Biswas, J.@mdashThe Petitioner is said to be a dealer in ghee at Nitpore in the District of Dinajpur. On the 25th October, 1935, a consignment of
25 tins of buffalo ghee, admittedly meant for him, was landed at Godagari steamer-ghee and put into two carts for being. Conveyed to the
Godagari railway station from where it was to be booked to Rohonpur station where the Petitioner was to take delivery. Godagari is within the
District of Rajshahi and Rohonpur in Dinajpur. On the way the carts were stopped by the Sanitary Inspector of the Rajshahi District Board on
suspicion, and some samples of the ghee taken by him from one of the tins which were all sealed up. The samples were sent to the Public Analyst
for examination, and upon his report that the ghee was ""highly adulterated,"" the present prosecution was started before a Magistrate of the First
Class at Rajshahi. The complaint was filed by the Sanitary Inspector, and stated that the Petitioner had on the 25th October, 1935, infringed sec. 6
of the Bengal Food Adulteration Act, 1919 (Bengal Act VI of 1919) by "" exposing for sale or selling"" adulterated buffalo ghee. The Petitioner was
found guilty and sentenced by the Magistrate to pay a fine of Rs. 100, and on appeal to the Sessions Judge, the sentence was maintained, but the
conviction was altered to one under the said section, read with sec. 511 of the Indian Penal Code. Hence the present Rule.
2. There is one preliminary remark I feel bound to make in this case, and that is with reference to the delay in starting the prosecution. As stated
above, the offence was alleged to have been committed on the 25th October, 1935, and yet the complaint was not filed before the 8th July, 1936.
It appears that the samples were submitted to the Public Analyst on the 30th October, 1935, but his report was not received until the 11th May,
1936, and it was not till about two months after that the case was commenced. There is no explanation whatever on the record for this inordinate
delay. It seems to me to be amazing that it took over six months for the analyst to make his report, and then about two months for the District
Board to make up its mind, if it can be said to have had any mind at all. Whether it was gross negligence or hopeless inefficiency, I will not pause
to inquire, but I am not at all surprised that the Petitioner should have made it a grievance that the analyst''s report which was the basis of the
prosecution had been delayed so long. The learned Sessions Judge says that "" there is no reason to think that the adulteration took place in transit
or in process of time,"" but in the absence of any evidence from the analyst or from some other person competent to speak on the subject, it seems
to me to be impossible to tell how far the report might or might not have been affected by the delay. The least the prosecution could do in the case
was to have examined some one to speak to the effect of this long lapse of time.
3. One other matter I cannot help referring to and it is that the District Board took no action to see that the suspected ghee might not be used. It
would be hard to beat the naivet� of the Sanitary Inspector, who said this:
I suspected that the tins might contain adulterated food. I did not take any action that the ghee might not be used. I did not think it necessary to
seize all the ghee
4. The sooner public health authorities shed such conceptions of their duty, the better.
5. There is yet another comment, bearing on the Rule, which the case invites, and it is as to the lack of care in framing the complaint. As already
pointed out, the complaint was that the Petitioner had infringed sec. 6 ""by exposing for sale or selling"" adulterated ghee. And yet it is clear on the
prose caution case itself that there was no question of selling or of exposing for sale any ghee. The ghee was seized in transit, and it is not said that
any of the tins of ghee which were on the carts at the time was sold or exposed for sale. The learned Advocate for the District Board was unable
to deny this: so he was obliged to fall back upon a plea that whatever the complaint, the Court could convict for any other offence that the
Petitioner may be shown to have committed.
6. The other offence which from the facts proved the Petitioner is said to have committed is also under sec. 6, not by selling or exposing for sale as
alleged in the complaint, but by ""storing for sale"" Sec. 6, it will be seen, prohibits not merely selling or exposing for sale, but also manufacture or
store for sale. This being a summons case, it is true that sec. 246 of the Code of Criminal Procedure would not limit the finding or conviction to the
offence stated in the complaint, but I have no sympathy with a public body which, knowing the facts it relies on and can prove, still omits or
neglects to shape the complaint in terms which will accord with the facts. There was absolutely no justification here for not specifying the particular
form of breach of sec. 6 which the Petitioner was supposed to be guilty of. Such laxity the law may condone, but certainly merits no approval or
encouragement.
7. The question next arises whether there was ""storing for sale "" in breach of sec. 6. The learned Advocate for the District Board relies strongly on
sub-sec. (4) of this section. This sub-section provides that in any prosecution under this section, the Court shall, unless and until the contrary is
proved, presume that any of the articles mentioned therein found in the possession of a person who is in the habit of manufacturing or storing such
articles for sale, has been manufactured or stored for sale by such person.
8. It will be seen that the trying Magistrate relied on this sub-section, and holding that at the time the ghee was seized, the Petitioner was in
constructive possession through his servant Nur Muhammad, and that the Petitioner was a person in the habit of storing ghee for sale, drew the
presumption under this sub-section and found that the ghee was stored for sale by the Petitioner. The learned Sessions Judge, however, was of
opinion that sub-sec. (4) refers to actual, and not constructive, possession, and in that view altered the conviction to one for an attempt to sell or
store for sale adulterated ghee, reading sec. 6 with sec. 511 of the Indian Penal Code. It may be stated at once that the learned Judge was wholly
wrong in having recourse to sec. 511, as this section deals only with attempts to commit offences punishable under the Indian Penal Code. It can
have no application to an attempt to commit an offence under the Bengal Food Adulteration Act. This was conceded by the learned Advocate for
the prosecution, and he accordingly renewed the argument which had found favor with the trying Magistrate.
9. Now, as to sub-sec. (4), it is clear that this reverses the ordinary rule of evidence which rests the onus of proof in a criminal trial on the
prosecution: it will therefore, have to be strictly construed. Admittedly, in this case there is no positive evidence of storing of ghee for sale, and that
is why the presumption is invoked. But are the necessary conditions as laid down in the sub-section satisfied?
10. The person in whose possession the ghee is said to have been found here is Nur Muhammad, not the Petitioner. The evidence of the
Steamship Company Sub-agent (P. W. 4) is that Nur Muhammad took delivery of the tins on behalf of the Petitioner: the question is, whether this
can make the possession of Nur Muhammad the possession of the Petitioner for the purposes of sub-sec. (4). The Magistrate seems to think that
because sec. 6 [1916] 2 K. B, 753 says that ""no person shall, directly or indirectly, himself or by any other person on his behalf,"" do the offending
act, the possession in sub-sec. (4) may be equally the possession of the person accused and of any other person on his behalf. I do not think I can
accept this argument. This will be reading into the sub-section words which are not there: if that was the intention, the legislature might easily have
added after the words "" a person who is in the habit of manufacturing or storing like articles for sale "" som such words as "" or of any other person
on his behalf,"" like we find in sub-sec.[1916] 2 K. B, 753.. Possession in sub-sec. (4) must mean actual physical possession. It is to be observed
that mere possession of any of the articles referred to therein is not an offence under the Act, but from the fact of possession a presumption is to be
drawn which will establish an offence. That being so, the word ""possession"" must be given a strict interpretation, and cannot be extended to include
constructive possession"" Compare the decision in Webb v. Baker [1916] 2 K. B, 753. The fact that the ghee was in a cart for the purpose of
being carried and was not deposited in any place for the purpose of sale, in other words, that it was in transit, need not militate against the
presumption of storing for sale. See Daly v. Webb [1869] Ir. R. 4 C. L. 309. and Williams v. Allen [1916] 1 K. B. 425 (1915). But, as I have
said, it is only the person who is found in possession of the offending article against whom the presumption may be drawn. I agree, therefore, with
the Sessions Judge that on the facts found it cannot be said that the Petitioner stored ghee for sale, and as I have held that sec. 511 of the Indian
Penal Code cannot apply, it follows the prosecution must fail.
11. The second condition required by sub-sec. (4) is also not satisfied in this case. The condition is that the person against whom the presumption
is to be drawn must be shown to be a person who is in the habit of storing ghee for sale. The only evidence on the point is this. P. W. 5 says that
the Petitioner has a shop at Nitpur: ""it is a very big shop. It deals in ghee, sugar, cloth, etc."" P. W. 4, the steamship company sub-agent, says that
the Petitioner on an average takes delivery of about 25 tins of ghee per month, and P. W. 6, the station-master at Godagari, deposes that on two
subsequent dates to the date of the alleged offence, he saw two consignments of ghee arriving for the Petitioner. There is not a word in the
evidence what the consignments were intended for, nor as to what used to be done at the Petitioner''s shop at Nitpur, and yet it should not have
been difficult for the prosecution to give evidence on these points. I am wholly unable to agree with the trying Magistrate that the only inference that
can be drawn from the evidence is that the accused is in the habit of storing ghee for sale.
12. The result is that inspire of the fact that here was a man who was indenting ""highly adulterated"" ghee, he is able successfully to dodge the law,
not through any particular astuteness on his part, but solely and simply through the ineptitude of the prosecuting authorities.
13. The conviction and sentence passed on the Petitioner are, therefore, set aside, and the fine, if paid, must be refunded. A copy of this judgment
may be transmitted to the District Board of Rajshahi.