Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Will consider bail if you eat client’s food: Supreme Court to lawyer

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

A lawyer arguing for the anticipato­ry bail in a food adulterati­on case was left befuddled on Tuesday when the Supreme Court said it will consider allowing his plea if he and his family were willing to eat what his clients were selling.

As the lawyer, Puneet Jain, took time to reflect and the court said it was not inclined to give anticipato­ry bail in a case like this, he chose to withdraw the petition.

“Will you or your family eat this food? We will consider allowing the bail if your answer is a yes,” a bench of justices Indira Banerjee and MR Shah told advocate Jain.

It asked Jain why it was difficult for him to answer such a basic question. “Or is it that let other people die? Why should we bother?”

Jain’s clients Prawar Goyal and Vineet Goyal moved the court seeking pre-arrest bail in the case registered against them in December in Madhya Pradesh’s Neemuch district.

Jain pressed for their anticipato­ry bail, saying the charges pertaining to food adulterati­on were bailable and therefore, it will not serve any purpose to arrest his clients first.

He added only the charge of cheating was non-bailable for which his clients were required to secure bail from a trial court. But no such offence was made out as per the FIR, he added.

The two are accused of selling wheat after polishing it with non-edible golden offset colour. Several thousand kilograms of polished wheat was confiscate­d from their premises after a raid in December.

The two have been charged under the IPC sections related to food adulterati­on and sale of noxious food items.

Last week, another bench refused to grant anticipato­ry bail to an accused in a food adulterati­on case, observing these offences were against the entire society.

“You are trying to kill not just one person but the entire society by selling spurious food. Such offences cannot be taken lightly,” the bench of justices BR Gavai and Krishna Murari commented while refusing bail to one Dibyalocha­n Behera.

Behera’s lawyer argued on June 4 that the ghee he was accused of adulterati­ng was not meant for eating since it was being supplied only to the temples for lighting lamps.

The bench retorted: “This is just so good. And what was your chilli sauce for? Was it for decorating the deity or for abhisheka (consecrati­on) of the idols? Not a single product of yours is unadultera­ted.”

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