United States v. Certain Bottles of Lee's "Save the Baby."

37 F.2d 137, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1768
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedDecember 14, 1929
DocketNo. 3331
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 F.2d 137 (United States v. Certain Bottles of Lee's "Save the Baby.") is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Certain Bottles of Lee's "Save the Baby.", 37 F.2d 137, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1768 (D. Conn. 1929).

Opinion

THOMAS, District Judge.

The United States filed its libel for condemnation against certain bottles and their contents shipped in interstate commerce, and prayed that the same be condemned upon the ground that they were misbranded, within the meaning of the Food and Drugs Act. The libel alleges the transportation as of January 15, 1929.

The bottles were labeled “Save the Baby.” On the back of the bottle is a label setting forth the following:

“For croup apply with the hand or by saturating ® doth and laying it over the throat and chest; also apply over the nose. In severe eases, where relief does not follow in half an hour, give a half teaspoonful internally every half hour. * 0 a For Sore throat apply on the throat; also [138]*138take one-half a teaspoonful internally. For coughs “i * * apply on the chest, also take one teaspoonful morning and night. For ague in breast, apply to the parts affected. * * * ”

On the small carton the following legend appears:

“* f * SAVE THE BABY * * * GROUP MIXTURE * * * For Croup, ■* * * Coughs and Sore Throat * '* * used in eases of Grippe, Bronchitis, Laryngitis, Tonsilitis, Pneumonia, etc. * * * ”

There is considerably more of the same nature on the labels on the large cartons and on the circulars inclosed.

The libel proceeds to charge that the alleged drugs in question were misbranded, within the meaning of the Food and Drugs Act of June 30, 1906, as amended, section 8, paragraph third (21 USCA § 10), because they contained “no ingredient or combination of ingredients capable of producing the effects claimed,” and that the labels were applied in reckless and wanton disregard of their truth and with intent to mislead purchasers.

The claimant appears to he William W. Bee & Co., a partnership doing business in Watervliet, Albany county, N. Y., in the Northern district of New York. There is nothing to indicate who, at the present time, composes the copartnership. Both the answer and notice of claim are silent on this point.

• In their answer the claimants, after entering denial as to the alleged misbranding, set up a separate defense, which is contained in paragraph 4 of the answer, to which the motion to strike is addressed, wherein, inter alia, the claimant alleges:

“That on February 24, 1916, the United States attorney for the Northern district of New York laid an information against this claimant, William W. Bee & Co., and the several copartners thereof, pursuant to the Food and Drugs Act, accusing them individually and as sueh copartnership of unlawfully shipping and delivering for shipment in interstate commerce articles of drugs identical in kind, nature and composition with the articles of drugs which are the subject of the present libel, which articles then bore labels, wrappers and reading matter substantially identical with the labels, wrappers arid reading matter present in the articles seized under this libel; and that said information charged the claimant of violating the identical statute involved in this proceeding in the same particulars as charged in this libel and that thereafter the information was duly dismissed on the merits and an order to ' that effect entered on or about November 13, 1916, all of which is exhibited in a copy of the information and order annexed to the answer.” ij

The answer then proceeds further to al- ' lege that on July 26, 1920, an information was laid by the United States attorney for the Northern district of New York, which again charged the claimants with violation of the Food and Drugs Aet, in that the claimants shipped, on or about September 17, 1917, articles of drugs identical with those in suit and bearing the identical labels which said articles were claimed to be misbranded, and that on the 16th day of February, 1922, the information -wás dismissed, or nolle pros’ed, on motion of the United States attorney, as also appears by a copy of the information and order.

The whole of the information of 1916 is not annexed, but merely count 2 thereof, and it discloses that one Charles Samuel Uleher •and Carrie B. Uleher, trading as William W. Bee & Co., did unlawfully ship and deliver from New York to Boston certain packages labeled substantially similar to the labels on the packages at bar, and it was charged that those labels constituted a misbranding. The order of the District Court of October 27, 1916, discloses that the defendants then pleaded guilty to the first count of the information (though what that first count was we cannot tell), and were fined on their plea of guilty $25. The order dismissed the second count.

There is nothing from the nature of the order to indicate just what the reason was for the dismissal. There is no recital that the issues were tried, nor is there anything to indicate whether the dismissal was because of insufficiency in the information or what. I think that a fair interpretation of the order would indicate the second count was dismissed on consent of the United States attorney. Otherwise the dismissal would appear to have been founded on nothing whatsoever. The second information was also against the same defendants, and charged a shipment of misbranded articles of the same kind as those involved in the first information, and charged the misbranding thereof in the same way. The order which was entered thereon in February, 1922, recited the charge involved in the information at length, and that the defendants had entered a plea of former jeopardy, and thereupon and on motion of the United States attorney the second information was dismissed.

[139]*139In the ease at bar the government moves to strike out the matter embodied in the separate defense upon the ground that: '

“(A) The allegations and matters contained in said paragraph 4 and said annexes do not constitute a valid defense to any matters charged in the libel; and (B) the allegations and matters contained in said paragraph 4 and said annexes are incompetent, immaterial, irrelevant, and have no bearing whatever on the issues in this ease.”

The matters set up as a separate defense can be available only on one theory, and that is that, as to the libel at bar, they are res judicata. It is contended by the claimant that the dismissal of the two former informations against them involved an adjudication to the effect that articles so constituted and so labeled, as in the ease at bar, are not misbranded, and that such an adjudication is binding forever after.

The doetrine of res judicata is, like many other legal principles, simple enough in its statement, but difficult, at times, in its application. A former judgment on the merits concludes the parties and their privies as to all matters which were litigated, or which should or could have been litigated, within the field of the specific controversy. Therefore, in any action between the same parties upon the identical claim or demand upon which a judgment has already been rendered, that judgment is conclusive. Where the. action between the same parties is upon a different claim, the former judgment may, nevertheless, operate as an estoppel as to any matter litigated between the parties or actually determined therein.

It is to be noted, then, that a former judgment is conclusive only as to the parties. It binds no one but the parties, or those who derive their interest in the subject-matter from the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 F.2d 137, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-certain-bottles-of-lees-save-the-baby-ctd-1929.