Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6486-6494 of 2001
PETITIONER:
K.R. ANITHA AND ORS.
RESPONDENT:
REGIONAL DIRECTOR E.S.I. CORPORATION AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/09/2003
BENCH:
SHIVARAJ V. PATIL & D.M. DHARMADHIKARI
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2003 Supp(3) SCR 881
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHIVARAJ V. PATIL, J. : The appellants were contractors in respect of toddy
shops during the given period. Toddy shops were run on the basis of yearly
auction conducted by the Excise Department of the Government of Kerala.
Various guidelines were issued by the Board of Revenue and the State
Government from time to time for running toddy shops. The employees working
in the toddy shops during the period in question were not brought under the
coverage of the ESI Scheme mainly on the ground that the provisions of ESI
Scheme were not applicable to the toddy shops according to the appellants;
assuming that the Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948 (for short ’the
Act’) was applicable to the toddy shops in the previous years, that did not
create any continuing liability of the appellants. On the basis of the
inspection conducted by the officers of the respondent Corporation,
respondents took up the position that the toddy shops were covered under
the Act and assessed to the contribution; recovery proceedings also were
initiated for collection of contribution amount. At that stage the
appellants approached the Employees’ Insurance Court (El Court) seeking
declaration that the toddy shops run by the appellants during the period
1991-1994 could not have been brought under the ESI Scheme and, therefore,
no liability to pay contribution could be foisted on them.
According to the respondents the toddy shops were covered by the ESI Scheme
from 1983 onwards and only when the inspection was conducted it was noticed
that the appellants did not pay the contribution during the period of their
licence; in spite of the communication of the coverage and demand for
payment of contribution the appellants did not respond and in those
circumstances revenue recovery proceedings were initiated. According to the
respondents there was no illegality in the action taken by them. The
appellants elaborated their case in reply statement contending, even
assuming, that the previous contractors were complying with the ESI Scheme,
that did not make the appellants liable in any manner to continue the
coverage as the very applicability of the Act to the workers of toddy shops
was quite uncertain. It was their further case that the appellants could
not be treated as principal employers insofar as the toddy shops were
concerned because the responsibility to run the toddy shops through some
agent was purely that of the Excise Department under the Act; therefore,
Excise Department was the owner and principal employer of the toddy shops;
the functioning of the toddy shops was covered by the provisions of the
Abkari Act and Rules and not by the provisions of Kerala Shops and
Commercial Establishments Act; for the benefit of the workers in toddy
shops there is separate enactment and schemes framed thereunder, i.e.,
Kerala Toddy Workers Welfare Fund Act and Scheme; benefits to the workers
under the Kerala Toddy Workers Welfare Fund Act and the Scheme were more
beneficial to them; the licence given to a contractor to run a toddy shop
is not similar to the licence issued to the owners of the shops and other
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establishments under the shops and Establishments Act. The toddy shops
constitute different class of establishments; if the Government had any
intention to include the toddy shops also under the purview of the ESI
Scheme, they would have found place in the notification issued under
Section 1(5) of the Act. According to the appellants as contractors of
toddy shops, at the most, they had only the role of an immediate employer;
even assuming the Act is applicable to toddy shops the primary
responsibility to pay contribution was that of the Excise Department being
the principal employer.
The El Court after considering facts, respective contentions and referring
to the provisions of the Act and the Abkari Act and Rules concluded that
toddy shops were the establishments belonged to or were under the control
of the Department of the Government and the employees working in those
shops were enjoying the benefits substantially similar to the benefits
provided in the cases covered by the ESI Scheme. In this view the El Court
held that the provisions of ESI Scheme were not applicable to the employees
working in toddy shops of the appellants during the relevant period. The
Court also made it clear that since the proviso to Section 1(4) of the Act
was added to the statute book only with effect from 20.10.1989, any demand
for contribution for the prior period had to be viewed differently. In this
view the El Court allowed the applications filed by the appellants and
granted relief to them. The respondents challenged the validity and
correctness of the orders passed by the El Court by filing miscellaneous
first appeals before the High Court. The High Court, after hearing the
learned counsel for the parties and considering the respective contentions
raised by them, allowed the appeals and set aside the judgment of the El
Court. Hence these appeals are filed by the appellants questioning the
validity and correctness of the impugned common judgment.
This Court, on 9.5.2000, issued notice limited to the question whether the
provisions of the Act are applicable to the employees of toddy shops in the
State of Kerala under the notification in question. Subsequently leave was
granted on 13.9.2001.
Section 1 of the Act reads : -
" 1. Short title, extent, commencement and application. - (1) This Act may
be called the Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948.
(2) It extends to the whole of India.
(3) It shall come into force on such date or dates as the Central
Government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, appoint, and
different dates may be appointed for different provisions of this Act and
for different States or for different parts thereof.
(4) It shall apply, in the first instance, to all factories including
factories belonging to the Government other than seasonal factories :
Provided that nothing contained in this sub-section shall apply to a
factory or establishment belonging to or under the control of the
Government whose employees are otherwise in receipt of benefits
substantially similar or superior to the benefits provided under this Act.
(5) The appropriate Government may, in consultation with the Corporation
and where the appropriate Government is a State Government, with the
approval of the Central Government, after giving six months’ notice of its
intention of so doing by notification in the Official Gazette, extend the
provisions of this Act or any of them, to any other establishment or class
of establishments, industrial, commercial, agricultural or otherwise :
Provided that where the provisions of this Act have been brought into force
in any part of a State, the said provisions shall stand extended to any
such establishment or class of establishments within that part if the
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provisions have already been extended to similar establishment or class of
establishments in another part of that State.
(6) A factory or an establishment to which this Act applies shall continue
to be governed by this Act notwithstanding that the number of persons
employed therein at any time falls below the limit specified by or under
this Act or the manufacturing process therein ceases to be carried on with
the aid or power."
State of Kerala issued a notification dated 18.9.1974 in exercise of power
conferred under sub-Section (5) of Section 1 of the Act extending the
provisions of the Act to classes of establishments specified in the
schedule to the notification.
The learned senior counsel for the appellants urged that (1) the toddy
shops established under the Kerala Abkari Act are not covered by the Act
since in a notification issued under Section 1(5) of the Act they are not
specifically included; though Government specifically included hotels and
restaurants, intentionally excluded toddy shops while issuing notification
in 1974; this exclusion was because the employees attached to a toddy shop
are enjoying substantially similar or even superior benefits under the
Abkari Welfare Fund Act; hence the High Court was wrong in holding that
toddy shops are covered by the Act. (2) Toddy shops were owned and
controlled by the State Government and employees of these shops were
otherwise receiving benefits substantially similar or superior to the
benefits provided under the Act; because of the same the toddy shops were
exempted from the purview of the Act by virtue of proviso to Section 1(4)
of the Act; the State is the sole authority to do the business of any
intoxicating substance and no citizen has any right to do such business;
the appellants being only licensees (known as Abkari contractors) to run
abkari business of the Government, were only immediate employers under the
State Government or its Excise Department, who is the principal employer;
from various provisions of Abkari Act, Rules and the licence conditions it
is clear that the authority to run the business is only limited and the
main powers are vested with the Government itself. (3) The finding of the
High Court that the establishments of the appellants, i.e., toddy shops
having been covered by the Act, they shall continue to be governed by
virtue of Section 1(6) of the Act even though sub-Section (6) of Section
1of the Act came into force with effect from 20.10.1989 by an amendment is
not correct; even assuming that the Act was made applicable as on
20.10.1989 to the then contractors, that itself will not automatically make
the Act applicable to the appellants since they contracted to run toddy
shops in question for the first time in the year 1991-92.
In opposition, learned senior counsel for the respondents made submissions
supporting the reasons recorded by the High Court to arrive at the
conclusions in accepting the plea of the respondents negativing the
contentions raised on behalf of the appellants. He specifically pointed out
that before the El Court, as observed by the High Court in the impugned
judgment, the appellants did not specifically contend that the toddy shops
were not covered by the Act previously; the appellants only contended that
the toddy shops functioning in the State are not covered by the Act; it was
also not their case that strength of the employees in toddy shops was less
for being covered by the Act.
After careful consideration of the submissions made on either side and
looking to the discussion made and reasons recorded by the High Court in
the impugned judgment in the light of the facts and circumstances found in
these cases we are unable to find fault with the impugned judgment. The
High Court, dealing with the contention that the toddy shops are not
covered by the notification issued under Section 1(5) of the Act, referred
to and followed the judgments of this Court in M/s International Ore and
Fertilizers (India) Pvt. Ltd. v. Employee’s State Insurance Corporation,
[1987] 4 SCC 203, M/s. Cochin Shipping Co. \. E.S.I. Corporation, [1992] 4
SCC 245 and Employees State Insurance Corporation v. R.K. Swamy and Ors.,
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[1994] 1 SCC 445. Keeping in view the position, as made clear in
aforementioned decisions of this Court, the High Court was right in
holding, "Toddy Shop is a premises where the business of buying and selling
is going on. Therefore, according to us, a toddy shop would come under the
entry ’shop’ in the schedule." We may add here that the appellants were not
in a position to seriously dispute this finding of the High Court. In order
to take shelter under the proviso to sub-Section (4) of Section 1 of the
Act the appellants have to satisfy that (1) their establishments belonged
to or were under the control of the Government; and (2) the employees in
their estabishments were otherwise receiving benefits substantially similar
or superior to the benefits provided under the Act. The High Court rightly
took the view that the toddy shops of the appellants neither belonged to
the government nor they were under the control of the Government. If the
first requirement of the proviso itself is not satisfied, it becomes
unnecessary to examine as to the satisfaction of second requirement of the
proviso. No doubt, the State has the monopoly in liquor trade but it is
open to the State to part with that right for a consideration so as to
grant privilege of carrying on trade in liquor to the licensees. Under
Abkari Act right to run toddy shops is auctioned annually and licences are
granted to carry on business in liquor subject to the provisions of Abkari
Act, Rules and conditions of licence. The provisions contained in the
Abkari Act and Rules and conditions of licence having regard to the nature
of business, namely, dealing with liquor, are regulatory. None of these
provisions of the Act, Rules and conditions of licence interfere with a
right to carry on business by licensee subject to the regulatory measures
contained therein. In the matter of carrying on business and trade of
liquor under licences granted to the appellants it is not shown to us as to
how financially, functionally and administratively the State either
dominated or controlled. Looking to the facts of the case, keeping in view
the provisions of Abkari Act and Rules and conditions of licence, the
control of the State Government in regard to the trade in liquor by the
licensees was merely regulatory. Judged by the tests laid down in recent
judgment of the Constitution Bench of this Court in Pradeep Kumar Biswas v.
Indian Institute of Chemical Biology and others, [2002] 5 SCC 111 in the
context of establishment of belonging to or under the control of the
Government found in the proviso to sub-Section (4) of Section 1 of the Act,
the High Court was right in its conclusion that the said proviso did not
cover the toddy shops of the appellants and that neither the State
Government nor the Excise Department came in the picture of management of
the business of the appellants. It is clear from the facts that the State
had no participation in terms of finance and there was no Government
participation in carrying on the business of liquor by the appellants
either functionally or administratively. Hence we do not see any merit in
the second contention urged on behalf of the appellants. The High Court
rightly pointed out in the impugned judgment that the appellants did not
raise plea before the El Court that the toddy shops were not covered under
the Act previously. According to the respondents the toddy shops in
question were covered by the Act long prior to the appellants became
licensees to trade in liquor for the period in question. The appellants
only contended that the toddy shops functioning in the State were not
covered by the Act. As already noticed above, this plea was rejected by the
High Court with which we are in agreement. Neither there was a plea nor
material placed before El Court or High Court as to how many employees were
working in the toddy shops in question from the beginning or whether the
same employees continued/required to work in those shops even though the
licensees changed or whether the new licensees could change or reduce the
number of employees in existing toddy shops. In the absence of necessary
pleas the High Court was right in rejecting the contention urged on behalf
of the appellants based on Section 1(6) of the Act. The question of law
based on Section 1(6) of the Act is left open to be decided in an
appropriate case.
Thus, we do not find any merit in any one of the contentions urged on
behalf of the appellants. In our view, the impugned judgment does not call
for any interference. Hence the appeals are dismissed with no order as to
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costs.