Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5717 of 2001
PETITIONER:
H.P. State Forest Corporation
RESPONDENT:
Regional Provident Fund Commissioner
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/04/2008
BENCH:
Tarun Chatterjee & Harjit Singh Bedi
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
NON-REPORTABLE
CIVIL APPEAL NO.5717 OF 2001
WITH C.A. No.5718/2001
HARJIT SINGH BEDI,J.
1. These appeals are directed against the judgment and
order of the High Court of Himachal Pradesh at Shimla
whereby the order of the Presiding Officer of the Employees
Provident Fund Appellate Tribunal dated 15th December 1999
has been upheld and the direction issued thereunder to
remand the case for the re-determination of the contribution
with respect to the liability of the appellant Corporation has
been maintained. The facts are as under:
2. The Appellant Corporation (hereinafter called the
"Corporation") which is a company registered under the
Companies Act, came into existence on 1st April, 1974.
Proceedings for the deposit of the provident fund under the
provisions of the Employees Provident Fund and
Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952 (hereinafter called the
"Act") were initiated by the issuance of a notice dated 12th
December 1988 under section 7-A of the Act for determination
of the amounts due from the Corporation. This notice
pertained to the period 1982-88. The Corporation, through its
Regional Manager, contended, inter-alia, that the provisions of
the Act were not applicable to it inasmuch as it was not an
’industrial establishment’ in terms of section 2(e) of the
Industrial Employment (Standing Order) Act, 1964 nor under
section 25(k) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. The
Regional Provident Fund Commissioner however in his order
dated 14th July 1999 took the view that the Corporation was
covered under Section 1(4) of the Act as it had voluntarily
submitted to its coverage and had been allotted a provident
fund code number as well. The Commissioner then went into
the question as to whether the persons employed by the
contractor could be said to be the employees of the
Corporation and hence entitled to the benefits of the Act and
after examining the matter threadbare concluded that the said
employees were in fact employees of the Corporation and
therefore subject to the provisions of the Act and also drew up
an assessment of the amounts due from the Corporation. An
appeal was thereafter preferred before the Presiding Officer,
Employees Provident Fund Appellate Tribunal wherein similar
contentions were raised by the Corporation. The Tribunal in
its order of 15th December 1999 held that the Corporation was
indeed covered by the provisions of the Act but on the facts of
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the case opined that as the matter was stale and pertained to
the year 1982, it would be appropriate that the matter be
remitted to the Commissioner for re-determination of the
amount due and for this purpose issued the following
guidelines:
"In view of the above discussions, the appeal
is fit to be partly allowed and the case to be
remanded back for re-determination of the
dues with reference to the identifiable
employees only. The appellant cannot be
pressed to produce such records which
under any Statute they are not made liable
to maintain or which they are authorized to
destroy because of expiry date. The
appellants are directed to produce all the
records in their possession for the disputed
period and explain satisfactorily for those
which they cannot produce. Contractors
may be summoned if the appellant make a
prayer for that and give full details.
However, it is the appellant’s liability to
maintain the records and produce them as
held by the Hon’ble Supreme Court.
Both the appeals are partly allowed.
Coverage of the appellant in respect of
contractors employees is held valid. The
determination portion of the impugned
order is set aside. The case is remanded
back for re-determination after giving
reasonable opportunity to the appellants to
prove their case."
3. The Corporation then filed a Writ Petition in the High
Court impugning the order of the Commissioner the Appellate
Tribunal but vide order dated 29th November 2000, the High
Court upheld the order of the Tribunal and dismissed the Writ
Petition. It is in these circumstances that the matter is before
us.
4. Mr. M.N. Rao, the learned senior counsel for the
appellant has at the outset very fairly pointed out that as of
today and in the light of the fact that the Corporation itself
had voluntarily submitted that it was covered by the
provisions of the Act the question of a dispute with regard to
the liability of the Corporation was now largely academic, but
has pleaded that as the employees in question were seasonal
employees and the matter pertained to a long gone period i.e.
1982-98, the record pertaining to the employees was not
available either with the Corporation or with the Contractors
and that in many a case those who stood to benefit were not
even traceable, it would be appropriate that the impugned
orders be quashed as they would not serve any useful
purpose. It has also been pleaded that although there was no
limit prescribed under the Act within which proceedings under
section 7-A could be initiated, but under the broad principle
that a reasonable period ought to be read into the Statute, the
present delay of 16 years from 1982 could not be justified.
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The learned counsel for the respondents has, however, argued
that the Tribunal and the High Court had granted a limited
relief to the employees inasmuch that the examination of the
claim was to be limited only to those employees who could be
identified and that as the authorities below had exercised their
authority with respect to a beneficent legislation for the
weaker sections, it would be inappropriate to interfere with the
impugned orders.
5. We have heard the learned counsel for the parties and
gone through the record. We do appreciate that the inaction
on the part of the Commissioner to initiate proceedings within
a reasonable time, has to be deplored. However, as the
Corporation has itself submitted that it was covered under the
Act and in view of the limited relief granted by the authorities
below and by the High Court, we are disinclined to interfere
with the matter at this stage. We accordingly dismiss the
appeals but reiterate the recommendation that the amounts
due from the Corporation will be determined only with respect
to those employees who are identifiable and whose entitlement
can be proved on the evidence and that in the event the record
is not available with the Corporation (at this belated stage), it
would not be obliged to explain its loss, or that any adverse
inference be drawn on this score. With this very small
modification, we dismiss the appeals.