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public. We think, however, the license fee in this case is so high as to be prohibitive upon the itinerant vendor, (which feature of the statute we will consider later,) and that the practical operation of this statute must be to give the druggists of the State a monopoly of the business of selling patent and proprietary medicines without in any way conserving the health of the public, which was the ground upon which a similar statute was held invalid in Noel v. People, 187 Ill. 587. In that case a statute had been passed which authorized sales of patent and proprietary medicines to be made only by registered pharmacists, and this court held that the act was not a valid exercise of the police power of the State. In City of Chicago v. Netcher, supra, the court had before it an ordinance making it unlawful for any person, firm or corporation engaged in selling “dry goods, clothing, jewelry and drugs * to have ex

posed for sale, or sell to any person, firm or corporation, any meats, fish, butter, cheese, lard, vegetables or any other provisions." It was held that the ordinance was not a police regulation but was purely an arbitrary prohibition, and was void as an unlawful interference with property rights granted by the State and Federal constitutions. On page III the court said: "In order to sustain legislative interference with the business of the citizen by virtue of the police power it is necessary that the act should have some reasonable relation to the subjects included in such power. If it is claimed that the statute or ordinance is referable to the police power, the court must be able to see that it tends, in some degree, toward the prevention of offenses or the preservation of the public health, morals, safety or welfare. It must be apparent that some such end is the one actually intended and that there is some connection between the provisions of the law and such purpose. If it is manifest that the statute or ordinance has no such object, but, under the guise of a police regulation, is an invasion of the property

rights of the individual, it is the duty of the court to declare it void."

It has often been held that if the legislature, under the guise of regulation, fixes a license fee at so exorbitant an amount as to operate as a prohibition upon the business or calling sought to be regulated and thereby to create a monopoly, the effect would be to deprive the citizen of his liberty and of his property under the constitution, and that it would be within the power of the courts to declare such a statute invalid. (City of Carrollton v. Bazzette, 159 Ill. 284; Price v. People, 193 id. 114; Spiegler v. City of Chicago, 216 id. 114.) While it is no objection to a tax imposed under the police power that it may incidentally yield a revenue, still the tax cannot be made so heavy on a legitimate occupation as to create a monopoly, or, in effect, prohibit the pursuit of the occupation. (Waters-Pierce Oil Co.. v. Hot Springs, 85 Ark. 509; City Council of Montgomery v. Kelly, 142 Ala. 552; Americus v. Verner, 63 S. E. Rep. 347; Standard Oil Co. v. Commonwealth, 82 S. W. Rep. 1020; State v. Hanson, 16 N. Dak. 347; Cache County v. Jensen, 21 Utah, 207; Garfinkle v. Sullivan, 37 Wash. 650.) In this case the statute fixes the license fee to be paid by an itinerant vendor of patent and proprietary medicines at $100 per month, or $1200 per annum. It would seem it would occur to any fair-minded man, at a glance, that the fee of $100 per month is so excessive that no itinerant vendor of patent and proprietary medicines could afford to pay such license, and that the license fee so imposed would prohibit any person from vending such medicines except he had a drug store or other fixed place of business. In the Noel case a statute was held void which attempted to prohibit any person other than a registered pharmacist from vending patent and proprietary medicines, on the ground that it created a monopoly. If the reasoning of that case is sound,—and we have no doubt it is,--we think that a valid statute cannot be passed which accomplishes by

indirection what it was held in that case could not be accomplished directly, that is, instead of providing in direct terms by a statute that no person other than a druggist shall vend patent and proprietary medicines, pass a statute which imposes so high a license fee for the vending of patent and proprietary medicines that no itinerant vendor can afford to take out a license, the practical operation of which would be to give the druggists of the State a monopoly of that business.

From a careful examination of the record we are satisfied the paragraph of the statute in question, as applied to an itinerant vendor of patent and proprietary medicines, (which was the business in which appellee was engaged,) is unconstitutional. We are of the opinion, however, that the holding of that paragraph unconstitutional as to itinerant vendors of patent and proprietary medicines does not affect the validity of the remainder of the statute.

The judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

COOKE and DUNN, JJ., dissenting:

We do not concur in the majority opinion. The judgment of the circuit court should be reversed. Appellee attacked the constitutionality of section 8 of the Medical Practice act, referred to in the majority opinion as paragraph 12, upon several grounds, all of which have not been noted. He also insisted if the section is constitutional it has been repealed by the Pharmacy act. We are of the opinion that the section is constitutional and has not been repealed by implication. This statute is designed to protect the public health and is a proper exercise of the police power of the State. The practice of medicine, which includes the itinerant vending of drugs and nostrums, is subject to legislative regulation and control. In People v. Blue Mountain Joe, 129 Ill. 370, this court passed upon the question whether or not sections substantially the same as the present

sections 8 and 9 of the Medical Practice act were invalid for the reason that the title of the act was not broad enough to include the provisions of those sections. The title of the act was then, as it is now, "An act to regulate the practice of medicine in the State of Illinois and to repeal an act therein named," and it was held in that case that the regulation of the sale of drugs and nostrums by itinerant vendors clearly feil within the purpose of the act as expressed in its title. Section 8 provides that any itinerant vendor of any drug, nostrum, ointment or appliance of any kind intended for the treatment of disease or injury, who shall, by writing or printing, or any other method, profess to the public to cure or treat disease or deformity by any drug, nostrum or application, shall secure a license before so doing; and the majority holds that this is not a valid exercise of the police power of the State for the reason that there can be no distinction between itinerant vendors of such drugs and such persons as have an established place of business and sell them at their permanent places of business. This is based upon the assumption that itinerant vendors of drugs, nostrums, ointments and appliances intended for the treatment of disease or injury fall within the same class as vendors of the same preparations and appliances who have fixed and permanent places of business. This assumption is without foundation. A merchant with a permanent place of business deals, as a rule, with his regular customers and sells his wares to such as come to him to buy. He is not a stranger in the community, and his character, reliability and reputation are known. He has a business reputation to maintain and has a fixed abiding place at which he may be found. An itinerant vendor, on the other hand, is not bound by any rules which govern the local merchant. He may be an entire stranger to every member of the community in which he plies his trade. He has no business reputation to sustain. He is bound by no restraint in the representations he may make as to the par

ticular drug or nostrum he offers for sale. He is here today and to-morrow is gone, perhaps never to be heard of again. The local dealer and the itinerant vendor of drugs and nostrums are of separate and distinct classes. To regulate the practice of medicine is clearly within the police power of the State, and to discriminate between peddlers or itinerant vendors of medicinal preparations and local dealers of the same preparations is not an abuse of that power. The local dealer, with his business reputation to sustain, is much less liable to deal in drugs or nostrums of questionable quality and efficacy than the itinerant vendor, and is also less liable to make misrepresentations in reference to the diseases and ailments for which the drug sold is a specific.

The facts in this case disclose that Porter's Pain King was represented to be the best known remedy for almost every disease or ailment known to science of which man, beast or fowl may be afflicted, and specific directions were given for both external and internal use for all such ailments, and satisfaction guaranteed. To say that the legislature may not restrict such men as appellee in plying their trade is to deprive the State of one of its most important powers. The majority opinion states that the vendor, on obtaining a license from the State Board of Health, is required to show no qualification whatever, and that whether he secures the license depends alone upon his ability to pay the fee. The act provides that the board may, for sufficient cause, refuse any such license. This provision does not give the board the arbitrary power, in its discretion, to refuse to issue a license in any case, but it does invest it with a proper and reasonable discretion, to be exercised to safeguard the public health, in granting or refusing a license.

It is pointed out that the license provided for by these two sections of the statute is so high as to be prohibitive upon the itinerant vendor of drugs and nostrums.

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