Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
U.P. ELECTRICITY SUPPLY CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
WORKMEN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/09/1971
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
CITATION:
1971 AIR 2521 1971 SCR 381
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Reference-Compulsory acquisition of
company pending reference-Dispute regarding past bonus-Dutty
of Tribunal to complete adjudication and make Award.
Industrial Dispute--Bonus--Available Surplus-Calculation of.
HEADNOTE:
The State Government referred under s. 4K of the U.P.
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, the question whether the
appellants were to be required to pay bonus, to their
workmen for the years 1960 to 1961 and if so at what rate.
Pending the reference the undertakings of the appellant were
compulsorily acquired. The Tribunal however, continued the
proceedings and directed the employers to pay three months’
basic wage as bonus for the period. To the profits of the
company as found by the tribunal for working out the Labour
Appellate Tribunal Full Bench Formula, the tribunal added
three claims made by the workmen, namely, (1) Excess
debit to coal and fuel consumption; (2) estimated revenue
for one month and (3) notional revenue on the basis of
units produced but not accounted for. The Tribunal allowed
the expenses claimed by employers as prior charge as also
the notional normal depreciation. The Tribunal also allowed
as prior charge 5 per cent of the share capital while the
management claimed it at six per cent.
In appeal to this Court against the Award of he Tribunal the
appellants also raised a preliminary point that after the
appellant taking was taken over the industrial dispute, if
any, between it and its workmen ceased to exist.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD : On the facts of the case, the Tribunal went wrong in
allowing any bonus to the workers.
(1)The broad proposition that as soon as a particular
industry ceases to function any adjudication in respect of a
dispute which had occurred prior thereto becomes abortive,
cannot be accepted. If the dispute is one which relates to
the past working of the industry and in particular where the
claim of the workmen is for benefits which according to
their view had accrued to them in the past, it can hardly be
said that the adjudication is without any purpose. Where
the dispute, as in the present case, is over a claim of
benefits by way of bonus for work done in the past it would
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be the duty of the Tribunal to complete the adjudication and
make its award. No doubt the main object of the Act is to
ensure industrial peace but equally important is the purpose
behind the Act that the workmen should not be deprived of
their legitimate share of profits made by the industry. [556
C, 562 C]
Pipraich Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Pipraich Sugar Mills Mazdoor
Union, [1956] S.C.R. 872, M/s. Burn & Co.Ltd. v. Their
Workmen, [1956] S.C.R. 781, The A.C.C. Ltd. v. its Workmen,
[1959] S.C.R. 925 at 955,
554
Banaras Ice Factory Ltd. v. Its Workmen, [1957] S.C.R. 143
and Automobile Products of India Ltd. v. Rukinaji Bala,
[1955] 1 S.C.R. 1241, referred to.
Hariprasad Shivshankar Shukla v. A. D. Divikar, [1957]
S.C.R. 121 and U.P. Electric Supply Co. Ltd. v. R. K. Shukla
JUDGMENT:
(2)The Tribunal went wrong in adding back the three
amounts to the gross profits.
(a)Merely because a figure is to be found in the audited
balance sheet of the company, the industrial tribunal is not
bound to accept the said figure, if challenged. But when
the figures for expenses incurred in connection with fuel
given in the balance-sheet are also deposed to by a witness
the Tribunal should not have discarded the evidence of the
witness on this point. The figure as shown in the balance-
sheet should have been accepted by the Tribunal and there
should have been no deduction on account of excess debit to
coal and fuel consumption. [564 A, C]
(b), The non-inclusion of one month’s ’revenue in respect of
hulk supplies etc. was bona fide caused by switching over to
a different basis of accounting which the employer could
lawfully have done and the Tribunal was not justified in
adding back the amount to the profits as it had done. [566
B]
(c)In applying the Full Bench Formula the employers cannot
be charged with any notional profits which they should have
made, although the formula itself is notional. It has never
been held by this Court that if through the inefficiency in
the working of the industry or by reason of use of defective
machinery of apparatus full profits are not received with
the result that nationally labour is deprived of a share
thereof, the Tribunal adjudicating on the question of bonus
payable to labour for a particular year should add back to
the gross profits as shown in the balance-sheet the amount
of profit lost through the inefficiency or negligence of the
employers. [568- G]
The A.C.C. Ltd. v. Its Workmen, [1959] S.C.R. 925 at 955 and
M/s. J. K. Cotton Manufacturers Ltd. Kanpur v. Their
Workmen, 1954 L.A.C. 716 at 745, referred to.
(3)This Court has held that a return of six per cent is
ordinarily considered to be a fair return on the capital
invested in the case of paid up capital and also that in a
particular industry where the risk in the business was great
there would be a good cause for providing for six per cent.
Deducting the amounts allowed by the Tribunal as prior
charge as also the notional normal depreciation and allowing
a return on the capital at six per cent the available
surplus would not be enough to meet the provisions for
Statutory Contingency Reserve and Statutory Development
Reserve. While it is true that these amounts cannot be
considered as prior charges far the purpose of finding
available surplus they have to be taken into consideration
when the question of distribution to the workers out of the
available surplus arises. [569 C-D]
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M/s Burn & Co. Ltd. v. Their Workmen, [1956] S.C.R. 781,
Pierce Leslie & Co. Ltd., Kozhikode v. Workmen, [1960] 3
S.C.R. 194, National Engineering Industries Ltd. v. its
Workmen, [1968] 1 S.C.R. 779, M/s. Bareilly Electricity
Supply Co. Ltd. v. The Workmen, [1972] 2 S.C.R. 241 and
Mathura Prasad Srivastava v. Saugor Electric Supply Co. Ltd.
[1966] 2 L.L.J. 307, referred to.
555
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 1255 and
1256 of 1966.
Appeals by special leave from the Award dated November 16,
1965 of the Industrial Tribunal (111), Allahabad in
Adjudication Cases Nos. 9 and 12 of 1962.
G. B. Pai, Harish Chandra, H. K. Puri and B. Ramrakhiani,
for the appellant (in both the appeals).
J.P. Goyal, for respondent No. 1 (in C.A. No. 1255 of
1966).
J.P. Goyal and M. V. Goswami, for respondent no. 1 (in
C.A. No. 1256 of 1966).
P.N. Tiwari, Secretary, INTUC, U.P. in person, for
respondent No. 3 (in both the appeals).
L.M. Singhvi, and O. P. Rana, for respondent No. 4 (in
both the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mitter, J. These two appeals by special leave arise out of
an award of the Industrial Tribunal Allahabad following two
references dated 24th January, 1962 by the State of U.P.
tinder S. 4-K of the U.P. Industrial Disputes Act, 1947.
The subject matter of both the references was, whether the
employers (the appellants before this Court) should be
required to pay bonus to their workmen for the year 1960-61,
and if so, at what rate.
The U.P. Electric Supply Co., Ltd. (the appellants herein)
had two electricity undertakings, one at Allahabad and the
other at Lucknow. It carried on the business of generation
and distribution of electricity under two licences one for
Allahabad and the other for Lucknow within the areas
specified therein. In pursuance of the provisions of
paragraph 12 of the said licences the U.P. Electricity Board
compulsorily acquired the said undertakings of the company
including the business of generation and distribution of
electricity in the areas covered by the licences with effect
from 16th September, 1964. The Tribunal had however entered
on the reference on 29th January 1962 and its proceedings
continued down to 16th November, 1965 when a common award
was made directing the employers to pay three months’ basic
wages as bonus to all the workmen entitled thereto for the
year 1960-61. These appeals are against the said award.
On behalf of the appellant, a preliminary point was raised,
viz., that after the appellants’ undertaking was taken over
in September, 1964 the industrial dispute, if any, between
it and its workmen ceased to exist. The reasoning behind
the argument was
556
that if the industry itself disappeared any adjudication
with regard to a dispute which had arisen in the past would
be a fruitless errand and any award made on the reference
thereafter would be ineffective. Our attention was drawn to
certain decisions of this Court in support of the above
reasoning. Before we proceed to do so, we ’think it will be
proper to examine the question as if it were res-integra.
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In our view, the broad proposition put forward by counsel
for the appellant that as soon as a particular industry
ceases to function any adjudication in respect of a dispute
which had occurred prior thereto becomes abortive cannot be
accepted. It may be that an adjudication which concerns
only the future working of the industry becomes redundant
when the industry itself comes to an end. If the dispute is
one which relates to the past working of the industry and in
particular where the claim of the workmen is for benefits
which according to their view had accrued to them in the
past, it can hardly be said that the adjudication is without
any purpose. If the workmen ask for better service
conditions like the revision of wage scales, dearness
allowance, medical and other facilities, gratuity etc. it
would be useless for the Tribunal to complete the
adjudication and award how the service conditions etc. ought
to be bettered or revised where as industry is non-est.
Where however the dispute, as in this case, is over a claim
to benefits by way of bonus for work done in the past, it
would be the duty of the Tribunal to complete the
adjudication and make its award. If the Tribunal finds that
because of the service rendered by the workers in the past
an industry reaped profits whereof a portion should go to
the workmen it should not lie in the mouth of the employers
to say that inasmuch as they have ceased to carry on
business their obligation to pay for service rendered in the
past should be wiped out. There is ,no logic in the
submission made on behalf of the appellants that the
ascertainment of the liability even with regard to the
working of the industry in the past can take place only
during the subsistence of the relationship of master and
servant between the employers and the employed.
Counsel for the appellant referred to certain provisions in
Chapter V-A of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 as
illustrative of his argument that in cases where legislature
felt it necessary to provide for relief to workers even
after the closure or transfer of ,an industry it made
express provisions therefore. In particular, reliance was
made to S. 25-FF and 25-FFF to show that by the first of the
above provisions the legislature had provided for
compensation to certain workmen where the ownership or
management of an undertaking was transferred, whether
voluntarily or by operation of law. Similarly compensation
had been provided for in S. 25-FFF for workmen in cases
where on the closing down of
557
an undertaking for any reason whatever workmen were to be
treated as having been retrenched thus giving them the
benefit of retrenchment compensation. Reference was also
made to S. 33-C of the Act under which a workman could
approach the appropriate Government for recovery of moneys
due to him under a settlement or an award under the
provisions of Ch. V-A of the Act. In our view, by these
provisions the legislature sought to give redress to workmen
in the contingencies mentioned in the said sections which
are of common occurrence. ’these sections do not lay down
that on the closure or transfer of an undertaking the
employers were to be relieved of all other obligations to or
claims of the workers. The preamble to the Industrial
Disputes Act which expressly aims at preventing strikes and
lockouts is in pari materia to the U.P. Industrial Disputes
Act i.e. "to make provision for the investigation and
settlement of industrial disputes, and for certain other
purposes" cannot be read down to mean that the statute was
being enacted only for the purpose of securing industrial
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peace so far as the future working of the industry was
concerned. No doubt the main object of the Act is to ensure
industrial peace but equally important is the purpose behind
the Act that the workmen should not be deprived of their
legitimate share of profits made by the industry. The
central object of the Act is to preserve industrial harmony
which would be meaningless if the workers of a particular
industry were to be deprived of benefits of services
rendered in the past.
The first decision of this Court which bears on this point
is the case of Pipraich Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Pipraich Sugar
Mills Mazdoor Union(1). The facts in that case were shortly
as follows. Owing to continued losses suffered by the
appellant its management asked the State Government either
to increase its quota of sugarcane or to permit it to sell
the mills. In pursuance of the Government’s permission to
sell, the mills were sold to a Madras party. As the
crushing season was on at that time the appellant obtained
from the purchaser a lease of the mills for the then current
season agreeing to deliver possession of the mills on the
termination of the lease. There were negotiations between
the appellant, and the Madras party for the former
dismantling the machinery and erecting it at Madras for a
lump consideration expecting to perform the contract through
its own workmen. On coming to know of this, the workmen
assumed a hostile attitude to the whole transaction and gave
a notice of strike. There were negotiations between the
parties thereafter which averted the strike and the crushing
went on till the season came to an end. Thereafter the
workmen refused to help in the dismantling of the mills.
The Government however declined to interfere with the sale
of the machinery and
(1) [1956] S.C.R. 872.
558
the management discharged the workers. In view of the
inability of the appellant to take up the contract, the
purchaser entered into direct negotiations with the workmen
and concluded an agreement with them for dismantling the
machinery.. The net result was that the appellant lost the
contract, on which as admitted by the respondent, it would
have earned a profit of at least Rs. 2 lakhs. The workers
having taken the benefit of a direct contract with the
purchaser for dismantling the machinery, next turned their
,attention to the appellant, and on the basis of certain
earlier letters sent a notice to it on 19th April, 1951
asking for distribution among the workers of the 25% labour-
share of the profits on sale of machinery. The State
Government referred to an Industrial Tribunal the dispute:
"Whether the services of workmen, if so how
many, were terminated by the concern without
settlement of their due claims and improperly;
and if so, to what relief are the workmen
concerned entitled ?"
The Tribunal held the closure of the business and the sale
of the machinery to be bona fide, that the conduct of the
workmen had been throughout unfair and such as to disentitle
them to compensation but that the promise contained in
certain letters of the company to pay 25 per cent profits
realised by the sale of the mills was binding on the
management. It was held that Rs. 45,000/- was thus payable
to the workmen. The appeal of the management to the Labour
Appellate Tribunal being rejected, the matter came to this
Court by special leave. One of the points urged on behalf
of the appellants was that it was a condition precedent to
the exercise by the State of its power under s. 3 of the
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U.P. Industrial Disputes Act that there could be no
industrial dispute unless there was a subsisting
relationship of an employer and an employee; and inasmuch as
the appellant had sold its mills and discharged the workmen
on 21st March 1951 no question of any relationship of
employer and employee surviving thereafter could arise and
the notification under S. 3 of the Act on November 16, 1951
was incompetent.
It was pointed out by this Court that the entire scheme of
the Act assumed that there was in existence a dispute and
"the provisions of the Act relating to lock-out, strike, lay
off, retrenchment, conciliation and adjudication proceedings
the period during which the awards are to be in force have
meaning only if they refer to an industry which is running
and not one which is closed." Reference was made to Messrs
Burn & Co. Ltd. v. Their Workmen(1) and the observation of
this Court that the object of all labour legislation was
firstly to ensure fair terms to the workmen, and secondly to
(1) [1956] S.C.R. 781.
559
prevent disputes between employers and employees, so that
production might not be adversely affected and the larger
interests of the public might not suffer. Both these
objects can have their fulfillment only in an existing
industry and not a dead industry. The Court observed that
if the contention of the workmen that the management by
their letters dated January 3, 1951 and January 10, 1951 had
agreed to make payments to them was well founded, the
dispute related to a claim which arose while the industry
was in existence and between persons who stood in the
relationship of employer and employees, and that would
clearly be an industrial dispute as defined in the Act. It
was further remarked that section 3 "only requires, apart
from other conditions, with which we are not concerned, that
there should be an industrial dispute before there can be a
reference, and we have held that it would be an industrial
dispute if it arises out of an existing industry. If that
condition is satisfied, the competence of the State for
taking action under that section is complete, and the fact
that the industry has since been closed can have, no effect
on it." It :Is pertinent to note the Court’s observation
that "if the contention of the appellant was correct there
was nothing to prevent an employer who. intended for good
and commercial reasons to close his business from indulging
on a large-scale any unfair labour practices in
victimisation and in wrongful dismissals and escaping the
consequences thereof by closing down the Industry". The
Court finally held that
". . . . on a true construction of S. 3, the
power of the State to make. a reference under
that section must be determined with reference
not to the date on which it is made but to the
date on which the right which is the subject-
matter of the dispute arises, and that the
machinery provided under the Act would be
available for working out the rights which had accru
ed prior to the dissolution of the
business."
On the merits however this Court held against the agreement
put forward by the workmen and allowed the appeal setting
aside the award of compensation made by the Tribunal.
Turning to Burn & Company’s case (supra) which was decided
by the same Bench of Judges it may be noted that one of the
disputes which led to the reference by the State Government
was regarding bonus claimed by the workers. With regard to
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this the Court observed that the reasons for the grant of
bonus was that the workers should share in the prosperity to
which they have contributed. In The Associated Cement
Companies Ltd. v. Its Workmen(1) it was said that grant of
bonus to workmen was based on a two-fold consideration i.e.
(1) labour was entitled to
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 925 at 955.
560
a share of the profits because it had partially contributed
to the same and (2) it was entitled to claim that the gap
between actual wage and living wage shall within reasonable
limits be filled up.
Banaras Ice Factory Ltd. v. Its Workmen(,) referred to by
the learned counsel for the appellant is clearly
distinguishable. There the question arose as to the
applicability of ss. 22 and 23 of the Industrial Disputes
(Appellate Tribunal) Act, 1950 and referring to the Case of
The Automobile Products of India Ltd. v. Rukmaji Bala (2) it
was pointed out that the object of s. 22 of the said Act was
"to protect the workmen concerned in disputes which formed
the subject-matter of pending proceedings against
victimisation" and 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 these 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 relations between the employer and the
workmen. Clearly these objects_were capable of fulfillment
in a running or continuing industry only and not, in a dead
industry.
In our view the decision of this Court in Hariprasad Shiv-
shankar Shukla v. A. D. Divikar ( 3 ) does not support the
appellant’s contention. The facts in one of the appeals
which was the subject matter of that decision were that the
Barsi Light Railway Company served a notice on its workmen
on November 11, 1953 intimating that as a result of the
Government of India’s decision to terminate the contract of
the railway company and take over the railway from January
1, 1954 the services of all the workmen of the railway
company would be terminated with effect from the afternoon
of December 31, 1953. The notice further showed that the
Government of India intended to employ such of the staff of
the company as would be willing to serve the railway on
terms and conditions which would be notified later. These
were actually intimated by the Railway Board on December 15,
1953. In substance the new terms and conditions as embodied
in the letter and three specified forms stated that the
service of the staff employed by Government would be treated
as continuous for certain specific purposes only, such as
contribution to provident fund,, leave, passes and privilege
ticket orders, educational and medical facilities etc. But
it was made clear that previous service under the railway
company would not count for the purpose of seniority. Soon
thereafter the President of the Railwaymens’ Union filed a
large number of application on behalf of the erstwhile
workmen
(1) [1957] S.C.R. 143.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1241.
(3) [1957] S.C.R. 121.
561
of the railway company under s. 15 of the Payment of Wages
Act, 1936 for payment of retrenchment compensation to the
said workmen under el. (b) of S. 25V of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947. The application were made to the Civil
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Judge of Madha, the authority under the. Payment of Wages
Act. The issues framed by the Civil Judge were-(1) Whether
the authority under the Payment of Wages Act, 1936, had
jurisdiction to deal with and adjudicate on the claim of
retrenchment compensation; (2) whether the erstwhile workmen
were entitled to claim compensation under el. (b) of S. 25F
of the Act; add (3) whether they had been retrenched by
their former employer. The Civil Judge found against the
workmen on issue No. 1 but in their favour on the other two
issues. In writ petition before the High Court of Bombay
the parties agreed that-the matter should be decided on
merits and not on the question of jurisdiction. The High
Court held that the workmen were entitled to claim
compensation under s. 25-F(b) of the Act and the railway
company was liable to pay such compensation. The main
argument turned on the question as to whether the definition
clause regarding retrenchment i.e. s. 2(oo) of the Act,
covered the cases of closure of business when the closure
was real and bona fide. It was in these circumstances that
the court observed that (p. 135)
"........ except perhaps S. 25FF (inserted in
1956...... ) which can be said to bring a
closed or dead industry within the purview of
the Act the provisions of the Act, almost in
their entirely, deal with an existing or
continuing industry. All the provisions
relating to lay off in ss. 25A to 25E are also
inappropriate. in a dead business."
On the question, as to whether on the death of an employer
or on the reconstruction of a company the former business
carried on by the heirs or by the reconstructed company the
workmen would be entitled to retrenchment compensation
though they continued in service as before, this Court
observed that there must be compelling reasons in the words
of the statute before it could be held that such was the
intention of the legislature,.
In our view neither the observation in this case nor in U.P.
Electric Supply Co. Ltd. v. R. K. Shukla and Another(1) have
any application to the facts in the case before us.
Retrenchment has been specially provided for by the
legislature and the questions of closure of an industry and
the transfer of an industry have been expressly provided for
in the Industrial Disputes Act. Although the main purpose
of the Act is to provide for collective settlement of
disputes and maintenance of industrial peace we cannot hold
(1) [1970]-1 S.C.R. 507.
2-L3Sup.CI/72
562
that a tribunal which is called upon to adjudicate on a
dispute relating to a share of the profits earned by the
company in the past on behalf of the workmen becomes functus
offcio or that the dispute becomes incapable of
determination under the Act when the industry is closed.
The claim, as already pointed out is for services rendered
in the past and the dispute was a live one at the time when
the reference was made by the State Government and indeed
continued so for more than three years thereafter. It was
only because of the protracted proceedings of the tribunal
that the award came to be made as late as November 1965.
The closure of the business long after the rendering of the
services by the workmen and the reference of the dispute to
the tribunal cannot wipe out the claim of the workmen or
annul the adjudication in respect thereof.
This brings us to the merits of the case. The profits of
the company for working out the Labour Appellate Tribunal
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Full Bench formula as found by the Tribunal for the relevant
year was Rs. 23,42,352/-. The tribunal however added back
thereto three claims made by the workmen, namely, (1) excess
debit to coal and fuel consumption. 67,817; (2) estimated
revenue for one month Rs. 1,85,519 and (3) notional revenue
on the basis of units produced but not accounted for Rs.
2,50,000/ which would raise the figure of profits to Rs.
28,54,803. We find ourselves unable to accept any of the
above additions made by the tribunal referred to above.
The workmen submitted a number of interrogatories for reply
by the company and one of these related to the break up of
Rs. 59,67,466 shown as coal and fuel in the revenue and
profit and loss account of the company. In their reply the
company gave the following figures :-
1. (a) Contractors bill for carting, stacking and
putting coal into hoppers Rs. 6,67,477-68
(b) Contractors bill for crushing coal 18,986--39
(c) Miscellaneous charges (being charges for
insurance, rent of land for stacking coal etc.)8,001-50
(d) Proportionate wages to staff 9,063-24
-----------------
7,03,528-81
(e) Price of coal consumed 52,63,938-85
---------------
59,67,467-66
The Company’s witness M. Ghosh gave evidence on this and
other subjects before the tribunal. It-appears that his
examination went on from 27th October 1964 to 10th August
1965. In his examination-in-chief Ghosh referred to various
accounts, prepared from
563
the books of account and records of the company and audited
by a firm of well known chartered accountants. He gave the
figures of coal consumed both at Allahabad and Lucknow and
the average price per metric ton : these were 69,432.02
metric tops in Lucknow at Rs. 45-28 per ton ex-hopper and
60,673-03 metric tons at Allahabad at Rs. 45-42 per ton ex-
hopper. He also said that the cost of fuel oil was Rs.
67,950-02 for the two units. He was closely cross-examined
with regard to the statements produced by him and the
revenue ledgers disclosed by the company. He said in his
cross-examination under date 21st January 1965 that the
figure of Rs. 59,67,467-66 shown -at page 6 of the profit
and loss account included not only Rs. 52,63,938-85
mentioned in the interrogatories but also the other
following items:--
A. Contractors bill for carting stacking and putting coal
into hoppers (including cost of fuel
amounting to Rs 67,950--01) Rs.6,67477-68
B. Contractors bill
for crushing coal 18,986-39
C. Miscellaneous charges (being charges
for insurance, rent of land for
stacking coal etc.) 8,001-50
D. Proportionate wages
to staff 9,063-24
He was closely examined with regard to the accounts and with
respect to many figures when he said that without looking
into the journals he could not say what was included in the
sundry’s account. There can belittle doubt that the company
was using a diesel engine for the generation of electricity
the hire of which alone cost the company Rs. 2,00,000 in the
relevant year and mention is made of the use of the diesel
engine in the Directors’ report dated 28th August, 1961.
This is also borne out by the answer to interrogatory No. 4
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submitted by the workmen to the employers. In his cross-
examination Ghosh said that the figure of Rs. 59,67,467-66
had been taken from the revenue ledger of the head office,
and without reference to the revenue account statements he
could not say whether the value shown against coal and fuel
was in respect of the coal consumed or was the amount spent
for purchase of coal during the month. According to him
coal was purchased both at the units and through the head
office., The tribunal wrongly observed that it was for the
first time in his cross-examination that Ghosh had stated
that the contractors’ bill of Rs. 6,67,477-68 included the
cost of fuel amounting to Rs. 67,952-02. As already noted-,
Ghosh in his examination-in-chief had mentioned the cost of
fuel oil at Rs. 67,950-02. The Tribunal also observed that
the company had not produced any record and whatever they
had stated in reply to the interrogatories or in reply to the
workmens’ comments, after inspection, did not
corroborate the statement of Ghosh that out of the
contractors’ bill for Rs. 6,67,477-68 a sum of Rs. 67,952-02
was in respect of the cost of fuel oil. The tribunal went
by the two certificates Exs. E-2 and E-3 issued by the
chartered accountants both dated 22nd December 1961 giving
the figures of coal consumed at the two
564
generating stations and their average price per metric ton
and on that basis reached the conclusion that the company
had spent Rs. 58,99,650-90 on fuel for, the relevant year
and,contrasting this figure with Rs. 59,67,467-66 concluded
that there was an excess expenditure on this item in the sum
of Rs. 67,817.
In our view the Tribunal’s conclusion cannot be accepted.
It was the same firm of chartered accountants who issued
Exs. E-2 and E-3 who were responsible for preparation of
the balance sheet and profit and loss account of the company
which were accepted by the income-tax department. While it
is true that merely because a figure is to be found in the
audited balance sheet of the company an industrial tribunal
is not bound to accept’ the said figure if challenged It
must be said that when the figures for expenses incurred in
connection with fuel given in the balance sheet are also
deposed to by a witness who gives the break-up thereof and
says even in his examination-in-chief that the cost of fuel
oil was Rs. 67,950-02 which is repeated in cross-examination
and the witness is not asked in particular as to how this
figure was arrived at, although the witness was examined for
nearly 10 months, the tribunal should not have discarded his
evidence on this point. The break-up of the figure Rs.
59,67,467-66 was disclosed aS early as 25th August 1962 of
which Rs. 7,03,528-81 accounted for (1) contractors bills
for carting, stacking and putting coal into hoppers, (2)
contractors bill for crushing coal, (3) miscellaneous
charges (4) proportionate wages to staff and (5) price of
coal consumed and the books of account and records of the
company were made available for inspection to the workers.
In these circumstances the different figures of the break-up
should not have been disregarded by the tribunal : more so,
because the chartered accountants were giving certificates
only in respect to the expenses for coal delivered into the
hoppers. in the accounting year. It being undisputed that
the company was using a diesel plant for generating
electricity it would be surprising if no expenses were
incurred for purchasing the diesel oil to run it with. It
may be that in the different accounts of the company cost of
fuel oil was not separately recorded but was put under the
general head of raw material for running and working the
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turbines namely, coal. Not one of the several witnesses
examined on behalf of the workmen had made any statement
that fuel oil was not required by the company for the
relevant year of account. In our view, the figure of Rs.
59,67,467-66 as shown in the balance sheet should have ,been
accepted by the tribunal from which there should have been
no deduction of the figure Rs. 67,817.
The Tribunal added back a sum of Rs. 1,85,519/- to the
figure of profits on the ground that the company had
included only the revenue of II months and not of 12 months
as it should
565
have done for the working out of the Full Bench formula.
The preliminary objection of the workmen before the
examination of the witnesses was that the revenue on account
of light and power shown in the revenue account was much
less than the real revenue as it did not take into account
various items of revenue. After inspection of the accounts,
the workmen filed a specific objection that one months
revenue amounting to Rs. 1,85,519-14 had not been accounted
for and the profits had been reduced to the said extent.
According to the appellant this discrepancy is accounted for
by the fact that it changed its system of accounting in
February 1962 which was given effect to from the month of
January 1962. One of the witnesses for the workmen A. P.
Saxena who was an old account clerk of the company gave
evidence to the effect that it was his duty to prepare bills
of all bulk supply consumers, temporary connections and
sundry sales and that it was also his duty to maintain bulk
supply consumer ledgers and prepare its summary every month.
He added that :
"In the disputed year through office order No.
12 dated 23-2-61 the revenue on account of all
bulk supply came to be entered in the month
subsequent to the month in which it had
accrued. This practice is still continuing.
This change came about in January 1961. Prior
to January 1961, the revenue was entered in
the month in which it accrued. The result of
this change was that the revenue for March
1961 amounting to Its. 1,85,519-14 was taken
as the revenue of the succeeding year and in
the disputed year revenue from bulk supply
consumers was shown for only 11 months. In
the bulk supply ledger the income from bulk
supply consumers for January 1961 is shown as-
blank. In the consumer ledger summary for
January 1961 also the entry against bulk
supply consumers is blank."
In his cross-examination he admitted that the bill on
account of bulk supply consumed in January 1961 was sent in
February 1961. This is also borne out by two office orders
dated 15th February 1961 and 23rd February 1961. According
to the first, the revenue statistics for the month of March
was to be sent by the latest by 3rd of April. This was also
emphasised on by the document dated 23rd February 1961 that
bills for bulk supply and cinema and other categories of
consumers should be completed by the third week of March
1961 and in order that this may be facilitated the meter
readings taken in the month of March or February should be
debited in the months of March or February notwithstanding
that such meter reading might relate to he consumption for
the month of January. It is not as if the company was
depriving the workmen of the benefit of one month’s revenue
566
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as regards the bonus due to them. What really happened was
that for the year ending March 1961 only II months’ revenue
was taken into account and the bill for the month of March
for bulk supplies etc. was sent in April 1961. Whatever
income the company had for such supply in the month of March
was taken into account in the succeeding year. The non-
inclusion of one month’s revenue in respect of bulk supplies
etc. was bonafide caused by the switching over to a
different basis of accounting which the employer could
lawfully have done and the tribunal was not justified in
adding back the sum of Rs. 1,85,519-14 to the profits as it
had done.
With regard to the third item of Rs. 2,50,000/- added back
to the balance of profit and loss account by the tribunal,
it must be noted that the original claim of the workmen was
that the employers had failed to account for units of
electricity generated of the value of Rs. 28,20,306-50 in
the relevant year of account. After inspection of the
records by the company the, workmen stated that no less than
2,25,62,452 units of energy had not been accounted for at
Allahabad and Lucknow and the minimum value of these units
at 12 p. per unit came to Rs. 28,20,306-50 and the same
should be added back. The reply of the company was that the
unaccounted for units represented the loss in transmission,
distribution and also loss of units due to errors in meters
and leakage in lines and this was a normal and unavoidable
feature in electricity supply undertakings. The workmen
filed statements Exs. W- 1 and W-2 showing the total number
of units generated and purchased by the employers from
others as well as the total number of units sold to
consumers or otherwise used in power stations and
auxiliaries besides the number of units unaccounted for.
They also filed a statement Ex. W-3 showing the revenue
earned during the year. The tribunal found that Exs. W-1
and W-2 were in fact copies of some of the items contained
in Ex. W-31. Ex. W-1 is a chart showing (1) units
generated at Allahabad and Lucknow; (2) units purchased at
Allahabad and Lucknow; (3) units used on power station and
auxiliaries at Allahabad and Lucknow; (4) units sold at
Allahabad and Lucknow; and (5) units unaccounted for at
Allahabad and Lucknow. All the figures ate for the period
April 1960 to March 1961. It is worthy of note that both at
Allahabad and at Lucknow the figures for units unaccounted
for were very high. At Allahabad the highest figure was for
the mouth of January 1961 viz., 2868847 units and at Lucknow
the highest figure was reached- in July 1960, viz., 1739855
units. The lowest figure of units unaccounted for at
Allahabad was reached in February 1961 viz., 138705 while
that for Lucknow was also reached in the same mouth 151764.
The figures of units unaccounted for at both places do not
follow any particular pattern.
567
The figure next below 2868847 for January 1961 for Allahabad
was 1291679 for Allahabad in March 1961, while at Lucknow
the units unaccounted for were well over a million in 6
months out of 12; at Allahabad the million mark was crossed
only on three occasions. The company’s witness, Ghosh,
admitted that in January 1961 the unaccounted for units at
Allahabad were as high as 61.7 per cent of the total units
generated and he only ventured to guess that there was a
heavy loss or waste of energy through breakdown or
unexpected leakages. The Tribunal was alive to the fact
that a certain amount of loss was bound to occur in
transmission, distribution and conversion but took the view
that the same should not have exceeded 10 to 15 per cent of
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the electricity generated, and after allowing a margin of
wastage of about 8 lakhs units out of 28 lakhs unaccounted
for the month of January 1961 at Allahabad he took the view
that the value of 20 lakhs of units at the minimum rate of
12 p. per unit i.e. Rs. 2,50,000 ought to be added back to
the profits. In our view, the tribunal’s approach to the
question was wholly unwarranted. The loss of electric
energy was fairly high in all the months both at Allahabad
and at Lucknow except for one or two months out of the year.
There was no suggestion on behalf of the workmen that
electric energy could have been surreptitiously dealt with
by the company either for depriving the workmen of their
share of the profit or for any other purpose. Electric
energy as is well known cannot be transmitted except through
transmission lines and without any surreptitious manipula-
tion of the meter of which there was no allegation all
energy produced at the power station as also those supplied
to consumers whether in bulk or otherwise would be duly
recorded in the meters. What was not so recorded could only
be due to loss in transmission or conversion. Unusually
high wastage would certainly indicate serious leakage and
inefficient working unless it was explained by some break-
down. But in applying the Full Bench formula the employers
cannot be charged with any notional profits which they
should have made although the formula itself is notional.
In The Associated Cement Companies’ case(1) it was pointed
out by this Court :
"The working of the formula (the Full Bench
formula) begins with the figure of gross
profits taken from the profit and loss account
which were arrived at after payment of wages
and dearness allowance to the employees and
other items of expenditure. As a general rule
the amount of gross profits thus ascertained
is accepted without submitting the statement
of the profit and loss account to a close
scrutiny. If, however, it appears that
entries have been made on the debit side
deliberately and mala, fide to reduce the
amount of gross profits, it would be open to
the tribunal to examine the
568
question and if it is satisfied that the
impugned entries have been made mala fide it
may disallow them."
Approving of the dictum in M/s. J. K. Cotton Manufacturers
Ltd., Kanpur v. Their Workmen(1) that "if managing agents
deliberately divert profits to the selling agents with a
view to deprive labour of their bonus and pay commission to
the selling agents at high rates then certainly the matter
must be taken into consideration in the determination of
available surplus balance" this Court said that :
"It would likewise be open to the parties to
claim the exclusion of items either on the
credit or on the debit side on the ground that
the impugned items are wholly extraneous and
entirely unrelated to, the trading profits of
the year. In considering such a plea the
tribunal must resist the temptation of
dissecting the balance-sheet too minutely or
of attempting to reconstruct it in any manner.
It is only glaring cases where the impugned
item may be patently and obviously extraneous
that a plea for its exclusion should be
entertained. Where the employer makes profits
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in the course of carrying on his trade or
business, it would be unreasonable to inquire
whether each one of the items of the said
profit is related to the contribution made. by
the labour. In such matters the tribunal must
take an overall, practical and common sense
view. Thus it may be stated that as a rule
the gross profits appearing at the foot of
the statement of the profit and loss account
should be taken as the basic figure while,
working out the formula...... once it is
realised that in working out the formula the
bonus year is ’taken as a unit self-sufficient
by itself, the decisions of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal in regard to the refund of
excess profits tax and the adjustment of the
previous year’s depreciation and losses
against the bonus year’s profits must be
treated as logical and sound."
It has never been held by this Court that if through the
inefficiency in the working of the industry ’or by reason of
use of defective machinery or apparatus full profits are not
received with the result that nationally the labour is
deprived of a share thereof, the tribunal adjudicating on.
the question of bonus payable to labour for a particular
year should add back to the gross profits as shown in the
balance sheet the amount of profit lost through the
inefficiency or negligence of the employers.
(1) (1954) L.A.C. 716 at 745.
569
The above remarks apply to the case of adding back of Rs.
2,50,000 for unaccounted units of electrical energy as also
to the figure of Rs. 67,817 added back by the tribunal to
the balance of gross profits of Rs. 23,51,467/-.
If the said three amounts are not to be added back to the
profit according to the, balance sheet we have to start with
the figure of Rs. 23,51,467 in the working sheet. The
tribunal allowed Rs. 5,83,520 as expenses claimed by the
employers as prior charge out of the said figure as also
the notional ;normal depreciation of Rs. 13,16,804. This
would leave a surplus of Rs. 4,51,143/-. The next figure of
prior charge which the Tribunal allowed was. Rs. 2,80,000
at 5 per cent on the share capital while the manage-. ment
claimed it at 6 per cent i.e. Rs. 3,36,000/-. As for back
as 1960 in M/s. Pierce Leslie & Co. Ltd. Kozhikode v. The
Workmen(1) this Court held that a return of 6% is ordinarily
considered to be a fair return on the capital invested in
the case of paid up capital. The Court also said that in a
particular industry where the risk in the business was great
there will be a good cause for providing for 6 per cent.
Our attention was drawn to the case of National Engineering
Industries Ltd. v. Its Workmen ( 2 ). In this case it
appears that the Tribunal had. allowed 7-1/4 per cent on the
paid up capital instead of 8.57 per cent claimed by the
company. Referring to the Associated Cement Company’s case
(supra) that although 6 per cent would be a fair provision
for payment of interest this Court observed that the rule
was not to be regarded as inflexible, and in awarding
interest "if’ the tribunal were to find that it were to
grant 6% interest on paid up capital, nothing or no
appreciable amount would be left for bonus, it can adjust
the rate of interest so as to accommodate reasonably the
claim for bonus and thus meet the demands of both, as
reasonably as possible." The Tribunal awarded 5% interest
basing its conclusion on the fact that in the year 1960-61
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the bank rate of interest was 4% and that-on an earlier
occasion i.e. Adjudication Case No. 57/1958 5% had been
allowed. In our view, the addition of 2 to 3 per cent over
the bank rate is quite proper as formulated in M/s. Pierce
Leslie Company’s case and provision, for 6% interest on paid
up capital is normally quite appropriate. We may in this
connection mention that only very recently in the,’ case of
M/s Bareilly Electricity Supply Co. Ltd. v. The Workmen(3)
this Court had approved of the computation of interest at 6%
on the share capital and we see no reason to depart
therefrom.
It was urged on behalf of the workers that the company had-
been a prosperous one, that it had built up large reserves
and was paying dividend to its shareholders and as such the
proper figure,
(1) [1950] 3 S.C.R. 194.
(2) [1968] 1 S.C.R. 779.
(3) (1972) 2 S.C.R. 241.
570
for interest would be 5 % and not 6 %. In view of the
decisions of this Court we find ourselves unable to accede
to this argument. Allowing return on share capital at 6% we
have to deduct Rs. 3,36,000 from the surplus balance already
mentioned, namely, Rs. 4,51,143 which reduces the balance to
Rs. 1,15, 143/-. In this view of the matter it is not
necessary to go into the question as to whether and if so
what amount should be provided for as prior charges by way
of return on working capital or rehabilitation requirement.
But what we cannot ignore is the statutory contingency
reserve and the statutory development reserve the figures
for which put forward by the company and accepted by the
tribunal were Rs. 1,07,291 and 2,02,709 making a total of
Rs. 3,10,000/-. ’While it is true that these amounts cannot
be considered as prior ,charges for the purpose of finding
out the available surplus, they have to be taken into,
consideration when the question of distribution to the
workers out of the available surplus arises : see Mathura
Prasad Srivastava v. Saugor Electric Supply Co. Ltd.(1).
In this case the tribunal awarded no less than three months’
basic wages by way of bonus. The monthly basic wage bill of
all the employees was between Rs. 74,000 and Rs. 75,000/-.
It was contended on behalf of the workers that if Rs.
2,25,000/- was to be paid as bonus the company would get a
rebate of 45 % thereof by way of income-tax which would give
the company an additional sum of Rs. 1,01,250/- Even so the
available surplus together with this would not be enough to
meet the provision for statutory contingency reserve and
statutory development reserve. Even if we were to provide
for one month’s basic wages by way ,of bonus, there. would
not be enough money in the hands of the ,company to make
provision for the said reserves.
In the result, we must hold that the tribunal went wrong in
allowing any bonus to the workers, on the facts of this
case. The appeals must therefore be allowed and the
provision for payment of bonus in the award set aside. But
in view of the divided success in the appeal, and
particularly in view of the preliminary point as to
jurisdiction which was canvassed at some length on behalf of
the employers, the proper order for costs would be to leave
the parties to meet their own expenses. There will
therefore be no order as to costs.
K.B.N. Appeals allowed.
(1) [1966] 2 L.L.J. 307.
571
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