197 N.Y. 353 | NY | 1910
This action was instituted in the Municipal Court of the city of New York and was brought to recover three penalties under the Pharmacy Law (L. 1900, *355 chap. 667.) The pleadings were oral. The appeal book recites that the plaintiff brought the action "for penalties under Chapter 667, Laws of 1900, sections 194, 199, 200 and 201, and the said defendant answered as follows: General denial; demand bill particulars."
The bill of particulars discloses the precise character of the plaintiff's claim. It specifies three causes of action: (1) That on March 5th, 1906, Florence Smith, a person not licensed by the plaintiff to sell drugs or medicines, sold tincture of iodine, a medicine and poison; (2) that on the same date, the same person, not being licensed to do so, sold at defendants' store in Fulton street in the borough of Brooklyn, tincture of arnica; and (3) that on the same date, at the defendants' store in the same locality, Florence Smith, an unlicensed person, sold a medicine, to wit, spirits of camphor.
The plaintiff further specified $25 as the penalty which it was entitled to recover for each of these several infractions of the Pharmacy Law, making $75 in all. There was a final allegation in the bill of particulars to the effect that the said Florence Smith was not a person licensed by the plaintiff to sell drugs, medicines or poisons, and that the sale was not made in the presence or under the supervision of a licensed pharmacist or druggist in the employ of the defendant.
All the allegations of the bill of particulars were clearly established by the proof upon the trial. It appeared that the defendants conducted a large department store in the borough of Brooklyn including a pharmacy in charge of a duly licensed pharmacist. This pharmacist, however, was not present at the time of the sales in question which were made by an unlicensed saleswoman. The chemist of the state board of pharmacy testified that all of the articles sold, namely, tincture of iodine, spirits of camphor and tincture of arnica, were medicines and that tincture of iodine was a poison. The judgment of the Municipal Court was in favor of defendants. That judgment was reversed by the Appellate Term. On appeal to the Appellate Division that court affirmed the determination of the Appellate Term and *356 directed judgment absolute in favor of plaintiff. In attacking that judgment counsel for the appellants presents two questions for our consideration: (1) Are the articles involved, tincture of iodine, tincture of arnica and spirits of camphor, when sold in sealed bottles, within the exceptions of the statute, or do they come within the term "medicines," as used in section 200 of the Laws of 1900, chapter 667 (the Pharmacy Law), which prohibits the sale, under penalties, of "medicines or posions" except in the presence and under the supervision of a licensed pharmacist? (2) If the articles in question are medicines within the prohibition of section 200 of the Pharmacy Law, is that portion of the statute which restricts the sale of domestic remedies, or other perfectly harmless preparations, to licensed pharmacists a valid exercise of the police power, or is it an invasion of private rights and unconstitutional?
As to the first question I think that the courts may take judicial notice of the fact that tincture of iodine, spirits of camphor and tincture of arnica are medicines; and so far as tincture of iodine is concerned the uncontroverted evidence in the case proves that it is a poison. It is true that spirits of camphor and tincture of arnica are commonly known as domestic remedies, but this fact does not lessen their medicinal character. It is obvious that the same precautionary regulations may not be required in respect to the sale of medicines which are harmless if pure and properly used, as would be appropriate in respect to the sale of poisonous substances; but I can see no reason why if the police power embraces the regulation of the sale of medicines of a dangerous character it may not also legitimately be extended over the sale of medicines generally, if only in order to insure their purity.
We thus come to the second question as to whether legislation is constitutional which restricts not merely the sale of poisons, but the sale of domestic remedies or perfectly harmless medicinal preparations.
While the constitutional validity of a statute regulating *357 and restricting the sale of drugs and medicines does not appear to have been directly involved in any case heretofore passed upon by this court, the authority of the legislature to control and limit the sale of drugs and medicines has long been judicially recognized in this state.
In People v. Rontey (4 N.Y. Supp. 235; affirmed on opinion below,
The constitutionality of such legislation is affirmed by the leading text writers and it has been upheld by the courts of last resort in numerous other states in the Union. "The sale of poisonous drugs unless labeled" is among the acts enumerated by Chief Justice Cooley in his work on Constitutional Limitations as subject to be forbidden by a state in the exercise *358 of the police power. (Cooley's Constitutional Limitations [7th ed.], p. 881.) Mr. Tiedeman in his treatise on State and Federal Control of Persons and Property (Vol. 1, p. 512) says that safeguards of every kind can be thrown around the sale of poisonous drugs so that damage will not be sustained from an improper use thereof.
A few of the leading cases may be cited which uphold the doctrine thus asserted. An Oregon statute forbidding the sale or gift of opium to any one but a druggist or practicing physician except upon the prescription of a practicing physician was upheld in Ex parte Yung Jon (28 Fed. Rep. 309) by the District Court of the United States for the district of Oregon (DEADY, J.). A similar statute was sustained as constitutional in State ofNevada v. Ah Chew (
As has already been suggested, there are strong reasons relative to the public welfare which make it proper that regulations concerning the sale of drugs and medicines should not be confined to poisons, but may be extended so as to embrace what are known as harmless household remedies — that is, which may be harmless if properly prepared. The injury to the public health which might ensue if such medicines were carelessly or ignorantly compounded so as to contain deleterious ingredients or deceptively, so as to be something different from what they purported to be, is manifest. The police power logically extends to such medicines no less than to poisons and other lethal medicinal agents.
It is suggested that the Pharmacy Law (for which the existing Public Health Law, chap. 45 of the Consolidated *360
Laws, has now been substituted) is objectionable because it expressly permits the sale of certain known poisonous domestic remedies by merchants or traders in unincorporated villages or villages of the fourth class, provided their places of business be more than three miles distant from a drug store. In answer to this objection it is only necessary to refer to a Minnesota case in which a similar question was raised. (State v. Donaldson,
We entertain no doubt as to the constitutionality of the provisions of the Pharmacy Law under which the penalties in this case were recovered against the defendants and as no other question is raised it follows that the order appealed from must be affirmed.
CULLEN, Ch. J., GRAY, EDWARD T. BARTLETT, HAIGHT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed, with costs.