Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ROHTAS INDUSTRIES LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BRIJNANDAN PANDEY.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/10/1956
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
MENON, P. GOVINDA
CITATION:
1957 AIR 1 1956 SCR 800
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Temporary employees-Discharge of workmen-
Application before the Labour Appellate Tribunal-Scope of
enquiry-Discretion of the Tribunal-Industrial Disputes
(Appellate Tribunal) Act, 1950 (XLVIII of 1950), s. 22.
HEADNOTE:
The scope of an enquiry under s. 22 of the Industrial
Disputes (Appellate Tribunal) Act, 1950, is whether there is
a prima facie case made out for the proposed discharge of
the workman and the employer has not resorted to any unfair
practice or victimisation.
Though an Industrial Tribunal can create new obligations or
modify contracts in the. interests of industrial peace or to
prevent unfair practice or victimisation, its discretion has
to be exercised in accordance with well recognised
principles and it cannot ignore altogether an existing
agreement or existing obligations.
The Automobile Products of India Ltd. v. Rukmaji Bala
([1955] 1 S.C.R. 1241) and Atherton West & Co. Ltd. v. Suti
Mill Mazdoor Union, ([1953] S.C.R. 780), relied on.
Where, as in the present case, the Labour Appellate Tribunal
did not direct its mind to the real question to be decided
on an application under s. 22 of the Act for permission to
discharge the temporary employees and without deciding
whether the workmen were temporary employees or not, passed
an order dismissing the application on the basis of a
finding which was not determinative of the real point or
question at issue, held that the decision must be set aside
and the proper order passed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 144 of 1955.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September 25, 1953, of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of
India, Calcutta in Miscellaneous Case No. C-112 of 1953.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, A. B. N.
Sinha and B. P. Maheshwari, for the appellant.
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S. P. Sinha, R. Patnaik and A. D. Mathur, for the
respondents.
801
1956. October 11. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
S. K. DAS J.,-This is an appeal by special leave from a
decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal, Calcutta, dated
the 25th September, 1953. The relevant facts lie within a
narrow compass. On the 4th of May 1953 the appellant, the
Rohtas Industries Limited, Dalmianagar, made an application
to the said Labour Appellate Tribunal under section 22 of
the Industrial Disputes (Appellate Tribunal) Act, 1950
(XLVIII of 1950), hereinafter referred to as the Act, for
permission to discharge ninety six temporary employees in
the following circumstances. The appellant company have a
number of factories at Dalmianagar including a cement
factory, power house, pulp mill, paper factory, chemical
factory, factory for the manufacture of certain acids and an
asbestos cement factory. The company had a number of
temporary employees who were engaged temporarily in
connection with certain erection works for the extension and
enlargement of those factories. The terms of employment of
these employees were embodied in a temporary appointment
form which was signed by the employees as well as the
management. The said terms stated, inter alia, that "the
company could discharge the employee at any time without
notice, compensation and giving any reason therefor, whether
on completion of the work on which the employee was engaged
or earlier"; the terms also made it clear that whether the
employee was on the same job or some other job, in the same
department or some other, either on temporary work or
permanent work, he would remain a temporary employee until
the Works Manager issued a written letter expressly making
him a permanent employee. As and when the various erection
works were completed, the temporary employees were first put
on a list of spare men and then discharged. Some time prior
to the 3rd of July 1952, sixty nine of these temporary
employees were spared for being discharged. The names of
these sixty nine employees were given in two lists, Appendix
802
A and Appendix B. It was alleged that on the 3rd of July
1952, a number of these employees headed by one Brij Nandan
Pandey entered the office of Shri L. C. Jain, Manager of the
Cement Factory, and Brij Nandan Pandey assaulted the
Manager. A serious situation resulted from that ’incident
and the company stopped the sixty nine temporary employees
from coming to their factories or to their Labour Office and
issued a notice to them stating that the company were
applying to the Industrial Tribunal for permission to
terminate their services. At that time an industrial
dispute relating to, among other things, the payment of
bonus to the employees was pending adjudication in the Court
of the Industrial Tribunal, Bihar. On the 5th of July 1952,
the appellant company made an application to the said Tribu-
nal for permission to discharge the sixty nine employees.
The application was made under section 33 of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947. On the 12th of July 1952, forty nine
out of the said sixty nine employees made an application,
under section 33-A of the Industrial Disputes Act, to the
Chairman, Industrial Tribunal, Bihar, on the allegation that
the appellant company had discharged sixty nine employees on
the 5th July 1952 and had thereby contravened section 33 of
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. On the 20th of August
1952, thirty six more temporary employees were put on the
spare list and an application was made to the Industrial
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Tribunal Bihar, for including these thirty six persons also
in the application which had been made for permission to
discharge the temporary men; thus, all told, the application
related to one hundred and five temporary men. The case of
the appellant company was that the completion of the
erection works for which these temporary men were originally
employed was a gradual process and so far as the Cement
Factory erection work was concerned, it was completed by the
end of March 1952 except for certain minor additions and
alterations. Therefore, the appellant company no longer
required the services of the temporary employees and they
were put on the spare list as and
803
when their services were no longer required.
The two applications which had been made to the Industrial
Tribunal, Bihar, the one under section 33 of the Industrial
Disputes Act and the other under section 33-A of the said
Act, remained pending with the Industrial Tribunal till the
17th of December 1952 on which date the application under
section 33-A filed by forty nine of the sixty nine temporary
employees, was dismissed. On the 3rd of January 1953, the
Chairman of the Industrial Tribunal, Bihar, intimated to the
appellant company that the Tribunal was no longer competent
to pass any orders on the application under section 33 of
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, as the adjudication
proceedings on the main reference had already concluded.
Two appeals were taken to the Labour Appellate Tribunal, one
from the award made on the main adjudication and the other
from the order made on the application under section 33-A of
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. On the 20th May 1953,
the appeal from the order under section 33-A was dismissed.
As we are not concerned with that appeal in any way, nothing
further need be said about it in this judgment.
The appeal from the main award was pending on the 4th of May
1953 on which date the appellant company made their
application under section 22 of the Act to the Labour
Appellate Tribunal for permission to discharge ninety six of
the temporary employees. Though there were one hundred and
five temporary employees originally, with regard to whom an
application had been made to the Industrial Tribunal, Bihar,
nine out of them voluntarily left the service of the
company; therefore, the number of temporary employees
regarding whom the application under section 22 of the Act
was made was ninety. six only.,
The application was contested by forty two of the temporary
employees, and in their affidavit they denied that any of
the sixty nine workmen were originally recruited as
temporary workmen and they further denied that they were
involved in the incident relating to the assault on Shri
L.C. Jain on the 3rd of July 1952. They said that in effect
they were
804
permanent employees and enjoyed all the benefits of
permanent employees. They further stated.:
"The erection work of the cement plants of the petitioners
was completed towards the end of 1950 and it is therefore
patently false to suggest that we became redundant as a
result of the completion of the erection of the cement
plants. It is significant to note that a large number of
workmen who had worked on the job of erecting the cement
plants were discharged shortly after the completion of the
said work on the ground that they were surplus. The cement
plants started to Work in full swing from about the first
quarter of 1951 and we were working in the said cement plant
producing cement from the very beginning. right up to 5th
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July 1952, when we were informed that we were surplus. In
fact the real reason for the proposed retrenchment is the
petitioner’s desire to increase the rate of exploitation of
its workmen by increasing the workload".
With regard to the terms embodied in the appointment form,
it was alleged that on or about the 3rd of December 1948 the
employees of the appellant company were forced to go on
strike on account of an industrial dispute; towards the end
of the strike the workmen became exhausted and drifted back
to work. The strike was ultimately called off and the
appellant company taking full advantage of their victory
compelled a section of the workmen, who did not return to
work until the strike was called off, to sign the ap-
pointment form with the purpose of humiliating and
terrorising them.
The Labour Appellate Tribunal gave its decision on the 25th
September 1953 which is the decision under appeal. It
dismissed the application of the appellant. company on a
finding which the Tribunal expressed in the following words:
"It is thus clear that these 96 workmen had been working in
the production departments from as far back as the beginning
of the year 1951 and so the completion of the erection work
cannot be put forward as the ground for their retrenchment".
805
Referring to the Directors’ Report dated the 10th of July
1951, the Tribunal came to the conclusion that the workmen’s
version that the erection works had been completed by the
end of 1950 was supported by the said report. In other
words, the decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal was
primarily based on the finding that the erection works were
completed by the end of 1950 and therefore there was no
ground for discharging the ninety six temporary men.
Learned counsel for the appellant has contended before us
that (1) the Appellate Tribunal did not correctly appreciate
the true scope and effect of section 22 of the Act; (2) the
Appellate Tribunal gave attention to only one point, namely,
the completion of erection works, and did not consider the
other circumstances put forward on behalf of the appellant
in support of their application; (3) instead of considering
the real point which arose for determination on an
application under section 22 of the Act, the Appellate
Tribunal confined its attention to a point which was not
decisive of the question before it; and (4) by reason of its
failure to consider the real point for determination, the
order of the Appellate Tribunal has resulted in manifest
injustice. In our opinion, these contentions are correct
and should be upheld.
It was pointed out in The Automobile Products of India Ltd.
v. Rukmaji Bala(1) that section 22 of the Act confers on the
Appellate Tribunal a special jurisdiction which is in the
nature of original jurisdiction and the Tribunal being an
authority of limited jurisdiction must be confined to the
exercise of such functions and powers as are actually
conferred on it. With regard to the scope of section 22 of
the Act, it was observed:
"The object of section 22 of the 1950 Act like that of
section 33 of the 1947 Act as amended is to protect the
workmen concerned in disputes which form the subject-matter
of pending proceedings against victimisation by the employer
on account of their having raised industrial disputes or
their continuing the
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1241. 105
105
806
pending proceedings. It is further the object of the two
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sections to ensure that proceedings in connection with
industrial disputes already pending should be brought to a
termination in a peaceful atmosphere and that no employer
should during the pendency of those proceedings take any
action of the kind mentioned in the sections which may give
rise to fresh disputes likely to further exacerbate the
already strained relation between the employer and the
workmen. To achieve this object a ban has been imposed upon
the ordinary right which the employer has under the ordinary
law governing a contract of employment. Section 22 of the
1950 Act and section 33 of the 1947 Act which impose the ban
also provide for the removal of that ban by the granting of
express permission in writing in appropriate cases by the
authority mentioned therein. The purpose of these two
sections being to determine whether the ban should be re-
moved or not, all that is required of the authority
exercising jurisdiction under these sections is to accord or
withhold permission".
The earlier decision of this Court in Atherton West & Co.
Ltd. v. Suti Mill Mazdoor Union(1) dealt with clause 23 of
the U. P. Government Notification dated the 10th March 1948
made in exercise of the powers conferred by sections 3 and 8
of the U. P. Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, and it was there
observed that the scope of the enquiry was to come to a
conclusion whether there was a prima facie case made out for
the discharge or dismissal of the workman and the employer,
his agent or manager was not actuated by any improper
motives or did not resort to any unfair practice or
victimisation in the matter of the proposed discharge or
dismissal of the workman. That being the scope of the
enquiry on an application under section 22 of the Act, what
the Labour Appellate Tribunal had to decide in the present
case was whether the appellant company had made out a Prima
facie,case for the proposed discharge and whether they were
resorting to any unfair practice or victimisation in the
matter of the proposed discharge.
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 780.
807
Instead of doing that, the Labour Appellate Tribunal
dismissed the application of the appellant company on the
only ground that the version of the workmen that the
erection works had been completed by the end of 1950 was
supported by the Report of the Directors dated the 10th July
1951. Learned counsel for the appellant has rightly pointed
out that even in respect of the completion of erection works
the conclusion of the Appellate Tribunal is a complete non
sequitur. First of all, the Directors’ Report was dated the
10th July 1951 though the balance-sheet of the company with
which the report was dealing related to the period ending on
the 31st October 1950 The report naturally referred to such
works as were completed on or before the 10th of July 1951.
It should be obvious that the completion of erection works
must be a gradual process, and while some of the erection
works might have been completed by the end of 1950 or July
1951, some were still in the process of completion. Under
their terms of employment, temporary employees could be
moved from one work to the other and the mere circumstance,
that they were employed in a production department for some
time, even if true, did not make them permanent employees;
nor did the circumstance that they enjoyed some of the
benefits of permanent employees make them permanent. These
are circumstances which have been completely ignored by the
Labour Appellate Tribunal.
It is worthy of note that in their application dated the
12th of July 1952, the forty nine workmen admitted:
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"though most of us were originally recruited for erection
work in the Cement Factory, many of us were later on
transferred as permanent workers to sugar and paper
factories and some of us were absorbed as permanent workers
in the maintenance section of the Cement Factory". (Vide
paragraph 3 of the application).
In the joint affidavit filed on the 12th August, 1953, in
reply to the appellant’s application under section 22 of the
Act, the said workmen denied however that
808
they were at any time engaged temporarily for temporary work
vide paragraphs 3 and 6 of the affidavit. Obviously, they
were shifting from the position which they had originally
taken up. No evidence was given that the men who were
employed temporarily were afterwards made permanent. They
filed a schedule, marked ’A’, to their affidavit wherein
they showed their period of service and the name of the
factory or plant from where their duties stopped. On an ex-
amination of the schedule (Annexure A) it appears that a
number of them were put on the spare list when the erection
work was completed some time in 1952. ’Annexure ’A’
therefore supports the case of the appellant company that
the completion of the erection works was a gradual process,
some were completed in 1950, some in 1951 and some in 1952.
The first batch of sixty-nine employees with whom we are
concerned were put on the spare list between March and July
1952 and the second batch were put on the spare list in
August 1952 when the relevant erection works were completed.
The finding of the Labour Appellate Tribunal with regard to
the completion of erection works was vitiated by reason of
the failure to take into consideration the circumstances
stated above.
With regard to the terms of employment embodied in the
temporary appointment form, the respondents’ case was that
the appointment forms were signed as a result of the strike
in 1948; it was never suggested that these forms were never
signed at all and the comment of learned counsel for the
respondents that the appellant company have not produced the
appointment forms has very little force. The respondents
gave no evidence in support of the allegation that the
appointment forms were taken from them for the purpose of
humiliating or terrorising them, nor did the Appellate
Tribunal come to any such finding. None of the affidavits
filed on behalf of the respondents suggested, even in a
remote way, that the appellant company were resorting to any
unfair practice or victimisation in the matter of the pro-
posed discharge.
809
Learned counsel for the respondents has contended before us
that the finding of the Labour Appellate Tribunal is a
finding on a question of fact, namely, whether the
respondents were temporary or permanent employees. He has
argued that this Court should not interfere even though the
finding is based on reasons which may not appear convincing
to us. We have, however, pointed out that the Labour
Appellate Tribunal gave no finding on the question whether
the respondents were temporary employees or not. The only
finding which the Tribunal gave related to a different
matter, namely, the completion of erection works. Secondly,
learned counsel for the respondents has contended that under
section 22 of the Act the Appellate Tribunal had a
discretion either to lift the ban or not to lift it and in a
matter of discretion this Court should not interfere. It is
true that this Court does not sit upon the decisions of
Industrial Tribunals like an ordinary Court of appeal, and
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there must be special circumstances to justify the exercise
of our special power under article 136 of the Constitution.
In our opinion, such special circumstances exist in the
present case where the Labour Appellate Tribunal has not
directed its mind to the real question to be decided on an
application under section 22 of the Act and has passed an
order on the basis of a somewhat irrelevant finding which
has resulted in manifest injustice.
The discretion which an Industrial Tribunal has must be
exercised in accordance with well recognised principles.
There is undoubtedly a distinction between commercial and
industrial arbitration. As has been pointed out by Ludwig
Teller (Labour Disputes and Collective Bargaining) Vol. 1,
page 536:
"Industrial arbitration may involve the extension of an
existing agreement, or the making of a new one, or in
general the creation of new obligations or modifications of
old ones, while commercial arbitration generally concerns
itself with interpretation of existing obligations and
disputes relating to existing agreements".
810
A Court of law proceeds on the footing that no power exists
in the courts to make contracts for people; and the parties
must make their own contracts. The courts reach their limit
of power when they enforce contracts which the parties have
made. An Industrial Tribunal is not so fettered and may
create new obligations or modify contracts in the interests
of industrial peace, to protect legitimate trade union
activities and to prevent unfair practice or victimisation.
We cannot, however, accept the extreme position canvassed
before us that an Industrial Tribunal can ignore altogether
an existing agreement or existing obligations for no rhyme
or reason whatsoever.
It has been necessary for us to go into the facts and
circumstances of this case in greater detail than is usual
with this Court, because the Labour Appellate Tribunal did
not do so. The Act under which the Appellate Tribunal
purported to pass its order has now been repealed by the
Industrial Disputes (Amendment and Miscellaneous Provisions)
Act, 1956. A question of some nicety as to the correct
interpretation of section 33 of the Industrial Disputes
(Amendment and Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1956 might
have arisen if we had thought fit to remand this case. We
do not, however, think it necessary to pass an order of
remand in this case and therefore abstain from expressing
any opinion as to the correct position in law under
subsection (2) of section 33 of that Act. No new facts need
investigation in this case. Learned counsel for the parties
have taken us through all the affidavits filed and the facts
necessary for an enquiry under section 22 of the Act clearly
emerge from those affidavits. We are satisfied Prima facie
that the respondents were temporary employees and were put
on the spare list as and when the erection works were
gradually completed. The appellant company have made out a
prima facie case for the permission which they have asked
for and there is no suggestion even of any unfair practice
or victimisation.
In these circumstances, we would allow the appeal, set aside
the decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal dated the 25th
September 1953 and pass the order
811
Which that Tribunal should have passed in this case,
namely, that permission be granted to the appellant to
discharge ninety six temporary workmen. In the
circumstances of this case, we think that the parties must
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bear their own costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.