46 Pa. Super. 72 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1911
Opinion by
The indictment under which the defendant was convicted was drawn under the Act of March 11, 1909, P. L. 13, which makes it “unlawful for any person .... to sell, offer for sale, expose for sale, or have in possession with intent to sell, eggs that are unfit for food, within the meaning of this act.” The defendant was a wholesale dealer in eggs, and Harry Saylor, to whom it was alleged the defendant made the unlawful sale, was also a dealer. The testimony of Saylor was to the effect that he applied to the defendant to buy good eggs, and the latter delivered to him five and one-half crates, for which he paid at a certain price per crate, $33.00; that he took them to his place of business and immediately candled one crate, containing thirty dozen, and found that about seven or eight dozen were good and the rest were bad, being what are called “rots” and “spots.” On the following day, according to his testimony, he complained to the defendant that the eggs were bad and said that he would bring them back, and that the defendant gave him $6.00 and told him not to bring them back, but to sell them cheaper. Saylor sold them for about half price to a baker. This fact does not affect the question of the defendant’s guilt or innocence, but it is significant as showing the practices which the statute was evidently intended to break up. The witness also testified to another sale of two crates, containing sixty dozen, of which a large proportion were unfit for food. The principal contention of the defendant is that, under the evidence adduced by him, the jury could have found that there was no sale of the bad eggs, but only of the good eggs, and therefore it was error to charge the jury that the defendants admitted that these eggs were sold by them on the dates and in the quantities set out by the commonwealth. This contention will be best answered
With regard to the offers to prove the rules of the Philadelphia Produce Exchange, and the custom or usage of wholesale dealers in eggs in Philadelphia, we remark that if there is any local custom or usage under which such a transaction as is described in this case would not be a sale within the meaning of the act of assembly, it cannot be sustained as a valid custom. A custom or usage repugnant to the express provisions of a statute is void, and whenever there is a conflict between a custom or usage and a statutory regulation the statutory regulation must control: 12 Cyc. of Law and Procedure, 1054-6; Greene v. Tyler, 39 Pa. 361.
There are several objections to the offer to prove a general understanding that was reached at a conference between the agent of the pure food department and the produce exchange, relative to the manner of doing business by wholesalers which would not be objected to by the pure food department. It is needless to refer to these objections in detail, for one is so obvious that it needs no discussion, and that is that the officer of the commonwealth could not abrogate the plain provisions of the statute.
In the last assignment of error the constitutionality of the act is brought into question, the objection suggested being that the subject of the act is not clearly expressed
All of the assignments of error are overruled.
The judgment is affirmed, and the record is remitted to the court of quarter sessions of Philadelphia county, with direction that the judgment be fully carried into effect, and to that end it is ordered that the defendant forthwith appear in that court and that he be by that court committed to serve and comply with such part of his sentence as had not been performed at the time this appeal was made a supersedeas.