State v. Foutch

295 S.W. 469, 155 Tenn. 476, 2 Smith & H. 476, 54 A.L.R. 725, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 70
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 469 (State v. Foutch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Foutch, 295 S.W. 469, 155 Tenn. 476, 2 Smith & H. 476, 54 A.L.R. 725, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 70 (Tenn. 1927).

Opinion

Ms. Chief Justice Gseeh

delivered the opinion of the Court.

An indictment was returned against defendant Lillard Foutch in which it was charged that he unlawfully did permit the selling and dispensing of poisons, to-wit, tincture of iodine, in his Pharmacy or retail drug store, hy an unlicensed person and without the presence of and under the immediate personal supervision of a pharmacist or assistant pharmacist.

*478 An indictment was returned against defendant Burnell Lester in which it was charged that he did unlawfully prepare, or dispense or sell a certain poison, to-wit, tincture of iodine, and at that time the said Burnell Lester was not a licensed person to sell such poisons, nor was he acting under the immediate personal supervision of a pharmacist or assistant pharmacist.

The trial judge sustained a motion to quash in each case and in each case the State appealed in error to this court. The two eases were heard together here.

The indictments were found under Chapter 162 of the Acts of 1919, regulating the practice of Pharmacy and sale of poisons. The indictment against defendant Foutch follows the language of Sub-section 3, of Section 20 of the Act, and the indictment against defendant Lester follows the language of Sub-section 2, of Section 20 of the Act. Tincture of iodine is enumerated as a poison in schedule B, under Section 18 of the Act. Each indictment, therefore, clearly states a case under the Statute, and the trial judge no doubt sustained the motions to quash on account of the constitutional objections made to the Statute.

Chapter 162 of the Acts of 1919-is too lengthy to be set out. It is entitled “An Act to establish a State Board of pharmacists, and assistant pharmacists, and'for the and sale of poisons, and to repeal” certain Acts to which apt reference is made. Provision is made for a State Board of Pharmacy, for the examination and licensing of Pharmacists, and Assistant Pharmacists, and for the selection by the Board of Pharmacy of Drug Dealers in rural communities of the State.

Section 1 enacts that .it shall be unlawful for any person, hot a registered pharmacist, to conduct any pharmacy or retail drug store as proprietor, unless he shall *479 employ and place in charge of such pharmacy 'or retail drug store, a registered pharmacist.who shall have supervision of that part of the business requiring a pharmaceutical skill and knowledge, and that it shall be unlawful to engage in the occupation of compounding or dispensing medicines or prescriptions of physicians, dentists or veterinarians,' or to sell at retail for medical purposes any drugs, chemicals, poisons, or pharmaceutical preparations within the State until compliance with the provisions of the Act. This section then excepts from its provisions the sale of a list of drugs enumerated.

Section 4.of the Act provides that the Board of Pharmacy may in its discretion issue a permit to persons, to be known as Drug Dealers, to engage in the business of retailing drugs, chemicals or medicinal preparations, upon the prescriptions of physicians in small towns or rural districts in the State having a population of 500 inhabitants or under, in which the conditions in the judgment of the Board do not justify the employment of a registered pharmacist, and such permits authorize the persons named therein to carry on such business in such small towns or rural districts, under such regulations and restrictions as the Board may adopt.

As heretofore stated, tincture of iodine is named-as a poison in schedule B. of Section 18, which it is unlawful for one to sell or allow to be sold in his place of business, except under the restrictions of the Statute.

It cannot be denied that the State, under its police power, may regulate the sale of drugs, poisons and medicines in the interest of the public health. Cooley's Const. Lim. (7 Ed.), p. 88; 1 Tiedman on State & Federal Control of Persons and Property, p. 512, 9 R. C. L., 697, Note 30 L. R. A. (N. S.), 519. Although a number of Statutes of this character have been heretofore enacted in *480 Tennessee, the power of the State to promulgate such laws generally has not been questioned, nor do we understand that any such question is made in these cases.

The purpose of the Statute before us is to regulate the dispensing of medicines and poisons through a Board of Pharmacy and the instrumentalities of that Board. Under Section i, in the larger communities, medicines and poisons within the Act may be dispensed and sold only under the supervision of a registered pharmacist. Under Section 4, in the smaller communities, medicines and poisons within the Act may be dispensed and sold by a Drug Dealer approved by the Board under restrictions adopted by the Board.

The first objection urged against the Statute is that it “makes the same thing criminal in one part of the State —that is, in cities — and makes it innocent and unpenal-ized in small villages and localities.”

This seems to us a misapprehension. The Act undertakes to regulate the dispensing and sale of medicines and poisons throughout the entire State. It merely provides different agencies for this purpose in the more populous communities and in the rural communities, registered pharmacists are the agents to be employed in the former localities, Drug Dealers are the agents to be employed in the latter localities.

The case does not fall within the authority of State ex rel. Grantham v. City of Memphis, 151 Tenn., 6. The Statute there considered undertook to regulate the plumbing business in cities of more than twenty-five thousand inhabitants, and no regulation of this business whatever was attempted in less populous towns or cities. The court was of opinion that there was no reason for’ such regulation in towns of a population of twenty-five thousand which did not apply with equal force to a town of *481 twenty-four thousand, and that the legislation was accordingly discriminatory and invalid.

As heretofore seen, however, Chapter 162 of the Acts of 1919, is subject to no such objection. It covers the entire State. The State holds its elections, enforces its criminal laws, and otherwise functions in the larger communities through agencies and officers different from those employed for the same purposes in the smaller communities — each agency or officer best adapted to the community in which he is placed. To deny the authority of the State so to proceed would involve the denial of the entire doctrine of legislative classification upon a population basis.

A Minnesota Statute similar to the one before us permitted shop keepers whose place of business was more than one mile from a drug or apothecary shop to sell commonly used medicines and poisons if such medicines and poisons had been put up by a registered pharmacist. This provision was attacked as an arbitrary and unreasonable distinction, but the Minnesota Court said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 469, 155 Tenn. 476, 2 Smith & H. 476, 54 A.L.R. 725, 1926 Tenn. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-foutch-tenn-1927.