State Board of Pharmacy v. . Gasau

88 N.E. 55, 195 N.Y. 197, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1006
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 88 N.E. 55 (State Board of Pharmacy v. . Gasau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Board of Pharmacy v. . Gasau, 88 N.E. 55, 195 N.Y. 197, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1006 (N.Y. 1909).

Opinion

Cullen, Ch. J.

The original judgment under review was recovered for an alleged violation of certain provisions of the Public Health Law (L. 1893, ch. 661, as amended by L. 1900, ch. 667). The provisions of that law, so far as they are material to this case, are as follows:

“§197. Adulteration or substitution" of drugs, chemicals and medicines.— Subdivision 1. Unless otherwise prescribed for, or specified by the customer, all pharmaceutical preparations, sold or dispensed in a pharmacy, dispensary, store or *199 place, shall be of the standard strength, quality and purity, established by the latest edition of the United States Pharmacopoeia.

“ Subdivision 2. Every proprietor of a wholesale or retail drug store, pharmacy, or other place where drugs, medicines or chemicals are sold, shall be held responsible for the quality and strength of all drugs, chemicals or medicines sold or dispensed by him except those sold in original packages of the manufacturer, and those articles or preparations known as patent or proprietary medicines.

Subdivision 3. Any person who shall knowingly, wilfully or fraudulently, falsify or adulterate any drug, medical substance or preparation, authorized or recognized in the said Pharmacopoeia, or used or intended to be used in medical practice or shall knowingly, wilfully or fraudulently offer for sale, sell or cause the same to be sold, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor; all drugs, medical substances, or preparations so falsified or adulterated shall be forfeited to the board and by the board destroyed.

Section 199. Application of article limited.— This article shall not apply to the practice of a practitioner of medicine who is not the proprietor of a store for the dispensing or retailing of drugs, medicines and poisons, or who is not in the employ of such a proprietor, and shall not prevent practitioners of medicine from supplying their patients with such articles as they may deem proper, and except as to the labeling of poisons it shall not apply to the sale of medicines or poisons at wholesale when not for the use or consumption of the purchaser, or to the sale of parís green, white hellebore and other poisons for destroying insects, or any substance for use in the arts, or to the manufacture and sale of proprietary medicines, or to the sale by merchants of ammonia, bicarbonate of soda, borax, camphor, castor oil, cream of tatar, dye stuffs, essence of ginger, essence of peppermint, essence of wintergreen, non-poisonous flavoring essence or extracts, glycerine, licorice, olive oil, sal-ammoniac, saltpetre, sal-soda, epsom salts, rochelle salts, and sulphur, except as herein provided. Pro *200 vided, however, that in the several places in this state outside of incorporated cities and villages, and in incorporated villages of the fourth class, said places and villages not having therein or within three miles thereof a regularly licensed pharmacy or drug store, physicians may compound medicines, fill prescriptions, and sell poisons, duly labeling the same as required by this act, and merchants and retail dealers may sell the ordinary non-poisonons domestic remedies. Any division of the state board of pharmacy, having within its territory any such village or place, shall, whenever the necessity therefor is shown to exist, grant to some resident therein, who has had experience in dealing in drugs, medicines and poisons, a permit to compound medicines, fill prescriptions and sell poison for a period not exceeding one year, upon the payment of a fee not exceeding three dollars. Such permit shall be limited to the village or place in which such person resides and may be limited to one or more of the above classifications and to the sale of certain kinds or classes of poisons.

“ Sec. 20i. Subdivision 4. Any person violating any of the provisions of this article, in addition to, or irrespective of the punishment hereinbefore provided, shall forfeit to the state board of pharmacy the sum of twenty-five dollars for every such violation, which may be sued for and recovered in the name of said board and shall be paid to state board of -pharmacy for its use, as in this article provided. All fines imposed and collected, under any of the provisions of this article, shall be paid over to the state board of pharmacy.”

The violation of the statute charged against the defendant, who was a grocer, was that he sold cream of tartar which was not of the standard strength and purity established by the latest edition of the IJ. S. Pharmacopoeia, in that it contained alum and calcium sulphate. The proof showed that the article sold by the defendant consisted of about 75 per cent pure ¿ream of tartar, the remainder being alum.

It is very probable that the defendant sold an adulterated article, and it is also quite possible that in so doing lie violated the law and subjected himself to a penalty, for section 164 *201 of the Agricultural Law (L. 1893, ch. 338, as amended by L. 1903, ch. 524) defines food as including “all articles used for food, confectionery or condiments by man whether simple, mixed or compound,” and by section 41 of the Health Law any one selling adulterated food is subject to a penalty of $100. This plaintiff, however, cannot maintain an action for such a penalty. Its authority to sue is limited to penalties accruing under article 11 of the Public Health Law, which deals with pharmacy. The ques-. tion, therefore, is whether the defendant violated any provision of that article. The case might be very summarily disposed of. Section 41 of the Health Law prescribes that it shall be deemed an adulteration in the case of drags: “ 1. If when sold under or by a name recognized in the United States Pharmacopoeia, it differs from the standard of strength, quality or purity laid down therein. 2. If, when sold under or by a name not recognized in the United States Pharmacopoeia, but which is found in some other pharmacopoeia or other standard work on materia medica, it differs materially from the standards of strength, quality or purity laid down in such work.” The name “ cream of tartar ” under which this article was sold is not recognized in the United States Pharmacopoeia. Therefore, the case does not fall within the first section. There is no proof in the record that the name is found in any. other pharmacopoeia or standard work on materia medica. Had such proof been given, then the standard of purity and strength would, under the terms of the statute, depend upon the standard prescribed by the work in which the name was found, and not that in the United States Pharmacopoeia, of what is said to be its equivalent, potassium bitartrate. The proof is, therefore, fatally defective.

There is, however, a more substantial objection to the plaintiff’s right to recover, which is that the pharmacy article of the statute does not apply to the case. Under section 199 it is provided that the article shall not apply to the sale by merchants of several enumerated articles including cream of tartar. The majority of the Appellate Division were of opinion *202

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 N.E. 55, 195 N.Y. 197, 1909 N.Y. LEXIS 1006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-board-of-pharmacy-v-gasau-ny-1909.