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State of Haryana Vs. Unique Farmaid P. Ltd. ors. - Court Judgment

SooperKanoon Citation
SubjectCriminal;Food Adulteration
CourtSupreme Court of India
Decided On
Case NumberCrl.A. No. 1053 of 1999 etc.
Judge
Reported in1999(2)ALD(Cri)908; 2000CriLJ2962; JT1999(8)SC162; (2000)124PLR290; 1999(6)SCALE404; (1999)8SCC190; [1999]Supp3SCR451
ActsInsecticides Act, 1968 - Sections 3, 17, 18, 21, 22, 24, 29 and 30; Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) , 1973 - Sections 482; Constitution of India - Article 227; Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940; Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954
AppellantState of Haryana
RespondentUnique Farmaid P. Ltd. ors.
Appellant Advocate Mahabir Singh, (NP), Adv
Respondent Advocate S.K. Mehta, ; Dhruv Mehta, ; Arun Nehru, ;
Cases Referred and Calcutta Municipal Corporation v. Pawan Kumar Saraf and Anr.
Excerpt:
.....evidence of child witness not to be discarded per se. conviction can be based on it if the child is found competent to depose and his evidence is found reliable. - 10. it has been submitted before us as well as before the high court that the insecticide inspector was not competent to send the sample for re-testing to the central insecticides laboratory and that request for re-testing should have been made to the court concerned......the senior analyst.1. name of insecticides inspector dda sonepat from whom received2. serial no. & date of insecticideinspector's memorandum l. no. 35 dt. 8.8.94batch no. 94 uf 703.manufacturing date march, 94expiry date feb., 95 date of sampling3. no. of sample one4. date of receipt 8.8.945. name of insecticide purportingto be contained in the sample monocrotophos 36% sl6. condition of the seals of thepackage intact7. result of test or analysis withprotocols of test applied tech.contt. 26.20%protocol of test applied as per isno. 8074.result misbranded.8. after unique farmaid had been served with the notice and the report aforesaid of the quality control laboratory alleging that provisions of sections 3(k)(i), 17 and 18 of the act had been contravened, in its reply to the show-cause.....
Judgment:
ORDER

D.P. Wadhwa, J.

1. Leave granted.

2. In these appeals, raising a common question of law, the State has challenged the three separate judgments of Punjab and Haryana High Court quashing the complaints filed under Section 29(1)(a) of the Insecticides Act, 1963 (for short, the 'Act'). High Court exercised its powers under Section 482 of the CrPC (for short, the 'Code') read with Article 227 of the Constitution of India. Section 29 of the Act provides for offences and punishment. Under Clause (a) of Sub-section (1) of Section 29 whoever imports, manufactures, sells, stocks; or exhibits for sale or distributes any insecticide deemed to be misbranded under Sub-clause (i) or Sub-clause (iii) or Sub-clause (viii) of Clause (k) of Section 3 of the Act shall be punishable for the first offence, with imprisonment for a term which may extend to two years, or with fine which may extend to two thousand rupees, or with both; and for the second and a subsequent offence, with imprisonment for a term which may extend to three years, or with fine, or with both.

3. To understand the rival contentions, we refer to the facts in the case in the appeal arising out of SLP (Crl.) No. 4067/97. An Insecticide Inspector appointed under the Act on August 5, 1994 visited the shop premises of Sukhbir Singh, Proprietor of M/s. Vikas Beej Bhandar and drew three samples of Monocrotophos 36 percent SL insecticide. He gave one sample to Sukhbir Singh, sent the second sample to the Senior Analyst, Quality Control Laboratory (Insecticides) Karnal, for testing and the third sample was deposited with the Deputy Director Agriculture, Sonepat (Sections 21 and 22 of the Act). M/s. Unique Farmaid Pvt. Ltd. (for short, the 'Unique Farmaid') is the manufacturer of the insecticide in question. Hari Singh Verma is the Sales Officer of Unique Farmaid, the manufacturer. It was reported by the Quality Control Laboratory in its analysis report that Sample of Monocrotophos 36 percent SL was misbranded (Sub-section (1) of Section 24 of the Act). Accordingly, notices along with analysis report of the sample were sent on September 30, 1994 to M/s. Vikas Beej Bhandar and to Unique Farmaid. A reply dated October 8, 1994 was sent by the Unique Farmaid. The reply did not find favour with the authority and after obtaining consent for launching the prosecution, the Insecticide Inspector on June 24, 1995 filed a criminal complaint in the court of Chief Judicial Magistrate, Sonepat.

4. Unique Farmaid and Hari Singh Verma, Sales Officers moved the High Court under Section 482 of the Code read with Article 227 of the Constitution for quashing the complaint and the consequential proceedings. It was submitted that the manufacturing date of the insecticide was March 1994 and its expiry date was February 1995. By the time the accused was summoned to appear in the Court on April 6, 1995, they had lost their right of getting the samples reanalysed from the Central Insecticides Laboratory under Sub-section (4) of Section 24 of the Act and in these circumstances making them to stand trial would be an abuse of the process of the Court.

5. Section 22 of the Act prescribes procedure to be followed by the Insecticides Inspector when he takes any sample of an insecticide. Sub-section (6) of Section 22 is relevant and is as under:

22. (6) The Insecticide Inspector shall restore one portion of a sample so divided or one container, as the case may be, to the person from whom he takes it and shall retain the remainder and dispose of the same as follows :

(i) one portion or container, he shall forthwith send to the Insecticide Analyst for test or analysis; and

(ii) the second, he shall produce to the court before which proceedings, if any, are instituted in respect of the insecticide.

6. As to how the report of the Insecticide Analyst is to be considered, reference may be made to Section 24 of the Act which is as under:

24. Report of Insecticide Analyst. - (1) The Insecticide Analyst to whom a sample of any insecticide has been submitted for test of analysis under Sub-section (6) of Section 22, shall, within a period of sixty days, deliver to the Insecticide Inspector submitting it a signed report in duplicate in the prescribed form.

(2) The Insecticide Inspector on receipt thereof shall deliver one copy of the report to the person from whom the sample was taken and shall retain the other copy for use in any prosecution in respect of the sample.

(3) Any document purporting to be a report signed by an Insecticide Analyst shall be evidence of the facts stated therein, and such evidence shall be conclusive unless the person from whom the sample was taken has within twenty-eight days of the receipt of a copy of the report notified in writing the Insecticide Inspector or the Court before which any proceeding in respect of the sample are pending that he intends to adduce evidence in controversion of the report.

(4) Unless the sample has already been tested or analysed in the Central Insecticides Laboratory, where a person has under Sub-section (3) notified his intention of adducing evidence in controversion of the Insecticide Analyst's report, the Court may, of its own motion or in its discretion at the request either of the complainant or of the accused, cause the sample of the insecticide produced before the magistrate under Sub-section (6) of Section 22 to be sent for test or analysis to the said laboratory, which shall make the test or analysis and report in writing signed by, or under the authority of, the Director of the Central Insecticides Laboratory the result thereof, and such report shall be conclusive evidence of the facts stated therein.

(5) The cost of a test or analysis made by the Central Insecticides Laboratory under Sub-section (4) be paid by the complainant or the accused, as the Court shall direct.

7. Report of the Insecticide Analyst is dated September 22, 1994 in the form prescribed (Form IX) and is as under:

Report of the Senior Analyst.1. Name of Insecticides Inspector DDA Sonepat from whom received2. Serial No. & date of InsecticideInspector's memorandum L. No. 35 dt. 8.8.94Batch No. 94 UF 703.Manufacturing date March, 94Expiry date Feb., 95 Date of sampling3. No. of sample One4. Date of receipt 8.8.945. Name of Insecticide purportingto be contained in the sample Monocrotophos 36% SL6. Condition of the seals of thepackage Intact7. Result of test or analysis withprotocols of test applied Tech.Contt. 26.20%Protocol of test applied as per ISNo. 8074.RESULT Misbranded.

8. After unique Farmaid had been served with the notice and the report aforesaid of the Quality Control Laboratory alleging that provisions of Sections 3(k)(i), 17 and 18 of the Act had been contravened, in its reply to the show-cause Unique Farmaid denied the allegations and stated that 'we intend to adduce evidence in support of our contention and request that a sample should be got analysed from Central Insecticides Laboratory as per provisions of Section 24 of the Act at the cost of the company'. The Insecticide Inspector did not avert to this request of the Unique Farmaid and, as stated above, filed a criminal complaint against six accused, namely, M/s. Unique Farmaid (P) Ltd., (2) Hari Singh Verma, Sales Officer of Unique Farmaid, (3) M/s. Vikas Beej Bhandar, (4) Sukhbir Singh, Proprietor of the Vikas Beej Bhandar, (5) M/s. Gandhi Beej Bhandar, Sonepat and (6) Satbir Singh, Proprietor, Gandhi Beej Bhandar. It is stated in the complaint that sample of the same insecticide was also lifted from the shop premises of M/s. Gandhi Beej Bhandar. In one of the appeals before us (arising out of SLP (Crl.) No. 2982/97), we find there is a reply by the Insecticide Inspector stating that it is only the court which is competent to get the sample tested from the Central Insecticides Laboratory. All these facts are not in dispute.

9. Principal contention of Unique Farmaid and its Sales Officer before the High Court was that no action was taken by the Insecticide Inspector to have the sample re-tested from the Central Insecticides Laboratory in terms of their request and that by the time they were asked to appear in the court to stand their trial, shelf life of the insecticide, of which sample was taken, had already expired. They were, thus, deprived of their valuable right of their defence. High Court found substance in their plea and said that once it is evident that the accused had been deprived of their right under Section 24 of the Act, it was obvious that they were prejudiced and it would be an abuse of the process of Court for the complaint to proceed further.

10. It has been submitted before us as well as before the High Court that the Insecticide Inspector was not competent to send the sample for re-testing to the Central Insecticides Laboratory and that request for re-testing should have been made to the Court concerned. Then the State has further submitted that no other defence than prescribed under Section 30 of the Act could he allowed to be raised in the prosecution filed under the Act and further that the shelf life of the sample was not relevant as the Act does not prescribe any expiry date. There is no substance in either of these contentions. If the expiry date is not relevant, there was no reason why in the form prescribed for submission of the report by the Insecticide Analyst, the date of manufacture of the article and the expiry date are mentioned. We do not find any answer to this by the State. In support of this submission, no rule has been cited and no evidence produced showing that the expiry date of the insecticide is inconsequential. Section 30 provides for defences which may or may not be allowed in prosecution under the Act. Section 30 is as under:

30. Defences which may or may not be allowed in prosecutions under this act. - (1) Save as hereinafter provided in this section, it shall be no defence in a prosecution under this Act to prove merely that the accused was ignorant of the nature or quality of the insecticide in respect of which the offence was committed or of the risk involved in the manufacture, sale or use of such insecticide or of the circumstances of its manufacture or import.

(2) For the purposes of Section 17, an insecticide shall not be deemed to be misbranded only by reason of the fact that:

(a) there has been added thereto some innocuous substance or ingredient because the same is required for the manufacture or the preparation of the insecticide as an article of commerce in a state fit for carriage or consumption, and not to increase the bulk, weight or measure of the insecticide or to conceal its inferior quality or other defect; or

(b) in the process of manufacture, preparation or conveyance some extraneous substance has unavoidably become intermixed with it.

(3) A person not being an importer or a manufacturer of an insecticide or his agent for the distribution thereof, shall not be liable for a contravention of any provision of this Act, if he proves:

(a) that he acquired the insecticide from an importer or a duly licensed manufacturer, distributor or dealer thereof;

(b) that he did not know and could not, with reasonable diligence, have ascertained that the insecticide in any way contravened any provision of this Act; and

(c) that the insecticide, while in his possession, was properly stored and remained in the same state as when he acquired it.

11. Sub-section (1) of Section 30 which appears to be relevant only prescribes in effect that ignorance would be of no defence but that does not mean that if there are contraventions of other mandatory provisions of the Act, the accused have no remedy. Procedure for testing the sample is prescribed and if it is contravened to the prejudice of the accused, he certainly has right to seek dismissal of the complaint. There cannot be two opinions about that. Then in order to safeguard the right of the accused to have the sample tested from Central Insecticides Laboratory, it is incumbent on the prosecution to file the complaint expeditiously so that the right of the accused is not lost. In the present case, by the time the respondents were asked to appear before the Court, expiry date of the insecticide was already over and sending of sample to the Central Insecticides Laboratory at that late stage would be of no consequence. This issue is no longer res integra. In The State of Punjab v. National Organic Chemical Industries Ltd. : (1996)11SCC613 this Court in somewhat similar circumstances said that the procedure laid down under Section 24 of the Act deprived the accused to have sample tested by the Central Insecticides Laboratory and adduce evidence of the report so given in his defence. This Court stressed the need to lodge the complaint with utmost dispatch so that the accused may opt to avail the statutory defence. The Court held that the accused had been deprived of a valuable right statutorily available to him. On this view of the matter, the court did not allow the criminal complaint to proceed against the accused. We have cases under the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 and the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 involving the same question. In this connection reference be made to decisions of this Court in State of Haryana v. Brij Lal Mittal and Ors. : 1998CriLJ3287 under the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940; Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Ghisa Ram : 1967CriLJ939 ; Chetumal v. State of Madhya Pradesh and Anr. : 1981CriLJ1009 and Calcutta Municipal Corporation v. Pawan Kumar Saraf and Anr. : 1999CriLJ1125 all under the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954.

12. It cannot be gainsaid, therefore, that the respondents in these appeals have been deprived of their valuable right to have the sample tested from the Central Insecticides Laboratory under Sub-section (4) of Section 24 of the Act. Under Sub-section (3) of Section 24 report signed by the Insecticide analyst shall be evidence of the facts stated therein and shall be conclusive evidence against the accused only if the accused do not, within 28 days of the receipt of the report, notify in writing to the Insecticides Inspector or the Court before which proceedings are pending that they intend to adduce evidence to controvert the report. In the present cases Insecticide Inspector was notified that the accused intended to adduce evidence to controvert the report. By the time the matter reached the court, shelf life of the sample had already expired and no purpose would have been served informing the court of such an intention. The report of the Insecticide Analyst was, therefore, not conclusive. A valuable right had been conferred on the accused to have the sample tested from the Central Insecticides Laboratory and in the circumstances of the case accused have been deprived of that right, thus, prejudicing them in their defence.

13. In these circumstances, High Court was right in concluding that it will be an abuse of the process of court if the prosecution is continued against the respondents - the accused persons. High Court rightly quashed the criminal complaint. We uphold the order of the High Court and would dismiss the appeals.


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