterated and wholesome milk, from which the cream has not been removed and in which the proportion of milk solids shall be the equivalent of twelve per cent, of milk solids in crude milk, twenty-five per cent, of such solids being fat, and unless the package, can or vessel containing it is distinctly labeled, stamped or marked with its true name, brand, and by whom and under what name made, shall be fined not less than fifty dollars nor more than two hundred dollars, and, for each subsequent offense, shall be fined not less than one hundred dollars nor more than five hundred dollars and imprisoned not less than ten days nor more than ninety days.”
Compound foods were first legally recognized by section 2 (now, in so far as pertinent, section 5775) of the Act of March 20, .1884, 81 Ohio Raws, p. 67. Section 12725, in substance, but with some variation in phraseology, originally appeared as section 13 of the supplementary act of May 17, 1886, 83 Ohio Laws, p. 178, entitled, “An act to prevent adulteration of and deception in the sale of daily products,” i. e., cheese, butter, and milk. A perusal of the act shows that its provisions conform to the purpose declared in the enacting clause. When the Legislature came to the enactment of section' 13 for the purpose of regulating the manufacture and sale of condensed milk, it knew that within legal limitations compound foods were permissible, and recognized, as appears by necessary implication from the section itself, that an article might, as the law then stood, be made and marketed as condensed milk (if such had not already been done), which was not made from whole or natural milk. It declared, to the exclusion of skimmed or any other form of adulterated milk and of any and all mixtures and compounds in which such milk is an ingredient, that there should be but one kind of condensed milk, and that it should be made of pure, clean, fresh, healthy, unadulterated, wholesome standard milk. Its purpose is to secure to the population, adult and infant, wholesome condensed milk of a certain standard of strength and purity. It is the conception of the law that condensed milk made from milk below the prescribed standard is not wholesome.
One of the purposes of the several acts relating to foods and drugs and to dairy products is to prevent deception in their sale to consumers and to preserve the public health. State v. Capital City Dairy Co., 62 Ohio St. 350, 57 N. E. 62, 57 L. R. A. 181; State v. Hutchinson, 56 Ohio St. 82, 46 N. E. 71; Arbuckle v. Blackburn, 113 Fed. 616, 51 C. C. A. 122, 65 L. R. A. 864 (C. C. A. 6). The construction thus giv
As to the practice of deception on consumers in the sale of the plaintiffs’ product, there is substantial and uncontradicted evidence that it is represented to be and is sold as “Hebe milk” and as condensed milk. The monetary value of the cocoanut oil substituted for the butter fat removed from the milk by skimming is much less than that of such fat; the cost of the oil prior to the commencement of the present European War being about 13 cents and at the time of the hearing about 19 cents per pound. The difference between the price at which condensed milk and Hebe, respectively, may be manufactured and sold, is such that the temptation to impose upon the public has been too great to be resisted. It seems that when the form of label was under consideration by Calvert’s predecessor in office, and when the Attorney General’s opinion was rendered, there were but three wholesalers in the state that were distributing the plaintiffs’ product. One of them in filling a contract of some magnitude with the United States Military Department twice supplied Hebe to fill an order for evaporated milk. The substitution was not detected until after the second delivery of goods was made. They were then returned to the seller.
It is in evidence that the plaintiffs have instructed their representatives to sell their product for what it really is; but, the purpose of the statute being to protect the people from deception by selling them one thing when they desire another, it is not important whether the plaintiffs intend or do not intend to deceive. They are the producers of an article which, it sufficiently appears, is freely sold by some retail dealers, at least, as a brand of condensed milk, of which there are several on the market, and is susceptible of being thus sold and used, and has
“The state lias undoubted power to protect the health of its people and to impose restrictions having reasonable relation to that end. The nature and extent of restrictions of this character are matters for the legislative judgment in defining the policy of the state and the safeguards required. In the avowed exercise of this power, the Legislature of Illinois has enacted a prohibition — as the statute is construed — against the sale of food preservatives containing boric acid, and, unless tills prohibition is palpably unreasonable and arbitrary, we are not at liberty to say that it passes beyond the limits of the state’s protective authority.”
In Dent v. West Virginia, 129 U. S. 114, 122, 9 Sup. Ct. 231, 32 L. Ed. 623, it was announced that the power of the state to provide for the general welfare of its people authorizes it to prescribe all such regulations as, in its judgment, will secure or tend to secure them against the consequences of ignorance and incapacity, as well as deception and fraud. Mr. Justice Harlan, in Plumley v. Massachusetts, 155 U. S. 461, 472, 15 Sup. Ct. 154, 158 (39 L. Ed. 223) after citing the Dent Case to the above point, added:
“If there be any subject over winch it would seem the states ought to have plenary control, and the power to legislate in respect to which, it ought not to be supposed, was intended lo be surrendered to the general government, it is the protection of the people against fraud and deception in the sale of food products. Such legislation may, indeed, indirectly or incidentally, affect trade in such products transported from one state to another state. But that circumstance does not show that [the] laws of the character alluded to are iuconsistent with the power of Congress to regulate commerce among the states.”
Reliance is placed by the plaintiffs on McDermott v. Wisconsin, 228 U. S. 115, 33 Sup. Ct. 431, 57 L. Ed. 754, 47 L. R. A. (N. S.) 984, Ann. Cas. 1915A, 39, in which it was held that the word “package,” or its equivalent expression, as used by Congress in sections 7 and 8 of the Pure Food and Drugs Act (June 30, 1906, c. 3915, 34 Stat. 768 [Comp. St. 1916, §§ 8723, 8724]), in defining what shall constitute “adulteration” and what shall constitute “misbranding” within the meaning of that act, refers to the immediate container of the article which is intended for consumption, and that, when an article in inter
But it was also expressly stated that it by no means follows that the state is not permitted to make regulations with a view to the protection of its people against fraud or imposition by impure food or drugs. The plaintiffs’ contention must fail, for the reason that, where the mode of putting up and labeling a package is adapted to meet the requirements of local trade or intrastate commerce and its sale is conducive to the deception of the consumer, the dealer will not be protected on the ground that he is selling an original package. The police power of a state extends to all regulations of its internal commerce designéd to prevent imposition and fraud, as well as to those designed to promote public health, public morals, or public safety although the regulations prescribed may incidentally affect interstate commerce, provided Congress has not acted in the particular matter. Congress has not declared that an article of food whose transportation in interstate commerce is permissible under the terms and provisions of the Pure Food and Drugs Act may be sold in a state to which it has been shipped, if such article is susceptible of use and is used as a means of deceiving consumers. The self-protecting power of the state may be rightfully exerted against its introduction, and such exercise of power cannot be considered a regulation of commerce prohibited by the Constitution. Savage v. Jones, 225 U. S. 501, 32 Sup. Ct. 715, 56 L. Ed. 1182; Sligh v. Kirkwood, 237 U. S. 52, 35 Sup. Ct. 501, 59 L. Ed. 835; Mutual Film Co. v. Industrial Commission of Ohio (D. C.) 215 Fed: 138; Hall v. Geiger-Jones Co., 242 U. S. 539, 37 Sup. Ct. 217, 61 L. Ed. 480; Ann. Cas. 1917C, 643; Arbuckle v. Blackburn.
Whether either standard or skimmed milk may be used as a constituent element of a compound or mixed food, and whether Hebe is nothing more than adulterated condensed milk with a minor ingredient added, and other questions discussed by counsel, need not be decided, although they have received the thoughtful consideration of the court.
A decree may be entered dismissing the bill.
WARRINGTON, Circuit Judge, and HORRISTER, District Judge, concur in the foregoing opinion.
