Bloom v. Texas State Board of Pharmacy

390 S.W.2d 252
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1965
DocketA-10431
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 390 S.W.2d 252 (Bloom v. Texas State Board of Pharmacy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloom v. Texas State Board of Pharmacy, 390 S.W.2d 252 (Tex. 1965).

Opinions

SMITH, Justice.

The Respondent, The Texas State Board of Pharmacy, after notice and hearing on the 19th day of April, 1963, found Jerry Irving Bloom, a registered pharmacist, guilty1 of the charge of violating Article 4542a, Section 12(h), Vernon’s Annotated Statutes. Section 12(h) provides that the Pharmacy Board may in its discretion cancel, revoke or suspend the license of any pharmacist if the Pharmacy Board finds after hearing that a licensee has engaged in the act of “substitution” in the dispensing of drugs. The Act defines “substitution” as meaning “ * * * the dispensing of a drug or a brand of drug other than that which is ordered or prescribed without the express consent of the orderer or pre-[253]*253scriber.” Section 12(h) goes further to provide that:

“If the consent of the orderer or preserver for substitution by the licensee is obtained, a notation shall be made by the licensee on the prescription stating that such consent has been obtained and by whom such consent was given, and such notation shall, in addition, specify the drug or brand of drug so substituted.”

On May 3, 1963, Bloom filed in the District Court of Dallas County, his appeal from the Pharmacy Board’s order suspending his pharmacist’s certificate. The petition alleged that the Pharmacy Board’s findings were not reasonably supported by substantial evidence, and that the evidence wholly failed to establish a violation of the law as charged; that the action of the Pharmacy Board was arbitrary, illegal, invalid and of no effect in that the order was not only without support in substantial evidence, but to the contrary the evidence showed that he had not violated the law, as charged; that he “had acted in good faith, had no intention to violate any law or regulation governing Plaintiff’s conduct as a registered pharmacist and that there was no basis for any complaint against the Plaintiff.” There is no contention that the druggist was negligent in any respect or that he filled the prescription by mistake.

On May 3, 1963, the trial court entered a temporary restraining order without notice to the Pharmacy Board based upon Bloom’s verified application therefor, restraining and enjoining the Pharmacy Board from enforcing its April 19, 1963, order.

On May 10, 1963, the Court, after considering Bloom’s pleadings, the Pharmacy Board’s general denial and the evidence offered by both parties, granted a Writ of Injunction decreeing that the Temporary Restraining Order entered on May 3, 1963, be “continued in force and effect as a Temporary Injunction” pending final hearing of the cause.

On August 26, 1963, after a hearing of the cause on its merits, the trial court rendered its judgment granting a permanent injunction in favor of Bloom and against the Pharmacy Board, holding that the Pharmacy Board’s order was not reasonably supported by substantial evidence and was invalid. The trial court ordered that “the Defendant Texas State Board of Pharmacy, its servants, agents and/or employees be, and they are hereby, restrained and enjoined from enforcing or carrying out its order of April 19, 1963, and from suspending, revoking or cancelling Plaintiff’s certificate and license to practice pharmacy, * *

The Pharmacy Board, on appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, won from that Court a judgment reinstating its order of April 19, 1963, and dissolving the permanent injunction which had been granted by the trial court on August 26, 1963. 382 S.W.2d 496.

We reverse the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals and affirm that of the trial court.

The facts are undisputed. Bloom dispensed a substance in two small bottles to a representative of A. H. Robins Company by pouring said substance from a one-gallon container, Bloom’s Exhibit 5, bearing the A. H. Robins Company “Donnatal” label. The one-gallon “Donnatal” container had been purchased by Bloom’s employer from a wholesale drug house; Bloom had never tampered with, or altered the contents of the Donnatal container; Bloom had no reason to believe that the bottle contained anything other than Donnatal; and Bloom believed that the substance dispensed was actually Donnatal. In addition to these admitted facts, the Pharmacy Board gives [254]*254emphasis to the fact that fifteen 2 tests were made by an A. H. Robins Company chemist in making an analysis of the dispensed substance, and that, in the opinion of the chemist, the substance analyzed was “definitely imitations of Donnatal elixir.” The record shows that ten of the fifteen tests showed that the substance analyzed was different from the A. H. Robins Company Donnatal elixir specifications. The chemist admitted that five of the tests “ran the same on the substance that came out of Plaintiff’s Exhibit 5, as run on Don-natal.” The chemist testified on cross-examination that the A. H. Robins Company did not ship Donnatal directly to the Dorchester Pharmacy, but shipped it to a wholesaler in Dallas, Texas, and that he did not know “what happened to this bottle while it was in the hands of the wholesaler.”

The principal contention of Bloom is that the evidence shows conclusively that he did not violate the law in any manner when he filled the prescriptions describing a drug known as “Donnatal.” The Pharmacy Board takes the position that the Statute, especially Section 203 of Article 4542a, supra, which provides that the practice of pharmacy in the State of Texas is a professional practice affecting the public health, safety and welfare, does not require intent to violate the Statute, and that the Legislature did not intend to make scienter an element. If intent is not required, then the order is supported by substantial evidence.

The answer to the question turns on our interpretation of the Statute, particularly the meaning intended to be given by the Legislature to the word “substitution” contained in the Statute. We hold that when the Legislature defined the word “substitution” in the Act as meaning “ * * * the dispensing of a drug or a brand of drug other than that which is ordered or prescribed without the express consent of the orderer or prescriber,” it meant to provide that before a guilty finding will be allowed to stand, the evidence must establish a conscious substitution. We recognize that it is not the province of this Court to substitute itself for the Pharmacy Board in determining the wisdom or advisability of the order in question, but this Court will only sustain the order upon a determination that the Pharmacy Board’s conclusions are supported by substantial evidence. In sustaining the judgment of the trial court in this cause, we recognize the rule that the Pharmacy Board’s order is presumed to be valid, and the burden rests with Bloom to show that the Pharmacy Board’s order of April 19, 1963, is not [255]*255reasonably supported by substantial evidence. Under our decisions an administrative order is reasonable, as a matter of law, if it is supported by substantial evidence. The evidence in this case shows conclusively that Bloom had no intention to substitute one drug for another. The Pharmacy Board cites Sutherland Statutory Construction, 3rd Edition, Vol. 3, Section 7202,4 pp.

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Bloom v. Texas State Board of Pharmacy
390 S.W.2d 252 (Texas Supreme Court, 1965)

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390 S.W.2d 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloom-v-texas-state-board-of-pharmacy-tex-1965.