Cooperative Pure Milk Assn. v. Board of Health

252 N.E.2d 182, 20 Ohio App. 2d 109, 49 Ohio Op. 2d 123, 1969 Ohio App. LEXIS 507
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 24, 1969
Docket360
StatusPublished

This text of 252 N.E.2d 182 (Cooperative Pure Milk Assn. v. Board of Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooperative Pure Milk Assn. v. Board of Health, 252 N.E.2d 182, 20 Ohio App. 2d 109, 49 Ohio Op. 2d 123, 1969 Ohio App. LEXIS 507 (Ohio Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

Shannon, P. J.,

This is an appeal on questions of law from a determination reached by the Court of Common Pleas, Clermont County, upon a petition for declaratory judgment.

The plaintiff, appellant herein, operates, as it has for some time, numerous wholesale and retail milk and dairy product routes in and through Clermont County. These *110 routes are serviced by delivery trucks which carry, in addition to milk and its related products, such items as orange juice, fruit drinks, potato chips and eggs. The additional items are carried so as to furnish a more complete service to plaintiff’s customers.

All products carried are processed by plaintiff exclusively within the limits of Cincinnati, and its plants and producers are under the direct inspection of the Board of Health of that city. Therefore, it was stipulated below that such board of health is the duly designated and approved health district with respect to plaintiff and is its licensor under Sections 3707.373 and 3707.371, Revised Code. Consequently, all plaintiff’s plants, producers and haulers, including the delivery trucks involved here, are inspected and approved by the Cincinnati Board of Health and the necessary fees are paid solely to it, none being paid to any other board of health in Ohio.

The filing of the petition involved here was occasioned when the Board of Health of Clermont County, under its sanitary regulations, imposed a permit fee of ten dollars per annum on each of plaintiff’s vehicles operating in Clermont County and notified it that criminal prosecution would follow noncompliance with the order to obtain permits and pay therefor. The prayer of the petition is for a determination of the validity and enforceability of the santiary regulations. A temporary restraining order was granted pending final determination, and plaintiff has not, as yet, paid any permit fees to defendant.

Inspection by Clermont County authorities went to the sanitary conditions of each truck, the type of refrigeration used, sources of possible contamination, and samples of milk products were taken and analyzed.

The lower court determined that the Board of Health of Clermont County had the authority to inspect all vehicles delivering food and drink, whether retail or wholesale, in the county, had the right to license them, had the right to charge a fee and that ten dollars per annum was not an exorbitant charge. Further, the court held that the sanitary regulations were valid but that the Milk Handlers *111 Statutes (Sections 3707.371 through 3707.376, inclusive, Revised Code) were not applicable in the premises.

Plaintiff concedes that the Clermont County Board of Health has the power, under Section 3709.21, Revised Code, generally to regulate for the public health through the issuance of orders and regulations and, particularly, to regulate by providing for inspection of “* * # places where food is manufactured, handled, stored, sold, or offered for sale” under Section 3709.22, Revised Code. Clearly, then, defendant can inspect plaintiff’s trucks because they are places “where food is handled, stored, sold, or offered for sale.”

Consequently, the issue is resolved to be: Do the powers of the board of health to regulate include the power to impose an inspection fee?

We have been unable to find, and neither party has cited to our attention, any statutory authority for the imposition of such inspection, or permit, fee. Therefore, we conclude that none exists.

Ergo, if there is authority for the board of health of a general health district to exact an inspection, permit or license fee, it must arise by implication from the power to regulate.

While it seems that the precise question posed here has not been decided in Ohio, analogous situations can be found in earlier cases.

In Brunner v. Rhodes, 95 Ohio App. 259, the Court of Appeals for Franklin County reviewed the power of a city board of health to exact, by regulation, inspection fees from slaughterers of meat animals. It was determined in Brunner, supra (paragraph eleven of the syllabus), that:

“A city board of health is without authority to prescribe a regulation requiring the payment of inspection fees by meat packers.”

In reaching such conclusion, the court, at page 272, considered Section 1261-40, General Code, now substantially embodied in Section 3709.28, Revised Code, as “convincing that it was the intent of the legislation that the expenses of neither municipal nor general health districts *112 ■should be raised by them but should be referred to the council and the budget commissioners respectively for allowance.”

The Supreme Court of Ohio reflected upon the general question of what powers may be implied as incident to powers expressly conferred upon boards of health in Wetterer v. Hamilton County Board of Health, 167 Ohio St. 127. Herbert, J., author of the opinion observed, at page 138, that: “Here we have a situation where we must either imply in general boards of health the power to license as a necessary corollary to their power to regulate, or the contrary.” In apparent rejection of the holding and necessary rationale in McGowen v. Shaffer, 65 Ohio Law Abs. 138, paragraph two of the headnote, “While under the Ohio statutes the boards of health of the general health districts are not expressly granted the right to license master plumbers and register journeymen for a fee, they have, by reason of the powers granted to them under said 'statutes, an implied authority to so license and register,” the Supreme Court commented upon the lack of legislative authority in the premises and decided the case thusly:

“A board of health of a general health district has neither expressed nor implied power under Sections 3707.01, 3709.21 and 3709.36, Revised Code, to enact rules and regulations to provide for the licensing of plumbers in such general health district.”

The Court of Appeals for Stark County grappled with fundamentally the same problem in the unreported case of State, ex rel. Putman, v. Gressinger (January 1968), which involved a health regulation requiring migrant labor camps to obtain an annual license or permit and to pay a fee therefor. The court cited Wetterer, supra, and, reasoning from it, decided:

“* * * the public health council has not been given statutory authority to require an annual license or permit for operation of migrant labor camps and the board of health of a general health district has not been given statutory authority to exact a fee for such license.”

Such determination, the court stated, is supported by the number of cases in which the Legislature, when intend *113 ing that a license he required or fee be paid, has expressly provided for such, directing attention to Sections 915.15, 915.16, 3721.04, 3711.01, 3711.02, 3733.03, 3733.04, 3732.03, 3732.04, 3731.03 and 3731.04, Revised Code, among others.

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Related

Casey v. City of Youngstown
224 N.E.2d 155 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1967)
Brunner v. Rhodes
119 N.E.2d 105 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1953)
Prudential Co-Operative Realty Co. v. City of Youngstown
160 N.E. 695 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1928)
McGowen v. Shaffer
111 N.E.2d 615 (Summit County Court of Common Pleas, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
252 N.E.2d 182, 20 Ohio App. 2d 109, 49 Ohio Op. 2d 123, 1969 Ohio App. LEXIS 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooperative-pure-milk-assn-v-board-of-health-ohioctapp-1969.