In this proceeding at law (by the applicable statute called a libel) the Government seeks to condemn a quantity of “Vapex,” shipped in interstate commerce, on the ground that it is misbranded under section 8, paragraph 2, of the Food and Drugs Act of Congress-- (United States Code, title 21, § 10 [21 USCA § 10]).
The misbranding is alleged to result from the failure of the package “to bear a statement "on the label of the quantity or proportion of any alcohol * * or any derivative or preparation of any such substances contained therein.”
By its second special amended plea filed February 12, 1932-, the claimant, E. Fougera & Co., Inc., admits all the allegations of fact contained in the libel but, in opposition to the claimed condemnation, sets up the following contentions, in substance: (1) that the “Vapex” as shown by the labels on the packages is “a pure inhalant generally indicated in the treatment of head colds”; (2) that the directions for using it are to place a drop or two in the center of a folded handkerchief and inhale the vapor therefrom; (3) that the alcohol contained in the article “has no office or property therein other than as a diluent or solvent of the essential oils contained therein.” From those facts in the plea the legal conclusions are drawn (hat (a) Vapex is not a drug within the meaning of the Act; (b) the Act properly construed does not apply to Vapex; (e) that if construed to apply to Vapex the Act is unconstitutional in the absence “of a showing that the alcoholic content of said article renders the same noxious or harmful to the public health.”
The Government challenges the sufficiency of the plea to establish these conclusions.
After a study of the excellent briefs submitted by counsel, I have reached the conclusion that the demurrer should be sustained for the following reasons:
The term “drug” as used in the act is defined to include “all medicines and preparations recognized in the United States Pharmacopoeia or National Formulary for internal or external use, and any substance or mixture of substances intended to be used for the cure, mitigation, or prevention of disease of either man or other animals.” U. S. Code, title 21, § 7 (21 USCA § 7). The definition so clearly includes the substance “Vapex” (as it is described in claimant’s plea) that discussion seems unnecessary. The labels on the bottles as quoted in the plea state that the inhalation of the vapor from a drop of Vapex on a handkerchief is effective to relieve a head cold instantly and that its use will stop a cold at the start. It is further described as a new method of treatment for colds. The labels also assert that its use is both curative and preventative, and that breathing the vapor is inimical to the germs of common colds. It is clearly, therefore, a substance “intended to be used for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease,” unless it were denied, as it is not, and as I think it could not be, that a head or common cold is a disease. See U. S. v. 237/12 Dozen Bottles, 44 F.(2d) 831 (D. C. Conn.).
The more substantial contention of the claimant is that Vapex, by reason of its nature and use, is without the substantial intent although within the literal content of the wording of the Act. It is urged that the purpose of Congress in requiring preparations containing alcohol to state the percentage thereof on the label was to prevent the user of medicine from unconsciously acquiring a taste for alcohol disguised as medicine; and a comparative reference is made to the section of the same law relating to food jireparations which omits any requirement that food products containing alcohol (often contained therein, it is said, as preservatives) must state upon their labels the quantity contained. It is argued for the claimant that a medicine or drug used only for inhalation and not otherwise for internal use could not
It is a well-settled principle of statutory construction that the intention of the Legislature is to be sought primarily in the language used, and where this expresses an intention reasonably intelligible and plain, it must be accepted by the courts without modification by resort to construction or conjecture. Thompson v. United States,
In support of its contention the claimant relies upon the cases of United States v. Antikamnia Chemical Co.,
Finally, it is contended for the claimant that if “Yap ex” is within the language of the Act as properly construed, it is nevertheless without the power of Congress to prohibit its transportation in interstate commerce, because, as directed to be used, it is a harmless substance in no way detrimental to the public health. Emphasis is laid on the wording of the opinions in many of the eases in the Supreme Court dealing with the Food and Drugs Act to the effect that the primary purpose of Congress was to prevent injury to the public health and that the prohibition was only against impure food and drugs. See Hipolite Egg Co. v. United States,
It is true that the Food and Drugs Act (21 USCA § 1 et seq.) does forbid interstate commerce in impure food and drugs, but the scope of the Act is not limited to that subject alone. It also includes the regulation of interstate commerce in drugs and food that are not impure and not of theinselves harmful, including the requirement that the articles shall not be misbranded. In the judgment of Congress consumers of articles, harmless in themselves when used as directed, are entitled nevertheless to be advised of the existence in the articles of ingredients belonging to classes of articles which were regarded as potentially harmful of themselves, even though contained in harmless quantities in the articles as designed for consumption. To
The question in that case was whether a substance called “Poinsetta,” itself entirely innocuous but containing an ingredient forbidden by the statute of Mississippi, was prohibited by the Act which, as construed by the state court, forbade the sale of all malt liquors. The court held that the article in question was within the Act.
The same principle has been subsequently applied by the Supreme Court "to other analogous situations. As in Hebe Co. v. Shaw,
And the same principle was again applied by the Supreme Court in the cases of Pierce Oil Corporation v. City of Hope,
If we assume that the inhalation of Vapex is innocuous, nevertheless it is within the category of articles which, by the Act, are required to contain a declaration on the label of the aleoholic content. And it cannot be said at this time that a statute which merely regulates interstate commerce in drugs containing' alcohol, passes the bounds of reason or assumes the character of an arbitrary fiat. It is, therefore, not permissible for the court to make an exception where Congress has made none, and thus to withdraw from the operation of the statute an article which, even though harmless itself, is otherwise within .the proscribed class.
The demurrer is, therefore, sustained.
