American Bakeries Co. v. Louisiana State Board of Health

172 So. 518, 186 La. 433, 1937 La. LEXIS 1093
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 1, 1937
DocketNo. 33811.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 172 So. 518 (American Bakeries Co. v. Louisiana State Board of Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Bakeries Co. v. Louisiana State Board of Health, 172 So. 518, 186 La. 433, 1937 La. LEXIS 1093 (La. 1937).

Opinion

*435 HIGGINS, Justice.

The American Bakeries Company instituted this action against the Louisiana State Board of Health for the purpose of obtaining an injunction to restrain and enjoin the officers, agents, and employees of the board from molesting, interfering with, arresting, and causing the arrest of the company’s officers, agents, and employees for alleged violations of article 215 of the Sanitary Code of the Louisiana State Board of Health.

A temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction were issued, but after a trial on the merits, the district judge dissolved the preliminary injunction and rejected the company’s demands, and it has appealed.

The company contends that article 215 of the Sanitary Code of the State Board of Health should not be enforced against it for the following reasons:

(1) That article 215 of the Sanitary Code, as amended, has no executory force, because it was not promulgated; (2) that the article is unconstitutional and therefore null and void because it violates article 3 of section 16 of the State Constitution of 1921, which provides that every act shall express but one object; (3) that the article of the Sanitary Code is unconstitutional because the State Board of Health attempted to delegate to its president a delegated legislative power; (4) that the article is unconstitutional because it violates the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution, being an arbitrary and unreasonable exercise of the police power; and (5) that the company has not and does not by its mode of conducting its business or its activities violate the provisions of the article of the Sanitary Code.

We shall discuss these issues in the above order:

Plaintiff does not say that the Sanitary Code or article 215, as originally adopted, was not promulgated, but states that the amendment to the article was not promulgated.

The evidence shows that the State Board had the amendment to article 215 of the Sanitary Code published for 20 days in the official journal at Baton Rouge, in the same manner that acts of the Legislature are published, but counsel for the plaintiff contend that since the amending regulation was not certified by the secretary of state, as required by section 15 of article 5 of the Constitution of 1921, the amendment was not promulgated and therefore has no binding effect in law. They cite section 6 of Act No. 79 of Ex.Sess.1921, which was passed by the Legislature to carry into effect section 11 of article 6 of the Constitution of 1921. This section reads as follows:

“On the adoption of said Code by the Board it shall be promulgated in the manner provided for the promulgation of the Laws of the State of Louisiana and it shall be printed and published at the expense of the State Board of Health in pamphlet form in such nuipber of copies as may be necessary for distribution for information of health bodies,” etc. (Italics ours.)

It is argued that in order for a rule, regulation, or ordinance passed by the *437 State Board of Health to become legally effective, that the secretary of state must have it promulgated in the same manner as a state statute. We are referred to the cases of State ex rel. Mercier v. Judge of Superior District Court et al., 29 La.Ann. 223; State v. Ellis et al., 12 La.Ann. 390 and Whited, Tax Collector, v. Lewis et al., 25 La.Ann. 568, to the effect that the promulgation of an act of the Legislature must be made by the designated officers in the special mode prescribed by law before it acquires executory force. We are not favored with any authority holding that this rule of law is applicable to the rules, regulations, and ordinances of the State Board -of Health. It was shown that the secretary of state has never construed the law as granting to him the right to promulgate such rules, etc., of the State Board of Health. The law does not make him the custodian of the rules, regulations, or ordinances of the Board of Health. They have always been kept on file by the State Board of Health with its official papers. It is our opinion that the amendment to article 215 of the Sanitary Code of the State Board of Health, having been promulgated for 20 days in the official journal at Baton Rouge by the State Board of Health, there was compliance with section 6 of Act No. 79 of Ex.Sess.1921, and that the certification of the rule by the secretary of state was unnecessary. State v. Snyder, 131 La. 145, 146, 59 So. 44.

(2) Section 16 of article 3 of the Constitution of 1921 requiring every act to express but one object applies to legislative acts and not to rules, regulations, or ordinances of the State Board of Health. Gibbs v. City of Natchitoches, 182 La. 926, 162 So. 731; State v. Snyder, supra. Therefore, even though it be conceded that article 215 embraces more than one object, it is not unconstitutional. In passing, we may add that this article deals with the sanitation of bakeries, and the fact that it contains a provision requiring permits issued to bakeries to be posted in conspicuous places in bakeries does not add another object, because this is merely incidental to the single object expressed in the article.

(3) The alleged unconstitutionality of article 215 under issue No. 3 is predicated on the allegation that there is a provision contained therein whereby the State Board of Health delegated to the president of the board the right to make rules and regulations and to establish exemptions. The fallacy of this argument is that the president would have a discretion in making provision for these exemptions and would be able to make arbitrary and discriminatory decisions affecting different bakeries. But this is not so, because the provision guards against such an infringement upon the constitutional rights of individuals or corporations. This clearly appears from the language of the article, which reads as follows:

“Art. 215. No bread or other bakery products, shall be delivered to the retailer by means of a box or other receptacle that is on the outside of his place of business.
“All handling or sale of bread, or other bakery products, and all practices connected therewith, shall be conducted at all times so as to prevent contamination, or the spread of disease among the consumers.
*439 “No bread or other bakery products, except as hereinafter provided, shall be returned from any consumer, or other purchaser, to the dealer or baker, nor from any dealer to the baker and no baker or dealer shall directly or indirectly accept any returns or make any exchange of bread or other baking products from a dealer, restaurant or hotel keeper, consumer or other person, and all bread and all other bakery products shall be kept moving to the consumer in as direct a line as may be practicable, and without unreasonable delay, and without exchange, return or practice whatsoever which may disseminate contamination, disease or infection, among bakeshops, or which may cause waste in the food supply.

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Related

State v. Maitrejean
192 So. 361 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 518, 186 La. 433, 1937 La. LEXIS 1093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-bakeries-co-v-louisiana-state-board-of-health-la-1937.