162 N.E. 484 | NY | 1928
The action is by the People of the State against a farmer and dairyman in the township of Rome, Oneida county, to recover penalties for the violation of an order made in 1925 by the Commissioner of Farms and Markets in accordance with the provisions of the Farms and Markets (now the Agriculture and Markets) Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 69), and to restrain the violation of such order hereafter.
The defense is that the order is illegal and void. *457
Section 76 of the Farms and Markets Law as it stood before its amendment in 1924 (L. 1924, ch. 267) provided as follows:
"The commissioner may order any animal or animals affected with communicable disease or which have been exposed to a communicable disease or which he believes to be suffering from or exposed to a dangerous communicable disease, to be put in quarantine and may order any premises or farm where such disease exists or shall have recently existed to be put in quarantine, so that no domestic animal be removed from or brought to the premises quarantined; and shall prescribe such regulations affecting animals, persons or property as he may deem necessary or expedient to prevent the dissemination of the disease from the premises so quarantined."
This section was amended in 1924 by adding thereto the following:
"Whenever ninety per centum of the herds of cattle in any town have been subjected to the tuberculin test for the purpose of ridding such herds of the disease known as tuberculosis, and the owner of any untested herd in such town refuses or neglects to have his herd tuberculin tested, then the commissioner may order the premises or farm on which such untested herd is harbored to be put in quarantine, so that no domestic animal shall be removed from or brought to the premises quarantined, and so that no products of the domestic animals on the premises so quarantined shall be removed from the said premises" (Since amended by L. 1926, ch. 84; L. 1927, ch. 214).
Discovery of tuberculosis in cattle is made in two ways:First, by physical examination, i.e., inspection by sight and touch, an imperfect and uncertain method; and second, by the so-called tuberculin test, or tests similar thereto. Physical examination is compulsory whenever ordered by the Commissioner (§ 78). The tuberculin test requires the co-operation of the owners (§ 79).
Section 78 provides that the Commissioner may cause *458 a physical examination of dairy cows whose milk is marketed in liquid form or otherwise to be made at any time. "If, from such examination, an animal be deemed by the commissioner to be infected with tuberculosis" it "shall be immediately removed from the herd, slaughtered or disposed of as the commissioner may prescribe."
Section 79 provides that "the owner of a herd of cattle kept for dairy or breeding purposes * * * may apply to the commissioner for examination of his herd by the tuberculin, or other approved tests," subject, however, to prescribed regulations. One of these is to the effect that the Commissioner may cause any animal responding to the test to be slaughtered or held in strict quarantine. Another is to the effect that if diseased cattle are found, the owner shall agree "to follow directions of the commissioner designed to prevent the reinfection of the herd and to suppress the disease and prevent the spread thereof."
Ninety per cent of the herds of cattle in the township of Rome, Oneida county, were subjected to the tuberculin test at the request of their owners. There is evidence that of 3,500 cattle tested, 1,600 were condemned as tubercular and slaughtered. The defendant, the owner in that township of a herd of twelve cows, refused to permit the test to be applied to his herd. Thereupon the Commissioner, acting under section 76 of the statute, made an order, dated November 10, 1925, that the defendant's "premises or farm on which said untested herd is harbored or kept be * * * placed in quarantine;" "that no bovine animal shall be removed from or brought to said premises," and "that no products of the bovine animals on said premises shall be removed from said premises," the order to take effect immediately.
The defendant contests the validity of the order and refuses to obey it. He has violated its commands by removing his milk from the farm and selling it to the *459
milk-gathering stations at Marcy and Oriskany, New York. He assails the statute back of the order as an unconstitutional interference with liberty and property, and a denial to him and others of the equal protection of the laws. The standard to be applied in ordering a quarantine involves, in his view, an arbitrary preference of some localities and persons to the detriment of others. The classification, he says, is unrelated in any reasonable degree to the mischief to be remedied (Power Co.
v. Saunders,
We find no arbitrary preference of localities or persons, no classification unrelated to the mischief to be remedied.
The plan of the statute is to make the township the territorial unit in the war upon unhealthy cattle. More will be accomplished, it has been thought, by attacking the units severally than by going against all together (Miller v. Strahl,
Enlightening is the course of legislation in States other than our own. There as here experience has shown that the most effective method of attack is by division into units, established, not merely by coercion, but with the willing co-operation of the persons most affected. A system known as the "county area plan" and the "county area accredited plan" has found a place upon the statute books with the approval of the courts. Thus, in Iowa, an act was passed in 1923, whereby the county area plan was to be established by the State Commission whenever there was submitted a petition signed by fifty-one per cent of the owners of breeding cattle within a county that the county be thereafter enrolled upon that basis. Provision was then to be made for the testing of the cattle by owners signing the petition or other appropriate agreements. In 1924 this statute was amended so as to compel submission by unwilling owners. Whenever seventy-five per cent of the owners of breeding cattle in any county operating under "the county area plan" signed agreements to that effect, the county was to be enrolled by the department under the "accredited *461
area plan." Thereafter "every owner of breeding cattle within the county shall cause his cattle to be tested, and shall comply with all the requirements for the establishment and maintenance of a tuberculosis-free accredited herd." These statutes were upheld by the Supreme Court of Iowa (Lausen v. Bd. of Supervisors,
The size of the unit is not, however, the sole basis of the attack upon the statute. Attack is also made upon the standard of selection to be applied within the unit. The principle of local co-operation — a principle shared by this statute with those in other States — involves, it is said, a false basis of division. There is a denial, in this view, of the equal protection of the laws if not an *462 unlawful delegation of legislative power, when the voluntary use of a test by a prescribed percentage of the owners in a township is made a standard of conduct to which others must conform, though owners in other townships, where there is a different percentage of opposition, are free from such restraints. Again there is significance in practice and decision. If the Legislatures in so many States have "deemed it wise to invite and secure voluntary local co-operation" before applying a plan "to a given area" (Schulte v. Fitch, supra), we may suspect that in a choice so general there is something more substantial than a vagary of the will.
The local mind can best discern in these things as in many others the local needs and interests (Adams v. City ofMilwaukee, supra, at p. 583; Ohio ex rel. Clarke v.Deckebach,
A command thus conditioned is neither a denial of equal laws (Adams v. City of Milwaukee, supra, at p. 581), nor an illegitimate delegation of legislative power (People ex rel.Unger v. Kennedy,
Ninety per cent of the cattle owners in the township of Rome have said by their acts that the test rejected by the defendant is useful and desirable. Legislation in this State and elsewhere has confirmed their judgment. Acts of Congress have done the same (See e.g., Mason's Fed. Code, art. 21, §§ 111, 123). The defendant holds out, and says the test is worthless. The Constitution does not protect him in this assertion of his own will against a judgment so preponderant (Matter of Viemeister,
Other objections have been considered, and have been found to be untenable. The statute makes provision for compensation when tuberculous animals are slaughtered by order of the Commissioner or his deputies. It would not be invalid if compensation were withheld (Adams v. City of Milwaukee, supra; State v. Heldt,supra; People v. Cipperly,
The judgment should be affirmed with costs.
POUND, ANDREWS, LEHMAN, KELLOGG and O'BRIEN, JJ., concur; CRANE, J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed. *465