I. The abstract before us shows that the defendants, acting as the commissioners of pharmacy of the state, upon the record of the conviction of plaintiff upon an indictment for maintaining a nuisance, by keeping a place for the sale of intoxicating liquors contrary to law, and by selling intoxicating liquors therein in violation of law, did strike his name from the register of pharmacists, and revoke the certificate issued authorizing him to practice as a pharmacist. The plaintiff, in his petition, complains of the want of authority of the defendants, and of certain alleged illegal acts in the proceeding and judgment in question. The defendants made full return of their doings in the case. The proceedings in the cause, and plaintiff’s objections thereto,need not be here more particularly referred to. They will be stated, so far as may be necessary, in the consideration and discussion of. the various grounds of objection urged in this court by' plaintiff’s counsel to the judgment of the circuit court; but, that these proceedings and plaintiff’s objections thereto may be understood, it is necessary to set out here with proper fullness the statute under which the proceedings were had, viz., chapter 75, Acts of the Eighteenth General Assembly.
The statute is entitled “ An act to regulate the practice of pharmacy, and the sale of medicines and poisons.” Sections 1 and 2 forbid any one not a registered pharmacist to conduct any drug-store or apothecary shop, etc., or to compound and dispense prescriptions of physicians, or to retail or dispense poisons for medical use, except under the supervision *341of a registered pharmacist. Penalties are provided for the violation of these sections. Section 3 provides for the appointment by the governor of three commissioners of pharmacy, who are authorized “ to make by-laws and necessary regulations for the fulfillment of their duties under this act.” Sections 4 and 5 provide for the registry of the names of all persons to whom the commissioners issue certificates. Persons in the business when the law took effect, it is provided, shall be registered without examination; others upon examination. These sections contain provisions as to the manner of examination, and other matters that need not be here more particularly referred to. Section 6 relates to fees and other matters not involved in the questions brought to our attention by this case. Section 7 declares that registered pharmacists shall be responsible for the quality of the drugs and medicines they may sell and dispense, and provides penalties for the sale of adulterated articles, and for the striking of the names of offenders from the register. Section 8 is in the following language: “Apothecaries registered as herein provided shall have the right to keep and sell, under such restrictions as herein provided, all medicines and poisons authorized by the National American or United States Dispensatory and Pharmacopoeia as of recognized medical utility: provided that nothing herein contained shall be construed so as to shield an apothecary or pharmacist, who violates or in any way abuses this trust for the legitimate and actual necessities of medicine, from the utmost rigor of the law relating to the sale of intoxicating liquors, and in addition thereto his name shall be stricken from the register.” Section 9 declares that it shall be unlawful for any person to retail any of the poisons enumerated, except as therein prescribed. The last sentence of the section is as follows: “Nor shall it be lawful for ány licensed or registered druggist or pharmacist to retail, or sell, or give away, any alcoholic liquors or compounds as a beverage, and any violation of the provisions of this section shall make the owner or *342principal of said store or pharmacy liable to a fine of not less than twenty-five dollars, and not more than one hundred dollars, to be collected in the usual manner, and, in addition thereto, for repeated violations of this section, his name shall be stricken from the register.” Section 10 provides for licensing itinerant vendors of drugs, nostrums, etc. Section 11 provides penalties for procuring, or attempting to procure, registration by false representations, and for conducting the business of selling drugs and medicines without registration. Section 12 declares that the act shall not apply to physicians putting up their own prescriptions.
The plaintiff was convicted upon an indictment which is in the following language: “The said I. F. Hildreth, on the first day of July, A. D. 1880, in the county aforesaid, and daily thereafter, up to the finding of this indictment, did unlawfully keep, own, control, continue, establish and manage a building, in Leon, Iowa, for the purpose and intent of keeping and selling therein, in the state of Iowa, intoxicating liquors, in violation'of law, and at the said time and place, and in said building, the said defendant did keep and sell, in the state of Iowa, intoxicating liquors, in violation of law.”
1. PHARMAfuisaie'o^" íorfeunreof ucense. II. Counsel for plaintiff insists that the offense for which he was convicted is not contemplated by the statute as a ground for the revocation of the certificate of a « registered pharmacist, as we understand counsel, for the reason that the defendants had no jurisdiction in the case. The statute provides what class of persons shall hold certificates of registration, and the grounds upon which the certificates shall be revoked. Not Only the acquirements of the pharmacists are to be contemplated under the statute, in determining whether he shall receive the certificaté, but it provides that the violation of the statute forbidding the sale of intoxicating liquors shall be .cause for revoking his registration. This provision is based, upon the ground that one who illegally sells intoxicating *343liquors is not a fit person to hold a certificate as a pharmacist.' There are many valid reasons, which need not be here stated, which doubtless induced the restriction. Now, while the statute relates to the practice of pharmacy and the sale of poisons, it prescribes causes which shall take from the pharmacist the right to hold a license. It matters not whether the intoxicating liquors sold by plaintiff were or were not to be regarded either as medicines or poisons. Their sale by plaintiff was unlawful; and, for the violation of the law in selling them, he became disqualified to hold his registration
2. commispl°wmaeyf: povvers^uponf constitutionaiity. III. The plaintiff insists that “ the creation of a board of officers, with legislative and judicial powers, is not only wholly foreign to the subject of the act, as indicated by its title, but is void as an attempt to delegate powers which the constitution vests only . , . . , m the legislature.” (1) Ihe act regulates the practice of pharmacy by declaring the conditions upon which it shall be practiced, and the class of persons thereto empowered. It contains many regulations, which are readily discovered upon reading the statute. It is obvious that these regulations can be applied and enforced only by officers duly authorized by law. The commissioners are such officers. (2) There are no legislative powers intrusted to the commissioners; they can neither make nor unmake a single provision of’ law.. They are charged with the administration of the law, and with no other powers. (3) "While in the administration of the law they are intrusted with certain quasi judicial powers, they possess none except those of the class which the law confers upon ministerial and executive officers. They exercise discretion which may be quasi judicial, just as all officers do. The by-laws and regulations which they are authorized to make pertain to the lawful discharge of the duties imposed upon them. They do not pertain to the rights or liabilities of other persons. (4) It is complained that the commissioners are authorized to exact a license fee. Surely we are not expected to . cite authorities to show that *344the legislature may provide for licensing persons engaged in specified pursuits, and require the payment of.a fee therefor by the person accepting a license. Counsel do not deny that the statute, so far as it requires a pharmacist to obtain a license or certificate, is constitutional, but insist that the provision for fees is unconstitutional. They give neither reasons nor cite authorities to support their position. It demands no further attention.
3. ——:revolicense by: due process of law. IY. Counsel insist that the proceedings before the commissioners were without authority, and in conflict with the constitution, in that plaintiff thereby is deprived of his property without due process of law. By ^ this they mean that plaintiff was entitled to a trial before some court. Well, defendant had such a trial in the most solemn and formal manner. He was indicted and convicted of violating the law relating to the sale of intoxicating liquors. He had another trial before the defendants to determine whether he had been so convicted, and the fact was established in the manner prescribed by law, i. e., by the production of the record. Here, then, he had two trials. His violation of the law was thus established before the commissioners, who are charged with the duty of giving and revoking certificates of registration. They discharged a plain and imperative duty in revoking plaintiff’s certificate.
4. phaematümi of6r-°a_ fufsaie'ofaw" .iiquors. Y. The statute (section 8) declares that the certificate of registration shall be revoked for violation of the law relating to ^ie sa^e °*' intoxicating liquors. But counsel say that there is a difference between alcoholic and intoxicating liquors, and that section 9 proyjdes that the certificate shall be revoked for the unlawful sale of alcoholic liquors. So it is; but section 8 authorizes the revocation for the sale of intoxicating liquors. It follows that, as both sections must stand, the revocation hray be for the sale of both intoxicating and alcoholic liquors.
*345b. —:--.: her of "offenses *344YI. Section 9 declares that for repeated violations of its provisions the certificate may' be revoked. But section 8 *345declares that for violations of the law relating to the sale of intoxicating liquors, without regard to the repetition of the offense, the name of the offender shall be stricken from the register. Section 9 applies to other violations of the law besides the sale of alcoholic liquors. The provision as to repeated offenses will be construed to apply to them, and not to the sale of intoxicating or alcoholic liquors, which is provided for in section 8. By this construction both sections stand, and are not in conflict.
6. indictgation aPe" cuannoticedof loeatiou of town. 7. certioraue to review aotsfetl°nary VII. It is insisted that the indictment upon which plaintiff was convicted fails to show that the offense was committed within the jurisdiction of the court in which the indictment was found. It will be observed that it alleges that the offense was eom- . . f . mited m Leon. Ihe court lyouid take judicial notice that Leon was the county seat of the county wherein the indictment was found. But surely the objection could not be raised after verdict and judgment, in a proceeding involving the enforcement of a penalty based upon the judgment. This objection, as well as one based upon the claim that an appeal was pending in the case wherein plaintiff was convicted at the time of the hearing before defendants, and another based upon the incompeteney of the judgment as evidence in the case, pertain to questions of fact, which were for the determination of defendants. They are not based upon questions of jurisdiction, or of illegal acts of defendants. The competency and sufficiency of the evidence were before defendants for consideration, and they did not act illegally or without jurisdiction in deciding thereon. They may have erred in their decision, but their error cannot he reviewed upon certiorari. Tiedt v. Carstensen, 61 Iowa, 334.
"We reach the conclusion that the circuit court rightly dismissed plaintiff’s petition. The judgment appealed from is, therefore, Affirmed.