The question presented in this appeal is whether R.C. 1327.61(B) plainly indicates a purpose to impose strict liability as provided in R.C. 2901.21(B). Because we hold that the legislature has plainly indicated an intention to impose strict liability for a violation of R.C. 1327.61(B), we affirm.
Buehler Food Markets, Inc. (“Buehler”) misweighed and offered for sale eight packages of meat at its Orrville store between November 1987 and May 1988. There was evidence presented that the misweighing was due to malfunctions in Buehler’s automatic packaging equipment. After the trial court overruled Buehler’s motion to dismiss, Buehler entered a plea of no contest to, and was found guilty of, the charge of misrepresentation of weight and price in violation of R.C. 1327.61(B). The trial court found R.C. 1327.61(B) to be a strict liability offense. The court also found that the acts were unintentional and occurred in spite оf Buehler’s efforts to avoid misweighing. Therefore, the court required Buehler to pay only court costs.
Buehler raises two assignments of error:
Assignment of Error I
“The court erred in ruling that Revised Code 1327.61(B) is a strict liability offense.”
R.C. 1327.61 provides:
“No person shall:
a* * *
“(B) Wrap, package, label or advertise any product contrary to the provisions of Chapter 1327. of the Revised Code, or regulations promulgated thereunder, or sell, offer, hold, or expose for sale any product wrapped, packаged, or labeled contrary to the provisions of sections 1327.46 and 1327.61 of the Revised Code or regulations promulgated thereunder[.]”
Before 1974, legislative silence as to
mens rea
was interpreted as an indication of the purpose to impose strict liability.
State
v.
Lisbon Sales Book Co.
(1964),
The more serious the consequences are to the public, the more likely the legislature meant to impose liability without fault. For example, the offenses created primarily for the purpose of singling out individual wrongdоers for punishment and correction are the ones commonly requiring
mem rea.
Police offenses, merely regulatory in nature, are frequently enforced irrespective of any guilty intent. Sayre, Public Welfare Offenses (1933), 33 Colum. L. Rev. 55, 72. Regulations passed for the safety, health, or well-being of the сommunity, such as those preventing the giving of short weight in the sale of ice or meat, are included in this category.
Id.
at 73, 87; see, also,
Morissette
v.
United States
(1952),
The more difficult it is for a consumer to ascertain the true facts, the more likely it is that the legislature meant to require liаbility without fault. In this instance, while it may be difficult for the retailer to ascertain the true weight of eight out of over three hundred fifty-two thousand packages, the consumer must rely on the integrity of the retailer because only the retailer will ordinarily have access to the measures takеn to ensure the reliability of its weight and pricing process. See, generally,
Flint
v.
Ohio Bell Tel. Co.
(1982),
When a statute is designed for the protection and general, welfare of thе public, it must be considered in light of its overall purpose, the business to which it relates, and the potential evil which it is designed to prevent.
Fogt
v.
Ohio State Racing Comm.
(1965),
R.C. 1327.61 was enacted in 1974 by Am. Sub. H.B. No. 203 (135 Ohio Laws, Part II, 559, 571), which also repealed R.C. 1327.42 (prior G.C. 13106). R.C. 1327.42, prohibiting the sale of false or short weight, remainеd substantially the same as R.C. 1327.61. In
State
v.
Weisberg
(1943),
The reenactment of a statute creates a presumption of legislative adoption of a previous judicial construction of such a stаtute.
Ohio
v.
Glass
(1971),
Therefore, by reenacting the statute without stating a mental culpability, we presume that the legislature intended to adopt the strict liability construction of the prior statutе.
Based on these factors, we hold that the legislature plainly indicated an intention to impose strict liability for a violation of R.C. 1327.61(B).
The first assignment of error is overruled.
Assignment of Error II
“The court erred in overruling defendant’s motion to dismiss based upon the failure of the criminal complaint to specify the essential element of recklessness.”
Based upon the disposition of the first assignment of error, the second assignment of error is overruled.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
