People v. Castro

76 P.R. 143
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 3, 1954
DocketNo. 15528
StatusPublished

This text of 76 P.R. 143 (People v. Castro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Castro, 76 P.R. 143 (prsupreme 1954).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Negrón Fernández

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant was convicted of the crime of adulteration of milk and sentenced to pay a fine of $25 under the charge that “he had in his possession and control and transported cow’s milk which he offered and had for sale for human consumption, which was adulterated with water added artificially.”

The two assignments on appeal challenge the sufficiency of the evidence.

In addition to the fact of the adulteration by 19 per cent of water added artificially — which was stipulated — the evidence for the People which consisted of the testimony of José Yeyo Rojas, Inspector of the Department of Health, is substantially the same as that for the defense, which consists of the testimony of the defendant himself. It is, briefly, as follows: “The appellant worked as a driver transporting milk for the Caribbean Dairy, Inc., a pasteurizing [144]*144and bottling milk plant located at Santa Ana Street, Stop 24, Santurce,, His work consisted of calling for the milk at different dairies and transporting it to the plant. On October 21, 1952, when the defendant returned from one of the rounds and while unloading and delivering the milk to be subjected to the pasteurization process, health inspector José Yeyo Rojas took samples from the cans which the former brought from the different dairies. A laboratory test revealed that the sample obtained from the can labeled “Ramón Cruz” was adulterated with water. All the cans, including the latter, were closed, labeled and sealed, and it was necessary to tear off the labels in order to obtain the samples. After the milk is pasteurized and bottled, the Caribbean Dairy sells it to the public. The pasteurization process, which takes about half an hour, commences from the time the milk is poured out of the cans into a sieve and strained, and then passes to a pasteurizing tank, where the process is completed and the milk bottled.

We need not examine here the cases of People v. Cedrés, 41 P.R.R. 112, and People v. Vidal, 44 P.R.R. 502, cited by appellant, and that of People v. Cotis, 50 P.R.R. 464, cited by the prosecuting attorney. In view of the facts of this case, we cannot agree with the prosecuting attorney that the evidence is sufficient to prove that the milk was transported by defendant for human consumption — admitting, as did that officer, that the defendant neither offered it nor had it for sale — for, knowing the destination of the milk, the Caribbean Dairy pasteurization plant, as well as the pasteurization process to which it is subjected before selling it to the public, the immediate purpose of the transportation — when the milk was taken from appellant — was not for human consumption. The process of pasteurization consisting of the heating of the milk to a temperature of 145 degrees Fahrenheit and holding it at that temperature for 30 minutes, cooling it rapidly for the purposé of destroying pathogenic organisms — germs, bacteria and' other substances that, might [145]*145be in raw milk — took place between the time the milk was transported from the dairies and the final human consumption. See H.P. Hood & Sons v. Commonwealth, 127 N.E. 497, 499; City of Richmond Dairy Co., 157 S.E. 728, 732; City of Louisville v. Ewing Von-Allmen Dairy Co., 105 S.W. 2d 801, 802. The prosecuting attorney failed to prove that the adulterated milk taken from the can labeled “Ramón Cruz” would be used for human consumption in that condition. On the contrary, the evidence offered by him proved, as has been seen, that the milk from all the cans received at the plant was emptied, and necessarily mingled, into a receptacle or sieve to be strained, and from there it passed to the tank where pasteurization took place. The adulterated milk from the can labeled “Ramón Cruz” was not used for human consumption in such condition but as part of the bulk of the milk brought from the dairies to be pasteurized. It not having been established that the milk, already pasteurized, contained a percentage of water greater than the natural contents of milk, we must necessarily conclude that the evidence was insufficient.

The judgment is reversed and the defendant acquitted.

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Related

City of Louisville v. Ewing Von-Allmen Dairy Co.
105 S.W.2d 801 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1937)
City of Richmond v. Richmond Dairy Co.
157 S.E. 728 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
76 P.R. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-castro-prsupreme-1954.