117 Ky. 1 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1903
Opinion of the court by
Affirming.
The appellant, Fred Sanders, -was indicted, tried and convicted in the Jefferson Circuit Court for having knowingly sold milk from animals fed upon “still slop,” in violation of the provisions of section 1274 of the-Kentucky Statutes of 1899, which reads as follows: “Whoever shall knowingly sell, or cause to be sold, to any person in tbis State, milk diluted with water, or in any way adulterated, or milk from which any cream has been taken, or sell milk commonly known as ‘skimmed milk,’ with-intent
Appellant’s contention is based upon the claim that still slop, when used under proper conditions, is a wholesome and innocuous food for dairy cows, and that the milk from cows fed thereon is a pure and wholesome article of food for human beings. Our attention is called to the fact that there is nothing in the statute, nor the indictment which is the foundation of this prosecution, which negatives either of these contentions, and that no testimony was introduced by the Commonwealth upon the trial of the case for the purpose of establishing that such was the fact; that the whole proceeding rests upon the naked prohibition contained in the statute itself. ‘The section upon which the prosecution is based is one of the provisions of the statute aimed at offenses against the public health, and was exercised under the police power of the State for the protection of the health of its citizens. No exact definition of
national government, through any of its departments or officers, assume any supervision of the police regulations ■of the States. All that the Federal authority can do is to see that the States do not, under cover of this power, invade the sphere of the national sovereignty, obstruct or impede the exercise of any authority which the
The fourteenth amendment of the Federal Constitution was first called to the attention of the Supreme Court of the United States in the Slaughterhouse Cases, 16 Wall, 36, 21 L. Ed., 394. In construing a statute of Louisiana vesting in a slaughterhouse company the sole and exclusive privilege of conducting a live stock landing and slaughterhouse business, and requiring that all animals should be landed at the stock lánding and slaughtered at the slaughterhouse of the company, and nowhere else, it was held that the statute did not conflict with the provisions of the fourteenth amendment. The scope of this amendment, in so far as it relates to the question before us, has been very clearly stated by Judge Cooley as follows: “The
guarantied equal protection is not to be understood to require that every person in the land shall possess the same rights and privileges as every other person. The amendment contemplates classes of persons, and the protection given by the law is deemed to be equal if all persons in the same class are treated alike under like circumstances and conditions, both as to privileges conferred and liabilities imposed. The classification must be based on reasonable grounds. It can hot be a mere arbitrary selection.” Cooley’s Constitutional Law. And the text is supported by numerous adjudged cases.
. It is a canon of statutory construction that every pre-. sumption must be indulged in favor of the validity of the statute, as the Constitution confers upon the General Assembly the lawmaking power. But notwithstanding this general presumption, the courts must obey the Constitu
It was decided in the case of Maryland v. Henry A. Broadbelt, 43 Atl, 771, 45 L. R. A., 435, 73 Am. St. Rep., 201, that the Legislature could, “under the police power,”
development in the science of bacteriology in recent ye. ... s conclusively proven that the microbe is a most potent agent in the propagation of contagious diseases, and that there is no more favorable element for their absorption, growth and development than milk, and that milk contaminated by their presence communicates diphtheria, typhoid fever, tuberculosis, and other kindred contagious diseases, to human beings, especially to the young. And it is a matter of common knowledge that the conditions usually prevailing around places where “still slop” is produced are also highly favorable to the development of many forms of bacilli. The heat, dampness, and fermentation —all essential elements, in the production of still slop— are favorable to germ growth. So that we may fairly assume that the General Assembly, in the enactment of this statute, had sufficient information to justify the belief that milk from cows fed on still slop had ample opportunity to become impregnated with elements dangerous to the public health. Nearly every police regulation affects to some extent property rights, and, whilst this power can not be made the excuse for oppressive and unjust legislation, the courts are not permitted to say that the Legislature may not enact laws apparently necessary for the public health. We have reached the conclusion that, under the facts of this case, this court has no power to hold that the General Assembly did not have under the “police power” authority to enact the statute under which appellant was convicted.
Judgment affirmed.