delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action for breach of contract. The Purity Extract and Tonic Company (plaintiff below), a Tennessee corporation, is the manufacturer of beverage called “Poinsetta,” and in November, 1910, it made an agreement with the defendant Lynch for the purchase of the article by him on stated terms during the period of five years.. The agreement contemplated resales by, the defendant in Hinds County, Mississippi, to the making of which he was to devote his best efforts^ It was provided, that he was to sell only in that county where he was to have the exclusive right.of-salé.for which he was to pay to the plaintiff the sum of five hundred dollars within five days after the making of the contract. It was to recover this amount, that the action was brought, the defendant having' repudiated, the agreement at the outset *198 upon the ground that on coming to Mississippi he found it to be unlawful to sell “Poinsetta” in that State. The trial court sustained the defense of illegality and its judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Mississippi. 100 Mississippi, 650.
The statute which the agreément has been held to violate is Chapter 115'of the Laws of Mississippi of 1908, § 1, p. 116, which includes in its prohibition the sale of malt liquors.
The case was tried upon an agreed statement of facts in which the characteristics of “Poinsetta” are set forth at length. ' In substance, the statement is that it is composed of puré distilled water to the extent of 90.45 per. cent., the remaining 9.55 per cent, being solids derived from cereals, “which are in an unfermented state and are wholesome and nutritious”; that “it contains 5.73% of malt and is sold as a beverage”; that it does not contain either alcohol or saccharine matter, being manufactured in such a manner under a secret formula obtained from German scientists as to bring neither into its composition; that it is not intoxicating; that its taste and odor áre distinctive; that its appearance is such that, “it would not probably be mistaken for any intoxicating liquor”; and that it “cannot be employed as a subterfuge for the sale of beer because it is bottled in a distinctive way and its. name blown in each bottle which contains the beverage.” It is further agreed that “the United States Government does not treat Poinsetta as within the class of intoxicating liquors and does, not require .anything to be done With reference, to its sale.”
The state court, following its decision in Fuller v. City of Jackson, 97 Mississippi, 237, construed the statute as prohibiting the sale of all malt liquors whether in fact intoxicating. or not,' and this construction of the state law is binding here. The court said: “Poinsetta may or may not be an intoxicant, but it is a malt liquor, and as such *199 is prohibited from being sold in this State. The. prohibition law can not be made effective unless it excludes all subterfuges.” (100 Mississippi, 650, 657.)
The agreed statement of facts also contained the following: “Poinsetta is put Up in bottles at Chattanooga, Tennessee, and is shipped in bottles, each separate and apart from the other, placed in a case to which they are in no way attached, and which is done merely to prevent breakage of the bottles in transit. The case is not fastened with nails or other device but merely closed. The bottles so contained are shipped in' interstate commerce from Chattanooga, Tennessee, and are to be received under the cohtract by the consignee in Mississippi in the same condition as when bottled, and are to be sold as each several package. There is to be no . retail sale under such right by said Lynch in the State of Mississippi, but all shipments-are to be made direct either to said Lynch, or to other persons who shall desire to purchase said drink, and are to be delivered to said purchasers of said bottles in. precisely the same shape as prepared in Tennessee, and said Poinsetta is still contained in the original package at the time it will be offered for sale in Mississippi by the purchaser thereof in the original package which was sent from Tennessee through Alabama into Mississippi.”
The plaintiff brings this writ of error assailing the validity of the statute, as construed by the state court, (1) as an unconstitutional interference with interstate commerce and. (2) as depriving the plaintiff of its liberty and property without due process of law.
First.
We do not find that the decision of the state court involves a denial of any right incident to interstate commerce. .The contract, it is true, provided for purchases by the defendant from the plaintiff, the deliveries to be made at. Chattanooga, Tennessee, for transporta! on to the. defendant at Jackson, Mississippi/ So far as appears, however, there were no purchases and no deliveries. The
*200
reason obviously is that the agreement looked to resales by the defendant in Hinds County. Finding that such sales would be against the local law, he refused performance
in limine.
The state court did not deny to the plaintiff the right to sell to the defendant or to have its article transported and delivered to the defendant in interstate commerce.
Rhodes
v.
Iowa,
Nor is the contention of the plaintiff aided by the agreed statement of facts. This statement in one of its clauses says that there was to be “no retail sale” by the defendant. Whatever this may mean in the light of the words of the contract which contained no such limitation, it is clear that the defendant was not debarred from selling the bottles separately. On the contrary, the argument for the plaintiff is that “each bottle,” brought into-the State in cases as described, constitutes “an original package.” As to this, it is to be noted that by the terms of the contract the agreed prices on the purchases by the defendant from the plaintiff were per cask containing ten dozen bottles and per case containing six dozen bottles respectively. In short, the plain purpose was that the defendant was to buy in casks and cases, and in the light of the transactions thus contemplated, and, as they would
*201
be normally conducted, between the plaintiff as manufacturer and the defendant as local dealer it can not be said that each separate battle which he might sell in Hinds County must be considered as an original package so as to save the sale from the interdiction of the state law.
May
v.
New Orleans,
Second. Treating the matter then as one bf local sales, the question is whether the prohibitory law of the State as applied to a beverage of this sort is in conflict with the Fourteenth Amendment.
That the State in the exercise of its police power may prohibit the selling of intoxicating liquors is undoubted.
Bartemeyer
v.
Iowa,
Thus in Booth v. Illinois, supra, the defendant was convicted under a statute of that State which made it a criminal offense to give an option to buy grain at a future time. It was contended that the statute as interpreted by the state court was “not directed against gambling contracts relating to the selling or buying of grain or other commodities, but against mere options to- sell or buy at a future time without any settlement between the parties upon the basis of differences, and therefore involving no element of gambling.” The argument was that it directly forbade the citizen “from pursuing a calling which, in itself, involves no element of immorality.” This court, in sustaining the judgment of conviction, said: “If, looking at all the circumstances that attend, or which may ordinarily attend, the pursuit of a particular calling, the State thinks that certain admitted evils can not be successfully reached unless that calling be actually prohibited, the courts cannot interfere, unless, looking through mere forms and at the substance of the matter, they can say that the statute enacted professedly to protect the public morals has no real or substantial relation to that object, but is a clear, unmistakable infringement of rights secured by the fundamental law.” It must be assumed, it was added, that, “the legislature was of opinion that an effectual mode to suppress gambling grain contracts was to declare illegal all options to sell dr buy at a future time,” and the court could not say that the means em-' ployed were not appropriate to the end which it was competent for the State to accomplish. (Id. pp. 429, 430.)
The same principle was applied in Otis v. Parker, supra, *203 which dealt with the provision of the constitution of California that all contracts for the sale of shares of the capital stock of any corporation, on margin,, or to be delivered at a future day, should be void, and that any money paid on such contracts might be recovered. The objection urged against the provision in its literal sense was that the prohibition of all sales on margin bore no reasonable relation to the evil sought to be cured, but the court upheld the law, being unwilling to declare that the deep-seated conviction on the part of the people concerned as to what was required to effect the purpose could be regarded as wholly without foundation. {Id., pp. 609, 610.)
A strong illustration of the extent of the power of the State is found in
Silz
v.
Hesterberg,
It was competent for the legislature of Mississippi to recognize the difficulties besetting the' administration of laws aimed at the prevention of traffic in intoxicants. It prohibited, among other things, the sale of “malt liquors.” In thus dealing with a class of .beverages which in general are regarded as intoxicating, it was not bound to resort to a discrimination with respect to ingredients and processes of manufacture which, in the endeavor to eliminate innocuous beverages from the condemnation, would facilitate subterfuges and frauds and fetter the enforcement of the law. A contrary conclusion logically pressed would save the nominal power while preventing its effective exercise. The statute establishes its own category. The question in this court is whether the legislature had power to establish it. The existence of this power, as the authorities we have cited abundantly demonstrate, is not to be denied simply because some innocent articles or transactions may be found within the proscribed class. The inquiry must be whether, considering the end in view, the statute passes,the bounds of reason' and assumes the' character of a merely arbitrary' fiat.
That the opinion is extensively held that a general prohibition of the'sale of malt liquors, whether intoxicating or not., is a,necessary means to -the suppression'of trade in intoxicants, sufficiently appears from the legislation of other States , and the decision of the courts in its construction.
State
v.
O’Connell,
99 Maine, 61;
The State, within the limits we have stated, must decide upon the measures that are needful for the protection of its people,, and, having regard-to the artifices which are used to promote the sale of intoxicants under the guise of innocent beverages, it would constitute an unwarrantable departure from accepted principle to hold that the prohibition of the sale of all malt liquors, including the beverage in question, was beyond its reserved power.
Judgment affirmed.
