Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2240 of 2001
PETITIONER:
M.P. Electricity Board
RESPONDENT:
Hariram
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/09/2004
BENCH:
N.Santosh Hegde & S.B.Sinha
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(With CA Nos. 2241/2001, 2242/2001 & 2243/2001)
SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
The appellant-M.P. Electricity Board in these appeals
question the correctness of the judgment of the High Court of
Judicature at Jabalpur whereby the High Court dismissed its writ
petitions challenging the order of the Industrial Court, Bhopal
Bench which in turn had directed to re-instate the respondents
herein with 50% back wages.
Facts necessary for the disposal of these appeals are as
follows:
The respondents herein were engaged by the appellant-
Board on daily wages for the purpose of digging pits for erecting
electric poles. It is the case of the appellant that on completion of
the said project of drawing electric lines from point to point, the
employment of the respondents was terminated and whenever a
similar occasion arose for digging pits they were re-employed on
daily wages. Hence their employment was not permanent in nature
nor in any one of the cases the respondents had completed 240
days of continuous work in any given year. The said project jobs
have come to an end in 1991 and respondents were never re-
employed by the Board.
Being aggrieved by the said non-employment, the
respondents herein filed applications under Section 31 read with
Section 61 of the M.P.Industrial Relations Act (M.P.Act) in
January, 1993 before the Labour Court, Bhopal seeking permanent
employment under the Board, primarily on the ground that they
have completed 240 working days in a year and their
discontinuation of service amounted to retrenchment without
following the legal requirements.
The appellant-Board denied the allegations made in the said
application which had termed the non-employment as
retrenchment of their service by contending that the question of
retrenchment does not arise in the nature of employment because
the service of the respondents were on work requirement basis.
Before the Labour Court, an application was made by the
respondents to produce the Muster Rolls for the period 1987 to
1992. That apart no other material was produced by the
respondents to establish a fact that they had worked for 240 days
continuously in any given year. Though some other applicants
examined themselves before the Labour Court no other document
was produced. While the appellant-Board examined three
witnesses who are Engineers-In-Charge of the Project and
produced the Muster Rolls for the period between 1986 to 1990 but
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did not produce the Muster Rolls for the later period. The Labour
Court after examining the entries in the Muster Rolls came to the
conclusion that the respondents-applicants had not worked for 240
days continuously in any given year, hence, they cannot claim
permanency nor could they term their non-employment as a
retrenchment. On the said basis, it rejected the applications of the
respondents.
Being aggrieved by the said rejection of their application,
the respondents preferred an appeal before the Industrial Court at
Bhopal Bench. The Industrial Court noticing the fact that though
the application for production of the Muster Rolls was for the years
1987 to 1992, the appellant had only produced the Muster Rolls for
the year ending 1990. Therefore, an adverse inference against the
appellant was drawn and solely based on the said adverse inference
it accepted the case of the respondents that they had worked for
240 days continuously in a given year, hence, proceeded to grant
relief, as stated herein above.
A challenge to the said orders of the appellant were
dismissed by the High Court after drawing an adverse inference
based on the same grounds of non-production of all the Muster
Rolls.
However, while considering the case of grant of back wages
both the Industrial Court as well as the High Court came to the
conclusion that the respondents had not worked continuously at
any given point of time and were not engaged on all working days
and their employment was punctuated by short periods when they
had not been engaged. Hence, it confined the back wages to 50%
only and with the above modification reinstatement of the
respondents was ordered.
In these appeals, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellant-Board contended that the courts below could not have
drawn any adverse inference against the Board for not having
produced the Muster Rolls for the year 1990-1992 when it
complied with the request of the respondent by producing the
Muster Rolls for the year 1988-90. It is submitted that the said
Muster Rolls which were produced before the court clearly
indicated that the respondents had not worked continuously for 240
days in a year, at any point of time between 1988-90. It is argued
that it is not the case of the respondents that between the year
1990-92 for which period the Muster Rolls were not produced they
had worked for 240 days continuously only in those years. Their
entire case was that between 1988 and 1992 they have been
working in 240 days continuously in a year which having not been
established atleast for the years 1988 and 1990 without there being
a specific allegation that between 1990 and 1992 there was such
continuous employment a mere non-production of the Muster Rolls
for the said year could not have been made the basis of drawing an
adverse inference by the courts below. It is also argued that the
non-employment of a daily wager when there is no work would not
amount to retrenchment. Learned counsel also submitted that the
nature of work that was being done by the appellant was a work for
a project and that project having come to an end, question of
regularising the services of the respondents or making them
permanent did not arise.
Shri S.K.Gambhir, learned senior counsel appearing for the
respondents per contra argued the very fact that the appellants
though were in possession of the Muster Rolls between 1988 to
1992 did not produce the same inspite of being summoned must
give rise to assumption that those documents if produced would
prove the case of the respondents, hence, the Industrial Court as
well as the High Court justly drew an adverse inference against the
appellant. He submitted that these workmen being poor and
illiterate people will not have any material in their possession to
prove their continuous employment, hence, the burden of proving
their continuity of their employment could not be thrust on them.
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He submitted that even otherwise in law the impugned orders did
not call for any interference.
Having heard the learned counsel for the parties and having
perused the documents, we notice that the case of the appellant that
these respondents were employed for the purpose of digging pits
for erecting electric poles in the course of drawing electric wire
from one point to another point is not disputed. It is an accepted
finding of the courts below that the employment of the respondents
have been discontinuous and intermittent during the period from
1982 till their employment was discontinued. We can take judicial
notice of the fact that drawing of an electric line is in the nature of
project work and once the polls are erected and the electric wire is
drawn from the starting pole to the ending pole that work comes to
an end. Therefore, it cannot be contended that the nature of work
which was only to dig pits for the purpose of erecting poles could
be construed as a permanent job. Of course, during the course of
electrifying more places, job of this nature may be done by the
Board continuously in different parts of the State but that does not
deviate from the fact that drawing of electric line from one point to
another at one part of the State would be a project and not a
continuous job. Therefore, employment of people in that local area
for the limited job cannot be construed as an employment for a
continuous and regular work of the Board. This fact is also
recorded in the Muster Rolls which shows that at regular intervals
the services of the respondents were sought obviously for the
reason that there was no continuous need for such work. A perusal
of the Muster Rolls, a copy of which is produced along with the
writ appeal which pertains to the respondents in the first appeal
clearly indicates the above fact. If as an example, we take the case
of the respondent in C.A.No.2240/01 we notice that he worked
between 16.11.1987 to 15.12.1987 for 30 days. His next
employment was from 16.12.1987 to 15.1.1988 for 26 days.
Therefore, it could be said that during the period 16.11.1987 to
15.1.1988 this respondent worked continuously for 56 days. He
was then not employed between 15.1.1988 till 16.2.1988. After the
said break he was re-employed from 16.2.1988 to 15.9.1988 which
is for a period of 106 days. Thereafter, he was not employed till
16.11.1988. From 16.11.1988 he was re-employed till 15.12.1988
for 30 days. Thus it is noticed that the employment during the
period 1987 to 1988 was not continuous and his total employed
days for one year if taken from 16.11.1987 till 16.11.1988, same
comes to 136 days. Similar is the case if we have a look at a
subsequent employment during the years 1989-1990, this clearly
shows the fact that the employment of the respondent was on a job
required basis and was not for any continuous services required by
the Board. The appellant, therefore, cannot claim either
permanency or regularisation since there is no such permanent post
to which he could stake his claim nor could he claim the benefit of
completion of 240 days of continuous work in a given year,
because as stated above the figures do not show that the
respondents whose particulars are referred to herein above or the
other respondents for that matter have worked for 240 days. In
such a factual background, in our opinion, the Industrial Court or
the High Court could not have drawn an adverse inference for the
non-production of the Muster Rolls for the year 1990 to 1992 in
the absence of specific pleading by the respondents-applicants that
atleast during that period they had worked for 240 days
continuously in a given year. The application calling for the
production of the documents was for the years 1987 to 1992. As
stated above, between the period 1987 to 1990, as a matter of fact,
till end of the year 1990 the respondents have not been able to
establish the case of continuous work for 240 days. Considering
these facts in our view drawing of an adverse inference for the
non-production of the Muster Rolls for the years 1991-92, is
wholly erroneous on the part of the Industrial Court and the High
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Court. We cannot but bear in mind the fact that the initial burden
of establishing the factum of their continuous work for 240 days in
a year rests with the applicants-respondents.
The above burden having not been discharged and the
Labour Court having held so, in our opinion, the Industrial Court
and the High Court erred in basing an order of re-instatement
solely on an adverse inference drawn erroneously. At this stage it
may be useful to refer to a judgment of this Court in the case of
Municipal Corporation, Faridabad vs. Siri Niwas (JT 2004 (7) SC
248) wherein this Court disagreed with the High Court’s view of
drawing an adverse inference in regard to the non-production of
certain relevant documents. This is what this Court had to say in
that regard :
"A court of law even in a case where
provisions of the Indian Evidence Act apply, may
presume or may not presume that if a party despite
possession of the best evidence had not produced
the same, it would have gone against his
contentions. The matter, however, would be
different where despite direction by a court the
evidence is withheld. Presumption as to adverse
inference for non-production of evidence is always
optional and one of the factors which is required to
be taken into consideration in the background of
facts involved in the lis. The presumption, thus, is
not obligatory because notwithstanding the
intentional non-production, other circumstances
may exist upon which such intentional non-
production may be found to be justifiable on some
reasonable grounds. In the instant case, the
Industrial Tribunal did not draw any adverse
inference against the appellant. It was within its
jurisdiction to do so particularly having regard to
the nature of the evidence adduced by the
respondent."
If we apply the principles laid down by this Court in the
above stated case of Siri Niwas, it is clear that the Labour Court
not having drawn any adverse inference, on facts and
circumstances of this case the Industrial Court or the High Court
could not have based an order of re-instatement solely on the basis
of an adverse inference.
For the reasons stated above, these appeals succeed. The
impugned orders of the High Court as well as the Industrial Court
are set aside and that of the Labour Court is restored.
These appeals are allowed.