Constitutional Status and Enforcement of the PFA Act:
The subject of the Prevention of Food Adulteration is in the concurrent list of the constitution.
However, in general, the enforcement of the Act is done by the State/U.T Governments. Each
State Government and Union Territory has created its own organisation for implementation of
the Act and Rules framed there under. The Central Government primarily plays an advisory role
in its implementation besides carrying out various statutory functions/duties assigned to it under
the various provisions of the Act.
Section 22A empowers the Central Government to give such directions as it may deem necessary
to a State Government regarding the implementation of the Act. Whereas, Section 23 empowers
the Central Government to make rules to carry out the provisions of the Act. In particular, and
without prejudice to the generality of the rule making power, the power of the Central
Government includes the one in clause (f). Further, Section 24 of the Act is the section which
grants rule making power to the State Government. The State Government may, after
consultation with the Committee, and subject to the condition of previous publication, there
under make rules for the purpose of giving effect to the provisions of the Act in matters not
falling within the purview of section 23.moreover, Sub section (2) of Section 24 grants power to
the State Government to make rules with regard to the powers and duties of the different
authorities under the Act. Prescription of forms of licences for the manufacture for sale, storage,
sale and distribution of articles of food, the conditions subject to which such licences may be
issued and the fees payable there for, analysis of any article of food or matter and provision for
further delegation of power by the State Government to the Food(Health) Authority or the
subordinate authorities are the matters covered within this delegated power. Thus there is
chances of conflict between centre and state.
Manner of interpretation of the Act
It is well-settled that wherever possible, without unreasonable stretching or straining, the
language of such a statute should be construed in a manner which would suppress the mischief,
advance the remedy, promote its object, prevent its subtle evasion and foil its artful
circumvention.
Whether the Act and Rules infringes Articles 14, 19(1)(g) and20(3) of Constitution of India
It is also argued that by the Act and the Rules, the guarantee of Art. 14 was infringed, but no
argument was presented before court independently of the argument relating to infringement of
the guarantee under Art. 19(1)(g), in support of the contention that the Act infringed the
guarantee of equality before the law or equal protection of the laws. The Act deals with the
regulation of a class of traders, and in view of the widespread malpractices, and the practical
difficulties of controlling those malpractices, stringent provisions have been made by the Act.
The classification is founded on an intelligible differentia and the differentia has a rational
relation to the object sought to be achieved. The provisions of the Act again do not invest
arbitrary authority upon those who are to administer the Act nor can it be said that the standards
prescribed are arbitrary. The Act also does not infringe the guarantee of Art. 20(3) of the,
Constitution. By that clause no person accused of any offence shall be compelled to be a witness
against himself. But by enacting that a plea by the vendor in a prosecution for an offence
pertaining to sale of adulterated or misbranded article of food, that he was ignorant of the nature,
substance or quality will not be a defence, the guarantee under Art. 20(3) is not infringed. The
vendor when charged with an offence is not thereby compelled to be a witness against himself.
Nor can it be said that by making the report of the Director of Central Food Laboratory
conclusive evidence of the facts stated therein, any such infringement is intended. The provision
has been made with a view to secure formal evidence of facts without requiring the Director to
remain present, and in' the interest of effective administration of the Act, the certificate signed by
the Director of the Central Food Laboratory is made final and conclusive evidence of the facts
stated therein. The Director is a highly placed official, an expert in determining the nature,
substance and quality of food, and is wholly disinterested in the result of any case coming before
the Courts. It is difficult to appreciate how conclusiveness attributed to the certificate of the
Director compels the vendor charged with an offence under the Act to be a witness.. As the
preamble of the Act indicates, "it is an Act to make provision for the prevention of adulteration
of food. Food’ is defined in S. 2(v) " Section 2(ia) defines what is 'adulterated food'
‘Food’, ‘Adulterated’ and ‘Misbranded’-A Conceptualization
As per PFA, Food includes everything, which is consumed by human beings or even used for
preparing items of human consumption. Thus cereals, oil, sugar, cooked food, drinks, spices,
colouring matters, flavouring matter etc. are all included in the category of food. It excludes
water and drugs. However, packaged natural water and packaged mineral water are considered to
be food.We ordinarily mean by adulteration to “debase, falsify by mixing with something
inferior or spurious”. By adulterated food, people also mean rotten, putrefied, insect infested or
poisonous food. As per the Act, a food is deemed to be adulterated:
(a) If the article sold by a vendor is not of the nature, substance or quality demanded by the
purchaser and is to his prejudice, or is not of the nature, substance or quality which it purports or
is represented to be.
(b) If the article contains any other substance, which affects, or if the article is so processed as to
affect, injuriously the nature, substance or quality thereof.
(c) If any inferior or cheaper substance has been substituted wholly or in part for the article so as
to affect injuriously the nature, substance or quality thereof.
(d) If any constituent of the article has been wholly or in part abstracted so as to affect
injuriously the nature, substance or quality thereof.
(e) If the article had been prepared, packed or kept under insanitary conditions whereby it has
become contaminated or injurious to health.
(f) If the article consists wholly or in part of any filthy, putrid, rotten, decomposed or diseased
animal or vegetable substance or is insect-infested or is otherwise unfit for human consumption.
(g) If the article is obtained from a diseased animal.
(h) If the article contains any poisonous or other ingredient which renders it injurious to health.
(i) If the container of the article is composed, whether wholly or in part, of any poisonous or
deleterious substance which renders its contents injurious to health.
(j) If any colouring matter other than prescribed in respect thereof is present in the article, or if
the amount of the prescribed colouring matter, which is present in the article are not within the
prescribed limits of variability.
(k) If the article contains any prohibited preservative or permitted preservative in excess of the
prescribed limits.
(l) If the quality or purity of the article falls below the prescribed standard or its constituents are
present in quantities not within the prescribed limits of variability, but, which renders it injurious
to health.
(m) If the quality or purity of the article falls below the prescribed standard or its constituents are
present in quantities not within the prescribed limits of variability, but which does not render it
injurious to health.
Provided that, where the quality or purity of the article, being primary food, has fallen below the
prescribed standards or its constituents are present in quantities not within the prescribed limits
of variability in either case, solely due to natural causes and beyond the control of human
agency, then, such article shall not be deemed to be adulterated within the meaning of this sub-
clause.
In "M. V. Joshi v. M. U. Shimpi8Supreme Court observed that If the quality or purity of butter falls
below the standard prescribed by the said rule or its constituents are in excess of the prescribed
limits of variability, it shall be deemed to be adulterated within the meaning of S. 2 of the
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act. If the prescribed standard is not attained, the statute treats
such butter, by fiction, as an adulterated food though in fact it is not adulterated
Broadly speaking, the definition covers situations where a food article is sub-standard, or
contains injurious ingredients or has become injurious to health by reason of packing or keeping
under unsanitary conditions or having become contaminated or is otherwise not fit for
consumption. The definition also extends to cases of articles which fall below. Under the Act an
article in order to be deemed to be adulterated need not be necessarily be poisonous or injurious
to the health. Indeed it may even be conducive to health in some cases; the offence is complete
when a substance is used for mixing is not which is not recognized by law9. Thus, It is
undoubtedly a social evil which can be regarded as the outcome of an interaction between a
number of social, economic, technical and human behavioural factors.
This law replaces all local food adulteration laws where they exist and also applies to those
States where there were no local laws on the subject. Among others, it provides for-
(i) a Central food Laboratory to which food samples can be referred to for final
opinion in disputed cases10
(ii) a Central Committee for food Standards consisting of representatives of Central and State
Government to advise on matters arising from the administration of Act,11 and
8 AIR 1961 SC 1494
9In re, S. Moses, AIR 1961 SC 631
10 clause 4
11 clause 3
(iii) the vesting in the Central Government of the rule-making power regarding standards of
quality for the articles of food and certain other matters12.
The provisions of the Act are very stringent. it is necessary to briefly notice some of the relevant
provisions of the Act . Section 7, upon which most of the arguments turn, needs to be noticed.
Section 7 of the Act provides that ‘no person shall himself or by any person on his behalf
manufacture for sale, or store, sell or distribute-
(i) any adulterated food;
(ii) any misbranded food;
(iii) any article of food for the sale of which a licence is prescribed, except in accordance with
the conditions of the licence;
(iv) any article of food for the sale of which is for the time being prohibited by the Food (Health)
Authority in the interest of public health; or
(v) any article of food in contravention of any other' provision of this Act or of any rule made
there under.’
Act provides that a food inspector appointed13 under of the Act is authorised to take samples of
any articles of food from any person selling such article, or from any person who is in the course
of conveying, delivering or preparing to deliver such article to a purchaser or consignee, or from
a consignee after delivery of any such article to him, and to send such sample for analysis to, the
public analyst, and with the previous approval of the health officer having jurisdiction in the
local area concerned, or with the previous approval of the Food (Health) Authority to prohibit the
sale of any article of food in the interest of public health.14 The procedure prescribed by the Act
for investigation and prosecution of offences has to be followed and those prescribed by the code
of criminal procedure can not in view of section 5(2) thereof, be restored to. Hence it excludes
the ordinary jurisdiction of police officer under the said Act15.
Act provides that any document purporting to be a report signed by a public analyst, unless it has
been superseded under sub-section (3), or any document purporting to be a certificate signed by
the Director of the Central Food Laboratory, may be used as evidence of the facts stated therein
in any proceeding under this Act or under sections 272 to 276 of the Indian Penal Code.16
12 clause 22
13 Section 9 ( 1 )
14 section 10
15A Treaties On Economic And Social Offences:Dr.B.K.Sharma, Dr Vijay Nagpal
16 Sub-section (5) of s. 13
However, any such 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.
Section 16(1) prescribes the penalties for the violation of provisions contained in the Act. One of
such provision provides that ‘if any person-
(a) whether by himself or by any other person on his behalf imports into India or manufactures
for sale, or stores, sells or distributes any article of food-
(i) which is adulterated or misbranded or the sale of which is prohibited by the Food (Health)
authority in the interest of public health;
(ii)other than an article of food referred to in subclause (i), incontravention of any of the
provisions of this Act or of any rule madethere under; or
and
(f) whether by himself or by any other person on his behalf gives to the vendor a false warranty
in writing in respect of any article of food sold by him, he shall in addition to the penalty to
which he may be liable under the provisions of section 6, be punish-able with imprisonment for a
term which shall not be less than six months but which may extend to six years, and with fine
which shall not be less than one thousand rupees.17
Section 19 deals with the defences which may, and which may not, be allowed in prosecutions
under the Act. It provides that ‘it shall be no defence in a prosecution for an offence pertaining to
the sale of any adulterated or misbranded article of food to allege merely that the vendor was
ignorant of the nature, substance or quality of the food sold by him or that the purchaser having
purchased any article for analysis was not prejudiced by the sale.18 Similarly, a vendor shall not
be deemed to have committed an offence pertaining to the sale of any adulterated or misbranded
article of food if he proves:
(a) that he purchased the article of food-
(i) in a case where a licence is prescribed for the sale thereof, from a duly licensed manufacturer,
distributor or dealer;
(ii) in any other case, from any manufacturer, distributor or dealer with a written warranty in the
prescribed form; and
17cls. (a) & (f)
18Section 19 (1)
(b) that the article of food while in his possession was properly stored and that he sold it in the
same state as he purchased it. (3)Any person by whom a warranty as is referred to in section 14
is alleged to have been given shall be entitled to appear at the hearing and give evidence.
Whether the restriction imposed is reasonable or unreasonable
It is argued that, the Act imposes unreasonable restrictions, because it creates absolute liability
by S. 16(1) (a) and imposes severe penalties for storage and sale or distribution of articles of
food found to be adulterated or misbranded, or prohibited by law; it prescribes standards which
are technical, and absolute, and for the slightest departure there from the trader is liable to be
prosecuted and punished, the Act is unconstitutional.19 It is also argued that it is impossible for an
ordinary trader without the assistance of an expert technician to ascertain whether the articles of
food purchased by him comply with the prescribed standards, and that in prescribing the
standards of quality the imperceptible changes which take place in foodstuffs by passage of time,
are not taken into account.
Repelling all such argument the court cleared the position and observed that ‘the restrictions
imposed upon the conduct of business by traders in foodstuffs cannot be deemed unreasonable.
By s. 16(1) provision is made for imposing penalties, among other acts, for storage, sale or
distribution of articles of food which are adulterated or misbranded, or sale of which is
prohibited by the Food (Health) authority in the interest of the public health, or is in
contravention of the Act or the rules. The Act, it is true, does not make some blame-worthy
mental condition constituted by knowledge or intention relating to the nature of the article stored,
sold or distributed, an ingredient of the offence. Unless the case falls within sub-s. (2) of s. 19, if
sale, storage or distribution is established, intention to sell articles or knowledge that the articles
are adulterated, misbranded, or prohibited need no, be proved by the prosecutor to bring home
the charge. Sub- section (1) of s. 19 provides that it is no defence in a charge, for an offence
pertaining to the sale of any adulterated or misbranded article of food to allege merely that the
vendor was ignorant of the nature, substance or quality of the food sold by him, or that the
purchaser having purchased any article for analysis was not prejudiced by the sale. By that clause
a bare plea of ignorance by a trader about the nature, substance or quality of the food sold by him
is not a defence in a prosecution for the offence pertaining to the sale of any adulterated food nor
that the article was, purchased for analysis. But in considering whether creation of absolute
19 Andhra Pradesh Grain & Seed Merchants' Association etc. v. Union of India, AIR 1971 SC 2346
liability amounts to imposing unreasonable restrictions, the Court has to strike a balance between
the individual right and public weal. The Courts will not strike down an Act as imposing
unreasonable restrictions merely because it creates an absolute liability for infringement of the
law which involves grave danger to public health. The Courts will undoubtedly consider whether
without imposing absolute liability the object of the statute could be reasonably secured. For that
purpose the Court will consider the object of, the Act, apprehended danger to the public interest,
arising out of the activity if not controlled and the, possibility of achieving the intended results
by less stringent provisions. The nature of the trade in foodstuffs, the channels of supply and the
movement of goods from trader to trader and fertile sources of adulteration and misbranding
make it extremely difficult in a large majority of cases to establish affirmatively that storage or
sale of adulterated or misbranded foodstuff was with a guilty mind. Provisions in the statute book
creating absolute liability for sale of adulterated food are fairly common.
It may be noted here that similar provisions regarding strict liability is imposed under U.K law.
Under section 3(1) of the English, Foods & Drugs Act, 1938, absolute duty has been on a dealer
in foodstuff regardless of negligence. Such duty were held constitutional as well as reasonable.20
The same provision is repeated in S. 2 of the "Food and Drugs Act, 1955.
Strict Liability and requirement of proof of Mens-rea—
one of the essential element of a crime, is mensreaor guilty mind. In the entire field of criminal
law there is no important doctrine than that of mensrea. The fundamental principle of English
Criminal jurisprudence, is “actus non facitreum nisi mens sit rea”. Mensreais the state of mind
indicating culpability, which is required by statute as an element of a crime. It is commonly
taken to mean some blameworthy mental condition, whether constituted by intention or
knowledge or otherwise, the absence of which on any particular occasion negatives the intention
of a crime. The term ‘mensrea’ has been given to volition, which is the motive force behind the
criminal act. It is also one of the essential ingredients of criminal liability. As a general rule
every crime requires a mental element, the nature of which will depend upon the definition of the
particular crime in question. Even in crimes of strict liability some mental element is required.
the question whether common law requirement of mensrea must imported into every crime
defined in the statute even where it is not expressly mentioned as an ingredient, has been
discussed in a number of cases both in England and India.
There are two school of thoughts one embodied in the judgement of Wright in Sherras v. de
rutzen21 that in every statute mensrea is to be implied unless contrary is shown and second is that
20 Lindley v. George W. Horner & Co. Ltd 1950-1 All ER 234;(1) and Lamb v. Sunderland and District Creamery Ltd.
1951-1 All ER 923
21(1895) 1 Q.B. 1918.
of Kenndy . L.J. in Hobbs v Winchester corporation22 that you ought to construe the statute
literally unless there is something to show that mensrea is required.
In Russell on Crime,23 it is stated... there is a presumption that in any statutory crime the common
law mental element, mensrea, is an essential ingredient.
On the question how to rebut this presumption, the policy of the courts is unpredictable. In
Halsbury’sLaws of England, 24 the following passage appears: A statutory crime may or may not
contain an express definition of the necessary state of mind. A statute may require a specific
intention, malice, knowledge, wilfulness, or recklessness. On the other hand, it may be silent as
to any requirement of mensrea, and in such a case in order to determine whether or not mensrea,
is an essential element of the offence it is necessary to look at the objects and terms of the
statute. This passage also indicates that the absence of any specific mention of a state of mind as
an ingredient of an offence in a statute is not decisive of the question whether mensrea, is an
ingredient of the offence or not: it depends upon the object and the terms of the statute. So too,
Archbold25says much to the same effect that:
It has always been a principle of the common law that mensrea, is an essential element in the
commission of any criminal offence against the common law.... In the case of statutory offences
it depends on the effect of the statute.... .
The leading case on the subject is Sherrasv. De Rutzen26There is a presumption that mensrea, an
evil intention, or a knowledge of the wrongfulness of the act, is an essential ingredient in every
offence; but that presumption is liable to be displaced either by the words of the statute creating
the offence or by the subject-matter with which it deals, and both must be considered.
The Privy Council in Jacob Bruhn v. King on the Prosecution of the Opium Farmer27
observed that mensrea, was not really excluded but the burden of proof to negative mensrea,
was placed upon the accused.
Lord Coleridge, J., cited with approval the following passage of Channell, J., in
22 (1910) 2 K.B. 471
2311th Edn., Vol. 1, at p. 64:
243rd Edn., Vol. 10, in para 508, at p. 273
25in book on Criminal Pleading, Evidence and Practice, 35th Edn.,at p. 48
26[(1895) 1 QB 918, 921].
27[LR(1909) AC 317, 324]
Pearks, Gunston& Tee, Ltd. v. Ward28: But there are exceptions to this rule in the case of quasi-
criminal offences, as they may be termed, that is to say, where certain acts are forbidden by law
under a penalty, possibly even under a personal penalty, such as imprisonment, at any rate in
default of payment, of a fine; and the reason for this is, that the legislature has thought it so
important to prevent the particular act from being committed that it absolutely forbids it to be
done; and if it is done the offender is liable to a penalty whether he had any mensrea, or not, and
whether or not he intended to commit a breach of the law. Where the act is of this character then
the master, who, in fact, has done the forbidden thing through his servant, is responsible and is
liable to a penalty. There is no reason why he should not be, because the very object of the
legislature was to forbid the thing absolutely.
This decision states the same principle in a different form. It also places emphasis on the terms
and the object of the statute in the context of the question whether mensrea, is excluded or not.
The decision in Rex v. Jacobs 29 illustrates that on a construction of the particular statute, having
regard to the object of the statute and its terms, the Court may hold that mensrea, is not a
necessary ingredient of the offence. In Brendv. Wood 30 dealing with an emergency legislation
relating to fuel rationing, Goddard, C.J., observed: There are statutes and regulations in which
Parliament has been not to create offences and make people responsible before criminal courts
although there is an absence of mensrea, but it is certainly not the Court’s duty to be acute to find
that mensrea, is not a constituent part of a crime. It is of the utmost importance for the protection
of the liberty of the subject that a Court should always bear in mind that, unless a statute, either
clearly or by necessary implication, rules out mensrea, as a constituent part of a crime, the Court
should not find a man guilty of an offence against the criminal law unless he has a guilty mind.
In Srinivas Mall Bairoloyav. King-Emperor 31Lord Parcq, speaking for the Board, approved the
view expressed by Goddard, C.J., in Brendv. Wood and observed:Their Lordships agree with the
view expressed by the Lord ChiefJustice of England, when he said: ‘It is in my opinion the
utmost importance for theprotection of the liberty of the subject that a court should always bear
in mind that, unlessthe statute, either clearly or by necessary implication, rules out mensrea, as a
constituentpart of a crime, a defendant should not be found guilty of an offence against the
criminallaw unless he has got a guilty mind.’
28[(1902) 71 LJ KB 656]
29[(1944) KB 417]
30[(1946) 62
The Times LR 462, 463]
31[(1947) ILR 26 Pat 460, 469 (PC)]
The acceptance of the principle by the Judicial Committee that mensrea, is a constituent part of a
crime unless the statute clearly or by necessary implication excludes the same, and the
application of the same to a welfare measure is an indication that the Court shall not be astute in
construing a statute to ignore mensrea, on a slippery ground of a welfare measure unless the
statute compels it to do so. Indeed, in that case the Judicial Committee refused to accept the
argument that where there is an absolute prohibition, no question of mensrea, arises. Wills, J. in
R. v. Tolson32: Although, prima facie and as a general rule, there must be a mind at fault before
there can be a crime, it is not an inflexible rule, and a statute may relate to such a subject-matter
and may be so framed as to make an act criminal whether there has been any intention to break
the law or otherwise to do wrong, or not.
Chagla, C.J., speaking for the Division Bench, after considering the relevant English and Indian
decisions, observed: It is not suggested that even in the class of cases where the offence is not a
minor offence or not quasi-criminal that the legislature cannot introduce the principle of
vicarious liability and make the master liable for the acts of his servant although the master has
no mensrea, and was morally innocent. But the Courts must be reluctant to come to such a
conclusion unless the clear words of the statute compel them to do so or they are driven to that
conclusion by necessary implication.
It is a well settled principle of common law that mensreais an essential ingredient of a criminal
offence. Doubtless a statute can exclude that element, but it is a sound rule of construction
adopted in England and also accepted in India to construe a statutory provision creating an
offence in conformity with the common law rather than against unless the statute expressly or by
necessary implication excluded mensrea. To put it differently, there is a presumption that
mensrea, is an essential ingredient of a statutory offence; but this may be rebutted by the express
words of a statute creating the offence or by necessary implication.
But the mere fact that the object of a statute is to promote welfare activities or to eradicate grave
social evils is in itself not decisive of the question whether the element of guilty mind is
excluded from the ingredients of the offence. It is also necessary to enquire whether a statute by
putting a person under strict liability, helps him to assist the State in the enforcement of the law:
can he do anything to promote the observance of the law? Mensrea, by necessary implication can
be excluded from a statute only where it is absolutely clear that the implementation of the object
of a statute would otherwise be defeated and its exclusion enables those put under strict liability
by their act or omission to assist the promotion of the law. The nature of mensrea that will be
implied in a statute creating an offence depends upon the object of the Act and the provisions
thereof.
In Mousell Brothers v. London and North Western Rail Co.33Atkin, J., observed:
32[23 QBD 168]
33[1917] 2 K.B. 845.
"...... yet the legislature may prohibit an act or enforce a duty in such words to make the
prohibitions or the duty absolute :....... To ascertain whether a particular Act of Parliament has
that effect or not, regard must be had to the object of the statute, the words used, the nature of the
duty laid down, the person whom it is imposed, the person by whom it would in ordinary
circumstances be performed, and the person upon whom the penalty is imposed."
In Quality Dairies (York) Ltd. v. Pedley34 the Court of Appeal held thatRegulation-26(1) of the
Mill and Dairies Regulation, 1949, requiring a distributor to ensure that every vessel used as a
container for milk shall be in a state of thorough cleanliness, imposed an absolute liability.
It is true that for the protection of the liberty of the citizen, in the definition of offences,
blameworthy mental condition is ordinarily an ingredient either by express enactment or clear
implication: but in Acts enacted to deal with a grave social evil, or for. Ensuring public welfare,
especially in offences against public health, e.g., statutes regulating storage or sale of articles of
food and drink, sale of drugs, sale of controlled or scare commodities, it is often found necessary
in the larger public interest to provide for imposition of liability without proof of a guilty mind.
If from the scheme of the Act it appears that compliance with the regulatory provisions will be
promoted by imposing an absolute liability, and that it cannot otherwise be reasonably ensured,
the Court will be justified in holding that the restriction on the right of the trader is in the interest
of the general public. Adulteration and misbranding of foodstuffs is a rampant evil and a statute
calculated to control that evil is indisputably in the interest of the general public : The statute
imposing restrictions upon traders will not be deemed unreasonable merely because it makes a
departure from the normal structure of statutes enunciating offences and prescribing
punishments. By sub-s. (2) of S. 19, even in respect of the absolute offence, the Parliament has
enacted that on proof of certain facts, criminal liability will be excluded. Thereby a vendor is not
deemed to have committed an offence pertaining to the sale of any adulterated or misbranded
article of food if he proves that the purchased the article of food from a duly licensed
manufacturer, distributor or dealer in a case where a licence is prescribed for the sale thereof, and
in any other case from any manufacturer, distributor of dealer with a written warranty in the
prescribed form, provided the article of food while in his possession was properly stored and that
he sold it in the same state as the purchased it. The argument of counsel for the petitioners that
the provision that a retail seller who opens a container of a branded article of food loses even the
limited protection under s. 19(2) is without substance.Clause (b) of sub-s. (2) of s. 19 does not
provide, nor does it imply, that if the container of a branded article is opened, the article of food
ceases to be in them same state in which the vendor purchased it. If the article of food' is sold in
the same condition in which it was purchased from a licensed manufacturer or dealer, or was
34[1952] 1 All.E..R. 380.
purchased with a warranty, the vendor will not lose the protection of sub-s. (2) of S. 19 merely
because he opened the container. If the vendor has obtained the article from a licensed
manufacturer, distributor or dealer or from a manufacturer, distributor or dealer with a warranty,
he is protected, provided he has property stored the article and sells it in the same state as he
purchased the article, even if it turns out that the article was adulterated or misbranded. The Act
does not dispense with proof that the article of food is adulterated, misbranded or that its sale is
prohibited: it enacts that a vendor selling articles of food adulterated or misbranded cannot plead
merely that hewas ignorant of the nature, substance or quality of the goods. A statute enacted by
the Parliament in the interest of public health (which is generally made in similar statutes
elsewhere) imposing liability for an offence without proof of a guilty mind does not per se
imposerestrictions on the, freedom to carry on trade which are unreasonable.
It is true that stringent penalties are provided under S. 16 (1)(a). A vendor of adulterated,
misbranded or prohibited articles of food is punishable with imprisonment for a term which shall
not, in the absence of adequate and special reasons, be less than six months, and which may
extend to six years, and with fine which shall not be less than one thousand rupees. But for the
protection of the public by ensuring the purity of articles of.food supplied to the people and
preventing malpractices by the traders in articles of food, severity of the penalties is not so
disproportionate to the gravity of the offence that it may be deemed unreasonable.
The Court in State of Uttar Pradesh v. Kartar Singh35 in which in dealing with an argument
of invalidity of the rule setting out standards under the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act
observed :
"The standards themselves, it would be noticed, have been prescribed by the Central Government
on the advice of a Committee which included in its composition persons considered experts in
the field of food technology and food analysis. In the circumstances, if the rule has to be struck
down as imposing unreasonable or discriminatory standards, it could not be done merely on any
a priori reasoning but only as a result of materials placed before the Court by way of scientific
analysis. . . . That where a party seeks to impeach the validity of a rule made by a competent
authority . .. . . . the burden is on him to plead and prove the infirmity is too well established to
need elaboration. If, therefore, the respondent desired to challenge the validity of the rule on the
ground either of its unreasonableness or-its discriminatory nature, he had to lay a foundation for
it by setting out the facts necessary to sustain such a plea and adduce cogent and convincing
evidence to make out his case, for there is a presumption that every factor which is relevant or
35 (1) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 679.
material has been taken into account in formulating the classification of the zones and the,
prescription of the minimum standards to each zone, and where we have a rule framed with the
assistance of a Committee containing experts such as the one constituted under s. 3 of the Act,
that presumption is strong, if not overwhelming."
Enforcement agency
The law, previously enforced by the Director General of Health Services, Department of Health
(DH), Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MHFW), Government of India (GOI), is now
enforced by the FSSAI. The Central Committee of Food Safety (CCFS) and Directorate General
of Health Services, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare are the primary policy making bodies
that advise Central and State Governments regarding the administration of the Act and developed
standards relating to the Act.
In India, a three-tier system is in vogue for ensuring food quality and food safety. The State
Governments and local bodies in Corporation and Municipalities implement the provisions of the
Act. It is the responsibility of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare to liase with the
national and international food quality control organisation, namely the Bureau of Indian
Standards (BIS) which is associated with the certification of the processed food articles, the
Directorate of Marketing and Inspection (DMI), the Ministry of Food Processing Industries as
well as the Codex Alimentarius Commission. It also includes in its role the creation of consumer
awareness, which is hardly evident. Enforcement of the food laws primarily rests with the
State/UTs. There are 28 States and 7 Union Territories in the country. The implementation of the
Act in most of the States is under the administrative control of the Directorate of Health
Services, whereas, in a few States, the implementation is being combined with Drugs
Administration under the Joint Food and Drug Administration. The implementation has been left
to the administrative setup of the States, but it has been stressed on the States that whatever the
structure be, there should be a whole-time Senior Officer duly qualified and experienced in Food
Science, Food Technology, Food Analysis with other supporting officers and inspectors. State
Governments are also empowered to make rules laying down details of licensing conditions of
food, the establishments of food industries and prescribing licence fees/analysis fees. Under the
PFA, Food Inspectors are appointed by the State governments. They are often a part of the Food
and Drug Administration or Local Health Authority. The Food Inspector has the power to take a
sample of the food from the place of manufacture, storage or from seller and send it to a Public
Analyst for testing36. Public Analysts have been created under the Act to analyse sample of
article of food sent to them.37
36Section 10
37Section 8
A Food Inspector who intends to take a sample has to disclose his identity and inform the retailer
his intention of taking a particular product as a sample for analysis38. The Food Inspector takes
three samples, which are to be sealed and labelled39. He sends one sample with a memorandum to
a Public Analyst40. The other two samples are deposited in the office of the department to which
the Food Inspector belongs41. The Public Analyst sends his report42. If the Analyst’s report
declares that the sample is not in conformity with the provisions of the PFA, the Food Inspector
initiates prosecution of the PFA, the Food Inspector initiates prosecution in the court of a first
class magistrate. The Food Inspector while taking sample asks the retailer to disclose the name of
the wholesaler/distributor. From the package, the Food Inspector also gets to know the name of
the manufacturer and distributor. Thus, he knows the entire chain. The Food Inspector can, and
often does, make all the parties in the chain accused in the first instance itself. Along with
initiating prosecution, the Food Inspector sends letters to manufacturer, distributor and
wholesaler. The letter informs that a case has been initiated and that the accused can make an
application before the court to have their sample re-tested by a Central Food Laboratory within
ten days from the receipt of the letter. The analysis by the Central Food Laboratory is considered
superior to the report of the Public Analyst43. It is a right of the accused to get a sample re-tested
from a Central Food Laboratory. If an accused makes an application to the Magistrate, the court
directs the department to produce the remaining two samples. After inspecting the seal, the court
sends one sample to a Central Food Laboratory. The Central Food Laboratory sends the report. If
the report declares the sample to be in conformity with the provisions of the PFA and Rules, the
court discharges the case. If the sample fails, trial by the magistrate starts.
Position of corporate bodies
Corporate bodies like companies, co-operatives or firms are also persons in the eyes of the law.
These can be prosecuted and punished as corporate bodies under the Act. A fine can always be
38Section 11(a)
39Section 11(b)
40Section 11©(i)
41Section 11 ©(ii)
42Section 13(1)
43Section 13(3)
paid out of their corporate account. However, a company or co-operative is not a real person who
can be imprisoned. There have to be specific persons who can be held responsible. The PFA
makes provisions that corporate bodies can authorise a person, like a director, manager or
secretary to exercise all such powers and take all steps to prevent food adulteration and inform
the local (health) authority of such an authorisation. The authorised person is called a PFA
nominee. The nominee represents the organisation for all matters dealing with the PFA. He is
held responsible for any violation committed by the firm. If an organisation has not appointed a
nominee, the court holds the person who was responsible to the corporate body for the
commission or omission of the action, which led to the violation of the PFA. In State Bank of
Hyderabad v. T. Meenakshi and Anodr44the court observed that no doubt the corporation can also
incur a criminal liability e.g. various statute do create a criminal liability on the part of the bodies
corporate violate any laws. But it must also be remembered that those very statutes which
creates the criminal liability against the body corporate do normally specify that either the officer
or the director as the case may be of such body corporate to be prosecuted and punished in the
case when the offence is committed by the body corporate.
Nature of the Provision
It is made a criminal offence because it is an important characteristic of criminal law is that its
enforcement is by government investigations and prosecution. Therefore with minor exceptions,
government has chosen to reserve for itself the role of agent of social change in India. Although
4404 BC 19
food adulteration was already a crime under Indian penal code, the Act was enacted as an
additional statute tailored to the needs of punishing and eliminating this socio economic crime.
The provisions of the Act are mandatory and contravention of the rules can theoretically lead to
both fine and imprisonment. But this happens rarely in practice.
Criticisms and suggestions
The law commission report shows that the act to be overall most inadequate statute , regulating a
social economic offence and most inclusive of the special provision necessary for combating
these offences. The question raised is why the Act despite its excellence as a statute, has been
unsuccessful in curbing adulteration.
According to some its judiciary fault because judiciary has been unnecessary obstructionist in
interpreting legal technicalities to prevent successful prosecution of food adulterations. Further,
it is alleged that judges in sentencing white collar criminals including food adulteration, have
failed to meet out sentences commensurate with seriousness of the offence45. Other reason
includes insufficient financing46, Corruption among government employee, too few and under
equipped laboratory facilities for analysing food samples, shortage of food spectres, apparatus
for enforcement is so inadequate that rural areas have almost no food inspectors and state and
union territory even do not have even one laboratory that analyzes the food samples. This is
made clear from following data;
Performance under Prevention of Food Adulteration47
Sl.No Particulars 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2009-10 2010-11(
1 No.of samples
2 No.Found 761 545 419 547 923 25
analysed 4277 3968 3641 3639 4996 310
46First three five year plans did not mention prevention of food adulteration.the fourth plan iniyialy suggested
allocation ruppes twelve crores , reduced this to four crores and much of this four crores never actually
appropriated.similarly food and agriculytural organization showed concern about inadequacy of the fund.
47http://www.tnhealth.org/dphpmpfa.htm
Adulterated
3 % of
Adulteration 17.79 13.74 11.50 15.03 18.47 8.06
Working of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954
in different States / UTs. - 2002 (commodity wise)
(E) No. of Samples Examined,
(A) No. of Samples found Adulterated/Misbranded.
NA Information not Available.
There is now a provision under the Prevention of Food Adulteration (PFA) Act and Rules that in
extreme cases, life imprisonment could be awarded to those who commit food adulteration which
is extremely injurious for health. Though this provision exists, so far not one person has been
given this sentence.
The Softdrink pesticide controversy further affirms it.CSE (Centre for Science and
Environment's) blew the lid off the matter when it released a report on pesticide residues in 12
major cold drink brands sold in and around Delhi48. CSE had pointed out that regulations for
pesticide levels in soft drinks are weak in the country. Neither the Prevention of Food
Adulteration Act, 1954, nor the Fruit Products Order explicitly deals with the subject. The study
also highlighted the fact that India has no standards to define ‘clean' or ‘potable' water, and asked
the Union government to put in place legally enforceable water quality norms. The Joint
Parliamentary Committee also affirmed the same.
Further, The PFA lays emphasis on the prevention of adulteration of foods and is not
comprehensive enough to deal with the contamination of food through the animal feed and the
food chain. The apex industrial bodies like Confederation of Indian Industries (CII), Federation
of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) and Central Food Technological
Research Institute (CIFTRI) have very strongly called for a complete overhaul of PFA in order to
harmonise it with the international standards set by the Codex Alimentarius Commission.
The PFA does not always keep pace with advances in the food processing sector. Moreover, PFA
rules sometimes appear to be drafted in a manner that goes beyond the mere establishment of
minimum product quality specifications, by prescribing recipes for how food products are to be
manufactured.
Obviously, this demand from the food industry is to protect the health of the people but at the
same time there is a concern that food safety standards by other countries are being used against
India as non-tariff barriers to stop/restrict exports from India to the developed countries.
If we take a cursory look at the quality of food commodity being sold in the domestic market and
PFA functionaries, who are more than 6000 Food Inspectors, the domestic market challenges
towards food safety standards come to the fore. These typical Food Inspectors very often have no
scientific background, but orientation is towards legal technicalities. Any re-orientation of food
laws may not have any incentive to perform their duties diligently and honestly.
In theory, producers or traders who supply adulterated/contaminated produce can be taken to
court and fined or imprisoned, if found guilty. But there are some problems in implementing the
Act. It is a very long way from the central food laboratory to the court room and the whole Act is
unable to guarantee food safety at one hand and it also does not restrict import of unhygienic,
expired, badly labelled products from other countries. It is very important that the sampling
procedure is standardised and it is transparent which does not happen in PFA. The procedure for
formulation of standards should be participatory and all stake-holders should be consulted. With
regard to certification the emphasis should be on process control rather than the final product
48 (see:"COLANISATION'S DIRTY DOZEN", Down To Earth, August 15, 2003)
inspection. The procedures for inspection and drawing samples should be laid down in
accordance with the standards prescribed and should be in tune with the international practice.
The appeals process, however, is cumbersome and time consuming. All imported products must
adhere to the rules as specified in the regulation, including the labelling and marking
requirements.
Indian food laws are mostly archaic and the occasional law that does appear attractive seems
so only on paper. It is due to the lack of coordination among the various ministries. As a
remedial measure, it is argued for the creation of one central food regulatory authority that
will ensure formulation of more workable laws.
There should streamline of the laws to avoid overlaps in product coverage. For instance,
quality standards for canned fruit products are set by the FPO, the Agricultural Produce
(Grading and Marketing) Act, 1937, and the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act (PFA),
1954. Moreover, under the PFA, the offence and the punishment are the same whether the
adulteration is grave or minor. What is more, it specifies a list of additives that can be used
in food products, thereby making the use of anything else a case of adulteration49.
It is to be noted, that in the US, only two agencies control most of the food regulations.
Though the US has many laws and sub-agencies involved in implementing food regulations,
there is a clear understanding about the jurisdictions and responsibilities of each. Same
should be adopted in India.
On adapting foreign laws, the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP50) food
safety system should be made a norm in the domestic market.
Further, quality control should be issued at the micro level — the plant level and the supply
chain.
49 TAKING a cue from the Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) controversy, the government has decided to make changes
in the level of monosodium glutamate permitted in food.
It was found that the present one per cent limit allowed under the Prevention of Food Adulteration A (PFA), 1976
(amended) was even lower than the natural level found in so fruits and vegetables. The PFA does not clarify
whether the one per cent level is the amount in addition to that naturally present or is the total amount found The
Act is being reviewed as it contains so many outdated provisions. The PFA doe" not permit the entry of diet Coke
ano diet Pepsi as they contain a substance called aspertin. There is a fee[Z" among government officials KFC
controversy has adversely affected the inflow of foreign investment.
50The HACCP, which has its origins in the US National Aeronautical and Space Application (NASA) Center, is a system
that looks out for potential risks at critical points in the production cycle and then identifies appropriate control
and monitoring mechanisms to ensure safety of the product. In NASA, it was used as a way of guaranteeing the
food provided to astronauts in the 1960s. Now, it is mostly used by the food industry.
Conclusion
The act is in at least one sense, perfectly representative of the nation’s approach to combat social
problem confronted with the social problem, the government has constituently chosen to enact a
Adulterant Foods Commonly
criminal law banning the anti social conduct an important characteristic of crime.
The enforcers which mean the government, municipal bodies and all others responsible directly
or indirectly with the control of food adulteration will opine that the control of this menace needs
Lathyrussativus
a number of measures; only legal enforcement will not be enough. The basic requirements are
providing adequate food supply at a reasonable price, setting up of realistic food standards which
(Khesari dal)
are enforceable and which can be attained by majority of the traders (not only the big food
industries but the common agricultural producers, traders and the medium and petty food
processor), the minimum basic honesty on the part of the traders and the law enforcers, a band of
committed inspectorate staff and of course, a harsh deterrent punishment for those who commit
this crime.In the past five decades, the nature of food industry has changed. The market for
processed and pre-packed food has expanded tremendously. The food industry deploys
sophisticated and expensive food processing technology. There has been a revolution in creation
and use of newer packaging materials to give protection to articles of food. The law needs to be
revised to take stock of these practices. Law should not only continue to deter food adulterators,
but it should also be revised to be optimum in its effect, severe on violators and facilitators to
others.
The consumers' view is certainly most important because the prevention of food adulteration
machinery is designed for their benefit. The consumers feel by and large that an honest
enforcement will certainly reduce the crime and along with that is the need to award harsh
punishment, not only the provision of punishment under the law. Consumers can play a very
vital role in food adulteration thus consumer awareness needs to be done.
Diseases & Health
Involved
Effects
Mixed in other pulses like
cow pea (arhar/toor dal) or
as Khesari dal alone
Lathyrism (crippling
spastic paraplegia or
Lower limb paralyses)Khesari
Dal has a toxic Amino acid
APPENDIX-I
Stearin (fat derived
from palm oil)
& tallow (animal
fat)
Oxytocin hormone
injection
(Administered to
cattle to increase
the milk output)
Washing powder Ice Cream Gastric irritation leading
Spurious desi ghee
(clarified butter), yellow
butter
Traces reported from
Bovine Milk samples
known as Beta oxalyl amino
alanine. Cases Widely
reported from Bihar and
parts of U.P
Digestive problems,
prolonged usage may
cause accumulation of
cholesterol in the blood
vessels
Even traces are enough
to cause
Abortions, still births,
sterility & kidney damage
Argemone seeds
Argemone oil
Mustard seeds
And oil
Responsible for the Dropsy
outbreak in India during the
nineties
to peptic ulcers in
extreme cases
Epidemic dropsy,
Glaucoma,
Cardiac arrest
Methanol Cheap Alcoholic liquors.
Responsible for Hooch tragedy
and other similar instances
throughout the country.
Food grains, pulses etc. Damage digestive tract
Blurred vision, blindness,
death
Sand, marble chips,
stones, filth
Foreign leaves or
exhausted tea
leaves, saw dust
artificially coloured
Molasses Honey Digestive problems
Chalk powder Sugar, salt Contaminated chalk
Tea Injurious to health,
cancer
powder may contain
spores of pathogens like
ascaris, tapeworm
TCP Oils Paralysis
Rancid (spoilt due
to microbial action)
oil
Oils Destroys vitamin A and
E
Artificially
coloured foreign
seeds, papaya seeds
Calcium carbide
Used for artificially
ripening banana,
mangoes ect.
As a substitute for cumin
seed,
Poppy seed, blackpepper
Traces detected in fruits like
banana, mangoes etc.
Injurious to health
Consumption of such
fruits leads to
Diarrhoea
Ulcers,
Miscarriages
Mineral oil (white
oil, petroleum
fractions) & linseed
oil
Edible oils and fats, Cancer
Castor oil Groundnut oil Can cause abortion in
Mobile oil Used to impart a shiny
appearance to vegetables
like brinjal, tomatoes etc.
pregnant women when
amount adulterated goes
beyond 0.7 mg/kg of
body weight.
Harmful for the
Gastrointestinal also
causes respiratory
problems
Deleterious
chemicals
(Food colours,
additives)
Lead chromate Turmeric whole and
Foods involved Diseases/
Health effects
Anemia, abortion,
paralysis, brain damage
Metanil Yellow
(Not permitted by
the PFA*)
Rhodamin –B
(Not permitted by
the PFA*)
powdered, mixed spices,
pulses
Ice Creams, Candies,
Sweets like
Laddoos&Jalebies, dishes
like chicken tandoori
etc
Sweets like GulabJamuns
and Halwas
Male reproductive
defects like decreased
sperm count etc
Cancer
Orange II
(Not permitted by
the PFA*)
Congo red &
Butter Yellow
(Not permitted by
the PFA*)
Sudan I
(Not permitted by
the PFA*)
Malachite green Used to colourparwal&
Orange coloured sweets
like rasgullas
Cancer
Biscuits, Sweets and Cakes Carcinogenic on
prolonged usage
Red Chilli Powder Carcinogenic
Carcinogenic
peas
Ketchups, Jams, Jellies etc May cause allergies and
Sodium benzoate
(Preservative)
asthma according to the
American Academy
Allergy, Asthama&
Immunology
Anaemia
Copper Sulphate
(blue coloured)
Used to artificially
colourvegetables like Lady
fingers &Parwal
Saccharin Used as an artificial
Brominated
Vegetable oils
sweetener. Since it is 300-500
times sweeter than sugar.
Added to citrus
(orage,lemon)flavored drinks
Proven to the cause of
Urinary Bladder cancer
in mammals
Proven carcinogen
(B.V.O) to maintain their
Ajinomoto/
Monosodium
Glutamate (MSG)
Characteristic cloudy
appearance
A flavor enhancer in
prepared foods.
It was responsible for the
Kentucky Fried Chicken
(KFC) controversy in New
Delhi during the Nineties
Produces “Chinese
restaurant Syndrome”
Causing some people to
have a
Burning. sensation in
neck and fore arms,
tightness in the chest and
headache
Tin (cans) Food stored in cans Colic pains even
vomiting in some cases
Zinc (food
containers)
Mercury Mercury fungicide treated
Canned Foods Colic pains even
vomiting in some cases
Brain damage, paralysis,
death
seed grains or mercury
contaminated fish
Arsenic Fruits such as apples sprayed
over with lead arsenate
Barium Foods contaminated by rat
poisons (Barium carbonate)
Cadmium Fruit juices, soft drinks, etc.
in contact with cadmium
Dizziness, chills, cramps,
paralysis, death
Violent peristalisis,
arterial hypertension,
muscular twitching,
convulsions, cardiac
disturbances
‘Itai-itai (ouch-ouch)
disease, Increased
plated vessels or equipment.
Cadmium contaminated
water and shell-fish
Lead Drinking Water coming
Aluminium as thin
foils
from lead coated pipelines,
food stored in polythene
bags, natural and processed
food
Decoration of Sweet meats,
instead ofsilver foils
salivation, acute gastritis,
liver and kidney damage,
prostrate cancer
Lead poisoning (foot-
drop, insomnia, anemia,
constipation, mental
retardation, brain
damage)
Prolonged consumption
may lead to neurological
problems like
Alzheimer’s disease .
Carbofuran Brinjals
Developmental defects
and Cancer
To give a fresh purple
appearance to them
Cauliflowers
To give a fresh white
appearance to them
i.
Phosphomidon
e
ii. Methyl
Parathin
iii.
Monocrotopho
s
Developmental defects
and Cancer
PFA : Prevention of Food Adulteration ( Act), 1954
APPENDIX-II
Food article Adulteration Test
Wheat flour Excessive sand &
dirt
Shake a little quantity of sample with
about 10 ml. Of Carbon tetra chloride
and allow to stand. Grit and sandy matter
will collect at the bottom.
Excessive bran Sprinkle on water surface. Bran will float
on the surface.
Chalk powder Shake sample with dil. HCl
Effervescence indicates chalk.
Mustard oil Argemone oil Add 5 ml, conc. HNO3to 5 ml. sample.
Ghee (Clarified
butter)
Mashed Potato
Sweet Potato, etc.
Shake carefully. Allow to separate yellow,
orange yellow, crimson colour in the
lower acid layer indicates adulteration.
Boil 5 ml. Of the sample in a test tube.
Cool and a drop of iodine solution. Blue
colour indicates presence of Starch.
colour disappears on boiling &
reappears on cooling.
Vanaspati Take 5 ml. Of the sample in a test tube.
Synthetic
Colouring Matter
Pulses/Besan Kesari
dal(Lathyrussativus
)
Add 5 ml. Of Hydrochloric acid and 0.4
ml of 2% furfural solution or sugar
crystals. Insert the glass stopper and
shake for 2 minutes. Development of a
pink or red colour indicates presence of
Vanaspati in Ghee.
Pour 2 gms. Of filtered fat dissolved in
ether. Divide into 2 portions. Add 1 ml.
Of HCl to one tube. Add 1 ml. Of 10%
NaOH to the other tube. Shake well and
allow to stand. Presence of pink colour
in acidic solution or yellow colour in
alkaline solution indicates added
colouring matter.
Add 50 ml. Of dil.HCl to a small quantity
of dal and keep on simmering water for
about 15 minutes. The pink colour, if
developed indicates the presence of
Kesari dal.
Pulses MetanilYellow(dye) Add conc.HCl to a small quantity of dal
in a little amount of water. Immediate
development of pink colour indicates the
presence of metanil yellow and similar
colour dyes.
Lead Chromate Shake 5 gm. Of pulse with 5 ml. Of
Milk Water
water and add a few drops of HCl. Pink
colour indicates Lead Chromate.
Put a drop of milk on polished vertical
surface. The drop of pure milk either
stops or flows slowly leaving a white trail
Urea
Ice Cream Washing Powder
behind it. Whereas milk adulterated with
water will flow immediately without
leaving a mark.
Take 5 ml of milk in a test tube and add
2 drops of bromothymol blue soln.
Development of blue colour after 10
minutes indicates presence of urea.
Put some lemon juice, bubbles are
observed on the presence of washing
powder
Common
spices like
Turmeric,
chilly, curry
powder,etc.
Colour Extract the sample with Petroleum ether
Black Pepper Papaya seeds/light
berries, etc.
Spices(Ground
)
Coriander
powder
Common salt To 5 ml. Of sample add a few drops of
Powdered bran and
saw dust
Dung powder Soak in water. Dung will float and can be
and add 13N H2SO4 to the extract.
Appearance of red colour (which persists
even upon adding little distilled water)
indicates the presence of added colours.
However, if the colour disappears upon
adding distilled water the sample is not
adulterated.
Pour the seeds in a beaker containing
Carbon tetra-chloride. Black papaya
seeds float on the top while the pure
black pepper seeds settle down.
Sprinkle on water surface. Powdered
bran and sawdust float on the surface.
easily detected by its foul smell.
Red Chilli Brick powder grit,
sand, dirt, filth, etc.
silver nitrate. White precipitate indicates
adulteration.
Pour the sample in a beaker containing a
mixture of chloroform and carbon
tetrachloride. Brick powder and grit will
settle at the bottom.
Turmeric
Powder
Rodamine Culture
Starch of maize,
wheat, tapioca, rice
Take 2gms sample in a test tube, add 5ml
of acetone. Immediate appearance of red
colour indicates presence of Rodamine.
A microscopic study reveals that only
pure turmeric is yellow coloured, big in
size and has an angular structure. While
foreign/added starches are colourless
and small in size as compared to pure
turmeric starch.
Lead Chromate Ash the sample. Dissolve it in 1:7
Sulphuric acid (H2SO4) and filter. Add 1
or 2 drops of 0.1% dipenylcarbazide. A
pink colour indicates presence of Lead
Chromate.
Metanil Yellow Add few drops of conc.Hydrochloric
acid (HCl) to sample. Instant appearance
of violet colour, which disappears on
dilution with water, indicates pure
turmeric. If colour persists Metanil
yellow is present.
Rub the cumin seeds on palms. If palms
turn black adulteration in indicated.
Cumin seeds
(Black jeera)
Asafoetida
(Heeng)
Chalk Shake sample with Carbon tetrachloride
Grass seeds
coloured with
charcoal dust
Soap stone, other
earthy matter
Shake a little quantity of powdered
sample with water. Soap stone or other
earthy matter will settle at the bottom.
(CCl4). Asafoetida will settle down.
Saffron
Coloured dried
tendrils of maize
cob
Honey Water
Food grains Hidden insect
infestation
Tea
Coloured leaves
Used tea
Iron fillings
Coloured
Green
vegetables like
pointed gourd
(parwal),
Brinjal, chillietc
Malachite green
Decant the top layer and add dil.HCl to
the residue. Effervescence shows
presence of chalk.
Pure saffron will not break easily like
artificial. Pure saffron when allowed to
dissolve in water will continue to give its
colour so long as it lasts.
A cotton wick dipped in pure honey
burns when ignited with a matchstick. If
adulterated presence of water will not
allow the honey to burn, if it does will
produce a cracking sound.
Take a filter paper impregnated with
Ninhydrin (1% in alcohol.) Put some
grains on it and then fold the filter paper
and crush the grains with hammer. Spots
of bluish purple colour indicate presence
of hidden insects infestation
Rub leaves on white paper, artificial
colour comes out on paper.
Tea leaves sprinkled on wet filter paper.
Pink or red spots on paper show colour
Move a magnet through the sample. Iron
will stick to the magnet.
Take a small part of the sample and place
it over a moistened white blotting paper,
the impression of the colour on paper
indicates the presence of malachite green
ABBREVIATIONS
AGMARK Agricultural Marketing
APEDA Agro Processing Export Development Authority
ASI Annual Survey of Industries
BIS Bureau of Indian Standards
CAC Codex Alimentarius Commission
CFTRI Central Food Technological Research Institute
CII Confederation of Indian Industries
CSE Centre for Science and Environment's
DMI Directorate of Marketing and Inspection
EEC European Economic Community
EFR Excise and Food Adulteration Report
FAC Food Adulteration Cases
FAJ Food Adulteration Journal
FAO Food Adulteration Order
FAO Food and Agricultural Organization
FICCI Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry
FPC The Fnlit Products Order
FPI Food Processing Industry
FPO Foodstuff of Plant Origin
GDP Gross Domestic Product
GMP Good Manufacturing Practice
GVA Gross Value Added
HACCP Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points
ISO International Organization Standardization
KAU Kerala Agricultural University
MFPI Ministry of Food Processing Industries
MFPO Meat Food Products Order
MHFW Ministry of Health and Family Welfare
MIS Management Information System
NABL National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration
Laboratories
PFA Prevention of Food Adulteration Act
PFAJ Prevention of Food Adulteration Journal
SDP State Domestic Product
SSI Small Scale Industry
UNO United Nations Organization
WHO World Health Organization
WTO World Trade Organization
Ram Lal Vs. State of Rajasthan 2000
In this case sample of she-camel milk taken of which no standard is fixed .Accused was
acquitted by trial court as no standard has been fixed under the Act for such milk. The court
observed that there is no room for dissenting from the defence version that it was camel’s milk
that was sold to the Food Inspector — whether camel’s milk cannot be sold for human
consumption" Supreme Court unable to agree with the finding of the High Court that camel milk
is not fit for human consumption — in some States in India, particularly in Rajasthan, camel
milk is extensively used as edible article — different standards have been fixed for different
classes and designations of milk — the High Court, after holding that camel’s milk could not be
sold for human consumption, further held that the milk sold was not shown to be camel’s milk at
all. Nonetheless, learned single judge of the High Court, on the appeal preferred by the State,
convicted the appellant under Section 16(1) of the Act and sentenced him to rigorous
imprisonment for 6 months and to pay a fine of Rs. 1,000/- — the report of the Public Analyst
showed that the sample was examined and found to contain 25% of added water and that the
milk fat was 4.1% and the milk solid non-fat was 6.74%. — an article which is food does not
lose its character as food by the fact that it was also used or sold for other purposes — Rule 44 of
the Rules prohibits the sale of "milk which contains any added water". The Public Analyst who
tested the sample in the laboratory has reported that it contained 25% of added water. Hence the
offence to be found against appellant is Section 16(1)(a)(I) of the Act.
Shri Ranajoy Bose Vs. Shri A.B. Roy and another 2002.
The Court held each District Health Officer is authorised to exercise the power under Section
20(1) to accord consent under Section 20(1) P.F.A. Act in respect of the respective District in his
charge. Court dismissed the appeal.
State (Govt. of NCT of Delhi) Vs. Bansi Lal 2003
The question raised in this case was whether the High Court, while exercising the powers of
revision under Sections 397 read with Section 401 of the Code of Criminal Procedure can
entertain a new plea to consider and accord the benefit by enlarging on probation a person who is
under 18 years of age as envisaged under Section 20AA of the Prevention of food adulteration
Act, 1954. The court held that the question of law is left open; to be urged and decided in an
appropriate case thus the appeal is disposed of.
Mohinder Kumar Vs. State of Haryana 2004
In this case appeal was made against conviction under Sections 7 and 16. The appellant was
sentenced to 1 year imprisonment and fine of Rs. 1000/.in this case first accused mr. Naresh
kumar was acquitted. Food Inspector along with Doctor visited the shop of the first accused
Naresh Kumar and purchased 3 packets of iodized Tata salt ,the salt did not contain iodine as per
report of the Public Analyst. Further the report from the Central Food Laboratory also disclosed
that the sample did not conform to the standard prescribed under the Act and the Rules as it
contained only 5.0 ppm of iodine as against the required quantity of 15.0 ppm of iodine . First
accused Naresh Kumar filed application under section 14-A of the food adulteration Act .The
appellant herein was thus impleaded as the second accused -- the invoice allegedly issued by the
appellant herein was in the name of one Darshan Lal -- the first accused Naresh Kumar did not
adduce any evidence to show that he had purchased the adulterated article from the appellant
under the said invoice. The Trial Court proceeded on the assumption that the appellant admitted
the genuineness of the Bill No. 4987 and that he conceded that he had sold the Tata Salt to the
first accused Naresh Kumar but the evidence on record shows that the bill produced by the first
accused Naresh Kumar was standing in the name of one Darshan Lal and there is no evidence to
show that who was Darshan Lal, as in the bill it is not specifically stated that it was sold in
packed condition. Only the weight of the article is shown as 3, presumably 3 quintal and the total
amount paid is Rs. 375/-, the value being Rs. 125/- per quintal -- in the absence of specific
evidence as to whom invoice was issued and to whom adulterated article was sold by the
appellant it is difficult to prove complicity of the appellant -- neither the Trial Court nor the
Appellate Court adverted to this aspect of the case. The Court had ample power to invoke section
20(A) of the Act to prosecute the person who was really guilty of the offence punishable under
the Act. The conviction of the appellant was solely based on the invoice allegedly issued to
Darshan Lal. The Apex court held that as the genuineness of the invoice is not proved before the
Court, the conviction and sentence against the appellant is not sustainable under the law, thus
conviction set aside.
Nalin Thakur and others Vs. State of Maharashtra 2004.
In this case appellants directors of a company engaged in the manufacture and sale of vanaspati.
the sample did not conform to the standard. In three cases person nominated arrayed as an
accused did not stated in the complaint that the appellants were responsible for the conduct of the
business of the company. Four other complaints filed against the appellants and the Board of
Directors quashed. The court held that if the prosecution is successful in producing any materials
before the trial court to show that if these appellants could be prosecuted either under Section
17(a)(ii) or section 17(4), the trial court would be at liberty to take action in accordance with law
thus the court quashed the complaint.
State of Madhya Pradesh vs. Gendalal 2004.
As per High Court prosecution not maintainable. The High Court made acquittal on the ground
that there was nothing to show that the Food Inspector who had collected samples had undergone
the requisite training for three months. To this acquittal by High Court an appeal was made in
Supreme Court. The Apex Court observed when a question of this nature regarding competence
of an official is raised, it has to be taken before the Trial Court and thereby afford an opportunity
to the official concerned to place material in that regard. This was not done in present case, the
Court held that, it would be appropriate for the High Court to hear the matter afresh. Thus the
was matter remitted to the High Court for a fresh consideration.
Dayal Singh Vs. State of Rajasthan 2004.
In this case Sample was taken from a hard boiled sugar confectionary which found to contain
mineral oil, unpleasant smell and taste. The Court observed that application of the modified
standards to cases which arose before the amendment of the Rules, would be impracticable.the
Court further observed that as it is demonstrated by the facts of this case, the report of the Public
Analyst did not mention the percentage of mineral oil present in the sample at the relevant time,
thus 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 ,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. Further the apex court observed that a minimum sentence of six months R.I. prescribed
by law, Court not inclined to modify the sentence thus strict adherence to Prevention of food
adulteration Act and Rules is essential, for safeguarding the interest of consumers of articles of
food -- stringent laws will have no meaning if the offenders could go away with more fine. The
court observed 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. minimum sentence of six months R.I. prescribed by law.
Godawat Pan Masala Products I.P. Ltd. and another Vs. Union of India and others 2004.
Question was raised regarding validity of notifications issued by the Food (Health) Authority
under Section 7(iv) of the Prevention of food adulteration Act, 1954, by which the manufacture,
sale, storage and distribution of pan masala and gutka (pan masala containing tobacco) were
banned for different periods. The Court observed that the power of banning an article of food or
an article used as ingredient of food, on the ground that it is injurious to health, belongs
appropriately to the Central Government to be exercised in accordance with the rules made under
Section 23 of the Act, particularly, sub-section (1A)(f). The state Food (Health) Authority has no
power to prohibit the manufacture for sale, storage, sale or distribution of any article, whether
used as an article or adjunct thereto or not used as food. Such a power can only arise as a result
of wider policy decision and emanate from Parliamentary legislation or, at least, by exercise of
the powers by the Central Government by framing rules under Section 23 of the Act. Thus the
impugned notifications are ultra vires the Act and, hence, bad in law, the impugned notifications
are unconstitutional and void as abridging the fundamental rights of the appellants guaranteed
under Articles 14 and 19 of the Constitution.
Further question was raised before court Regarding Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products
(Prohibition of Advertisement and Regulation of Trade and Commerce, Production, Supply and
Distribution) Act, 2003.The question before the court was is the above act is directly in conflict
with the provisions of Section 7(iv) of the Prevention of food adulteration Act, 1954. The Apex
court observed that, the former Act is a special Act intended to deal with tobacco and tobacco
products particularly, while the latter enactment is a general enactment. Thus, the Act 34 of 2003
being a special Act, and of later origin, overrides the provisions of Section 7(iv) of the
Prevention of food adulteration Act, 1954 with regard to the power to prohibit the sale or
manufacture of tobacco products while are listed in the Schedule to the Act 34 of 2003.
State of Haryana Vs. Daya Nand 2004.
In this case sample of milk was taken in which non solid fat was found to be 8.1% instead of
8.5% while solid fat was found to be 4.5% as against the requirement of 4%. Conviction by trial
court but acquittal by High Court on the assumption of improper stirring. The Apex court
observed that The High Court rather casually has come to an erroneous assumption that there
was improper stirring for which there is no foundation at all, The High Court could not have
substituted a factual foundation available on record, by an assumption, to give benefit of doubt to
the respondent, appeal was allowed and the order of the High Court set aside.
Dinesh Kumar Vs. State of M.P. 2004.
In this case sample of Besan taken was found adulterated. The trial Court as after considering the
entire material and hearing the parties acquitted accused. On appeal, Madhya Pradesh High
Court held that the appellant has contravened relevant provisions of the Act and was, therefore,
to be convicted. On appeal Apex Court observed Section 2(i)(c) deals with substitution of an
article by inferior or cheaper substance which affects injuriously the nature, substance or quality
thereof. In the Public Analyst's report there was no reference to this aspect. What would happen
if the Public Analysts' report in this regard even if Rule 44A was not in operation, does not
therefore, fall for consideration in this case. On that score alone the High Court's judgment is
indefensible and is accordingly set aside.
Further in this case question was raised regarding sale of Kesari dal. There was violation of Rule
44A of Prevention of food adulteration Rules, 1955,according to which sale of Kesari dal in any
form was forbidden. Even though the ash content was within permissible limit, accused-appellant
was to be convicted for violation of Rule 44A of the Rules. The trial Court had held though the
ingredients were within the permissible limit but because of the mixture of Kesari Dal, the article
could not be said to be adulterated ,there was no finding recorded by the Public Analyst that the
percentage of powder of Kesari as had been found in the sample, affected injuriously the nature,
substance and quality of the food article analysed. Accordingly, it was held that the sample
collected was not adulterated. High Court only referred to Rule 44A and held that adulteration
was established, the State Government concerned has to notify in the official gazette the date
with effect from which Rule 44A becomes applicable in the State. The apex Court observed
since Rule 44A was not applicable and was not in operation in the State of M.P. on the date of
alleged collection of samples Rule 44A could not have been applied to find the accused guilty.
The subject of the Prevention of Food Adulteration is in the concurrent list of the constitution.
However, in general, the enforcement of the Act is done by the State/U.T Governments. Each
State Government and Union Territory has created its own organisation for implementation of
the Act and Rules framed there under. The Central Government primarily plays an advisory role
in its implementation besides carrying out various statutory functions/duties assigned to it under
the various provisions of the Act.
Section 22A empowers the Central Government to give such directions as it may deem necessary
to a State Government regarding the implementation of the Act. Whereas, Section 23 empowers
the Central Government to make rules to carry out the provisions of the Act. In particular, and
without prejudice to the generality of the rule making power, the power of the Central
Government includes the one in clause (f). Further, Section 24 of the Act is the section which
grants rule making power to the State Government. The State Government may, after
consultation with the Committee, and subject to the condition of previous publication, there
under make rules for the purpose of giving effect to the provisions of the Act in matters not
falling within the purview of section 23.moreover, Sub section (2) of Section 24 grants power to
the State Government to make rules with regard to the powers and duties of the different
authorities under the Act. Prescription of forms of licences for the manufacture for sale, storage,
sale and distribution of articles of food, the conditions subject to which such licences may be
issued and the fees payable there for, analysis of any article of food or matter and provision for
further delegation of power by the State Government to the Food(Health) Authority or the
subordinate authorities are the matters covered within this delegated power. Thus there is
chances of conflict between centre and state.
Manner of interpretation of the Act
It is well-settled that wherever possible, without unreasonable stretching or straining, the
language of such a statute should be construed in a manner which would suppress the mischief,
advance the remedy, promote its object, prevent its subtle evasion and foil its artful
circumvention.
Whether the Act and Rules infringes Articles 14, 19(1)(g) and20(3) of Constitution of India
It is also argued that by the Act and the Rules, the guarantee of Art. 14 was infringed, but no
argument was presented before court independently of the argument relating to infringement of
the guarantee under Art. 19(1)(g), in support of the contention that the Act infringed the
guarantee of equality before the law or equal protection of the laws. The Act deals with the
regulation of a class of traders, and in view of the widespread malpractices, and the practical
difficulties of controlling those malpractices, stringent provisions have been made by the Act.
The classification is founded on an intelligible differentia and the differentia has a rational
relation to the object sought to be achieved. The provisions of the Act again do not invest
arbitrary authority upon those who are to administer the Act nor can it be said that the standards
prescribed are arbitrary. The Act also does not infringe the guarantee of Art. 20(3) of the,
Constitution. By that clause no person accused of any offence shall be compelled to be a witness
against himself. But by enacting that a plea by the vendor in a prosecution for an offence
pertaining to sale of adulterated or misbranded article of food, that he was ignorant of the nature,
substance or quality will not be a defence, the guarantee under Art. 20(3) is not infringed. The
vendor when charged with an offence is not thereby compelled to be a witness against himself.
Nor can it be said that by making the report of the Director of Central Food Laboratory
conclusive evidence of the facts stated therein, any such infringement is intended. The provision
has been made with a view to secure formal evidence of facts without requiring the Director to
remain present, and in' the interest of effective administration of the Act, the certificate signed by
the Director of the Central Food Laboratory is made final and conclusive evidence of the facts
stated therein. The Director is a highly placed official, an expert in determining the nature,
substance and quality of food, and is wholly disinterested in the result of any case coming before
the Courts. It is difficult to appreciate how conclusiveness attributed to the certificate of the
Director compels the vendor charged with an offence under the Act to be a witness.. As the
preamble of the Act indicates, "it is an Act to make provision for the prevention of adulteration
of food. Food’ is defined in S. 2(v) " Section 2(ia) defines what is 'adulterated food'
‘Food’, ‘Adulterated’ and ‘Misbranded’-A Conceptualization
As per PFA, Food includes everything, which is consumed by human beings or even used for
preparing items of human consumption. Thus cereals, oil, sugar, cooked food, drinks, spices,
colouring matters, flavouring matter etc. are all included in the category of food. It excludes
water and drugs. However, packaged natural water and packaged mineral water are considered to
be food.We ordinarily mean by adulteration to “debase, falsify by mixing with something
inferior or spurious”. By adulterated food, people also mean rotten, putrefied, insect infested or
poisonous food. As per the Act, a food is deemed to be adulterated:
(a) If the article sold by a vendor is not of the nature, substance or quality demanded by the
purchaser and is to his prejudice, or is not of the nature, substance or quality which it purports or
is represented to be.
(b) If the article contains any other substance, which affects, or if the article is so processed as to
affect, injuriously the nature, substance or quality thereof.
(c) If any inferior or cheaper substance has been substituted wholly or in part for the article so as
to affect injuriously the nature, substance or quality thereof.
(d) If any constituent of the article has been wholly or in part abstracted so as to affect
injuriously the nature, substance or quality thereof.
(e) If the article had been prepared, packed or kept under insanitary conditions whereby it has
become contaminated or injurious to health.
(f) If the article consists wholly or in part of any filthy, putrid, rotten, decomposed or diseased
animal or vegetable substance or is insect-infested or is otherwise unfit for human consumption.
(g) If the article is obtained from a diseased animal.
(h) If the article contains any poisonous or other ingredient which renders it injurious to health.
(i) If the container of the article is composed, whether wholly or in part, of any poisonous or
deleterious substance which renders its contents injurious to health.
(j) If any colouring matter other than prescribed in respect thereof is present in the article, or if
the amount of the prescribed colouring matter, which is present in the article are not within the
prescribed limits of variability.
(k) If the article contains any prohibited preservative or permitted preservative in excess of the
prescribed limits.
(l) If the quality or purity of the article falls below the prescribed standard or its constituents are
present in quantities not within the prescribed limits of variability, but, which renders it injurious
to health.
(m) If the quality or purity of the article falls below the prescribed standard or its constituents are
present in quantities not within the prescribed limits of variability, but which does not render it
injurious to health.
Provided that, where the quality or purity of the article, being primary food, has fallen below the
prescribed standards or its constituents are present in quantities not within the prescribed limits
of variability in either case, solely due to natural causes and beyond the control of human
agency, then, such article shall not be deemed to be adulterated within the meaning of this sub-
clause.
In "M. V. Joshi v. M. U. Shimpi8Supreme Court observed that If the quality or purity of butter falls
below the standard prescribed by the said rule or its constituents are in excess of the prescribed
limits of variability, it shall be deemed to be adulterated within the meaning of S. 2 of the
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act. If the prescribed standard is not attained, the statute treats
such butter, by fiction, as an adulterated food though in fact it is not adulterated
Broadly speaking, the definition covers situations where a food article is sub-standard, or
contains injurious ingredients or has become injurious to health by reason of packing or keeping
under unsanitary conditions or having become contaminated or is otherwise not fit for
consumption. The definition also extends to cases of articles which fall below. Under the Act an
article in order to be deemed to be adulterated need not be necessarily be poisonous or injurious
to the health. Indeed it may even be conducive to health in some cases; the offence is complete
when a substance is used for mixing is not which is not recognized by law9. Thus, It is
undoubtedly a social evil which can be regarded as the outcome of an interaction between a
number of social, economic, technical and human behavioural factors.
This law replaces all local food adulteration laws where they exist and also applies to those
States where there were no local laws on the subject. Among others, it provides for-
(i) a Central food Laboratory to which food samples can be referred to for final
opinion in disputed cases10
(ii) a Central Committee for food Standards consisting of representatives of Central and State
Government to advise on matters arising from the administration of Act,11 and
8 AIR 1961 SC 1494
9In re, S. Moses, AIR 1961 SC 631
10 clause 4
11 clause 3
(iii) the vesting in the Central Government of the rule-making power regarding standards of
quality for the articles of food and certain other matters12.
The provisions of the Act are very stringent. it is necessary to briefly notice some of the relevant
provisions of the Act . Section 7, upon which most of the arguments turn, needs to be noticed.
Section 7 of the Act provides that ‘no person shall himself or by any person on his behalf
manufacture for sale, or store, sell or distribute-
(i) any adulterated food;
(ii) any misbranded food;
(iii) any article of food for the sale of which a licence is prescribed, except in accordance with
the conditions of the licence;
(iv) any article of food for the sale of which is for the time being prohibited by the Food (Health)
Authority in the interest of public health; or
(v) any article of food in contravention of any other' provision of this Act or of any rule made
there under.’
Act provides that a food inspector appointed13 under of the Act is authorised to take samples of
any articles of food from any person selling such article, or from any person who is in the course
of conveying, delivering or preparing to deliver such article to a purchaser or consignee, or from
a consignee after delivery of any such article to him, and to send such sample for analysis to, the
public analyst, and with the previous approval of the health officer having jurisdiction in the
local area concerned, or with the previous approval of the Food (Health) Authority to prohibit the
sale of any article of food in the interest of public health.14 The procedure prescribed by the Act
for investigation and prosecution of offences has to be followed and those prescribed by the code
of criminal procedure can not in view of section 5(2) thereof, be restored to. Hence it excludes
the ordinary jurisdiction of police officer under the said Act15.
Act provides that any document purporting to be a report signed by a public analyst, unless it has
been superseded under sub-section (3), or any document purporting to be a certificate signed by
the Director of the Central Food Laboratory, may be used as evidence of the facts stated therein
in any proceeding under this Act or under sections 272 to 276 of the Indian Penal Code.16
12 clause 22
13 Section 9 ( 1 )
14 section 10
15A Treaties On Economic And Social Offences:Dr.B.K.Sharma, Dr Vijay Nagpal
16 Sub-section (5) of s. 13
However, any such 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.
Section 16(1) prescribes the penalties for the violation of provisions contained in the Act. One of
such provision provides that ‘if any person-
(a) whether by himself or by any other person on his behalf imports into India or manufactures
for sale, or stores, sells or distributes any article of food-
(i) which is adulterated or misbranded or the sale of which is prohibited by the Food (Health)
authority in the interest of public health;
(ii)other than an article of food referred to in subclause (i), incontravention of any of the
provisions of this Act or of any rule madethere under; or
and
(f) whether by himself or by any other person on his behalf gives to the vendor a false warranty
in writing in respect of any article of food sold by him, he shall in addition to the penalty to
which he may be liable under the provisions of section 6, be punish-able with imprisonment for a
term which shall not be less than six months but which may extend to six years, and with fine
which shall not be less than one thousand rupees.17
Section 19 deals with the defences which may, and which may not, be allowed in prosecutions
under the Act. It provides that ‘it shall be no defence in a prosecution for an offence pertaining to
the sale of any adulterated or misbranded article of food to allege merely that the vendor was
ignorant of the nature, substance or quality of the food sold by him or that the purchaser having
purchased any article for analysis was not prejudiced by the sale.18 Similarly, a vendor shall not
be deemed to have committed an offence pertaining to the sale of any adulterated or misbranded
article of food if he proves:
(a) that he purchased the article of food-
(i) in a case where a licence is prescribed for the sale thereof, from a duly licensed manufacturer,
distributor or dealer;
(ii) in any other case, from any manufacturer, distributor or dealer with a written warranty in the
prescribed form; and
17cls. (a) & (f)
18Section 19 (1)
(b) that the article of food while in his possession was properly stored and that he sold it in the
same state as he purchased it. (3)Any person by whom a warranty as is referred to in section 14
is alleged to have been given shall be entitled to appear at the hearing and give evidence.
Whether the restriction imposed is reasonable or unreasonable
It is argued that, the Act imposes unreasonable restrictions, because it creates absolute liability
by S. 16(1) (a) and imposes severe penalties for storage and sale or distribution of articles of
food found to be adulterated or misbranded, or prohibited by law; it prescribes standards which
are technical, and absolute, and for the slightest departure there from the trader is liable to be
prosecuted and punished, the Act is unconstitutional.19 It is also argued that it is impossible for an
ordinary trader without the assistance of an expert technician to ascertain whether the articles of
food purchased by him comply with the prescribed standards, and that in prescribing the
standards of quality the imperceptible changes which take place in foodstuffs by passage of time,
are not taken into account.
Repelling all such argument the court cleared the position and observed that ‘the restrictions
imposed upon the conduct of business by traders in foodstuffs cannot be deemed unreasonable.
By s. 16(1) provision is made for imposing penalties, among other acts, for storage, sale or
distribution of articles of food which are adulterated or misbranded, or sale of which is
prohibited by the Food (Health) authority in the interest of the public health, or is in
contravention of the Act or the rules. The Act, it is true, does not make some blame-worthy
mental condition constituted by knowledge or intention relating to the nature of the article stored,
sold or distributed, an ingredient of the offence. Unless the case falls within sub-s. (2) of s. 19, if
sale, storage or distribution is established, intention to sell articles or knowledge that the articles
are adulterated, misbranded, or prohibited need no, be proved by the prosecutor to bring home
the charge. Sub- section (1) of s. 19 provides that it is no defence in a charge, for an offence
pertaining to the sale of any adulterated or misbranded article of food to allege merely that the
vendor was ignorant of the nature, substance or quality of the food sold by him, or that the
purchaser having purchased any article for analysis was not prejudiced by the sale. By that clause
a bare plea of ignorance by a trader about the nature, substance or quality of the food sold by him
is not a defence in a prosecution for the offence pertaining to the sale of any adulterated food nor
that the article was, purchased for analysis. But in considering whether creation of absolute
19 Andhra Pradesh Grain & Seed Merchants' Association etc. v. Union of India, AIR 1971 SC 2346
liability amounts to imposing unreasonable restrictions, the Court has to strike a balance between
the individual right and public weal. The Courts will not strike down an Act as imposing
unreasonable restrictions merely because it creates an absolute liability for infringement of the
law which involves grave danger to public health. The Courts will undoubtedly consider whether
without imposing absolute liability the object of the statute could be reasonably secured. For that
purpose the Court will consider the object of, the Act, apprehended danger to the public interest,
arising out of the activity if not controlled and the, possibility of achieving the intended results
by less stringent provisions. The nature of the trade in foodstuffs, the channels of supply and the
movement of goods from trader to trader and fertile sources of adulteration and misbranding
make it extremely difficult in a large majority of cases to establish affirmatively that storage or
sale of adulterated or misbranded foodstuff was with a guilty mind. Provisions in the statute book
creating absolute liability for sale of adulterated food are fairly common.
It may be noted here that similar provisions regarding strict liability is imposed under U.K law.
Under section 3(1) of the English, Foods & Drugs Act, 1938, absolute duty has been on a dealer
in foodstuff regardless of negligence. Such duty were held constitutional as well as reasonable.20
The same provision is repeated in S. 2 of the "Food and Drugs Act, 1955.
Strict Liability and requirement of proof of Mens-rea—
one of the essential element of a crime, is mensreaor guilty mind. In the entire field of criminal
law there is no important doctrine than that of mensrea. The fundamental principle of English
Criminal jurisprudence, is “actus non facitreum nisi mens sit rea”. Mensreais the state of mind
indicating culpability, which is required by statute as an element of a crime. It is commonly
taken to mean some blameworthy mental condition, whether constituted by intention or
knowledge or otherwise, the absence of which on any particular occasion negatives the intention
of a crime. The term ‘mensrea’ has been given to volition, which is the motive force behind the
criminal act. It is also one of the essential ingredients of criminal liability. As a general rule
every crime requires a mental element, the nature of which will depend upon the definition of the
particular crime in question. Even in crimes of strict liability some mental element is required.
the question whether common law requirement of mensrea must imported into every crime
defined in the statute even where it is not expressly mentioned as an ingredient, has been
discussed in a number of cases both in England and India.
There are two school of thoughts one embodied in the judgement of Wright in Sherras v. de
rutzen21 that in every statute mensrea is to be implied unless contrary is shown and second is that
20 Lindley v. George W. Horner & Co. Ltd 1950-1 All ER 234;(1) and Lamb v. Sunderland and District Creamery Ltd.
1951-1 All ER 923
21(1895) 1 Q.B. 1918.
of Kenndy . L.J. in Hobbs v Winchester corporation22 that you ought to construe the statute
literally unless there is something to show that mensrea is required.
In Russell on Crime,23 it is stated... there is a presumption that in any statutory crime the common
law mental element, mensrea, is an essential ingredient.
On the question how to rebut this presumption, the policy of the courts is unpredictable. In
Halsbury’sLaws of England, 24 the following passage appears: A statutory crime may or may not
contain an express definition of the necessary state of mind. A statute may require a specific
intention, malice, knowledge, wilfulness, or recklessness. On the other hand, it may be silent as
to any requirement of mensrea, and in such a case in order to determine whether or not mensrea,
is an essential element of the offence it is necessary to look at the objects and terms of the
statute. This passage also indicates that the absence of any specific mention of a state of mind as
an ingredient of an offence in a statute is not decisive of the question whether mensrea, is an
ingredient of the offence or not: it depends upon the object and the terms of the statute. So too,
Archbold25says much to the same effect that:
It has always been a principle of the common law that mensrea, is an essential element in the
commission of any criminal offence against the common law.... In the case of statutory offences
it depends on the effect of the statute.... .
The leading case on the subject is Sherrasv. De Rutzen26There is a presumption that mensrea, an
evil intention, or a knowledge of the wrongfulness of the act, is an essential ingredient in every
offence; but that presumption is liable to be displaced either by the words of the statute creating
the offence or by the subject-matter with which it deals, and both must be considered.
The Privy Council in Jacob Bruhn v. King on the Prosecution of the Opium Farmer27
observed that mensrea, was not really excluded but the burden of proof to negative mensrea,
was placed upon the accused.
Lord Coleridge, J., cited with approval the following passage of Channell, J., in
22 (1910) 2 K.B. 471
2311th Edn., Vol. 1, at p. 64:
243rd Edn., Vol. 10, in para 508, at p. 273
25in book on Criminal Pleading, Evidence and Practice, 35th Edn.,at p. 48
26[(1895) 1 QB 918, 921].
27[LR(1909) AC 317, 324]
Pearks, Gunston& Tee, Ltd. v. Ward28: But there are exceptions to this rule in the case of quasi-
criminal offences, as they may be termed, that is to say, where certain acts are forbidden by law
under a penalty, possibly even under a personal penalty, such as imprisonment, at any rate in
default of payment, of a fine; and the reason for this is, that the legislature has thought it so
important to prevent the particular act from being committed that it absolutely forbids it to be
done; and if it is done the offender is liable to a penalty whether he had any mensrea, or not, and
whether or not he intended to commit a breach of the law. Where the act is of this character then
the master, who, in fact, has done the forbidden thing through his servant, is responsible and is
liable to a penalty. There is no reason why he should not be, because the very object of the
legislature was to forbid the thing absolutely.
This decision states the same principle in a different form. It also places emphasis on the terms
and the object of the statute in the context of the question whether mensrea, is excluded or not.
The decision in Rex v. Jacobs 29 illustrates that on a construction of the particular statute, having
regard to the object of the statute and its terms, the Court may hold that mensrea, is not a
necessary ingredient of the offence. In Brendv. Wood 30 dealing with an emergency legislation
relating to fuel rationing, Goddard, C.J., observed: There are statutes and regulations in which
Parliament has been not to create offences and make people responsible before criminal courts
although there is an absence of mensrea, but it is certainly not the Court’s duty to be acute to find
that mensrea, is not a constituent part of a crime. It is of the utmost importance for the protection
of the liberty of the subject that a Court should always bear in mind that, unless a statute, either
clearly or by necessary implication, rules out mensrea, as a constituent part of a crime, the Court
should not find a man guilty of an offence against the criminal law unless he has a guilty mind.
In Srinivas Mall Bairoloyav. King-Emperor 31Lord Parcq, speaking for the Board, approved the
view expressed by Goddard, C.J., in Brendv. Wood and observed:Their Lordships agree with the
view expressed by the Lord ChiefJustice of England, when he said: ‘It is in my opinion the
utmost importance for theprotection of the liberty of the subject that a court should always bear
in mind that, unlessthe statute, either clearly or by necessary implication, rules out mensrea, as a
constituentpart of a crime, a defendant should not be found guilty of an offence against the
criminallaw unless he has got a guilty mind.’
28[(1902) 71 LJ KB 656]
29[(1944) KB 417]
30[(1946) 62
The Times LR 462, 463]
31[(1947) ILR 26 Pat 460, 469 (PC)]
The acceptance of the principle by the Judicial Committee that mensrea, is a constituent part of a
crime unless the statute clearly or by necessary implication excludes the same, and the
application of the same to a welfare measure is an indication that the Court shall not be astute in
construing a statute to ignore mensrea, on a slippery ground of a welfare measure unless the
statute compels it to do so. Indeed, in that case the Judicial Committee refused to accept the
argument that where there is an absolute prohibition, no question of mensrea, arises. Wills, J. in
R. v. Tolson32: Although, prima facie and as a general rule, there must be a mind at fault before
there can be a crime, it is not an inflexible rule, and a statute may relate to such a subject-matter
and may be so framed as to make an act criminal whether there has been any intention to break
the law or otherwise to do wrong, or not.
Chagla, C.J., speaking for the Division Bench, after considering the relevant English and Indian
decisions, observed: It is not suggested that even in the class of cases where the offence is not a
minor offence or not quasi-criminal that the legislature cannot introduce the principle of
vicarious liability and make the master liable for the acts of his servant although the master has
no mensrea, and was morally innocent. But the Courts must be reluctant to come to such a
conclusion unless the clear words of the statute compel them to do so or they are driven to that
conclusion by necessary implication.
It is a well settled principle of common law that mensreais an essential ingredient of a criminal
offence. Doubtless a statute can exclude that element, but it is a sound rule of construction
adopted in England and also accepted in India to construe a statutory provision creating an
offence in conformity with the common law rather than against unless the statute expressly or by
necessary implication excluded mensrea. To put it differently, there is a presumption that
mensrea, is an essential ingredient of a statutory offence; but this may be rebutted by the express
words of a statute creating the offence or by necessary implication.
But the mere fact that the object of a statute is to promote welfare activities or to eradicate grave
social evils is in itself not decisive of the question whether the element of guilty mind is
excluded from the ingredients of the offence. It is also necessary to enquire whether a statute by
putting a person under strict liability, helps him to assist the State in the enforcement of the law:
can he do anything to promote the observance of the law? Mensrea, by necessary implication can
be excluded from a statute only where it is absolutely clear that the implementation of the object
of a statute would otherwise be defeated and its exclusion enables those put under strict liability
by their act or omission to assist the promotion of the law. The nature of mensrea that will be
implied in a statute creating an offence depends upon the object of the Act and the provisions
thereof.
In Mousell Brothers v. London and North Western Rail Co.33Atkin, J., observed:
32[23 QBD 168]
33[1917] 2 K.B. 845.
"...... yet the legislature may prohibit an act or enforce a duty in such words to make the
prohibitions or the duty absolute :....... To ascertain whether a particular Act of Parliament has
that effect or not, regard must be had to the object of the statute, the words used, the nature of the
duty laid down, the person whom it is imposed, the person by whom it would in ordinary
circumstances be performed, and the person upon whom the penalty is imposed."
In Quality Dairies (York) Ltd. v. Pedley34 the Court of Appeal held thatRegulation-26(1) of the
Mill and Dairies Regulation, 1949, requiring a distributor to ensure that every vessel used as a
container for milk shall be in a state of thorough cleanliness, imposed an absolute liability.
It is true that for the protection of the liberty of the citizen, in the definition of offences,
blameworthy mental condition is ordinarily an ingredient either by express enactment or clear
implication: but in Acts enacted to deal with a grave social evil, or for. Ensuring public welfare,
especially in offences against public health, e.g., statutes regulating storage or sale of articles of
food and drink, sale of drugs, sale of controlled or scare commodities, it is often found necessary
in the larger public interest to provide for imposition of liability without proof of a guilty mind.
If from the scheme of the Act it appears that compliance with the regulatory provisions will be
promoted by imposing an absolute liability, and that it cannot otherwise be reasonably ensured,
the Court will be justified in holding that the restriction on the right of the trader is in the interest
of the general public. Adulteration and misbranding of foodstuffs is a rampant evil and a statute
calculated to control that evil is indisputably in the interest of the general public : The statute
imposing restrictions upon traders will not be deemed unreasonable merely because it makes a
departure from the normal structure of statutes enunciating offences and prescribing
punishments. By sub-s. (2) of S. 19, even in respect of the absolute offence, the Parliament has
enacted that on proof of certain facts, criminal liability will be excluded. Thereby a vendor is not
deemed to have committed an offence pertaining to the sale of any adulterated or misbranded
article of food if he proves that the purchased the article of food from a duly licensed
manufacturer, distributor or dealer in a case where a licence is prescribed for the sale thereof, and
in any other case from any manufacturer, distributor of dealer with a written warranty in the
prescribed form, provided the article of food while in his possession was properly stored and that
he sold it in the same state as the purchased it. The argument of counsel for the petitioners that
the provision that a retail seller who opens a container of a branded article of food loses even the
limited protection under s. 19(2) is without substance.Clause (b) of sub-s. (2) of s. 19 does not
provide, nor does it imply, that if the container of a branded article is opened, the article of food
ceases to be in them same state in which the vendor purchased it. If the article of food' is sold in
the same condition in which it was purchased from a licensed manufacturer or dealer, or was
34[1952] 1 All.E..R. 380.
purchased with a warranty, the vendor will not lose the protection of sub-s. (2) of S. 19 merely
because he opened the container. If the vendor has obtained the article from a licensed
manufacturer, distributor or dealer or from a manufacturer, distributor or dealer with a warranty,
he is protected, provided he has property stored the article and sells it in the same state as he
purchased the article, even if it turns out that the article was adulterated or misbranded. The Act
does not dispense with proof that the article of food is adulterated, misbranded or that its sale is
prohibited: it enacts that a vendor selling articles of food adulterated or misbranded cannot plead
merely that hewas ignorant of the nature, substance or quality of the goods. A statute enacted by
the Parliament in the interest of public health (which is generally made in similar statutes
elsewhere) imposing liability for an offence without proof of a guilty mind does not per se
imposerestrictions on the, freedom to carry on trade which are unreasonable.
It is true that stringent penalties are provided under S. 16 (1)(a). A vendor of adulterated,
misbranded or prohibited articles of food is punishable with imprisonment for a term which shall
not, in the absence of adequate and special reasons, be less than six months, and which may
extend to six years, and with fine which shall not be less than one thousand rupees. But for the
protection of the public by ensuring the purity of articles of.food supplied to the people and
preventing malpractices by the traders in articles of food, severity of the penalties is not so
disproportionate to the gravity of the offence that it may be deemed unreasonable.
The Court in State of Uttar Pradesh v. Kartar Singh35 in which in dealing with an argument
of invalidity of the rule setting out standards under the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act
observed :
"The standards themselves, it would be noticed, have been prescribed by the Central Government
on the advice of a Committee which included in its composition persons considered experts in
the field of food technology and food analysis. In the circumstances, if the rule has to be struck
down as imposing unreasonable or discriminatory standards, it could not be done merely on any
a priori reasoning but only as a result of materials placed before the Court by way of scientific
analysis. . . . That where a party seeks to impeach the validity of a rule made by a competent
authority . .. . . . the burden is on him to plead and prove the infirmity is too well established to
need elaboration. If, therefore, the respondent desired to challenge the validity of the rule on the
ground either of its unreasonableness or-its discriminatory nature, he had to lay a foundation for
it by setting out the facts necessary to sustain such a plea and adduce cogent and convincing
evidence to make out his case, for there is a presumption that every factor which is relevant or
35 (1) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 679.
material has been taken into account in formulating the classification of the zones and the,
prescription of the minimum standards to each zone, and where we have a rule framed with the
assistance of a Committee containing experts such as the one constituted under s. 3 of the Act,
that presumption is strong, if not overwhelming."
Enforcement agency
The law, previously enforced by the Director General of Health Services, Department of Health
(DH), Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MHFW), Government of India (GOI), is now
enforced by the FSSAI. The Central Committee of Food Safety (CCFS) and Directorate General
of Health Services, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare are the primary policy making bodies
that advise Central and State Governments regarding the administration of the Act and developed
standards relating to the Act.
In India, a three-tier system is in vogue for ensuring food quality and food safety. The State
Governments and local bodies in Corporation and Municipalities implement the provisions of the
Act. It is the responsibility of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare to liase with the
national and international food quality control organisation, namely the Bureau of Indian
Standards (BIS) which is associated with the certification of the processed food articles, the
Directorate of Marketing and Inspection (DMI), the Ministry of Food Processing Industries as
well as the Codex Alimentarius Commission. It also includes in its role the creation of consumer
awareness, which is hardly evident. Enforcement of the food laws primarily rests with the
State/UTs. There are 28 States and 7 Union Territories in the country. The implementation of the
Act in most of the States is under the administrative control of the Directorate of Health
Services, whereas, in a few States, the implementation is being combined with Drugs
Administration under the Joint Food and Drug Administration. The implementation has been left
to the administrative setup of the States, but it has been stressed on the States that whatever the
structure be, there should be a whole-time Senior Officer duly qualified and experienced in Food
Science, Food Technology, Food Analysis with other supporting officers and inspectors. State
Governments are also empowered to make rules laying down details of licensing conditions of
food, the establishments of food industries and prescribing licence fees/analysis fees. Under the
PFA, Food Inspectors are appointed by the State governments. They are often a part of the Food
and Drug Administration or Local Health Authority. The Food Inspector has the power to take a
sample of the food from the place of manufacture, storage or from seller and send it to a Public
Analyst for testing36. Public Analysts have been created under the Act to analyse sample of
article of food sent to them.37
36Section 10
37Section 8
A Food Inspector who intends to take a sample has to disclose his identity and inform the retailer
his intention of taking a particular product as a sample for analysis38. The Food Inspector takes
three samples, which are to be sealed and labelled39. He sends one sample with a memorandum to
a Public Analyst40. The other two samples are deposited in the office of the department to which
the Food Inspector belongs41. The Public Analyst sends his report42. If the Analyst’s report
declares that the sample is not in conformity with the provisions of the PFA, the Food Inspector
initiates prosecution of the PFA, the Food Inspector initiates prosecution in the court of a first
class magistrate. The Food Inspector while taking sample asks the retailer to disclose the name of
the wholesaler/distributor. From the package, the Food Inspector also gets to know the name of
the manufacturer and distributor. Thus, he knows the entire chain. The Food Inspector can, and
often does, make all the parties in the chain accused in the first instance itself. Along with
initiating prosecution, the Food Inspector sends letters to manufacturer, distributor and
wholesaler. The letter informs that a case has been initiated and that the accused can make an
application before the court to have their sample re-tested by a Central Food Laboratory within
ten days from the receipt of the letter. The analysis by the Central Food Laboratory is considered
superior to the report of the Public Analyst43. It is a right of the accused to get a sample re-tested
from a Central Food Laboratory. If an accused makes an application to the Magistrate, the court
directs the department to produce the remaining two samples. After inspecting the seal, the court
sends one sample to a Central Food Laboratory. The Central Food Laboratory sends the report. If
the report declares the sample to be in conformity with the provisions of the PFA and Rules, the
court discharges the case. If the sample fails, trial by the magistrate starts.
Position of corporate bodies
Corporate bodies like companies, co-operatives or firms are also persons in the eyes of the law.
These can be prosecuted and punished as corporate bodies under the Act. A fine can always be
38Section 11(a)
39Section 11(b)
40Section 11©(i)
41Section 11 ©(ii)
42Section 13(1)
43Section 13(3)
paid out of their corporate account. However, a company or co-operative is not a real person who
can be imprisoned. There have to be specific persons who can be held responsible. The PFA
makes provisions that corporate bodies can authorise a person, like a director, manager or
secretary to exercise all such powers and take all steps to prevent food adulteration and inform
the local (health) authority of such an authorisation. The authorised person is called a PFA
nominee. The nominee represents the organisation for all matters dealing with the PFA. He is
held responsible for any violation committed by the firm. If an organisation has not appointed a
nominee, the court holds the person who was responsible to the corporate body for the
commission or omission of the action, which led to the violation of the PFA. In State Bank of
Hyderabad v. T. Meenakshi and Anodr44the court observed that no doubt the corporation can also
incur a criminal liability e.g. various statute do create a criminal liability on the part of the bodies
corporate violate any laws. But it must also be remembered that those very statutes which
creates the criminal liability against the body corporate do normally specify that either the officer
or the director as the case may be of such body corporate to be prosecuted and punished in the
case when the offence is committed by the body corporate.
Nature of the Provision
It is made a criminal offence because it is an important characteristic of criminal law is that its
enforcement is by government investigations and prosecution. Therefore with minor exceptions,
government has chosen to reserve for itself the role of agent of social change in India. Although
4404 BC 19
food adulteration was already a crime under Indian penal code, the Act was enacted as an
additional statute tailored to the needs of punishing and eliminating this socio economic crime.
The provisions of the Act are mandatory and contravention of the rules can theoretically lead to
both fine and imprisonment. But this happens rarely in practice.
Criticisms and suggestions
The law commission report shows that the act to be overall most inadequate statute , regulating a
social economic offence and most inclusive of the special provision necessary for combating
these offences. The question raised is why the Act despite its excellence as a statute, has been
unsuccessful in curbing adulteration.
According to some its judiciary fault because judiciary has been unnecessary obstructionist in
interpreting legal technicalities to prevent successful prosecution of food adulterations. Further,
it is alleged that judges in sentencing white collar criminals including food adulteration, have
failed to meet out sentences commensurate with seriousness of the offence45. Other reason
includes insufficient financing46, Corruption among government employee, too few and under
equipped laboratory facilities for analysing food samples, shortage of food spectres, apparatus
for enforcement is so inadequate that rural areas have almost no food inspectors and state and
union territory even do not have even one laboratory that analyzes the food samples. This is
made clear from following data;
Performance under Prevention of Food Adulteration47
Sl.No Particulars 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2009-10 2010-11(
1 No.of samples
2 No.Found 761 545 419 547 923 25
analysed 4277 3968 3641 3639 4996 310
46First three five year plans did not mention prevention of food adulteration.the fourth plan iniyialy suggested
allocation ruppes twelve crores , reduced this to four crores and much of this four crores never actually
appropriated.similarly food and agriculytural organization showed concern about inadequacy of the fund.
47http://www.tnhealth.org/dphpmpfa.htm
Adulterated
3 % of
Adulteration 17.79 13.74 11.50 15.03 18.47 8.06
Working of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, 1954
in different States / UTs. - 2002 (commodity wise)
(E) No. of Samples Examined,
(A) No. of Samples found Adulterated/Misbranded.
NA Information not Available.
There is now a provision under the Prevention of Food Adulteration (PFA) Act and Rules that in
extreme cases, life imprisonment could be awarded to those who commit food adulteration which
is extremely injurious for health. Though this provision exists, so far not one person has been
given this sentence.
The Softdrink pesticide controversy further affirms it.CSE (Centre for Science and
Environment's) blew the lid off the matter when it released a report on pesticide residues in 12
major cold drink brands sold in and around Delhi48. CSE had pointed out that regulations for
pesticide levels in soft drinks are weak in the country. Neither the Prevention of Food
Adulteration Act, 1954, nor the Fruit Products Order explicitly deals with the subject. The study
also highlighted the fact that India has no standards to define ‘clean' or ‘potable' water, and asked
the Union government to put in place legally enforceable water quality norms. The Joint
Parliamentary Committee also affirmed the same.
Further, The PFA lays emphasis on the prevention of adulteration of foods and is not
comprehensive enough to deal with the contamination of food through the animal feed and the
food chain. The apex industrial bodies like Confederation of Indian Industries (CII), Federation
of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) and Central Food Technological
Research Institute (CIFTRI) have very strongly called for a complete overhaul of PFA in order to
harmonise it with the international standards set by the Codex Alimentarius Commission.
The PFA does not always keep pace with advances in the food processing sector. Moreover, PFA
rules sometimes appear to be drafted in a manner that goes beyond the mere establishment of
minimum product quality specifications, by prescribing recipes for how food products are to be
manufactured.
Obviously, this demand from the food industry is to protect the health of the people but at the
same time there is a concern that food safety standards by other countries are being used against
India as non-tariff barriers to stop/restrict exports from India to the developed countries.
If we take a cursory look at the quality of food commodity being sold in the domestic market and
PFA functionaries, who are more than 6000 Food Inspectors, the domestic market challenges
towards food safety standards come to the fore. These typical Food Inspectors very often have no
scientific background, but orientation is towards legal technicalities. Any re-orientation of food
laws may not have any incentive to perform their duties diligently and honestly.
In theory, producers or traders who supply adulterated/contaminated produce can be taken to
court and fined or imprisoned, if found guilty. But there are some problems in implementing the
Act. It is a very long way from the central food laboratory to the court room and the whole Act is
unable to guarantee food safety at one hand and it also does not restrict import of unhygienic,
expired, badly labelled products from other countries. It is very important that the sampling
procedure is standardised and it is transparent which does not happen in PFA. The procedure for
formulation of standards should be participatory and all stake-holders should be consulted. With
regard to certification the emphasis should be on process control rather than the final product
48 (see:"COLANISATION'S DIRTY DOZEN", Down To Earth, August 15, 2003)
inspection. The procedures for inspection and drawing samples should be laid down in
accordance with the standards prescribed and should be in tune with the international practice.
The appeals process, however, is cumbersome and time consuming. All imported products must
adhere to the rules as specified in the regulation, including the labelling and marking
requirements.
Indian food laws are mostly archaic and the occasional law that does appear attractive seems
so only on paper. It is due to the lack of coordination among the various ministries. As a
remedial measure, it is argued for the creation of one central food regulatory authority that
will ensure formulation of more workable laws.
There should streamline of the laws to avoid overlaps in product coverage. For instance,
quality standards for canned fruit products are set by the FPO, the Agricultural Produce
(Grading and Marketing) Act, 1937, and the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act (PFA),
1954. Moreover, under the PFA, the offence and the punishment are the same whether the
adulteration is grave or minor. What is more, it specifies a list of additives that can be used
in food products, thereby making the use of anything else a case of adulteration49.
It is to be noted, that in the US, only two agencies control most of the food regulations.
Though the US has many laws and sub-agencies involved in implementing food regulations,
there is a clear understanding about the jurisdictions and responsibilities of each. Same
should be adopted in India.
On adapting foreign laws, the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP50) food
safety system should be made a norm in the domestic market.
Further, quality control should be issued at the micro level — the plant level and the supply
chain.
49 TAKING a cue from the Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) controversy, the government has decided to make changes
in the level of monosodium glutamate permitted in food.
It was found that the present one per cent limit allowed under the Prevention of Food Adulteration A (PFA), 1976
(amended) was even lower than the natural level found in so fruits and vegetables. The PFA does not clarify
whether the one per cent level is the amount in addition to that naturally present or is the total amount found The
Act is being reviewed as it contains so many outdated provisions. The PFA doe" not permit the entry of diet Coke
ano diet Pepsi as they contain a substance called aspertin. There is a fee[Z" among government officials KFC
controversy has adversely affected the inflow of foreign investment.
50The HACCP, which has its origins in the US National Aeronautical and Space Application (NASA) Center, is a system
that looks out for potential risks at critical points in the production cycle and then identifies appropriate control
and monitoring mechanisms to ensure safety of the product. In NASA, it was used as a way of guaranteeing the
food provided to astronauts in the 1960s. Now, it is mostly used by the food industry.
Conclusion
The act is in at least one sense, perfectly representative of the nation’s approach to combat social
problem confronted with the social problem, the government has constituently chosen to enact a
Adulterant Foods Commonly
criminal law banning the anti social conduct an important characteristic of crime.
The enforcers which mean the government, municipal bodies and all others responsible directly
or indirectly with the control of food adulteration will opine that the control of this menace needs
Lathyrussativus
a number of measures; only legal enforcement will not be enough. The basic requirements are
providing adequate food supply at a reasonable price, setting up of realistic food standards which
(Khesari dal)
are enforceable and which can be attained by majority of the traders (not only the big food
industries but the common agricultural producers, traders and the medium and petty food
processor), the minimum basic honesty on the part of the traders and the law enforcers, a band of
committed inspectorate staff and of course, a harsh deterrent punishment for those who commit
this crime.In the past five decades, the nature of food industry has changed. The market for
processed and pre-packed food has expanded tremendously. The food industry deploys
sophisticated and expensive food processing technology. There has been a revolution in creation
and use of newer packaging materials to give protection to articles of food. The law needs to be
revised to take stock of these practices. Law should not only continue to deter food adulterators,
but it should also be revised to be optimum in its effect, severe on violators and facilitators to
others.
The consumers' view is certainly most important because the prevention of food adulteration
machinery is designed for their benefit. The consumers feel by and large that an honest
enforcement will certainly reduce the crime and along with that is the need to award harsh
punishment, not only the provision of punishment under the law. Consumers can play a very
vital role in food adulteration thus consumer awareness needs to be done.
Diseases & Health
Involved
Effects
Mixed in other pulses like
cow pea (arhar/toor dal) or
as Khesari dal alone
Lathyrism (crippling
spastic paraplegia or
Lower limb paralyses)Khesari
Dal has a toxic Amino acid
APPENDIX-I
Stearin (fat derived
from palm oil)
& tallow (animal
fat)
Oxytocin hormone
injection
(Administered to
cattle to increase
the milk output)
Washing powder Ice Cream Gastric irritation leading
Spurious desi ghee
(clarified butter), yellow
butter
Traces reported from
Bovine Milk samples
known as Beta oxalyl amino
alanine. Cases Widely
reported from Bihar and
parts of U.P
Digestive problems,
prolonged usage may
cause accumulation of
cholesterol in the blood
vessels
Even traces are enough
to cause
Abortions, still births,
sterility & kidney damage
Argemone seeds
Argemone oil
Mustard seeds
And oil
Responsible for the Dropsy
outbreak in India during the
nineties
to peptic ulcers in
extreme cases
Epidemic dropsy,
Glaucoma,
Cardiac arrest
Methanol Cheap Alcoholic liquors.
Responsible for Hooch tragedy
and other similar instances
throughout the country.
Food grains, pulses etc. Damage digestive tract
Blurred vision, blindness,
death
Sand, marble chips,
stones, filth
Foreign leaves or
exhausted tea
leaves, saw dust
artificially coloured
Molasses Honey Digestive problems
Chalk powder Sugar, salt Contaminated chalk
Tea Injurious to health,
cancer
powder may contain
spores of pathogens like
ascaris, tapeworm
TCP Oils Paralysis
Rancid (spoilt due
to microbial action)
oil
Oils Destroys vitamin A and
E
Artificially
coloured foreign
seeds, papaya seeds
Calcium carbide
Used for artificially
ripening banana,
mangoes ect.
As a substitute for cumin
seed,
Poppy seed, blackpepper
Traces detected in fruits like
banana, mangoes etc.
Injurious to health
Consumption of such
fruits leads to
Diarrhoea
Ulcers,
Miscarriages
Mineral oil (white
oil, petroleum
fractions) & linseed
oil
Edible oils and fats, Cancer
Castor oil Groundnut oil Can cause abortion in
Mobile oil Used to impart a shiny
appearance to vegetables
like brinjal, tomatoes etc.
pregnant women when
amount adulterated goes
beyond 0.7 mg/kg of
body weight.
Harmful for the
Gastrointestinal also
causes respiratory
problems
Deleterious
chemicals
(Food colours,
additives)
Lead chromate Turmeric whole and
Foods involved Diseases/
Health effects
Anemia, abortion,
paralysis, brain damage
Metanil Yellow
(Not permitted by
the PFA*)
Rhodamin –B
(Not permitted by
the PFA*)
powdered, mixed spices,
pulses
Ice Creams, Candies,
Sweets like
Laddoos&Jalebies, dishes
like chicken tandoori
etc
Sweets like GulabJamuns
and Halwas
Male reproductive
defects like decreased
sperm count etc
Cancer
Orange II
(Not permitted by
the PFA*)
Congo red &
Butter Yellow
(Not permitted by
the PFA*)
Sudan I
(Not permitted by
the PFA*)
Malachite green Used to colourparwal&
Orange coloured sweets
like rasgullas
Cancer
Biscuits, Sweets and Cakes Carcinogenic on
prolonged usage
Red Chilli Powder Carcinogenic
Carcinogenic
peas
Ketchups, Jams, Jellies etc May cause allergies and
Sodium benzoate
(Preservative)
asthma according to the
American Academy
Allergy, Asthama&
Immunology
Anaemia
Copper Sulphate
(blue coloured)
Used to artificially
colourvegetables like Lady
fingers &Parwal
Saccharin Used as an artificial
Brominated
Vegetable oils
sweetener. Since it is 300-500
times sweeter than sugar.
Added to citrus
(orage,lemon)flavored drinks
Proven to the cause of
Urinary Bladder cancer
in mammals
Proven carcinogen
(B.V.O) to maintain their
Ajinomoto/
Monosodium
Glutamate (MSG)
Characteristic cloudy
appearance
A flavor enhancer in
prepared foods.
It was responsible for the
Kentucky Fried Chicken
(KFC) controversy in New
Delhi during the Nineties
Produces “Chinese
restaurant Syndrome”
Causing some people to
have a
Burning. sensation in
neck and fore arms,
tightness in the chest and
headache
Tin (cans) Food stored in cans Colic pains even
vomiting in some cases
Zinc (food
containers)
Mercury Mercury fungicide treated
Canned Foods Colic pains even
vomiting in some cases
Brain damage, paralysis,
death
seed grains or mercury
contaminated fish
Arsenic Fruits such as apples sprayed
over with lead arsenate
Barium Foods contaminated by rat
poisons (Barium carbonate)
Cadmium Fruit juices, soft drinks, etc.
in contact with cadmium
Dizziness, chills, cramps,
paralysis, death
Violent peristalisis,
arterial hypertension,
muscular twitching,
convulsions, cardiac
disturbances
‘Itai-itai (ouch-ouch)
disease, Increased
plated vessels or equipment.
Cadmium contaminated
water and shell-fish
Lead Drinking Water coming
Aluminium as thin
foils
from lead coated pipelines,
food stored in polythene
bags, natural and processed
food
Decoration of Sweet meats,
instead ofsilver foils
salivation, acute gastritis,
liver and kidney damage,
prostrate cancer
Lead poisoning (foot-
drop, insomnia, anemia,
constipation, mental
retardation, brain
damage)
Prolonged consumption
may lead to neurological
problems like
Alzheimer’s disease .
Carbofuran Brinjals
Developmental defects
and Cancer
To give a fresh purple
appearance to them
Cauliflowers
To give a fresh white
appearance to them
i.
Phosphomidon
e
ii. Methyl
Parathin
iii.
Monocrotopho
s
Developmental defects
and Cancer
PFA : Prevention of Food Adulteration ( Act), 1954
APPENDIX-II
Food article Adulteration Test
Wheat flour Excessive sand &
dirt
Shake a little quantity of sample with
about 10 ml. Of Carbon tetra chloride
and allow to stand. Grit and sandy matter
will collect at the bottom.
Excessive bran Sprinkle on water surface. Bran will float
on the surface.
Chalk powder Shake sample with dil. HCl
Effervescence indicates chalk.
Mustard oil Argemone oil Add 5 ml, conc. HNO3to 5 ml. sample.
Ghee (Clarified
butter)
Mashed Potato
Sweet Potato, etc.
Shake carefully. Allow to separate yellow,
orange yellow, crimson colour in the
lower acid layer indicates adulteration.
Boil 5 ml. Of the sample in a test tube.
Cool and a drop of iodine solution. Blue
colour indicates presence of Starch.
colour disappears on boiling &
reappears on cooling.
Vanaspati Take 5 ml. Of the sample in a test tube.
Synthetic
Colouring Matter
Pulses/Besan Kesari
dal(Lathyrussativus
)
Add 5 ml. Of Hydrochloric acid and 0.4
ml of 2% furfural solution or sugar
crystals. Insert the glass stopper and
shake for 2 minutes. Development of a
pink or red colour indicates presence of
Vanaspati in Ghee.
Pour 2 gms. Of filtered fat dissolved in
ether. Divide into 2 portions. Add 1 ml.
Of HCl to one tube. Add 1 ml. Of 10%
NaOH to the other tube. Shake well and
allow to stand. Presence of pink colour
in acidic solution or yellow colour in
alkaline solution indicates added
colouring matter.
Add 50 ml. Of dil.HCl to a small quantity
of dal and keep on simmering water for
about 15 minutes. The pink colour, if
developed indicates the presence of
Kesari dal.
Pulses MetanilYellow(dye) Add conc.HCl to a small quantity of dal
in a little amount of water. Immediate
development of pink colour indicates the
presence of metanil yellow and similar
colour dyes.
Lead Chromate Shake 5 gm. Of pulse with 5 ml. Of
Milk Water
water and add a few drops of HCl. Pink
colour indicates Lead Chromate.
Put a drop of milk on polished vertical
surface. The drop of pure milk either
stops or flows slowly leaving a white trail
Urea
Ice Cream Washing Powder
behind it. Whereas milk adulterated with
water will flow immediately without
leaving a mark.
Take 5 ml of milk in a test tube and add
2 drops of bromothymol blue soln.
Development of blue colour after 10
minutes indicates presence of urea.
Put some lemon juice, bubbles are
observed on the presence of washing
powder
Common
spices like
Turmeric,
chilly, curry
powder,etc.
Colour Extract the sample with Petroleum ether
Black Pepper Papaya seeds/light
berries, etc.
Spices(Ground
)
Coriander
powder
Common salt To 5 ml. Of sample add a few drops of
Powdered bran and
saw dust
Dung powder Soak in water. Dung will float and can be
and add 13N H2SO4 to the extract.
Appearance of red colour (which persists
even upon adding little distilled water)
indicates the presence of added colours.
However, if the colour disappears upon
adding distilled water the sample is not
adulterated.
Pour the seeds in a beaker containing
Carbon tetra-chloride. Black papaya
seeds float on the top while the pure
black pepper seeds settle down.
Sprinkle on water surface. Powdered
bran and sawdust float on the surface.
easily detected by its foul smell.
Red Chilli Brick powder grit,
sand, dirt, filth, etc.
silver nitrate. White precipitate indicates
adulteration.
Pour the sample in a beaker containing a
mixture of chloroform and carbon
tetrachloride. Brick powder and grit will
settle at the bottom.
Turmeric
Powder
Rodamine Culture
Starch of maize,
wheat, tapioca, rice
Take 2gms sample in a test tube, add 5ml
of acetone. Immediate appearance of red
colour indicates presence of Rodamine.
A microscopic study reveals that only
pure turmeric is yellow coloured, big in
size and has an angular structure. While
foreign/added starches are colourless
and small in size as compared to pure
turmeric starch.
Lead Chromate Ash the sample. Dissolve it in 1:7
Sulphuric acid (H2SO4) and filter. Add 1
or 2 drops of 0.1% dipenylcarbazide. A
pink colour indicates presence of Lead
Chromate.
Metanil Yellow Add few drops of conc.Hydrochloric
acid (HCl) to sample. Instant appearance
of violet colour, which disappears on
dilution with water, indicates pure
turmeric. If colour persists Metanil
yellow is present.
Rub the cumin seeds on palms. If palms
turn black adulteration in indicated.
Cumin seeds
(Black jeera)
Asafoetida
(Heeng)
Chalk Shake sample with Carbon tetrachloride
Grass seeds
coloured with
charcoal dust
Soap stone, other
earthy matter
Shake a little quantity of powdered
sample with water. Soap stone or other
earthy matter will settle at the bottom.
(CCl4). Asafoetida will settle down.
Saffron
Coloured dried
tendrils of maize
cob
Honey Water
Food grains Hidden insect
infestation
Tea
Coloured leaves
Used tea
Iron fillings
Coloured
Green
vegetables like
pointed gourd
(parwal),
Brinjal, chillietc
Malachite green
Decant the top layer and add dil.HCl to
the residue. Effervescence shows
presence of chalk.
Pure saffron will not break easily like
artificial. Pure saffron when allowed to
dissolve in water will continue to give its
colour so long as it lasts.
A cotton wick dipped in pure honey
burns when ignited with a matchstick. If
adulterated presence of water will not
allow the honey to burn, if it does will
produce a cracking sound.
Take a filter paper impregnated with
Ninhydrin (1% in alcohol.) Put some
grains on it and then fold the filter paper
and crush the grains with hammer. Spots
of bluish purple colour indicate presence
of hidden insects infestation
Rub leaves on white paper, artificial
colour comes out on paper.
Tea leaves sprinkled on wet filter paper.
Pink or red spots on paper show colour
Move a magnet through the sample. Iron
will stick to the magnet.
Take a small part of the sample and place
it over a moistened white blotting paper,
the impression of the colour on paper
indicates the presence of malachite green
ABBREVIATIONS
AGMARK Agricultural Marketing
APEDA Agro Processing Export Development Authority
ASI Annual Survey of Industries
BIS Bureau of Indian Standards
CAC Codex Alimentarius Commission
CFTRI Central Food Technological Research Institute
CII Confederation of Indian Industries
CSE Centre for Science and Environment's
DMI Directorate of Marketing and Inspection
EEC European Economic Community
EFR Excise and Food Adulteration Report
FAC Food Adulteration Cases
FAJ Food Adulteration Journal
FAO Food Adulteration Order
FAO Food and Agricultural Organization
FICCI Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry
FPC The Fnlit Products Order
FPI Food Processing Industry
FPO Foodstuff of Plant Origin
GDP Gross Domestic Product
GMP Good Manufacturing Practice
GVA Gross Value Added
HACCP Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points
ISO International Organization Standardization
KAU Kerala Agricultural University
MFPI Ministry of Food Processing Industries
MFPO Meat Food Products Order
MHFW Ministry of Health and Family Welfare
MIS Management Information System
NABL National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration
Laboratories
PFA Prevention of Food Adulteration Act
PFAJ Prevention of Food Adulteration Journal
SDP State Domestic Product
SSI Small Scale Industry
UNO United Nations Organization
WHO World Health Organization
WTO World Trade Organization
Ram Lal Vs. State of Rajasthan 2000
In this case sample of she-camel milk taken of which no standard is fixed .Accused was
acquitted by trial court as no standard has been fixed under the Act for such milk. The court
observed that there is no room for dissenting from the defence version that it was camel’s milk
that was sold to the Food Inspector — whether camel’s milk cannot be sold for human
consumption" Supreme Court unable to agree with the finding of the High Court that camel milk
is not fit for human consumption — in some States in India, particularly in Rajasthan, camel
milk is extensively used as edible article — different standards have been fixed for different
classes and designations of milk — the High Court, after holding that camel’s milk could not be
sold for human consumption, further held that the milk sold was not shown to be camel’s milk at
all. Nonetheless, learned single judge of the High Court, on the appeal preferred by the State,
convicted the appellant under Section 16(1) of the Act and sentenced him to rigorous
imprisonment for 6 months and to pay a fine of Rs. 1,000/- — the report of the Public Analyst
showed that the sample was examined and found to contain 25% of added water and that the
milk fat was 4.1% and the milk solid non-fat was 6.74%. — an article which is food does not
lose its character as food by the fact that it was also used or sold for other purposes — Rule 44 of
the Rules prohibits the sale of "milk which contains any added water". The Public Analyst who
tested the sample in the laboratory has reported that it contained 25% of added water. Hence the
offence to be found against appellant is Section 16(1)(a)(I) of the Act.
Shri Ranajoy Bose Vs. Shri A.B. Roy and another 2002.
The Court held each District Health Officer is authorised to exercise the power under Section
20(1) to accord consent under Section 20(1) P.F.A. Act in respect of the respective District in his
charge. Court dismissed the appeal.
State (Govt. of NCT of Delhi) Vs. Bansi Lal 2003
The question raised in this case was whether the High Court, while exercising the powers of
revision under Sections 397 read with Section 401 of the Code of Criminal Procedure can
entertain a new plea to consider and accord the benefit by enlarging on probation a person who is
under 18 years of age as envisaged under Section 20AA of the Prevention of food adulteration
Act, 1954. The court held that the question of law is left open; to be urged and decided in an
appropriate case thus the appeal is disposed of.
Mohinder Kumar Vs. State of Haryana 2004
In this case appeal was made against conviction under Sections 7 and 16. The appellant was
sentenced to 1 year imprisonment and fine of Rs. 1000/.in this case first accused mr. Naresh
kumar was acquitted. Food Inspector along with Doctor visited the shop of the first accused
Naresh Kumar and purchased 3 packets of iodized Tata salt ,the salt did not contain iodine as per
report of the Public Analyst. Further the report from the Central Food Laboratory also disclosed
that the sample did not conform to the standard prescribed under the Act and the Rules as it
contained only 5.0 ppm of iodine as against the required quantity of 15.0 ppm of iodine . First
accused Naresh Kumar filed application under section 14-A of the food adulteration Act .The
appellant herein was thus impleaded as the second accused -- the invoice allegedly issued by the
appellant herein was in the name of one Darshan Lal -- the first accused Naresh Kumar did not
adduce any evidence to show that he had purchased the adulterated article from the appellant
under the said invoice. The Trial Court proceeded on the assumption that the appellant admitted
the genuineness of the Bill No. 4987 and that he conceded that he had sold the Tata Salt to the
first accused Naresh Kumar but the evidence on record shows that the bill produced by the first
accused Naresh Kumar was standing in the name of one Darshan Lal and there is no evidence to
show that who was Darshan Lal, as in the bill it is not specifically stated that it was sold in
packed condition. Only the weight of the article is shown as 3, presumably 3 quintal and the total
amount paid is Rs. 375/-, the value being Rs. 125/- per quintal -- in the absence of specific
evidence as to whom invoice was issued and to whom adulterated article was sold by the
appellant it is difficult to prove complicity of the appellant -- neither the Trial Court nor the
Appellate Court adverted to this aspect of the case. The Court had ample power to invoke section
20(A) of the Act to prosecute the person who was really guilty of the offence punishable under
the Act. The conviction of the appellant was solely based on the invoice allegedly issued to
Darshan Lal. The Apex court held that as the genuineness of the invoice is not proved before the
Court, the conviction and sentence against the appellant is not sustainable under the law, thus
conviction set aside.
Nalin Thakur and others Vs. State of Maharashtra 2004.
In this case appellants directors of a company engaged in the manufacture and sale of vanaspati.
the sample did not conform to the standard. In three cases person nominated arrayed as an
accused did not stated in the complaint that the appellants were responsible for the conduct of the
business of the company. Four other complaints filed against the appellants and the Board of
Directors quashed. The court held that if the prosecution is successful in producing any materials
before the trial court to show that if these appellants could be prosecuted either under Section
17(a)(ii) or section 17(4), the trial court would be at liberty to take action in accordance with law
thus the court quashed the complaint.
State of Madhya Pradesh vs. Gendalal 2004.
As per High Court prosecution not maintainable. The High Court made acquittal on the ground
that there was nothing to show that the Food Inspector who had collected samples had undergone
the requisite training for three months. To this acquittal by High Court an appeal was made in
Supreme Court. The Apex Court observed when a question of this nature regarding competence
of an official is raised, it has to be taken before the Trial Court and thereby afford an opportunity
to the official concerned to place material in that regard. This was not done in present case, the
Court held that, it would be appropriate for the High Court to hear the matter afresh. Thus the
was matter remitted to the High Court for a fresh consideration.
Dayal Singh Vs. State of Rajasthan 2004.
In this case Sample was taken from a hard boiled sugar confectionary which found to contain
mineral oil, unpleasant smell and taste. The Court observed that application of the modified
standards to cases which arose before the amendment of the Rules, would be impracticable.the
Court further observed that as it is demonstrated by the facts of this case, the report of the Public
Analyst did not mention the percentage of mineral oil present in the sample at the relevant time,
thus 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 ,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. Further the apex court observed that a minimum sentence of six months R.I. prescribed
by law, Court not inclined to modify the sentence thus strict adherence to Prevention of food
adulteration Act and Rules is essential, for safeguarding the interest of consumers of articles of
food -- stringent laws will have no meaning if the offenders could go away with more fine. The
court observed 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. minimum sentence of six months R.I. prescribed by law.
Godawat Pan Masala Products I.P. Ltd. and another Vs. Union of India and others 2004.
Question was raised regarding validity of notifications issued by the Food (Health) Authority
under Section 7(iv) of the Prevention of food adulteration Act, 1954, by which the manufacture,
sale, storage and distribution of pan masala and gutka (pan masala containing tobacco) were
banned for different periods. The Court observed that the power of banning an article of food or
an article used as ingredient of food, on the ground that it is injurious to health, belongs
appropriately to the Central Government to be exercised in accordance with the rules made under
Section 23 of the Act, particularly, sub-section (1A)(f). The state Food (Health) Authority has no
power to prohibit the manufacture for sale, storage, sale or distribution of any article, whether
used as an article or adjunct thereto or not used as food. Such a power can only arise as a result
of wider policy decision and emanate from Parliamentary legislation or, at least, by exercise of
the powers by the Central Government by framing rules under Section 23 of the Act. Thus the
impugned notifications are ultra vires the Act and, hence, bad in law, the impugned notifications
are unconstitutional and void as abridging the fundamental rights of the appellants guaranteed
under Articles 14 and 19 of the Constitution.
Further question was raised before court Regarding Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products
(Prohibition of Advertisement and Regulation of Trade and Commerce, Production, Supply and
Distribution) Act, 2003.The question before the court was is the above act is directly in conflict
with the provisions of Section 7(iv) of the Prevention of food adulteration Act, 1954. The Apex
court observed that, the former Act is a special Act intended to deal with tobacco and tobacco
products particularly, while the latter enactment is a general enactment. Thus, the Act 34 of 2003
being a special Act, and of later origin, overrides the provisions of Section 7(iv) of the
Prevention of food adulteration Act, 1954 with regard to the power to prohibit the sale or
manufacture of tobacco products while are listed in the Schedule to the Act 34 of 2003.
State of Haryana Vs. Daya Nand 2004.
In this case sample of milk was taken in which non solid fat was found to be 8.1% instead of
8.5% while solid fat was found to be 4.5% as against the requirement of 4%. Conviction by trial
court but acquittal by High Court on the assumption of improper stirring. The Apex court
observed that The High Court rather casually has come to an erroneous assumption that there
was improper stirring for which there is no foundation at all, The High Court could not have
substituted a factual foundation available on record, by an assumption, to give benefit of doubt to
the respondent, appeal was allowed and the order of the High Court set aside.
Dinesh Kumar Vs. State of M.P. 2004.
In this case sample of Besan taken was found adulterated. The trial Court as after considering the
entire material and hearing the parties acquitted accused. On appeal, Madhya Pradesh High
Court held that the appellant has contravened relevant provisions of the Act and was, therefore,
to be convicted. On appeal Apex Court observed Section 2(i)(c) deals with substitution of an
article by inferior or cheaper substance which affects injuriously the nature, substance or quality
thereof. In the Public Analyst's report there was no reference to this aspect. What would happen
if the Public Analysts' report in this regard even if Rule 44A was not in operation, does not
therefore, fall for consideration in this case. On that score alone the High Court's judgment is
indefensible and is accordingly set aside.
Further in this case question was raised regarding sale of Kesari dal. There was violation of Rule
44A of Prevention of food adulteration Rules, 1955,according to which sale of Kesari dal in any
form was forbidden. Even though the ash content was within permissible limit, accused-appellant
was to be convicted for violation of Rule 44A of the Rules. The trial Court had held though the
ingredients were within the permissible limit but because of the mixture of Kesari Dal, the article
could not be said to be adulterated ,there was no finding recorded by the Public Analyst that the
percentage of powder of Kesari as had been found in the sample, affected injuriously the nature,
substance and quality of the food article analysed. Accordingly, it was held that the sample
collected was not adulterated. High Court only referred to Rule 44A and held that adulteration
was established, the State Government concerned has to notify in the official gazette the date
with effect from which Rule 44A becomes applicable in the State. The apex Court observed
since Rule 44A was not applicable and was not in operation in the State of M.P. on the date of
alleged collection of samples Rule 44A could not have been applied to find the accused guilty.