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[Cites 8, Cited by 27]

Supreme Court of India

Ajitprasad Ramkishan Singh vs The State Of Maharashtra on 2 May, 1972

Equivalent citations: 1972 AIR 1631, 1973 SCR (1) 483, AIR 1972 SUPREME COURT 1631, 1974 (1) SCJ 198, 1973 MADLW (CRI) 246, 1973 (1) SCR 483, 1972 ALLCRIR 543, 1972 SCD 632, 1974 MADLJ(CRI) 81

Author: Kuttyil Kurien Mathew

Bench: Kuttyil Kurien Mathew, P. Jaganmohan Reddy

           PETITIONER:
AJITPRASAD RAMKISHAN SINGH

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MAHARASHTRA

DATE OF JUDGMENT02/05/1972

BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
MITTER, G.K.

CITATION:
 1972 AIR 1631		  1973 SCR  (1) 483
 1972 SCC  (3) 180


ACT:
Prevention  of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 (37 of 1954),  s.
13(2)  long  delay  between  taking  sample  and   launching
prosecution  for  adulteration of milk-If accused  does	 not
make application under s. 13(2) he cannot claim that  sample
must,  have deteriorated and he has lost valuable  right  to
have analysed by Director.



HEADNOTE:
The appellant had a 'sweet meat shop in Bombay whose running
he  had entrusted to his nephew.  The food inspector  acting
under  the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act 1954  took  a
sample	of  buffalo milk from 'he shop.	 One  of  the  three
portions of the sample was given to the vendor, another	 was
sent  to  the Public Analyst and the third was kept  by	 the
inspector.  The Analyst reported that the fat content of the
milk   was  lower  than	 prescribed.   The   appellant	 was
prosecuted  under  s.  116(1)(a)(i) of	the  Act;  the	case
against	 his  nephew was dropped since he  was	untraceable.
The Magistrate acquitted the appellant.	 He held that  there
was  long delay between taking the sample and the  commence-
ment of the prosecution and since the preservative added  to
the  sample was less than prescribed, the sample  must	have
become decomposed.  As a result according to the Magistrate,
the appellant lost his valuable right of having his  portion
of  the	 sample analysed by the Director.   The	 High  Court
reversed  the judgment of acquittal holding that  since	 the
appellant  did	not make any application under s.  13(2)  he
could  not  be	said to have lost any  valuable	 right.	  In
appeal to this Court,
HELD  :	 The High Court's view was in  consonance  with	 the
decision  of this Court in the case of Babulal	Hargovindas
that  unless  an  application  to send	the  sample  to	 the
Director  is  made, the vendor cannot-complain that  he	 was
deprived  of  his right to have the sample analysed  by	 the
Director. [486 A-C]
The Magistrate was wrong in thinking that no useful  purpose
would  be served by sending the sample for analysis  by	 the
Director.It  was not for the Magistrate to  decide  without
any date that the samplewould	be   decomposed	  and	was
incapable  of being analysed.  There was no evidence  before
him to justify this conclusion. [486 D]
The conviction of the appellant must accordingly be  upheld.
[Sentence reduced on the special facts of the case].
Municipal  Corporation	of  Delhi v. Ghisa  Raw,,  [1967]  2
S.C.R. II 6, distinguished.
Babulal Hargovindas v. The State of Gujarat, 1971 (1) S.C.C.
767 applied.



JUDGMENT:

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 243 of 1969.

Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated November 18. 1969 of the Bombay High Court in Criminal Appeal No. 1459- of 1968.

484

M. P. Kenya and K. Rajendra Chowdhary, for the appellant. B. N. Lokur and S. P. Nayar, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Mathew, J. This appeal, by special leave, is from the judgment of the High Court of Bombay, convicting the appellant under Section 16(1)(a)(i) read with section 7 (i) of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act (Act 37 of 1954), hereinafter called the 'Act', and sentencing him to undergo R.I. for 6 months and pay a fine of Rs. 1,000/- and, in default of payment of fine, to undergo R.I. for a further period of two months.

The appellant was the owner of a sweet meat shop on Kurla- Andheri Road, Bombay. On July 1, 1965, the Food Inspector of the Bombay Municipal Corporation visited his shop at 9.55 A.M. and took a sample of unboiled buffalo milk after conforming to the formalities enjoined by the Act. The Food Inspector divided the sample into three parts, retained two parts with him and delivered the other part to accused No. 2, who alone was in the shop at the time. The Food Inspector sent one part for analysis by the Public Analyst. Exhibit 'B' is the report of the Analyst. That showed the fat content of the milk as only 2.7 per cent instead of 6 per cent, as required by the rules framed under the Act. On the basis of the report the accused were prosecuted. Accused No. 1, the appellant, admitted that lie was the owner of the shop and that accused No. 2 who actually sold the milk to the Food Inspector was his nephew. As the whereabouts of accused No. 2 could not be traced, the case as against him was dropped.

The Magistrate acquitted the appellant. His reasoning was as follows: the sample was taken on July 1, 1965; the complaint was filed on August 13, 1965, summons was served on the appellant on November 13, 1965; the date for appearance of the accused was on November 26, 1965; the right to apply to the Court to have the part of the sample delivered to the Vendor sent for analysis by the Director, Central Food Laboratory, Calcutta, hereinafter referred to as the "Director", accrued to the appellant only when the summons was served on him; since by that time the sample would have become decomposed, he lost the valuable right to have the part of the sample, delivered to the vendor analysed by the Director and, so, the appellant should be acquitted.

The High Court, on appeal by the Food Inspector reversed the order of acquittal. The High Court held that the appellant was bound to make an application under section 13(2) of the' Act after paying the prescribed fee and as no such application was filed by the appellant, it could not be said that the appellant had 485 been deprived of any valuable right : And as the fat content of milk was deficient by 55 per cent, the food was adulterated and so, the appellant was guilty of the offence. In this appeal, counsel for the appellant contended that the appellant was deprived of his right to have the sample analysed by the Director on account of the delay in the service of summons. He said that the appellant was acquitted by the Magistrate because the Magistrate found that on account of the delay it would be a futile exercise to have sent the sample for analysis to the Directorand as the laches of the complainant was the reason for the delay in the service of summons and the proximate cause of the appellant losing his right to get the part of the sample delivered to the vendor analysed by the Director, the appellant was entitled to be acquitted. He relied on the decision of this Court in Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Ghisa Ram(1) to support his contention. We do not think that the case would in any way assist the appellant. In that case, the part of the sample delivered to the vendor hard been sent to the Director on the application of the vendor but, the Director reported that the sample had become highly decomposed and could not be analysed. It was not disputed in that case that the Food Inspector had not taken the precaution of adding the necessary preservative to the sample. So the Court held that the valuable right given to the vendor under section 13(2) of the Act could not be availed of and that the conviction was bad. In the present case, the appellant never applied to the Court to have the part of the sample with him analysed by the Director. Section 13 (2) of the Act states :

" After the institution of a prosecution under this Act the accused vendor or the complainant may, on payment of the prescribed fee, make an application to the Court for sending the part of the sample mentioned in subclause (i) or sub- clause (iii) of clause (c) of sub-section (1) of section 1 1 to the Director of the Central Food Laboratory for a certificate; and on receipt of the application the Court shall first ascertain that die mark and seal or fastening as provided in clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section 11 are intact and may then despatch the part of the sample under its own seal to the Director of the Central Food Laboratory who shall thereupon send a certificate to the Court in the prescribed form within one month from the date of receipt of the sample, speci- fying the result of analysis."

It is clear from the sub-section that the appellant should have made an application after paying the prescribed fee if he wanted the part of the sample available with him to be sent to the Director-

(1) [1967] 2 S.C.R. 116.

486

for analysis. If he had made the application after paying the prescribed fee, the Magistrate would have had no option but to send the part of the sample for analysis by the Director. If in pursuance of the application the part of the sample was sent to the Director and he had reported that the part of the sample was incapable of analysis for the reason that it was decomposed, the appellant could perhaps, have contended that he was deprived of his right to have the sample analysed by the Director on account of the laches of the complainant and that he should be acquitted. But, since the appellant never applied under section 13(2) of the Act, he cannot complain that he has been deprived of any right. In Babulal Hargovindas v. The State of Gujarat(3), Jaganmohan Reddy, J., speaking for the Court, said that unless an application to send the sample to the Director is made, the vendor cannot complain that he was deprived of his right to have the sample analysed by the Director. The learned Magistrate was wrong in thinking that no useful the Director. It was not for the Magistrate to decide without any data that the sample would be decomposed and was incapable of being analysed. The Food Inspector had sworn as P.W. 1. that he had added 8 drops of formalin to each part of the sample. 'Though under the rules he should have added 16 drops to each part, there is no reason to think that the sample became decomposed 'by the time the summons was served for that reason. There was no evidence before the Magistrate that for the reason that the prescribed quantity of fomialin was not added to each part, the part of the sample delivered to the vendor was incapable of being analysed by the Director. Nor did the Magistrate rely on that circumstance for his conclusion that the, sample would have become decomposed. The appellant could have summoned the Public Analyst and examined him if he was serious in his present contention that since the prescribed quantity of formalin was not added, the part of the sample would have become decomposed by the time the summons was served, and no useful purpose would have been served by sending the sample for analysis by the Director. There was, therefore, no evidence that the part of the sample available with the appellant had so deteriorated at the time the summons was served as to be incapable of being analysed. In Sukhmal Gupta and another v. The Corporation of Calcutta(2), Sikri, J. as he then was, speaking for the Court, said:

"....... it was held by this Court in Municipal.Corporation of Delhi v. Ghisa Ram that section 13 (2) of the Act confers a valuable right to have the sample given co him analysed by the Director of the Central Food Laboratory but, "the reason why the conviction cannot be sus-
(1) [1971](1)S.C.C.767. (2)G.A.Nol61ofl966,dicided on May 3,1968.
487

tained is that the accused is prejudiced in his defence and is denied a valuable right of defending himself solely due to the daleberate acts of the prosecution". In this case no prejudice of the defence has been Shown. It has not been established on the record that the sample of tea which was available with the appellant had deteriorated by the time- the summons was received. He never utilised the right under section 13(2) of the Act of sending the sample to the Director of Central Food Laboratory". We are of the opinion that the High Court was right in coming to the conclusion that the appellant was guilty of the offence. But we do not think that the sentence of 6 months R.I. and fine of Rs. 1,000/- was called for in the circumstances of the case. Since the offence fell under proviso (1) of section 16 of the Act, the Court was not bound to impose a sentence of imprisonment for a term of 6 months. The appellant had entrusted the running of the shop to the second accused, his nephew. There is no evidence to show that there was any mechanism in the shop by which the fat content could be extracted from un-boiled milk. There is also no evidence that any water had been added to the milk.

Taking into account all these circumstances, we reduce the sentence to R.I. for 3 months and the fine to Rs. 500//- and we direct that in default of payment of fine, the appellant will undergo R.I. for a further period of one month. The appeal is allowed only to the etxent indicated but is dismissed in all other aspects.

The appellant, if on bail, shall surrender to the bail.

G.C.					     Appeal  allowed
in part.
488