152 N.Y.S. 875 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
The defendant appeals from three judgments of conviction in the Court of Special Sessions, two for the violation of chapter 49 of the Laws of 1909, as amended by chapter 335 of the Laws of 1911, and as further amended by chapter 414 of the Laws of 1914, and one for the violation of rules 3 and 12 adopted by the State Commissioner of Health on September 15 and December 16, 1913, respectively. The statute referred to was designed to prevent the keeping of food products in cold storage for a longer period than the Legislature deemed to be safe or desirable. The rules are designed to prevent the obliteration of marks upon packages of food-stuffs so stored.
It appears from the evidence that a firm known as Jed Frye & Co. on July 28, 1913, placed in a cold storage warehouse belonging to the Terminal Warehouse Company six casks of salmon. On May 27, 1914, defendant caused four of these casks and on May twenty-eighth two of the casks to be transferred to the cold storage warehouse of the F. C. Linde Company where they remained until September 22,1914, when
The statute under which defendant was convicted is section 337 of the Public Health Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 45; Laws of 1909, chap. 49), and was added to that law by chapter 335 of the Laws of 1911, and amended by chapter 414 of the Laws of 1914, which went into effect on April 17, 1914, and as so amended, and as it was in force when defendant removed the salmon from the terminal warehouse to that of the F. 0. Linde Company, the section read as follows:
“ § 337. Time that cold storage foods may be kept. It shall hereafter be unlawful for any person, corporation or corporations, engaged in the business of cold storage warehousemen or refrigerating, or for any person placing food in a cold storage warehouse, to keep in storage for preservation or otherwise any kind of food or any article used for food a longer period than ten calendar months,' excepting butter products which may be kept in said cold storage or refrigeration twelve calendar months.”
The italicized words, “ or for any person placing food in a cold storage warehouse,” constitute the amendment of 1914. Prior to that amendment it was only the warehouseman who was affected by the section, and the purpose of the amendment of 1914 was to extend the inhibition of the statute to those placing food stuffs in storage as well as to the warehouseman who received and kept it.
The defendant raises two legal objections to his conviction: First, he says that the whole section is unconstitutional and void whether applied to warehousemen or to those who place goods in cold storage, and, secondly, he says that if the act be valid, still he should not be convicted under it, because he did not keep the goods in cold storage for ten months, and that said goods were not kept in cold storage by any one for ten months after April 17, 1914, the date on which the amendatory act of 1914 took effect.
As to the validity of the act, we think that there can be no doubt on constitutional grounds. Every intendment and presumption is in favor of its validity. (People ex rel. Simon v.
The question whether or not the facts justified the defendant’s conviction rests upon somewhat different considerations. It does not appear precisely when he acquired ownership and control of the salmon, but he must have done so at least as early as May 27, 1914, when he removed the first lot from the terminal warehouse and placed it in the Linde warehouse. The salmon had then been in storage for the full ten months allowed by the statute, and we think that he is chargeable with knowledge of that fact, for he could easily have ascertained it if he had made inquiry. He is also chargeable with knowledge of the law limiting the allowable term of storage. He was certainly the person “placing” the goods on storage in the Linde warehouse.
The obvious purpose of the act (Public Health Law, § 337, as amd.) is to prevent the keeping of food products in cold storage for more than the prescribed period, and it evidences the judgment of the Legislature that to keep such products longer in such storage would tend to produce dangerous deterioration.
To so construe the act that such products may be received by successive warehousemen and kept for a period of ten
The true construction of the act is, as we think, and the only construction which will give it any efficacy, that such food products may not be kept in cold storage in the aggregate longer than the time prescribed by the statute, whether that time shall be spent in one or in more than one warehouse, or shall have been placed in storage by one or more than one owner, and that the warehouseman who keeps the goods in storage after the expiration of the prescribed period from the date of the first storage, and the person who shall have placed the goods in storage after the limit has been exhausted, or having placed them in storage, before the expiration of such time limit shall keep them beyond it, is guilty of a violation of the statute. Such a construction will serve to carry out the obvious purpose of the act and will work no hardship on any warehouseman or purchaser, for, as already pointed out, means are provided by which each warehouseman or person to whom the goods are offered for storage or purchase is afforded means of ascertaining how long the goods have already been in storage, and how long they may he lawfully kept therein. Thus in the present case the defendant was chargeable with actual or imputed knowledge that the goods had been in the terminal warehouse for the full term permitted by law, and by placing them in another warehouse and keeping them there for some months
We think that no error was committed in admitting in evidence the written reports of the inspectors. They are expressly permitted by statute to be used as presumptive evidence. (Public Health Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 45; Laws of 1909, chap. 49], § 21b, added by Laws of 1913, chap. 559.) The inspectors themselves were produced as witnesses, and defendant was afforded every opportunity to question the accuracy of the reports or to controvert the statements contained therein. (Howard v. Moot, 64 N. Y. 262, 268.)
As to the conviction for violating rules 3 and 12 of the State Commissioner of Health in erasing or causing to be erased certain marks on the packages of salmon, we are of opinion that while the circumstances might create a strong suspicion of defendant’s guilt because he had control of the goods and was the person to be benefited by the erasure, yet there was not sufficient legal evidence to warrant his conviction for a crime in this regard.
The defendant was also convicted for a violation of section 339a of the Public Health Law (added by Laws of 1911, chap. 335), which provides as follows: “§ 339a. Transfers from one warehouse to another. The transfer of any food from one cold storage or refrigerating warehouse to another for the purpose of evading any provisions of this article is hereby prohibited.”
The result is that the two convictions for violation of the statute are affirmed; the judgment of conviction for violation of the rules of the State Commissioner of Health is reversed and the information dismissed.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Laughlin and Clarke, JJ., concurred.
Judgments of conviction for violation of the statute affirmed; judgment of conviction for violation of the rules of the State Commissioner of Health reversed and the information dismissed. Order to be settled on notice.