United States v. Durst

59 F. Supp. 891, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2475
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedMarch 28, 1945
DocketNo. 9784
StatusPublished

This text of 59 F. Supp. 891 (United States v. Durst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Durst, 59 F. Supp. 891, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2475 (S.D.W. Va. 1945).

Opinion

MOORE, District Judge.

Thomas Durst is the defendant in a criminal information charging in seventeen counts numerous violations of War Food Distribution Order 75-1. He demurred to the information, setting forth a number of grounds of demurrer. The only grounds seriously argued are those which challenge the validity of the regulation on which the information is based because of indefiniteness, in that, as defendant alleges, it fails to provide a standard which is certain enough to be used in determining the question of guilt or innocence.

War Food Distribution Order 75-1 was issued by the War Food Administrator pursuant to the authority of the Act of Congress of June 28, 1940, § 2(a), as amended by § 301, of the Second War Powers Act of 1942, 56 Stat. 176, 50 U.S.C.A. Appendix, § 633, which authorizes the President of the United States to make allocations of materials and facilities needed for the national defense, whenever he is satisfied that the fulfillment of requirements for the defense of the United States may result in a shortage in the supply of any material or any facility for the national defense, or for private account, or for export. Section 1410.17(a) (12) and (13) define the terms “minimum sanitary facilities” and “adequate facilities” as applied to slaughterers of livestock in Class 2 as follows:

“(12) The term ‘minimum sanitary facilities’ means a structure that is reasonably fly and rodent proof with ample light and ventilation, which has concrete or comparably sanitary floors with adequate drainage system, is provided with clean water and which, together with all equipment, is in a clean and orderly condition. Such structure must be a reasonable distance from stables, barnyard, hog lot, refuse heap, privy, or other source of fly breeding or contamination.”

“(13) The term ‘adequate facilities’ means:

“(i) Equipment in good order for the proper skinning and dressing of animals, and the rendering of fat or tallow; and
“(ii) Storage or other equipment for retaining or preserving edible or inedible by-products to insure against spoilage.”

Paragraph (m) (2) of the same section reads as follows: “No class 2 slaughterer and no person who custom slaughters livestock, except in those cases where custom slaughtering is done on a farm for a farmer, shall slaughter livestock in the absence of minimum sanitary facilities and adequate facilities for the conservation and preservation of all edible and principal inedible by-products. Compliance with san[893]*893itary requirements for State, county or city inspection may be considered as compliance with this requirement.”

Defendant is a Class 2 slaughterer. The first fourteen counts of the information charge him with having slaughtered livestock in the absence of minimum sanitary facilities and adequate facilities for conservation, etc.,.as required by the foregoing regulation, in that the structure used as an abattoir, its equipment and immediate surroundings were filthy and unclean, were supplied with polluted and filthy water, were situated near a privy and hog lot, and other sources of fly breeding, that the structure and equipment were not fly and rodent proof, and were not in proper order for the skinning and dressing of animals, etc., and were not provided with storage and other equipment for preserving against spoilage. The fifteenth count is of the same- nature, except that it is limited to the charge that defendant used polluted and filthy water. The sixteenth count is limited to the charge that the structure and equipment were filthy, unclean and disorderly; and the seventeenth count is limited to the charge that the structure was not provided with storage and other equipment for preserving against spoilage.

The requirements are: that the slaughterer must maintain a structure that is “reasonably fly and rodent proof” with “ample light and ventilation” with “adequate • drainage system” provided with “clean water” with structure and equipment “in a clean and orderly condition” and “a reasonable distance from stables, barnyard, hog lot, refuse heap, privy, or other source of fly breeding or contamination,” that the equipment must be “in good order for the proper skinning and dressing of animals and the rendering of fat or tallow,” and that storage or other equipment must be provided “for retaining or preserving edible or inedible by-products to insure against spoilage.” If all these requirements, or any of them, are definite enough to fix a standard of guilt or innocence, the demurrer must be overruled; but if they are so indefinite as to leave the standard to be fixed according to the “variant views of the different courts and juries which may be called upon to enforce it,” then the demurrer must be sustained.

By the Sixth Amendment to the Federal Constitution it is provided that “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right * * * to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation.”

Any statute or regulation purporting to define a crime, and fixing a penalty therefor, which fixes no definite standard by which guilt or innocence can be measured, is in conflict with the constitutional guarantee, and consequently inoperative and void. United States v. L. Cohen Grocery Co., 255 U.S. 81, 41 S.Ct. 298, 65 L.Ed. 516, 14 A.L.R. 1045. The uncertainty is usually brought about by the use of adjectives or adverbs which are relative in their meaning — that is, under some circumstances the words may have one meaning, but under different circumstances, another meaning. Thus, if slaughterers were required merely to abstain from improper conduct in their business, the invalidity of such a regulation would be clearly apparent. Atlantic Refining Co. v. Trumbull, D.C., 43 F.2d 154. What would be improper conduct would always be a question to be determined by each juror or court according to the opinion entertained by the individual, since no fixed standards of propriety are given.

Coming to the regulation in question here, the term “minimum sanitary facilities” standing alone and without definition would certainly not provide a sufficient standard of conduct. We are therefore called upon to examine the definition in Paragraph (12) of § 1410.17(a) to determine whether it supplies the requisite certainty.

I cannot accede to the argument made by the Government that because in some of the counts of the information complete absence of either sanitary or adequate facilities, minimum or otherwise, is charged, considerations of relativity do not enter in so far as these counts are concerned. The information can rise no higher than its source, and its source is the regulation contained in War Food Distribution Order 75-1.

One of the requirements is that the abattoir have concrete or comparably sanitary floors with adequate drainage system. There is no charge that the structure does-not have concrete floors properly drained; therefore, this requirement need not be considered.

The phrase “reasonably fly and rodent proof,” when subjected to examination, yields a degree of certainty little, if [894]*894any, greater than the term which it purports to define. It is not required that the structure be actually fly and rodent proof. Some degree of infestation is implicit in the definition.

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Related

United States v. L. Cohen Grocery Co.
255 U.S. 81 (Supreme Court, 1921)
Atlantic Refining Co. v. Trumbull
43 F.2d 154 (D. Connecticut, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
59 F. Supp. 891, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-durst-wvsd-1945.