Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TULSI RAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/10/1984
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
KHALID, V. (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 299 1985 SCR (1) 949
1984 SCC (4) 487 1984 SCALE (2)578
CITATOR INFO :
R 1991 SC1757 (5)
ACT:
Prevention of Food Prevention Act, sections 13 (2) (as
amended by Act of 1976) read with Prevention of Food
Adulteration Rules 9A. scope of-Interpretation of Rules 9A.
Words and Phrases: meaning of the word "immediately" in
Rule 9A-Whether delay of 18 days in supplying the report of
the Public Analyst vitiates the trial-Whether mixing cotton
seed oil with soyabean oil, adulteration of soyabean oil-
Prevention of Adulteration Rule 44(c) read with section
2(ia) (m).
HEADNOTE:
On the basis of the report of the Public Analyst that
the sample of soya. bean oil purchased by the Food
Inspector, Sorar on 17.11.79 from the shop of the accused
petitioner was found adulterated, a complaint was filed on
29.11.79 in the Court of the Judicial Magistrate, Balod. On
17.11.79 a copy of the report of the Public Analyst was
forwarded to the petitioner as required by Rule 9A of the
Prevention of Food Adulteration Rules. The accused
petitioner made no application to the trial Court to have
one of the samples sent to the Central Food Laboratory for
further analysis, but was content merely to deny offence.
After due trial, he was convicted by the Magistrate on
8.9.82 under section 16 (1) (a) (i) of the Prevention of
Food Adulteration Act and sentenced to suffer rigorous
imprisonment for six months and to pay a fine of Rs. 1000.
The appeal preferred by the petitioner to the Session Judge,
Durg and the Revision Petition preferred thereafter to the
High Court of Madhya Pradesh were dismissed, Hence the
Special leave petition.
Dismissing the petition, the Court,
^
HELD: 1:1. The expression "immediately" in Rule 9A is
intended to convey a sense of continuity rather than
urgency. What must be done is to forward the report at the
earliest opportunity, so as to facilitate the exercise of
the statutory right under section 13(2) of the Prevention of
Food Adulteration Act in Food and sufficient time before the
prosecution commences leading evidence. [961C-D]
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1:2. Non-compliance with Rule 9A is not fatal. It is a
question of prejudice. Applying this principle. in the
instant case, the trial cannot be said to
950
be vitiated by the delay of eighteen days in forwarding the
report of the Public Analyst to the Petitioner.
1:3. Rule 9A has to be interpreted so as to keep it in
tune with, and within the bounds of section 13(2). The
amended section 13(2) does not prescribe any point of time
before which the report of the Public Analyst is to be
forwarded to the accused vendor. But, the very basis of a
prosecution for adulteration of food is the report of the
Public Analyst that the article of food is adulterated The
accused is given the right to dispute the Public Analyst’s
report by applying to the court for an analysis by the
Central Food Laboratory If the report of the Central Food
Laboratory is to the effect that the article of food is not
adulterated the very basis of the prosecution will
disappear. In such an event the further pursuit of the
prosecution will be needless and the accused will have to be
discharged or acquitted as the case may be. It is therefore
to be assumed that the report of the Public Analyst is to be
made available to the accused vendor at the commencement of
the prosecution, that is to say, before the prosecution
starts leading evidence in the case, and in good and
sufficient time to enable the accused to exercise his right
of having the sample analysed by the Central Food Laboratory
if he so desires it. There fore Rule 9A carefully refrains
from mentioning any definite limit of time and the
expression "immediately" is not to be understood to mean the
very next instant, the very next hour, that very day or the
very next day. Construed in its setting, the expression
"immediately" is only meant to convey ’reasonable despatch
and promptitude’ and no more. The idea is to avoid
dilatoriness on the part of official dom and prevention of
unnecessary harassment to the accused. But the idea is not
to penalise the prosecution and to provide a technical
defence. If after receiving the Public Analyst’s report the
accused never sought to apply to the court to have the
sample sent to the Central Food Laboratory, as in the
present case, he may not be heard to complain of the delay
in the receipt of the report by him, unless, of course, he
is able to establish some other prejudice. [960E-H; 961A-B]
Dal Chand v. Municipal Corporation, Bhopal AIR 1983 SC
303; Kashmiri Lal v. State of Haryana 1981 (2) AIPFC 167,
Kanda Swami v. Food Inspector 1982 (1) AIPFAC 322, Perumal
v. Kumbakonam Municipality 1982 (2) AIPFAC 106 and Food
Inspector v. Prabhkaran 1983 (1) AIPFAC 84; considered.
2. The mixing of cotton seed oil with soyabean oil is
adulteration of soyabean oil incurring liability to be
convicted under section 16(1) (a) (i) of the Prevention of
Food Adulteration Act. The sale of an article of food the
sale of which is prohibited by any rule made under the Act
also renders the person selling the article of food liable
to punishment under s. 16 (l) (i). Rule 44(e) prohibits the
sale of a mixture of two or more edible oils as an edible
oil. A mixture of soyabean oil and cotton seed oil cannot
therefore be sold as soyabean oil irrespective of whether
the mixture has affected the soya bean oil injuriously or
not. [961E-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
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(Criminal No. 3038 of 1983.
From the Judgment and order dated the 16th August, 1983
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of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Criminal Revision No.
260 of 1983.
S.K.Gambhir, Ashok Mahajan and S.S. Kirpalani for the
petitioner.
The order of the Court was delivered by
CHINNAPPA REDDY, 1. On 17.8.1979 the Food Inspector,
Sorar, purchased 375 grams of Soyabean oil from the shop of
the petitioners, Tulsiram. The Soyabean oil purchased was
divided into three parts; each part was filled in a bottle;
each bottle was sealed; and, one of the bottles was sent to
the Public Analyst, Raipur for analysis. The Public Analyst
found that the sample was adulterated as it contained traces
of cotton seed oil. On 29.11.1979 a complaint was filed on
the basis of the report of the Public Analyst, in the court
of the Judicial First Class Magistrate, Balod. On 17.12.1979
a copy of the report of the Public Analyst was forwarded to
the petitioner as required by Rule 9-A of Prevention of Food
Adulteration Rules. The accused-petitioner however made no
application to the Trial Court to have one of the samples
sent to the Central Food Laboratory for further analysis. He
was content merely to deny offence. After due trial he was
convicted by the Magistrate on 8.9.1982, under s.
16(1)(a)(i) of the Prevention Food Adulteration Act and
sentenced to suffer rigorous imprisonment for six months and
to pay a fine of Rs. 1000. The Appeal preferred by the
petitioner to the Sessions Judge, Durg and the Revision
Petition preferred thereafter to the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh were rejected. The petitioner now seeks special
leave to appeal to this Court under Article 136 of the
Constitution.
The learned counsel for the petitioner urged before us
that Rule 9-A of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Rules,
which has been substituted for Rule 9(j) in 1977, now
prescribes that the Local (Health) Authority shall
immediately after the institution of the prosecution forward
a copy of the report of the Public Analyst by registered
post or by hand to the person from whom the sample was taken
by the Food Inspector, that the word ’immediately’ occurring
in Rule 9-A showed that it brooked no delay and that as G
there was a delay of 18 days, in the present case, in
forwarding the report to the petitioner, the prosecution was
vitiated and the petitioner was entitled to be acquitted. He
argued that the scheme of the Act was changed by the
amendments introduced in 1976 and that in consonance with
the revised scheme of the Act
952
the rules were also amended. He invited our attention to the
A departure in the language of the present Rule 9-A from the
language of old Rule 9(j). The learned counsel also argued
that cotton seed oil was more nutritive and consumable than
Soyabean oil and, therefore, a person mixing cotton seed oil
with Soyabean oil could not be said to have adulterated
soyabean oil. He invited our attention to Dal Chand v.
Municipal Corporation, Bhopal, Kashmiri Lal v. State of
Haryana ; Kanda Swami v. Food Inspector: State of
Maharashtra v. Tukaram Babu Rao Mane; Perumal v. Kumbakonam
Municipality ; and Food Inspector v. Prabhkaran. We have
considered all of them and we do not think it necessary to
launch into a discussion of the cases, one by one We would
rather refer to and construe the relevant statutory
provisions and rules ourselves. Suffice to say here that we
do not agree with the submissions of the learned counsel.
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It is true, in 1976 important changes were made in some
of the procedural provisions of the Prevention of Food
Adulteration Act. We are concerned in this case with some of
the changes made in ss. 11 and 13 of the Act and the new
Rules made as a consequence. Before the 1976 amendment, s.
11 required the Food Inspector taking a sample for analysis
to separate the sample into three parts, seal or fasten up
each part and to deliver one of the parts to the person from
whom the sample was taken, send another part for analysis to
the Public Analyst and retain the third part for production
in case legal proceedings were taken or for analysis by the
Director of the Central Food Laboratory under sub-section 2
of s. 13 as the case might be. Sub-section (1) of old s. 13
(as it stood before 1976) required the Public Analyst to
deliver to the Food Inspector a report of the analysis of
any article of food submitted to him for such analysis. Sub-
section (2) enabled the accused vendor, after the
institution of the prosecution under the Act, to apply to
the Court to send the part given to him or the part retained
with the Food Inspector for production in case of legal
proceedings, to the Director of the Central Food Laboratory
for a certificate specifying the result of the analysis to
be made by him. The certificate issued by the Director of
the Central Food Labora-
953
tory was to supersede the report given by the Public Analyst
and was to be final and conclusive evidence of the facts
stated therein. A Rule 9 (j) of the 1955 Rules prescribed
that it shall be the duty of the Food Inspector to send by
registered post, a copy of the report of the Public Analyst
to the person from whom the sample was taken within ten days
of the receipt of the said report.
It is obvious that s. 13 (2) was intended to secure to
the accused vendor the right to have the report of the
Public Analyst tested if he so wanted, by obtaining the
final and conclusive report of the Director of the Central
Food Laboratory. In order to enable the accused vendor to
exercise this right it was necessary to first make available
to him the report of the Public Analyst. So Rule 9 (j)
provided that a copy of the report of the Public Analyst
should be sent to the person from whom the sample was taken
within ten days of the receipt of the report by the Food
Inspector. The mention of ten days as the period within
which the Food Inspector was to send the report of the
Public Analyst to the person from whom the sample was taken
led to considerable controversy whether Rule 9 (j) was
mandatory or directory. Some High Courts took the view that
Rule 9 (j) was mandatory and that failure to strictly comply
with the rule was fatal to the prosecution. The matter was
finally set at rest by this Court in Dalchand v. Municipal
Corporation Bhopal (supra) where it was held that Rule 9 (j)
was directory. It was observed :-
"There are no ready tests or invariable formulae
to determine whether a provision is mandatory or
directory. The broad purpose of the statute is
important. The object of the particular provision must
be considered. The link between the two is most
important. The weighing of the consequence of holding a
provision to be mandatory or directory is vital and,
more often than not, determinative of the very question
whether the provision is mandatory or directory. Where
the design of the statute is the avoidance or
prevention of public mis-chief, but the enforcement of
a particular provision literally to its letter will
tend to defeat that design, the provision must be held
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to be directory, so that proof of prejudice in addition
to non-compliance of the provision is necessary to
invalidate the act complained of. It is well to
remember that quite often many rules, though couched in
language which appears to be imperative, are no more
than mere instructions to those entrusted
954
with the task of discharging statutory duties for
public benefit. The negligence of those to whom public
duties are entrusted cannot by statutory interpretation
be allowed to promote public mischief and cause public
inconvenience and defeat the main object of the
statute. It is as well to realise that every
prescription of a period within which an act must be
done, is not the prescription of a period of limitation
with painful consequences if the act is not done Within
that period. Rule 9 (j) of the Prevention of Food
Adulteration Act, as it then stood, merely instructed
the Food Inspector to send by registered post copy of
the Public Analyst’s Report to the person from when the
sample was taken within 10 days of the receipt of the
Report. Quite obviously the period of 10 days was not a
period of limitation within which an action was to be
initiated or on the expiry of Which a vested right
accrued. The period of 10 days was prescribed with a
view to expedition and with the object of giving
sufficient time to the person from whom the sample was
taken to make such arrangements as he might like to
challenge the Report of the Public Analyst; for
example, by making a request to the Magistrate to send
the other sample to the Director of the Central Food
Laboratory for analysis. Where the effect of non-
compliance with the rule was such as to wholly deprive
the right of the person to challenge the Public
Analyst’s Report by obtaining the report of the
Director of the Central Food Laboratory, there might be
just cause for complaint, as prejudice would then be
writ large. Where no prejudice was caused there could
be no cause for complaint. I am clearly of the view
that R. 9 (j) of the Prevention of Food Adulteration
Rules were directory and not mandatory".
As already mentioned by us, some High Courts had
earlier taken the view that the Rule was mandatory and that
non-compliance with the Rule was fatal to the prosecution.
The working of the Act also revealed that often enough the
accused vendor would adopt dilatory tactics by waiting till
the last minute to exercise his right to apply to the Court
to send the sample to the Director of Central Food
Laboratory. This statutory right could not be denied to the
accused vendor even when made at the very last stages of the
case. The result was not merely undue and unnecessary delay
in the disposal of the case but fairly frequently, it would
be discovered
955
that the sample had disintegrated due to lapse of time, thus
disabling the Director, Central Food Laboratory from
analysing the sample. With a view to overcome the
difficulties encountered in the working of the Act, ss. 11
and 13 were recast by the Amending Act of 1976 and new rules
were made in 1977, new Rule 9-A replacing old Rule 9 (j).
Sub-section (1) of amended s. 11 and the whole of amended s.
13 may be usefully extracted here. Section 11 sub- section
(1) is as follows:-
"When a food inspector takes a sample of food for
analysis, he shall:-
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(a) give notice in writing then and there of his
intention to have it so analysed to the person
from whom he has taken the sample and to the
person, if any, whose name, address and other
particulars have been disclosed under section 14A.
(b) except in special cases provided by rules under
this Act, divide the sample then and there into;
three parts and mark and seal or fasten up each
part in such a manner as its nature permits and
take the signature or thumb impression of the
person from whom the sample has been taken in such
place and in such manner as may be prescribed;
Provided that where such person refuses to sign or
put his thumb impression the food inspector shall call
upon one or more witnesses and take his or their
signature or thumb impressions, of such person:-
(a) (i) send one of the parts for analysis to the public
analyst under intimation, to the Local (Health)
Authority; and
(ii) send the remaining two parts to the Local (Health)
Authority: for the purposes of sub-section (2) of
this section and sub-sections (2A) and (2E) of
section 13". Section 13 is as follows:-
"(1) The public analyst shall deliver, in such form as
may be prescribed, a report to the Local (Health)
Authority of the result of the analysis of any
article of food submitted to him for analysis.
956
(2) On receipt of the report of the result of the
analysis under sub-section (1) to the effect that
the article of food is adulterated, the local
(Health) Authority shall, after the institution of
prosecution against the person from whom the
sample of the article of food was taken and the
person, if any, whose name, address and
particulars have been disclosed under section 14A,
forward, in such manner as may be prescribed, a
copy of the report of the result of the analysis
to such person or persons, as the case may be,
informing such person or persons that if it is so
desired, either or both of them may make an
application to the court within a period of ten
days from the date of receipt of the copy of the
report to get the sample of the article of food
kept by the Local (Health) Authority analysed by
the Central Food Laboratory.
(2A) When an application is made to the Court under sub
section (2), the court shall require the Local
(Health) Authority to forward the part or parts of
the sample kept by the said Authority and upon
such requisition being made, by said Authority
shall forward the part or parts of sample to the
court with in a period of five days from the date
of receipt of such requisite on.
(2B) On receipt of the part or parts of the sample from
the Local (Health) ’Authority under sub-section
(2A), the court shall first assertion that mark
and seal or fastening as provided in clause (b) of
sub-section (1) of section 11 are intact and the
signature or thumb impression, as the case may be,
is not tampered with, and despatch the part or, as
the case maybe, one of the parts 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
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within one month from the date of receipt of the
part of the sample specifying the result of the
analysis.
(2C) Where two parts of the sample have been sent to
the court and only one part of the sample has been
sent by the court to the Director of the Central
Food Laboratory under sub-section (2B), the court
shall, as soon as
957
practicable, return the remaining part to the
Local (Health) Authority and the Local (Health)
Authority shall destroy that part after the
certificate from the Director of the Central Food
Laboratory has been received by the court;
Provided that where the part of the sample
sent by the court to the Director of Central Food
Laboratory is lost or damaged, the court shall
require the Local (Health) Authority to forward
the part of the sample, if any, retained by it to
the court and on receipt thereof the court shall
proceed in the manner provided in sub-section
(2B).
(2D) Until the receipt of the certificate of the result
of the analysis from the Director of Central Food
Laboratory the court shall not continue with the
proceedings pending before it in relation to the
prosecution.
(2L) It after considering the report, if any, of the
Food Inspector or otherwise, the Local (Health)
Authority is of the opinion that the report
delivered by the public analyst under sub-section
(1) is erroneous, the said Authority shall forward
one of the parts of the sample kept by it to any
other public analyst for analysis and if the
report of the result of the analysis of that part
of the sample by that public analyst is to the
effect that the article of food is adulterated.
the provisions of sub section (2) to (2D) shall,
so far as may be apply.
(3) The certificate issued by the Director of the
Central Food Laboratory under sub-section (2B)
shall supersede the report given by the public
analyst under sub section (1).
(4) Where a certificate obtained from the Director of
the Central Food Laboratory under sub-section (23)
is produced in any proceeding under this Act, or
under sections 272 to 276 of the Indian Penal
Code, 45 of 1860 it shall not be necessary in such
proceeding to produce any part of the sample of
food taken for analysis.
(5) Any document purporting to be a report signed by a
958
public analyst, unless it has been supersede under
sub section (3) or any document purporting to be a
certificate signed by the Director of the Central
Food Laboratory, may be used as evidence of the
facts stated therein in any proceeding under this
Act or under sections 272 to 276 of the Indian
Penal Code 45 of 1980. (Provided that any document
purporting to be a certificate signed by the
Director of the Central Food Laboratory) (not
being a certificate with respect to the analysis
of the part of the sample of any article of food
referred to in the proviso to sub-section (1A) of
section (16) shall be final and conclusive
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evidence of the facts stated therein).
Explanation-In this section, and in clause
(f) of sub-section (1) of section 16, "Director of
the Central Food Laboratory’ shall include the
officer for the time being in charge of any Food
Laboratory (by whatever designation he is known)
recognised by the Central Government for the
purpose of this section)".
It will be noticed that amended s. 11 does not require
a part of the sample to be given to the person from whom the
sample was taken. While one part is required to be sent to
the public Analyst for analysis, the other two parts are
required to be sent to the Local (Health) Authority. The
amended s. 13 requires the Public Analyst to deliver to the
Local (Health) Authority a report of the result of his
analysis. Section 13(2) requires the Local (Health)
Authority lo forward to the person from whom the sample was
taken a copy of the report of the Public Analyst, if the
report is to the effect that the article of food is
adulterated. The report is to be forwarded in such manner as
maybe prescribed, after the institution of the prosecution.
Thereafter the person from whom the sample was taken is
given the right to apply to the court within ten days of the
receipt by him of the copy of the Public Analyst’s report to
get the sample kept by the Local (Health) Authority analysed
by the Central Food Laboratory. It is no longer open to the
accused vender to wait till the very last minute to apply to
the court to have the sample analysed by the Central
Laboratory. If he wants to exercise the statutory right of
having the sample analysed by the Central Food Laboratory he
has to
959
exercise that right by applying to the court within ten days
of receipt, by him of the Public Analyst’s Report. It is
also to be noticed that amended s. 13(2) does not prescribe
any point of time before which the report of the Public
Analyst is to be forwarded to the accused-vendor. But, the
very basis of a prosecution for adulteration of food is the
report of the Public Analyst that the article of food is
adulterated. The accused is given the right to dispute the
Public Analyst’s report by applying to the court for an
analysis by the Central Food Laboratory. If the report of
the Central Food Laboratory is to the effect that the
article of food is not adulterated the very basis of the
prosecution will disappear. In such an event the further
pursuit of the prosecution will be needless and the accused
will have to be discharged or acquitted as the case may be.
It is therefore to be assumed that the report of the Public
Analyst is to be made available to the accused vender at the
commencement of the prosecution, that is to say, before the
prosecution starts leading evidence in the case, and in good
and sufficient time to enable the accused to exercise his
right of having the sample analysed by the Central Food
Laboratory if he so desires it. We have seen that s. 13(2)
provides that the Public Analyst’s Report, shall be
forwarded to the person from whom the sample was taken ’in
such manner as may be prescribed’. Now, Rule 9-A of the
Rules as amended in 1977 which replaces Rule 9(j) of the old
Rules prescribes the manner in which the Public Analyst’s
Report may be forwarded to the person from the sample was
taken. lt reads as follows:-
"The Local (Health) Authority shall immediately
after the institution of prosecution forward a copy of
the report of the result of analysis in Form III
delivered to him under sub-rule (3) of Rule 7, by
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registered post or by hand, as may be appropriate, to
the person from whom the sample of the article was
taken by the Food Inspector, and simultaneously also to
the person, if any, whose name, address and other
particulars has been disclosed under Section 14A of the
Act;
Provided that where the sample conforms to the pro
visions of the Act of the Rules made thereunder, and no
prosecution is intended under sub-section (2), or no
action is intended under sub-section (2E) of section 13
of the Act, the Local (Health) Authority shall intimate
the
960
result to the vendor from whom the sample has been
taken and also to the person, whose name, address and
other particulars have been disclosed under Section 14A
of the Act, within 10 days from the receipt of the
report from the Public Analyst."
The first thing to be noticed is that Rule 9-A
carefully refrains from mentioning any definite limit of
time such as that found in old Rule 9(j) which gave rise to
the controversy whether the Rule was mandatory or directory,
and instead uses the general expression ’immediately.’ The
Local (Health) Authority is now required to forward to the
person from whom the sample was taken in the manner
prescribed, a copy of the report of the Public Analyst
immediately after the institution of the prosecution. While
prescribing the manner in which the Report may be forwarded
the opening words of Rule 9-A "The Local (Health) Authority
shall (immediately) after the institution of the prosecution
forward’’ (bracket in ours), are borrowed verbatim from s.
13(2) with the word ’immediately’ inserted in between. The
Rule making authority could never have intended to amend the
statute by super-adding the word immediately’ as indeed it
was not competent to do. Rule 9-A has to be interpreted so
as to keep it in tune with and within the bounds of s.
13(2). The departure from the previous rule by refraining
from mentioning a definite period of time as was done in the
old rule makes it evident that the expression ’immediately’
is used to convey a sense of continuity rather than a sense
of urgency. It is not to be understood to mean the very next
instant, the very next hour, that very day or the very next
day. It must be construed in its setting. It is no use
turning to dictionaries. Dictionaries give variegated
meanings to words. What meaning is to be adopted depends on
the context. Rule 9-A is made in the context of the amended
s. 13(2) which provides for the forwarding of the Public
Analyst’s Report to the person from whom the sample was
taken after the institution of prosecution and enables that
person to apply to the court to have analysed by the Central
Food Laboratory the sample kept with the Local (Health)
Authority. In the context the expression ’immediately’ is
only meant to convey ’reasonable despatch and promptitude’
and no more. The idea is to avoid dilatoriness on the part
of officialdom and prevention of unnecessary harassment to
the accused. But the idea is not to penalise the prosecution
and to provide a technical defence. First to construe
’immediately’ as meaning ’at once’ or
961
’forthwith’ and next to hold delay to be fatal to the
prosecution would perhaps be to make Rule 9-A ultra vires s.
13(2). We do not think it is permissible to interpret Rule
9-A in such a way. The real question is, was the Public
Analyst’s Report sent to the accused sufficiently early to
enable him to properly defend himself by giving him an
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opportunity at the outset to apply to the court to send one
of the samples to the Central Food Laboratory for analysis.
If after receiving the Public Analyst’s Report he never
sought to apply to the court to have the sample sent to the
Central Food Laboratory, as in the present case’ he may not
be heard to complain of the delay in the receipt of the
report by him, unless, of course, he is able to establish
some other prejudice. Our conclusions on this question are;
The expression ’immediately’ in Rule 9-A is intended to
convey a sense of continuity rather than urgency. What must
be done is to forward the report at the earliest
opportunity, so as to facilitate the exercise of the
statutory right under s. 13(2) in good and sufficient time
before the prosecution commences leading evidence. Non-
compliance with Rule 9-A is not fatal. It is a question of
prejudice. Applying these principles. We find no merit in
the submissions based on Rule 9-A. The second submission of
the learned counsel, namely, that mixing cotton seed oil
with Soyabean oil cannot be considered to be adulteration of
Soyabean oil and therefore the petitioner was not liable to
be convicted under s. 16 (1) (a) (i) is equally without any
merit. Section 16 (1) (a) (i) makes a person liable to
punishment if whether by himself or by any other person on
his behalf, he imports into India or manufactures for sale,
or stores, sells or distributes any article of food which is
adulterated within the meaning of sub-clause (m) of clause
(ia) of section (2) or misbranded within the meaning of
clause (ix) of that section or the sale of which is
prohibited under any provision of this Act or any rule made
thereunder or by an order of the Food (Health) Authority. It
is therefore seen that the sale of an article of food the
sale of which is prohibited by any rule made under the Act
also renders the person selling the article of food liable
to punishment under s. (16) (1) (a) (i). Rule 44 (e)
prohibits the sale of a mixture of two or more edible oils
as an edible oil. A mixture of Soyabean oil and cotton seed
oil cannot therefore be sold as Soyabean oil irrespective of
whether the mixture has affected the Soyabean oil
injuriously or not. The special leave petition is therefore
dismissed.
S.R. Petition dismissed.
962