Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF DELHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GHISA RAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/11/1966
BENCH:
ACT:
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act (37 of 1954), s. 13(2),
(3) and (5)-Delay in filing prosecution-Sample given to
accused vendor decomposed-Examination ofsample by
Director of Central Food Laboratory not possible-Accussed,if
prejudiced.
HEADNOTE:
The Food Inspectorof the appellant-Municipality took a
sample of curd from the respondent’s shop for the purpose of
testing whether there was any adulteration. The sample was
divided into three equal parts, put in separate bottles and
sealed. One bottle was handed over to the respondent and
one was sent to the Public Analyst who analysed it and sent
his report. On the basis of that report a complaint was
filed, seven months after receipt of the report, against the
respondent, for an offence under ss. 7 and 16 of the
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954. During the
trail, the respondent applied to have the sample given to
him analysed by the Director of the Central Food Laboratory
in accordance with s. 13(2) of the Act. The Director
reported- that the sample had become highly decomposed and
could not be analysed. The trial Court acquitted the
respondent accepting his contention that he could not be
convicted after having been denied his right of obtaining
the Director’s certificate by the delay in launching the
prosecution.
On the question whether he should have been convicted on the
basis of -the Public Analyst’s report.
HELD : A right is conferred by s. 13 (2) on the accused-
vendor to have the sample, given to him by the Food
Inspector, analysed by the Director after the prosecution
was launched against him. It is a valuable right, because,
he could for his proper defence, have that sample analysed
by a more competent expert, whose certificate supersedes the
report of the Public Analyst under s. 13(3), and is to be
accepted by the Court as conclusive evidence of its contents
under the proviso to s. 13(5). However, if for any reason,
no certificate is issued by the Director, the report of the
Public Analyst does not cease to be evidence of the facts
contained in it. But, in a case where there is denial of
this right on -account of the deliberate conduct of the-
prosecution, the accused-vendor would be seriously
prejudiced in his trial, and could not be convicted on ’the
report of the Public Analyst, even though that report may be
evidence in the case, of the facts stated therein. In the
present case, the prosecution should have anticipated that
there would be some delay, in the analysis by the Public
Analyst and in the sending of his report, and consequently,
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the elementary precaution of adding a preservative to the
sample given to the respondent should have been taken by the
Food Inspector. If such a precaution had been taken, the
sample given to the respondent would have been available for
analysis by the Director, for a period of ’four months; and
the prosecution could have been launched, after receiving
the Public Analyst’s report, well within time to enable the
respondent -to exercise his right under s. 13(2). The
respondent was therefore denied a valuable right in
defending himself, due to the inordinate delay in launching
the prosecution, ad was prejudiced in his defence. [119 H;
120 A-B, F-H; 121 A]
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 194 of
1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 9, 1964 of the Punjab High Court in Circuit Bench
at Delhi in Criminal Appeal No. 30-D of 1964.
H.R. Gokhale, K. K. Raizada and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for
the appellant.
Frank Anthony, Ghanshyam Dass, Jitendra Sharma
and V. P. Chaudhari, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. The respondent, Ghisa Ram, is a Halwai dealing
in milk and milk products, including Dahi, and holds a
licence for running his shop in Defence Colony in New Delhi.
On September 20, 1961, the Food Inspector of the Municipal
Corporation of Delhi visited the shop of the respondent and
took a sample of curd of cow’s milk for the purpose of
testing whether there was any adulteration. The curd was
churned and divided into three equal parts. Each part was
put in a separate bottle and sealed by the Food Inspector.
One of the bottles containing the sample of the curd taken
was handed over to the respondent. Out of the two remaining
samples with the Food Inspector, one was sent to the Public
Analyst who carried out the analysis on October 3, 1961. He
then gave a certificate on October 23, 1961, in which he
noted that the fat content in the curd was 11.6% and the
non-fatty solids were 7.3%. The standard prescribed by the
Rules framed under the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act,
1954 (No. 37 of 1954) (hereinafter referred to as "the Act")
for curd of cow’s milk was. that it must contain a minimum
of 3.5% fat and 8.5% non-fatty solids. Since the analysis
showed that the content of non-fatty solids was 1.2 % below
the prescribed standard, the respondent was prosecuted for
committing an offence under s. 16 of the Act for
contravening section 7 of the Act. The complaint was filed
before the Magistrate on behalf of the appellant, Municipal
Corporation of Delhi, on May 23, 1962. On October 4, 1963,
the respondent applied that the sample, which had been given
to him by the Food Inspector, be sent for examination by the
Director of the Central Food Laboratory in accordance with
the provisions of s. 13 (2) of the Act. When the sample was
received by the Director, he reported that the-sample of
curd sent to him had become highly decomposed and no
analysis of it was possible. The case against the
respondent had, therefore, to be tried in the absence of the
report of the Director of the Central Food Laboratory.
At the trial, the respondent admitted the taking of the
sample of curd from his shop by the Food Inspector, but he
pleaded that he had prepared the curd from pure cow’s milk.
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The counsel for the:
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challenged the correctness of the analysis of the
sample .made by the Public Analyst, and a further plea was
taken that the having been denied his right of obtaining the
report of ,the Director of the Central Food Laboratory
because of the delay by the appellant in launching the
prosecution, the respondent could not be validly convicted.
This defence was accepted by the Magistrate, and the
respondent was acquitted. The appellant filed an -appeal
against this order of acquittal before the Delhi Bench of
the Punjab High Court, but that Court upheld the order of
the Magistrate. The appellant has now-come up to this Court,
by special leave, against that decision of the High Court.
In this appeal, the main contention on behalf of the
appellant was that, though, under the Act, a certificate of
the Director of the Central Food Laboratory has the effect
of superseding the report of the Public Analyst, the absence
of such a certificate for any reason whatsoever will not
affect the value and efficacy of the certificate given by
the Public Analyst. The proposition put forward on behalf
of the appellant appears to be correct. Under, s. 13(3) of
the Act, the certificate issued by the Director of the
Central Food Laboratory supersedes the report given by the
Public Analyst. ’The proviso to sub-section (5) of s. 13
further lays down that any document purporting to be a
certificate signed by the Director of the Central Food
Laboratory shall be final and conclusive evidence of the
facts stated therein. These provisions of the Act are,
however, only attracted when, in fact, an analysis of the
sample sent to the Director of the Central Food Laboratory
is made by him on the :basis of which he issues a
certificate. If, for any reason, no certificate is issued,
the report given by the Public Analyst does not cease to be
evidence of the facts contained in it and does not become
ineffective merely because it could have been superseded by
the certificate issued by the Director of the Central Food
Laboratory. Further, there being no certificate issued by
the Director of the Central Food Laboratory, no question can
arise of his certificate becoming final and conclusive
evidence of the report contained in it.
This aspect, however, does not conclude the matter so far as
the question of the validity of the acquittal of the
respondent is concerned. There can be no doubt that sub-s.
(2) of s. 13 of the Act confers a right on the accused
vendor to have the sample given to him examined by the
Director of the Central Food Laboratory and to obtain a
certificate from him on the basis of the analysis of that
sample. It is when the accused exercises this right that a
certificate has to be given by the Director of the Central
Food Laboratory and that certificate then supersedes the
report given by the Public Analyst. If, in any case, the
accused does not choose to exercise this right, the case
against him can be decided on the basis of the report of the
Public Analyst. Difficulty, however, arises in
119
a case where the accused does exercise the right by making a
request to the Court to send ’his sample for analysis to the
Director of the Central Food Laboratory and the Director is
unable to issue a certificate because of some reason,
including the reason that the sample of the food article has
so deteriorated and become decomposed that no analysis is
possible.
In the present case, we find *that the decomposition of the
sample, which the respondent desired should be analysed by
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the Director of the Central Food Laboratory, took -place
because of the long delay that had occurred in sending the
sample to the Director’ The sample was taken on September
20, 1961, while it was sent to the Director after October 4,
1963, when the respondent made his application in that
behalf. The submission on behalf of the respondent was that
the appellant instituted the prosecution of the respondent
on May 23, 1962, and consequently, under s. 13(2) of the
Act, the right accrued to the respondent to have the sample
sent for analysis only thereafter. Section 13(2)
specifically mentions that the accused vendor may make
the application "after the institution of a prosecution
under the Act." No right vested in the respondent to have
the sample analysed in this case until the prosecution was
launched on May 23, 1962.
The opinion of one of the experts, Dr. Sat Parkash, given in
this case shows that in the case of a food article, like
-curd, it starts undergoing changes after a week, if kept at
room temperature, without a preservative, but remains fit
for analysis for another 10 days thereafter. On the other
hand, if the sample is kept in a refrigerator, it will
preserve its fat and non-fatty solid contents for purposes
of analysis for a total period of four weeks. If a
preservative is added and the sample is kept at room
temperature, the percentage of fat and non-fatty solids
contents for purposes of analysis will be retained for about
four months, and in case it is kept in a refrigerator after
adding the preservative, the total period which may be
available for making analysis, without decomposition, will
be six months. In this case, when the Food Inspector handed
over the sample to the respondent, the respondent was not
expected to keep it in a refrigerator. Consequently,
without any preservative, the sample kept with him could
have been analysed successfully during the next 17, days,
whereas, if a preservative had been added, it could have
been analysed successfully during the next four months.
It appears to us that when a valuable right is conferred by
s. 13 (2) of the Act on the vendor to have the sample given
to him analysed by the Director of the Central Food
Laboratory, it is to be expected that the prosecution will
proceed in such a manner that that right will not be denied
to him. The right is a valuable one, because the
120
certificate of the Director supersedes the report of the
Public Analyst and is treated as conclusive -evidence of its
contents. Obviously, the right has been given to the vendor
in order that, for his, satisfaction and proper defence, he
should be able to have the sample kept in his charge
analysed by a greater expert whose certificate is to be
accepted by Court as conclusive evidence In a case where
there is denial of this right on account of the deliberate
conduct of the prosecution, we think that the vendor, in his
trial, is so seriously prejudiced that it would not be
proper to uphold his conviction on the basis of the report
of the Public Analyst, even though that report continues to
be evidence in the case of the facts contained therein.
We are not to be understood as laying down that, in every
case where the right of the vendor to have his sample tested
by the Director of the Central Food Laboratory is
frustrated, the vendor cannot be convicted on the basis of
the report of the Public Analyst. We consider that the
principle must, however, be applied to cases where the
conduct of the prosecution has resulted in the denial to the
vendor of any opportunity to exercise this right. Different
considerations may arise if the right gets frustrated for
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reasons for which the prosecution is not responsible.
In the present case, the sample was taken on the 20th
September, 1961. Ordinarily, it should have been possible
for the prosecution to obtain the report of the Public
Analyst and institute the prosecution within 17 days of the
taking of the sample. It, however, appears that delay took
place even in obtaining the report of the Public Analyst,
because the Public Analyst actually analysed the sample on
3rd October, 1961 and sent his report on 23rd October, 1961.
It may be presumed that some delay in the analysis by the
Public Analyst and in his sending his report to the prose-
cution is bound to occur. Such delay could always be
envisaged by the prosecution, and consequently, the
elementary precaution of adding a preservative to the sample
which- was given to the respondent should necessarily have
been taken by the Food Inspector. If such a precaution had
been taken, the sample with the respondent would have been
available for analysis by the Director of the Central Food
Laboratory for a period of four months which would have
expired about the 20th of January, 1962. The report of the
Public Analyst having been sent on 23rd October, 1961 to the
prosecution, the prosecution could have been launched well
in time to enable -the respondent to exercise his right
under s. 13(2) of the Act without being handicapped by the
deterioration of his sample. The prosecution, on the other
hand, committed inordinate delay in launching the
prosecution when they filed the complaint on 23rd May, 1962,
and no explanation is forthcoming why the complaint in Court
was filed about seven months after’ the report of the Public
Analyst had been issued by him
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This, is, therefore, clearly a case where the respondent was
deprived of the opportunity of exercising his right to have
his sample examined by the Director of the Central Food
Laboratory by the conduct of the prosecution. In such a
case, we think that the respondent is entitled to claim that
his conviction is vitiated by this circumstance of denial of
this valuable right guaranteed by the Act, as a result of
the conduct of the prosecution.
Learned counsel for the appellant drew our attention to a
decision reported in Suckling v. Parker(1). That case was
concerned with similar law in England, but, there, the
provision relating to the testing of the sample kept with
the vendor was quite different. In England, there was no
restriction that the vendor could not have his sample tested
until after the prosecution was launched, nor did the
subsequent report have the effect of completely superseding
the earlier report of the Analyst.
In Municipal, Corporation, Gwalior, v. Kishan Swaroop,(2) it
was held that, where there was delay in launching the
prosecution, it deprived the accused of the valuable right
to challenge the report of the Analyst in the manner
prescribed by s. 13(2) of the Act, and when this right was
denied to the accused for no fault of Ms, but wholly due to
the inordinate laches of the prosecution, no weight could be
given to the report of the Public Analyst. That decision
proceeded on the basis of the value of the report of the
Public Analyst being affected by the fact that the accused
had been deprived of his right to challenge that report by
obtaining a certificate from the Director of the Central
Food Laboratory. The report of the Public Analyst, as we
have said earlier, does not cease to be good evidence merely
because a certificate from the Director of the Central Food
Laboratory cannot be obtained. The reason why the
conviction cannot be sustained is that the accused is
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prejudiced in his defence and is denied a valuable right of
defending himself solely due to the deliberate acts of the
prosecution.
In these circumstances, the acquittal of the respondent was
justified, and the appeal is dismissed.
V.P.S. Appeal
dismissed
(1) [1906]1 K.B.527.
(2) AJ.R. 1965 M.P. 180.
Cl/66-9
122