LAWS(CAL)-1933-2-2

CHAIRMAN, DIST. BOARD MIDNAPORE Vs. ATUL CHANDRA PAL

Decided On February 01, 1933
Chairman, Dist. Board Midnapore Appellant
V/S
ATUL CHANDRA PAL Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) This is a Reference by the District and Sessions Judge of Midnapore under Sec. 438, Criminal P.C., concerning a conviction of one Atul Chandra Pal under Sec. 21 read with Sec. 6(i)(e), Bengal Food Adulteration Act 6 of 1919(B.C.). The accused was sentenced to pay a fine of Rs. 100 for selling and exposing for sale adulterated mustard oil. There seems to be some doubt as to what actually occurred at the time when the Sanitary Inspector, employed by the Midnapore District Board, visited the shop belonging to Pal in company with the Circle Officer, Nagendra Nath Majumdar. It is to be regretted that the learned Magistrate who tried the case did not record in a systematic way the evidence of the two or three witnesses who were called before him. He recorded their evidence in indirect speech which makes it somewhat difficult to ascertain what the sequence of events in the shop really was. But the learned Magistrate has stated in his judgment:

(2.) The oil which the Sanitary Inspector, in fact, took was subsequently found, on analysis by the Public Analyst to the Government of Bengal, to be a sample of adulterated mustard oil. In his certificate the Public Analyst says: "It is mustard oil in which linseed oil is present" and he describes it as "adulterated mustard oil." The case sot up for the defence seems to have been that the oil which was taken by the Sanitary Inspector was compounded of a number of different oils including mustard oil and that a notice was displayed in the shop of the accused to that effect and that the tin canister's containing this oil were marked in letters engraves with acid "jalani tel". It was further said that the article in these canister's was not intended to be sold as an article of food at all The learned Sessions Judge, in referring the matter to this Court, has suggested that the conviction was wrong in law, because, according to him, there is nothing in the Bengal Food Adulteration Act of 1919 to prevent a shop-keeper from selling or exposing for sale or storing for sale an article which happens to have as one of its ingredients a certain amount of mustard oil, provided always the composite article is not sold or intended to be sold as food for human beings. It seems to me however that in this particular case the learned Sessions Judge has somewhat misread the facts as they are set forth in the judgment of the learned Magistrate who tried the case; though the learned Sessions Judge himself does summaries those facts in this way:

(3.) Upon that statement of facts the learned Sessions Judge said: