DeAryan v. Butler

119 Cal. App. 2d 674
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 13, 1953
DocketCiv. No. 4527
StatusPublished

This text of 119 Cal. App. 2d 674 (DeAryan v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeAryan v. Butler, 119 Cal. App. 2d 674 (Cal. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

119 Cal.App.2d 674 (1953)

C. LEON deARYAN, Appellant,
v.
JOHN D. BUTLER, as Mayor of the City of San Diego, et al., Respondents.

Civ. No. 4527.

California Court of Appeals. Fourth Dist.

Aug. 13, 1953.

C. Leon deAryan, in pro. per., for Appellant.

J. F. Du Paul, City Attorney, Aaron W. Reese and Douglas D. Deaper, Deputy City Attorneys, for Respondents.

GRIFFIN, J.

Plaintiff and appellant individually, as taxpayer and elector, and in a claimed representative capacity, filed an action to enjoin the mayor, city council, and other city officials from adding a fluoride compound, in an amount sufficient to maintain one part of fluoride per one million parts of water to the water furnished to the consumers of water in the city of San Diego.

The action arose out of the adoption of a resolution of the city council on October 30, 1951, as pleaded in the petition, reciting in part that:

"Whereas, the San Diego County Medical Society, the San Diego County Dental Society, the Board of Directors and the Health Division of the Community Welfare Council, the Health Division of the Ninth District Congress of Parents and Teachers and the Public Health Commission of The City of San Diego have recommended to this Council that it will be directly in the interests of the health of the people of The City of San Diego to furnish to water consumers in said City water which has been treated by adding to its contents fluorides, and that this Council should endorse the principle of *677 artificial fluoridation with respect to the supplying of water to the people of The City of San Diego; and"

"Whereas, this Council is of the opinion that such recommendation should be followed, and that it will be in the interests of the public health and the dental health of the residents of San Diego and the water consumers of said City to treat the water served to consumers within said City by adding to it an approved fluoride compound ...; Now, Therefore,"

"Be It Resolved ..."

"That the City Manager be, and he is hereby authorized and directed to apply to the State Board of Health for an amendment of the water permit of said City to allow said City" so to do.

A temporary restraining order was issued. At the hearing it was stipulated that such a resolution, as worded, was adopted after receiving testimony "that the fluoridation of water will primarily act as a caries- preventive on children up to about the age of twelve years, and that said Resolution ... was adopted by the Council primarily in the interest of the public health of said children up to about the twelfth year of age; ... that pursuant to said resolution ... City Manager ... did apply for and receive from the State of California Department of Public Health, pursuant to sections 4011-4038, inclusive, of the California Health and Safety Code, a permit to add fluoride compounds to all the water being served in The City of San Diego."

Thereafter, plaintiff offered certain exhibits and reports in evidence and produced certain witnesses who testified generally concerning the artificial fluoridation of water intended for human consumption, and as to its probable beneficial or detrimental effects in so using it.

The sanitary engineer for the city water department (appearing in his individual capacity) testified that although he was not qualified to testify as to the actual biochemistry of fluorides in the human body, he did know there were "two sides" to the question as to the detrimental or beneficial effect of fluoridation of water for human consumption. His study was based on such reports as those of the National Research Council, Division of Medical Sciences, pertaining to the Ad Hoc Committee on Fluoridation of Water Supplies, which commission was headed by Dr. Kenneth S. Maxcy, of Johns Hopkins University. He pointed out from the conclusions of that report, with which he said he agreed, that "The upper *678 level of safety has been reached in the northern part of the United States in domestic water supplies containing approximately 1.0 to 1.5 p.p.m. fluorine, in the southern part of the country approximately 0.7 p.p.m."; and that in his opinion the city of San Diego, "climatically would be in the lowest tolerance group in the United States"; that of its 375,000 inhabitants now being served by the city water department, about 25 per cent are of the age 12 years or under; that the cost of the equipment and to run the contemplated program provided in the ordinance for the first six months would be $35,000, and in the subsequent years this would cost about $35,000 per year; that only about one-half of one per cent of the public water supply output is used for cooking and drinking; that if one starts out with one part per million concentration and boils another one-half of it away he will end up with two parts per million, and if he boils one-half away he will end up with four parts per million; that in such cases, although not necessarily dangerous "could possibly," or would probably, cause parents of children some concern and "perhaps involve the City," and that "moderate fluorosis is a probability."

Another witness testified that he operated a health food store and had studied nutrition for over 20 years; that he had studied pamphlets prepared by universities, doctors and chemists on the subject, and that they state that "sodium fluoride, such as used in our drinking water, is a toxic and poisonous chemical," and that fluoridation of water harms the human system more than it helps it.

Another witness, a graduate of West Coast Chiropractic College, testified he made a study of chemistry there; that he agreed with Taber's Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary defining sodium fluoride, as being a manufactured product, a "White crystalline powder, saline in taste ... Action and Uses: Epilepsy, tuberculosis, and malaria ... Commercially, in etching glassware, for eradication of rats, insects, ants, and other pests, or as a food preservative"; that in his opinion it would not help in building up children's teeth; that when it came in contact with the stomach juices it would turn into hydrochloric acid, a substance used to etch glass; and that in his opinion it would, as to a certain class of people, have a cumulative effect and would injure organs of the human body. He admitted that current surveys made by the United States Public Health Service indicate a great difference of opinion as to the cumulative effect on the organs and as to *679 what concentrations are necessary to produce the effects above noted; that a San Diego County Medical Society bulletin indicates that more than 140 cities have adopted fluoridation of water supplies; that it states that the councils are unaware of any evidence that fluoridation of water supplies, up to a concentration of one part per million, would lead to structural damage in the bones; that the only difficulty so far revealed is the possible increase in the mottling of the teeth enamel, but the use of it is safe. He did not agree in toto with them. He stated that he heard some of the arguments, pro and con, at a hearing before the city council on the advisability of adopting the plan, but did not participate in the arguments.

Several dissertations by so-called experts on the subject, which involved tests claimed to have been made, were admitted in evidence, which reports resulted in the conclusion that sodium fluoride has a cumulative effect on the human body, and is harmful to anyone's teeth, regardless of his age, and that the fluorine content of the water supply should never be more than one- half part per million.

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119 Cal. App. 2d 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dearyan-v-butler-calctapp-1953.