Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE PRAKASH COTTON MILLS (PRIVATE) LTD. AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY (NOW MAHARASHTRA)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/02/1961
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 977 1962 SCR (1) 105
CITATOR INFO :
F 1967 SC1450 (5)
ACT:
Bonus-Textile Mills in local area-Agreement for bonus with
specified mills-Award thereon-Extension of award to other
mills in the area-Notification by Government-Validity-
Constitutional validity of enactment Bombay Industrial
Relations Act, 1946 (Bom. 11 of 1947), ss. 95A, 114(2).
HEADNOTE:
The disputes regarding bonus to be paid to the’ workmen of
the appellant mill and other cotton textile mills in Greater
Bombay for the year 1952 and 1953 were referred to the
Industrial Court under the provisions of the Bombay
Industrial Relations Act, 1946, and while the references
were pending, an agreement was arrived at between the Mill-
owners’ Association, Bombay, and the Rashtriya Mills Mazdoor
Sangh, a Representative Union of workmen in the cotton
textile industry with respect, to payment of bonus for the
years 1952 to 1957, providing inter alia for payment of
bonus even where a mill made actual loss, the minimum bonus
being 4.8 per cent., of the basic wages earned during the
year, subject to such mill being entitled to adjust the
amount thus paid by it as the minimum bonus against any
available surplus in any subsequent year or years. This
agreement was registered and was made enforceable as an
award
(1) L.L.R. [1948] Nag. 95o.
(2) A.I.R. 1937 Mad. 763.
106
against those mills which were parties thereto. The
appellant; however, did not sign, the agreement, and its
case before the Industrial Court was that it had been
continuously making losses from 1950 to 1955. On July 31,
1956, the Government of Bombay issued a notification under
s. 114(2) Of the Act directing that the award made by the
Industrial Court aforesaid, for payment of bonus for the
years 1952 and 1953 and also for the years 1954 to 1957 be
enforced against the appellant. The appellant challenged
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the validity of s. 114 on the grounds (1) that it offended
Art. 14 Of the Constitution inasmuch as it gave an unguided
and arbitrary power to the State Government to discriminate
between various sets of employers and employees and make an
order on any one set at its pleasure leaving out others, (2)
that it offended Art. 19(i)(g) in that it put an unrea-
sonable restriction on a person’s right to carry on
business, and (3) that it prevented a party from having an
industrial dispute decided by an Industrial Court under the
Act. In any event, the appellant contended that the
notification was bad, because (a) it was made while a
reference was pending in an Industrial Court and, therefore,
took away the jurisdiction of, that Court to decide the
pending references and (b) the notification went beyond the
powers conferred on the State Government by s. 114 since
under that section the Government was bound by the decisions
of the Full Bench in view of s. 95A, but in the present case
it ignored a decision of the Full Bench which provided that
no bonus would be payable by an employer where it had made
no profits.
Held (Sarkar, j., dissenting), that the notification dated
July 31, 1956, was beyond the powers conferred on the State
Government under s. 114(2) Of the Bombay Industrial
Relations Act, 1946, and must, therefore, be struck down,
There are three limitations on. the power of the State
Government when acting under s. 114(2): (1) that it is
limited by the subject-matter of the agreements, or
settlement, submission or award sought to be extended, (2)
that it has to be in conformity with the industrial law laid
down by the Full Bench of the Industrial Court and also by
any decision of the Supreme Court, and (3) that the State
Government’s power to make a direction under that section is
co-terminus-with the power of an adjudicator and the State
cannot do ’what an ’adjudicator cannot do under the Act.
Action taken by the State Government under s. 114(2) is a
proceeding under the Act within the meaning Of s. 95A of the
Act.
The New Maneckchowk Spining Co. Ltd. and others v. The
Textile Labouy Association, [1961] 3 S.C.R. I, relied on.
Per Sarkar, J.-(1) Section 114 of the Bombay Industrial
Relations Act, 1946, does not offend Art. 14 Of the
Constitution. The object of the Act is the settlement of
industrial disputes and
107
attainment of industrial peace and the section does not
confer absolute and arbitrary power.
(2) The restrictions imposed by s. 114(2) are reasonable
and have been put in the interest of the general public.
Consequently, the section does not contravene Art. 19(i)(g).
Bijay Cotton Mills Ltd. v. The State of Ajmer, [1955] 1
S.C.R. 752, referred to.
(3) The provisions of the Act must be read together and in
cases in which power under s. 114(2): has been exercised,
the right to ask for an adjudication by an Industrial Court
must be considered either as taken away or unavailing.
(4) The issue of a notification under s. 114(2) is not a
proceeding as contemplated by s. 95A and, therefore, any
question of complying with any Full Bench decision does not
arise.
(5) Section 114 directly permits and contemplates a
notification which would produce a result in variance with a
decision of the Supreme Court and, therefore, a notification
duly issued under that section cannot be said to have been
issued, mala fide.
Muir Mills Co. Ltd. v. Suti Mills Mazdoor Union, Kanpur,
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[1955] 1 S.C.R. 991, referred to.
(6) The Act is not invalid and the notification of July 31,
1956, is unobjectionable and cannot be set aside.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 759 of 1957.
Appeal from the judgment and Order dated June 26, 1957, of
the Bombay High Court in Appeal No, 92 of 1956.
J. C. Bhatt, S. N. Andley, J. B. Dadachanji, Rameshuar
Nath and.P. L, Vohra, for the appellants.
R. Ganapathy Iyer and D. Gupta, for respondent.
1961. February 16. The Judgment of Gajendragadkar, Subba
Rao, Wanchoo and Mudholkar, JJ., was delivered by Wanchoo,
J. Sarkar, J., delivered a separate Judgment.
WANCHOO, J.-This appeal by certificate granted by the High
Court of Bombay raises the constitutionality, of s. 114(2)
of the Bombay Industrial Relations Act, No. XI of 1947,
hereinafter called the Act). The brief facts necessary for
present purposes are these.
108
The appellant is a cotton textile mill situate in Bombay.
It is said that the appellant had been continuously making
losses from 1950 to 1955. References were however made
under s. 73-A of the Act by the Rashtriya Mill’ Mazdoor
Sangh, Bombay, in respect of disputes relating to bonus for
the years 1952 and 1953, which are said to be pending before
the Industrial Court, Bombay. The ease of the appellant
before the Industrial Court was that as it had made losses
there was no question of its paying any bonus for the years
in dispute. It seems that at the same time there were cases
relating to bonus of other mills pending before the
Industrial Court and the appellant applied that its case
should be dealt with separately, and this prayer was acceded
to. It seems that while the references were pending, an
agreement was. arrived at between the Mill-owners’
Association, Bombay and the Rashtriya Mill Mazdoor Sangh,
Bombay, with respect to payment of bonus for the years 1952
to 1957 and the agreement was to come into force with
respect to each mill when it was signed by each member mill
of the Mill-owners’ Association. Clause (6) of that agree-
ment provided for payment of bonus even where the profit
made by a mill was not adequate to provide for all prior
charges as per the Full Bench formula evolved by the Labour
Appellate Tribunal in The Mill-owners’ Association, Bombay
v. The Rashtriya Mill Mazdoor Sangh (1) or even where a mill
made actual loss, the minimum bonus being in either of these
two cases 4-8 per cent. of the basic wages. earned during
the year, subject to such mill being entitled to adjust the
amount thus paid by it as the minimum bonus against any
available surplus in any subsequent year or years under the
provisions of the agreement. This agreement was registered
and was made enforceable as an award against those mills
which were parties thereto. The appellant however did not
sign the agreement and therefore it was not enforced as an
award by the Industrial Court against the appellant.
Thereafter the Rashtriya Mill Mazdoor Sangh wrote to the
Government of Bombay requesting that the
(1) [1930] 2 L.L.J. 1247.
109
said award should be enforced against the appellant in
exercise of the powers vested in the Government by s. 114(2)
of the Act. After necessary action under s. 114(2), the
Government of Bombay issued a notification dated July 31,
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1956, directing that the award made by the Industrial Court
on March 13, 1956, for payment of bonus for the years 1952
and 1953 and also for the years 1954 to 1957 be enforced
against the appellant.
This was followed by a writ petition by the appellant in the
High Court challenging the constitutionality of s. 114(2)
and also challenging the power of the State Government to
issue such a notification under that provision. The
petition was however dismissed on October 9, 1956. There
was then an appeal to a Division Bench of the High Court in
which also the appellant failed. The appellant then applied
for a certificate to enable it to file an appeal to this
Court, which was granted and that is how the matter has come
up before us.
Two main points have been urged on behalf of the appellant
before us. In the first place, it is urged that s. 114(2)
is unconstitutional as it violates the fundamental rights
guaranteed under Art. 19(1)(f) and (g) of the Constitution.
In the second place, it is urged that even if s. 114(2) is
constitutional, the notification has gone beyond the powers
conferred on the State Government by that section and
therefore the notification is bad.
We do not think it necessary for purposes of the present
appeal to consider the constitutionality of s. 114(2), for
we have come to the conclusion that the notification is bad
because it goes beyond the powers conferred on the State
Government by that section. This brings us immediately to
the second point that has been urged before us and in that
connection we have to consider the ambit of the power of the
State Government under s. 114(2). Section. 114(2) reads as
follows.-
"In cases in which a Representative Union is a
party to a, registered agreement, or a
settlement, submission or award, the State
Government may,
110
after giving the parties affected an
opportunity of being heard, by notification in
the Official Gazette, direct that such
agreement, settlement, submission or. award
shall be binding upon such other employers and
employees in such industry or occupation in
that local area as may be specified in the
notification:
Provided that before giving a direction under
this section the State Government may, in such
cases as it deems fit, make a reference to the
Industrial Court for its opinion."
The words of s. 114(2) are very general and may at first
blush be open to the interpretation that any agreement,
settlement, submission or award may be extended thereunder
provided it fulfills its terms. But further consideration
shows that there are two obvious limitations on the power of
the State. Government in that behalf. The first limitation
arises out of the subject-matter of the agreement etc., to
be extended. Suppose the agreement etc. deal with (lot us
say) the wages of a certain type of workmen in a certain
mill. Suppose that the agreement etc., are extended to ano-
ther mill where that type of workmen does not exist.
Obviously the agreement cannot be extended in these
circumstances and the power of the State Government is thus
limited by the subject matter of the agreement etc.
The second limitation which again, is obvious arises from
the provisions of law. The proviso to s. 114(2) shows that
before exercising its power under the said section the
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Government can refer the matter to an Industrial Court and
there can be no doubt that an Industrial Court cannot and
will not, advise anything against the law. Section 95-A
makes the determination of any question of law in any order,
decision, award or declaration passed or made, by the Full
Bench of the Industrial Court under the regulations made
under s. 92 binding in all proceedings under the Act. What
is done under s. 114(2) is also a proceeding under the Act
after notice to the parties affected. The State Government
is thus bound by any decision on a question of law while
proceeding under a. 114(2). The
111
policy of the Act underlying s. 95-A therefore lead,,; to
the conclusion that the exercise of power conferred by s.
114(2) has to be in conformity with the industrial law laid
down by the Full Bench of the Industrial Court and also by
any decision of this Court. The State Government therefore
when it passes an order under s. 114(2) must have full
regard to the law as laid down by the legislature and by the
decisions of this Court and cannot pass an order under s.
114(2) which is against such law. Besides, s. 114(2) places
a registered agreement, a settlement, a submission and an
award on the same footing and so if an award has to conform
to s. 95-A as it must so must the other three mentioned
therein. Therefore, when the State Government acts under s.
114(2) it can only do as between the parties before it what
a labour court, an Industrial Court or a wage board can in
law do under the Act. We do not think that s. 114(2)
authorises the State Government to act against the law as
laid down by the legislature or by this Court. Section
114(2) therefore appears to be speedy remedy (dispensing
with all appeals provided under the Act) by which the State
Government may direct that the terms and conditions of
employment in the matter of wages, hours of work and so on
may be the same in a particular industry or occupation in a
particular area as may have been settled between a
representative union and other employers in that area and as
could if necessary be enforced through an award in a case to
which the representative union was a party. There can be no
doubt however that the State Government cannot do under s.
114(2) what an adjudicator has ’no power to award under the
provisions of the Act. Therefore, as we read a, 114(2) we
cannot escape the conclusion that the State Government’s
power to make a direction under that section is co-terminus
with the power of an adjudicator (be it a labour court, an
Industrial Court or a wage board under the Act) to make an
award thereunder, and the State Government cannot under s.
114(2) do what an adjudicator cannot do under the Act. This
being the ambit of the State Government’s power in respect
of giving a direction under a. 114(2),
112
let us now proceed to see whether the impugned notification
is within the ambit of these powers.
By this notification the State Government has directed that
the award dated March 13, 1956, made by the Industrial Court
shall be binding on the appellant and its employees in the
matter of payment of bonus for the years 1952 to 1957 (both
inclusive). It is not in dispute that the said award was
based, on an agreement between the Mill-owners’ Association,
Bombay and the Rashtriya Mill Mazdoor Sangh, Bombay. The
said agreement provided that it would have to be signed by
each member mill of the Mill-owners’ Association before it
would be binding on it and again it is not in dispute that
the appellant-mill though it is a member of the Mill-owners’
Association never signed it. Farther, cl. (6) of the
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agreement provided for payment of minimum bonus even in
cases where there was no adequate profit to provide for all
prior charges as per the Full-Bench formula and also in
cases where a mill had made actual loss on the year’s
working, subject to a proviso as to adjustment. Thus by the
direction given in the impugned notification the appellant
is subjected to payment of bonus even where it has not made
adequate profit to provide for all prior charges or has in
fact made a loss. The contention on behalf of the appellant
is that it would not be open to an Industrial Court to grant
bonus when profit was not adequate to meet all prior charges
or where there was an actual loss and therefore when the
impugned notification made it possible for grant of bonus
even in these cases (for prima facie the appellant had made
losses upto 1955), it directed something which even an
Industrial Court could not do.’ In consequence, it is urged
that the notification inasmuch as it makes this possible is
beyond the powers conferred on the State Government under s.
114(2) because it allows something to be done which even an
Industrial Court could not allow. Reliance in this
connection is placed on the decision of this Court in The
New Manekchowk Spinning. Co. Ltd. and Others v. The Textile
Labour Association (1). In that case this Court was
considering
(1) [1961] 3 S.C.R.
113
a similar agreement relating to Ahmedabad. The Industrial
Court had imposed that agreement after its expiry for one
year on the mills inspite of their contention that they were
not bound to pay any bonus for the years in dispute in view
of the law laid down by this Court in The- Associated Cement
Companies, Limited v. The Workmen (1). After examining the
terms of the agreement then in dispute this Court came to
the conclusion that in view of the law laid down in The
Associated Cement Companies’ case, the Industrial Court had
no jurisdiction to impose that agreement on the mills. It
further held that an agreement of that kind could only
continue by consent of parties. and could not be enforced by
industrial adjudication against the will of any of the
parties. The agreement in the present case directed to be
enforced by the impugned notification is similar in terms
and as held New Manekchowk’s case (2) it could not be
enforced by industrial adjudication against the will of any
of the parties. The power of the State Government under s.
114(2) being co-terminus with the power of an adjudicator
under the Act, such an agreement cannot therefore be
directed to be enforced against the will of the appellant
even under s. 114(2) inasmuch as by doing so the State
Government would be going beyond the powers conferred on it
by that section.The impugned notification therefore must be
held to be bad inasmuch as it goes beyond the powers
conferred on the State Government under s. 114(2) and must
therefore be struggle down.
We therefore allow the appeal with costs and setting aside
the order of the High Court hold that the notification dated
July 31, 1956, is beyond the powers of the State Government
under s. 114(2) and direct that it will not be enforced.
We should however like to make it clear that this decision
will not prejudice the trial of any references with respect
to bonus which may be pending or which may hereafter be made
between the appellant and its employees with respect to
years 1952 to 1957 (both
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 925.
(2) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 1.
114
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inclusive). If such references are pending or are hereafter
made they will be decided in accordance with the decision of
this Court in The Associated Cement Companies’ Case
SARKAR, J.-This appeal arises but of an application made by
the appellants to the High Court at Bombay under Art. 226 of
the Constitution for a writ directing the respondent, the
State’ of Bombay, to forbear from acting upon or enforcing a
certain notification issued by it under a. 114(2) of the
Bombay Industrial Relations Act, 1946. This order was;
sought on two grounds. The first ground was that s. ll4(2)
was ultra vires, illegal and void. The second ground was
that if it was not so, the notification had been issued in
improper exercise of the powers conferred by that provision.
The appellants are a cotton textile mill in Greater Bombay,
a local area under the Act, and its directors and
shareholders. Their application was dismissed by the High
Court and hence the present appeal.
It appears that certain references were pending since 1953
and 1954 under the Act in the Industrial Court between
various cotton textile mills in Greater Bombay and their
employees, in respect of disputes concerning bonus for the
years 1952 and 1953. In these references the employees were
represented by the Rashtriya Mill Mazdoor Sangh, a
Representative Union of workmen in the cotton textile
industry as defined in the Act and a union registered under
it. The appellant mill was a party to these references. On
March 1, 1956, while these references were pending, the
Rashtriya Mill Mazdoor Singh entered into an agreement with
the Mill Owners Association, Bombay, of which fortyseven
cotton textile mills including the appellant mill, were
members, regarding the bonus to be paid to the employees of
these mills for the years 1952 to 1957. This agreement was
subsequently accepted individually by about fortytwo of the
mills who were members of the Association and parties to the
references, and became binding on these mills. This
agreement was later registered under the Act and filed in
the pending references and an award was
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 925.
115
made by the Industrial Court on March 13, 1956, in terms of
it, as between the mills who had individually accepted the
agreement and their employees. The appellant mill did not
accept the agreement and no award was made in the references
concerning it and so far as it was concerned, the references
remained pending.
On July 31, 1956, the respondent made the order which is
challenged in these proceedings. That order was in these
terms:
"Whereas the...Rashtriya Mill Mazdoor Sangh,
Bombay.....is a party to an award dated the
13th March 1956
And whereas the Government of Bombay, con-
siders that the award should be made binding
upon the employers specified in column 1 of
the schedule hereto annexed and their
employees
And whereas the said employers and the Rash-
triya Mill Mazdoor Sangh, Bombay, representing
the said employees being the parties affected
were heard
Now, therefore, in exercise of the powers
conferred by sub-section (2) of section 114 of
the said Act, the Government of Bombay hereby
directs that the said award shall be binding
on the employers specified in column 1 of the
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schedule hereto annexed and their employees in
the matter of payment of bonus for the years
specified against the employers in column 2 of
the said schedule."
The appellant mill was one of the employers men. tioned in
the schedule to the notification and the schedule further
provided that the award would be binding on the appellant
mill and its employees for the years 1952 to 1957, both
inclusive. As a result of this notification the appellant
mill became liable to pay bonus to its employees for the.
years mentioned, in terms of the award based on the
agreement, to neither of which it was a party. The
appellants contend that the appellant mill is not liable to
pay bonus in law as laid down by this Courtin Muir Mills Co.
Ltd. v. Suti Mills Mazdoor Union (1) and by the Full Bench
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 99r.
116
of the Labour Appellate Tribunal, in Mill Owners’
Association, Bombay v. Rashtreeya Mills Mazdoor Sangh (1) as
it has not made any profit for the period commencing from
June 30, 1950, and ending on June 30,1955.
The agreement on which the award was based, adopted a
formula for ascertaining the available surplus of the
profits of an employer and provided for payment of certain
bonus out of it. This bonus, I gather, would have been of a
smaller amount than that payable under the formula laid down
in the cases mentioned earlier. The appellants have no
complaint against this Part of the agreement for,
presumably, under it, they would not be liable to pay any
bonus at all. What they object to is el. 6 of the’
agreement. This clause in substance provided that when no
avai. lable surplus was found to exist according to the for-
mula or even when a mill had incurred loss in a particular
year, it would have to pay its employees "a minimum bonus
equivalent to 4.8 per cent of the basic wages earned by them
during the year", with a right to recoup the bonus so paid,
out of the bonus that would be payable under the agreement
in subsequent years and out of the residue of the surplus
profits then remaining, it would have to pay bonus in terms
of the agreement. The substance of the appellants’ grie-
vance against the notification is that under it the
appellant mill has to pay bonus in terms of cl. 6 of the
agreement even though it has been working at a loss.
The first question is whether s. 114(2) is invalid and
illegal. That section so far as is material is in these
terms:
"S. 114 (1). A registered agreement or a
settlement, submission or award shall be
binding upon all per. sons who are parties
thereto:
(2) In cases in which a Representative Union
is a party to a registered agreement, or a
settlement, submission or award, the State
Government may, after giving the parties
affected an opportunity of
(1) [1950] 2 L.L.J. 1247.
117
being heard, by notification in the Official
Gazette, direct that such agreement,
settlement, submission or award shall be
binding on such other employers or employees
in such industry or occupation in that local
area as may be specified in the notification."
The appellants first challenge the validity of the .section
on the ground that it offends Art. 14 of the Constitution.
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It is said that it gives an unguided and arbitrary power to
the State Government to discriminate between various sets of
employers and employees and make an order on any one set at
its pleasure leaving out others. It seems to me that this
contention is not well-founded. The power given by the
provision is not, in my view, uncontrolled. The object of
the Act clearly is the settlement of industrial disputes and
attainment of industrial peace. Furthermore, under the
section the order can be made on employerS and employees in
a local area which again is a limitation of the power.
Now, a local area is an area notified as such for the
purposes of the Act:- see s. 2(23). The object of this pro-
vision as to local areas is to divide the State into several
areas for better maintenance of industrial peace and to
group together for that purpose, the industries in a region.
If conditions of labour in any area where a large number of
workmen is collected, are uniform, then there is less likely
to be disaffection among them whereas if such conditions are
not the same, the workmen are likely to become restive. It
is well-known that regional considerations are closely
connected with industrial disputes and are of importance for
their settlement.
The local area contemplated by s. 114(2) is obviously the
area in respect of which the Representative Union mentioned
in it has been registered. No reference can be found in the
section to any other local area. Under s. 2(33) a
Representative Union means a union registered as such under
the Act and under s. 13(1) a Representative Union is a union
which has a membership of not less than fifteen per cent. of
the employees in any industry in any local area and
registered for that industry in the area.
118
The agreement, settlement, submission or award mentioned in
the section has to be one to which a Representative Union is
a party. It follows from this that a substantial body of
workmen in an area has come to a decision or become bound by
an award as to a question or questions affecting them.
Therefore, the power under the section can be exercised only
for achieving industrial peace in that area. It is not
unlikely when a substantial section of workmen congregated
in an area have secured certain rights that the other
employees in that area may claim similar rights and this may
disturb industrial peace in that area. The power can be
exercised only for meeting such disturbance and only in the
local area where it occurs.
There are therefore two guiding principles. First, the
power can be exercised only to prevent breach of industrial
peace. Secondly, it can be exercised only in a specified
area if there is a threat to industrial peace there. An
exercise of the power outside the area and for purposes
other than maintenance of industrial peace, would be beyond
the scope of the section. Again, once there is occasion for
legitimate exercise of the power and it is exercised, it
must be exercised in all units of the industry in that local
area in which units the threat to the industrial peace
exists if that would restore the peace. It would be open to
the Courts to correct a discriminatory use of the power or
its use outside the scope of the section. Therefore it does
not seem to me that the section confers unguided and
arbitrary power.
It. is of some interest to state that in the present case
there has been no such discriminatory use of the power or
any use outside the section. The respondent has made the
award binding on all the remaining mills who had not
accepted the agreement and there is evidence that there was:
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threat of breach of industrial peace in these mills.
Then also, I find that the section has conferred the power
on the highest authority, namely, the Government itself.
That would be some guarantee that it would be duly
exercised. This is a further reason for
119
holding that the section does not confer absolute and
arbitrary Power.
The next objection to the section is that it offends Art.
19(1)(g) in that it puts an unreasonable restriction on a
person’s right to carry on business. This contention also
is unacceptable to me. There is no doubt that the section
puts certain restrictions on a person’s right to carry (in
an occupation or business. The real question is whether the
restrictions have been put in the interest of the general
public and are reasonable. That the restrictions have been
put in the interest of the general public seems to me to be
unquestionable. The reason why the restrictions have been
put is that otherwise, industrial peace would be disturbed.
The entire country is interested in industries and,
therefore, in industrial peace. This point requires no
elaboration.,
Then, are the restrictions put, reasonable? It seems to me
that they are. The restrictions are that an agreement;
settlement, award or submission-all of ,Which of course must
be concerning industrial disputes to which a person is not a
party is made binding on him. By an "agreement", the
parties to an industrial dispute settle it themselves. A
"settlement" means a settlement of an industrial dispute
arrived at with the assistance of a conciliator in the
course of conciliation proceedings under the provisions of
the Act. A "submission" is a reference of an industrial
dispute to arbitration. An "award" is an adjudication on an
industrial dispute by the court constituted under the Act.
An agreement, a settlement or a submission is the result of
the free consent of the parties to the dispute. As earlier
stated, the section only applies to an agreement, settlement
or submission to which a Representative Union, which is a
union representing a substantial number of workmen, is a
party. Therefore, the section can apply to an agreement,
settlement or submission which a substantial number of
workmen and an employer has, of their free choice, accepted.
It would follow that such an agreement, settlement or
submission has been considered reasonable by parties
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interested and in the case of a settlement by the con-
ciliator appointed under the Act also. The restrictions
imposed by any of these must therefore be reasonable. An
award, on the other hand, is a decision of a court and can,
therefore, always be expected to be reasonable.
If certain restrictions are reasonable for an employer and
his employees, I suppose it would follow that those
restrictions would be equally reasonable for other employers
and employees and more so, when they are all in the same
neighborhood where the conditions are likely to be more or
less the same. Therefore, it seems to me that the
restrictions imposed by s. 114(2) cannot be said to be
unreasonable.
I have earlier summarised the offending part of the
agreement. I do not think that there is anything
unreasonable there. The employer pays only 4.8 per cent of
the basic wage in the year when he makes no profit with a
right to recoup it in a subsequent and more prosperous year.
The maximum that he has to pay as bonus in the best year is,
I gather, less than what he would have to pay under. the
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formula regarding bonus laid down by this Court. The
agreement extends over 6 years and it would not be
unreasonable to suppose that during_ these years profits
might be made to wipe off the minimum bonus paid in a lean
year. The restrictions put by the present agreement are,
therefore,, in my view quite reasonable.
It may be that in individual cases, which are not likely to
be many, the restrictions may work hardship. But that would
not justify a conclusion that s. 114(2) itself imposes
unreasonable restrictions on a man’s right to carry on his
business or occupation. This view was taken by this Court
in Bijay Cotton Mills v. The, State, of Ajmer (1), where it
was said in respect of the Minimum Wages Act, 1948;
"Individual employers might find it difficult
to carry on the business on the basis of the
minimum wages fixed under the Act but this
must be due entirely to the economic
conditions of these particular employers.
That cannot be a reason for the striking down
the law itself as unreasonable."
(1)...[1955] 1 S.C.R. 752, 755-6.
121
Another ground on which the validity of the section was
challenged was that it prevented a party from having an
industrial dispute decided by an Industrial Court under the
Act. But I do not see that there is an inherent right in a
party to an industrial dispute to have it decided by an
Industrial, Court under the Act. The right to ask for an
adjudication by an Industrial Court is itself created by the
Act. What the Act has given, it can clearly restrict or
take away in any manner it thinks fit. The provisions of
the Act must be read together and in cases in which power
under s. 114(2) has. been exercised, the right to ask for an
adjudication by an Industrial Court must be considered
either as taken away or unavailing.
I thus come to the conclusion that the section is not
invalid for any of the reasons mentioned. I also feel no
doubt that the section was quite within the legislative
competence of the legislature which passed it. I did not
understand the learned counsel for the appellants to contend
to the contrary. I have mentioned the legislative
competence only to dispose of another argument which also, I
think, was aimed at the validity of the section. It was
said that there is no power anywhere to provide for payment
of bonus where in law such bonus is not payable. This argu-
ment is founded on the decision of this Court in the Muir
Mills case (1) where it had been said that no bonus is
payable where no profit has been made. Therefore it is said
that the section authorises payment of bonus where none is
payable in law. This argument seems to me to be
misconceived. If the section is legislatively competent and
otherwise valid, as I think it is, then it cannot be invalid
for the simple reason that it directs payment of bonus
where, as held by this Court, as a matter of adjudication,
none would be payable in law. The law laid down by this
Court is only for application when the question comes up for
adjudication by a court bound by that law. It has no
relevance, in deciding the validity of an otherwise
competent law. The law laid down by any Court cannot take
away legislative competence. The
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 991
122
enactment in question has left the law laid down by this
Court quite unaffected; it will still apply in all cases
where it is applicable.
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Now I proceed to consider the validity of the notification.
As I understood the learned counsel for the appellants, he
put his case on two grounds. He first said that the
notification was invalid as it was made while a reference
was pending in an Industrial Court. The reasoning is that
it is invalid as it takes away the jurisdiction of that
Court to decide the pending reference. I think what I have
earlier said is a sufficient answer to this contention. The
right to have the pending reference proceeded with was given
by the Act. There is nothing to prevent that Act or any
other, from providing that the pending reference shall be
discontinued or become infructuous. If a notification could
be made under the section, as the present argument assumes
it could be, then as to when it could be made, would
certainly depend on the terms of the statute. I find
nothing in the Act to show that a notification could not be
made while a reference was pending and so as to render it
’abortive. Therefore I think that no exception can be taken
to the notification in the present case for the reason that
it was issued while the reference was pending.
The other challenge to the notification does not appear to
have been raised in the High Court. It was based on s. 95A
of the Act which is in these terms:
S.....95A. The determination of any question
of law in any order, decision, award or
declaration passed or made, by the Full Bench
of the Industrial Court, constituted under the
regulations made under s. 92, shall be
recognised as binding and shall be followed.
in all proceedings under this Act.
It is said that the Government in issuing a notification
under s. 114(2) was, in view of s. 95A, bound by the
decisions of the Full Bench but in issuing the present
notification, it ignored a decision of the Full Bench which
provided that no bonus would be payable by an employer where
he had made no profits. Therefore it is contended that the
notification is invalid.
I am unable to accept this argument. I will assume
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that there is Full Bench decision of the kind mentioned. It
is also true that the effect of the notification is to make
the appellant mill pay bonus for a year when it had made no
profit. All this, however, to my mind makes no difference
for, though in issuing a notification under s. 114(2) the
respondent has to give the parties sought to be affected by
it a hearing, there is really no proceeding held within the
meaning of s. 95 A in connection with the issue of the
notification.
All that s. 95A does is to make "the determination of any
question of law" by the Full Bench binding in certain
proceedings. In order that determination of a question of
law may be binding in another proceeding, that proceeding
must raise the same question for, a determination of one
question of law cannot be binding on another question. Now
what is the question when a notification is intended to be
issued under is. 114(2)? The only question is whether it is
necessary for preserving industrial peace in a locality that
a certain agreement, settlement, submission or award should
be made binding on persons who are not parties to it. Such
a question would not be a question of law at all; it would
not be a question which could ever have arisen before the
Full Bench. It would follow that no occasion of being bound
by a determination of a question of law by the Full Bench
can ever arise when the Government is considering whether a
notification under s. 114(2) should be issued.
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It may be that the result of a notification made under s.
114(2) is to create a liability, for example, to pay bonus.
The question of law as to the liability to pay bonus may
have been decided by the Full Bench.
That however cannot make the question arising under s.
114(2) a question whether in law bonus is payable. The
questions remain essentially different. Therefore, it seems
to me, that s. 114(2) does not contemplate a proceeding of
the nature conceived by s. 95A.
Then I find that s. 95A occurs in Chapter XIII of the Act
which is concerned with Industrial Courts. It appears from
the provisions of this chapter that the Industrial Court is
the highest Court contemplated by
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the Act. Under s. 92 it has power to provide by regulations
made by it that it will sit in Benches consisting of more
than one person. Obviously it is intended that when a
question of importance and difficulty arises, the Court will
sit in a larger Bench. Section 95A appears, therefore, to
have been enacted for the purpose that other courts acting
under the Act should follow the decisions of the Full Bench
so that there might be uniformity of law. It was not
intended to have any application to the issue of a
notification under is. 114(2).
It also seems to me that if in issuing a notification under
s. 114(2) the Government were to be bound by the decisions
of the Full Bench, then that section would be rendered
almost completely infructuous. The question whether in view
of s. 95A, in issuing a notification under s. 114(2) the
Government is bound to follow the decisions of the Full
Bench can arise only if s. 114(2) is valid. If s. 114(2) is
valid, an interpretation of a. 95A which renders it
infructuous cannot be correct. The sections of a statute
must be so interpreted as not to affect the operation of one
another.
Let me take the case of an agreement concerning bonus
between employer A and his employees. Now there is nothing
in law to prevent an employer and his employees from making
any agreement they like as to bonus. They may agree that
bonus would he paid at a certain rate even when the employer
has not made any profit. That would be a perfectly valid
agreement. The agreement that was made in this case was of
that kind. It has not been suggested that the agreement was
invalid. Indeed, the fact that it was filed in the pending
references and an award was made in terms of it would put it
beyond doubt that it was unexceptionable for, the award was
made in terms of the agreement as required by s. 115A and it
could not have been so made unless the agreement was in all
respects valid. The Act therefore contemplates an
agreement of this kind.
If the argument of the learned counsel for the appellants is
right, this agreement cannot be made
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binding between B and his employees. Now, first, s. 114(2)
does not say that the agreement contemplated by it must
comply with all decisions of the Full Bench. I find no
justification for adding to the word "agreement" in s.
114(2) the words "provided it is in compliance with
decisions of the Full Bench". Secondly, common experience
would show that when; disputants settle their disputes
themselves by an agreement, they rarely, if ever, make the
agreement strictly in terms of their legal ’rights; they, as
it is said, give and take and adjust matters in their own
way. So cases would be rare where the parties make’ the
agreement strictly in terms of the law laid down’ by the
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Full Bench. Thus if the contention of the appellants is
right, there would practically be no agreement to which s.
114(2) would apply.
Now, what is the law that can be laid down by the Full Bench
regarding right to bonus? It can Only be general principles
as to when it is to be payable and if payable, how the
amount of it is to be calculated. This is what this Court
did in the Muir Mills Case (1) and the subsequent cases
regarding bonus. The actual award of bonus by the Full
Bench on the facts of the case before it, would of course
not be a determination of a question of law. Suppose now
that the agreement between A and his employees was in
compliance with the Full Bench decision. That agreement
must therefore only provide that bonus of a certain amount
would be paid in certain years. I do not find it possible
to conceive of an agreement concerning bonus made after the
Full Bench decision, which does not provide for the amount
of the bonus to be paid but ,only lays down the formula for
calculating what is to be paid, for, the formula is in the
Full Bench decision and does not require to be laid down
afresh. That agreement would be an agreement in compliance
with the-Full Bench decision. Suppose such an agreement
provides for payment of a month’s wage,% as bonus. Now this
agreement is to be made binding on B and his employees. If
the argument that it can be made so binding only if as a
result, B is not made to pay
(1)..[1955] 1 S.C.R. 991.
126
anything more than what he would have to pay under he Full
Bench decision itself, is right then, it seems to be that
the only case in which the agreement can be made so binding
will be that in which the figures for example, of income,
expenses, rehabilitation and a host of other things on which
according to the Full Bench decision the bonus is to be
calculated, are in the case of B absolutely identical with
those in the case of A. If the figures were not so
identical, then in the case of B, a month’s wages may be too
large a bonus according to the Full Bench decision, though
it La just right in the case of A. I do not think that such
identity would ever exist. I think it right to point out
here that under S. 114(2) only the agreement as made can be
extended to become binding on others. There is no power
under it to alter the agreement in any way and then make it
binding. What I have said so far concerning agreements
would apply equally to settlements. Therefore, again almost
all agreements made in terms of the Full Bench decision
would also be taken out of the operation of s. 114(2).
Then I take the case of an award. An award is a decision of
a court adjudicating upon an industrial dispute under the
Act. I do not consider now an award based on an agreement
for such an award would in substance be an agreement and
with agreements, I have already dealt. I will, therefore,
take an award passed as a matter of adjudication. I should
suppose that such an award would be in accordance with the
law as decided by the Full Bench for the decision of the
Full Bench would be binding on the court passing the award
in view of a. 95A. As stated in connection with agreements
such an award would only decide how much bonus, assuming the
dispute to be concerning bonus, would have to be paid; it
would not be laying down any general principle for
calculating bonus for, ex hypothesis those principles have
already been laid down by the Full Bench. Here again, as in
the case of agreements and for the same reason, if the
argument for the appellants is right, the award can be made
binding on employers not parties to it only when the
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relevant figures in the case if both the employers,
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namely, the one who is a party to the award and also the
other on whom the award is sought to be made binding, are
identical. I conceive, such identity would never exist.
As regards submissions, I am unable to see how s. 95A can
have any application at all. Submissions are defined in
s. 66 of the Act which, so far as material, provides, that
"Any employer and a Representative Union may, by a written
agreement, agree to submit any present or future industrial
dispute to ......... arbitration Such agreement shall be
called a submission." It does not appear to me to be
conceivable that the Full Bench could ever have decided
whether such a submission shall be made or not. The making
of a submission involves no question of law. It can be made
only in respect of industrial disputes. Section 66 gives
the parties concerned the right to make it. Clearly, when a
submission by A and his employees is sought to be made
binding on B and his employees, there can be no question of
compliance with any Full Bench decision.
It would, therefore, appear that s. 114(2) would become
almost wholly infructuous if a notification under it could
be issued only where the effect of that would not be to
produce a result which is not in compliance with Full Bench
decisions. It also strikes me that if in issuing the
notification, the Government had to follow the Full Bench
decisions, then the issue of that notification would really
become an adjudication, the Government taking the place of
the Industrial Court. The very same questions would then
arise as would have arisen if the matter had to be decided
by an Industrial Court. I am unable to hold that the inten-
tion was to make the Government itself an Industrial Court.
If an adjudication by a court was necessary then the
Industrial Court was already there and there was no need to
put the duty of adjudication on the Government.
For all these reasons I do not think that in issuing a
notification under s. 114(2) any question of complying with
any Full Bench decision arises. In my view,
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the issue of the notification is not a proceeding as
contemplated by s. 95A.
Lastly, it was contended that the notification under the
section had been issued mala fide. The only reason for this
contention was that the object of such issue was to get
round the decision of this Court in Muir Mills case (1). It
is true that one of the reasons why the Rashtriya Mill
Mazdoor Sangh wanted the notification to be issued was that
it wanted to find a "way out of the situation arising as a
result of the decision of the Supreme Court in Muir Mills
case (1)". But I am not able to agree that makes the
notification mala fide. Apart from the fact that the Sangh
felt that the decision had not helped the industry or the
workmen, which feeling I have no reason to doubt was
perfectly honest, I am unable to see bow, if it is legally
permissible under the statute to do a thing the result of
which would be to get round a decision of this Court, the
doing of it can be said to be mala fide. The Act directly
permits and contemplates a notification which would produce
a result in variance with a decision of this Court. There
has been no misuse of the Act at all. As I have earlier
stated, in the case of bonus the effect of a notification
under s. 114(2) would almost always be to permit something
which is not permitted under the rule laid down in the Muir
Mills case (1). That being so, a notification duly issued
under the section cannot be said to have been issued mala
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fide.
For all these reasons, in my view, the Act is not invalid
and the notification of July 31, 1956, is unobjectionable
and cannot be set aside. I would, therefore, dismiss the
appeal with costs.
By COURT: In accordance with the majority judgment, the
order of the High Court is set aside and the appeal is
allowed with costs.
Appeal allowed.
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 991.
129