People v. Butler

140 A.D. 705, 125 N.Y.S. 556, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3019
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 140 A.D. 705 (People v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Butler, 140 A.D. 705, 125 N.Y.S. 556, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3019 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Spring, J.:

The action is to recover a penalty for delivering adulterated milk to a cheese factory. The defendant is a farmer in Erie county [706]*706with a dairy of forty cows, and in 1902 was delivering its product to a full cream cheese factory at Chaffee, in said county.

About eight o’clock on the morning of May twenty-first of that year one Murray, who was the agent of the defendant, delivered four cans of milk from the defendant’s herd to this factory. The cans were of a capacity of thirty gallons each, two containing the milk of that morning, while in the other two, containing about forty gallons, weighing 372 pounds, was the milk produced the evening before. The morning’s milk was emptied into the weighing can and tested with the lactometer, and it was then all run out of the can. After that the milk in the two cans containing the night’s milk was poured into the weighing can. There were present an Assistant Commissioner of Agriculture of the State and another agent of that Department, who handed Murray a dipper and told him to stir the milk thoroughly, which he did with the dipper “ seven or eight times in a rotary way,” and the agent again applied the lactometer which showed that the milk was adulterated. He placed a quantity of this milk, after it was mixed, into a jar, from which he took duplicate samples, filling two bottles, properly labeling, sealing and numbering them, and gave one to Murray, directing him to deliver it to the defendant, which he did, and later tile State agent gave the, other to the State chemist! (Agricultural Law [Glen. Laws, chap. 33; Laws of 1893, chap. 338], § 12, as amd. by Laws of 1898, chap. 557.)

Adulterated milk, so far as pertinent to this case, as defined by the statute, means : Milk containing (1) more than eighty-eight per centum of water or fluids ; or (2) less than twelve per centum of milk solids; or (3) less than three per centum of fats. (Agricultural Law, § 20.) A subsequent analysis of the sample of the defendant’s milk delivered to the State chemist disclosed that it contained eighty-nine and twelve one-hundredths per cent of water, ten and eighty-eight one-lmndredtlis per cent of total solids and two and eighty-two one-hundredtlis per cent of fats. In each of the three particulars mentioned the milk was adulterated. In other words, the analysis disclosed, taking the maximum per centum of water permissible for wholesome milk as the basis, that ten per centum or four gallons of water above this maximum was in the defendant’s milk when deli vered at the factory.

[707]*707On Hay twenty-ninth two agents of the State Agricultural Department were at the farm of the defendant, saw the milking done, and with his consent took a sample of the mixed milk of the entire herd of cows, delivering a duplicate sample of the milk to the defendant and retaining one (Agricultural Law, § 12, as amd. supra), which an analysis demonstrated was wholesome milk.

The milk product from which the samples were taken at the factory had been placed in three cans as it was drawn from the cows at the defendant’s farm the evening preceding its delivery at the factory. These cans were placed in a tub of cold water, the covers removed for the night, and in the morning this milk was emptied into two cans, which were carried to the factory.

It is the contention of the defendant’s counsel that all the milk of the defendant' delivered to the factory should have been commingled and the sample taken from this mixture instead of from the night’s milk alone. Section 12 referred to in defining how the inspection of milk offered for sale shall be conducted provides that when the officer making the examination “ shall in discharge of his duties take samples of such product, he shall before taking a sample, request the person delivering the milk or who has charge of it at the time of inspection, to thoroughly stir or mix the said milk before the sample is taken. * * * The person taking the sample of milk for analysis shall take duplicate samples thereof.” The statute does not in terms prescribe that the two milkings shall be mixed before the sample is taken.

In People v. Wiard (61 App. Div. 612; affd., on grounds stated in memorandum below, 170 N. Y. 690) the producer delivered eight cans of milk to a railroad station for a single purchaser. The sample of milk which was analyzed was from one can. This court in overruling the plaintiff’s exceptions made the following memorandum : “ Held, that the analysis of a sample of milk taken from only part of the product delivered by the producer at any one time to a single purchaser will not afford a basis for an action for a penalty under the Agricultural Law.” All the milk contained in the eight cans was produced that morning, so there was no mixing of all the milk. The sample taken from the one can of eight would not enable a fair comparison to be made of this milk with the product of the herd of the producer, which is an imperative requirement.

[708]*708The statute is specific in requiring the sample of the herd at the farm to be from the mixture of the entire product of the herd. In order to make this comparative test effective the first sample must be from all the milk of one milking when thoroughly stirred.

In the Wiard case it was from only, a part of the herd. It was not a sample of all delivered from one milking. In the present case all of one milking was mixed and a sample taken from it, so that it is not within the condemnation of the Wiard case. Here the fair comparative test could be made. In the winter time the farmer may deliver to the factory at one time the product of half a dozen milkings each in cans by itself. It cannot be that in order to obtain a fair sample all of this product of several days must be commingled. The producer is protected if the one milking is mixed conformably to the statute and its other provisions observed. He then has the entire product of one milking at the farm compared with one entire milking delivered at the factory.

It is claimed on behalf of the defendant that it is difficult, and the defendamos expert says well nigh impossible, to reunite the ingredients of the milk after the cream has raised over night. It would add still more to this difficulty if the two or more milkings were intermixed.

At the close Of the entire evidence the trial judge directed a verdict for the plaintiff for fifty dollars, the least sum to be awarded for a violation of this statute. (Agricultural Law, § 37, as amd. by Laws of 1901, chap. 656.) The defendant’s counsel asked “to go to the jury on the whole case,” and claims now that the fairness of the sample was a question of fact for the jury.

The night’s milking was poured from the two large cans into the weighing can four or five feet below. Each can was elevated by means of a crane above the weighing can and then tipped over, letting out the milk, which would fall in a large volume and with a rush. The momentum caused by twenty gallons of milk falling into this weighing can followed by another like quantity would cause the mass to be mingled together thoroughly. The defendant’s agent was requested to stir this milk thoroughly, and the two witnesses who testified on the subject say he thoroughly stirred it, describing the manner in which it was done. Hurray was not sworn. These agents were engaged in the inspection of milk at that factory from [709]*709seven o’clock until eight-thirty that morning, yet no one disputed their testimony.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 A.D. 705, 125 N.Y.S. 556, 1910 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3019, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-butler-nyappdiv-1910.