Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4461 of 1996
PETITIONER:
TI CYCLES OF INDIA, AMATTUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M.K.GURUMANI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/08/2001
BENCH:
S. RAjendra Babu & Shivaraj V. Patil
JUDGMENT:
[With C.A.No.5682/2001 (@ SLP(c) No.11497/98)]
J U D G M E N T
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :
C.A.No. 5682/2001 (@ SLP(c) No.11497/98)
Leave granted.
Respondent Nos. 3 to 23 were workmen in the establishment of the
appellant. They filed applications under the Payment of Gratuity Act,
1972 [hereinafter referred to as the Act] for a direction to pay balance of
gratuity by the appellant for a period of service rendered by them.
Respondent Nos. 3 to 23 retired from the establishment of the appellant
and they were paid gratuity calculating basic wages and dearness
allowance only. They claimed that they were also paid incentive wages as
per Section 4(2) of the Act. The appellant contended that they were
governed by settlements and awards regarding wages and other service
conditions, which had clearly set out that incentive earnings should not
be reckoned as wages for the purpose of provident fund, bonus, gratuity,
ESI, overtime, etc. They also submitted that the incentive earnings
would not partake the character of wages for the purpose of gratuity
under the provisions of the Act and that the respondents had already
received gratuity on the basis of last drawn basic wages and dearness
allowance and, therefore, sought for dismissal of the applications.
The Controlling Authority held as follows:
For the incentive payment, the norms fixed were in pieces, per
jar, per unit, per truck per paid, per trap per cistern, per hands,
etc. Therefore, incentive payment was made on the basis of pieces
or number of items produced.
On that basis, the Controlling Authority concluded that Section
4(2) of the Act was attracted as it deals with the piece rate wages but
wages paid for any overtime work should not be taken into account as
wages and that the appellant had paid incentive wages to their workers
on the basis of pieces produced by the workers. It was further held that
the incentive wages were actually calculated on the basis of pieces and
also the rate was fixed per piece or unit, etc. In those circumstances, the
Controlling Authority held that incentive wages were actually paid piece
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rate wages. Although the Controlling Authority agreed with the
contention that wages would mean basic wage and dearness allowance,
he stated that the incentive wages paid on the basis of piece rates and
amount fixed per piece have to be treated as piece rate wages in terms of
Section 4(2) of the Act and, therefore, allowed the applications.
Appeal preferred against the same having failed, writ petition was
filed. On dismissal of the writ petition further appeal was preferred before
the High Court. The Division Bench of the High Court after referring to
various decisions of this Court and of the High Court, held that the
incentive payments in question would fall within the definition of wages
for the purpose of the Act. The High Court found that there is a
difference in the term wages employed under the Act and basic wages
defined under the Employees Provident Funds & Miscellaneous
Provisions Act, 1952 [for short PF Act]. While the Act defines the term
wages, the PF Act defines the term basic wages and, therefore, the
term basic wages has got to be contra-distinguished from the term
wages and that difference will have to be construed in the context of the
enactment and the purpose thereof. Apart from that the High Court
relied upon Section 4(2) of the Act as has been done by the Controlling
Authority. The High Court, having dismissed the writ appeal, this appeal
is preferred by special leave.
Shri Andhyarujina, learned Senior Advocate and Shri
A.T.M.Sampath, learned counsel for the appellant, submitted that the
definitions of the term basic wages in the PF Act and the term wages
in the Act are para-materia and both cover all emoluments while on duty
but exclude any bonus, commission, HRA, overtime wages and any other
allowance. They also submitted that a perusal of the terms of
settlements between the parties would make it clear that the incentive
scheme introduced by them is not a piece rate wages and the concept
relating to bonus has been altogether ignored both by the Controlling
Authority and the High Court.
On behalf of the respondents, it is submitted that the view taken
by the High Court and the authorities is justified and we should not
interfere with the order made by the High Court.
Section 2(s) of the Act defines the term wages as under:
wages means all emoluments which are earned by an employee
while on duty or on leave in accordance with the terms and
conditions of his employment and which are paid or are payable to
him in cash and includes dearness allowance but does not include
any bonus, commission, HRA, overtime wages and any other
allowance.
Under Section 2(b) of the PF Act, the term basic wages is defined
which reads as follows:
basic wages means all emoluments which are earned by an
employee while on duty or on leave or on holidays with wages in
either case in accordance with the terms of the contract of
employment and which are paid or are payable in cash to him, but
does not include
(i) the cash value of any food concession;
(ii) any dearness allowance (that is to say, all cash payments
by whatever name called paid to any employee on account of a rise
in the cost of living), house-rent allowance, overtime allowance,
bonus, commission or any other similar allowance payable to the
employee in respect of his employment or of work done in such
employment;
(iii) any presents made by the employer;
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A comparison between these two provisions will make it clear that
there is no basic difference between the two expressions used in these
two enactments insofar as the exclusion of bonus from the emoluments
is concerned. The High Court has been carried away by the expression
basic wages used in the PF Act while the term wages is used in the
Act but that distinction will not be of any impact, if we closely examine
the manner in which the two terms are defined in the respective Acts.
The nomenclature of the two expressions will not alter the contents of the
two terms. Therefore, the High Court ought to have considered this
aspect of the matter. Further this Court in Straw Board Mfg. Co. Ltd.
vs. Its Workmen, 1977 I LLJ 463, was concerned with the gratuity
scheme formulated prior to the Act and this is how this Court interpreted
this aspect of the matter:
26. Decisions have been brought to our notice some of which
refer to basic wages and others to consolidated wages as the
foundation for computation of gratuity. These are matters of
discretion and the fee of the circumstances prevalent in the
industry by the Tribunal and, unless it has gone haywire in the
exercise of its discretion the award should stand. We see that in
the Payment of Gratuity Act also, not basic wages but gross wages
inclusive of dearness allowance; have been taken so as the basis.
This, incidentally, reflects the industrial sense in the country
which has been crystallised into legislation. (emphasis supplied)
x x x x x x
We clarify that wages will mean and include basic wages and
dearness allowance and nothing else..
Again this Court in Bridge & Roof Company (India) Ltd. & Ors.
and Union of India & Ors., 1962 II LLJ 490, examined the scope of the
term basic wages as defined in PF Act and as to whether bonus would
be included in the same and it was explained that the word bonus, not
having been qualified in any manner in Section 2(b)(ii) of the PF Act,
would not include only profit bonus but every other kind of bonus
amounts paid by way of bonus under the scheme and held to be
excluded from the definition of basic wages covered by the exception to
Section 2(b) of the PF Act. Therefore, these two decisions make it clear
that bonus stands excluded from the purview of wages for the purpose
of calculating the contribution to be made in the provident fund or the
gratuity payable under the Act. These decisions could not have been
brushed aside or explained away in the manner done by the High Court,
one by stating that the decision has no bearing after the Act came into
force and the other that the enactment is different. The essence of wages
was explained in Straw Boards case (supra) with reference to gratuity
and the Act was relied upon to state what the law on the matter stood
then is reflected in the Act, while in Bridge & Roof Company (India)
Ltd. (supra) this Court explained the scope of definition of basic wages
which we have held to be identical with the term wages used in the Act.
However, the High Court has also proceeded to consider the fact
that the gratuity payable under the Act would cover bonus paid in the
present cases inasmuch as the same is only an incentive wage paid on
piece rate work and not as bonus as such. Therefore, it is necessary for
us to examine the economic concept of bonus and as to the manner in
which the said expression has been understood in the context of
industrial jurisprudence.
Report of the National Commission on Labour dealt with this
aspect of the matter under the heading Wage Incentives or Production
Bonus. This is what was stated by the said Commission:
The incentives given to the labour by their employers for
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achieving higher productivity, are generally known as incentive
bonus or production bonus. In other words the incentive for
increased production is generally known as production bonus.
Broadly the basis of remuneration for work in industry is based on
two fundamental arrangements, viz. (i) payment by time, and (ii)
payment by output. In the former case, a worker is paid a
predetermined amount for a specified unit of time which may be
an hour, a day, a week, or a month. Under this arrangement,
there is no direct control on the amount of work done by the
workers except perhaps to a certain extent through supervision so
long as he is engaged on tasks specified by the employer. In the
latter arrangement, the worker is remunerated according to his
output or the output of the group to which he belongs. It may
assume complex forms such as differential piece work wherein
rates of remuneration per unit of output may be either progressive
or regressive. There are also other types of remuneration that are
not directly dependent on production, like bonuses for regular
attendance, length of service, quality of production and
elimination of waste, all constituting an area of wage incentives.
The First and the Second Five Year Plans also recommended the
introduction of incentive to promote more efficient work in industries
with due safeguards to protect the interests of the workers through the
guarantee of minimum or fall-back wage and protection against fatigue
and undue speed up. In the Second Five Year Plan, it was further made
clear that earnings beyond the minimum wage should be necessarily
related to results and workers should be consulted before a system of
payment by results was introduced in such an establishment. The Third
Five Year Plan emphasised the need for higher productivity and
reduction in the unit cost of production and put the responsibility on the
management to provide the most efficient equipment, correct conditions
and methods of work, and adequate training and suitably psychological
and material incentives for the workers. One thing is clear from the
report and the recommendations made in the various Five Year Plans
that there is a base of standard above which extra payment is made for
extra production in addition to basic wage. Sometimes, the piece rate
work is termed as bonus and such a question was considered by this
Court in Daily Partap vs. Regional Provident Fund Commissioner,
1998 (8) SCC 90. The test adopted in that case is that in order to be
excluded from basic wages the payment under such a scheme must
have a direct nexus and linkage with the amount of extra output. On an
examination of the scheme in that case, it was found that less than
normal number of workmen doing normal work of a shift, production
bonus was given according to the deficiency in the numerical strength of
workmen and extra output given by any workman in any shift, output of
different types of workmen being measured according to the prescribed
norms but production bonus not directly linked with the amount of the
extra output furnished by the workman concerned but paid at a uniform
rate of his normal wages was held to be not bonus at all and the scheme
was not a genuine one. It was not the same as incentive bonus scheme.
In the present case, the scheme sets out the terms under the
settlements. Clause 1.1 sets out the objectives as follows:
The objective of the scheme is to ensure optimum production of
high quality, promote safety and cost consciousness and maintain
a high level of productivity.
Incentive payment is based on two components: group
performance index and individual/sectional performance index. It was
made clear that no incentive will be payable to workmen on leave,
absent, away from duty or on holidays. The minimum performance level
is indicated in each sectional incentive table and below which no
incentive will be paid for any reason whatsoever. If a person works for
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more than one group during the month, he will be awarded incentive as
per the performance of each group in the respective periods. Clause 9.1
also sets out incentive payment payable under the scheme will not be
regarded as wages and, therefore, the payment shall not be taken into
account for the purpose of leave wages, overtime wages, wages in lieu of
notice, provident fund contributions, bonus, gratuity or any other
allowance. However, this clause is subject to review in case of statutory
amendments if any.
The Authorities were carried away by considering that the bonus is
payable on the basis of output equivalent to certain pieces per man-day.
But it is made clear in the scheme that each payment will be made not
on the basis of pieces of per man-day nor is it a piece rate work for which
wages are paid but it is an additional incentive for payment of bonus in
respect of extra work done. The measure of extra work done is indicated
by pieces and not wages as such that are paid on that basis. It is not
that in respect of each piece any wages are paid but altogether if certain
number of pieces are produced, additional incentive will be payable at a
particular rate. Therefore, the authorities have completely missed scope
of the scheme and have incorrectly interpreted the same. Inasmuch as
both the High Court and the authorities have incorrectly understood the
position in law and have wrongly held that the concept of wages under
the Act would include bonus and that even on facts the scheme would
attract Section 4(2) of the Act. Proviso to Section 4(2) of the Act is to the
effect that in case of a piece-rated employee, daily wages shall be
computed in a particular manner but that is not the rate at which the
wages are paid in the present case at all. Therefore, Section 4(2) of the
Act is not attracted in the case of the present scheme with which we are
concerned.
Hence this appeal is allowed setting aside the orders made by the
authorities and the High Court. If the payments have already been made
to the respective respondents in terms of the orders made by the
authorities, we do not think, we should disturb the same in these
proceedings which have been mainly filed for the purpose of interpreting
the provisions of law and the scheme. Therefore, no recovery shall be
effected in respect of payments that may have been made pursuant to
the orders under appeal.
Subject to the aforesaid directions, the appeal is allowed. No costs.
C.A.No.4461/96
The facts arising in this appeal are identical to those considered by
us in C.A.No. ./2001 (@ SLP(c) No.11497/98). In view of the
reasons supplied in the said appeal, this appeal shall also stand allowed
subject to the similar directions given therein.
...J.
[ S. RAJENDRA BABU ]
...J.
[SHIVARAJ V. PATIL]
August 24, 2001.