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The Concept of Jurisdiction and Federalism. FSC-421. Jurisdiction. Jurisdiction over persons Police Authority Jurisdictional prerequisite for exercise of authority over an individual Habeas Corpus Jurisdiction over subject Matter Foods and drugs
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Jurisdiction • Jurisdiction over persons • Police Authority • Jurisdictional prerequisite for exercise of authority over an individual • Habeas Corpus • Jurisdiction over subject Matter • Foods and drugs • Jurisdictional prerequisite for exercise of authority over an individual • Definitions • Compelling governmental interest
Jurisdictional Prerequisites • Minimum contacts with locality • Residence / Domicile • Benefits and protections of society • Some nexus between the activity, the person and the regulation • International Shoe v. Washington Personal Jurisdiction
Jurisdictional Prerequisites • Exercise of authority over a thing • Compelling National interest • Health and welfare of inviduals • Protection of the environment • Food safety • Definition as basis for a violation
Jurisdictional Prerequisites • Jurisdictional prerequisite to the exercise of authority in area of foods is a finding that the product has been either adulterated or misbranded
Definitions(Legal Mumbo-Jumbo) • Food • Adulteration • Misbranding • Jurisdiction • Jurisdictional Prerequisites • First section of the “Act”
Nutrilabs v. Schweiker (1983) • Plantiff manufactures “starch blockers” and sells them as “food” for weight control • Alpha amylase inhibitor derived from food source • Claim: “Blocks the human body’s digestion of starch as an aid to controlling weight” • FDA alleges this is “drug” not “food”and requested removal of product from market • Stream of commerce / Commerce Clause • Jurisdictional prerequisite
Nutrilabs • Starch blocker contained protein extracted from kidney beans • Protein inhibits production of amylase • Undigested CHO passes through body • FDA says kidney bean dangerous if eaten raw • 75 reports of injury • Marketed as a food so avoided rigorous drug testing procedure (Benecol)
Drug • Section 321(g)(1): • (B) articles intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in man or other animals • (C) articles (other than foods) intended to affect the structure or any function of the body of man or other animals………
Section 321(f):| (1) articles used for food or drink for man or other animals, (2) chewing gum, (3) articles used for components of any such article “Food”
Food • Statutory requirements for food differ from drugs or other FDA regulated products • Classification can determine legality of the product • Use to which a product is put will determine the category into which it falls (fruits/veggies)
“Food” • Congressional intent: • Food is to be defined in terms of it’s function as food rather than in terms of its source, composition or ingestibility. • What about vitamins and minerals? • Food unless therapeutic claims are made • Wine and Alchol • BATC • Wine if > 7% (<7% = FDA)
“Food” • Chewing gum • Specifically defined as “food” • Drug delivery device • Snuff? • Water • EPA regulates drinking water • FDA regulates bottled water
Nutrilabs • “Articles (other than foods)”expressly excluded from definition of a drug • Definitions not mutually exclusive • Nutraceuticals/Dietary supplements • Food defined as “articles used as food”
Plantiffs (Nutrilabs) • Starch blockers are food because derived from food (kidney beans) • Bullshit! What about penicillin, caffeine, insulin, botulism toxin, influenza vaccine • Congress intended foods for “special dietary uses” to come within definition of a food • Bullshit! What about anti-fat drugs and slenderizers. If all products intended for weight control are foods then no diet products could be regulated as drugs (no testing) • -not congress’s intent
Court(7th Circuit Ct of Appeals) • No clear guidance from congress • Definition of food intended to be broad because includes chewing gum and food additives • But, common sense definition includes articles used by people in the ordinary way most people use food
Court(7th Circuit Ct of Appeals) • Too narrow to restrict foods to just those that taste, smell or have nutritive value • What about prune juice and coffee (not consumed for taste) • Drugs intended to be something “other than food” • Food affects “function and structure” of man also
Court(7th Circuit Ct of Appeals) • Starch blockers not food in any sense of definition • Not consumed for taste • Taken only to control weight • Not chewing gum, not food additive • Starch blocker is “article, other than food, intended to affect structure and function so is DRUG!
Federalism The Separation of the Powers between the States and the Federal Government
Federalism • Federalism provides for a separation of powers between the state and federal governments • Individual states, surrendered certain governmental powers to the Federal Government • States retain control over all legal issues not specifically delegated to the federal government • Federal Government can regulate local activity that substantially affects interstate commerce if national regulation is needed because states, on their own, could not achieve the same objective
Federalism • Issues, such as education, family, or social matters, are retained by the states (10th Amendment) • The 10th amendment created an enclave of state autonomy that the federal government may not enter through exercise of legislative or regulatory power.
Federalism • States are free to operate in any arena that has not been preempted by federal law • Federalism provides opportunities for expression of a wide range of conservative, moderate and liberal positions within a national forum • Separation of federal and state authority provides different groups with a stake in the political system and discourages separatist movements.
Federalism • States may pass additional, more restrictive or stringent food safety laws or regulations than those promulgated at the federal level • Federal government may delegate part of its authority to state agencies, such as permitting a state agency to conduct food plant safety inspections on its behalf
Federalism Example • A small retailer in Cascadia bought a large bottle of nutritional supplements from an interstate wholesaler who had purchased them form an out of state supplier. • The bottle contained an unapproved food additive. The label form the manufacturer had clearly listed that this additive was present in the product. • The retailer transferred 12 pill to a smaller container and sold them in Cascadia. • Defendant charged with violating provisions of the federal Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act
Holding: • Extension of federal jurisdiction to this apparently in-state matter is valid. • FDA’s role in promoting food and drug safety is national in scope.This permits the federal government to regulate entirely local sales of goods simply because they had crossed a single state line sometime during production and final sale
Separation of Powers • Federal Government divided into three branches: • Legislative • Executive • Judicial • Act as “checks and balances” to prevent any branch from dominating the government • States have same system
Legislative Branch • Congress • Two houses • Senate • House of Representatives • “I’m just a bill” • Congress passes “laws”
Executive Branch • President is head of Executive Branch • Enforces laws passed by the Legislature • Federal agencies who are created by congress through “enabling Legislation” • Agency heads serve at “the pleasure of president” • DOJ is only agency that can bring criminal charges
Judicial Branch • Supreme and lower courts • Federal District Courts • Federal criminal cases • Courts of Appeal • Appeals from District Courts • Supreme Court hears only “certain” cases • Appeals from lower federal courts • State decisions regarding US Constitution • States vs. States
Interstate Commerce • Congress’ power to regulate foods limited to foods that move in interstate commerce • Interstate = between any State and anyplace outside thereof… • Commerce = any form of commercial activity involving goods
Example: • Michiganer goes to Wisconsin, buys cheese for personal consumption and returns to Mich. • Wis. seller had no reason to know Michiganer returning to Mich. with cheese • This NOT interstate commerce b/c: • Wis. seller didn’t know or intend • Mich. Buyer did not resell cheese, personal use