Honeyman v. Green

27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 569, 1930 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1188
CourtMiami County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 8, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 569 (Honeyman v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Miami County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Honeyman v. Green, 27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 569, 1930 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1188 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

Jones, J.

The briefs filed by all the counsel in this case are very full, and highly creditable, containing an elaborate discussion of every phase of the case. They received careful, anxious and repeated consideration by the court. While I have no other idea than that any decision that this court may render will be reviewed by the higher courts, which, in view of the importance of the matter, is desirable, and while I hope that all the questions involved may finally be settled beyond controversy, I have tried to be as careful as if I had the final word in the controversy.

In one of the briefs filed on behalf of the plaintiffs it is suggested that the pleadings and evidence present five lines of consideration:

1st. Sufficiency of the test petitions filed.

2d. Compliance with the other requirements of General Code, Section 1121-18.

3d. Abuse of administrative discretion by the Department of Agriculature in selecting the tuberculin test.

4th. The social necessity to justify enactment of General Code, Section 1121-18 (area plan and forcible testing) .

. 5th. Constitutionality of the aera plan and forcible test clauses.

[571]*571' These propositions will be considered in a different order, and regarding the 3d and 4th as really covering the same proposition.

As to the question of the constitutionality of the whole of what is generally known as the Riggs law—

I regard it as settled by the decision of the Supreme Court in the case that went up from this county — Kroplin v. Truax, Director, 119 Ohio St., 610.

It is true that the court, in its syllabus, only referred directly to Section 1121-10, which was all it was required to do, but I am of the opinion that the first clause of the syllabus is sufficient to cover the ground in question:

“ ‘The Legislature’ says the Supreme Court, ‘is authorized within its police power to require the examination, inspection and testing of cattle for bovine tuberculosis,’ etc.”

But in addition, it must be remembered that it is settled beyond controversy that every presumption is in favor of the constitutionality of a law enacted by the people, or through their chosen representatives. No authorities are needed upon this proposition.

In September, 1912, the people of Ohio went so far as to vote into the Constitution of the state that no act of the Legislature should be held unconstitutional by the Supreme Court except by the vote of all the members of the court but one, so that a law passed by the Legislature could not be set aside by the Supreme Court, even if five of its seven members believed it to be unconstitutional.

A case that will be remembered by every citizen of this county is that of County of Miami v. City of Dayton, 92 Ohio St., 215 (the Flood Conservancy Act), in which, as the court said, “every variety of constitutional question was involved,” yet the court held it to be a valid exercise of the police power of the state, and said, in syllabus 7:

“Before a court is warranted in declaring a legislative act unconstitutional, it must clearly appear that the statute is obviously repugnant and irreconcilable with some specific provision or provisions of. the Constitution. If théré be a reasonable doubt as to such conflict, the statute must be upheld.”

[572]*572. In the Miami county case referred to (Kroplin v. Truax) the Supreme Court said:

“Statutes of this nature, providing even drastic measures for the elimination of disease, whether in human beings, crops, stock, or cattle, are, in general, authorized under the police power. The preservation of the public health is universally conceded to be one of the duties devolving upon the state as a sovereignty, and therefore whatever tends to preserve the public health is a subject upon which the Legislature, within its police power, may take action.”

As to this police power, no less an authority than the Supreme Court of the United States has said, “It is the most essential of powers, at times the most insistent, and always one of the least limitable of the powers of government.” 214 U. S., 138; 226 U. S., 137.

As referred to by our own Supreme Court, the Legislature “took action” resulting, among other things, in the enactment of Sections 1121-1 and 1121-3, General Code, providing for the tuberculin test, and defining the same as meaning “any method of testing by tuberculin, or by any other method of testing approved by the Department of Agriculture.

I am satisfied as to the constitutionality of the law, but it is earnestly urged that in the selection and the administration of the tuberculin test the public welfare is endangered and the effect upon the cattle so tested is detrimental rather than beneficial, and that the test itself is a menace to public welfare.

At the outset of the case I entertained grave doubts as to whether the courts would be permitted to go into the question of the efficacy of the test methods prescribed by the State Board of Agriculture in accordance with the statutory authority. I deemed it best and prudent and fair, however, that the plaintiffs should be allowed to introduce their evidence in this particular, reserving the question of its competence or relevancy, feeling that in case of an adverse decision the plaintiffs should be permitted to have in the record the evidence upon which.they [573]*573relied to support the allegations of the petition in this respect.

Is it the province of the court to determine what methods, remedies, or processes are beneficial or detrimental to the physical condition of cattle, or is the court to determine how they are to affect the human race? Is not this purely a legislative instead of a judicial function? The fathers of our government and the framers of our constitutions,’ both national and state, have always sought to draw a distinct line between the three great branches of government, executive, legislative, and judicial, and carefully separate their jurisdiction and powers. Courts may interpret laws, but they cannot make them. It seems that the proposition that the court should undertake to exercise the police power, or even to divide it with the representative branch of the government, is on its face an invasion by the courts of a matter which belongs solely to the Legislature. It is not within the province of the courts to enact health regulations, prohibitory laws, traffic laws, quarantines, for anyone, or to interfere with the proceedings of legislative or executive bodies expressly charged with the care of such matters.

In the instant case we have a great volume of evidence pro and con as to the effects of the tuberculin test upon cattle and indirectly upon humanity. It is urged on behalf of the plaintiffs that in many instances the effects of the test have been highly disastrous. We are met with the argument on the other side and it is claimed that in the vast majority of cases no harm has resulted from such tests, and. that where apparent injury has followed the testing, it may have been from the incompetence or carelessness of the parties applying the test and not in the system itself. In addition to the evidence of laymen we have had experts in the medical field, who have given widely divergent views as to the effect of the test in question.

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Related

District of Columbia v. Brooke
214 U.S. 138 (Supreme Court, 1909)
Eubank v. City of Richmond
226 U.S. 137 (Supreme Court, 1912)
Kroplin v. Truax
165 N.E. 498 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 569, 1930 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honeyman-v-green-ohctcomplmiami-1930.