Adams v. City of Milwaukee

228 U.S. 572, 33 S. Ct. 610, 57 L. Ed. 971, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2399
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 12, 1913
Docket247
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 228 U.S. 572 (Adams v. City of Milwaukee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. City of Milwaukee, 228 U.S. 572, 33 S. Ct. 610, 57 L. Ed. 971, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2399 (1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered' the opinion of the. court.

Error to review a judgment of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin sustaining the validity of an ordinance of the common council of the City of Milwaukee regulating the sale of milk. 1

*577 The ordinance provides that no milk drawn from cows outside of the city shall be brought into the city, contained in cans, bottles or packages, unless they be marked with a legible stamp, tag br impression bearing the name and address of the owner of the cows and unless such owner shall, within one year from the passage of the ordinance, file in the office of the Commissioner of Health a certificate of a duly licensed veterinary surgeon or other person given authority by the State Livestock Sanitary Board to make *578 tuberculin tests, stating that such cows have been found free from tubercúlosis of other contagious diseases. The certificate 's required'to give a number which has been permanently attached to each cow and a description sufficient for identification. . The certificate must be renewed annually and must show that the cows are . free from tuberculosis or other contagious diseases.

A short' time before the ordinance was to go into effect this suit was brought against the city and Dr. Bading, its "Health, Commissioner, to restrain the-enforcement of the ordinance. After a hearing judgment was entered dismissing the complaint, and the judgment, was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the State.

. .The plaintiff (we shall , so call him) alleged that he brought the suit for himself and all other producers of and dealers in pure, wholesome milk, as it involved a question of common interest to many persons. He alleged also the following: He is a farmer, living about seventeen miles from Milwaukee, and maintains a large dairy herd of cattle and is enjoying a profitable dairy business, shipping milk into Milwaukee to eertain retail milk dealers in' the city. His herd is healthy, so far as he is able to know of judge. He keeps his stables wholesome and clean, and if his cows become sick or affécted in any way with any infectious of contagious disease, so far as he is able to learn or discover by giving careful attention to his herd in its deeding and care, he removes such animals immediately t So. far as he is able to discover, his herd' is;, absolutely free from disease, and the-milk he offers-for sale in Milwaukee^ or will offer for sale, is and will be, so far., as he is able to discover, absolutely pure and wholesome; and all', that proves to be impure and unwholesome upon being tested in the usual and custoinary manner will be withdrawn from' sale.

Bading, as Commissioner of Health of the City of Milwaukee, threatens, on and af(er April 1, 1909, to execute *579 the ordinance and confiscate, forfeit afid destroy all milk shipped by plaintiff and other producers to be sold in Milwaukee contrary to the requirements of the ordinance, unless restrained; and if he does so irreparable injury will be caused plaintiff and such other producers and make their business of maintaining a dairy absolutely unprofitable as well as impracticable.

The tuberculin test required by the ordinance is, . as plaintiff is informed and believes, wholly unreliable, untrustworthy and entirely worthless so far as being a guide or protection to the public as to whether or not the cows tested by it ¿re free from the germs of tuberculosis or any other infectious disease.

The milk threatened to be confiscated, shipped to Milwaukee for sale by plaintiff and other producers, when pure and wholesome is not dangerous to public health becaúse perchance the owners of the cows producing the milk have not had the cows tested or have failed to secure the certificate óf a veterinary surgeon or other person as required by the ordinance.

It is alleged that the constitution of the State and the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States are violated.

A motion to dismiss is made on the ground that the questions in this case, under the decisions of this court, are so far forecloséd as to make their discussion unnecessary. The motion is overruled.

The particular contention of plaintiff is that the ordinance violates the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States because it discriminates between milk dr¿wn from cows outside of Milwaukee and milk drawn from cows within the city. Therefore the charge is that the ordin¿nce does not afféct all. persons alike. If we regard the territorial distinction merely, that is, milk from cows outside and milk from cows within the city, there is certainly no discrimination. All producers *580 outside of the city are treated alike. Plaintiff identifies himself in interest with’all of them and sues for all of them. He therefore seeks grounds of comparison other than the locality of the dairies find urges that the discrimination exists in the difference between the tests to which cows kept outside of the city are. subject and the test to which.cows within the city are subject.

To sustain his contention plaintiff in error cites an ordinance of the city which provides that no cows or cattle shall be kept in the city without permit from the Commissioner of Health, except at places provided or established for purposes of slaughtering, and that the stables and places where such animals may be shall be kept at all times in ai cleanly and wholesome condition and properly, ventilated,.and that no person shall allow any animal to be therein which is affected with any. contagious an,d pestilential disease.

.' This ordinance was supplemented by various rules made by the' Health Commissioner in regard to cleanliness of the stabling of the animals, keeping from them persons infected or who have been exposed to disease, requiring applications for permits to be accompanied by the certificate of the veterinary surgeon showing that the animals have been tested by the tuberculin test and shown by said test to be free from tuberculosis, and that they are not affected with-any infectious or contagious disease. If the animals become subsequently infected they are to be removed from the city or disposed off. in the manner provided by law;

Three contentions are, notwithstanding, made — (1) The rules were promulgated after this suit was begun. (2) The Commissioner had no authority to make the rules. (3) They are radically different rules from the rules as to cows kept outside of the city.'

The third contention is the only one that involves a Federal question. The others involve local questions only, *581 and the Supreme Court of the State decided that the sale of milk drawn from diseased' cows is forbidden within the city; that the health officer may remove a diseased animal to a place where it will not spread infection, and that he may apply any known test to determine whether the animal is afflicted with tuberculosis. Inspection and care, therefore, can be applied to the animals within the city, and it is applied also to the milk drawn from such animals. It cannot be applied to animals kept outside of the city. It can only be applied to the milk drawn from them.

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Bluebook (online)
228 U.S. 572, 33 S. Ct. 610, 57 L. Ed. 971, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-city-of-milwaukee-scotus-1913.