Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 1042 of 1997
PETITIONER:
Dayal Singh
RESPONDENT:
State of Rajasthan
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/04/2004
BENCH:
N. SANTOSH HEGDE & B.P. SINGH.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
B.P. SINGH, J.
The appellant herein was tried by the Chief Judicial
Magistrate, Jodhpur, Rajasthan charged of the offence under
Section 7/16 of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954
since the sample of hard boiled sugar confectionary taken from
the appellant was found to be adulterated in view of the
presence of mineral oil, as also on account of its having a very
unpleasant smell and taste. The learned Chief Judicial
Magistrate by his judgment and order of April 25, 1986 found
the appellant guilty of the offence charged and sentenced him to
undergo rigorous imprisonment for 2 years and a fine of
Rs.2,000/-, in default of payment of fine to further undergo
rigorous imprisonment for 6 months. The appeal preferred by
the appellant was dismissed by the District and Sessions Judge,
Jodhpur by his order dated August 4, 1988 who upheld the
conviction but modified the sentence and reduced it to 6
months’ rigorous imprisonment and a fine of Rs.1,000/-, in
default of payment of fine to further undergo rigorous
imprisonment for 1 month. This was the minimum sentence
which could be imposed under the Act for the charge proved
against the appellant. The appellant thereafter preferred S.B.
Criminal Revision No.200 of 1988 before the High Court of
Rajasthan at Jodhpur but the same was dismissed by the High
Court by its judgment and order dated 1st August, 1997. The
appellant is before us by special leave.
The facts of the case are not in dispute. On October 25,
1979 the Food Inspector took a sample of hard boiled sugar
confectionary from the shop of the appellant. After complying
with the requirements of the Act and the Rules the sample was
sent to be Public Analyst and the report of the Public Analyst
dated November 16, 1999 showed that the sample was not
according to the prescribed standard as mineral oil was found
present which was an unwholesome ingredient, and also that
the sample had a very unpleasant smell and taste. The Food
Inspector filed a complaint on January 29, 1980. After trial the
learned Chief Judicial Magistrate by his judgment and order
dated April 25, 1986 found the appellant guilty and sentenced
him as earlier noticed.
The appellant preferred an appeal before the Court of the
District and Sessions Judge, Jodhpur. During the pendency of
the appeal a Notification was issued on April 8, 1988 whereby
the Central Government in exercise of powers conferred by
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sub-section (1) of Section 23 of the Prevention and Food
Adulteration Act amended the Prevention of Food Adulteration
Rules, 1955. In Appendix ’B’ item No.25.01 was amended and
under the amended Rules, the presence of mineral oil was
permitted subject to two conditions, namely - that the mineral
oil was of food grade if used as a lubricant, and did not exceed
0.2 % by weight. It will thus be seen that the amendment
brought about in the year 1988 did not unconditionally permit
the presence of mineral oil in hard boiled sugar confectionary
but permitted only 0.2 % by weight provided it was of food
grade and used as a lubricant.
The appeal preferred by the appellant was dismissed by
the District and Sessions Judge, Jodhpur, by his judgment and
order dated August 4, 1988 and as observed earlier while
upholding the conviction the appellate court reduced his
sentence to the minimum prescribed sentence of 6 months
rigorous imprisonment. Revision preferred by the appellant
before the High Court was dismissed.
Shri Krishnamani, senior advocate appearing on behalf of
the appellant argued before us with great vehemence that the
courts below have committed a clear error of law in not
noticing the amended provisions of the Rules. Since the appeal
was pending when the amended Rules came into force, the
Court was bound to take notice of it and hold that the sample
was not adulterated. He further submitted that the report of the
Public Analyst was defective inasmuch as it did not mention the
percentage of mineral oil found in the sample. He placed
reliance on several decisions to support his submission that any
law mollifying the rigour of criminal law must be held to be
retrospective in the sense that it must be held to be applicable to
pending proceedings, including appeal. He submitted that the
courts below were in error in holding that the amendment was
only prospective in operation and did not benefit the appellant
since the date on which the offence is alleged to have been
committed, the sample was adulterated as per the standard
prescribed.
Learned counsel for the appellant placed considerable
reliance on a decision of the Division Bench of the Delhi High
Court reported in 1974 Prevention of Food Adulteration Cases
page 21 : Sunder Lal vs. Municipal Corporation of Delhi. In
that case it was urged before the High Court that during the
pendency of the appeal before the High Court the standard of
compounded Hing was changed by Notification dated March 9,
1966 and that the sample conformed to the new standard.
Consequently, it was argued that the appellant was entitled to
acquittal. While considering the submission, the learned Judges
observed that the new standard having taken away the rigours
of law and being in favour of the accused, it should be given a
retrospective operation. For this proposition reliance was
placed on a decision of the Division Bench of the Allahabad
High Court in AIR 1968 All. 392 : Shyam Lal vs. State
wherein after quoting from Crawford’s Construction of Statute
(1940 Edition) at page 599, the Court observed :-
"The above rule of construction is based on
principle that until the proceedings have reached
final judgment in the Court of last resort, that
Court, when it comes to announce its decision,
must conform to the law then existing".
It further quoted with approval the following passage
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from the judgment of the Allahabad High Court :-
"It seems to us clear that the true rule of
construction of a penal statute is that where the
legislature evinces its intention to modify the law,
in favour of the accused, so as to reduce the rigors
of the law in the light of past experience and
changed social conditions, so long as prosecution
of the accused has not concluded by a judgment of
conviction, the proceedings against him are
regarded as inchoate and the law applicable to him
would be the law as amended by the legislature.
The Court trying an accused person has to take
into consideration the law as it exists on the date of
the judgment. It seems reasonable that an accused
person cannot render himself liable to a higher
punishment under a statute which has ceased to
exist and has been substituted to be a new which
favours him. Where the question as to the
interpretation of a penal statute is concerned, the
Court must construe its provisions beneficially in
regard to their applicability to the accused. It
would be violating the spirit of the law and the will
of the Legislature as expressed in the amending
statute to sentence an accused person on the basis
of the original Act which has been considered by
the Legislature to be harmful and harsh against
public interest."
The High Court also relied upon the principle laid down
by this Court in AIR 1965 SC 444 : Rattan Lal vs. State of
Punjab.
In our view the reliance placed on the judgment of this
Court in Rattan Lal (supra) was clearly misplaced. Indeed the
principle laid down in that judgment supports the case of the
prosecution. In Rattan Lal (supra) this Court was not
concerned with the retrospective operation of a penal statute.
The question which arose for consideration by this Court was a
question of jurisdiction of an appellate court to exercise its
powers under Section 6 of the Probation of Offenders Act,
1958. In that case the High Court did not act under Section 11
of the Probation of Offenders Act and failed to pass orders
under Sections 3, 4 and 6 thereof granting benefit of probation
to the accused. In that context a question arose whether the
power under Section 11 of the Act could be exercised by the
High Court in an appeal pending before it, even if such a power
could not be exercised by the trial court, since the offence was
committed at a time when the Probation of Offenders Act had
not been enacted. This Court observed:-
"The first question is whether the High
Court, acting under S. 11 of the Act, can exercise
the power conferred on a court under S.6 of the
Act. It is said that the jurisdiction of the High
Court under S. 11(3) of the Act is confined only to
a case that has been brought to its file by appeal or
revision and, therefore, it can only exercise such
jurisdiction as the trial court had, and in the present
case the trial court could not have made any order
under S. 6 of the Act, as at the time it made the
order the Act had not been extended to Gurgaon
District. On this assumption, the argument
proceeds, the Act should not be given retrospective
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operation, as, if so given, it would affect the
criminal liability of a person for an act committed
by him before the Act came into operation. In
support of this contention a number of decisions
bearing on the question of retroactivity of a statute
in the context of vested rights have been cited.
Every law that takes away or impairs a vested right
is retrospective. Every ex post facto law is
necessarily retrospective. Under Art. 20 of the
Constitution, no person shall be convicted of any
offence except for violation of a law in force at the
time of the commission of that act charged as an
offence, nor be subjected to a penalty greater than
that which might have been inflicted under the law
in force at the time of the commission of the
offence.
But an ex post facto law which only
mollifies the rigour of a criminal law does not fall
within the said prohibition.
If a particular law makes a provisions to
that effect, though retrospective in operation it
will be valid. The question whether such a law is
retrospective and, if so, to what extent depends
upon the interpretation of a particular statute,
having regard to the well settled rules of
construction".
In the light of the principle enunciated, this Court
proceeded to consider the question whether the High Court, as
the appellate court, had the power under Section 11 to extend to
the accused the benefit under the Act. In doing so this Court
noticed that it was dealing not with a case where an act which
was not an offence is made an offence under the Act ; nor was it
a case where under the Act a punishment higher than that
obtaining for an offence before the Act is imposed. This Court
further observed :-
"This is an instance where neither the
ingredients of the offence nor the limits of the
sentence are disturbed, but a provision is made to
help the reformation of an accused through the
agency of the court. Even so the statute affects an
offence committed before it was extended to the
area in question. It is, therefore, a post facto law
and has retrospective operation. In considering the
scope of such a provision we must adopt the rule
of beneficial construction as enunciated by the
modern trend of judicial opinion without doing
violence to the provisions of the relevant section.
Section 11 (3) of the Act, on the basis of which the
learned counsel for the State advances most of his
arguments, has no relevance to the present appeal,
the said sub-section applies only to a case where
no appeal lies or is preferred against the order of a
court declining to deal with an accused under S. 3
or S. 4 of the Act, and in the instant case an appeal
lay to the Sessions Judge and indeed an appeal was
preferred from the order of the Magistrate. The
provision that directly applies to the present case is
S. 11 (1) of the Act, whereunder an order under the
Act may be made by any Court empowered to try
and sentence the offender to imprisonment and
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also by the High Court or any other court when the
case comes before it on appeal or in revision. The
sub-section ex facie does not circumscribe the
jurisdiction of an appellate court to make an order
under the Act only in a case where the trial court
could have made that order. The phraseology used
therein is wide enough to enable the appellate
court or the High Court, when the case comes
before it, to make such an order. It was purposely
made comprehensive, as the Act was made to
implement a social reform. As the Act does not
change the quantum of the sentence, but only
introduces a provision to reform the offender, there
is no reason why the Legislature should have
prohibited the exercise of such a power, even if the
case was pending against the accused at one stage
or other in the hierarchy of tribunals".
The decision approves of the principle that ex post facto
law which only mollifies the rigour of the criminal law, though
retrospective in operation, will be valid. After enunciating this
principle the Court interpreted Section 11 of the Probation of
Offenders Act and came to the conclusion that on a true
interpretation of the provision the High Court had jurisdiction
to exercise the power at the appellate stage, and this power was
not confined to a case where the trial court could have made
that order. The phraseology of the Section was wide enough to
enable the appellate court or the High Court when the case
came before it, to make such an order. We, therefore, do not
find that Rattan Lal made a departure from the well settled
principle that no person shall be convicted of any offence
except for violation of a law in force at the time of the
commission of that act charged as an offence, nor be subjected
to a penalty greater than with which he might have been
inflicted under the law in force at the time of the commission of
the offence. This Court only laid down the principle that an ex
post facto law which only mollifies the rigour of a criminal law
did not fall within the said prohibition, and if a particular law
made a provision to that effect, though retrospective in
operation, it will be valid. Rattan Lal was, therefore, decided
on an interpretation of Section 11 of the Probation of Offenders
Act which was not a penal statute in the sense that it did not
create an offence and provide for punishment thereof. We,
therefore, do not find that principles laid down in Rattan Lal
depart from the well settled principles that a penal statute which
create new offences is always prospective and a person can be
punished for an offence committed by him in accordance with
law as it existed on the date on which an offence was
committed.
In another decision of the Delhi High Court reported in
the same volume at page 19 : Municipal Corporation of Delhi
vs. Mai Ram alias Bhaya Ram; Sunder Lal was followed and
reference was made to the decision of this Court in Rattan Lal
(supra). We have no doubt that the High Court of Delhi in
Sunder Lal vs. Municipal Corporation of Delhi (supra) and
Municipal Corporation of Delhi vs. Mai Ram alias Bhaya
Ram (supra) and the Allahabad High Court in Shyam Lal vs,
State (supra) have erred in law in holding that Notification
substituting new standards in place of the old under the
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act must, while judging the
guilt of an accused, be given retrospective operation. We are
clearly of the view that this Court in Rattan Lal did not lay
down such a proposition.
We also find that in such cases application of the
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modified standards to cases which arose before the amendment
of the Rules, would be impracticable as is demonstrated by the
facts of this case. As pointed out by the learned senior counsel
appearing for the appellant, the report of the Public Analyst did
not mention the percentage of mineral oil present in the sample.
This was obviously for the reason that at the relevant time mere
presence of mineral oil, being an unwholesome ingredient,
amounted to adulteration and, therefore, it was not necessary
for the Public Analyst to mention the percentage of mineral oil
found in the sample. Moreover under the modified standard the
mineral oil found in the sample must be of food grade, if used
as a lubricant. There is no report on this aspect of the matter by
the Public Analyst, obviously because he was not required to do
so having regard to the standard then prescribed. On the record
there is nothing to show that mineral oil found in the sample
was of food grade and was used as a lubricant and did not
exceed 0.2 % by weight as prescribed under the amended Rules.
It is not as if the amended Rules permit the presence of mineral
oil in any quantity and of any quality in hard boiled sugar
confectionary. Presence of mineral oil even after the
amendment will amount to adulteration if it is not of food
grade, and not used as a lubricant, and if it is more than 0.2 %
by weight.
Learned counsel for the appellant then cited before us
several judgments in which, having regard to the long pendency
of such cases, a lesser sentence was imposed. In (1996) 4 SCC
513 : Krishan Gopal Sharma and another vs. Govt. of N.C.T.
of Delhi, this Court having regard to the technical violation of
the Rules, and having regard to the fact that no minimum
sentence was prescribed at the time when the offence was
committed, found that a deterrent punishment for imprisonment
was not called for and imposition of fine will meet the ends of
justice. Similar was the approach of this Court in (1992) 1 SCC
365 : State of Orissa vs. K. Rajehwar Rao and 1995 Crl. L. J.
3651 : N. Sukumaran Nair vs. Food Inspector, Mavelikara.
In the instant case it was not disputed that for the offence
charged a minimum sentence of 6 months rigorous
imprisonment is prescribed by law. The appellant has been
sentenced to undergo 6 months rigorous imprisonment which is
the minimum sentence. We are not inclined to modify the
sentence by passing an order of the nature passed in N.
Sukumaran Nair (supra) where this Court in exercise of its
extra ordinary jurisdiction imposed only a sentence of fine and
directed the State to exercise its powers under Section 433 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure to commute the sentence of
simple imprisonment for fine. In the instant case the appellant
has been sentenced to undergo 6 months rigorous
imprisonment. Moreover we are firmly of the view that strict
adherence to Prevention of Food Adulteration Act and the
Rules framed thereunder is essential for safeguarding the
interest of consumers of articles of food. Stringent laws will
have no meaning if offenders could go away with mere fine.
We, therefore, find no reason to interfere with the sentence
imposed against the appellant.
Finding no merit, we dismiss this appeal.