The defendant below, the Hall-Baker Grain Company, a corporation, engaged in the purchase and sale of grain at Kansas City, Mo., was convicted of misbranding a car load of mixed wheat, No. 2 red wheat, and of adulterating the same by mixing other inferior wheat with it, in violation of the Pure Pood Act of June 30, 1906, 34 Stat. 768, sections 7 and 8, U. S. Comp. Stat. Supp. 1909, pp. 1191, 1192. It attacks the judgment against it on many grounds, one of which is that there was no substantial evidence of the charges against it and the court below refused to instruct the jury, as it requested, to return a verdict in its favor.
The defendant was found guilty of misbranding under the second, and adulteration under the fourth, count of the indictment. The second count was based on these provisions of section 8 of the act:
“That for the purposes of this act an article shall also be deemed to be misbranded, * * * in the case of foods, first, if it be an imitation of, or offered for sale under, a distinctive name of another article; second, if it oe labeled or branded so as to deceive or mislead the purchaser.”
And the second count charged that the mixed wheat was offered for sale by the defendant as No. 2 red wheat, and that it was labeled No. 2 red wheat, when it was in fact mixed wheat, so as to deceive and mislead the purchasers thereof.
The fourth count was founded on this declaration of section 7 of the act:
“That for the purposes of this act an article shall be deemed to lie adulterated in tlie ease of food, first, if any substance has been mixed and packed with it so as to reduce, or lower, or injuriously affect its quality or strength; second, if any substance has been substituted in whole or in part for the article; third, if any valuable constituent of the article has been wholly or in part abstracted; fourth, if it be mixed, colored, powdered, coated or stained in a manner whereby damage or inferiority is concealed.”
And the fourth count charged that each of these things had been done to the car load of wheat. There was evidence tending to establish these facts: Kansas City, Mo., was a grain market. There was a public elevator capable of containing 1,000,000 bushels of wheat, operated by a corporation which had no interest in this transaction, which classified wheat purchased by the defendant and other dealers according to its quality and grade as it came to it and was inspected by the official Missouri inspectors and stored it in its various bins, so that wheat of the same grades or qualities went into the same bins and those of different grades and qualities into different bins. On receipt of orders from the owners of this wheat to ship out wheat of any grade, the elevator company loaded it out of the bin containing that grade of wheat into a car, that car load of wheat was then inspected by an official inspector of the state of Missouri and certified to be of the grade and' character which he found and adjudged it to be. There were rules for this inspection that had been established pursuant to laws of the state of Missouri and the inspection was made by officers of the state. One of these rides was that No. 2 red wheat was “to be sound, well cleaned, dry, red winter wheat, weighing not less than 59 pounds to the measured bushel.”
The second charge was that the wheat was labeled and marked No. 2 red wheat when it was in fact mixed wheat, so as to deceive and mislead the purchasers thereof. But there was no evidence that it was ever labeled or marked at all. The government offered the invoice of the wheat in evidence, over the objection of the defendant, to prove a label, but this invoice contained a provision similar to that in the contract of sale to the effect that the wheat was to be governed by the Missouri grades, and the wheat had been already inspected and graded No. 2 red wheat by the official inspector several days before the invoice was issued. There was no evidence of any false labeling to deceive purchasers here.
The fourth count of the indictment charged (a) that other grades of wheat had been mixed with the wheat shipped so as to injuriously affect it; (b) that other grades of wheat had been substituted in part for the No. 2 red wheat pretended to be sold; (c) that a part of the No. 2 red wheat had been abstracted and a like quantity of of wheat of inferior grade substituted; and (d) that the wheat was mixed and packed with other grades of wheat whereby damage and inferiority was concealed. But, as has already appeared, the proof was conclusive that the wheat sold and delivered was the identical article offered for sale, to wit, that wheat which under the laws of Missouri the official inspector of that state should and did adjudge
The act of Congress was not enacted to catch and punish merchants who are conducting their business by customary and approved methods with no intent to deceive purchasers, or to injure the public health, for the mistakes of third persons over whom they have no control, nor for trivial errors of their own, which at first blush may seem to bring their action within the inhibition of the law, but by which in reality they violate neither its letter nor its spirit. Many other questions of law arose at the trial, and were discussed by counsel at the bar. But the conclusion which has been reached renders it unnecessary to consider them, and because there was no evidence to sustain any of the charges in this indictment the judgment below must be reversed and the case must be remanded to the court below for a new trial; and it is so ordered.