Opinion
November, 1916.
John F. Kinney, for plaintiff, for motion.
Benjamin B. Cunningham, corporation counsel, for defendant, opposed.
The state having the ultimate power to protect and preserve the public health has the right to impose by statute reasonable regulations to accomplish that purpose ( Fischer v. St. Louis, 194 U.S. 361; Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 id. 17; Lieberman v. Van De Car, 199 id. 552; Matter of Viemeister, 179 N.Y. 235; Matter of Walters, 84 Hun, 457, 460) and may delegate that power to local authorities for its more convenient exercise in political subdivisions of the state. Fischer v. St. Louis, supra; Jacobson v. Massachusetts, supra; People ex rel. Lieberman v. Van De Car, 175 N.Y. 440, 444, 445; affd., 199 U.S. 552; People ex rel. Shelter v. Owen, 66 Misc. 24; State v. Nelson, 68 N.W. 1066; 17 L.R.A. (N.S.) note 709.
In this case the state has delegated that power to the city authorities, not by the Public Health Law or the State Sanitary Code, but by the charter of the city. The Public Health Law and the State Sanitary Code expressly reserve in the city the powers granted to the city by the charter which are not inconsistent with that law and code. Laws of 1913, chap. 559, § 2c. The language of the State Sanitary Code with reference to the permission to engage in selling milk and cream which is urged as an attempted delegation by the public health council is a mere reservation in the local authorities, there designated as the health officer, of the power vested in the local authorities to impose further conditions (Sanitary Code, chap. 3, reg. 1), and the Code expressly provides that the health authorities of any municipality may in their discretion increase the stringency of any of its regulations or add to them in any way not inconsistent with the provisions of the Code. Id. reg. 14. If the local authorities do not possess that power by independent legislation they do not secure it by the Sanitary Code as the public health council is given no power to delegate its quasi judicial functions with reference to determining conditions upon which a license to sell milk or cream may be granted.
But the legislature by the charter of the city has expressly conferred authority, with respect to the protection and preservation of the public health of the people of the city subject to limitations imposed by the Public Health Law or other statutes and the Sanitary Code, upon the common council, commissioner of public safety and the health officer. Laws of 1907, chap. 755. The common council may pass general rules and regulations on this subject and thus control or limit the action of the commissioner of public safety and the health officer except as they may be given specific authority by any provision of the charter. Id. § 340. If the common council does not act in the matter or, having acted, has not expressly or impliedly limited the action of the commissioner of public safety and the health officer, the latter may take such reasonable action as they may deem the preservation and the protection of the public health require. In this instance the common council has merely authorized the health bureau to issue licenses to sell milk and cream without prescribing the conditions or indicating that any conditions are to be imposed and the commissioner of public safety and the health officer are, therefore, authorized under the power granted to them by the chapter to preserve and protect the public health, to impose such conditions as may be uniform, reasonable and just. The common council may control, limit or prohibit the commissioner of public safety and the health officer in this respect, but it has not done so, and the latter are now required in the interest of the public health to exercise the authority vested in them by the charter.
This authority and responsibility primarily rest upon the commissioner of public safety. The charter vests in the department of public safety, limited by general rules and regulations of the common council, the jurisdiction, care and responsibility of the health of the people of the city subject of course also to any limitations or restrictions imposed by any general legislation or state regulations. It is for the commissioner of public safety therefore, the common council not having done so, to prescribe the requirements upon which a license shall be issued, and his requirements, unless arbitrary, capricious or unreasonable, must be observed.
The health bureau is made a part of the department of public safety and the health officer is made its executive officer and as such he has the active supervision and responsibility of the health of the community and the duty of seeing that the laws and regulations of the state, the ordinances of the city and the orders of the commissioner of public safety are observed and of making such recommendations for the preservation and protection of the public health as may seem necessary. He may be intrusted with such powers and duties, in addition to those given to him by law, as the commissioner of public safety may impose upon him, but the commissioner of public safety under this language cannot relieve himself of any duties requiring his personal judgment and discretion. City of Hudson v. Flemming, 139 A.D. 327.
In this instance the question of delegation by the common council does not arise as the ordinance of the common council did not purport to delegate to the health bureau any discretionary power to issue licenses but vested in it ministerial functions merely; nor does the question of delegation by the commissioner of public safety arise as the commissioner himself required this relator to submit to a blood test and denied him a license because of his refusal to comply with the condition imposed upon his right to sell milk and cream. The commissioner of public safety has asked him to submit a drop of his blood for microscopic examination for evidences of typhoid, as other applicants have done, in order to make sure that he is not a carrier of typhoid and this he has refused to do although but slight inconvenience will be occasioned to him thereby.
This test is but a part of the precautions among many others deemed necessary to provide for the people of the city a clean, pure and wholesome supply of milk and cream free from disease germs, and unless it can be said to be unreasonable and unjust it must be observed by those applying for a license to engage in the business of selling milk and cream to their possible inconvenience but for the benefit of the health of the people of the city.
The power to impose suitable and reasonable conditions for the sale of milk and cream in the city being in the commissioner of public safety, in the absence of any restrictive ordinances of the common council, statutes of the state or sanitary provisions of the public health council, he may act in anticipation of any emergency and may under normal conditions of public health provide such measures as he may deem reasonably necessary to protect and preserve the public. He is not required to wait until an epidemic arises but may anticipate such a condition and may guard against it by such reasonable precautions as he deems necessary. The duty of the commissioner of public safety to foresee dangers to public health and to provide against them is quite as important, if not more so, than that of eradicating an epidemic after it has arisen.
The character of the precautions that may be reasonably necessary in normal conditions of public health depends upon the circumstances and each requirement must be passed upon in the light of the conditions existing at the time of its adoption. Extraordinary measures adapted to emergencies are not suitable and would not be regarded as reasonable at ordinary times. Each requirement must be adapted to the circumstances of the condition and times and must not be unreasonable or oppressive. Good judgment and common sense must be employed and when the requirements meet this test and that of sound reason they will be upheld. It has been held, for instance, that dairy and cow stables may be prohibited within the limits of a city ( Fischer v. St. Louis, 194 U.S. 361); that it is not a denial of the equal protection of the law to single out the milk business for regulation and that the state has the right to regulate the milk business or any occupation which may become unsafe or dangerous when unrestrained ( Lieberman v. Van De Car, 199 U.S. 552, 558, 563); that vaccination may be required as a condition of attendance in public schools ( Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11; Matter of Viemeister, 179 N.Y. 235; Matter of Walters, 84 Hun, 457); that regulations may be made requiring a separate room for the storage of milk and the cleansing of utensils ( People ex rel. Shelter v. Owen, 66 Misc. 24) and that a tuberculene test of cows may be required as a condition of selling milk. State v. Nelson, 68 N.W. Rep. (Minn.) 1066. The imposition of a blood test is not unlike some of these requirements and presents no greater inconvenience or more serious interference with personal rights.
The present condition of the public health of the city with respect to typhoid is not abnormal and still the requirement of a blood test as a condition for a license to sell milk and cream seems to be a fair and reasonable precaution to protect the public against any increase of typhoid. Milk is a particularly sensitive product produced under conditions which if not regulated and controlled may carry and disseminate the germs of typhoid or other diseases and spread them in the community. It is the chief food of infants and lies at the basis of their health and strength. It may be heated, sterilized or pasteurized but even then contact with unclean utensils or unclean human beings may make it the carrier of disease germs. Unlike other articles of food it cannot be washed and otherwise cleansed in the home. The impurities may be hidden from sight and thus a sense of security engendered which may render it a still more serious menace to health. Under these conditions it would seem to impose no unreasonable hardship upon a dealer in milk or cream to require him to submit to a blood test to make sure that he has not had typhoid and is not a typhoid carrier.
That typhoid is a contagious disease and may be transmitted by one afflicted with the disease is a matter of common knowledge and the court will take notice of that fact without proof. Hunter v. New York, O. W.R.R. Co., 116 N.Y. 615, 623; People v. Lochner, 177 id. 169; Jones v. United States, 137 U.S. 202, 216; Matter of Viemeister, 179 N.Y. 235, 241. The court will also take notice of the fact that an examination of a drop of blood will reveal whether or not the person from whom it has been taken has had typhoid. This may not be universally held by scientific men or universally believed by the people, but until science disproves the value of the test it will be accepted by the courts as true. Matter of Viemeister, supra, and other cases cited above.
The imposition of this test with respect to this particular occupation and the requirement of this and any other test in any other occupation which may affect the public health rests in the sound discretion of the state or local authorities in whom the discretion to pass upon the subject has been vested. It is not an arbitrary or capricious discretion but one which under the circumstances is reasonable and just. People ex rel. Lodes v. Dept. of Health, 189 N.Y. 187; People ex rel. Cumisky v. Wurster, 14 A.D. 556; People ex rel. Dorr v. Thacher, 42 Hun, 349; People ex rel. Shelter v. Owen, 66 Misc. 24; People ex rel. Moses v. Gaynor, 77 id. 576; 17 L.R.A. (N.S.) note 709.
This rule does not infringe upon the civil rights of the individual. Government has been instituted among men for their mutual protection and no man has the right to make himself or his business a menace to the public health. Take away the regulation and control of individual rights and organized society would break up into its original elements. Under organized society all rights are subject to such reasonable regulations as may be deemed by the governing authority essential to the society, health, peace, good order and morals of the community. It is a part of the social compact that government shall be maintained for the common good for the protection and safety of property and the happiness of all the people, and that of any particular individual, class or group of men must give way to the welfare of all. Jacobson v. Massachusetts, supra.
It is important, therefore, to the whole community that the supply of milk and cream should be kept clean, pure and wholesome and should not be contaminated with impurities, or infected with disease, and it is the duty of the health authorities to see that this is accomplished by the establishment of such reasonable regulations as may be necessary to meet existing conditions or to ward off impending dangers to the public health, and in imposing a blood test as a condition to a license to sell milk and cream in the city the commissioner of public safety and the health officer acted within the scope of their authority and applicants for such a license should co-operate with the public authorities and assist rather than oppose reasonable efforts to provide pure and wholesome milk and cream for the people of the city. The requirement of a blood test of an applicant for a license is just a step and a small one in the direction of the protection of the public health, but every reasonable effort made in this direction should be encouraged so long as it does not unreasonably infringe upon the rights of the individual. The application is denied, with costs.
Application denied, with costs.