Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BABU LAL HARGOVINDAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT
DATE OF JUDGMENT18/03/1971
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
MITTER, G.K.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 1277 1971 SCR 53
1971 SCC (1) 767
CITATOR INFO :
F 1972 SC1631 (6)
F 1974 SC 789 (4)
ACT:
Food Adulteration Act, 1954--Panch witness admitting
signatures but denying presence at time of recovery of
sample--Evidence of Food Inspector can be relied upon and s.
10(7) of Act must be taken as complied with Resolution of
Municipal Corporation under s. 20(1) of Act authorising
Medical Officer of Health to give written consent for
prosecution under Act--Not necessary that authorisation
should be by Commissioner--Effect of ss. 67(3) and
68(1)--Complaint need not be in the name of Corpora-
tion--Rule 7(2) does not contravene ss. 13(1) and 23(1) (e)
of Act and is not ultra vires.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was a dealer in milk. The Food Inspector
purchased milk from him for analysis and sealed it in three
bottles one of which was left with the dealer and one sent
for analysis, the third being kept by the Inspector for
production in court. The Public Analyst’s report showed
that be had caused the sample to be analyzed and that there
was a deficiency of non-fatty solids in the sample. With
the written consent of the Medical Officer of Health the
Inspector filed a complaint under s. 16 of the Food
Adulteration Act, 1954. Before the Magistrate the witness
of the recovery of the sample admitted his signatures on the
receipt Ex. 5 and on the wrappers and labels of the bottles
in which the sample was sealed but denied that he was
present when the sample was obtained. He claimed that he
had signed Ex. 5 without reading it. The Magistrate relying
on the testimony of the Food Inspector convicted the
appellant. The High Court confirmed the conviction. With
certificate under Art. 134(1) (c) of the Constitution
appeal was filed in this Court.
HELD: (1) The fact that the panch witness refused to
support the prosecution in regard to the recovery of milk
from the appellant could not mean that s. 10(7) of the Food
Adulteration Act had not been complied with. The evidence
of the Food Inspector alone if believed can be relied on for
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proving that the samples were taken as required by law. At
the most courts of fact may find it difficult in any
particular case to rely on the testimony of the Food
Inspector alone though this result does not necessarily
follow. The circumstances of each case will determine the
extent of the weight to be given to the evidence of the Food
Inspector and what in the opinion of the Court is the
value of his testimony. In the present case the courts were
justified in concluding on the evidence of the Food
Inspector that he had complied with the requirements and
that the samples were seized in the presence of the Panch
witness whose signatures were taken in the presence of the
accused. [57E-58C]
Manka Hari v. State of Gujarat, 8 G.L.R. 588, referred to.
(ii) The appellant had made no application to the Court for
sending the sample in his custody to the Director, Central
Food Laboratory under s. 13(2). It did not therefore avail
him to say that over four months had elapsed from the time
the samples were taken to the time when the complaint was
filed and consequently the sample had deteriorated and
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could not be analyzed. The Food Inspector had added a
preservative to the appellant’s sample and therefore the
decision of this Court in Ghisa Ram’s case was
distinguishable. [58D, G]
Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Ghisa Ram, [1967] 2 S.C.R.
116, distinguished.
(iii) The contention that the Medical Officer of Health
was not duly authorized under s. 20(1) of the Act to give
his consent for the appellant’s prosecution could not be
accepted. The authority had been conferred by a resolution
of the Municipal Corporation in this regard. The Corpora-
tion did not for this purpose have to act through the
Commissioner. A combined reading of ss. 67(3) and 68(1) of
the Act clearly indicates that the Commissioner cannot
exercise his functions without any fetters as if he is the
Corporation. The Corporation is the controlling authority
and can restrict; limit or impose conditions on the
Commissioner in The exercise of any of the powers under s.
67(3) or under s. 68(1). The Corporation has the final
voice in determining whether the Commissioner or any other
person will discharge the function envisaged therein. That
apart. s. 20(1) of the Act places no restriction on the
Corporation to circumscribe the powers of the Commissioner.
The Corporation was therefore free to authorize the Medical
Officer of Health to give his written consent in appropriate
cases to institute prosecution. [61H-62C]
(iv) All that the Medical Officer of Health is required to
do is to; give his written consent to institute the
prosecution. There is no validity in the contention that
the complaint should be in the name of the Corporation.
[61D]
State of Bombay v. Parshottam Kanaiyalal, [1961] S.C.R. 458,
relied on.
(v) Rule 7(2) of the Act which permits the Public Analyst
to cause the samples to be analyzed by persons under him is
not ultra vires. There is no inconsistency between the
provisions of r. 7 and, those of s. 13(1) as to hold that
the rule is in excess of what is prescribed by the section
nor is there any justification for holding that the rule is
beyond the rule making powers udder s. 23(1) (e) which
empowers the Central Government after consultation with the
committee to define the qualifications power and duties of
the Food Inspectors and Public Analysts. [61G-62D]
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal No. 133
of 1969.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 15, 16, 17
and 18, 1969 of the Gujarat High Court in Criminal Appeal
No.. 850 of 1966.
Ravinder Narain, P. C. Bhartari for the appellant.
P. K . Chatterjee, B. D. Sharma and S. P. Nayar, for the
respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
P. Jagamohan Reddy, J.-The Appellant Babu Lal Hargovindas
carries on business of selling milk in the City of
Ahmedabad. ,On 2-12-1965 at about 8 a.m. the Food Inspector
Mangulal C..
55
Mehta visited the Appellant’s shop, disclosed his identity
and intimated to him that he was purchasing the milk for
analysis. Thereafter 700 ML. milk which was being sold as
cow’s milk was purchased from him. It was divided into 3
parts and poured into three bottles in each of which he
added sixteen drops of formalin as preservative. The
bottles were then corked, sealed and wrapped and signatures
of the Panch one Adambhai Rasulbhai were taken on the seals
and wrappers. of the three, bottles that were then sealed
one was given to the Appellant, one was kept by the Food
Inspector to be produced in the Court as required by the
provision of Food Adulteration Act, .1954 (hereinafter
referred to as it contained total non-fat solids of 7.4 %
instead of 8.5 % 11.30 a.m. to the Chemist Laxmansingh
Vaghela who being authorized by the Public Analyst Dr. Vyas
analyzed it. The analysis of the sample by Vaghela revealed
that the milk was adulterated as it contained total non-fat
solids of 7:4% instead of 8:5% which was the minimum
prescribed. After the receipt of the report of the Public
Analyst the Food Inspector filed a complaint on 6-4-1966
with the written consent of the Medical Officer of Health of
the Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation. After examining the
Food Inspector Mehta, the Chemist Vaghela and the Panch
Adambhai Rasulbhai, the City Magistrate, 6th Court,
Ahmedabad convicted the Appellant under Section 16(1)(a)(i)
read with Section 7 of the Act for selling adulterated milk
and sentenced him to undergo Rigorous imprisonment for one
month and a fine of Rs. 1,000 in default to undergo a
further period of 3 months rigorous imprisonment. Against
this conviction and sentence the Appellant appealed to the
High Court of Gujarat which confirmed the conviction. This
Appeal against that Judgment is by Certificate under Article
134(1)(c) of the Constitution of India.
It is contended before us:-Firstly that the requirements of
Section 10(7) of the Act have not been complied with under
this provision when the Food Inspector takes any action as
specified in sub-sections 1(a), 2, 4 or 6 he shall call one
or more persons to be present at the time such action is
taken and take his or their signatures. The Panch witness
however- did not support the case of the complainant that he
was either present at the time when the sample was obtained
from the Appellant or that his signatures were taken when
the bottles were said to have been sealed. In these
circumstances, it is submitted, the conviction cannot be
sustained. Secondly the Appellant was not afforded an
opportunity to send the sample of the milk left with him to
the Director of Central Food Laboratory for a certificate
inasmuch as the complaint itself was lodged after a lapse of
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over 4 months from the dates of taking the samples. In
these circumstances the milk could not have been preserved
for the Appellant to have taken the ,opportunity afforded to
him by sub-section (2) of Section 13 by
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sending it to the Director, Central Food Laboratory for a
certificate. Thirdly the Food Inspector who filed this
complaint was not competent to file it because the Medical
Officer of Health who gave written consent to file it was
not validly authorized as required under Section 20(1) of
the Act inasmuch as under the relevant provisions of the
Bombay Provincial Municipal Corporation Act LIX of 1949
(hereinafter referred to as the ’Corporation Act as applied
to the State of Gujarat it was the Municipal Commissioner
and not the Municipal Corporation. that should have
authorized the giving of written consent to prosecute.
Fourthly even if the Medical Officer of Health can be said
to be validly authorized by resolution of the Municipal
Corporation dated 17-10-55 +"he, complaint is not in
accordance with that resolution since the resolution
authorized the filing of the complaint in the name of the
,Municipal Corporation but the complaint filed does not
disclose that it is filed on behalf of the Corporation.
Lastly rule 7(2) of the Prevention of Food Adulteration
Rules (hereinafter called the ’,Rules’) which permits the
Public Analyst to cause the sample to be analyzed is
ultra--vires because it is beyond the scope of Section 23(e)
of the Adulteration Act. Most ’of these contentions were
urged before the learned Single Judge of the Gujarat High
Court who in a lengthy Judgment held them to be untenable.
In our view also the submission of the learned Advocate for
the Appellant are without force and must be rejected.
It may be observed that Section 10(7) of the Act originally
required that the Food Inspector, when he takes action
either under the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2), (4) or
(6), to call as far as possible not less than two persons to
be present at the time when such action is taken and take
their signatures but that provision was amended by Act 49 of
1964 and instead it was provided that the Food Inspector
shall call one or more persons at the time when such action
is taken and take his or their signatures. It appears that
the person who witnessed the taking and sealing of the
sample did not support the Food Inspector’s version that the
signatures of this Panch witness were taken on the receipt
Ex. 5 and on the label and wrappers of the bottles at the
time when the samples were obtained.
The witness Rasulbhai who was serving in a Mill and also
sits in the cycle shop of his brother which is adjoining to
the milk shop of the Appellant, after he returns from his
duty stated that on the date in question at about 8 a.m. he
was called by the Food Inspector as a Panch witness and that
he signed on the two bottles of milk and wrappers also.
When he was confronted with the signature on Ex. 5 he said
that he had signed it without reading it. The Food
Inspector on the other hand asserted that he had in the
presence of Panch witness corked, sealed, labelled and wrap-
ped the bottles which were signed by the Panch twice on each
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of the bottles one on the label and the other on the wrapper
and thereafter the accused had passed a receipt to that
effect which was attested by the Panch witness in the
presence of the accused. The Trying Magistrate was not
prepared to take the word of the Panch witness that he had
signed Ex. 5 without reading it or without seeing the
accused signing the same and preferred the evidence of the
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Food Inspector. Before the High Court, none of the conten-
tions raised before the Trial Magistrate namely that
inasmuch as the Panch witness did not support the
prosecution that all the requirements of Section 10(7) of
the Act were not complied with or that the paper slips
bearing signature of the Panch ought co have been affixed on
the bottles and in the absence of such paper seals there
could have been tampering of the seals before they were
analyzed, though raised were not pressed having regard to a
decision of that Court in Manka Hari v. State of
Gujarat.(1).
The learned Advocate for the Appellant contends that though
these point-, were not pressed before the Gujarat High Court
he is free to urge it before us. In the first place we do
not think that having regard to the findings based on an
appreciation of evidence of the Panch witness and the Food
Inspector that the milk was bottled and sealed, signed and
attested by the Panch witness in the presence of the accused
as spoken to by the Food Inspector can be challenged before
us as those are findings of facts. In the second place
there is nothing to indicate that the provisions of sub-
section (7) of Section 10 have not been complied with. Even
otherwise in our view no question of the trial being
vitiated for non-compliance of these provisions can arise.
It is not a rule of law that the evidence of the Food
Inspector cannot be accepted without corroboration. He is
not an accomplice nor is it similar to the one as in the
case of Wills where the law makes it imperative to examine
an attesting witness under Section 68 of the Evidence Act to
prove the execution of the Will. The evidence of the Food
Inspector alone if believed can be relied on for proving
that the samples were taken as required by law. At the most
Courts of fact may find it difficult in any particular case
to rely on the testimony of the Food Inspector alone though
we do not say that this result generally follows. The
circumstances of each case will determine the extent of the
weight to be given to the evidence of the Food Inspector and
what in the opinion of the Court is the value of his
testimony. The provisions of Section 10(7) are akin to
those under Section 103 of the Criminal Procedure Code when
the premises of a citizen are searched by the Police. These
provisions are enacted to safeguard against any possible
allegations-of excesses or resort to unfair means either by
the Police Officers or by the Food Inspectors under the Act.
This
(1) 8 G. L. R. 588.
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being the object it is in the interests of the prosecuting
authorities concerned to comply with the provisions of the
Act, the noncompliance of which may in some cases result in
their testimony being rejected. While this is so we are not
to be understood as in any way minimizing the need to
comply with the aforesaid salutary provisions. In this case
however there is no justification in the allegation that the
provisions have not been complied. with because the Panch
witness had been called and his signatures taken which he
admits. In these circumstances the Courts were justified in
holding on the evidence of the Food Inspector that he bad
complied with the requirements and that the samples were
seized in the presence of the Panch witness whose signatures
were.. taken in the presence of the accused.
There is also in our view no justification for holding that
the accused had no opportunity for sending the sample in his
custody to the Director, Central Food Laboratory under
Section 13(2) because he made no application to the Court
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for sending it. It does not avail him at this stage to say
that over four months had elapsed from the time the samples
were taken to the time when the complaint was filed and
consequently the sample. had deteriorated and could not be
analyzed. The decision of this Court in Municipal
Corporation of Delhi v. Ghisa Ram(1) has no application to
the facts of this case. In that case the sample of the
vendor had in fact been sent to the Director of the Central
Food Laboratory on his application but the Director had
reported that the sample had become highly decomposed and
could not be analyzed. It is also evident from that case
that the Food Inspector had not taken the precaution of
adding the preservative. It appears from page 120 of the
report that the elementary precaution of adding
preservative. to the sample which was given to the,
Respondent should necessarily have been taken by the Food.
Inspector, that if such precaution had been taken, the
sample with the Respondent would have beer, available for
analysis by the Director of the Central Food Laboratory ’and
since the valuable right given to the vendor by Section
13(2) could not be availed of, the conviction was bad. No
such defence is available to, the Appellant in this case
because not only is there evidence, that the preservative
formalin was added but the Appellant had: not even made an
application to send the sample to the Director of Central
Food Laboratory.
The competence of the Food Inspector to file the complaint,
has been challenged on the ground that the Medical Officer
of Health who gave his written consent for filing it was not
Validly authorized by the Municipal Commissioner And that in
any case,, the complaint is not in accordance with the
resolution of the Muni-
1 [1967] 2 S. C. R. 116.
59
cipal Corporation (hereinafter referred to as the
’Corporation’) which authorized the filing of it in its name
and not in the name of the Food Inspector. it appears the
resolution of the Corporation of 17th October 1955 is in
Gujarati but before the High Court the Advocates of the
parties seem to have broadly agreed on the following
translation :-
"Municipal Corporation Resolution No. 639
1955-56 A. D., Shri Ramniklal Inamdar proposed
seconded by Shri Shantilal Manilal that, in
pursuance of the recommendation of the
Standing Committee Resolution No. 1124, dated
13-10-1955 the Medical Officer of Health is
authorized to accord written consent for
filing complaints for the Municipal
Corporation in accordance with Section 20 of
the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954
(Central Act). On votes being taken the
proposal was carried".
It was however pointed out by the lawyer of
the Corporation that the translation should
read slightly differently to replace that
part, after the words "the Standing Committee
resolution No. 1124 dated 13-10-1955" by the
words "the authority of the Municipal
Corporation to give written consent to file
complaints under Section 20 of the Prevention
of Food Adulteration Act is given to the
Medical Officer". In whatever manner the
resolution may be read it is clear that what
it purports to do is to authorize the Medical
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Officer of Health pursuant to the powers
vested in the Corporation as a local authority
under Section 20(1) of the Act to have his
written consent. The provisions of Section
20(1) are as follows
"20(1)-No prosecution for an offence under
this Act shall be instituted except by, or
with the written consent of the Central
Government or the State Government or a local
authority or a person authorized in this
behalf, by general or special order, by the
Central Government or the State Government or
a local authority".
On a reading of the above provision it is manifest that a
prosecution can be instituted either by the local authority
or by a person authorized by it in that behalf by general or
special order. The resolution therefore was in accord with
the power vested by Section 20(1) of the Act by which the
Corporation authorized the Medical Officer of Health to
institute a prosecution. It is however stated that under
the Corporation Act it is the Municipal Commissioner who is
the authority empowered to Act for the Corporation and
authorize any person to institute prosecution under ,the
Act, and since the Medical Officer of Health was not so
authorized by the Commissioner, the prosecution against the
Appellant
60
is invalid. This contention is based on the provisions of
Sections 67 & 68 of the Corporation Act under which it is
claimed that it is the Commissioner who is empowered to
exercise the functions of the Corporation, as such it is his
authorization that is required to satisfy the conditions
prescribed in Section 20(1) of the Act for the institution
of a prosecution under that Act. We do not however read the
provisions of the Corporation Act referred to as pressed
upon us. It is undisputed that under subsection (2) of
Section 67 the Municipal Government rests in the Corporation
unless of course there is any express provision which
provides otherwise. There is no doubt that the Corporation
Act specifically prescribes the respective functions of the
several Municipal authorities as constituted under Section 4
but it no-where relegates the Corporation to a subordinate
position or makes it subservient to the Commissioner. In
Section 67(3) upon which reliance is placed, the duties and
powers of the Commissioner are made expressly subject to the
approval and sanction of the Corporation as also subject to
all other restrictions limitations and conditions imposed by
the Corporation Act or any other Act for the time being in
force. The duties and powers of the Commissioner, be it
noted, are in respect of the carrying out of the provisions
of the Corporation Act and of any other Act for the time
being in force which imposes any duty or confers any power
on the Corporation. This sub-section is dealing with the
exercise of the executive power by the Commissioner which is
subject to limitations. On no interpretation is it possible
to hold that the Municipal administration vests solely in
the Commissioner or that any function to be discharged by
the Corporation ran only be discharged by the Commissioner
and no one else. The scheme of the Corporation Act leaves
no doubt that there are many instances where Corporation
alone has to discharge the functions such as the
appointment of certain officers under Sections 45. 53 and
58 or the discharging by it of the obligatory and
discretionary duties under Sections 63 to 66.
Section 68(1) empowers the Commissioner to perform or
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exercise any powers, duties and functions conferred or
imposed upon or vested in the Corporation by any other law
for the time being in force subject to the provisions of
such law and to such restrictions limitations and conditions
as the Corporation may impose.
A combined reading of these two provisions clearly indicates
that the Commissioner cannot exercise these functions
without any fetters as if he is the Corporation. The
Corporation is the controlling authority and can restrict
limit or impose conditions on the Commissioner in the
exercise of any of the powers envisaged in either under
Section 67(3) or under Section 68(1), There
61
is no gainsaying that the Commissioner can function under
Section 68(1) subject to the control of the Corporation as
also subject to the provisions of the law under which the
powers are conferred. The power to restrict limit or impose
conditions being vested in the Corporation, it has the final
voice in determining whether the Commissioner or any other
person win discharge those functions envisaged therein.
That apart Section 20(1) of the Act itself places no
restrictions on the Corporation to circumscribe the powers
of the Commissioner. It therefore follows that if a
discretion is vested in the Corporation either to give its
written consent in which case the Commissioner could
subject to such limitation as may be imposed by the
Corporation under Section 68(1) exercise the function or to
authorize any other person by general or special order to
give his written consent to institute prosecution under the
Act. The Corporation in either view is not fettered to
empower the Medical Officer of Health to give his written
consent in appropriate cases to institute prosecutions under
the Act, which in fact is what he did.
All that the Medical Officer of Health is required to do is
to give his written consent to institute the prosecution.
There is no validity in the contention that the complaint
should be in the .name of the Corporation. As pointed out
by this Court in the State of Bombay v. Parshottam
Kanaiyalal,(1) Section 20(1) does not in terms prescribe
that the complainant shall be named in the written consent.
It merely provides that the complaint should be filed either
by a named or specified authority, or with the written
consent of such authority. While the implication that
before granting a written consent the authority competent to
initiate a prosecution should apply its mind to the facts of
the case and satisfy itself that prima facie case exists for
the alleged offender being put up before a Court, is
reasonable, the further implication that the complainant
must be named in the written consent or that the name of the
Municipal Corporation should appear in the complaint, has no
basis. In our view, therefore, there is no defect in, the
procedure followed while lodging the complaint against the
appellant.
Lastly, it was faintly urged that Rule 7(2) of the Rules is
ultra vires the Act. It is contended that this Rule gives
scope for the Public Analyst to cause the samples to be
analyzed by persons under him, viz., the Chemical Examiner,
instead of himself analyzing them, which is contrary to the
express mandate of sub-section (1) of Section 13 and is
beyond the scope of Section 23(1)(e) of the Act. This
provision, according to the learned Advocate, requires the
Public Analyst to analyze the sample of any article of food
submitted to him for analysis, while the rule
(1)[1961] 1 S.C.R. 458.
62
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gives scope to him to cause it to be analyzed by others
which is beyond the scope of Section 23(1)(e). It is
apparent from ’I reading of Section 13(1) that what is
requires is that the report by the Public Analyst shall be
in the prescribed form and that the same should be delivered
to the Food Inspector. There is nothing to warrant the
submission that the Public Analyst should himself analyze
the samples. Sub-rule (3) of Rule 7 is in conformity with
this provision when it requires the Public Analyst, after
the analysis has been completed, to send to the person
concerned two copies of the report of such analysis in Form
III within a period of sixty days of the receipt of the
sample. All that the Public Analyst is required under sub-
rule 1 of Rule 7 on receipt of a package containing a sample
for analysis from a Food Inspector or any other person is to
compare the seals on the container and the outer cover with
specimen impression received separately and shall note the
condition of the seals thereon, or authorize someone else to
do it. We can find no inconsistency between the provisions
of Rule 7, and those of Section 13(1) as to hold that the
Rule is in excess of what is prescribed by the Section, nor
is there any justification for holding that the rule is
beyond the scope of the rule-making power under Section
23(1) (e), which empowers the Central Government, after
consultation with the Committee to define the
qualifications, powers and duties of the Food Inspectors and
Public Analysts. Rule 7 does no more than prescribe the
duties of the Public Analyst, in which will fall the duty to
have the samples analyzed. The qualifications of the Public
Analyst are, however, prescribed in Rule 6, which shows that
he is a person duly qualified, so that he is competent to
have the samples analyzed his laboratory by qualified
subordinates and under his supervision, which is what is
implied in the requirement that he should give a report in
the form prescribed. Rule 7(2) does not preclude the Public
Analyst from himself analyzing the samples, as indeed a
perusal of Form III would show that he certifies as follows
: "I further certify that I have/have caused to be analyzed
the aforementioned sample, and declare the result of the
analysis to be as follows" :
Whether the Public Analyst analyses the sample himself or
causes it to be analyzed, there is no doubt that he had to
subscribe to a declaration in respect of the result of the
analysis and has further to give his opinion thereon which
can only be done, if at some stage or other he takes part in
the analysis either by himself analyzing or checking the
results of the analysis with the assistance of his
subordinates.
In the light of the views expressed by us on the several
contention raised before us, the appeal fails and is
accordingly dismissed.
G. C. Appeal dismissed.
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