Iowa Farm Serum Co. v. Board of Pharmacy Examiners

35 N.W.2d 848, 240 Iowa 734, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 8, 1949
DocketNo. 47321.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 35 N.W.2d 848 (Iowa Farm Serum Co. v. Board of Pharmacy Examiners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iowa Farm Serum Co. v. Board of Pharmacy Examiners, 35 N.W.2d 848, 240 Iowa 734, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 323 (iowa 1949).

Opinion

Mulroney, J.

— The plaintiff, Iowa Farm Serum Company, was incorporated in 1940 and since that date it has held a license, issued under chapter 166, Code, 1946, to make retail sales of hog-cholera virus and anti-hog-cholera serum (hereafter called virus and serum). The sales were made through its one hundred sixteen retail outlets, though a few drugstores handled the virus and serum for the plaintiff. These retail outlets are in the Farm Bureau offices or adjacent thereto.

In June of 1947, the defendant Board of Pharmacy Examiners notified plaintiff that in its retail sales of virus and serum it was violating chapter 155, Code, 1946, in that the sales were not being conducted by or under the supervision of a registered pharmacist. The above notice called attention to the penalties as provided in chapter 155, so' plaintiff, deeming itself not subject to said chapter in the conduct of its virus and serum business, brought a declaratory judgment action against the Board, seeking a declaration to that effect and injunction against the Board’s threatened criminal prosecution. The Board’s answer and cross-petition sought a declaration that sales of virus and serum were subject to chapter 155, providing the sales of drugs and medicine must be by or under the supervision of a registered pharmacist, and injunctive and general equitable relief. A temporary injunction was sought by plaintiff, and obtained, and upon trial the temporary injunction was made permanent; the trial court holding in its conclusion of law that since virus and serum were the subject of a special law (chapter 166, Code, 1946) the effect was that they were excepted from the statutes controlling the practice of pharmacy (chapter 155, Code, 1946).

The facts are not in dispute. The plaintiff is doing business on the co-operative plan, with virus and serum its principal sales item. In 1947, its gross sales of virus and serum amounted to $500,000. It has, as stated, one hundred sixteen retail outlets, having added forty since 1944 and each outlet has a supply of virus and serum and an electric refrigerator to keep the virus *737 and serum at the proper temperature. The sales outlets do not engage the services of registered pharmacists. -

From the testimony of veterinarians and other experts we learn that hog cholera is a disease of swine only and it is not contracted by man or other animals. The virus and serum treatment of hogs is a preventative of and not a cure for hog cholera. In substance the method is the exposure of the animal to cholera, by hypodermically administered virus, the essence of the disease,, and the simultaneous hypodermically administered serum, which is the watery portion of the blood of a hog' which is immune from the disease. One veterinarian described the treatment: “We give the animal a light case of cholera and cure him at once and make him immune.”

The products are, each bottled in federally prescribed bottles and labelled with federally prescribed labels carrying .instructions for refrigeration (not to exceed forty-five degrees) and the date when the product will, by reason of age, lose its potency— virus ninety days and serum three years.

Chapter 155, Code, 1946, is entitled Practice- of Pharmacy, and the first section of the chapter (section 155.1) states that “persons who engage in the business of selling, or offering or exposing for sale, drugs and medicines at retail” shall be deemed to be “engaged in the practice of pharmacy.” Section 155.3, subsection 1, in said chapter defines the terms “drugs and medicines” as “all medicinal substances and preparations for internal or external use recognized- in the United States Pharmacopoeia or National Formulary, and any substance or mixture of substances intended to be used for the cure, mitigation, or prevention of disease of either man or animals.” Section 155.6 in said chapter prohibits the sale of drugs or medicines by one not a licensed pharmacist or by one who is not under the immediate personal supervision of a licensed pharmacist. Section 155.2 excludes from the operation of sections 155.1 and-155.6 (1) persons who assist in the selling of drugs and medicines under the supervision of a licensed pharmacist (2) persons selling completely denatured alcohol or concentrated lye, insecticides or fungicides (3) persons licensed to practice medicine, dentistry or veterinary medicine who dispense drugs and medicines as an incident to the *738 practice of their professions, and (4) persons selling proprietary-medicines' or nonpoisonous domestic remedies.

Chapter 166, Code, 1946, is entitled Hog-Cholera Virus and Serum. There are thirty-eight sections in the chapter dealing with the manufacture and sale of virus and serum and instruction and permits to users under regulations and license from the Iowa Department of Agriculture. The term “biological products” is defined to mean virus and serum and “dealer” is defined as “every person who, for profit, sells, dispenses, or distributes, or offers to do so, either as principal or agent, biological products.” Section 166.1, subsection 3. The department is given power to make “rules governing the manufacture, sale, and distribution of biological products as it deems necessary to maintain their potency and purity.” Section 166.2. Section 166.3, provides that “every person, before engaging as a manufacturer of, or dealer in, biological products shall obtain from the department of agriculture a permit for that purpose,” and the next few sections deal with the. applications for manufacturers’ and dealers’ permits and the bonds which applicants must. file. The remaining sections in the chapter deal with fees to be paid for permits, inspection of premises of permittees, revocation of permits, and permits obtained by owners of swine, after instruction, to administer the virus and serum to their own hogs. Sales by dealers are limited to persons holding permits to administer the virus and serum. Section 166.6, subsection 1, provides that the dealer’s bond must be conditioned “to faithfully comply with all laws governing the warehousing, sale, and distribution of biological products, and with all the rules of the department relating to such biological products.”

1. That virus and serum fall within the definition of drugs and medicines in section 155.3, previously quoted, is beyond debate. Plaintiff does not argue the virus and serum are not medicinal substances intended for the prevention of disease of animals. Its argument is that notwithstanding the fact that virus and serum might be within the terms of the statute defining drugs, still the history of the legislative enactments on both the subjects of pharmacy and drugs and virus and serum shows that- virus and serum were not intended to be included in said *739 definition but were intended to be subject to separate regulation and control under a different department of government and were not intended to be sold at retail exclusively by a registered pharmacist or under the supervision of a registered pharmacist.

II. As we trace the history of these two chaptérs we think it starts, for our purpose, with the Unpublished Acts of Extra Session, Fortieth General Assembly, when the legislature enacted each' chapter in its present form, arid they were first published in the Code of 1924 as chapter 123, Practice of Pharmacy, and chapter 180, Hog Cholera Virus and Serum.

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Bluebook (online)
35 N.W.2d 848, 240 Iowa 734, 1949 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-farm-serum-co-v-board-of-pharmacy-examiners-iowa-1949.