The Inspector reported this half-rotten apple to the Attorney General,
who brought suit a- gainst the greengrocer under the Pure Foods
Act.
At trial, the Attorney General was quite per- suasive in his argument,
citing, as precedent, the ancient case of the Crown vs.
Uncle Johns Cider Mill, in which it was held, One
rotten apple spoils the barrel.
The greengrocer was quite poor but man- aged to secure competent
representation from |
Legal Aid.
His lawyer cited the even more ancient case of the Crown vs.
Madame X, in which the Courts ruled that a mother could not
throw her baby out with the bath.
The Chancellor was impressed by both briefs, and undecided.
An attorney for Save the Children petitioned for leave to appear
as friend of the Court.
Leave was grant- ed; the attorney adduced evidence that half an apple
would keep two children alive for two days, and cited two yet more
ancient cases the Crown vs. Baker, in which it |
was held, Half a loaf is better than none, and H.
vs. H., in which King Solomon ruled that a baby,
claimed by both of two women, was to be divided between the two
equally, by the sword.
While Solomons dictum was righteous, counsel noted, the
babys real mother non- suited, pleading with the King to give
the en- tire baby to the pretender (whereupon the King, perceiving
the truth, rendered the baby unto its mother).
But in this case, counsel argued, King Solomons judgment
should be executed, and the rotten half of the apple given to the
Crown, and the ripe half back to the greengrocer for sale.
The Chancellor deliberated, and rendered |
his judgment:
While the greengrocers case was persuasive, and Save the
Childrens cases perhaps even more so, the Crowns was
closer in point, since therein the res litigiosae was a
rotten apple, as in the case at bar, and not babies or bread.
Moreover, the case of H. vs. H., cited
by Save the Chil- dren, was from a foreign jurisdiction, and not
precedent in this land.
The Court held for the Crown.
After all, the Chancellor said, the law is the
law.
The greengrocer appealed.
The parties were in a quandary:
What to do with the apple pending appeal?
There is no injunction against your selling |
the apple, the greengrocers lawyer advised him,
and because the case is on appeal, the judgment is not final.
The attorney for Save the Children pitched in, And your apple
may do some good.
But the Attorney General warned the green- grocer, If you lose
the appeal, and the apple has been sold, you will be severely
punished.
The greengrocer did nothing.
In those days, however, justice was swift; and the Court of Appeals
ruled in two days.
The learned Chancellor below, the Court |
of Appeals stated in its formal opinion, was
quite right in perceiving that the case cited by the Crown dealt
with apples, and not with bread or children, and seems, on the
surface, more pertinent.
But the learned Chancellor seems to have overlooked the fact
that an apple, like bread, is food; and the raison dêtre
of food is to feed the children, and other people.
Thus the cases cited by the green- grocer and Save the Children are
not inap- posite.
Moreover, while the case of H. vs. H.
is from a foreign jurisdiction, we would invite |
(for more writings by Natty Bumppo, see Borf Books)