Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6734-6745 of 2000
PETITIONER:
GOVERNMENT OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
V.S.R.MURTHY & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/09/2001
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu & D.P. Mohapatra
JUDGMENT:
[With C.A.Nos.6746/2000, 6750/2000, 6747/2000, 6748/2000 & 6749/2000]
J U D G M E N T
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :
When certain proceedings were pending before the Board of
Industrial and Financial Reconstruction (BIFR) a settlement was reached
between the employees of Bus Body Division and 1537 employees of M/s
Hyderabad Allwyn Ltd. [for short HAL] and their management under
Section 12 of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 [hereinafter referred to as
the Act]. Memorandum of Understanding [MOU] was also reached on
28.3.1993 with M/s Voltas Lt., Government of Andhra Pradesh and HAL.
In that MOU, one of the clauses provided as follows :
As regards employees numbering 1486, HAL will enter into
satisfactory arrangements with the Government of A.P.for their
deployment elsewhere.
The Government of Andhra Pradesh thereafter considered the
modalities of placement of 1486 employees of the company and a Cabinet
Sub-Committee was constituted which considered the recommendations
made by a High Power Committee and the operating agency appointed by
BIFR. The Managing Director, HAL was asked to identify the 1486
employees and allot them to the various Heads of the Departments as
indicated in Annexure II thereto as an interim measure to be effective
from 1.4.93. The placement of individuals was to be decided by the
Committee of Officers constituted under their order dated 31.3.1993. It
was also stated that separate orders will be issued creating
supernumerary posts for these employees.
Thereafter, the Government accepted recommendations of the
Committee of Officers creating supernumerary posts in the Government
Departments requiring the Heads of Departments to maintain a separate
muster roll and acquittance register for the individuals allotted to them.
The Heads of Departments were asked to issue temporary posting orders,
which shall be in operation till final orders of allotment were issued in
pursuance of decisions of the Empowered Committee. In the meanwhile,
BIFR published a draft scheme on 22.2.1994. Under the scheme,
amongst other things, it was provided for the establishment of a new
company Auto Company by the Government of Andhra Pradesh to
which the employees of the HAL working in its auto division shall be
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deemed to have been transferred with effect from 28.3.93. It was further
stated that the transferor company had identified the number of surplus
employees of the transferor company who would be transferred and
absorbed by the Government of Andhra Pradesh and the Government of
Andhra Pradesh has by its order dated 28.4.1993 completed the
modalities for placement of 1486 employees in various Government
departments and State level public enterprises. It was also stated that
the aforesaid transfer of the Watch undertaking to the Watch Company
together with the transfer of the employees engaged in or connected with
the Watch undertaking as also the transfer of the employees in the Auto
division and the surplus employees so identified would be completed
before the sanction of the scheme. On 4.4.1994, BIFR sanctioned the
scheme.
On 28.7.1994, the High Power Committee submitted its report to
the Government advising against absorption of surplus staff of public
sector undertakings in Government services for three reasons: [1] the
same were creating unrest amongst the Government employees who were
already in service; [2] there was no provision in the rules under which
surplus employees of the public sector undertakings could be given
placement in Government service in any cadre; and [3] such lateral
induction of employees of public sector undertakings was bound to lead
to endless litigation. The Committee recommended to the Government to
take a decision not to absorb or induct surplus staff of public sector
undertakings into Government service in future. The Government
approved the recommendations of the High Power Committee. On
1.10.1996, the Government issued a notification mentioning the
difficulties in the matter of regularisation of the surplus workers and the
decision to abolish all the supernumerary posts with effect from
30.11.1996 and to provide for payment of an amount for rehabilitation
equal to 1½ months pay including Dearness Allowance for every year of
completed service subject to a minimum amount of Rs.30,000/- for each
employee in addition to other statutory dues.
An ordinance was promulgated which came into effect from
30.11.1996 prohibiting absorption of employees of State Public Sector
Undertakings in Government service and cancelling all orders of
Government appointing any employee of the state public sector
undertakings to any post in a public service on the ground that the
undertaking had become sick or was likely to become sick or was closed
or was likely to be closed. The ordinance was replaced by the Andhra
Pradesh Absorption of Employees of State Government Public Sector
Undertakings into Public Service Act, 1997.
The validity of the Ordinance and the Act was challenged in a
batch of writ petitions before the High Court. A full bench of the High
Court allowed the writ petitions and set aside the impugned G.O. while
declaring that the impugned ordinance or the Act will not affect the
rights of the parties as protected under the BIFR scheme. The High Court
found that the surplus employees of the HAL were already absorbed and
they are the employees of the State alone and, therefore, the impugned
Act or the Ordinance cannot affect their rights. The High Court also
found that the BIFR scheme could not be defeated by a legislation to be
made by the State and arbitrariness is writ large in this case and the
Government cannot sack the employees drafted by them for no fault of
theirs. The argument raised on behalf of the appellants on the economic
capacity of the State was also rejected by the High Court. The High
Court, however, gave a finding that the surplus employees deployed by
the Government will continue to be workmen. It was also found by the
High Court that the termination of services of the employees was not on
account of any retrenchment following the provisions of the Industrial
Disputes Act but on the ground that the industry has become sick. The
scheme for absorption of the employees was complete and implemented
and if it is not complete, the Government is bound to complete this
exercise.
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Special leave petitions were preferred by the Government before
this Court and this Court made an interim order on 24.2.1999 allowing
the appellants to place the difficulties in implementing the scheme before
the BIFR and directed the BIFR to pass such orders as they deem fit after
hearing the parties irrespective of the observations made by the High
Court in the judgment under appeal.
By an order made on 12.5.1999, the BIFR rejected the application
filed by the appellants. M/s Allwyn Watches Ltd., which is also covered
by the BIFR scheme, was ordered to be closed down with effect from
29.2.2000 and identical voluntary retirement scheme was accepted by
more than 90% of the employees as on that date and out of a total
number of 2147 employees of that company, 2135 had been relieved and
given benefits under the voluntary retirement scheme and the remaining
12 employees had been retained for winding up operations. The said
employees are all stated to be senior to the workmen who are the
respondents in the present batch of cases and that scheme was
challenged before this Court in Dayakar Reddy vs. MD, Allwyn Auto
Ltd. & Ors., 2000 (9) SCC 247, and this Court upheld the scheme
implemented by the State Government in respect of the employees of the
erstwhile Allwyn Auto Ltd., a company formed by way of implementation
of this very BIFR scheme and issued appropriate directions to the
company with regard to extension of the benefits of the voluntary
retirement scheme to workmen who had not opted for the same.
Shri P.P.Rao, learned Senior Advocate appearing for the appellants,
contended as follows:
1. Section 32 of the Sick Industrial Companies (Special
Provisions) Act, 1985 [hereinafter referred to as the SICA]
cannot override the provisions of the A.P.Prohibition of
Absorption of Employees of State Government Public Sector
Undertakings into Public Service Act, 1997 which, in pith and
substance, is a law falling within the scope of Entry 41 of List
II of Seventh Schedule to the Constitution of India i.e. State
Public Services. The overriding effect given by Section 32 of
the SICA is limited to laws made by Parliament with respect to
the items enumerated in Lists I & III and it cannot extend to
laws enacted by the State Legislature with respect to any
matter in List II. The finding of the High Court to the contrary
is erroneous and unsustainable.
2. Para 9(c) of the BIFR scheme has to be read subject to Section
18(1)(da) of the SICA. Therefore, the scheme cannot be
understood to require the Government to permanently absorb
the surplus staff in question contrary to the statutory
provisions governing recruitment to public services of the
State.
3. The State Government did not make any firm commitment to
permanently absorb the 1486 employees contrary to the rules
governing recruitment to Government departments and other
public sector undertakings.
4. Availability of work is a pre-condition for absorption. When the
Government found that there were already surplus employees
without work, it cannot be forced to absorb the 1486
employees.
5. The finding of the High Court that the workmen have already
been permanently absorbed is incorrect. In any event,
retrenchment of surplus staff is an inherent right of the
Government.
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6. The doctrine of promissory estoppel is subject to exceptions.
The Government cannot be compelled to carry out a
representation or promise which is contrary to law or which
was outside the authority or power of the officer of the
Government or of the authority to make. That doctrine must
also yield when the equality so requires.
7. In view of the High Courts finding that the surplus employees
deployed by the Government will continue to be workmen only
and the termination of their services was not on account of
retrenchment under the Act, it will be open to the Government
of A.P.to retrench them under the Act in which case the
compensation payable under the Act will be far less than the
compensation offered by the Government in G.O.Ms.No. 192
dated 1.10.1996. The High Court failed to appreciate this
aspect and erred in quashing the G.O. which is more beneficial
to the employees as the scale of compensation provided is three
times more than what is provided in the Act.
8. Assuming without admitting that the BIFR scheme is binding
on the Government notwithstanding the A.P.Act No.14 of 1997,
the BIFR ought to have allowed the State Governments request
to modify the scheme so as to facilitate a golden handshake in
terms of G.O.Ms.No.192 dated 1.10.1996. The reasons given
by the BIFR for rejecting the Governments request are
unsustainable.
In support of the aforesaid propositions, Shri P.P.Rao relied upon
the decisions of this Court in Prafullah Kumar Mukherjee vs. Bank of
Commerce, LR 74 IA 23; A.S.Krishna vs. State of Madras, 1957 SCR
399; State of Rajasthan vs. G.Chawla, 1959 Supp. (1) SCR 904; State
of A.P. vs. McDowell & Co., 1996 (3) SCC 709; P.N.Krishna Lal vs.
Government of Kerala, 1995 Supp.(2) SCC 187; Management of
Dandakaranya Project v. Workmen, 1997 (2) SCC 296; N.Ramanatha
Pillai v. State of Kerala, 1974 (1) SCR 515; K.Rajendran v. State of
Tamil Nadu, 1982 (3) SCR 628; Union of India vs. Godfrey Philips,
1985 Supp. (3) SCR 123; Kasinka Trading v. Union of India, 1995 (1)
SCC 274; Excise Commissioner, U.P. vs. Ram Kumar, 1976 Supp. SCR
532.
Shri M.N.Rao, learned Senior Advocate appearing for the
respondents, submitted that the finding of the High Court that the
surplus employees of HAL were already absorbed and they are the
employees of the State and, therefore, the impugned Act has no
application to them should be sustained by us followed by the finding of
the High Court that termination is not on account of retrenchment but
on the ground that the industry has become sick and the scheme of
absorption was complete and having been implemented pursuant to the
agreement entered into by the Government of Andhra Pradesh and the
various other parties and the Government should not now be allowed to
turn back from solemn undertaking given before the BIFR and other
authorities and such a question should not be allowed to be agitated in
the court and the view expressed by the High Court should be upheld by
us.
Act No. 14 of 1997 is effective from November 26, 1996. The said
Act declares that no employee of a State Government Public Sector
Undertaking shall be or shall ever be deemed to be entitled to absorption
into public service from the date of the commencement of the Act only on
the ground that such undertaking has become sick or is likely to become
sick or is closed or is likely to be closed and accordingly. The Act is
effective from a date long after the scheme was sanctioned by the BIFR
on 4.4.1994. Clauses (c) and (d) of the scheme provides as follows:
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(c) the transferor company has identified the number of surplus
employees of the transferor company who would be transferred
and absorbed by the Government of A.P.. The Government of A.P.
has vide its order G.O.Ms. No.180 dated 28th April, 1993
completed the modalities for placement of 1486 employees in
various Government Departments and State level public
enterprises.
(d) The aforesaid transfer of the Watch undertaking to the Watch
Company together with the transfer of the employees engaged in
or connected with the Watch undertaking as also the transfer of
the employees of the Auto Division and the surplus employees
identified as aforesaid would be completed before the sanction of
this Scheme.
The underlined portion in clause (c) will make it clear that the
Government has completed the modalities for placement of 1486
employees in various Government Departments and State level public
enterprises. It is also made clear that the transfer of the surplus
employees identified as aforesaid would be completed before the sanction
of the scheme. The scheme having been already sanctioned by the BIFR,
it must be taken that the employees in different establishments have
been identified and their placement in the various Government
Departments and the public sector undertakings is complete. It is not
necessary to look into any other document. The reports of the various
Committees and the Government orders issued thereon will have no
relevance at all. When the necessary material had been placed before the
BIFR and the BIFR had gone into the same and thereafter sanctioned the
scheme in the manner stated above, we think the finding recorded by the
High Court that the surplus employees of HAL have been absorbed in the
services of the Government and they are employees of the State is
justified.
The sequiter is that when the Act was made effective from
26.11.1996, the Act cannot have any application to the present
employees at all. It may be for the purpose of convenience or for other
reasons the Government may have placed them in supernumerary posts
or other kinds of posts but it was publicly declared before a competent
statutory forum that the modalities for placement of 1486 employees in
various Government Departments and State level public enterprises are
complete and, therefore, that position cannot now be doubted or
disputed.
In this background, we do not think it is necessary for us to go into
the complex questions of the competence of the State Legislature to enact
the Act, effect of the Act, application of doctrine of promissory estoppel,
the manner in which the same would operate in spite of the scheme
framed under the SICA and whether in the light of Section 32 of the SICA
the scheme would override the Act or not. These questions become
academic and the correctness of decision on questions of law recorded by
the High Court on these aspects is left open to be agitated in appropriate
proceedings.
The High Court has given a finding that the workmen in question
as enumerated in the scheme of the BIFR referred to earlier have been
deployed in the Government Departments or the state public sector
undertakings and they do not cease to be workmen merely because they
are employed in the Government Departments. The view expressed by
the High Court in this regard is justified and is not under challenge by
respondents before us either. Therefore, it is not necessary for us to
examine any further on this aspect of the matter.
A contention is raised by the learned Advocate General before the
High Court that the respondent-employees being workmen their services
could be retrenched under the provisions of Section 25-F of the
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Industrial Disputes Act as the industries in question from which they are
drafted have become sick. The High Court, in our view, rightly rejected
that contention by stating when the workmen in question have become
employees of the Government the industries becoming sick would be
irrelevant. If the services of the workmen in question are terminated for
other reasons as provided under the Industrial Disputes Act, the
respective parties can work out their respective rights as provided under
that Act.
Shri P.P.Rao further contended that M/s Allwyn Watches Ltd. to
which some of the employees who were senior to the respondent
employees were absorbed under the BIFR scheme and which is allowed
to be closed down and 2135 have been relieved and given benefits under
the Voluntary Retirement Scheme and only 12 employees have been
retained for winding up operations and that matter came up before this
Court in Dayakar Reddys case [supra] and this Court did not interfere
with the implementation of the scheme but on the other hand gave
extension of time to claim the benefits arising under such VRS scheme.
But this factor does not have any bearing on the present case because
even in certain flourishing and prosperous companies many of the
employees volunteer to retire on account of their personal reasons
depending upon whether benefits arising therein would be advantageous
to them. If such attractive schemes are offered to the employees in the
present case also, as to what the employees would do, is not for us to
predict. Particularly when the employees have been held to be workmen
and we have left open the question as to whether they can invoke the
provisions of the Industrial Disputes Act, it is for them to decide as to
whether action should be taken or not. Therefore, the fact that the
voluntary retirement scheme being applied in M/s Allwyn Watches Ltd.
would not influence us to deviate from the approach made by us in the
matter.
Whether absorption of the employees by the Government would be
a drain on the public exchequer was a matter certainly present to the
mind of the Government before taking various steps culminating in the
scheme sanctioned by the BIFR. In trying to solve various problems, the
Government has to balance several interests and devise methods to suit
the needs of the situation. In the present case, when certain industries
had become sick and a large number of employees were likely to be
uprooted and thus a human problem arose, the Government sought to
work out certain solutions which resulted in a scheme framed by the
BIFR, now to say that such a scheme could not have been framed and
that scheme would affect the rights of the other employees of the
Government or likely to affect the finance of the Government is only the
result of unimaginative narrow thinking on the part of the Government
by relying on bureaucracy used to the usual red tapism. To depend
upon the reports of the bureaucracy, which cannot take decision of such
large magnitude involving human problem, would only indicate that the
realities of the matter are ignored. It is only after due deliberation and
after considering the financial and administrative implications the
previous orders of the Government had been passed leading to a scheme
framed by the BIFR has not been duly appreciated in the proper
perspective by the Government. Hence, challenge to the order of BIFR
made on 12.5.1999 is unsustainable. In that view of the matter, if the
Government was merely guided by the reports of the bureaucracy and
not on the ground realities and thereafter the Ordinance has been
promulgated under a misconception thinking it would be applicable to
the present employees, we think, the attempt of the Government has
misfired.
In the result, we dismiss these appeals subject to the observations
made in the course of this order. No costs.
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...J.
[ S. RAJENDRA BABU ]
...J.
[ D.P.MOHAPATRA ]
SEPTEMBER 18, 2001.