
    UNITED STATES v. 11¼ DOZEN PACKAGES OF ARTICLE LABELED IN PART MRS. MOFFAT’S SHOO FLY POWDERS FOR DRUNKENNESS.
    No. 567.
    District Court, W. D. New York.
    June 17, 1941.
    George L. Grobe, U. S. Atty., and Joseph J. Doran, Asst. U. S. Atty., both of Buffalo, N. Y., for libellant.
    Merwin, Paul, Lesswing & Hickman, of Buffalo, N. Y. (Wortley E. Paul and Louis Burman, both of Buffalo, N. Y., of counsel), for claimant.
   KNIGHT, District Judge.

The libellant seeks condemnation of certain articles of alleged drug products described as “11^4 Dozen Packages of article labeled in part ‘Mrs. Moffat’s Shoo Fly Powders for Drunkenness.’ ” Libel is brought under the provisions of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act of June 25, 1938, Title 21 U.S.C.A. and is based upon the claim that the aforesaid articles are misbranded under subdivision (a) and (j) of Section 352 of Title 21 U.S.C.A.

It is admitted that the articles in question were shipped in Interstate Commerce, that is from the State of Pennsylvania to the Ellicott Drug Co., at Buffalo, New York, on November 2, 1940, by the intervenor, M. F. Groves’ Son & Co., who concededly is the owner and manufacturer of the articles in question, and that a representative of the libellant during said month purchased a quantity of the articles in question from the last-named company. The articles contained on the average 3.2 grains of potassium antimony tartrate (tartar emetic) and no other constituents.

Section 321 (g) Title 21 U.S.C.A. provides, among other things, that a drug means “(2) articles intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in man or other animals”; and “(3) articles (other than food) intended to affect the structure or any function of the body of man * * and (k), (same section) defines a label as “a display of written, printed, or graphic matter upon the immediate container of any article.” The label on the articles in question clearly purports the content to be for use in the “diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention” of drunkenness.

The label in question is as follows:

“Trade Mark)

Mrs. Moffat’s Shoo Fly Powders For Drunkenness

6 Powders — 18 GM. Each Antimony & Potassium Tartrate In Use 60 Years Use according to directions

M. F. Groves’ Son & Co.

Since 1832

803 South Front Street Philad’a, Pa.

Sold to Druggists only

Price, 50 Cents a Box

19574 E Nov 14 1940

Directions. — One of the Powders may be given in Beer, Coffee, Tea or any other liquid.

Never give more than one Powder a day. These powders are intended to be used by adults only, and should be kept from children.”

Section 352, Title 21, supra, provides: “A drug or device shall be deemed to be misbranded — (a) If its labeling is false or misleading in any particular” and “(j) If it is dangerous to health when used in the dosage, or with the frequency or duration prescribed, recommended, or suggested in the labeling thereof.” Such misbranded article is liable to condemnation “when introduced into or while in interstate commerce * * *, or at any time thereafter, * * Section 334, Title 21, supra.

The questions at issue are (1) whether the labeling of the article aforesaid is false and misleading, and (2) whether the drug is dangerous to health when used in the dosage prescribed on the label. The libel must be sustained on the determination of either question in the affirmative.

On behalf of the government five physicians testified with respect to the effect of the use of antimony and potassium tartrate (tartar emetic) “for' drunkenness,” and with respect to the danger to health in its use in the dosage prescribed. On behalf of the claimant an officer of the intervenor gave testimony as to the amount of the article in question sold over a period of years.

The proceeding is in rem. The burden rests upon the government to establish its case only by a fair preponderance of the evidence. United States v. 5 One-Pint Bottles, etc., D.C., 9 F.Supp. 990; United States v. 237/12 Doz. Bottles, etc., D.C., 44 F.2d 831.

A contention made by the intervenor is that it is necessary for the government to show intent to deceive and defraud. While this was held to be the law under the Act of June 30, 1906, § 8, as amended by the Act of August 23, 1912, 21 U.S.C.A. § 10, such is not the law under the Act of June 25, 1938, supra. The former statutes provided that an article should “be deemed to be misbranded; In case of drugs: * * * If its package or label shall bear * * * any statement * * * regarding the curative * * * effect * * . *, which is false and fraudulent.” Chichester Chemical Co. v. United States, 60 App.D.C. 134, 49 F.2d 516, held that the government must prove actual intent to deceive. Under the present statute a drug is deemed to be misbranded “if its labeling is false or misleading in any particular.” Intent is not necessary to be proved. Further, the aforesaid Act of 1906, section 8, required that the misbranding must be “false or misleading." These are the words of the present statute. Under the Act of 1906 numerous cases held that it was not necessary to show intent. In this Circuit we find United States v. Scaduto, S.D.N.Y. decided January 16, 1920; Von Bremen et al. v. United States, 2 Cir., 192 F. 904.

It is urged that merely stating that the article is “for drunkenness” is not sufficient to constitute offense of misbranding. The use of the words “for drunkenness” is the equivalent of saying that it is a “cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention” of drunkenness. The necessary implication is that it is for relief from drunkenness to at least some extent. In United States v. Natura Co., D.C., 250 F. 925, cited by the intervenor, the indictment charged misbranding where the label stated that the drug was “a natural remedy for certain specified diseases, and that it had proved effective in the treatment of such diseases.” There it was claimed that the word “remedy” was synonymous with “cure.” This was a criminal case, and it was held that the plaintiff had not established beyond a reasonable doubt that the statements on the label were both “false and fraudulent.” This has no controlling bearing here.

The physicians testifying on b'ehalf of the government were, one a pharmacologist, one an internist, one a neuropsychiatrist, one a specialist in therapeutics and one a neuropsychiatrist. Each testified that antimony and potassium tartrate (tartar emetic) was not a curative for drunkenness, that it is a drug not properly useable in the treatment of drunkenness, and that its use in • the dosage shown on the label herein is dangerous to health. Each of these physicians had had extensive practice in his specialty. Each testified that the medical profession had long recognized that tartar emetic was a drug dangerous to be administered through the mouth; that its use through the mouth has been abandoned in the teaching field; and that the standard textbooks treat it as a poison. The testimony of these physicians is to the effect that tartar emetic taken through the mouth irritates the lining of the stomach and intestines, produces various injurious effects on various other organs of the body; that it is cumulative in its effect; that when taken in increased doses it causes nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and retching; and after absorption affects the liver and kidneys and increases the heart rate; that through the loss of the control of the muscles of the stomach the vomitus may be swallowed causing pneumonia. They say the medical profession for many years has not prescribed it to be taken through the mouth, except as it is so used in so-called Brown’s Mixture, which contains Yio of a grain of this drug, and that its present use is almost entirely intravenously or intramuscularly as a treatment for numerous tropical diseases. Brown’s Mixture is Used as a carrier with other drugs to make a cough syrup. They have given many other details pointing out the other effects from the use of this drug in the dosage prescribed.

The Pharmacopeia (Ed.1936) states the average dosage when taken internally as %o of a grain. The National Standard Dispensary (Ed. 1907) gives it as one-half to one grain taken every fifteen minutes until several doses are taken or till emesis occurs. I find on reference to the edition of 1938 no reference is made to any repetition of the dose and that the dosage “usually is about Yz grain (.03 gm.).” The National Standard Dispensary (Ed. 1907) also states that tartar emetic at one time was largely employed as an “expectorant, diaphoretic, emetic, sedative, antiphlogistic, and counter-irritant, but at present its use has become greatly limited.” It states it is an irritant and that continued application causes “a pustular eruption followed by deep sloughing”; that “antimony depresses the sensory side of the spinal cord; * * * lowers * * * the pulse-force”; and blood pressure; that it is an irritant to the stomach and intestines and in toxic dose produces violent gastro-enteritis; that the purging following overdose of the drug “is an effort made by the intestines to eliminate the poison, and is due also to the intense intestinal inflammation”; that it is very slowly absorbed and slowly eliminated; that as an emetic this drug causes great prostration and muscular relaxation, it is badly borne by children, by the aged and by those who are enfeebled by disease; and never should be used when “gastrointestinal irritation or inflammation is present”; and that chronic poison sometimes results from the frequent administration of this drug.

The Edition of 1937 of the National Standard Dispensary further states this: “Its emetic action is very certain, powerful, prolonged, but accompanied by much depression, * * * although because of the promptness of its emetic action recovery may occur after very large amounts one case is on record in which two grains proved fatal.” This work gives the dosage when used intravenously or intramuscularly at one-half to two grains given every alternate day and as a dosage internally “as a diaphoretic or expectorant it may be given in quantities of from Vao to Vs grain. If used as an emetic the dose usually is about % grain.”

The conclusion here is inescapable both that the label in question is false and misleading and that the drug is dangerous to health when used in the dosage prescribed on the label. While it may seem that t-he use of this emetic in some amount may be beneficial in cases of drunkenness because of the fact that it clears the stomach, the fact is that alcohol is absorbed into the blood stream within twenty minutes to half an hour after being taken into the stomach and, therefore, the emetic could not usually affect the action of the alcohol.

The only evidence offered by the intervenor was that given by an official of the claimant to the effect that the powders in question have been sold for upwards of 60 years; that over 50,000 of the powder packages have been sold yearly for the last ten years and that not a single case of harm or injury had ever been reported by any one to the manufacturers. Objection was raised to the reception of all this testimony. It was received subject to be stricken, if the court later so decided. It is believed that the testimony as to the number of packages of the powder that had been sold and the period of years over which it had been sold is competent and the ruling as made stands. However, the testimony that no complaints had been received is incompetent. Goldstein v. United States, 8 Cir., 63 F.2d 609. It is clearly hearsay.

The intervenor urges that the testimony on behalf of the intervenor is not outweighed by the testimony given by the experts called by the government. We are to bear in mind in this connection that the only testimony now in the record offered by the intervenor is with reference to the number of packages sold and the period of timé over which they were sold. While the intervenor cites numerous cases in which consideration had been given to the weight of expert testimony, none of these hold that it is to be given no weight. The weight of such testimony is for the court to determine. These cases present somewhat comparable situations where physicians have testified as experts: United States v. Lee, 7 Cir., 107 F.2d 522, certiorari denied 309 U.S. 659, 60 S.Ct. 513, 84 L.Ed. 1008; United States v. Dr. David Roberts Vet. Co., 7 Cir., 104 F.2d 785; United States v. American Laboratories, D.C., 222 F. 104; United States v. W. B. Wood Mfg. Co., D.C.E.D.Mo., decided May 12, 1921; Eleven Gross Packages, etc., v. United States, 3 Cir., 233 F. 71; Chichester Chemical Co. v. United States, supra; Hall v. United States, 5 Cir., 267 F. 795. The testimony of these physicians is largely based on their studies as physicians but not upon the actual use of the article in question. Certain of these physicians have testified to personal observation of the use of the drug in question. Testimony of these men is not to be entirely disregarded because they testified as experts. As against the testimony that large numbers of packages of this drug have been sold during many years, we have the testimony of all the five physicians that the drug itself is not a cure for drunkenness and that its use in the dosage prescribed is dangerous to health. Each of these physicians went into great detail in explaining the nature of the drug and its reactions upon the human system when taken internally.

It is not necessary to decide whether the drug when taken in the dosage of any specific number of grains less than 3.2 may properly be taken in the treatment of drunkenness or whether such dosage would be dangerous to health. I do decide that the articles in question are misbranded, since the labels thereon are false and misleading, because antimony and potassium tartrate in the dosage of 3.2 grains (the average in the articles analyzed) is not a “cure, mitigation or treatment” for drunkenness as purported to be and also that it is misbranded, because the use of the drug in the dosage of 3.2 grains is dangerous to health.

Libellant is entitled to an order adjudging and decreeing that the articles of drug product aforesaid be condemned according to the provisions of the statute. 
      
       No opinion for publication.
     
      
       No opinion for publication.
     