1982 INSC 0053 M/S. Sat Pal Gupta and Another Vs State of Haryana and Others Civil Appeal No. 1099(N) of 1972 (CJI Y. V. Chandrachud, A. D. Koshal JJ) 05.02.1982 JUDGMENT CHANDRACHUD C.J. ­ 1. The appellants, in this appeal by special leave, are dealers in rice, paddy and rice bran. They also have an associate rice milling and husking plant which is run under the name and style of Jagdamba Rice Mills, Traori. 2. Section 3 of the essential Commodities Act, 10 of 1955. empowers the Central Government, under the circumstances stated in that section, to issue notified orders providing for the regulation of production supply and distribution of any essential commodity. Under Section 5, the Central Government can delegate its powers to a State Government or an officer or authority subordinate to it. In exercise of that power, the Central Government issued a notification on July 24, 1987 delegating to the State Governments the power conferred upon it by Section 3 of the Act. In exercise of such delegated power, respondent 1, the State of Haryana, promulgated the Haryana Rice Bran (Distribution and Price) Control Order, 1967. Clause 3 of the said Order provides that "no dealer or owner of a rice mill shall sell or offer to sell or supply price bran save against a permit granted by the Director, Food and Supplies, or the District Magistrate or any other officer authorised by the Director in this behalf". The appellants filed a writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution in the High Court of Punjab & Haryana, challenging Clause 3 of the aforesaid Control Order, on the ground that rice bran is not an essential commodity and therefore the power conferred by Section 3 of the Act cannot be exercised for the purpose of regulating its sale or supply. This contention has been negatived by the High Court. 3. It is true that the power conferred by Section 2(1) of the Essential Commodities Act, 1955, can be exercised by the Central Government or its delegate, only if it is of the opinion that it is necessary or expedient to provide for the regulation of any essential commodity. The only sub-clauses of Section 2(a) which are relevant for the purpose of deciding whether rice bran is an essential commodity, are sub-clause (i) and (v) Sub-clause (i) of Section 2(a) defines an 'essential commodity' to mean "cattle fodder, commodity means "foodstuffs, including edible oil-seeds and oils". If rice bran is either cattle fodder or foodstuff, it would be an essential commodity and the Central Government or its delegate, the State Government would have the power to regulate its production, supply and distribution and trade and commerce therein. 4. Coming first to the question argued by Shri Maheshwari as to whether rice bran is a 'foodstuff', it is well known that rice bran is commonly used as poultry feed and not uncommonly as cattle feed. This is undisputed. Rice bran is a by-product of the husking and milling process of paddy and consists of the layer which lies between the husk and the kernel. The affidavit of Shri T. K. Banerji, Director, Food & Supplies, Haryana which was filed in the High Court shows that rice bran is used in place of wheat bran or wheat middling in livestock feeding. To the same effect is the affidavit filed in this Court by Shri H. D. Bansal, Director, Food & Supplies Haryana, If this is the true position, we are unable to appreciate that rice bran cannot be considered to be a foodstuff. Any stuff which is commonly used as food by the generality of living beings is foodstuff : it is not legitimate to restrict the meaning of that word to things which are used as food by human beings. The animal kingdom is not any the less important in the cosmic shame than the human empire and it is a distortion to say that it is a matter of little or no concern to the State whether the cattle and the poultry get their due ration of the means of their subsistence. Cattle feed and poultry feed are food to the cattle and the poultry and therefore they are foodstuffs. 5. The word 'foodstuffs' which occurs in clause (v) of Section 2(a) is not defined in the Act and therefore it must receive its ordinary and natural meaning, that is to say, a meaning which takes account of and accords with the day-to-day affairs of life. Cattle and poultry are living components of the natural environment and there is no reason to exclude that which they eat or feed upon, from the meaning of the word 'foodstuffs'. If what the human beings eat is food, so is what the other living beings eat. Cattle fodder is expressly brought within the compass of essential commodities by sub-clause (i) of Section 2(a). It would be illogical if, in that context, rice bran is excluded from the purview of essential commodities on the ground that it is eaten by the poultry and not by Homo Sapiens. 6. By 'foodstuffs' is meant food of any kind. The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary (Third Edition) says that 'food is "what one takes into the system to maintain life and growth". According to Webster's Third New International Dictionary, 'food' means "material consisting of carbohydrates, fats, proteins and supplementary substances, that is taken or absorbed into the body of an organism in order to sustain growth, repair, and all vital processes and to furnish energy for all activity of the organism; something that nourishes or develops or sustains". These dictionary meanings of the word "food" are not restricted to what is eaten by human beings for nourishment and sustenance. According to them, what one takes into the system to maintain life and growth or what is taken into the body of an organism in order to sustain growth is food. 7. We are therefore of the opinion that rice bran being a foodstuff within the meaning of Section 2(a) (v) of the Act, it is an essential commodity and therefore, the power conferred by Section 3 can be used to regulate its production, sale or supply. 8. The affidavits filed on behalf of the State of Haryana have attempted to make out a case that rice bran is also used for human consumption. A research bulletin brought out by the Department of Chemical Engineering and Technology, Punjab University, Chandigarh, is cited therein a showing that the oil extracted from rice bran can be used in a variety of ways in the edible filed as, for example, for fat-frying, cooking and in the preparation of salads and sauces, and that in Japan, it has been used for edible purposes for many years. This claim may or may not be true but we would like to have better evidence. To uphold it. It may be possible, in course of time, to process rice bran by the use of advanced food technology in order to make it a common article of food for human consumption. 9. Our attention is drawn by Shri Bhagat, who appears on behalf of the Haryana Government, to a decision of this Court in Sachdeva & Sons v. State of Punjab in which it was held that rice bran is "cattle fodder" within the meaning of Section 2(a) (i) of the Act. We need not go into that question since we are of the view that rice bran, being a foodstuff is an essential commodity. 10. The decisions in State of Bombay v. Virkumar Gulabchand Shah and Shriniwas Pannalal Chockhani v. Crown which were cited by Shri Maheshwari and Shri Bhagat respectively do not bear upon the question in issue before us and need not, therefore be discussed. 11. For these reasons we dismiss the appeal, but without costs.