Rose v. State

5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 72, 11 Ohio C.C. 87
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 72 (Rose v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rose v. State, 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 72, 11 Ohio C.C. 87 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Marvin, J.'

The case of L. C. Rose, plaintiff in error, against the state of Ohio, defendant in error, involves a construction of one of the pure food statutes of the state.

In this case Rose, the plaintiff in error, was arrested upon an affidavit charging that on or about the 12th day of March, 1895, at the county of Cuyahoga, Ohio, he unlawfully offered and exposed for sale and sold an article under the name of cocoa; that it was so offered and exposed for sale and sold as an article of human food and to be used for human food; that the article so offered and exposed fox sale and sold was not pure cocoa, but was an adulteration; that certain other substances were added to or mixed with the cocoa, and that there had been extracted from the cocoa a necessary constitutent thereof, to wit: a large per cent of the fat; that the article so sold was not labeled as a mixture and compound with the name and per cent of each ingredient therein,,and which entered into and formed what was so exposed and offered for sale and sold.

The prosecution was under the statute passed by the general assembly of this state on the 20th of March, 1884, as amended April 22, 1890. That statute is divided into five sections, but it is only the first three sections with which we have to deal in this case. The third section has lettered subdivisions, and such subdivisions have numbered paragraphs. Omitting from each of these sections so much as is not involved in this case, we have the statute reading as follows:

Section 1. “No person shall, within this state, manufacture for sale, offer for sale, or sell any drug or article of food which is adulterated, within the meaning of this act.”

Sec. 3. “ An article shall be deemed to be adulterated within the meaning of this act: * * *

“(b) In the case of food: (1) If any substance or substances have been mixed with it, so as to lower or depreciate it, or injuriously affect its quality, strength or purity; (2) If any inferior or cheaper substance or substances have been substituted wholly or in part for it; (3) If any valuable or necessary constituent or ingredient has been wholly or in part abstracted from it, ”

[73]*73There is a proviso in the statute which reads: “ Provided, that the provisions of this act shall not apply to mixtures or compounds recognized as ordinary articles qf food, or ingredients of articles, if each and every package sold or offered for sale be distinctly labeled as mixtures or compounds, with the name and per cent of each ingredient therein, and are not injurious to health. ”

The plaintiff in error, Rose, was tried before a justice of the peace and a jury upon the charge made in the affidavit, and upon such trial was found guilty. He filed a motion for a new trial, also a motion in arrest of judgment, both of which were overruled, and judgment entered upon the verdict. A petition in error with a bill of exceptions embodying all the evidence was filed in the court of common pleas, and upon hearing there had, the judgment of the justice was affirmed, and the case comes to this court upon a petition in error to reverse the judgments of the lower courts, and the entire record, including all the evidence, is before us.

The important question here to be determined is whether the verdict of the jury was sustained by the evidence. It is clearly established by the evidence that at the time and place charged in the affidavit the plaintiff in error sold, to be consumed as human food, a package containing a manufactured product of the cocoa bean, the bean being a natural product of the tree known as the cacao tree. The product of the cocoa tree is the cocoa nut, and the product of the cacao tree is the cocoa bean. That such manufactured product contained nothing which was not a part of the cocoa bean. The charge in the affidavit, it will be observed, is that other substances were added to the cocoa to make the article sold, but the evidence of the experts introduced on the part of the state — shows that there was nothing added to the cocoa to make the article which was sold by Rose. That such manufactured product contained nothing which was not a part of the cocoa bean, but resulted from converting that bean, by removing the hulls and drying and baking, into what is known as cocoa nibs, and then abstracting therefrom a considerable part of the fat or oily matter, and then grinding the remainder into a powdered substance. There is no dispute in the evidence that this was the article sqld under the name of cocoa; that such powdered substance is sold and has been known and has been sold for twenty-five years past and more under the name of “cocoa;” and that besides this article produced in the way which I have explained,, there is sold and known and for a like period there has been sold and known as “cocoa” a manufactured product, which is produced by the mixing and compounding with the cocoa bean after grinding, some other harmless matter, so that the percentage of oil will be less than in the natural product, in either way; that is to say, whether manufactured as the cocoa which was sold in this case was manufactured, by abstracting the 'fat or the oily part of the bean, or by adding some harmless matter to the bean, to the natural product, so that the per cent of oil shall be reduced. For more than twenty-five years the evidence clearly shows that each of these has been known and generally recognized and sold as “cocoa.”

There is no claim in this case that what was sold was not entirely wholesome. That is agreed upon by all the witnesses in this case who Say anything upon that subject.

The evidence establishes that the package sold was put up in a tin box haying imprinted in the cover in large letters the words “Walter [74]*74Baker & Co.’s Breakfast Cocoa,” and having a wrapper around the box on one side of which printed in large letters are the words “ Breakfast Cocoa,” and on another side “ Baker’s Breakfast Cocoa ” in large letters, followed by the words in smaller letters, but still in very distinct type, “ From which the excess of oil has been removed,” and on a third side the words in large letters “ This Extract of Cocoa ” and toward the bottom of the label on the same side of the box as the words last quoted these words .in distinct type, “ The excess of oil having been removed.”

The sale was made to one Henry C. Eowrie, who asked for cocoa.

The determination of the case depends upon the construction to be given to the statute under which Rose was prosecuted. It will be observed that but for the exception already read, “ Provided that the provision of this act shall not apply to mixtures or compounds recognized as ordinary' articles of food, or ingredients of articles, if each and every package sold or offered for sale be distinctly labeled as mixtures or compounds, and are not injurious to health, with the name and per cent of each ingredient therein,” the statute would absolutely prohibit both the manufacture and sale of all articles of food named in the statute; and it will be further observed that to bring an article within the exception — that is, to make it such an article as may be sold if properly labeled in pursuance of the statute — it must be a mixture or compound which may be relieved from the prohibition of the statute by having the proper label. And this brings us to a consideration of whether the article sold by this plaintiff in error is a mixture or compound

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 72, 11 Ohio C.C. 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-v-state-ohcirctcuyahoga-1896.