State v. Layton

61 S.W. 171, 160 Mo. 474, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 26, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 61 S.W. 171 (State v. Layton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Layton, 61 S.W. 171, 160 Mo. 474, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 71 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

On the thirtieth day of August, 1899, the assistant prosecuting attorney of the St. Louis Court of Criminal correction lodged in that court the following information against Whitney Layton of said city:

“Richard Johnston, assistant prosecuting attorney, of [482]*482the St. Louis Court of Criminal Correction, now here in court, on behalf of the State of Missouri, information makes as follows:
“That Whitney Layton in the city of St. Louis, on the twenty-eighth day of August, 1899, then and there doing business in this State, did unlawfully manufacture, sell and offer to sell a certain compound and preparation, to-wit,. Layton’s Health Eood Baking Powder, which said compound and preparation was so manufactured and sold for the purpose of being used and was intended by said Layton to be used in the preparation of food, in which said compound and preparation, so manufactured and sold, there was alum. Contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided, and against the peace and dignity of the State,” etc.

The defendant was arrested and entered his plea of not guilty.

A jury was waived and the cause tried to the court.

At the trial the State’s representative filed and read in evidence the following stipulation:

“For the purpose only of the trial of this cause and at said trial the defendant Whitney Layton, for a stipulation covering a part of the facts in the above entitled case, admits that in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, on the twenty-eighth day of August, 1899, he, the defendant, then and there doing business in the State of Missouri, did manufacture, 'sell and offer to sell to J. M. Houston Grocery Company, then doing business at said city, a certain compound and preparation, to-wit, one case containing two dozen, one-pound cans of baking powder, known and designated as Layton’s Health Food. Baking Powder, which said compound and preparation, so manufactured, sold and offered for sale by him for the purpose of its being used and was intended by defendant and by said J. M. Houston Grocer Company to be use in the preparation of food.
[483]*483“Defendant further admits that in said compound and preparation so manufactured, sold and offered to he sold by him there was alum, and that the fact that the same contained alum was then well known to defendant; and it is further agreed and stipulated that at the trial of this case either party may offer any other evidence not inconsistent with the above facts which he may deem material, relevant and competent in the case, subject to objection by the other party to its materiality, relevancy or competency.”

The prosecution then rested.

The defendant then offered evidence tending to establish the following facts:,

Baking powders have been in use for more than fifty years. They are intended to furnish to the people a simple, cheap, efficient, and wholesome leavening agent in the cooking of food, as a substitute for yeast, which is a very slow and more expensive leavening agent, and one -which requires considerable intelligence in the cook to use successfully. All baking powders furnish this leavening agent in the form of carbon dioxide (carbonic acid gas), which is given off from the baking powder in preparing and cooking food. This gas being liberated in the dough, forms bubbles which take permanent form in the baked bread, thus making it light and porous. All baking powders in their essential features are the same. They all supply this leavening agent (dioxide of carbon), by freeing it from bicarbonate of soda. They differ in the nonessential manner in which this carbon dioxide is released from the bicarbonate of soda. There are three classes of baking powders known to commerce, viz., the cream of tartar baking powders, the phosphate baking powders and the alum baking powders.

The cream of tartar powders are composed of bicarbonate of soda and cream of tartar (bicarbonate of potassium), mixed [484]*484with starch as a filler. The soda and cream of tartar are combined in such proportions that when they are united together in the presence of water, in the process of cooking, .they react upon each other, and free the carbon dioxide which leavens the bread. The resulting product left in the bread after cooking is Rochelle Salts, a purgative agent

In the phosphate powders the active agent is the phosphate of calcium which unites with the bicarbonate of soda and liberates the dioxide of carbon, the leavening agent

The alum powders, as they do not differ from the cream of tartar powders in the main essential features of a baking powder, to-wit, the liberation of the carbon dioxide from bicarbonate of sodium, but merely in the non-essential mode of liberating the gas, do not differ from each other essentially. In the phosphate alum powders, phosphate of calcium is-used to aid in liberating from the bicarbonate of soda the gas, the leavening agent, the essential thing.

The straight alum baking powders are composed of bicarbonate of soda and a double sulphate salt of sodium and aluminum, which technically is not alum at all but is popularly called soda alum, with starch as a filler or carrier. The alum and the bicarbonate of soda are mixed in such proportions that in the cooking process the carbon dioxide is released as a leavening agent, as in the case of the cream of tartar baking powders. The resulting products are sulphate of sodium and hydroxide (hydrate) of aluminum.

The evidence of defendant tended to show that none of the products left in the food cooked with alum baking powders are at all injurious to the human system.

The evidence shows that the trade in alum baking powders as a trade has given entire satisfaction to the people. Alum baking powders are nearly as standard an article as flour or sugar. They are to be found upon the shelves of every gro[485]*485eery store, not only in Missouri but in tbe United States. They were first introduced about 1870. In spite of the fiercest competition and most hostile rivalry upon the part of manufacturers of cream of tartar powders, who the evidence shows ■ have used every effort to prejudice the mind of the public by every manner of advertisements and representations, the trade rapidly expanded until it has now reached vast proportions. The evidence tended to show that alum baking powder sold in the United States last year amounted to not fewer than 120,-000,000 pounds and involved an enormous expenditure in its manufacture and distribution. The defendant’s evidence also tended to show, that not only was the particular case of baking powder known as “Layton’s Health Food” for the sale of which he was prosecuted, but also all alum baking powders in general are and always have been healthful and wholesome adjuncts in the preparation of human food. The evidence tends to show that no one had ever either heard of, or had known of, a single case where the health of a single human being had been injured, or had been supposed to have been injured by the use of alum baking powder in the preparation of food, and that the trade in alum baking powders, as a trade, prior to the passage of this law, was an honest and lawful business in a generally harmless, and useful preparation used as an adjunct in the cooking of food.

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W. 171, 160 Mo. 474, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-layton-mo-1901.