Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
PETITIONER:
WELCOME HOTEL AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/08/1983
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1983 AIR 1015 1983 SCR (3) 674
1983 SCC (4) 575 1983 SCALE (2)131
CITATOR INFO :
F 1987 SC1802 (11)
ACT:
Andhra Pradesh Catering Establishments (Fixation and
Display of Prices of Foodstuffs) Order, 1978-Validity of.
Essential Commodities Act, 1955-S. 2(a) (v)-
"Foodstuffs", meaning of-Whether it includes cooked food ?-
Mechanics of price fixation under the Act-Extent of scope
for interference by Court.
HEADNOTE:
The Government of Andhra Pradesh, in exercise of powers
conferred under the Essential Commodities Act, 1955
promulgated the Andhra Pradesh Catering Establishments
(Fixation and Display of Prices of Foodstuffs) Order, 1978
fixing the maximum prices of seven items of cooked food
listed in the Schedule thereto. As the hoteliers in the
State raised a hue and cry, the State Government effected an
upward revision of the prices fixed by an Amending Order
dated December 11, 1980. The hoteliers were not satisfied
with that and negotiations were held between them and the
Minister of Civil Supplies and as a consequence another
order dated January 5, 1981 was issued effecting yet another
upward revision in the maximum prices fixed and also
reducing the number of scheduled items from seven to six.
Ignoring this order which replaced the earlier orders, the
petitioners approached this Court questioning the validity
of the earlier orders and obtained an ex parte stay.
The contentions raised were: (i) that the State
Government was not competent to issue any price control
measure in respect of ’cooked food’ as the expression
’foodstuffs’ under the Act means raw foodstuffs only; and
(ii) that the fixation of maximum prices of scheduled items
under the impugned orders was arbitrary and violative of
Art. 14 inasmuch as the prices were economically
unprofitable as the same had been arrived at without
scientifically examining the prices of inputs, over-head
charges, etc.
Dismissing the petitions,
^
HELD: 1. The expression ’foodstuffs’ in s. 2(a) (v) of
the Essential Commodities Act, 1955 includes cooked food. If
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
power to control prices of raw foodstuffs such as rice or
wheat in conferred by s. 3, there is no justification for
that power not comprehending within its fold the power to
regulate prices of articles made out of such raw foodstuffs.
[678 A-C]
(i) The Essential Commodities Act, 1955 has the same
object as the 1946 Act and therefore the expression
’foodstuffs’ in the 1955 Act must receive
675
the same construction which it received under the 1946 Act.
Expressions such as ’food crops’, ’spices’ and ’condiments’
indicate different spices of articles of food but the
general expression ’foodstuffs’ was interpreted in the
context of the 1946 Act to include spices and condiments
also. It was pointed out that although expressions ’food’
and ’foodstuffs’ could be used in both a wide and a narrow
sense, the expression ’foodstuffs’ had been used in a wider
sense in the 1946 Act. [679 D-G]
State of Bombay v. Virkumar Gulabchand Shah, [1952]
S.C.R. 877 referred to.
(ii) The expression ’food’ has generally been
understood to mean nutritive material absorbed or taken into
the body of an organism which serves for purposes of growth,
work or repair and for the maintenance of the vital process.
What human beings consume is styled as food and what animals
consume is described as animal feed. This distinction has to
be borne in mind. The expression ’foodstuffs’ is made of two
expressions, ’food’ and ’stuff’. In other words, the stuff
which is used as food would be foodstuff. Therefore,
foodstuff is that which is taken into the system to maintain
life and growth and to supply for waste of tissue. If raw
foodstuff with a view to making it consumable by human
beings undergoes a change in its condition by the process of
cooking, the derivative is none the less foodstuff. [679 H,
680 A-B]
(iii) That the expression ’foodstuff’ as used in the
1955 Act comprehends cooked food is also clear from the fact
that ’food crop’ has been separately defined in the Act.
[680 D]
2. (a) The mechanics of price fixation has necessarily
to be left to the judgment of the executive and unless it is
patent that there is hostile discrimination against a class
of operators, the processual basis of price fixation has to
be accepted in the generality of cases as valid. [681 G-H]
Prag Ice & Oil Mills & Anr. v. Union of India, [1978] 3
S.C.R. 293 relied on.
(b) The petitioners ordinarily do not serve only the
scheduled items, but they have large establishments catering
to various tastes and delicacies. No price fixation order
need guarantee profit to an establishment in respect of each
unit of article served or sold. It is the overall picture in
the trade or commerce that needs to be examined. The
petitioners have not shown that in their overall turnover
they have since the promulgation of impugned orders suffered
losses. And this situation never fructified because the 1978
Order was kept in suspended animation for a period of two
years and when the latest order dated January 5, 1981 was
promulgated, it was still-born at the hands of the Court
because of the ex parte stay order obtained by the
petitioners.
[681 D-F]
JUDGMENT:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition Nos. 43 of 1981,
51-53, 415-18/81, 5465-5562/83, 1751-52/81 and 7763-7890 of
1983.
676
Dr. L. M. Singhvi, B. Kanta Rao, Lakshmi Kant Pandy and
J. Eswara Prasad for the Petitioners.
M. S. Ganesh, Ms. Lata Krishnamoorty and T.V.S.N. Chari
for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DESAI, J. Should Art. 32 of the Constitution lend its
assistance to petitioners in this group of petitions so that
the poor in Andhra Pradesh can be successfully deprived of
their staple simple breakfast ? Even an imaginary marginal
dent in the profits of the hoteliers stirs it into action by
an easy resort to a writ petition under Art. 32 and an ex-
parte stay which itself is success even if the petition
ultimately fails because in the meantime the measure which
may possibly affect their profits is kept under suspended
animation and the profit being continuously derived from
scattered consumers is not refundable and the unjust
enrichment is enjoyed with impunity. This case amply
illustrates the point.
Hoteliers of Andhra Pradesh raised a hue and cry when
the Government of Andhra Pradesh-the first respondent
enacted and proclaimed in exercise of the powers conferred
by Sec. 3 of the Essential Commodities Act, 1955 (1955 Act
for short) read with the notification of the Ministry of
Agriculture and Irrigation dated June 9, 1978, the Andhra
Pradesh Catering Establishments (Fixation and Display of
Prices of Foodstuffs) Order. 1978 (1978 Order for short)
dated September 8, 1978 whereby it was made obligatory for
the catering establishments to display the prices of all
foodstuffs served by the establishment and simultaneously
fixed the maximum price of seven items of food comprising
the poorman’s menu in the State of Andhra Pradesh. The seven
items enumerated in the Schedule appended to the 1978 Order
include idli, vada, upma, sada dosa, puree, coffee, tea and
a rice plate (scheduled items for short). Cl. 3 of the Order
prescribed maximum prices of the scheduled items of food and
cl. 4 makes it obligatory to display in English and
principal language of the area the weight or measure and
price of every item of foodstuff offered for sale in the
establishment. There were consequential provisions such as
power to issue directions, power to call for information,
power of entry, search & seizure and power to grant
exemption as also power to amend the Schedule. A
clarificatory notification was issued on October 3, 1978
giving certain directions.
677
The Schedule and the rates set out therein were modified by
the Amending Order dated December 11, 1980. The amendment
catered to an upward revision of the prices. It seems some
further negotiations took place between the Minister of
Civil Supplies and Labour on the one hand and hoteliers on
the other which led to a notification dated January 5, 1981
(1981 Order for short) giving further upward revision in
maximum price of scheduled items and the scheduled items
were reduced from 7 to 6 deleting rice place. Ignoring this
latest order which replaced the earlier orders, the
petitioners approached this Court and obtained an ex-parte
stay of the implementation of Orders dated September 5, 1978
and December 11, 1980. In fact, but for the intervention by
the Court staying the operation of earlier orders, the order
dated January 5, 1981 was not stayed yet effectively the
petitioners succeeded in putting into cold storage the price
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
fixation order leaving them free to charge any price
unhampered and uninhibited by any governmental action.
Dr. L.M. Singhvi, who led on behalf of the petitioners
made two submissions which have nothing to do with the
validity or legality of the impugned Orders. He submitted
that the Court should give a direction to the State
Government to re-examine the prices of inputs and overhead
charges so as to arrive at such maximum price of the
scheduled commodities as to ensure a reasonable return on
the investment which would render the restriction on the
fundamental right to carry on trade, reasonable and satisfy
Art. 19 (1) (g) of the Constitution. He next submitted that
there are certain directions in the 1978 and 1981 orders
which are impossible of compliance and, therefore, the
petitioners should be heard before they are compelled to
implement the conditions. Neither of the submissions has any
impact on the validity of the impugned Orders. It may,
however, be pointed out how the petitioners suppressing
material facts succeeded in obtaining an ex-parte stay
order. In the counter-affidavit filed by one Mr. D.
Muralikrishna, Director of Civil Supplies, it was stated
that after the Order dated December 11, 1980 was issued the
hoteliers resorted to some agitation which led to the
Minister of Civil Supplies calling a meeting of the
hoteliers. What transpired at this meeting may be extracted
from the counter-affidavit:
"The Minister for Civil Supplies therefore
convened a meeting at Hyderabad on 31.12.80 with the
representatives of hoteliers all over the State and the
Joint Collectors. At the said meeting all the issues
involved were thoroughly
678
discussed. After prolonged discussions, the hoteliers
of the districts have agreed unanimously for reducing
the prices in respect of 6 items of foodstuffs
excluding meals and an undertaking to that effect was
signed by the hoteliers at 1.30 a.m. on 1.1.1981."
A copy of the undertaking is produced at Annexure ’B’ to the
counter-affidavit which inter alia also provided that the
rates of the scheduled items determined with the consent of
the hoteliers will be reviewed after three months. What is
now demanded is that the State Government should examine the
prices of inputs and overhead charges and determine afresh
the maximum prices of the scheduled items, which was very
much an integral part of an over all agreement between the
State Government and the hoteliers. After suppressing this
material fact from the Court in the petition, the
petitioners obtained an ex-parte stay order on January 12,
1981 and this was suppression of such a material fact as
would disentitle the petitioners to any relief at the hands
of this Court. That apart review at reasonable interval is
implicit in any price fixation measure.
The second submission that the petitioners be heard to
point out the impossibility of complying with some of the
conditions of the Orders is merely to be stated to be
rejected. If the real bone of contention was the maximum
price of scheduled items which was to be thrashed out by
discussion, it is not possible to accept the submission that
the petitioners would not have put forth their grievances
about the impossibility of complying with some of the
conditions of the impugned orders. There is not a whisper
about it in the agreement Annexure ’B’ and we do not find
anything very unusual or impracticable in the conditions
prescribed in the impugned orders.
Mr. B. Kanta Rao who appeared for some of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
petitioners urged that the State Government is not competent
to issue any price control measure in respect of cooked food
because the Essential Commodities Act, 1955 which confers
power to issue orders in respect of essential commodities
does not confer any power to issue any order in respect of
cooked food. Sec. 3 of Essential Commodities Act, 1955
confers power on the Central Government by an order to
provide for regulating or prohibiting the production,
distribution and supply and trade in essential commodity or
for securing their equitable distribution and availability
at fair prices. The power to fix price of essential
commodity is implicit in the power conferred by
679
Sec. 3 of the Act and what is implicit in Sec. 3 (1) is made
explicit by cl. (c) of sub-section (2) of Sec. 3 which
provides that an order made under Sec. 3 (1) may provide-(c)
for controlling the price at which essential commodity may
be bought or sold. Clause (a) of Sec. 2 defines ’essential
commodity’ to mean any of the items which include...(v)
foodstuffs, including edible oilseeds and oils. The
submission is that the expression ’foodstuffs’ in its
etymological and grammatical sense would mean raw foodstuffs
or appropriately called food grains such as wheat, rice,
jawar, bazra, maize etc. but not cooked food which is a
perishable commodity. We see no justification for giving a
restricted meaning to the expression ’foodstuffs’. If power
to control prices of raw foodstuffs such as rice or wheat is
conferred by Sec. 3, we see no justification for that power
not comprehending within its fold the power to regulate
prices of articles made out of such raw foodstuffs.
Expression such as ’foodcrops’ ’spices’ and ’condiments’
indicate different species of articles of food but the
general expression ’foodstuffs’ was interpreted to include
spices and condiments also. In the State of Bombay v.
Virkumar Gulabchand Shah(1) this Court construed the
expression ’foodstuffs’ in cl. (3) of the Spices (Forward
Contract Prohibition) Order of 1944 read with Sec. 2 (a) of
the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, 1946 to
include turmeric. After examining the definition of
expression ’foodstuffs’ in Oxford English Dictionary and
Webster’s International Dictionary and some decisions
bearing on the subject, this Court held that the expressions
’food’ and ’foodstuffs’ can be used in both a wide and a
narrow sense and that the circumstances and background can
alone determine which is proper in any given case. After
examining the object and the intendment underlying enactment
of Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, 1946, this
Court held that if turmeric is a commodity essential to the
life of the community it must be covered by the expression
’foodstuffs’. Accordingly, it was held that the expression
’foodstuffs’ has been used in a wider sense in 1946 Act. It
may be recalled that the Essential Commodities Act, 1955 was
enacted for the control of the production, supply and
distribution of and trade and commerce in essential
commodities. It has the same object as the 1946 Act and
therefore, the expression ’foodstuffs’ in 1955 Act must
receive the same construction. If that be so, the expression
’foodstuffs’ must obviously include cooked food also.
Further the expression ’food’ has generally been
understood to mean nutritive material absorbed or taken into
the body of an
680
organism which serves for purposes of growth work or repair
and for the maintenance of the vital process. What human
beings consume is styled as food and what animals consume is
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
described as animal feed. This distinction has to be borne
in mind. Expression ’foodstuffs’ is made of two expressions,
’food’ plus ’stuff’. In other words, the stuff which is used
as food would be foodstuff. Therefore, foodstuff is that
which is taken into the system to maintain life and growth
and to supply waste of tissue. If the raw foodstuff with a
view to making it consumable by human beings undergoes a
change of its condition by the process of cooking, the
derivative is none the less foodstuff. If raw rice is
foodstuff, does rice when boiled in water cease to be
foodstuff. As the Chinese by an accidental fire in a hut
where there were pigs learnt the advantage of consuming
cooked food in place of raw food, the submission of Mr.
Kanta Rao would make us march backward by centuries and be a
disgrace to modern culinary art. And ’food crop’ is another
expression defined in the 1955 Act. Therefore, the
expression ’foodstuff’ as used in the 1955 Act comprehends
cooked food. The contention of Mr. Kanta Rao, therefore,
must be negatived.
It was next contended that the maximum price of
scheduled items fixed under the impugned orders is
economically unprofitable and the same have been arrived at
without scientifically examining the price of inputs and
overhead charges and the reasonable return on investment and
therefore, the exercise of fixing maximum price suffers from
the vice of arbitrariness and must be declared
unconstitutional as being violative of Art. 14. While
canvassing the submission, some attempt was made both on the
side of the petitioners as well as on the side of the State
to take us through the labyrinth of the tables drawn up by
both side showing prices of inputs and overhead charges. We
declined to be involved in the vortex of this cost
accountant’s exercise as we are neither experts of the
subject nor we consider it necessary to undertake this
exercise. The argument proceeded that the prices of inputs
have escalated so high that the maximum prices determined by
the impugned orders have become uneconomical. For this
malaise, petitioners have to thank themselves because it was
an integral part of their agreement with the Minister of
Civil Supplies on December 31, 1980 that the maximum prices
fixed by the impugned orders would be re-examined on the
expiration of the three months from the date of the
agreement. Instead of honoring this agreement, the
petitioners within a span of 12 days rushed to this Court
and obtained ex-parte stay order wholly suppressing the fact
that the orders
681
impugned in these petitions have already been replaced by
the latest order dated January 5, 1981. Petitioners who have
behaved in this manner are not entitled to any consideration
at the hands of the Court.
In order to illustrate how the Court is not the forum
for scientifically structuring prices of commodities, it may
be pointed out that the petitioners in their price structure
tables have added in respect of each scheduled item 24% of
wages. Totalling the wages for seven items the wage bill
accumulates at 175%. And that is equally true of other
overhead charges. Add to this numerous other items of food
sold by petitioners in their establishments and the utter
unsustainability of their claim becomes manifest.
We would however, reject the contention about the
mechanics of price fixation on the short ground that
petitioners, ordinarily do not serve only the scheduled
items, but they have large establishments catering to
various tastes and delicacies. No price fixation order need
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
guarantee profit to an establishment in respect of each unit
of article served or sold. It is the over all picture in the
trade or commerce that needs to be examined. Petitioners
have not shown that in their over all turnover they have
since the promulgation of impugned orders suffered losses.
And this situation never fructified because the 1978 Order
was kept in suspended animation for a period of two years
and when the latest order dated January 5, 1981 was
promulgated, it was still-born at the hands of the Court
because of the ex-parte stay order obtained by the
petitioners. And we reject this contention for the
additional reason as laid down by a Constitution Bench of
seven learned Judges of this Court in Prag Ice & Oil Mills &
Anr. etc. v. Union of India(1) where Chandrachud, C.J.
observed as under;
"In the ultimate analysis, the mechanics of price
fixation has necessarily to be left to the judgment of
the executive and unless it is patent that there is
hostile discrimination against a class of operators,
the processual basis of price fixation has to be
accepted in the generality of cases as valid."
682
Not the slightest case is made out for departure from the
proposition laid down by this Court as extracted
hereinabove.
Before we conclude, we would like to pin-point the
unfair advantage which the petitioners have obtained by ex-
parte stay suppressing the material fact that the later
order had already replaced the earlier orders and the latest
order was issued with their consent. In the Writ Petition
No. 43/81 the prayer clause reads as under:
"Issue a writ of mandamus or any other appropriate
writ or order holding that G.O. Ms. No. 548 dated
8.9.1978 and G.O. Ms. No. 626 dated 11.12.1980 of the
Government of Andhra Pradesh and the notification
issued by the Collector, the second respondent herein
dated 16.12.1980 in pursuance of the said impugned
Orders as ultra vires, unconstitutional and void and
quash the same."
The bone of contention was not the power exercised by the
State Government but the maximum prices fixed in exercise of
the power conferred on the State Government. The maximum
prices were to be regulated as per the order dated January
5, 1981, and even though this Court was moved for ex-parte
stay on January 12, 1981, the fact that the latest order
dated January 5, 1981 has replaced the earlier orders was
suppressed from the Court. And peculiarly the State
Government did not pursue vigorously its latest notification
dated January 5, 1981 because its operation was not stayed
by the Court. However, the entire notification fixing the
price of the menu of the poormen was put under suspended
animation leaving the hoteliers to extort any price to suit
their greed. Now that we are dismissing these petitions and
vacate the stay orders, the notification fixing the maximum
prices will revive and can be enforced. But in the meantime
the poor of Andhra Pradesh were made to pay by their nose
for their simplest menu and the difference between maximum
price fixed by the impugned notification and the prices
charged by the hoteliers would be unjust enrichment of the
hoteliers undeservedly enjoyed with the assistance of the
court by the exercise of the constitutional power under Art.
32 of the Constitution, and there is no way of depriving
this unjust enrichment The Court
683
set up for justice, including socio-economic justice,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
unfortunately lent its assistance to such unjust enrichment
and yet we are helpless.
For the reasons herein discussed, we find no merits in
any of the contentions canvassed on behalf of the
petitioners and therefore, these petitions fail and they are
dismissed with costs in each.
H.L.C. Petition dismissed.
684