Bloemer v. Turner

137 S.W.2d 387, 281 Ky. 832, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 43
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 5, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 137 S.W.2d 387 (Bloemer v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloemer v. Turner, 137 S.W.2d 387, 281 Ky. 832, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 43 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner—

Reversing.

The case presents a question of statutory construction with respect to the authority of an administrative bureau. It relates to labels on canned dog food. It is a representative suit by a distributor and manufacturer of such commodity against the Director of the Kentucky Agriculture Experiment Station and the Head of the Department of Feeding Stuffs of that Station, seeking, a declaration of rights and injunctive relief. The circuit court upheld the authority of the administrative officers and its exercise.

No claim is made that canned dog food is not within the terms of Section 1719a-l et seq. of the Statutes, which regulate the manufacture and sale of “concern trated commercial feeding stuff.” The statute is administered by the Director of the Kentucky Agriculture Experiment Station, which is a part of the College of Agriculture of the University of Kentucky. Section 4636f-l et seq., Statutes. The Act (Chapter 48, Acts of 1906) defines the term to include certain specified articles of food for domestic animals, requires inspection and analysis, provides for branding and labeling, and imposes civil liability as well as a criminal penalty for its violation. In many respects the statute is vague *834 and ambiguous. Section 1 of tbe Act, Section 1719a-l, Statutes, sets out the requirements as to labeling or tagging the containers of such feeding stuff. So much of that section as bears on the question before us may be thus abridged:

Every container shall bear a tag or label on which is shown (1) the number of net pounds therein; (2) the name, brand or trade-mark; (3) the name and address of the manufacturer; (4) “and the guaranteed analysis, stating the percentage of fat and the percentage of protein, allowing one percentum (1%) of nitrogen to equal six, twenty hundred percentum (20.-100%) of protein, these constituents to be determined by the methods adopted by the Association of Official Chemists of the United States;” and (5) the.ingredients from which the feed is compounded. The package must also bear a stamp showing payment of the inspection fee. Section 13 of the Act, Section 1719a-13, Statutes, provides:

“The director of said experiment station is empowered to adopt standards for concentrated commercial feeding stuffs and to make and enforce such rules and regulations as he may deem necessary to carry fully into effect the true intent and meaning of this act.”

There has been a phenomenal development of this new industry of preparing and marketing food for dogs in cans. It is principally made of the by-products or offal of meat packing and the fishing industry, with cereals added. It is declared by the chemists and others who testified to be nutritious, clean and wholesome, but the Director seriously questions this. The record indicates that the manufacturers and distributors have cooperated and worked in harmony with the Agriculture Experiment Station, there being unquestionably a need for regulation and an advantage to be derived from having the product bear the approval of the Station with its consequent guarantee. As counsel expresses it, they seek “not to destroy but to fulfill” the law. However, a disagreement arose over the order of Dean Thomas Cooper, the Director, and his representative, J. D. Turner, the Head of the Department of Feeding Stuffs, that there be printed on the label of each can the statement that it contained, “Water, maximum 74%.” The director had promulgated a document styled, “Stand *835 ards, Rules and Regulations for Dog Feed,” which required that all cans should contain protein, minimum 10%; fat, minimum 2%; fiber, maximum 1.5%; water, maximum 74%.

Later the Department sent out a circular letter to manufacturers and distributors requiring that for the purpose of registration such dog food should be guaranteed as to the maximum percentage of water; that water be declared as one of the ingredients; and that the labels on the cans should contain essentially the information guaranteed by the registration. The industry sought to have him withdraw that part of the order requiring that the labels should state the water content. They did not object to the fixing of a maximum or to the maximum so fixed. They objected only to printing the statement on.the labels that the can contained 74% water because it would be misleading since (a) the principal water content is the natural moisture of the ingredients of meat and vegetables, with only a small amount of water added for cooking and processing; and (b) a false impression would be given the trade that the dog food actually contains 74% of added water, whereas it is a spongy mass, substantially solid, and contains no free liquid. There would be, the appellants maintain, an immovable sales resistance. It is pointed out in the evidence by way of illustration that a label on a bottle of milk that it contains 90% water would be ruinous to the dairymen, even though such be a fact. There are other detriments and disadvantages claimed. The Director refused to recede from his position, justifying his action upon deception of the public as to the nutrition in and actual worth of the product. He states there has been adulteration and much water added by some manufacturers, and claims gross exaggeration of merit in the product. Official notice was given that prosecutions under the penal provision of the statute would be instituted against those who failed to show the maximum water content on the labels. This suit followed.

The basis of the objection by manufacturers and distributors and the justification by the Director have little to do with the decision of the legal question involved, since the plaintiffs do not rely upon the ground of an arbitrary abuse .of official discretion. They chai *836 lenge only the authority of the Director to require that the labels on the cans bear the statement, “Water, maximum 74%. ” Appellants argue that the statute cannot be rightly and fairly construed to give the Director such power; that such a construction would make the act invalid as an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power. The due process clauses of the Federal Constitution, U. S. C. A. Constitution Amendments 5, 14, are invoked because the statute provides for no hearing before the Director or appeal to the courts.

First, it is to be noted that though Section 1 of the Act provides that each package of “concentrated * * * feeding stuff” shall have printed on the label or tag the “ingredients from which it is compounded,” it does not provide that the proportion of each ingredient shall be stated. The requirement of percentages is only as to fat and protein, that is, certain elements of food value of the entire product — the nutritious substance of all the compounded ingredients as measured by the terms “fat” and “protein.” For selling feeding stuff containing smaller percentages of fat and protein than the minimum or larger percentages of crude fiber than the maximum guaranteed, and for adulteration, with foreign substances of certain kinds having little or no food value, a criminal penalty is provided. Section 1719a-9, Statutes. For misrepresenting on the label a larger percentage of protein or fat than the product actually contains, both criminal and civil liability are imposed. Section 1719a-10, Statutes.

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.W.2d 387, 281 Ky. 832, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloemer-v-turner-kyctapphigh-1939.