TY - JOUR AB - The enormous changes of recent years in the food and drink processed and marketed for our consumption has made certain that the law of the sale of food and drugs, despite its history of a hundred years, will not remain static. One would think that everything that could be interpreted and defined had been so long ago, but the law is dynamic; it is growing all the time. The statutes, at the time of their coming into operation, seem to provide for almost every contingency, yet in a few years, the Courts have modified their effect, giving to clauses new meaning, and even making new law of them. It has always been so. The High Court of Justice not only interprets the law, but from time immemorial, Her Majesty's judges have been making law. Long before Parliament became a statute‐making body, with the legal capacity to “change a man into a woman,” and the supreme court of the land, judges were making the law—the Common Law of England, which settlers during the centuries have taken to the four quarters of the world, where it has invariably grown lustily. Decisions of the Supreme Courts of these newer countries, are accepted as case law here and legal principles evolved from them have returned to enrich the law of the old country. VL - 64 IS - 4 SN - 0007-070X DO - 10.1108/eb011600 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/eb011600 PY - 1962 Y1 - 1962/01/01 TI - British Food Journal Volume 64 Issue 4 1962 T2 - British Food Journal PB - MCB UP Ltd SP - 37 EP - 50 Y2 - 2024/09/19 ER -