Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INDERJEET
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT10/08/1979
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SHINGAL, P.N.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1867 1980 SCR (1) 255
1979 SCC (4) 246
CITATOR INFO :
R 1989 SC1011 (14)
ACT:
Statutory standardised sentence-Absolute liability with
mandatory minimum sentence of six months’ R.I. of offender’s
guilt of sale of adulterated food, whether constitutionally
bad, offending Articles 14, 19 and 21-Prevention of Food
Adulteration Act, Section 7 read with Section 16, vires of.
Dismissing the Writ Petition, the Court
HEADNOTE:
HELD: Section 7 read with Section 16 of the Prevention
of Food Adulteration Act is constitutionally valid. [257G]
Policy is for Parliament, constitutionality is for the
Court. Protection of public health and regulation of noxious
trade belong to the police power of the State and
Legislation like the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act is
of that genre. [256F-G]
If a sentence, as in the instant Act, is prescribed as
a mandatory minimum and that is too cruel to comport with
Art. 21 and too torturesome to be reasonably justifiable or
socially defensible under Article 19, then a case for
judicial review may arise. [256 G-H]
Judge-proof sentencing is not per se bad. Sometimes
judicial fluctuations in punishment, especially on the
softer side where white collar criminals are involved,
induce legislative standardization of sentences, to avoid
giving societal protection in hostage to fortune. There is a
wide play still left for the Court, and mandatory minima are
familiar from the days of the Penal Code. [256H, 257A]
The prescription of equal protection is not breached
either, because within the range of judicial discretion the
Court deals out to each what he deserves according to
established principles. [257B]
Observation
(a) Public authorities entrusted with the
enforcement of regulatory provisions to
protect society may, in proper cases, examine
those prosecutions which are harassments to
the humbler folk even if they technically
violate the law and cause only minimal harm
to society and decide whether they should at
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all sanction their prosecution. [257D-E]
(b) The Legislature, in its wisdom, may also
consider the advisability of resting power
somewhere to reduce the sentence without the
bigger offender escaping through these wider
meshes meant for the smaller offenders. Even
otherwise, there is a general power in the
Executive to commute sentences and such power
can be put into action on a principled basis
when small men get caught by the law. [257E-
F]
256
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 449 of 1979
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution)
R. K. Garg and D. K. Garg for the Petitioner.
The Order of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-The adventurous petitioner
imaginatively challenges the vires of Section 7 read with
Section 16 of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act and
the relevant rules framed thereunder. The gravamen of his
charge is that the above provisions, read together, impose
an inflexible minimum sentence of six months R.I. of
offender’s guilty of sale of adulterated food, excluding in
the process even the need to prove mens rea in the accused.
This absolute liability, with mandatory sentence, dependent
on sophisticated chemical tests and complicated formulae, is
oppressively unreasonable in the illiterate, agrestic
realities of little Indian retail trade. Such, in one
sentence, is the submission of counsel.
The primary props to support this broad submission may
be briefly noticed. Counsel complains that there is no
classification as between injurious pollutants and innocuous
adulterants while proscribing the sentence. Nor is there any
intelligent differentiation between petty dealers and giant
offenders, and vendors, big and small, are put on the
Procrustean bed of stern punishment alike. Articles 14, 19
and 21 are the constitutional artillery employed by counsel
to shoot down the said provisions of the Act.
Frankly, we are not impressed with the consternation
about the constitutionality even if the potential for
victimisation affecting smaller people may be real and
elicit our commiseration. We may dwell for a moment on the
latter grievance against the law a little later. First, we
will repel the vice of unconstitutionality.
Let us be clear about the basics. Policy is for
Parliament, constitutionality for the Court. Protection of
public health and regulation of noxious trade belong to the
police power of the State and legislation like the
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act is of that genre.
If a sentence, as here, is prescribed as a mandatory
minimum and that is too cruel to comport with Art. 21 and
too torturesome to be reasonably justifiable or socially
defensible under Art. 19 then a case for judicial review may
arise. But we see none here. Nor can we agree that judge-
proof sentencing is per se bad. Sometimes judicial
257
fluctuations in punishment, especially on the softer side
where white collar criminals are involved, induce
legislative standardisation of sentences, to avoid giving
societal protection in hostage to fortune. There is a wide
play still left for the court, and mandatory minima are
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familiar from the days of the Penal Code (Vide Sec. 302).
The prescription of equal protection is not breached either,
because within the range of judicial discretion the court
deals out to each what he deserves according to established
principles.
Shri R. K. Garg feelingly urged that the poor and the
weak, who are the larger, lower sector of retail traders,
will have to suffer the standardised imprisonment if Food
Inspectors can challan them in Court and, on some minor
variation in the chemical composition of food sold, get them
convicted sans mens rea merely because, along the chain,
some bigger trader has fobbed off inferior commodities on
them. We are disturbed that it is possible that small men
become the victims of harsh law when there is no executive
policy which guides prosecution of offenders. Petty
victuallers and big sharks operate on society in different
degrees and draconian equality will be tempered by flexible
policy.
This is a matter of penal policy in constitutionality
and so it is, in a sense, out of bounds for judicial advice.
Even so, we feel constrained to state that public
authorities entrusted with the enforcement of regulatory
provisions to protect society may, in proper cases, examine
those prosecutions which are harassments to the humbler folk
even if they technically violate the law and cause only
minimal harm to society and decide whether they should at
all sanction their prosecution. The Legislature, in its
wisdom, may also consider the advisability of resting power
somewhere to reduce the sentence without the bigger offender
escaping through these wider meshes meant for the smaller
offenders. Even otherwise, there is a general power in the
Executive to commute sentences and such power can be put
into action on a principled basis when small men get caught
by the law.
We dismiss the Writ petition since there is no
constitutional invalidity made out and the grounds urged are
more appropriately an appeal to the Parliament and the
Executive.
V.D.K. Petition dismissed.
258