State v. Schriber

205 P.2d 149, 185 Or. 615, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 141
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 205 P.2d 149 (State v. Schriber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Schriber, 205 P.2d 149, 185 Or. 615, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 141 (Or. 1949).

Opinion

LUSK, C. J.

In 1945 the legislature passed an act relating to the control and eradication of Bang’s disease in cattle. Ch. 355, Oregon Laws, 1945. Certain amendments were adopted by Ch. 588, Oregon Laws, 1947. Under the Act cattle which are found to be infected with the disease must be slaughtered. Violation of provisions of the Act or of any rule promulgated thereunder by the director of the Department of. Agriculture was made a misdemeanor. The defendant was indicted for violating the Act and a rule established by the director by failing to cause or permit to be slaughtered. five head of cows which he owned, and which had theretofore been tested in the manner required by law and found to be infected with Bang’s disease. He filed a demurrer to the indictment, which the Circuit. Court sustained on the ground that the Act was too vague and uncertain to form the basis of a criminal prosecution.

' The statute- provides in § 2 for the creation of the office of county veterinarian, and that any- test re *621 quired under the Act, when performed by any United States Department of Agriculture Bureau of Animal Industry veterinarian or by any State Department of Agriculture veterinarian shall be the equivalent of a test made by a county veterinarian. Section 8, as amended by the Laws of 1947, provides in part:

“It shall be the duty of the county veterinarian to test, except as otherwise herein provided, all female bovine animals and bulls over 6 months of age in the county or territory within the county for which he is appointed, not less than once per annum for Bang’s disease (brucellosis) and.for bovine tuberculosis. He shall make concurrently the tests for Bang’s disease and tuberculosis. * * * Upon completion of the tests herein provided, all animals found to be infected with bovine tuberculosis shall be disposed of as otherwise provided by law, and every herd owner shall elect in writing, and after consultation with the county veterinarian who has tested his herd, one of the following programs for the control or eradication of Bang’s disease (brucellosis) * * * ”

disease as a result of any test required by this act In § 9 it is provided:

“Such county veterinarian shall conduct the testing work provided for in this act in such manner as shall have been approved by the state department of agriculture, and as shall be deemed most effective in the eradication of Bang’s disease and tuberculosis and other contagious, infectious and communicable disease of cattle. * * * Those reacting to the Bang’s disease test shall be earmarked with a condemnation tag and branded with a two inch ‘B’ on the left jaw.”

Section 14, as amended by Oregon Laws, 1947, provides:

“Animals found to be infected with Bang’s to be performed hereby are required to be slaugh *622 tered, and indemnity shall he paid to the owners thereof as hereinafter provided.”

The amounts to be paid as indemnity and the procedure for appraisal of infected animals are prescribed.

Section 19 reads:
“The department shall establish such rules.and regulations as may be necessary to effectuate the purposes of this act. * * * ”

Administrative Order No. AD-336 of the director of ■the Department of Agriculture, effective March 1,1948, contains this provision:

“The owner of a bovine animal which has reacted to the official test for Bang’s disease shall have such animal slaughtered within fifteen (15) days after the date of the appraisal of said animal .following such test, unless such time shall be extended as provided by sub-section 12, section 15, chapter 355, supra. Such slaughter must be done where a veterinarian approved by the Department may examine the carcass and certify that ■ such reactor animal has been killed.”

The charging part of the indictment reads as follows:

“The said Joe Schriber on the 28th day of April A. D. 1948, in the said County of Tillamook and State of Oregon, then and there being, and then and there being the owner of certain bovine animals within said county, to-wit: five head of cows, all of which bovine animals theretofore had been tested as required by Chapter 355, Oregon Laws 1945, as amended, and had been found to be infected with Bang’s disease (Brucellosis), did then and there wilfully and unlawfully fail and refuse to slaughter said infected bovine animals or cause or permit them to be slaughtered, contrary to the *623 rules and regulations of the department of agrB. culture of the State of Oregon and contrary to the statutes in such cases made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State of Oregon.”

We will consider in the order of their presentation in the defendant’s brief the points urged in sup7 port of the demurrer. '

The first point — upon which the court' below based its ruling — is that the term “Bang’s disease” has no well-defined accepted meaning. Therefore, it is said, the statute violates “the fundamental principle that in the creation of an offense which was not a crime at common law a statute must be sufficiently certain to show what the legislature intended to prohibit.” State v. Anthony, 179 Or. 282, 288, 169 P. (2d) 587, cert. den. 330 U. S. 826, 91 L. ed. 1276, 67 S. Ct. 865. Bang’s disease, it is said, should have been defined by the legislature. Otherwise the statute is void for indefiniteness.

We do not agree. “Brucellosis”, the word used in the statute interchangeably with Bang’s disease, is defined in The American Illustrated Medical Dictionary, Borland (21st ed.), 1948, as follows:

“A generalized infection caused by one of the species of Brucella, namely Br. melitensis of goats, Br. abortus bovinus of cattle and B. suis of hogs. Man acquires the disease by drinking infected milk or by contact with infective material. In man the disease is marked by remittent undulatory fever,■ malaise, cervical pain, headache, sweating, constipation, weakness and anemia. Called also undw lant fever * * * ” .

In Stedman’s Medical Dictionary (1939) among the synonyms for “Bang’s bacillus” are “Bacillus *624 abortus” and “Brucella abortus”. This organism is said to be “the cause of puerperal fever in the cow”. “Brucellosis” is defined in the same work as “infection with some species of the genus Brucella”.

In 1939 I. Forest Huddleson, D.Y.M., M.S., Ph. D., research professor in bacteriology, Michigan State College, published a work entitled “Brucellosis in Man and Animals”, and in 1943 a second edition thereof consisting of 327 pages. In the foreword to the first edition we find the following statements:

“Forty years ago Hughes published his Undulant Fever. This work is a medical classic and may be fairly said to contain the available information on the subject at the time of its publication.

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Bluebook (online)
205 P.2d 149, 185 Or. 615, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-schriber-or-1949.