Ōoka Tadasuke and the Case of the Stolen Smell

May 11, 2009 17:39

From the Wikipedia article on Ōoka Tadasuke:

Ōoka Tadasuke (1677 - 1752) was a Japanese samurai in the service of the Tokugawa shogunate. [...] He was highly respected as an incorruptible judge and has taken on a legendary status in a number of stories about his wise and imaginatively unorthodox legal decisions.

One of the most famous stories is called "The Case of the Stolen Smell" where he heard the case of a paranoid innkeeper who accused a poor student of literally stealing the fumes of his cooking by eating when the innkeeper was cooking to flavour his dull food. Although his colleagues advised Ōoka to throw the case out as ridiculous, he decided to hear the case. The judge resolved the matter by ordering the student to pass the money he had in one hand to his other and ruling that the price of the smell of food is the sound of money.
Thanks, tonyb, for my O SNAP moment of the day.
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