Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. LIPTON LIMITED AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THEIR EMPLOYEES
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
02/02/1959
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 676 1959 SCR Supl. (2) 150
CITATOR INFO :
R 1963 SC1327 (6)
R 1963 SC1332 (7)
RF 1966 SC 305 (46)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Bonus-Fixation of grades and scales of
Pay-Company with head office in England and branch in India-
Employees in the Delhi Office-Claim to bonus on the basis of
global Profits-Revision of wage structure-Principle-Bonus
and Wage, distinction-Jurisdiction of the Tribunal to make
an award in respect of employees of Delhi office employed
outside State of Delhi.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company was incorporated in the United
Kingdom, with its registered office in London and its
business in the United Kingdom consisted of stores and
groceries, including tea which represented only about 10% of
its business there. Its operations in India were carried on
by a branch with its head office in Calcutta, and the
business there consisted mainly in the sale of " packeted "
tea throughout India. The Delhi office of its Indian branch
controlled the salesmen and other employees employed in the
Punjab, Delhi State, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh, but had no
connexion with the export side of the business. The Indian
Branch had no subscribed capital nor any reserves, and the
capital used in India was money advanced from the company’s
fund in England.
The dispute between the respondents who were the employees
of the Delhi office and the company related, inter alia, to
(1) fixation of grades and scales of pay; (2) whether
retrospective effect should be given to the new scales of,
pay; and (3) bonus for the year 1951. The respondents
contended that the total global profits of the appellant
company should form the basis for determining the claim to
bonus on the ground that it was an integrated industry which
had trading activities in various countries. The Tribunal
found that the Indian workmen did not in any way contribute
to the profits which the appellant company derived from its
ex-India business, that the Indian branch maintained
separate accounts which had been audited and accepted by the
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Income-tax authorities as showing the profit and loss of the
Indian branch of the business, and that though, at the
relevant time, the appellant company was one legal entity
and the capital of the Indian branch came from London, the
Indian branch was treated as a separate entity for all
practical purposes. The Tribunal also found that for 195 I
there was no available surplus for distribution as bonus to
the employees in India. In the matter of fixation of grades
and scales of pay, the Tribunal found that the existing
scale of wages of the Delhi employees was far below the
standard of a living wage, and for fixing the wage level it
took into consideration the company’s global capacity to pay
and came to the conclusion that having regard to its global
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resources the company was financially able to bear a
slightly higher wage structure. Accordingly, the Tribunal
revised the grades by giving an increase of 20% to all
workers. As to the date from which the revised grades were
to take effect, the Tribunal directed that they should have
retrospective effect from January 1, 1954, instead of
January 1, 1953, as claimed by the Union.
The appellant contended that the Tribunal erred in taking
into consideration the global financial resources of the
company in support of an increase in wages while holding
that the Indian branch was a separate entity for the payment
of bonus, that the financial resources of the Indian branch
did not show any capacity to pay higher wages, and that, in
any case, there was no reliable evidence to show that the
existing wage structure required revision if it was compared
to the wage structure in similar industries in the Delhi
region. A question was also raised as to whether the
Industrial Tribunal, Delhi, had jurisdiction to make an
award in respect of employees of the Delhi office who were
employed outside the State of Delhi.
Held: (1) that on the finding that the Delhi office
controlled all its employees in the matter of appointment,
leave, transfer, supervision, etc., whether employed in
Delhi State or outside it, the Industrial Tribunal, Delhi,
had jurisdiction to adjudicate on the dispute between the
appellant company and its workmen of the Delhi office, as
the Delhi State Government was the appropriate Government
within the meaning of s. 2 of the Industrial Disputes, Act,
1947, and under s. 18 of the Act the award made by the
Tribunal was binding on all persons employed in the Delhi
office;
(2) that in the circumstances in which the appellant com-
pany operated in India at the relevant time and on the
finding that no part of the profits made in India was
diverted to England and that the Indian business depended on
its own trading results the global profits of the company
could not be made the basis for awarding bonus to Indian
workmen, and that the latter can claim bonus only if there
was an available surplus of profits of the Indian business;
Muir Mills Co. Ltd. v. Suti Mills Mazdoor Union, Kanpur,
[1955] 1 S.C.R. 991, Ganesh Flour Mills Co. Ltd v. Employees
of Ganesh Flour Mills, A.I.R. 1958 S.C. 382, Burn and Co.,
Calcutta v. Their Employees, [1956] S.C.R. 781 and Baroda
Borough Municipality v. Its workmen, [1957] S.C.R. 33,
referred to.
(3) that in determining the question of a revision of the
wage scale, the relevant considerations were : (1) whether
the existing wage structure required revision by reason of
its being below the standard of living wage, and (2) whether
the industry could bear the additional burden of an increase
in the wage scale on the basis of industry-cum-region by
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reason of its financial resources in India ; that judged by
the considerations stated
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above, it could not be said that the Tribunal erred in
revising the wage structure on the basis of the evidence
adduced before it ; and that the increase in the wages was
not beyond the financial resources of the company as
disclosed by its trading results in India.
There is a distinction between bonus and wage. Bonus comes
out of profits and is paid, if after meeting prior charges,
there is an available surplus. Wages primarily rest on
contract and are determined on a long term basis and are not
necessarily dependent on profits made in a particular year.
Crown Aluminium Works v. Their Workmen, [1958] S.C.R. 651
and Express Newspapers (Private) Ltd. v. The Union of India,
[1959] S.C.R. 12, relied on.
(4) that the new scales of pay should be brought into
effect from November 1, 1955, instead of January 1, 1954, as
directed by the Tribunal.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 713 to 715
of 1957.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
May 25, 1956, of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of India
(Lucknow Bench) in Appeals Nos. 111-272, 282 and 327 of
1955, arising out of an Award dated August 18, 1955, of the
Additional Industrial Tribunal, Delhi.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, B. Sen and S.
N. Mukherjee, for the appellants.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and Janardan Sharma, for the
respondents.
1959. February 2. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
S. K. DAS, J.-These are three appeals by special leave.
The appellant in all the three appeals is a company called
Messrs. Lipton Ltd., London, having an office at Asaf Ali
Road, New Delhi (hereinafter referred to as the Lipton,
Ltd.). The respondents are the employees of the Delhi office
of the said Lipton, Ltd. represented by the Lipton Employees
Union (hereinafter referred to as the Union). On April 14,
1958, a petition was filed on behalf of the appellant for an
amendment of the cause title of the three appeals, wherein
it was stated that as a matter of internal arrangement the
Board of Directors of the
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Lipton Ltd., London, decided to separate the export side of
its business from its internal trade in respect of its
branch in India and on April 4, 1957, a separate sterling
company called Lipton (India) Ltd., was incorporated in the
United Kingdom and this new Company took over the internal
side of the business in India on and from January 5, 1958,
but the export side of the business continued to be a branch
of the Lipton Ltd., London. Pursuant to the aforesaid
arrangement, the employees of the Delhi office of the
Lipton, Ltd., were notified of the formation of the new
Company and on and from January 5, 1958, their services were
transferred to Lipton (India) Ltd., on condition that their
services would be treated as continuous, uninterrupted and
on the same terms as before. On the aforesaid statements,
the appellant made a prayer that the cause title of the
three appeals should be amended by substituting Lipton
(India) Ltd. in place of Lipton, Ltd. We directed that
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Lipton (India) Ltd. be added as one of the appellants
without prejudice to either party on the merits of the case.
Two of the appeals (Civil Appeals Nos. 713 and 714 of 1957)
were consolidated by an order of this Court, and they raise
certain common questions with regard to (1) fixation of
grades and scales of pay of the respondent-employees and (2)
bonus for the year 195 1. The third appeal (Civil Appeal No.
715 of 1957) raises a somewhat different question with
regard to overtime payment and is directed against an order
of the Additional Industrial Tribunal, Delhi, dated October
15, 1955, by which the Tribunal made a modification in its
award dated August 18, 1955, in respect of overtime payment.
It will be convenient if Civil Appeal No. 715 of 1957 is
dealt with separately from the other two appeals.
It is necessary now to state very briefly some of the facts
which have given rise to these three appeals. The Lipton,
Ltd., is a company incorporated in England having its
registered office in London. Its business in the United
Kingdom consists of stores and groceries, including tea
which represents only about
20
154
10% of its business there. Its operations in India are
carried on by a branch with its head office in Calcutta.
This branch, which may be conveniently called the Indian
branch, has been operating in this country for more than 60
years. The company is principally interested in the sale of
" packeted " tea throughout India together with small sales
of imported tinned milk and also in the export of tea to all
parts of the world. The Lipton, Ltd., does not own any tea
gardens in India and has no financial interest in the
producing side of the industry. All the teas which are sold
in India or which are exported are purchased from producers
in India, either through public auctions in Calcutta and
Cochin or by private contract. It has factories in
Calcutta, Allahabad and Conoor in which teas are blended and
packed into retail packets for sale throughout India.- It
-sells tea direct to retail dealers and, with relatively
minor exceptions, does not operate through wholesalers.
Dealers are supplied by the company’s own salesmen each of
whom has a sales depot at which he maintains stocks of the
company’s products. The salesman sells these teas at the
company’s wholesale prices- to dealers for cash and remits
the cash through banking channels to Calcutta. The sales
Organisation is controlled through six offices, one of which
is located at Delhi. The Delhi office controls the salesmen
and other employees employed in the Punjab, Delhi State,
Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh on its. business; but the Delhi
office has no connexion with the export side of the
business. So far as the export business is concerned, it
consists of two different types of trade activities. In
some foreign countries the Indian branch sells packet tea
under the Lipton label on which it is able to make a profit;
these profits appear in the accounts of the Indian branch,
which are separately maintained and audited. This type of
trade activity is mostly confined to Burma, Iraq, Iran and
certain small Middle East countries. The greater part of
the export trade, however, consists of purchases made at the
Calcutta auctions on behalf of overseas buyers, who utilise
the services of Lipton’s expert tea tasting staff in
Calcutta
155
to buy tea on their account at the auctions and the Indian
branch is remunerated for this service by the payment of a
commission of one per cent. The Indian branch has no
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subscribed capital nor any reserves. A. W. Samuel,
Administrator, Lipton, Ltd., thus explained the position
with regard to the capital of the Indian branch in his
evidence:-
" Our Company has no subscribed capital in India nor any
reserves. The capital used in India is money advanced from
the company’s fund in England, and the amount of this
advance at the balance sheet date is shown as the balance of
the current account with the Liptons Ltd., London. We have
also to resort to overdraft on the local banks to meet the
working capital demand in India ".
It appears that an account is maintained which is known as
the London General Account and the capital which enables the
Indian branch to operate in India is recorded as the balance
of the current account in the Indian books and to determine
the amount of capital employed in India a daily average of
the current account has to be taken and the working capital
of the Indian branch is the amount by which the fixed
current assets exceed the total liabilities.
The Delhi office of the Indian branch employs peons,
sweepers, van-workers, godown workers, village salesmen,
drivers,. junior clerks, godown keepers, senior clerks,
stenographers, divisional salesmen and other categories of
workers, details whereof need not be set out in full at this
stage. The case of the Union was that as far back as June,
1951, the workers of the Delhi office had made a
representation for an increase in pay; the representation
was repeated in April, 1952. As the management did not
accede to their request a union of Lipton employees was
formed in September 1953. This Union framed a charter of
demands and submitted it in December, 1953. The charter of
demands consisted of a large number of items and as the
management contended that it %,as not in a position to meet
the demands, certain conciliation proceedings followed.
They, however, came to nothing and on October 1, 1954, the
industrial dispute
156
between the Lipton, Ltd., and the Union was referred to the
Additional Industrial Tribunal, Delhi, for adjudication.
The reference set forth in a sub-joined schedule the matters
upon which adjudication was necessary, and the schedule
contained twenty terms of reference out of which the two
items with which we are now concerned related to (a)
fixation of grades and scales of pay including the question
whether the new scales should be given retrospective effect
from January 1, 1953, and (b) bonus for each of the years
1951, 1952 and 1953. After hearing the parties the Tribunal
made its award on August 18, 1955. It disallowed the claim
of bonus, but as to the fixation of grades and scales of pay
it allowed an increase of about 20 per cent. to all workers
over their present wages and proportionate increase in the
dearness allowance, details whereof we shall state at a
later stage. As to overtime payment which was item no. 8 of
the terms of reference the Tribunal said:-
" Since the company is allowed by law to take 48 hours work
in a week from its employees, it is only fair that if a
worker puts in over-time work in any week within a -total of
48 working hours, he should be only paid at the single rate
for all over-time work that he puts in between 39 and 48
hours in the week. If the over-time work done by the worker
brings his total working, hours during the week to more than
48 hours, any excess over-time work above 48 hours should be
paid at double the rate. I direct accordingly."
It may be stated here that there was a dispute about the
working hours also and the Tribunal changed the working
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hours from 9-30 a.m.-5 p.m. to 10 a.m.5 p.m. on week-days
with half an hour’s interval for lunch, and 10 a.m. to I
p.m. on Saturdays-thus bringing the total to 36 hours in a
week,. The question of over-time arose only if a workman
was asked to Work in excess of the working hours fixed by
the Tribunal. On October 12, 1955, the Union made an
application in which it stated that the figure " 39 "
occurring in paragraph 24 of the award relating to over-time
payment was obviously a mistake for " 36 "; because the
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learned Tribunal had fixed. in paragraph 23 of the award
that the working hours of a workman should be 36 hours a
week. The learned Tribunal considered this application
without any notice to the present appellant and corrected
the error by amending the figure 39 to 36. The Tribunal
proceeded on the footing that the mistake was a clerical
error due to an accidental slip which could be corrected
under r. 23 of the Industrial Disputes (Central) Rules,
1947.
Against the award of the Industrial Tribunal three appeals
were taken to the Labour Appellate Tribunal (Lucknow Bench).
The two main appeals before the Appellate Tribunal, namely,
No. 272 of 1955 and No. 282 of 1955, were filed by the
Lipton, Ltd., and the Union respectively and related to the
various items of the terms of reference on which the
Industrial Tribunal had given its decision. The third
appeal, No. 327 of 1955, related to the subsidiary matter of
over-time payment regarding which the Industrial Tribunal
had amended its award. So far as the two items with which
in Civil Appeals Nos. 713 and 714 of 1957 we are now
concerned, the Labour Appellate Tribunal in its decision
dated May 25, 1956, upheld the decision of the Industrial
Tribunal as respects fixation of grades and scales of pay
comprised in the term of reference numbered 1 (a); it also
upheld the decision of the Industrial Tribunal to give
retrospective effect to the new scales of pay from January
1, 1954, which was covered by the term of reference numbered
I (b). As to bonus, which was item 4 of the terms of
reference, the Appellate Tribunal upheld the decision of the
Industrial Tribunal with regard to the years 1952 and 1953
but for 1951 it awarded an extra two months salary as bonus
for that year in addition to the bonus of one month’s salary
which the Lipton, Ltd., had already granted ex gratia to the
workmen. As to the subsidiary appeal relating to the over-
time payment, the Appellate Tribunal agreed with the view of
the Industrial Tribunal that there was an error in computing
the working hours and the error being of a clerical nature,
it was open to the Tribunal to correct it.
From the decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal
158
in the three appeals in question, the appellant obtained
special leave to appeal to this Court on June 27, 1956, and
in pursuance of the order of this Court granting such
special leave, the present appeals have been preferred.
Civil Appeal No. 715 of 1957. It is now convenient to
dispose of Civil Appeal No. 715 of 1957. We have no doubt in
our mind that the error in computing the working hours with
regard to over-time payment was due to an ’accidental slip
in making the calculation; it was nothing but a clerical
error which the Industrial Tribunal was entitled to correct
even without notice to the appellant. The learned Attorney-
General who appeared for the appellant in these three
appeals has not pressed Appeal No. 715 of 1957. This appeal
must accordingly be dismissed with costs.
Civil Appeals Nos. 713 and 714 of 1957. We now turn to the
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other two appeals, namely, Civil Appeals 713 and 714 of
1957. We have already stated that the only points which
survive for decision are those relating to items 1(a), 1(b)
and 4 of the terms of reference. These items relate to
fixation of grades and scales of pay, whether retrospective
effect should be given to the new scales of pay, and bonus
for 1951. The other items of the award relating to City
compensatory allowance, leave, holidays, etc., have not been
challenged before us. We are, therefore, saying nothing
about those items of the award, which must necessarily
stand. It may be made clear, however, at this stage that
one of the points taken before the Industrial Tribunal on
behalf-of the Lipton, Ltd., was that the Industrial Tribunal
had no jurisdiction to make an award in respect of employees
of the Delhi office who were employed outside-the State of
Delhi. This point of jurisdiction was decided against the
appellant and the Industrial Tribunal pointed out that all
the workmen of the Delhi office, whether they worked in
Delhi or not, received their salaries from the Delhi office;
they were controlled from the Delhi office in the matter of
leave, transfer, supervision, etc., and, therefore, the
Delhi State Government was the appropriate Government within
the meaning of s. 2 of the Industrial
159
Disputes Act, 1947, relating to the dispute which arose
between the Lipton, Ltd., and the Union and under s. 18 of
the said Act the award made by the Tribunal was binding on
all persons employed in the Delhi office. The Appellate
Tribunal upheld the decision of the Industrial Tribunal on
this point and though this question of jurisdiction was
raised in the appeals before us, it was not seriously
pressed by the learned AttorneyGeneral. We are of the view
that the Industrial Tribunal had jurisdiction to adjudicate
on the dispute between the Lipton, Ltd., and its workmen of
the Delhi office.
Now, we go on to the two main points urged on behalf of the
appellant. We take up first the question of bonus. Item 4
of the terms of reference related to bonus and the claim of
the Union was made in two parts. Item 4 reads thus:-
" Bonus: (a) Whether every workman be, paid bonus at the
rate of 5 months’ salary for each of the years 1951, 1952
and 1953 and what other directions are necessary in this
respect ?
(b) Whether special bonus equivalent to three months salary
should be paid to all workmen in honour of the company’s
Diamond Jubilee celebration for the year 1953 ? "
Before the Industrial Tribunal the claim of the Union was
that the total global profits of the Lipton, Ltd., should be
the basis for determining the claim to bonus ; the
contention on behalf of the Lipton, Ltd., was that the
profits of the Indian business only should be taken into
account in assessing any available surplus for the payment
of bonus. The Industrial Tribunal held that as both labour
and capital contributed to the earnings of an industrial
concern, labour must have its legitimate share of the
profits to which it has contributed; since, however, the
employees of the Lipton, Ltd., in India do not by any
stretch of reasoning contribute to the profits which accrue
to the Lipton, Ltd., in respect of its trading activities
outside India, the employees in India cannot claim bonus on
account of any profits which the Lipton, Ltd., derive from
its ex-India business. On this footing the
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Industrial Tribunal considered the question of bonus and
held that for 1951 there was no available surplus for
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distribution as bonus to the employees in India in
accordance with the formula evolved by the Full Bench of the
Labour Appellate Tribunal in Millowner’s Association, Bombay
v. Rashtriya Mill Mazdoor Sangh (1) generally though not
completely approved by this Court in Muir Mills Co’ Ltd. v.
Suti Mills Mazdoor Union, Kanpur (2). For 1952 and 1953 the
claim of the Union for bonus, the Industrial Tribunal held,
was still weaker, because in those years there was still
less available surplus for distribution as bonus to its
workers, and so far as the second part of the claim of the
Union, namely, Diamond Jubilee bonus, was concerned the
Industrial Tribunal rejected it outright. The Labour
Appellate Tribunal substantially affirmed the decision of
the Industrial Tribunal and gave several reasons why the
global profits of the Lipton, Ltd., could not be taken into
account for the payment of bonus to its workers in India.
After having given those reasons, the Labour Appellate
Tribunal referred to the auditors’ report dated March 17,
1952, with regard to the profit and loss account and
balance-sheet of the Indian business as on January 5, 1952.
In that report which related to the year 1951 it was stated
that the value of the stocks of tea held at the end of 1951
had been written down below cost by Rs. 9,93,824-5-3. The
auditors’ report then said:-
" We estimate the net realisable value of the total stocks
of tea as on January 5, 1952, to be in excess of their cost
and, therefore, in our opinion, such stocks have been
undervalued to the extent of the above reduction below
cost."
Relying on this report the Labour Appellate Tribunal added
back Rs. 9,93,824 to the available surplus of Rs. 9,66,654
which the profit and loss account of the Indian business for
the year 1951 showed. Adding the two figures the Labour
Appellate Tribunal opined that the available surplus at the
end of 1951 was Rs. 19,60,478. After deducting therefrom
the
(1) [1950] L.L.J. 1247.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 991.
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legitimate prior charges on account of (a) rehabilitation,
(b) a four per cent. return on capital and (c) one month’s
bonus already paid to the workers, the Labour Appellate
Tribunal came to the conclusion that there was a clear
available surplus of Rs. 4,11,478 for distribution of extra
bonus over and above the bonus of one month’s salary. which
the Lipton, Ltd., had already paid to its workers.
It has been contended before us, and rightly in our opinion,
that the Labour Appellate Tribunal committed a manifest
error with regard to the sum of Rs. 9,93,824 and odd. It is
true that the auditors in their report referred to the
under-valuation of the stock of tea available at the end of
1951 by a sum of Rs. 9,93,824 and odd. An explanation of
such undervaluation was given in the written statement of
the Lipton, Ltd., dated February 8, 1955. It was stated
therein:-
" It is a well recollected fact and the Court will not need
evidence in support of this that the tea market dropped
rapidly and in a catastrophic fashion to,wards the end of
1951. As a result of this the Company apprehended severe
losses on the stocks which it was carrying and provision for
this loss was made in the 1951 accounts by an adjustment to
the value of stocks of tea on hand at the end of December,
1951. The amount of this adjustment was Rs. 9,93,824. As a
result of this, the profits made during 1951 were
understated in the company’s accounts and overstated in the
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accounts for 1952. It should be noted that the Income-tax
Department insisted that these profits were made in 1951 and
not in 1952 and the Company was taxed accordingly."
What is worthy of note is that when the Income-tax
Department insisted that the sum of Rs. 9,93,824 should be
treated as the profits of 1951, the said amount was added
back in the summarised profit and loss account of the Indian
branch and the available surplus of Rs. 9,66,654 was shown
therein after having taken into consideration the sum of Rs.
9,93,824. This is clear from the summarised profit and loss
account
21
162
of the Indian branch. It is clear, therefore, that the 1951
profit and loss account took into consideration the sum of
Rs. 9,93,824 and after adding back that sum to the profits
of 1951, the available surplus of Rs. 9,66,654 was arrived
at. The Labour Appellate Tribunal was, therefore,
manifestly in error in adding back the sum of Rs. 9,93,824;
because that amount had already been added back in arriving
at the available surplus of 1951. Thus, the main reason
which the Labour Appellate Tribunal gave for its decision to
award the payment of extra bonus for 1951 disappears, and it
is not disputed that if the available surplus for 1951 was
only Rs. 9,66,654, then after making the necessary deduction
for prior charges, nothing would be left for payment as
extra bonus in 1951 to the workers in India. So far as the
other two years, 1952 and 1953, are concerned, it is
unnecessary to consider the profits of those two years,
because there is no appeal before us on behalf of the Union.
On behalf of the Union, however, it has been very strongly
contended that the bonus for 1951 as awarded by the Labour
Appellate Tribunal can be justified, if the global profits
of the Lipton, Ltd., are taken into consideration, and it
has been argued before us that there is no reason why the
Lipton, Ltd., should not be treated as one integrated
industry which has trading activities in various countries
and, for the purpose of the payment of bonus, why the total
global profits of the Lipton, Ltd., should not be taken into
consideration.
We do not think that the Union is justified in asking for
bonus for a particular year on the basis of the world
profits of the Lipton, Ltd. The true nature of a claim for
bonus has been the subject of many decisions in Labour
Tribunals and Courts. It has been judicially recognised
that bonus is not deferred wage, and the justification for a
demand of bonus as an " industrial claim " arises when wages
fall short of the living wage and the industry makes
sufficient profits to which both labour and capital have
contributed. Substantially, the claim for bonus is a claim
which is paid out of the available surplus from the profits
of an
163
industrial undertaking, to which both labour and capital
have contributed. This aspect of bonus was considered
in.Muir Mills Co. Ltd. v. Suti Mills Mazdoor Union, Kanpur
(1). It has also been said in some cases that bonus is a
temporary and partial filling-up of the gap that exists
between a living wage and the actual wage paid: where the
goal of living -wage has been attained, bonus is a mere cash
incentive to greater efficiency and production, but where an
industry has not the capacity to pay a living wage or its
capacity varies or is expected to vary from year to year so
that the industry cannot afford to pay a living wage, the
payment of bonus may be looked upon as a temporary
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satisfaction, wholly or in part, of the needs of the
employees. Learned counsel for the Union has emphasised
this latter aspect and has contended that there is nothing
unfair in considering the global profits of the Lipton,
Ltd., in awarding a temporary satisfaction, in part, of the
needs of its Indian employees. We do not think that it is
necessary or advisable to lay down any inflexible, general
rule as to the basis of a claim for bonus by some of its
employees in an industrial undertaking which carries on
trade activities in several countries or even in different
parts of the same country. So far as foreign countries are
concerned, many considerations such as restrictions on
foreign remittances and other trade restrictions may have to
be taken into account in determining the question, as in
Ganesh Flour Mills v. Employees of Ganesh Flour Mills (2).
There are a number of decisions of Labour Tribunals, most of
which were noticed in Ganesh Flour Mills Co. Ltd. v.
Employees of Ganesh Flour Mills (2), where a distinction has
been made between a parent concern and subsidiary concerns
or even between different units of the same concern, and,
speaking generally, the test laid down for the payment of
bonus in such cases is (1) if the different units are so
connected together or integrated that the payment of bonus
to one section of employees will violate the principle that
all workers should share in the prosperity to which they
have jointly contributed, or (2) the
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 991.
(2) A.I.R. 1958 S.C. 382.
164
different units are so separated or unconnected that the
trade activity of one and the contribution of labour made in
the profits thereof has no necessary connexion with the
trade activity and profits of the other units. In the
former case the undertaking has been treated as a whole as
in Burn and Co., Calcutta v. Their Employees (1); and Baroda
Borough Municipality v. Its Workmen(2) ; in the latter, it
has been held that each unit must rest its claim for bonus
on the profits made by that unit. Whether a particular case
comes under the former category or the latter must depend on
its own facts and circumstances, and we may readily agree
that the more keeping of separate accounts may not in all
cases be the proper criterion for determining whether the
different units are integrated or not.
For the purpose of these appeals it is sufficient, however,
to state that in view of the findings arrived at by the
Tribunals below, it will be unfair and unjust to grant bonus
to the Indian workers on the global profits of the Lipton,
Ltd. The Tribunals below have clearly found that the Indian
workmen do not in any way contribute to the profits which
the Lipton, Ltd., derive from its ex-India business. As a
matter of fact, even the nature of the trade activity is not
quite the same ; tea represents only about 10 per cent. of
the trading activities of the Lipton, Ltd., in the United
Kingdom, whereas tea is the main commodity of the trading
activity of the Indian branch. The Indian branch maintains
separate accounts which have been audited and accepted by
the Income-tax authorities as showing the profit and loss of
the Indian branch of the business. The Labour Appellate
Tribunal has very clearly found that though, at the relevant
time, the Lipton, Ltd., was one legal entity and the capital
of the Indian branch came from London, the Indian branch was
treated as a separate entity for all practical purposes. It
said:
" Lipton, London never interferes with the trading
operations of Lipton, India, in India. Lipton, India buys
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vast quantity of tea amounting to millions
(1) [1956] S.C.R. 781.
(2) [1957] S.C.R. 33.
165
of tons at auctions in India and sells the same loose or in
packets at a profit in the markets of India. Profits thus
made go entirely to the credit of the Indian concern. No
part of the profits is diverted to England. Lipton, India
also purchases tea for export...... Trading results of
Lipton, India must be regarded to be restricted to the
earning of commission on tea exported and returns on sale of
tea-loose or in packets-in the internal markets in India.
Lipton, India has got ,to pay income-tax to the Government
of India on the basis of its earnings on those two heads.
Workmen of the Indian Organisation have to work mainly for
purchase of tea at auctions in India, for sale of tea at
profit in Indian markets and for export of tea on commission
to a lesser extent. Therefore, the returns on these heads
are the only things upon which the staff of the Indian
Organisation may depend for bonus."
In the appeals before us the claim for bonus was made really
on the basis of an available surplus of profits, and we
agree with the Labour Appellate Tribunal that the Indian
workers can claim bonus if there is an available surplus of
profits out of the Indian business. In the circumstances in
which the Lipton, Ltd., operated in India at the relevant
time, it would be unjust to award bonus to the Indian work-
men on the basis of the global profits of the Lipton, Lid.
It is not disputed that the Lipton, Ltd., is a very big
Organisation and has huge reserves which were built up in
previous years out of its world profits. There is no
evidence to show to what extent, if any, the Indian business
contributed to those profits. On the finding of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal that no part of the profits made in India
is diverted to England and on the further finding that the
Indian business depends on its own trading results, we are
of the view that the Tribunals below correctly held that the
global profits of the Lipton, Ltd., could not be the basis
for awarding bonus to its Indian workmen.
There was some argument before us as to whether the 1%
commission which the Indian branch earned on the export of
tea correctly represented the proper remuneration payable to
the Indian business. That,
166
however, is a question which we do not think is open to
enquiry in the present appeals. The Income-tax authorities
accepted as correct the returns of the Lipton, Ltd., as to
their Indian business. It was not suggested that anything
more than 1% was in fact taken as commission by the Indian
branch, or that the accounts were " cooked " in that
respect. Whether the 1% commission was the normal market
rate of commission for purchases on behalf of overseas
buyers was not investigated ; on the contrary, the accounts
filed by the Lipton, Ltd., in this respect were accepted as
correct. That being the position, it is not open to the
respondent to contend that the available surplus should be
determined on mere speculation as to what the Indian branch
should have earned in the export side of its business.
On a consideration of all the relevant factors, we are of
the view that the Labour Appellate Tribunal was in error in
awarding an extra two months’ bonus for 1951 and the
decision of the Industrial Tribunal was correct. Therefore,
the award in so far as it directs the payment of extra two
months’ bonus for 1951 must be set aside. We now go to the
more difficult question of fixation of grades and wages.
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What the Union demanded in the matter of fixation of grades
and scales of pay will appear from the terms of
reference.
These terms were:-
" Fixation of grades and scales of pay: 1(a) Whether the
following pay scales should be adopted and what directions
are necessary in this respect:-
Peon, Sweeper, Van
Mazdurs and God-....Rs. 60-3-90-4-130-5-155.
own Mazdurs.
Village salesmen....Rs. 70-5-120-7 1/2-195-10-245.
Drivers.............Rs. 90-71/2-150-10-250-15-325.
Junior Clerks, Typ-
ists, Salesmen and
Assistant Godown....Rs. 90-71/2-150-10-250-15-325.
Keepers.
Godown Keepers......Rs. 120-10-200-12-320-20-460.
167
Senior Clerks, Steno-
graphers, Compto........Rs. 150-10-250-15-400-20-500.
meter operator and
Div. Salesmen.
(b) Whether pay scales as stated in ’a’ above should come
into effect retrospectively from 1-1-53 and what should be
the method of adjustments while fixing the actual pay in the
revised scale? "
The Industrial Tribunal gave an increase of 20% to all
workers and set out in tabular form the category of workers,
their present grades, and the revised grades which the
Tribunal was allowing on the basis of a 20% increase. It is
necessary to set out the -tabular form here:-
"CATEGORY PRESENT REVISED
GRADE GRADE
Peons, Sweepers, Van
Mazdoors and Godown
Mazdoors. 27-2-45 35-2-55
Village Salesman. 40-0-50 50-2-60
Drivers. 65-3-95 78-3-114
Junior Clerks and
Typists. 70-5-125 84-6-150
Salesman. 50-0-75 60-5-90
Godown Keepers Gr. 1 70-5-130 84-6-150
2 125-8-200 150-9-240
3 195-10-235 230-10-280
Senior Clerks and
Comptometer Operators. 120-8-200 140-10-240
Stenographers. 125-8-205 150-10-240
Divisional Salesman 80-0-125 100-10-150."
As to the date from which the revised grades were to take
effect, the Tribunal directed that they should have
retrospective effect from January 1, 1954, instead of
January 1, 1953, as claimed by the Union. This direction
the Tribunal gave because the Union had presented its
demands to the Lipton, Ltd., for the first time towards the
end of December, 1953. The Tribunal also gave certain
directions as to how the present employees should be brought
into the
168
new scales and what adjustments should be made therefor.
The Tribunal proceeded on the footing that the existing wage
structure, though not far below what it called the minimum
fair wage, was far below the standard of a living wage, the
progressive attainment of which (the Tribunal said) is the
aim of all labour laws. The Tribunal then considered the
question of financial capacity of the Lipton, Ltd., to bear
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a higher wage structure and expressed itself as follows :
" Since as remarked before, the existing wage level of the
company’s employees cannot be said to be far below the
minimum fair wage level obtaining in this country, this wage
level can be increased only if it can be found that the
company is in a financially sound position to bear the
additional burden. This again brings us face to face with
the question whether it is the company’s capacity to pay on
an all-world basis that should be considered for this
purpose or only the prosperity of its Indian branch. So far
as bonus is concerned, since bonus according to the latest
theory represents a due share of the labour in the profits
of business so largely contributed to by it, profit accruing
from foreign business does not come into the picture in
distributing bonus. The same principle cannot be extended
to the fixing of the wage level of the workers for all the
employees in India are of course employees of the parent
company.......................... The company’s global
resources cannot, therefore, be disregarded in determining
its capacity to pay. At the same time, the company’s
overall balance-sheet and state of business cannot furnish
the sole criterion for the fixing of the upper limit of the
fair wage in India, for if a burden is imposed upon the
company which is out of all proportion to the income that it
derives from the business in India, the company may very
well be tempted to close down its business in India and
employ the capital thus released elsewhere. No one can be
happy over a situation like this, the company’s employees
least of all. While, therefore, the company’s global
capacity to pay cannot be kept
169
out of consideration in fixing the wage level of its Indian
employees, any increase in the wages cannot be granted on a
level that would not leave it worth while for the company to
continue its business in India. In other words, while the
company’s overall prosperity may be considered in fixing the
wage level in India, I should see to it that the increase
should not be such that it drives the company out of India
altogether."
The Tribunal pointed out that according to the last balance-
sheet filed in the case the share capital of the Lipton,
Ltd., amounted in 1954 to pound 2,75,000 (but the balance-
sheet however shows pound 2,500,000) while the reserve
capital stood at pound 3,60,417. The Tribunal expressed the
view that having regard to its global resources, the Lipton,
Ltd., was financially able to bear a slightly higher wage
structure in order to bridge the gap, in part at least,
between the existing wage structure and the living wage
standard. The Tribunal also referred to the circumstance
that though the Lipton, Ltd., had incurred losses in 1949
and 1950, it bad turned the corner in 1951 and the Company
having overhauled its system of sales, there was a rea-
sonable expectation of larger profits in future years. The
Tribunal said that in the course of arguments before it, it
put to the parties whether an overall increase of five lakhs
of rupees in the wage structure on an all India basis could
be borne by the company. The Tribunal then said:
" Mr. Samuel was prepared to accept this additional burden
on the condition that in future there will be no liability
on the Company to, pay bonus to their workers on an ex
gratia basis, which they have been paying so far to their
workers every year at the rate of one month’s basic salary."
On the aforesaid grounds, the Tribunal came to the
conclusion that the Lipton, Ltd., could easily stand an
additional burden to the tune of five or six lakhs of rupees
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over the wages and dearness allowance at present paid to its
employees all over India, and as the total annual wage bill
of the Indian workmen was
22
170
in the neighbourhood of about twenty lakhs, an increase of
20% allowed to all workers over their present wages and
-proportionate increase in the dearness allowance would not
exceed six lakhs. On this basis the Industrial Tribunal
gave its award.
The Labour Appellate-Tribunal substantially affirmed the
reasons given by the Industrial Tribunal and said that the
two questions which arose for determination were (1) whether
the existing scales of pay required revision and (2) whether
the revised scales as fixed by the Industrial Tribunal were
unwarranted and beyond the financial capacity of the Lipton,
Ltd. Both these questions the Appellate Tribunal answered in
favour of the respondent workmen.
In the appeals before us, the learned AttorneyGeneral
appearing for the Lipton, Ltd., has very strongly contended
that the reasons given by the Tribunals below for a revision
of the wage structure are unsound in principle and
unjustified on facts ; he has particularly laid stress on
the contradiction involved in taking the global financial
resources of the Lipton, Ltd., in support of an increase in
wages while holding that the Indian branch is a separate
entity dependent on its own profits for the payment of
bonus. He has also submitted that the financial resources
of the Indian branch do not show any capacity to pay higher
wages; nor was there, according to him, any reliable
evidence to show that the existing wage structure required
revision if it was compared to the wage structure in similar
industries in the Delhi region. He pointed out that the
Tribunal was wrong in thinking that the Lipton, Ltd., turned
the corner in 1951 and that there was a reasonable
expectation of larger profits in future years, and in
support of his contention, he referred to the appellant’s
statement of the case, wherein the appellant stated in the
following chart from the profit and loss figures of. the
Indian branch from 1949 to 1957 in the context of its
average capital:
171
1949 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957
(in lakhs of rupees) 1
----
2
year.
Average
Capital (re-
presenting 162 158 167 209 195 235 245 193 165
Head office
Current Ac-
count).
Net Profit
(after taxa- 8.2 3.6 2.4 6.3 7.08.2 2.8 10.6 6.6
tion) (loss)(loss) (loss) (loss)
Percen-
tage of Net
Profit/Loss 5.1 2.3 1.4 3.0 3.6 3.5 1.0 5.5 3.6
to the Aver- (loss) (loss) (loss) (loss)
age Capital
The learned Attorney-General then referred to the alleged
admission of Samuel as to the capacity of the Lipton, Ltd.,
to bear an additional burden of about five lakhs and drew
our attention to the affidavit of S. K. Choudhury, personnel
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officer of the Lipton Ltd., made before the Appellate
Tribunal, in which it was stated that Samuel never agreed
that the appellant was able to bear an additional burden of
five lakhs in the wage structure. On these submissions, the
learned Attorney-General has very strongly contended that
the Tribunals below were wrong, in principle as well as on
facts, in disturbing the present wage structure.
We think that, in the main, three questions arise for
consideration: (1) were the Tribunals below wrong in having
regard to the global financial resources of the Lipton Ltd.,
in fixing the wage structure whereas for the payment of
bonus the profits of the Indian branch only were taken into
consideration; (2) did the existing wage structure require
revision and was there any reliable evidence to show the
wage structure of any comparable industry in the same
region, on the assumption that the capacity to pay should be
gauged on the industry-cum-region basis; and (3) has Lipton
Ltd., financial capacity to bear the additional burden on
its Indian resources ?
172
It is necessary first to state that there is a distinction
between bonus and wage-a distinction to which we had earlier
adverted in this judgment. Bonus comes out of profits and
can claim no priority over dividend or other prior charges;
bonus is paid if after meeting prior charges, there is an
available surplus. Wages stand on a somewhat different
footing; wages primarily rest on contract and are determined
on a long term basis and are not necessarily dependent on
profits made in a particular year. The distinction between
the two has been adverted to in two recent decisions of this
Court: Messrs. Crown Aluminium Works v. Their Workmen (1)
and Express Newspapers (Private) Ltd. v. The Union of India
(2). In the Crown Aluminium Works (1) this Court has
observed:
" The old principle of the absolute freedom of contract and
the doctrine of laissez faire have yielded place to new
principles of social welfare and common good. Labour
naturally looks upon the constitution of wage structures as
affording ’ a bulwark against the dangers of a depression,
safeguard against unfair methods of competition between
employers and a guarantee of wages necessary for the minimum
requirements of employees’. There can be no doubt that in
fixing wage structures in different industries, industrial
adjudication attempts,. gradually and by stages though it
may be, to attain the principal objective of a welfare state
to secure ’to all citizens justice, social and economic To
the attainment of this ideal the Indian Constitution has
given a place of pride and that is the basis of the new
guiding principles of social welfare and common good to
which we have just referred."
In so far as bare minimum wage is concerned, it has been
held that no industry has the right to exist unless it is
able to pay its workmen at least a bare minimum wage; in
other words, minimum wage is the first charge on an
industry. In the later decision of the Express NewsPapers
(Private) Ltd. (2) the three concepts of the minimum wage,
fair wage and living wage have been examined, and it has
been pointed out that
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 651, 660.
(2) [1959] S.C.R. 12.
173
the content of the expressions " minimum wage ", " fair wage
" and " living wage " is not fixed and static; it varies and
is bound to vary from time to time.
The present case is not one of payment of the minimum wage;
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it is a case of payment of a fair wage which still falls
short of a living wage. For the payment of a fair wage as
for a living wage, the financial capacity of the industry is
undoubtedly a relevant consideration. The question before
us is-how is the financial capacity of the Lipton, Ltd., to
be judged? The question of the capacity of the industry to
pay a fair wage has been considered in the Express
Newspapers (Private) Ltd. (1) (at p. 89) and the following
observations are apposite-
" The capacity of industry to pay can mean one of three
things, viz.,
(i) the capacity of a particular unit (marginal,
representative or average) to pay,
(ii) the capacity of a particular industry as a whole to pay
or
(iii) the capacity of all industries in the country to
pay.
The Committee on Fair Wages had said (pp. 13-15 of the
report) :
" In determining the capacity of an industry to pay, it
would be wrong to take the capacity of a particular unit or
the capacity of all industries in the country. The relevant
criterion should be the capacity of a particular industry in
a specified region and, as far as possible, the same wages
should be prescribed for all units of that industry in that
region."
This is known as the industry-cum-region basis for the
fixation of wages. In the Express Newspapers (Private) Ltd.
(1) this Court has laid down the following principles for
the fixation of wages (at p. 92):
" The principles which emerge from the above discussion are:
(1) that in the fixation of rates of wages which include
within its compass the fixation of scales of wages also, the
capacity of the industry to pay is one
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 12.
174
of the essential circumstances to be taken into con-
sideration except in cases of bare subsistence or mini. mum
wage where the employer is bound to pay the same
irrespective of such capacity;
(2) that the capacity of the industry to pay is to be
considered on an industry-cum-region basis after taking a
fair cross section of the industry; and
(3) that the proper measure for gauging the capacity of the
industry to pay should take into account the elasticity of
demand for the product, the possibility of tightening up the
Organisation so that the industry could pay higher wages
without difficulty and the possibility of increase in the
efficiency of the lowest paid workers resulting in increase
in production considered in conjunction with the elasticity
of demand for the product-no doubt against the ultimate
background that the burden of the increased rate should not
be such as to drive the employer out of business."
We do not think that it is necessary to decide in the
present case whether the Tribunals below were right in
having regard to the global resources of the Lipton, Ltd.,
in the matter of the revision of the wagestructure; because
we consider that on an application of the principle of
industry-cum-region, the revision of the wage-structure made
by the Tribunals below cannot be said to be unjustified on
the financial resources of the Lipton, Ltd., as disclosed by
its trading results in India. The learned Attorney-General
has referred to certain larger considerations: he has
suggested that if the global resources of a company like the
Lipton, Ltd., which operates in several countries are taken
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into consideration in determining the wage structure, it way
result in disparity of wages in different regions giving
rise to industrial unrest and it may also have the effect of
stopping new industries in this country and thereby increase
unemployment. These are matters which may require serious
consideration in a more appropriate case; but in the present
case we may examine the problem from the narrower point of
view, namely, the trading results in India if the Lipton,
Ltd.
We may first. dispose of a subsidiary but connected
175
point. In the Industrial Tribunal the case proceeded on the
footing that the Lipton, Ltd., had a uniform system of wages
in India and if the wage structure of the Delhi employees
was revised it would mean revising the wage structure of the
employees in other Indian offices as well. It was further
suggested that if the wage structure was uniformly revised
at all other places, then the cost of the increase in wages
taken along with the cost of other reliefs granted by the
Industrial Tribunal, would be much more than five or six
lakhs. We do not think that this would be a good ground for
setting aside the award. The Industrial Tribunal, Delhi,
had jurisdiction to make an award in respect of the
employees of the Delhi office only ; it had no jurisdiction
to make an all-India award. Moreover, if the true principle
for fixation of wages is region-cum-industry, then there is
no reason why the Delhi award should automatically apply to
all the other regions.
It has not been disputed before us that the existing wage of
the Delhi employees is far below the living wage. The first
question is-was there any reliable evidence to show that in
comparable industries in the same region, the wages were
higher and, therefore, the wage structure required revision
to the extent allowed by the Industrial Tribunal. On behalf
of the Union evidence was given about the scales of pay of
employees in the Delhi office of a number of industrial
undertakings, such as the Standard Vacuum Oil Company,
Thomas Cook (Continental) Overseas, Burma Shell, Lever
Brothers (India) Ltd. and Associated Companies, and Marshall
Sons and Co. (India) Ltd. On behalf of the appellant it has
been contended that none of the above are comparable
industries; some are oil companies, some engineering
concerns and some manufacturing concerns. On behalf of the
Union, it has been pointed out that so far as the drivers,
sweepers, peons, clerks, godown keepers, typists, stenogra-
phers and the like are concerned, and these form the bulk of
the employees, their nature of work is about the same in all
the aforesaid industries and, therefore, there was a basis
for comparison on which the
176
Tribunals below could proceed. We are of the view that it
is impossible to say in this case that there was no evidence
on which the Tribunals could proceed to revise the wage
structure; on the contrary there was evidence accepted by
the Tribunals below which justified a revision of the wage
structure.
The Appellate Tribunal also referred to the scales of pay
obtaining in Brooke Bond, India, and opined that the
appellant’s scales of pay were lower than the Brooke Bond
scales. This opinion of the Appellate Tribunal has been
challenged before us; firstly, it has been contended that
though Brooke Bond has a similar trading activity in tea, it
is not a comparable industry because it owns tea gardens in
India; secondly, it has been pointed out that no evidence of
the Brooke Bond’s scales of pay was given and the opinion of
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the Appellate Tribunal was a mere surmise. It appears that
no evidence was given before the Industrial Tribunal about
the Brooke Bond’s scales of pay, but some additional
evidence was offered at the appellate stage; this was not,
however, accepted. In the circumstances, we do not think
that the Brooke Bond’s scales of pay can be taken into
consideration. But as we have earlier said, there was other
evidence on which a comparison could be and was made by the
Tribunals below. That comparison justified an increase in
the
The next question is-do the trading results in India of the
Lipton, Ltd., show that it has the financial capacity to
bear the burden of the wave increase? The statement, in
chart form, of the profit and loss figures from 1949-1957 to
which we have earlier referred, shows that net profits in
1952 exceeded six lakhs, in 1953 seven lakhs, in 1954 eight
lakhs and in 1956 ten lakhs. We have said earlier that
wages do not necessarily come out of the net profits of a
particular year, and it cannot be said that a fair wage must
inevitably be postponed till a fair return on capital is
obtained. Wages are fixed on a long term basis and depend
also on the cost of living and the needs of workmen.
Judging the trading results of the Indian business of the
Lipton, Ltd., over a period of years,
177
we cannot say that the Tribunals below committed any error
in revising the wage structure. It is germane to point out
here that Samuel’s evidence showed that the managerial staff
of the Indian business, recruited in England, receive very
high salaries. Samuel said that the General Manager, who is
the Chief Executive Officer of the Indian branch of the
Lipton, Ltd., gets a salary of Rs. 5,000 per month. The
next officer is the Administrator whose pay is Rs. 4,250 per
month. The third man, who is the Manager of the Tea Depart-
ment, gets the same pay as the Administrator. The fourth is
the Accountant of the company and his pay is Rs. 3,800 per
month. The fifth is the Marketing Controller whose pay is
Rs. 3,650 per month. The Factory Manager gets Rs. 3,350 per
month. There are several other officers who also get a very
high salary and the total number of covenated Executive
Officers consists of 32 Europeans and 17 Indians. Now, the
point taken on behalf of the Union is that the wage
structure of the Indian branch is top-heavy, in the sense
that the higher administrative officers get a salary which
is out of all proportion to the wage scale of the employees
with whom we are now concerned. It is further contended that
the high salaries paid to the superior Executive show (1)
that the wage structure of the lower employees requires
revision and (2) that the financial capacity of the Indian
branch is not as negligible as the appellant wants to make
out. We think, however, that it is not the duty of a Labour
Tribunal or Court to dictate to an industrial concern what
salaries should be paid to superior executive officers who
are not workmen within the meaning of the
Industrial,Disputes Act, 1947. We have pointed out,
however, in the Express Newspapers (Private) Ltd. (1) that "
the possibility of tightening up the organisation so that
the industry could pay higher wages without difficulty and
the possibility of increase in the efficiency of the lowest
paid workers resulting in increase in production must be
considered in conjunction with the elasticity of demand for
the product-
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 12.
23
178
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no doubt- against the ultimate background that the burden of
the increased rate should not be such as to drive the
employer out of business ". This is an aspect of the matter
which the Tribunals below had considered and the Industrial
Tribunal had particularly said that the increase in the wage
structure was not such as would drive the Lipton, Ltd., out
of its Indian business.
Our attention has been drawn to the financial implications
of the award and it has been pointed out that the total
annual cost to the company of the increase in the wage
structure of the employees in the Delhi office would be in
the neighbourhood of Rs. 49,721 per year; on an all-India
basis it would be in the neighbourhood of Rs. 2,71,000 and
odd. Having regard to the evidence which Samuel gave it
cannot be said that the burden of the increased rate was
such as would be beyond the financial resources of the Lip-
ton, Ltd., on its trading results in India or was such as
would drive the Lipton, Ltd., out of India. Even on the
basis of all the reliefs granted by the award, the total
cost to the company for the Delhi office would be in the
neighbourhood of Rs. 1,15,000 and on an all-India basis Rs.
6,34,000. We have said earlier that the award was not an
all-India award, and so far as the fixation of wages is
concerned, it must be judged on the principle of industry-
cum-region. So judged, we do not think that the increase is
beyond the financial resources of the Lipton, Ltd., as
disclosed by its trading results in India.
On behalf of the appellant, it has been submitted that one
of the tests for measuring the capacity of the industry to
pay the increased wage is, amongst others, the selling price
of the product and it has been pointed out that by reason of
the imposition in 1953 of an excise duty of three annas per
pound of packet tea, there is serious competition from those
who sell tea in loose form and any further increase in price
will give rise to consumers’ resistance and ultimately
result in lesser sale and lesser profits. In our opinion
the industrial Tribunal rightly pointed out that the
moderate increase in the wage scale proposed by it would
only
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be a very small fraction of the overall cost of production
of a packet of tea and would have very little repercussion
in its price.
Lastly, our attention was drawn to an award of the Special
Industrial Tribunal, Madras, dated October 15, 1956, between
the management of the Lipton, Ltd., Madras and its workers
employed in Madras where on more or less similar facts the
Industrial Tribunal repelled the argument on behalf of the
workmen that the global financial position of the Lipton,
Ltd., should be taken into account in considering the
capacity of the company to pay higher salaries and dearness
allowance, and it was held that the Lipton, Ltd., could not
be burdened with any additional liability and the employees
must wait for better days. That award is not the subject of
the present appeals and we consider it unnecessary, and
indeed inadvisable, to make any pronouncement as to the
correctness or otherwise of that award.
The only other point which requires consideration is the
question of the date from which the new scales of pay should
come into effect. The Industrial Tribunal fixed January 1,
1954, on the ground that the Union had presented its charter
of demands to the appellant for the first time towards the
end of December 1953. We are unable to agree with the
Tribunals below that the circumstance that a charter of
demands was presented in December 1953 is a good ground for
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giving retrospective effect to the new scales of pay. The
charter of demands presented by the Union consisted of 20
items and in the matter of the wage scale what the Union
demanded was in some cases more than 50 to 75% increase on
the existing scales of pay. Obviously, the demands were
exorbitant and the management was justified in refusing to
accept the demands in toto. We are, therefore, unable to
agree that retrospective effect should be given to the new
scales of pay from January 1, 1954. The award was made on
August 18, 1955, and it was published on October 6, 1955.
We think that it will be more just to bring the new scales
of pay with effect from November 1, 1955, and we direct
accordingly.’ The other directions given
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by the Industrial Tribunal to bring the present employees
into the new scales of pay will stand subject to the
necessary modification that instead of January 1, 1954, the
relevant date should be November 1, 1955.
The result, therefore, is as follows: Appeal No. 715 of 1957
is dismissed with costs. Appeals Nos. 713 and 714 of 1957
are allowed to the extent indicated above. The order for
the grant of bonus for 1951 is set aside and the new scales
of pay will take effect from November 1, 1955, instead of
from January 1, 1954. There will be no order for costs in
these two appeals.
Appeals Nos. 713 and 714 allowed in part.
Appeal No. 715 dismissed.