Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHARAT PETROLEUM CORPORATION LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MAHARASHTRA GENL.KAMGAR UNION & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/12/1998
BENCH:
S.SAGHIR AHMAD, D.P. WADHWA.,
JUDGMENT:
--------
S.SAGHIR AHMAD. J,
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The legal battle which started on a larger plane
between the parties to this appeal. in 1984, has now
narrowed down to only one question, namely, the question
relating to the representation of an employee in the
disciplinary proceedings through another employee who,
though not an employee of the appellant-corporation was,
nevertheless, a member of the Trade Union.
Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd., which is the
appellant before us, was incorporated in 1976.
On 4.12.1985, the appellant submitted Draft Standing Orders
to the Certifying Officer for certification under the
Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946 (for
short, ’the Act’) which were intended to be applicable to
the Marketing Division, Western Region, including its Head
Office at Bombay. On receipt of the Draft Standing Orders,
the Certifying Officer issued notices to various employees’
Unions and after following the statutory procedure and after
giving the parties an opportunity of hearing, certified the
Draft Standing Orders 14.10.1991 by an order passed under
Section 5 of the Act. The Draft Standing Orders, as
submitted by the appellant, were not certified in their
entirety but were modified in various respects.
One of the Clauses of the Draft Standing Orders, which was
not certified by the Certifying Officer, related to the
representation of an employee in the disciplinary
proceedings. The result was that the provision relating to
the representation of an employee, during departmental
proceedings, as contained in the Model Standing Orders,
continued to apply to the appellant’s Establishment.
Aggrieved by the order passed by the Certifying Officer, two
appeals; one by the present appellant and the other by
respondent No.1, were filed before the Appellate Authority
and the latter, by its order dated 23rd of November, 1993,
certified the Standing Orders as final. The Clause relating
to the representation of an employee during disciplinary
proceedings, as set out in the Draft Standing Orders, was
approved and the order of the Certifying Officer, in that
regard, was set aside. The Standing Orders, as finally
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certified by the Appellate Authority, were notified by the
appellant on 30.11.1993 and it was with effect from this
date that they came into force.
The order of the Appellant Authority was challenged by
respondent No.1 in Writ Petition No.231 of 1994 in the
Bombay High Court which admitted the petition on 15.3.1994
but refused the interim relief with the direction that
during the pendency of the Writ Petition, a charge-sheeted
workman would be permitted to be represented at the
departmental enquiry, at his option, by an office bearer of
the Trade Union of which he is a member. Since this order
was contrary to the Standing Orders, as certified by the
Appellate (Civil) No. 12274 of 1994 in which this Court, on
30.9.1994. passed the following Order:-
"Issue notice. Interim stay of the
direction of the High Court by which any Office
bearer of the Union who may not be a workman of the
petitioner corporation is permitted to represent the
delinquent workman. It is made clear that in the
meanwhile, the workman who is an employee of the
petitioner corporation."
By its judgment dated 18.9.1995, this Court set aside
the interim order passed by the Bombay High Court and
directed the High Court to pass a fresh interim order in the
Writ Petition after hearing the parties.
In December, 1995, respondent No. 1 took out a Notice
of Motion but the High Court, by its order dated 11.12.1995,
rejected the same, However, the High Court, by its final
judgment dated 28.6.1996, allowed the Writ Petition and the
order dated 23.11.1993, passed by the Appellate Authority,
by which the Clause relating to the representation of an
employee during the disciplinary proceedings, as contained
in the Draft Standing Orders, was certified, was set aside
and the order dated 14.10.1991, passed by the Certifying
Officer, was maintained. It is against this judgment that
the present appeals have been filed and the only question
with which we are concerned in these appeals is as to
whether an employee, against whom disciplinary proceedings
have been initiated, can claim to be represented by a
person, who, though, is a member of a Trade Union but is not
an employee of the appellant.
Para 14(4)(ba) of the Model Standing Orders, as
framed by the Central Government under the Act for
Industrial Establishments, not being Industrial
Establishments in coal-mines, provides as under:-
"In the enquiry, the workman shall be entitled to
appear in person or to be represented by an office
bearer of a trade union of which he is a member."
Clause 29(4) of the Draft Standing Orders, as
certified by thee Appellate Authority by its judgment dated
23.11.1993, provides as under:-
"29.4 (para-3) : If it is decided to hold an
enquiry the workman concerned will be given an
opportunity to answer the charge/charges and
permitted to be defended by a fellow workman of his
choice, who must be an employee of the Corporation,
The workman defending shall be given necessary time
off for the conduct of the enquiry."
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The vital difference between the Model Standing Orders, as
set out above, and the Draft Standing Orders, as certified
by the Appellate Authority, is that while under the Model
Standing Orders, a workman can be represented in the
departmental proceedings by an office bearer of a Trade
Union of which he is a member, he does not have this right
under the Draft Standing Orders, as certified by the
Appellate Authority, which restrict his right of
representation by a fellow workman of his choice from
amongst the employees of the appellant-Corporation. The
contention of thee learned counsel for the appellant is that
the Model Standing Orders, framed by the Central Government
under the Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Central
Rules, 1946 can operate only during the period of time when
the Standing Orders are not made by the Establishment
itself. If and when those Standing Orders are made which,
in any case, have to be compulsorily made in terms of the
Act, they have to be submitted to the Certifying Officer and
if they are certified, they take effect from the date on
which they are notified and effectively replace the Model
Standing Orders. The order of the Certifying Officer is
appealable before the Appellate Authority and the Appellate
Authority can legally interfere with the order passed by the
Certifying Officer and set it aside or uphold it. There is
no restriction under the Act that the Management or the
Establishment, or, for that matter, the employer would,
adopt the Model Standing Orders. It is contended that the
Standing Orders have only to be in consonance with the Model
Standing Orders besides being fair and reasonable.
The submission of the learned counsel for the respondent
No.1, on the contrary, is that the Standing Orders, as
framed by the Management, have to be on the lines indicated
in the Model Standing Orders and there cannot be a departure
either in principle or policy from the Model Standing
Orders. It is contended that once it was provided by the
Model Standing Orders that an employee of the Corporation
can be represented by an employee of another Establishment
with the only restriction that he should be an office-bearer
of a Trade Union, it was not open to the appellant to have
made a provision in their Standing Orders that an employee
of the Corporation would be represented in the disciplinary
proceedings only by another employee of the Corporation. It
is contended that this departure is impermissible in law
and, therefore, the High Court was justified in setting
aside the order of the Appellant Authority which had
certified the Draft Standing Orders submitted by the
appellant.
The Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act,
1946 was made by the Parliament to require employers of all
industrial Establishments to define formally the conditions
of employment on which the workmen would be engaged as
pointed out by this Court in Salem Erode Electricity
Distribution Company Pvt. Ltd. VS Employees Union, 1966
(1) LLJ 443 = AIR 1966 SC 808 = 1966 (2) SCR 498, followed
by its other decision in Glaxo Laboratories (I) Ltd. vs.
Presiding Officer, Labour Court, Meerut, 1983 Labour &
Industrial Cases 1909 = AIR 1984 SC 505 = 1984 (1) SCC 1.
The object underlying this Act, which is a
beneficent piece of legislation, is to introduce uniformity
of terms and conditions of employment in respect of workmen
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belonging to the same category and discharging same and
similar work under the industrial Establishment and to make
the terms and conditions of industrial employees
well-settled and known to the employees before they accept
the employment.
The Act applies to every Industrial Establishment
wherein hundred or more workmen are employed.
"Model Standing Orders" have been defined in Section
2(ee). They mean standing Orders prescribed under section 15
which gives rule-making power to the appropriate Government
and provides, inter alia, that the Rules so made by the
Government may set out Model Standing Orders for the purpose
of this Act,
Section 12(a) provides as under:-
"12-A. Temporary application of model standing
orders:- (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in
Sections 3 to 12, for the period commencing on the
date on which this Act becomes applicable to an
industrial establishment and ending with the date on
which the standing orders as finally certified under
this Act came into operation under Section 7 in that
establishment, the prescribed model standing orders
shall be deemed to be adopted in that establishment,
and the provisions of section 9, sub-section (2) of
Section 13 and Section 13-A shall apply to such
model standing orders as they apply to the standing
orders so certified.
(2) Nothing contained in sub-section (1) shall apply
to an Industrial Establishment in respect of which
the appropriate Government is the Government of the
State of Gujarat or the Government of the State of
Maharashtra."
This section provides that the Model Standing Order
will be applicable to an Industrial establishment during the
period commencing on the date on which the Act becomes
applicable to that Establishment and the date on which the
standing orders, as finally certified under this Act, come
into operation.
Section 7 of the Act sets out the date on which
the Standing Orders or amendments made thereto would become
operative. It provides as under:-
"7. Date of operation of standing orders or
amendments. -- Standing Order of amendments shall,
unless an appeal is preferred under Section 6, come
into operation on the expiry of thirty days from the
date on which authenticated copies thereof are sent
under sub-section (3) of Section 5, or where an
appeal as aforesaid is preferred, on the expiry of
seven days from the date on which copies of the
order of the appellant authority are sent under
sub-section (2) of Section 6."
The Standing Order are certified under Section 5. The
procedure for certification of the Standing Orders is set
out therein and it will be useful to quote Section 5 at this
stage:-
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"5. Certification of amendments. - (1) On receipt
of the draft under Section 3, the Certifying Officer
shall forward a copy thereof to the trade union, if
any, of the workmen, or where there is no such trade
union, to the workmen in such manner as may be
prescribed or the employer, as the case may be,
together with a notice in the prescribed form
requiring objections, if any, which the workmen, or
employer may desire to make to the draft amendments
to be submitted to him within fifteen days from the
receipt of the notice.
(2) After giving the employer, the workmen
submitting the amendments and the trade union or
such other representatives of the workmen as may be
prescribed an opportunity of being heard the
certifying officer shall decide whether or not any
modification of the draft submitted under
sub-section (1) of Section 3 is necessary, and shall
make an order in writing accordingly.
(3) The Certifying Officer shall thereupon certify
the draft amendments after making any modifications
therein which his order under sub-section (2) may
require, and shall within seven days thereafter send
copies of the model standing orders together with
copies of the certified amendments thereof,
authenticated in the prescribed manner and of his
order under sub-section (2) to the employer and to
the trade union or other prescribed representatives
of the workmen."
The order certifying the Standing Orders is made
under Sub-section (2) and (3) of the Act.
After certifying the Standing Orders or the Draft
Amendments, the Certifying Officer is required to send
copies of the Certified Standing Orders, authenticated in
the prescribed manner, to the employer as also to the Trade
Union or other prescribed representatives of the workmen.
Once the Standing Orders are certified, they constitute the
condition of who ready management *
employment or who may be employed after certification as was
laid down by this Court in Sudhir Chandra Sarkar vs. Tata
iron and Steel Company Ltd. & Ors., AIR 1984 SC 1064 =
(1984) 3 SCC 309 = 1984 (3) SCR 325, wherein reliance was
placed on an earlier decision in Agra Electric Supply
Company Ltd. vs. Alladin, AIR 1970 SC 512 = 1970 (1) SCR
808 = (1869) 2 SCC 598, in which also it was laid down that
the Certified Standing Orders bind all those in employment
at the time of service as well as those who are appointed
thereafter, (see also: Workmen Firestone Trye and Rubber
Company of India Pvt. Ltd. vs. Management, AIR 1973 SC
1227 + 1973 (3) SCR 587 = (1973) 1 SCC 813 and Glaxo
Laboratories (I) Ltd. vs. Presiding Officer, Labour Court,
Meerut, 1983 Labour & Industrial Cases 1909 = AIR 1984 SC
505 = 1984 (1) SCR 230 = (1984) 1 SCC 1).
The order of the Certifying Officer is appealable
under Section 6.
Section 10 provides as under:-
"10. Duration and modification of standing
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orders.(1) Standing Orders or the amendments finally
certified under this Act shall not, except on
agreement between the employer and the workmen or a
trade union or other representative body of the
workmen be liable to modification until the expiry
of six months from the date on which the standing
orders or the amendments or the last modifications
thereof came into operation and where model standing
orders have not been amended as aforesaid, the model
standing orders shall not be liable to such
modification until the expiry of one year from the
date on which they were applied under Section 2-A.
(2) Subject to the provision of sub-section (1), an
employer, or workman or a trade union or other
representative body of the workmen or any prescribed
representative of workmen desiring to modify the
standing orders of the model standing orders
together with the amendments, as finally certified
under this Act, or the model standing orders applied
under Section 2-A, as the case may be, shall make an
application to the certifying Officer in that
behalf, and such application shall be accompanied by
five copies of the standing orders, or the model
standing orders, together with all amendments
thereto as certified under this Act or model
standing orders in which shall be indicated the
modifications proposed to be made and where such
modifications are proposed to be made by agreement
between the employer and workmen or a trade union or
other representative body of the workmen certified
copy of the agreement shall be filed along with the
application.
(3) The foregoing provisions of this Act shall
apply in respect of an application under sub-section
(2) as they apply to the certification of the first
amendments.
(4) Nothing contained in sub-section (2) shall apply
to an industrial establishment in respect of which
the appropriate Government is the Government of the
State of Gujarat."
Section 10 provides for duration and modification of
Model Standing Orders. The Standing Orders finally
certified under the Act cannot be modified except on an
agreement between the employer and the workmen or a Trade
union or other representative body of the workmen until the
expiry of six months from the date on which they came into
operation.
Before coming to the core question, we may first
consider the right of an employee to be represented in the
disciplinary proceedings and the extent of the right.
The basic principle is that an employee has no right
representation in the departmental proceedings by another
person or a lawyer unless the Service Rules specifically
provide for the same. The right to representation is
available only to the extent specifically provided for in
the Rules. For example, Rule 1712 of the Railway
Establishment Code provides as under:
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"The accused railway servant may present his case
with the assistance of any other railway servant
employed on the same railway preparatory to
retirement) on which he is working.
The right to representation, therefore, has been made
available in a restricted way to a delinquent employee. He
has a choice to be represented by another railway employee,
but the choice is restricted to the Railway on which he
himself is working, that is, if he is an employee of the
western Railway, his choice would be restricted to the
employees working on the Western Railway. The choice cannot
be allowed to travel to other Railways.
Similarly, a provision has been made in Rule 14(8)
of the Central Civil Services (Classification, Control &
Appeal) Rules, 1965, where too, an employee has been given
the choice of being represented in the disciplinary
proceedings through a co-employee.
In Kalindi and Ors. vs. Tata Locomotive &
Engineering Company Ltd., AIR 1960 SC 914 = 1960 (3) SCR
407, a Three-Judge Bench observed as under:-
"Accustomed as we are to the practice in the
courts of law to skilful handling of witnesses by
lawyers specially trained in the art of examination
and cross-examination of witnesses, or first
inclination is to think that a fair enquiry demands
that the person accused of an act should have the
assistance of some person, who even if not a lawyer
may be expected to examine and cross-examine
witnesses with a fair amount of skill. We have to
remember however in the first place that these are
not enquiries in a court of law. It is necessary to
remember also that in these enquiries, fairly simple
questions of fact as to whether certain acts of
misconduct were committed by a workman or not only
fall to be considered, and straightforward
questioning which a person of fair intelligence and
knowledge of conditions prevailing in the industry
will be able to do will ordinarily help to elicit
the truth. It may often happen that the accused
workman will be best suited, and fully able to
cross-examine the witnesses who have spoken against
him and to examine witnesses in his favour.
It is helpful to consider in this connection
the fact that ordinarily in enquiries before
domestic tribunals the person accused of any
misconduct conducts his own case. Rules have been
framed by Government as regards the procedure to be
followed in enquiries against their own employees.
No provision is made in these rules that the person
against whom an enquiry is held may be represented
by anybody else. When the general practices adopted
by domestic tribunals is that the person accused
conducts his own case, we are unable to accept an
argument that natural justice demands that in the
case of enquiries into a charge-sheet of misconduct
against a workman he should be represented by a
member of his Union. Besides it is necessary to
remember that if any enquiry is not otherwise fair,
the workman concerned can challenge its validity in
an industrial dispute.
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Our conclusion therefore is that a workman
against whom an enquiry is being held by the
management has no right to be represented at such
enquiry by a representative of his Union: though of
course an employer in his discretion can and may
allow his employee to avail himself of such
assistance."
(Emphasis supplied)
In another decision, namely Dunlop Rubber Company
vs. Workmen, 1965 (2) SCR 139 = AIR 1965 1392 = 1965 (1)
LLJ 426, it was laid down that there was no right to
representation in the disciplinary proceedings by another
person unless the Service Rules specifically provided for
the same.
The matter again came to be considered by a
Three-Judge Bench of this Court in Crescent Dyes and
Chemicals Ltd. vs Ram Naresh Tripathi. (1993) 2 SCR 115 =
1992 Suppl. (3) SCR 559 = 1992 (3) Scale 518, and Ahmadi,
J. (as he then was) in the context of Section 22(ii) of the
Maharashtra Recognition of Trade Unions and Unfair
Labour-Practices Act, 1971, as also in the context of
domestic enquiry, upheld the statutory restrictions imposed
on delinquents choice of representation in the domestic
enquiry through an agent. It was laid down as under:-
"11. A delinquent appearing before a
Tribunal may feel that the right to representation
is implied in the larger entitlement of a fair
hearing based on the rule of natural justice. He
may, therefore, feel that refusal to be represented
by an agent of his choice would tantamount to denial
of natural justice. Ordinarily it is considered
desirable not to restrict this right of
representation by counsel or an agent of one’s
choice but it is a different thing to say that such
a right is an element of the principles of natural
justice and denial thereof would invalidate the
enquiry. Representation through counsel can be
restricted by law as for example, Section 36 of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, and so also by
certified Standing Orders permitted an employee to
be represented by a clerk or workman working in the
same department as the delinquent. So also the right
to representation can be regulated or restricted by
statute."
The earlier decisions in Kalindi & Others vs. Tata
Locomotive & Engineering Co, Ltd. (supra); Dunlop Rubber
Co. vs. Workmen (supra) and Brooke Bond India (p) Ltd. vs
Subba Raman (S.) and another, 1961 (2) LLJ 417, were
followed and it was held that the law in this country does
not concede an absolute right of representation to an
employee as part of his right to be heard. It was further
specified that there is no right to representation as such
unless the company, by its Standing Orders, recognizes such
a right. In this case, it was also laid down that a
delinquent employee has no right to be represented in the
departmental proceedings by a lawyer unless the facts
involved in the disciplinary proceedings were of a complex
nature in which case the assistance of a lawyer could be
permitted.
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We have seriously perused the judgment of the High
Court which, curiously, has treated the decision of this
Court in Crescent Dyes and chemicals Ltd.’s case (supra) as
a decision in favour of the respondent No.1. The process of
reasoning by which this decision has been held to be in
favour of respondent No.1 for coming to the conclusion that
he had a right to be represented by a person who, though an
office-bearer of the Trade Union, was not an employee of the
appellant is absolutely incorrect and we are not prepared to
subscribe to this view. Consequently, we are of the opinion
that the judgment passed by the High Court in so far as it
purports to quash the order of the Appellate Authority, by
which the Draft Standing Orders were certified, cannot be
sustained.
The contention of the learned counsel for Respondent
No. 1 that the Standing Orders as made by the appellant
must conform to the Model Standing Orders cannot be
accepted. It is true that originally the jurisdiction of
the Certifying Officer as also that of the Appellate
Authority was very limited and the only jurisdiction
available to them under the Act was to see whether the
Standing Orders made by the Establishment and submitted for
their certification conformed to the Model Standing Orders.
This required the process of comparison of the Draft
Standing Order with the Model Standing Orders and on
comparison if it was found that the Draft Standing Orders,
the same would be certified even if they were not reasonable
or fair. The workmen practically has no say in the matter
and they would not be listened even if they agitated that
the Draft Standing Orders were not fair or reasonable.
In 1956, radical changes were introduced in the Act
by the Parliament as a result of which not only the scope of
the Act was widened, but jurisdiction was also conferred
upon the Certifying Officer as also the Appellate Authority
to adjudicate upon and decide the question relating to
fairness or reasonableness of any provision of the Standing
Orders.
In the instant case, the Standing Orders as finally
certified cannot be said either to be not in consonance with
the Model Standing Orders or unreasonable or unfair.
Model Standing Orders, no doubt, provided that a
delinquent employee could be represented in the disciplinary
proceedings through another employee who may not be the
employee of the parent establishment to which the delinquent
belongs and may be an employee elsewhere, though he may be a
member of the Trade Union, but this rule of representation
has not been disturbed by the Certified Standing Orders,
inasmuch as it still provides that the delinquent employee
can be represented in the disciplinary proceedings through
an employee. The only embargo is that the representative
should be an employee of the parent establishment. The
choice of the delinquent in selecting his representative is
affected only to the extent that the representative has to
be a co-employee of the same establishment in which the
delinquent is employed. There appears to be some logic
behind this as a co-employee would be fully aware of the
conditions prevailing in the parent establishment, its
Service Rules, including the Standing Orders, and would be
in a better position, than an outsider, to assist the
delinquent in the domestic proceedings for a fair and early
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disposal. The basic features of the Model Standing Orders
are thus retained and the right of representation in the
disciplinary proceedings through another employee is not
altered, affected or taken away. The Standing Orders
conform to all standards of reasonableness and fairness and,
therefore, the Appellate Authority was fully justified in
certifying the Draft Standing Orders as submitted by the
Appellant.
The appeals are consequently allowed. The impugned
judgment dated 28.6.1996, passed by the Bombay High Court,
in so far as it relates to the Clauses in question which is
the subject matter of these appeals, is set aside and the
order passed by the Appellate Authority certifying the Draft
Standing Orders is upheld. There will be no order as to
costs.