15 September 1976
Supreme Court
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PREM BALLAB & ANR Vs THE STATE (DELHI ADMINISTRATION)

Bench: BHAGWATI,P.N.
Case number: Appeal Criminal 287 of 1971


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PETITIONER: PREM BALLAB & ANR

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE STATE (DELHI ADMINISTRATION)

DATE OF JUDGMENT15/09/1976

BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA

CITATION:  1977 AIR   56            1977 SCR  (1) 592  1977 SCC  (1) 173  CITATOR INFO :  F          1977 SC 435  (10)

ACT:             Prevention  of Food  Adulteration Act 1954--Sec. 16  (1)         (a)  (i) --2 (1)---2 (1) (c)  --2(1)(j)--2(1)(l)--Prevention         of Food Adulteration Rules  Rules 23-28 and 29--Can  convic-         tion be based on sole testimony of a Food Inspector--Can  an         article  fall under clause (j) & (I) of Sec. 2(i)--Are  they         mutually  exclusive  or overlapping--When rules  are  silent         about  colouring  material can use of  dye  be  punished--Do         provisions  of probation of offenders Act apply to  offences         under the prevention of Food Adulteration Act.

HEADNOTE:             The second appellant was the owner of a grocery shop and         the  first  appellant was his salesman in  the  shop.   Food         Inspector Bhanot purchased a sample from appellant No. 1  of         mustard oil after complying with the formalities  prescribed         by the Act.  The Public Analyst reported that the sample was         misbranded  as it was of in-seed oil and it was  adulterated         due to the presence of artificial dye.  The appellants  were         charge-sheeted under section 16(1)(a)(i). The learned Magis-         trate convicted the appellants and sentenced them to  suffer         rigorous imprisonment for 9 months.             On  appeal,  the learned Sessions  Judge  confirmed  the         conviction  but  reduced  the sentence from 9  months  to  6         months.  The High Court, in revision upheld the decision  of         the Sessions Judge.         On appeal of Special Leave the appellants contended:                     1. The conviction was bad since it rested solely                  on the evidence of Food: Inspector Bhanot.                     2.  The offence committed by the  appellants  on                  the  opinion of the Public Analyst fell under  sec-                  tion 16(1)(a)(i) read with clause (1) of section  2                  (i) and, therefore, the Court had discretion  under                  the  proviso  to section 16(1) to impose  a  lesser                  sentence than the minimum of 6 months.                     3. In any event, the benefit of the Probation of                  Offenders Act, 1958,, should be given to the appel-                  lants.         Dismissing the appeal,             HELD: 1. There is no rule of law that conviction  cannot

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       be  based on the sole testimony of a Food Inspector.  It  is         only  out of a sense of caution that the courts insist  that         the testimony of a Food Inspector should be corroborated  by         some independent witness.  This is a necessary caution which         has to be borne in mind because the Food Inspector may in  a         sense  be regarded as an interested witness.  But this  cau-         tion is a rule of prudence and not a rule of law. If it were         otherwise  it would be possible for many guilty  persons  to         escape  punishment  by resorting to the  device  of  bribing         Panch witnesses.  In the present case, the sample was  taken         in  the  presence  of witness Krishan Datt  Sharma  who  has         turned  hostile.  His explanation is palpably dishonest  and         cannot  be accepted. There is also the evidence  of  another         Food  Inspector Bhatnagar.  The Courts below accepted  their         evidence  and there is no reason to interfere with the  con-         current view taken by the courts below.  [595A-G]             2.  Section 2(1) defines "Adulterated" and says that  an         article  of  food shall be deemed to be adulterated  if  the         article  fails  within the description given in  my  of  the         succeeding clauses (a) to (1).  Clause (j) provides that  an         article  of  food shall be deemed to be adulterated  if  any         colouring matter other than         593         that prescribed in respect thereof and in amounts not within         the  prescribed  limits  of variability is  present  in  the         article.  Clause (1) deems an article of food to be adulter-         ated if the quality or purity of the article fails below the         prescribed  standard  or  its constituents  are  present  in         quantities which are   in excess of the prescribed limits of         variability.  [596C-D]             3.  It  is  wrong to contend that if  an  article  fails         within  clause  (1) it cannot fail under clause (j)  or  any         other  clause.   Different clauses of section 2(i)  are  not         mutually  exclusive;  they, overlap one another  and  it  is         quite possible that an article of food may be found adulter-         ated trader two or more clauses of section 2(i). [597A-C]             4.  The  report of the public analyst  showed  that  the         linseed  oil contained artificial dye and this  was  clearly         prohibited  under rule 23.  The only artificial  dyes  which         were permitted to be used in food were those set out in rule         28  and  Rule 29. prohibited the use of permitted  coal  tar         dyes  in or upon any articles of food other than those  enu-         merated in that Rule. Lin-seed oil was not one of the  arti-         cles of food enumerated in rule 29 and hence artificial dye,         even if permitted coal tar dye could not be added to linseed         oil. [597G-H, 598A]             5.  The  contention of the appellants  that  clause  (j)         would  be attracted only if colouring matter  is  prescribed         and  the  article of food is found to  con:sin  a  colouring         matter  different from that prescribed was negatived.   When         no colouring matter is permitted to be used in respect of an         article of food what is prescribed in respect of the article         is  ’nil’ colouring matter and if the article  contains  any         colouring matter it would be "other than that prescribed  in         respect" of the article.  [597A-C, 598B-D]         Vidyacharan Shukla v. KhubchandBaghel, [1964] 6 S.C.R.  129,         relied on.             6.  The operation of the Probation of Offenders  Act  is         not  excluded  in case of persons found  guilty  of  offence         under the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954.  Howev-         er,  imperatives of social defence must discourage  the  ap-         plicability of the probation principle.   No chances can  be         taken by Society with a man whose anti-social activities  in         the  guise of a respectable trade jeopardise the health  and         well-being of numerous innocent consumers.  The  adulterator

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       is a social risk; it might be dangerous to leave him free to         carry on his nefarious activities by applying the  probation         principle  to  him.   Adulteration is  an  economic  offence         prompted  by  profit  motive and it is not  likely  to  lend         itself  easily  to  therapeutic  treatment  by  probationary         measure.  [599D, G-H, 600A-B]             Isher Das v. State [1972] 3 S.C.R. 65. and 1. K.  Tejani         v.M.R. Dhange, [1974] 2 S.C.R. 154 followed.

JUDGMENT:         CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 287/         71.             Appeal  by  Special Leave from the Judgment  and   Order         dated  10-9-71 of the Delhi High Court in Criminal  Revision         No. 310  of 1970.             A.N. Mulla, (Miss) Uma Mehta, R.K. Mehta, S.K. Bagga and         (Mrs.) S. Bagga, for the Appellants.                S.N. Anand and R.N. Sachthey; for the Respondent.             D.   Mookerjee,  B.P.  Maheshwari,  Suresh   Sethi   and         N.K..lain for the Intervener.             The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             BHAGWATI, J.--This appeal, by special leave, is directed         against a judgment of the High Court of Delhi confirming the         conviction  of         594         the   appellants  under  section  7(i)  read  with   section         16(1)(a)(i)   of  the Prevention of Food  Adulteration  Act,         1954.         The  prosecution  case was that all material times  the  2nd         appellant  was  the  owner of a  grocery  shop   situate  at         Maharani  Bagh, New Delhi and the 1st appellant was employed         as  a  salesman in the shop.  On 23rd June, 1969  Bhanot,  a         Food  Inspector went to  the shop of the 1st  appellant  and         finding  the 1st appellant there as a sales man,  took  from         him  a sample of mustard oil for analysis after  paying  its         purchase price.  He divided the sample into three parts  and         sent  one  part to the Public Analyst for  analysis,  handed         over  the other part to the 2nd appellant and  retained  the         3rd  part with him.   The Public Analyst reported  that  the         sample  was misbranded as it was of Lin Seed Oil and it  was         adulterated  due to the presence of artificial dye.  On  the         strength  of this report, the appellants were  chargesheeted         under  section 7(i) read with section   16(1)(a)(i)   before         the   Judicial  Magistrate, Delhi.  The defence of  the  1st         appellant was that the 2nd appellant was at no time  engaged         by him as the  salesman and  no mustard  oil  was  purchased         by  Bhanot  from the  2nd  appellant. The    2nd   appellant         also  claimed  that  he  was  never  an employee of the l st         appellant  and while he was going to his  house  after  pur-         chasing  sarson oil for his personal use, he was  caught  by         two  or  three persons near Maharani Bagh and a  sample  was         taken from the oil which he was carrying and his  signatures         were   obtained  by threat on certain papers.   The  learned         Judicial  Magistrate accepted the evidence led on behalf  of         the  prosecution and rejected the defence version  and  held         that  the appellants were guilty of the offence  of  selling         lin seed oil containing artificial dye which was an  offence         punishable  under section 7(i) read with  section   16(1)(a)         (i).  The  learned Judicial Magistrate accordingly convicted         the appellants and sentenced each of them to suffer rigorous         imprisonment  for  nine  months and to pay  a  fine  of  Rs.         1000/-.  The appellants preferred an appeal, but the  appeal         was  rejected by the learned Sessions Judge and the  convic-

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       tion  was confirmed with only a slight modification  in  the         sentence.  The sentence was reduced from nine months to  six         months  rigorous imprisonment.  This led to the filing of  a         revision  application in  the High Court by the  appellants,         but  the revision application was also unsuccessful.   Hence         the  present  appeal by special leave   obtained  from  this         Court.             The  first contention raised on behalf of the  appellant         in  support  of the appeal was that the conviction  was  bad         inasmuch  as  it rested solely on the evidence of Bhanot and         one other Food Inspector, namely, Bhatnagar, who happened to         come  there at the tinge of taking the sample and there  was         no  independent  witness to support  the  prosecution  case.         Now,  it is true that the prosecution could not produce  :my         independent witness to depose to the taking of the sample by         Bhanot from the 2nd appellant at the shop of the 1st  appel-         lant but that by itself cannot be regarded as sufficient  to         warrant rejection of the prosecution case out of hand.   The         sample  was taken by Bhanot  in  the presence of one  Keshav         Dutt  Sharma and a panchnama evidencing the transaction  was         prepared and signed by Keshav Dutt Sharma on the spot.   But         in  the  witness box Keshav Dutt Sharma turned  hostile  and         denied that he was present at the time of taking the sample.         Of         595         course. he could not deny that the endorsement B to B on the         Panchanama was in his hand-writing and he had put his signa-         ture  at  the foot of it, but his explanation was  that  one         Food  Inspector  came to the shop where he was  working  and         asked  him either to give a sample of the ice cream  he  was         selling at the shop or to give his signature on the. pancha-         nama.  This explanation is palpably dishonest and cannot  be         accepted  by any court.  Moreover, it does not  explain  how         the endorsement B to B came to be made by Keshav Dutt Sharma         in his handwriting.  There can be no doubt that Keshav  Dutt         Sharma  was present at the time of taking of the sample  and         he  wrote down the endorsement B to B on the panchanama  and         signed  it  as he was a witness to the transaction.   It  is         unfortunately  not  an infrequent occurrence  to  find  that         pancha  witnesses  turn hostile and go  back  upon  what  is         stated in the panchanama in utter disregard  of truth.  This         betrays  lack of character and absence of civic sense  which         not  only result in the guilty escaping the  punishment  but         lead  to general deterioration in standards of  honesty  and         integrity.  This is a highly reprehensible phenomenon  which         has to be curbed in the larger  interest of the  administra-         tion of justice.  Here, apart from the endorsement B to B in         the  panchanama and the signature at the foot of it  showing         that  Keshav Dutt Sharma was a witness to the taking of  the         sample,  we  have the statement of Bhanot who  said  in  his         evidence that Keshav Dutt Sharma was taken by him to witness         the  taking  of the sample and Keshav Dutt Sharma  made  the         endorsement B  to  B  on  the panchanama and put his  signa-         ture  below  it and this statement made by  Bhanot  was  not         challenged  in the cross-examination, nor was  it even  sug-         gested to Bhanot that Keshav Dutt Sharma was not present  at         the  taking of the sample.  The prosecution  case  obviously         cannot  be  thrown  out merely because  Keshav  Dutt  Sharma         refused to  support what had been stated by him, in his  own         hand writing in the panchanama and went back upon it to  the         utter  dismay of the prosecution. It is true that by  reason         of the defection of Keshav Dutt Sharma, the prosecution  was         left  only  with the evidence of Bhanot and  Bhatnagar,  but         this evidence was regarded by the High Court as well as  the         learned  Judicial Magistrate and the learned Sessions  Judge

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       sufficient to found the conviction of the appellants and  we         do not see why we should interfere with the concurrent  view         taken by them as regards the appreciation of this  evidence.         There  is no rule of law that conviction cannot be based  on         the sole testimony of a food Inspector.  It is only out of a         sense  of caution that the courts insist that the  testimony         of a food Inspector should be corroborated by some independ-         ent  witness.  This is a necessary caution which has  to  be         borne  in mind because the food Inspector may in a sense  be         regarded  as  an interested witness, but this caution  is  a         rule  of prudence and not a rule of law: if it  were  other-         wise, it would be possible for many guilty persons to escape         punishment  by  resorting  to the device  of  bribing  punch         witnesses.  The conviction of the appellants cannot,  there-         fore,  be  assailed as infirm on the ground that  it  rested         merely on the evidence of Bhanot and Bhatnagar.              The  appellants  then  contended that  on  the  opinion         expressed  by the Public Analyst, the offence  committed  by         the appellants was one         596         under section 16(1)(a)(i) with respect to an article of food         adulterated under clause (1) of section 2 and the Court had,         therefore, discretion, under the proviso to section 16 (1  )         to impose a lesser sentence of imprisonment than six  months         for  adequate  and   Special reasons. The  argument  of  the         appellants was that this was a fit case in which the discre-         tion  under  the proviso to section 16(1) should  have  been         exercised and the minimum sentence of six  months  imprison-         ment  should not have been imposed on the appellants.   This         was  in  substance a plea for reduction of the  sentence  of         imprisonment  and this plea raises the question as to  which         is  the  clause of section 2(i) in which  the  present  case         falls.  Does it fail within the clause (1) as claimed by the         appellants  or within clause (j) as contended on  behalf  of         the prosecution or within both and, if it falls within both,         what  the effect ?  Section 2(i) defines  ’adulterated’  and         says that an article of food shah be deemed to be adulterat-         ed if the article fails within the description given in  any         of  the succeeding clauses (a) to (1).  Clause (j)  provides         that an article of food shall be deemed to be adulterated:                         "(j) if any colouring matter other than that                  prescribed  in respect thereof and in  amounts  not                  within  the  prescribed limits  of  variability  is                  present in the article."         and clause (1) deems an article of food to be adulterated:                         "(1) if the quality or purity of the article                  fails below the prescribed standard or if constitu-                  ents are present in quantities which are in  excess                  of the prescribed limits of variability."         In  the  present case what was sold by  the  appellants  was         linseed oil which contained artificial dye.  The standard of         quality  of linseed oil is defined in Paragraph A. 17.04  of         Appendix  B  to the Prevention of Food  Adulteration  Rules,         1955 as follows:                      "A-l7.04.--Linseed oil (Tilli ka tel) means the                  oil  obtained  by process of expressing  clean  and                  sound   linseed (Linum usitatissimum). It shall  be                  clear,  free  from rancidity,  suspended  or  other                  foreign matter, separated water,  added   colouring                  or flavouring substances, or mineral oil.  It shall                  conform to the following standards:                  (a)    Butyro-refractometer    reading    at     40                  deg.C  ......     69.5 to 74.3                  (b) Saponification value  ............  188 to 195                  (c) Iodine value  ..........  Not less than 170

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                (d) Unsaphnifiable matter  ........  Not more  than                  1.5                                                           per cent                   (e)  Free fatty acid as Oleic acid--not more  than                  2.0 per cent."         The argument of the appellants was that the  requirement  of         this  paragraph that linseed oil shall be free from  foreign         matter or added colouring substances lays down a standard of         quality of linseed oil and since the linseed oil sold by the         appellants  contained  artificial  dye, the quality  of  the         linseed oil fell below the prescribed standard and         597         hence  the case was covered by clause (i) of  section  2(i).         The appellants contended that if clause (1) of section  2(i)         was applicable in the present case, it excluded the applica-         bility of clause (j) and  the linseed oil containing artifi-         cial  dye  could not be said to be  adulterated  under  that         clause.  It was also urged on behalf of the appellants that,         in any event, no colouring matter was prescribed in  respect         of  linseed  oil and. therefore, it could not be  said  that         there was present in the linseed oil sold by the  appellants         artificial dye "other than that prescribed in respect there-         of  and  in amounts not within  the   prescribed  limits  0f         variability" so as to bring the case  within  the scope   of         clause  (j)  of section 2(i).  These  contentions   of   the         appellants,  plausible though they may seem at first  sight,         are  without  merit and must be rejected.  Our  reasons  for         saying so are as follows.             It  may be made clear at the out set that the  different         clauses  of section 2(i) are not mutually  exclusive.   They         overlap  one  another  ,red, it is quite  possible  that  an         article  of food may be found adulterated under two or  more         clauses  of section 2(i).  Take for example a case where  an         article of food contains a foreign  substance  which affects         injuriously the quality thereof and at the same time renders         it  unfit for human consumption.  Such a case would  clearly         fall  within  clauses (b) and (f) of section  2(i)  and  the         article of food would be deemed to be adulterated under both         these clauses.  So also, a case may arise where a  colouring         matter not permitted under the rules is added to an  article         of  food and such colouring matter affects  injuriously  the         quality  of the article of food and in such a case too  more         than one clause of section 2(i) would be attracted,  namely,         clause (b) and (i). These instances which we have given  are         merely  by  way of illustration and they  show  that  merely         because  an  article  of food is covered by  one  clause  of         section  2(i),  it does not exclude  the  applicability   of         another  clause  of the section an article of  food  may  be         deemed  to  be adulterated under more than  one  clauses  of         section  2(i).  It is, therefore, not a valid argument  that         because  the present case falls under clause (1) of  section         2(i),  the applicability of clause (j) is ipso  facto  nega-         tived and the case cannot come within that clause.             That  takes us to the question whether the present  case         falls within clause (i) of section 2(i), for if it does,  it         would be immaterial whethere it falls also within clause (1)         of  section 2 (i) and in so far as the linseed oil  sold  by         the appellants is deemed to be adulterated under clause  (j)         of section 2(i), the proviso to section 16(1) would  not  be         attracted.   Now, the ;report of the Public  Analyst  showed         that the linseed oil sold by the appellants contained  arti-         ficial dye and this was clearly prohibited under the  Rules.         Rule  23  provided  that  the addition of a colouring matter         to  an article of food, except as specifically permitted  by         the  Rules, shall be prohibited.  The only artificial  dyes,

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       which were permitted to be used in food, were those set  out         in Rule 28, and Rule 29 prohibited the use of permitted coal         tar dyes in or upon any food other than those enumerated  in         that  Rule. Linseed oil was admittedly not one of the  arti-         cles of food enumerated in Rule 29 and hence even  permitted         coal tar dyes could not be  added  to linseed oil.  It  does         not appear from the report of the Public Analyst         598         as to what was the artificial dye found mixed in the  sample         of  linseed oil sent to him but we will assume in favour  of         the defence that it was a permitted coal tar dye.  Even  so,         by  reason  of  Rules 23 and 29, it could not  be  added  to         linseed oil.  In the circumstances, the, linseed oil sold by         the appellants contained artificial dye which was prohibited         under the Rules.  The argument of the appellants  was   that         since colouring matter was prohibited in respect of  linseed         oil,  it  could not be said that any  colouring  matter  was         prescribed in respect of linseed oil by the Rules and  hence         the  presence of artificial dye in linseed oil did  not  at-         tract  the applicability of clause (j) of section  2(i).  It         was said that clause (j) of section 2(i) would be  attracted         only  if a colouring matter is prescribed in respect  of  an         article  of food and the article is found to contain  a  co-         louring  matter  different from that prescribed. But  if  no         colouring matter is prescribed, which would be the  position         where  colouring matter is totally prohibited, it cannot  be         said  that the article of food contains a  colouring  matter         other than that prescribed in respect of it.  This  argument         has the merit of ingenuity but it has no force and cannot be         sustained.  When no colouring matter is permitted to be used         in  respect of an article of food, what is prescribed     in         respect of the article is "nil colouring matter"  and if the         article  contains any colouring matter, it would  be  "other         than that prescribed in respect" of the article.  Clause (j)         of section 2(i) is not merely intended to cover a case where         one  type  of colouring matter is permitted to  be  used  in         respect  of  an  article of food and  the  article  contains         another type of colouring matter but it also takes in a case         where no colouring matter is permitted to be used in respect         of  an article of food, or in other words, it is  prohibited         and  yet the article contains a colouring matter.  There  is         really  no difference h3 principle between the two kinds  of         cases.   Both are equally reprehensible; in fact the  latter         may in conceivable cases be more serious  than  the  former.         Where  no  colouring matter is permitted to be  used  in  an         article of food, what is prescribed in respect of the  arti-         cle  is  that no coIouring matter shall be used and  if  any         colouring matter is present in the article in breach of that         prescription, it would clearly involve violation of cl.  (j)         of  section 2(i).  The words of clause (j) of section   2(i)         "other  than  that prescribed in respect thereof  recall  to         the  mind similar words used in section 29(2) of the Limita-         tion   Act which makes certain provisions of the  Limitation         Act  applicable in cases where a special or local  law  pre-         scribes  a  period of limitation different from  the  period         prescribed  by the Schedule to the  Limitation   Act.  These         words  of section 29(2) of the Limitation Act came  up   for         interpretation  before this Court in Vidyacharan  Shukla  v.         Khubchand  Baghel.(1) It was contended in that case that  on         ,a  true  construction of these words, it is  only  where  a         period  of  limitation  is specifically  prescribed  in  the         Schedule and a special or local  law  prescribes a different         period of limitation, that section 29(2) would be  attracted         and  that  section would have no application where  no  time         limit   is prescribed by the Schedule.  This contention  was

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       negatived  and  it  was held by this Court  that  where  the         Schedule  does  not  specifically prescribe  any  period  of         limitation  for an application but is silent and  a  special         or  local law prescribes a period of  limitation   for  such         an         [1964] 6 S.C.R. 129.         599           application, it can appropriately be said that the special         or local law   has prescribed a period of limitation differ-         ent  from  that  prescribed   in the  Schedule  and  section         29(2)  would be applicable.  The analogy   of this  decision         is  very  apt  and  it supports  the  construction  we   are         inclined  to place on the words "other than that  prescribed         in  respect    thereof" in clause (j) of section  2(i).   We         take the view that even   where the Rules prescribe that  no         colouring  matter  or  artificial  dye   shall  be  used  in         respect  of an article of food, clause (j) of  section  2(i)         would  apply  if it is found that some colouring  matter  or         artificial  dye    is  present in the  article.   Here,  the         linseed  oil sold by the appellants    contained  artificial         dye  despite  the prohibition in the Rules and  hence    the         case  was dearly covered by clause (j) of section  2(i)  and         the  linseed oil must be deemed to be adulterated under that         caluse. That   would exclude the applicability of the provi-         so to section (1), since   the offence in this view would be         one with respect to an article of   food deemed to be  adul-         terated under clause (j) of section 2(i).  The   appellants’         plea invoking the liberality of the provision enacted in the         proviso  to  section 16(1) must, in  the  circumstances,  be         rejected and   the minimum sentence of imprisonment for  six         months must be maintained.           The appellants then pleaded that in any event on the facts         and   circumstances of the present case the benefit of   the         Probation   of  Offenders Act 1958 should be given  to  them         and  they should not be   consigned to the rigours  of  jail         life.  This plea also does not impress   us.  It is no doubt         true  and  that was laid down by this Court in  the    first         pronouncement  made  by it on the subject in  Isher  Das  v.         State(1)   that the operation of the Probation Of  Offenders         Act, 1958 is  not   excluded in case of persons found guilty         of  offences under the Prevention of the  Food  Adulteration         Act,  1954.  To quote the  words  of  Krishna lyer,  3.,  in         P.K. Tejani v.M.R. Dange(2) "The rehabilatory purpose of the         Probation  of  Offenders  Act,  1958  is  pervasive   enough         technically  to take within its wings an offence even  under         the Act".  But in the very same decision in Isher Das’s case         (supra) this Court  sounded a note of caution which must  be         borne in mind:         "Adulteration  of  food is a menace to  public  health.  The         Prevention  of Food Adulteration Act has been  enacted  with         the aim of eradicating that anti-social evil and for  ensur-         ing  purity  in the articles of food. In view of  the  above         object  of the Act and the intention of the  legislature  as         revealed by the fact that a minimum sentence of imprisonment         for   a period of six months and a fine of rupees one  thou-         sand  has  been prescribed, the courts  should  not  lightly         resort  to the provisions of the Probation of Offenders  Act         in the case of persons above 21 years of age found guilty of         offences   under   the  Prevention  of   Food   Adulteration         Act  ....."               The imperatives of social defence must discourage  the         applicability of the probation principle.  No chances can be         taken by society with a man whose anti-social activites,  in         the guise of a respectable trade, jeopardise the health  and         well being of numerous innocent consumers.

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       (1) [1972] 3 S.C.R. 65.          (2) [1974] 2 S.C.R. 154.         600         The adulterator is a social risk.  It might be dangerous  to         leave  him  free  to carry on his  nefarious  activities  by         applying   the   probation principle to him.   Moreover,  it         must be remembered that adulteration is an economic  offence         prompted  by  profit  motive and it is not  likely  to  lend         itself  easily to therapeutic treatment by the  probationary         measure.   It  may be pointed out that the  Law   Commission         also  in its Forty Seventh Report recommended the  exclusion         of  applicability  of the probationary process  in  case  of         social  and economic offences and presumably in response  to         this  recommendation, the  Legislature has recently  amended         the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954 by introducing         section  20AA  providing  that nothing  contained   in   the         Probation of Offenders Act, 1958 or section 360 of the  Code         of Criminal Procedure, 1973 shall apply to a person convict-         ed  of an offence under the Act unless that person is  under         eighteen  years of age  This amendment of course  would  not         apply in the present case but it shows the legislative trend         which  it  would not be right for the court  to  ignore.  We         cannot,  therefore,  give the benefit of  the  Probation  of         Offenders  Act, 1958 to the appellants and release  them  on         probation.             We  accordingly  confirm the conviction   and   sentence         recorded against the appellants and dismiss the appeal.         P.H.P.                                     Appeal dismissed.                                         1         ?         601