Supreme Court appeal concerning INOX Air Products Limited and its Managing Director, who were accused of unlawfully selling Nitrous Oxide I.P. to an unlicensed firm, allegedly violating the Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940. The core of the case revolves around the interpretation of “manufacture” within the Act, as both INOX Air Products Limited and the purchasing firm held manufacturing licenses. The appeal also challenges the Magistrate’s initial summoning order, arguing it lacked proper reasoning. Ultimately, the Supreme Court overturned the High Court’s decision and quashed the initial summons, finding the charges against the appellants unsupported.
Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, Section 3(f), 18(a)(vi), Section 27(d) – Drugs and Cosmetics Rules, 1945, Form 26, point No. 03 read with Rule 65(5)(1)(b) – Quashing of Summoning order – No Prima facie case – Term ‘manufacture’ is an inclusive term and has a wide scope – It includes any process or part of a process for making, altering, ornamenting, finishing, packing, labelling, breaking up or otherwise treating or adopting any drug or cosmetic with a view to its sale or distribution – Both accused No.3 and appellant No.1 are holding the licence for manufacture, they will be entitled to carry out any process or part of process which includes altering or breaking up with a view to its further sale or distribution – Since accused No.3 also possesses licence under Form 25 for manufacture it is not only entitled to alter, break up, repack and relabel the product received from appellant No.1, it is also entitled to do it with a view for further sale or distribution – Since accused No.3 is also holding the licence under Form 25, it is entitled to sell and distribute the product received from appellant No.1 after altering, breaking it up and packing it in smaller containers – Only in the absence of any licence with accused No.3 which permitted it to further sell and distribute the product received from appellant No.1, sale of the product by appellant No.1 to it would have contravened the provisions of Section 18(a)(vi) and constituted an offence punishable under Section 27(d) of the said Act – As such, the licence under Form 25 would be liable, subordinate, subservient, inferior, obedient to; governed or affected by the licence under Form 20B – However, for that, the prosecution will have to show that appellant No.1 who possesses the licence under Form 25 has violated any of the provisions under licence in Form 20B – The learned counsel for the State has not been in a position to point out violation of any of the conditions as stipulated in Form 20B – Find that even if the allegations made in the complaint are taken at its face value, no case is made out for an offence punishable under Section 18(a)(vi) read with Section 27 (d) of the said Act – Except recording the submissions of the complainant, no reasons are recorded for issuing the process against the accused persons – There is no application of mind even for the namesake by the learned Magistrate while issuing the process – On this ground also, the impugned judgment and order is liable to be quashed and set aside – Impugned judgment passed by the High Court liable to be quashed and set aside – The summoning order passed by the Trial Court and the proceedings arising there from are also quashed and set aside.
(Para 25, 26, 30, 31, 33, 38 and 41)
Inox Air Products Limited Inox Air V. State Of Andhra Pradesh
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 128: (DoJ 30-01-2025)




