Rose v. State

2 Ohio N.P. 270, 4 Ohio Dec. 44, 1895 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 106
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ohio N.P. 270 (Rose v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas 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, 2 Ohio N.P. 270, 4 Ohio Dec. 44, 1895 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 106 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

LAMPSON, J.

On the 4th day of June, 1895, an affidavit was made and filed with E. H. Bohm, a justice of the peace in and for the county of Cuyahoga and state of Ohio, in which affidavit it was alleged, that on or about the 12th day cf March, 1895, at the county of Cuyahoga, state aforesaid, the plaintiff in error did unlawfully offer and expose for sale a certain package weighing about one-quarter of a pound, under the name of cocoa, as and for pure cocoa, as and for an article of human food, and to be used as human food, from which cocoa there had been extracted about one-third of the natural fat of cocoa, and which fat had been replaced with “sucrose” and starch, thereby injuring and affecting the strength and purity of the article; and, further, that by extracting one-third of the fat aforesaid, there had been taken from said cocoa as an article of human food a valuable and necessary constituent of said cocoa, contrary to the form of the statute in such cases made and provided.

A warrant was issued upon the affidavit, and the defendant arrested; the defendant entered a plea of not guilty to the charge made against him, and on the 15th day of August, 1895, trial was had before the justice and a jury, resulting in a verdict of guilty as charged, and on the 20th day of August, 1895, the defendant was sentenced to pay a fine of $75 and the costs of prosecution, and stand committed until fine and costs were paid; and the petition in error is filed in this court for the purpose of reviewing and reversing this judgment of the' justice of the peace by reason of various errors which are claimed to have entered into the record of said case.

While a large amount of testimony was taken in the'case, and a number of exceptions entered both to the admission and exclusion of evidence, and to other matters that took place during the trial of the case, counsel have argued and presented the case to this court solely upon one question —counsel for the plaintiff in error and the defendant in error both saying that their object was to waive all technical and minor questions which might be raised, for the purpose of getting a decision upon what they consider the main question arising in. this case. And this question, therefore, will be the only one considered by the court, and which is, as claimed by the plaintiff in error, that no crime as been committed, as shown by the testimony in the case.

The determination of this question depends upon the construction of clause 8 of subdivision b, section 8, of an act entitled “An act to provide against the adulteration of food and drugs,” passed March 20, 1884, and which took effect forty days after the passage of the same.

This act, so far as it relates to the question under consideration, including the clause aforesaid, reads as follows:

Sec. 1 No person shall within this state manufacture for sale,offer for [271]*271sale, or sell, any drug or article of food ivbich is adulterated within the meaning of this act.

Sec. 2. The term food, as used herein, shall include all articles used for food or drink by man, whether simple, mixed or compound.

Sec. 8. 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 lover or depreciate 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 nec■essary constituent or ingredient has been wholly or in part abstracted from it.

Now, it is claimed by the plaintiff in error, that the record disclosing all of the testimony in the case, fails to show any violation of this provision and prohibition of the statute. He says that the article complained of in the package described in the affidavit, and which was •offered in evidence in the case, was a package of cocoa prepared for consumption as a beverage, and known as “Walter Baker’s Breakfast Cocoa;” that it was a preparation of cocoa known to the trade for a-great many years, and that while the record shows that a large percentage of the fat •or cocoa oil had been extracted from the ground cocoa bean before the article was put in packages for the market, yet that the extracting of that fat or cocoa oil does not come within the prohibition of the statute. On the part of the state, it is claimed, that extracting the oil of -cocoa from the ground cocoa bean did constitute a violation of this prohibition of the statute.

Now, the testimony shows briefly, that the substance contained in the package which is the substance of the comxdaint in this action, was the •cocoa bean ground, with 30 to 50 per cent, of the cocoa oil extracted therefrom.

That this product was designed as a food to be used for the making of •a beverage or drink.

No substances were mixed with it — at least no substances mixed with it that changed or altered the natural constituency of the article itself.

In other words, the manufacturer took the cocoa bean, ground it up, having extracted a considerable portion of the oil therefrom, put the product thus prepared in the packages, and labeled it “Walter Baker’s Breakfast Cocoa,” and put it on the market for sale. The state says that was a violation of the prohibition of this clause of the statute “that an article of food shall be deemed to be adulterated if any valuable or necessary constituent or ingredient has been wholly or in part abstracted from it.”

It would seem as if the solution of this question was a simple one— that the only inquiry necessary to make (the facts being as stated), would be, is the oil of cocoa a valuable constituent in the preparation made of the cocoa bean for the jmrpoies of being used as an article of food, to-wit, the making of a beverage? Now, if this is all that is necessary to be determined, it is easily determined from the facts in the oase. Though there is a little manifestation of the expert on the x>art of some of the witnesses, perhaps only one — I mean manifestation of the retained expert, for the purposes of making cut a defense, yet, in fairness to them, all say that the oil of cocoa is the valuable ingredient in any preparation that can be made of the cocoa bean as an article of food. That, in other words, it gets its value for the purposes of making a drink for human beings from the presence of cocoa oil in the preparation. They further say that the cocoa bean, prepared for the purposes of beverage, or making a beverage, is used [272]*272with all of the oil in the product; that then the full strength of the cocoa, is obtained; that the reduction of the amount of oil lowers the strength, of the substance. Now, it would seem as if this determined the question, unless there is something about the subject-matter of this inquiry which relieves it from the condemnation of the statute.

For this purpose, the plaintiff in error says that this is a preparation well known to the trade, and well known to the trade at the time when this act was passed; that it has a trade name, “Walter Baker’s Breakfast. Cocoa;” that it is an article of food prepared from a natural product, and that, so long as Walter Baker does not change, or anybody else change the-ingredients of his preparation of breakfast cocoa, no violation of this statute has taken place.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio N.P. 270, 4 Ohio Dec. 44, 1895 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-v-state-ohctcomplcuyaho-1895.