121 F. 41 | 8th Cir. | 1903
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
It appears the article which the plaintiff put up in bottles and labeled “J. D. Iler’s Rochester Tonic, Kansas City, Mo. U. S. A.,” and which it put on the market and sold as and for a tonic, was “a mild form of beer” containing “about two per cent, of alcohol,” and that the plaintiff paid the revenue tax of $2 per barrel on the same as beer before it was bottled. The contention of the plaintiff is that this article is not a tonic within the meaning of Schedule B of section 30, above quoted, and for that reason is not liable to the stamp tax on tonics imposed by that section.
Schedule B of section 30 includes “every * * * bottle * * * containing any * * .* medicinal preparations or compositions whatsoever, * * * or which, if prepared by any formula, published or unpublished, are held out or recommended to the public by the makers, venders, or proprietors thereof as proprietary medicines, or medicinal proprietary articles or preparations, or as remedies or specifics for any disease, diseases, or affection whatever affecting the human or animal body.” And section 20 provides that the stamp taxes provided for in Schedule B shall apply to all articles “which are advertised on the package or otherwise as remedies or specifics for any ailment, or as having any special claim to merit, or to any peculiar advantage in mode of preparation, quality, use, or effect.”
The court does not feel called upon to go into any extended inquiry as to the exact nature of this tonic, or its value for medicinal purposes. It is sufficient to say that its medicinal virtues probably equal, if they do not excel, those of the majority of the popular tonics on the market for the sale of which stamp taxes are assessed and paid without question. Alcohol was present in this tonic, and probably constituted its chief tonic quality, as it does in many tonics. A tonic is defined to be “any remedy which improves the tone or vigor of the fibres of the stomach and bowels or of the
Beyond all question the article put on the market by the plaintiff and labeled as a tonic was a tonic as that term is defined by standard authorities. Whatever else it contained, it contained alcohol and the bitter principle of the hop in proportions that made it a mild tonic, instead of an intoxicating beverage. This is undeniable, since the plaintiff explains that its reason for putting the article up in the manner it did was to sell it in the Indian Territory and the state of Kansas and other prohibition localities, where it was unlawful to sell ordinary beer and other intoxicating beverages.
It is common knowledge that physicians frequently prescribe some kinds of beer as a tonic to be taken by their patients for physical ailments. The word “tonic” in itself signifies to the common understanding a preparation having medicinal qualities. The plaintiff unquestionably used the word in this sense, as it well might do, for, as we have seen, the alcohol and hop extract which the preparation contained did constitute it a tonic according to all definitions of that term, which might well be used, and often is used, for medicinal purposes; and brought it directly within the terms of the statute which embraces every tnedicinal preparation or composition whatsoever which is held out as having remedial properties, or as remedies for any diseases or affections of the human body, or which are advertised on the package or otherwise as remedies for any ailment, or as having any special claim to merit or to any peculiar advantage in mode of preparation, quality, use, or effect. By labeling its bottles “J. D. Iler’s Rochester Tonic” the plaintiff did thereby distinctly advertise on the package that its tonic had tonic or medicinal qualities. The statute does not require the ingredients of the tonic or its mode of preparation to appear on the package. The plaintiff will be presumed to have conformed to the law, which prohibited it under heavy penalties from shipping or removing its fermented liquors under any other than the proper name to designate their kind and quality. The plaintiff knew the ingredients and qualities of its products, and with this knowledge, and the further knowledge that the law required it under heavy penalties to mark or label its packages with “the proper name” of their contents, it deliberately chose to name and label this product “Rochester Tonic,” and put it on the market as such, and obtained an extensive sale for it in that character. Having enjoyed all the benefits of its sale as a tonic, it is now too late to call it by another name for the purpose of escaping taxation. Law and morals alike forbid the allowance of such a claim. We feel constrained to accept the name the plaintiff itself bestowed on its product under the most serious sanctions, and thus acquit it of a deliberate intention to perpetrate a fraud on the pub-
It is said that to compel the plaintiff to pay a stamp tax on this product will be subjecting it to double taxation; but it is not so. A tax paid on beer in the barrel does not exempt that product from a stamp tax when it possesses mild tonic properties, and is put up in bottles, and named and labeled in a manner that brings it within, the purview of Schedule B. The plaintiff voluntarily assumed the obligation to pay the stamp tax when it bottled and labeled and named it a tonic, which, as we have seen, it really was.
It was amply compensated for paying a stamp tax by the extended sale of its tonic to persons who wanted to purchase a tonic, and not beer, or any stronger beverage, and by its very extended sale in localities where beer could not be sold.
For the sale of “Rochester Tonic” the plaintiff paid no tax until it paid the tax which it seeks in this suit to recover back. Moreover, it would be entirely competent for Congress to impose a tax on beer in barrels and an additional tax on it when put up in bottles.
If the plaintiff had been proceeded against criminally for a violation of section 3449 of the Revised Statutes, it is not doubted but what it could and would have successfully defended the prosecution upon the ground that the contents of these bottles was not ordinary beer, but a mild tonic, and that the bottles were, therefore, truthfully labeled.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to dismiss the plaintiff’s petition.