Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE BUCKINGHAM AND CARNATIC CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VENKATIAH AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
02/08/1963
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1272 1964 SCR (4) 265
CITATOR INFO :
R 1968 SC 33 (12)
R 1979 SC 582 (6)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Standing Orders-Termination of Service-
Enployee absent without leave-"Employer not to dismiss or
punish employee during period of sickness"-scope and effect
of-Employees State Insurance Act, 1948 (34 of 1948), s. 73,
sub-ss. (1) and (2) and s. 85(d)-Standing Orders No. 8 (ii)
and 13(f)Regulations 53 to 86.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent Venkatiah went on leave for six days and did
-not join duty on the expiry of the leave period but
remained absent without sending to the appellant any
communication for extending his leave. Later, he sent 2
letter to the appellant accompanied by a medical certificate
issued by a Civil Assistant Surgeon in respect of his
illness for a period of nearly two months. The Medical
Officer of the appellant was unable to confirm that he was
ailing for a period of two months. Finding the explanation
for his absence unsatisfactory the appellant refused to take
him back in its employment. Meanwhile he had applied to the
Regional Director of the Employees’ State Insurance
Corporation and obtained cash sickness benefit for the
period covered by the Medical Certificate issued by the
Civil Assistant Surgeon. On the appellant’s refusal to take
him back in its employment, the respondent union, referred
his case for adjudication
18-2 S. C. India/64
266
to the Labour Court and the management of the appellant was
directed to reinstate him. The appellant then moved a writ
petition in the High Court and it was allowed by the learned
single Judge. The respondent then preferred a Letters
Patent Appeal before a Division Bench of the High’ Court.
The appeal was allowed by the Division Bench and the award
passed by the Labour Court was restored. In his appeal
against the said decision the appellant’s main contention in
this Court was that the case of Venkatiah fell squarely
within the provisions of Standing Order 8(ii) and the High
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Court was wrong in holding that the decision of the
appellant in refusing to condone the absence of Venkatiah
was either unfair or improper, or that it contravened the
provisions of s. 73 of the Employees’ State Insurance Act,
1948. The respondent mainly contended that in the present
case the employee received sickness benefit, and so, for the
said sickness, no penalty could be imposed on him.
Held : (i) Standing Order 8(ii) was applicable to the
present case and the fact that the same conduct was dealt
with in two different standing orders, could not affect the
applicability of Standing Order 8(ii) to the present case.
(ii) Whether or not the appellant should have accepted the
certificate of the Civil Assistant Surgeon was primarily for
the appellant to consider; as there was no allegation about
mala fides in this case, it was not open to the High Court,
in exercise of its writ jurisdiction, to consider the
propriety of the conclusion reached by the Labour Court on
this point.
(iii) On a proper construction of s. 73(1) read with
sub-s. (2), it was impossible to invoke s. 73 against the
appellant, because the termination of Venkatiah’s services
had not taken place during the period of his illness for
which he received sickness benefit; the High Court was not
justified in taking the view that the termination of
Venkatiah’s services under S.O. 8(ii) contravened the pro-
visions of s. 73(1).
(iv) The view taken by the Regional Director about the
effect of the Civil Assistant Surgeon’s certificate under
the proviso to regulation 53 could not be said to be binding
on the appellant and in view of the construction put on s.
73(1), there was no inconsistency between the said section
and Standing Order 8(ii).
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 874 of 1962.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated January 15, 1962,
of the Madras High Court in Writ Appeal No. 82 of 1959.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, G. B. Pai and B. N. Ghosh, for
the appellant.
267
B. R. Dolia, M. Rajagopalan and K. R. Chaudhuri, for the
respondents.
August 2, 1963. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-The principal question which arises in
this appeal relates to the true scope and effect of the
provisions contained in s. 73 of the Employees’ State
Insurance Act, 1948 (hereinafter called the Act). The
appellant, the Buckingham & Carnatic Co. Ltd., is a company
registered under the Indian Companies Act and its registered
office is at Madras. It has a Textile Mill in Madras City
which employs 14,000 workmen. On January 10, 1957, the
respondent Venkatiah whose case is sponsored by the
respondent Union, the Madras Labour Union, had gone on leave
for six days. Taking into account the intervening holidays,
the said leave expired on January18, 1957. He, however did
not join duty on the 19th January as he should have, but
remained absent without leave without sending to the
appellant any communication for extending his leave. On the
11th March 1957 he sent a letter to the appellant stating
that sometime after reaching his village near Kanigiri he
suffered from fever and dysentery and was treated by the
Civil Assistant Surgeon, Kanigiri. This letter was
accompanied by a certificate issued by the said Civil
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Assistant Surgeon. In this certificate it was stated that
Venkatiah suffered from chronic malaria and dysentery from
January 15 to, March 7, 1957. When he appeared before the
Manager of the Company, he was asked to go to the Senior
Medical Officer of the appellant for examination. The said
Officer examined him and was unable to confirm that he had
been ailing for a period of nearly two months. Acting on
that opinion’ the appellant refused to take back Venkatiah
and when Venkatiah pressed to be taken back, the appellant
informed him on March 23, 1957 that he could not be
reinstated as his explanation for his absence was un-
satisfactory. The case of Venkatiah was treated by the
appellant under Standing Order No. 8(ii) of the Standing
Orders of the appellant.
Meanwhile, Venkatiah had applied to the Employees State
Insurance Corporation and on or about the 15th June 1957 he
obtained cash sickness benefit for the period covered by the
medical certificate issued. by the Civil Assis-
268
tant Surgeon, Kanigiri. The Regional Director to whom
Venkatiah had applied for the said assistance accepted the
said certificate as alternative evidence and directed that
payment may be made to him to the extent permissible under
the Act. Accordingly, Rs. 82-14-00 were paid to him.
When the appellant refused to take back Venkatiah in its
employment, the respondent Union took up his case and it was
referred for adjudication to the Labour Court at Madras as
an industrial dispute (S.P.O. No. A-5411 of 1958). Before
the Labour Court the appellant urged that the reference made
was invalid and it also contended that the termination of
Venkatiah’s services was ’Justified. The Labour Court
rejected the appellants preliminary object-ion about the
invalidity of the reference. It held that if the matter had
to be considered solely by reference to the Standing Orders,
the appellant was entitled to succeed, because it was
justified in acting upon the opinion given by its Medical
Officer in regard to the alleged illness of Venkatiah. When
the said opinion was attacked before the Labour Court, it
observed that it was easy to make, such an attack and it
held that "he was not inclined to accept the correctness of
the criticism in the a absence of any strong evidence to
show that the Medical Officer was prejudiced against the
worker and was motivated with the idea of victimisation".
The respondent, however, succeeded before the Labour Court
primarily on the ground that the decision of the appellant
not to take back Venkatiah was inconsistent with the
provisions of s. 73 of the Act. That is why the Labour
Court directed the management of the appellant to reinstate
Venkatiah within two weeks after its award came into force
without liability to pay back-wages, but with continuity of
service.
After this award was pronounced by, the Labour Court, the
appellant moved the Madras High Court by 2 writ petition and
prayed that the said award be quashed (W.P. No. 716 of
1958). This writ petition was allowed by Mr. Justice
Balkrishna Ayyar. The learned Judge held that s. 73 of the
Act was inapplicable to the present case and found that, in
substance, the labour court had made its award on grounds of
sympathy for Venkatiah rather than on the merits of the
case.. In the result, the said
269
award was set aside by the learned judge. The respondent
challenged the correctness of this decision by a Letters
Patent Appeal before a Division Bench of the Madras High
Court (No. LPA 82 of 1959). The respondent’s appeal was
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allowed by the Division Bench and in consequence, the award
passed by the Labour Court has been restored. The Division
Bench has held that s. 73 applied to the present case and
that made the refusal of the appellant to take back
Venkatiah in its employment illegal. It has also observed
that in refusing to take back Venkatiah the appellant had
not properly discharged its obligation of examining
Venkatiah’s explanation reasonably and that introduced an
infirmity in its decision not to take him back. In ,other
words, according to the Division Bench, the action of the
management amounted to contravention of the provisions of s.
73 of the Act and was otherwise not fair. It is against
this decision that the appellant has come to this Court with
a certificate issued by the Madras High Court under Art.
133(1)(c) of the Constitution.
Mr. Sastri for the appellant contends that the case of
Venkatiah falls squarely within the provisions of Standing
Order 8(ii) and the High Court was in error in holding that
the decision of the appellant in refusing to condone the
absence of Venkatiah was either unfair or improper, or that
it contravened the provisions of s. 73 of the Act. Let us
first examine Standing Order No. 8(ii) before proceeding any
further. The said Standing Order reads thus:
"Absent without Leave: Any employee who
absents himself for eight consecutive working
days without Leave shall be deemed to have
left the Company’s service without notice
thereby terminating his contract of service.
If he gives an explanation to the satisfaction
of the management, the absence shall be
converted into leave without pay or dearness
allowance.
Any employee leaving the Company’s service in
this manner shall have no claim for re-
employment in the Mills.
But if the absence is proved to the
satisfaction of the Management to be one due
to sickness, then such absence shall be
converted into medical leave for such period
as the employee is eligible with the
permissible allowances."
270
This Standing Order is a part of the certified Standing
Orders which had been revised by an arbitration award
between the parties in 1957. The relevant clause clearly
means that if an employee falls within the mischief of its
first part, it follows that the defaulting employee has ter-
minated his contract of service. The first provision in
clause (ii) proceeds on the basis that absence for eight
consecutive days without leave will lead to the inference
that the absentee workman intended to terminate his contract
of service. The certified Standing Orders represent the
relevant terms and conditions of service in a statutory form
and they are binding on the parties at least as much, if not
more, as private contracts embodying similar terms and
conditions of service. It is true that under common law an
inference that an employee has abandoned or relinquished
service is not easily drawn unless from the length of
absence and from other surrounding circumstances an
inference to that effect can be legitimately drawn and it
can be assumed that the employee intended to abandon
service. Abandonment or relinquishment of service is always
a question of intention, and normally, such an intention
cannot be attributed to an employee without adequate
evidence in that behalf. But where parties agree upon the
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terms & conditions of service and they are included in
certified Standing Orders, the doctrines of common law or
considerations of equity would not be relevant. It is then
a matter of construing the relevant term itself. Therefore,
the, first part of Standing Order 8(ii) inevitably leads to
the conclusion that if an employee is absent for eight
consecutive days without leave, he is deemed to have
terminated his contract of service and thus relinquished or
abandoned his employment.
The latter part of this clause, however, provides that the
employee can offer an explanation as to his absence and if
Ms explanation is found to be satisfactory by the
management, his absence will be converted into leave without
pay or dearness allowance. Now this clause is in substance
a proviso to its first part. Before effect is given to the
inference of relinquishment of service which arises from the
first part of the clause, an opportunity is given to the
employee to offer an explanation and if the said explanation
is treated as satisfactory by the management,
271
the inference of termination of contract of service is
rebutted and the leave in question is treated as leave
without pay or dearness allowance. This latter clause
obviously postulates that if the explanation offered by the
employee is not found to be satisfactory by the management,
the inference arising from the first part prevails and the
employee shall be deemed to have terminated his contract of
service with the result that the relationship of master and
servant between the parties would be held to have come to an
end. With the remaining part of the said Standing Order we
are not concerned in this appeal.
It is true that absence without leave for eight consecutive
days is also treated as misconduct under cl. 13(f) of the
Standing Orders. The said clause refers to the said absence
and habitual absence without leave. In other words, the
position under the Standing Orders appears to be that
absence without leave for more than eight consecutive days
can give rise to the termination of the contract of service
either under Standing Order 8(ii) or may lead to the
penalties awardable for misconduct after due enquiry is held
as required by the relevant Standing Order. The fact that
the same conduct is dealt with in two different Standing
Orders cannot affect the applicability of S.O. 8(ii) to the
present case. It is not as if the appellant is bound to
treat Venkatiah’s absence as constituting misconduct under
S.O. 13(f) and proceed to hold an enquiry against him before
terminating his services. Dismissal for misconduct as
defined under S.O. 13 may perhaps have different and more
serious consequences from the termination of service
resulting from S.O. 8(ii). However that may be, if S.O.
8(ii) is applicable, it would be no answer to the
appellant’s case under S.O. 8(ii) to say that S.O. 13(f) is
attracted. This position is not seriously in dispute.
The High Court appears to have taken the view that the
appellant did not act fairly in rejecting Venkatiah’s case
that he was ill and in refusing to act upon the certificate
produced by him in support of his case. It is necessary, in
the first instance, to examine the correctness of this con-
clusion. As we have already indicated, the Civil Assistant
Surgeon no doubt certified on March 7, 1957 that Venkatiah
had suffered from chronic dysentery from janu
272
ary 15 to March 7, 1957, and he added that he was then
completely free from the ailments and was in a fit state of
health to join duty on the 9th March 1957. Incidentally,
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the certificate has been granted at the end of the treatment
and specifically avers that he was fit enough to join on
March 9, 1957. When Venkatiah was examined by the Medical
Officer of the appellant on the 22nd March 1957, thr-
Medical Officer was unable to confirm that he was ill for a
period of nearly two months. The High Court has criticised
this certificate as being vague. In our opinion, by this
certificate the Medical Officer politely suggests that
having regard to the opinion which he formed on examining
Venkatiah on March 22, he was unable to confirm the
certificate issued by the Civil Assistant Surgeon. What
struck the High Court as vague in the certificate is
obviously the result of the desire of the appellant’s Medi-
cal Officer to observe professional courtesy in dealing with
the certificate on which Venkatiah relied. Apart from I
this aspect, however, we do not see how it was open to the
High Court to consider the propriety of the conclusion
reached by the Labour Court on this point. We have already
noticed that the Labour Court has specifically repelled the
criticism made by the respondent against the conduct of the
appellant’s Medical Officer and has held that if the matter
had fallen to be considered only in the light of Standing
Order 8(ii), the appellant would have succeeded. That being
so, it is not easy to see how the respondent’s grievance
against the said finding of the Labour Court could have been
properly upheld by the High Court in exercising its writ
jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the Constitution. Whether or
not the appellant should have accepted the certificate of
the Civil Assistant Surgeon was primarily for the appellant
to consider. It is significant that there is no allegation
about mala fides in this case, and so, we do not think that
the High Court was justified in making a finding against the
appellant on the ground that the appellant had not
discharged its obligation under the Standing Orders of
properly considering the explanation of Venkatiah in regard
to his absence. The High Court was apparently aware of this
position and so, it has stated in the course of its judgment
that it would rest its decision on what it regarded to be
the effect of
273
s. 73 "even assuming that the discharge of the worker in
the instant case was automatic by virtue of the operation of
Standing Order 8(ii), and so, it is to this part of the case
that we must now turn.
Before doing so, however, we may refer to the argument urged
before us by Mr. Dolia for the respondent that it would be
anomalous if it is open to the appellant to reject
Venkatiah’s case that he was ill during the relevant period
when the said case had been accepted by the Corporation-when
it gave him relief under s. 73 and the regulations framed
under the Act. Mr. Dolia relies on the fact that Venkatiah
satisfied the relevant authorities administering the
provisions of the Act that he was ill during the relevant
period, and had, in fact, been given assistance on that
basis, so that for the purposes of the Act he is held to be
ill during that period, and yet the appellant for the
purpose of Standing Order 8(ii) holds that Venkatiah was not
ill. during the same period. It could not be the intention
of the legislature to allow such a glaring anomaly to
prevail, says Mr. Dolia, and so, he suggested that the
appellant was bound to hold that Venkatiah was ill during
the relevant period, having regard to the fact that his
illness had been accepted by the relevant authorities under
the Act. This argument is no doubt, prima facie,
attractive, but before accepting it, it would be necessary
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to find out whether there is any specific provision in the
Act which compels the appellant to accept the view taken by
the relevant authority under the Act when it decided to give
assistance to Venkatiah.
Section 73 of the Act reads asunder :
"Employer not to dismiss or punish employee
during period of sickness, etc.-
(1)No employer shall dismiss, discharge, or
reduce or otherwise punish an employee during
the period the employee is in receipt of
sickness benefit or maternity benefit, nor
shall he, except as provided under the
regulations, dismiss, discharge or reduce or
otherwise punish an employee during the period
he is in receipt of disablement benefit for
temporary disablement or is under medical
treatment for sickness or is absent from work
as a result of illness duly certified in
accordance with the regulations to arise out
274
of the pregnancy or confinement rendering the
employee unfit for work.
(2)No notice of dismissal or discharge or
reduction given to an employee during the
period specified in sub-section (1) shall be
valid or operative."
Mr. Dolia contends that since this Act has been passed for
conferring certain benefits on employees in case of
sickness, maternity and employment injury, it is necessary
that the operative provisions of the Act should receive a
liberal and beneficent construction from the court. It is a
piece of social legislation intended to confer specified
benefits on workmen to whom it applies, and so, it would be
inappropriate to attempt to construe the relevant provisions
in a technical or a narrow sense. This position cannot be
disputed. But in dealing with the plea raised by Mr. Dolia
that the section should be liberally construed, we cannot
overlook the fact that the liberal construction must
ultimately flow from the words used in the section. If the
words used in the section are capable of two constructions
one of which is shown patently to assist the achievement
of the object of the Act, courts would be justified in
preferring that construction to the other which may not be
able to further the object of the Act. But, on the other
hand, if the words used in the section are reasonably
capable of only one construction and are clearly intractable
in regard to the construction for which Mr. Dolia contends,
the doctrine of liberal construction can be of no
assistance.
Mr. Dolia’s suggestion is that the general policy of s. 73
is to prevent dismissal, discharge, reduction or other
punishment being imposed or,. an employee who is ill if it
is shown that he has received sickness benefit. There are
other cases mentioned in this section to which it is not
necessary to refer for the purpose of dealing with Mr.
Dolia’s argument. According to Mr. Dolia, the operation of
s. 73 is confined to cases of illness for instance, and it
prohibits the imposition of any penalty wherever it is shown
that in respect of the illness in question, the employee has
received sickness benefit. In the present case, the
employee has received sickness benefit, and so, for the said
sickness, no penalty can be imposed on him. That, in brief,
is the contention which Mr. Dolia has pressed
275
before us.
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On the other hand, Mr. Sastri argues that the words used in
the section are capable of only one construction. The
section merely prohibits any punitive action being taken
against the employee during the period of his illness, and
he urges that the prohibition is not confined to punitive
action in respect of illness alone but extends to punitive
action in respect of all kinds of misconduct whatever. What
the section says is, during the period that the employee is
ill, no action can be taken against him whatever may be the
cause for the said action.
Mr. Sastri also contended that the clause "during the period
the employee is in receipt of sickness benefit" can cover
the period during which the sickness benefit is actually
received by him, and so, he suggests that since during the
period of Venkatiah’s illness itself no sickness benefit had
been received by him, s. 73(i) is wholly inapplicable. We
are not impressed by this argument. In our opinion, the
clause "during the period the employee is in receipt of
sickness benefit" refers to the period of his actual illness
and requires that for the said period of illness, sickness
benefit should have been received by him. It is quite clear
that in a large majority of cases, sickness benefit would be
applied for and received by the employee after his sickness
is over, and so, to hold that the period there referred to
is the period during which the employee must be ill and must
also receive sickness benefit, would make the section wholly
unworkable. That is why we do not think that the limitation
which Mr. Sastri seeks to introduce by suggesting that
sickness benefit must be paid during the course of illness
itself, can be read into the section.
Even so, what is the effect of s. 73(1) ? In considering
this question, it would be useful to take into account the
provisions of -sub-s. (2). This sub-section provides that
no notice given to an employee during the period specified
in sub-s. (i) shall be valid or operative. Thus, it is
clear that the giving of the notice during the specified
period makes it invalid, and it is remarkable that the
notice is not in regard to dismissal, discharge or reduction
in respect of sickness alone, but it includes all such
notices issued, whatever may be the misconduct justifying
them. Thus,
276
there can be no doubt that the punitive action which is
prohibited by s. 73(1) is not confirmed to punitive action
proceeding on the basis of absence owing to sickness; it is
punitive action proceeding on the basis of all kinds of
misconduct which justifies the imposition of the penalty in
question. What s. 73(1) prohibits is such punitive action
and it limits the extent of the said prohibition to the
period during which the employee is ill. We are free to
confess that the clause is not very happily worded, but it
seems to us that the plain object of the clause is to put a
sort of a moratorium against 211 punitive actions during the
pendency of the employee’s illness. If the employee is ill
and if it appears that he has received sickness benefit for
such illness, during that period of illness no punitive
action can be taken against him. That appears to us to be
the effect of that part of s. 73(1) with which we arc
concerned in the present appeal. If that be so, it is
difficult to invoke s. 73 against the appellant, because the
termination of Venkatiah’s services has not taken place
during the period of his illness for which he received
sickness benefit.
There is another aspect of this question to which it is
necessary to refer. Section 73(1) prohibits the employer
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from dismissing, discharging, reducing or otherwise puni-
shing an employee. This seems to suggest that what is
prohibited is some positive act on the part of the employer,
such as an order passed by him either dismissing, discharg-
ing or reducing or punishing the employee. Where ter-
mination of the employee’s services follows automatically
either from a contract or from a Standing Order by virtue of
the employee’s absence without leave for the specified
period, such termination is not the result of any positive
act or order on the part of the employer, and so to such a
termination the prohibition contained in s. 73(1) would be
inapplicable. Mr. Dolia no doubt contended that the word
’discharge’ occurring in s. 73(1) should be liberally
construed and he argued that termination of service even
under Standing Order 8(ii) should be held to be a discharge
under s. 73(1). We are not prepared to accept this
argument. In considering the question about the true
denotation of the word "discharge" in s. 73(1), it is
relevant to bear in mind the provisions of S. 85(d) of the
Act.
277
Section 85(d) provides that if any person in contravention
of s. 73 or any regulation, dismisses, discharges, reduces
or otherwise punishes an employee, he shall be punishable
with imprisonment which may extend to three months or with
fine which may extend to five hundred rupees, or with both.
In other words, the contravention of s. 73(1) is made penal
bys. 85(d), and so, it Would not be reasonable to put the
widest possible denotation on the word "discharge" ins.
73(1). The word "discharge" in s. 73(1) must,therefore, in
the context, be taken to be a discharge which is the result
of a decision of the employer embodied in an order passed by
him. It may conceivably also include the case of a
discharge where discharge is provided for by a Standing.
Order. In such a case, it may be said that the discharge
flowing from the Standing Order is, in substance, discharge
brought about by the employer with the assistance of the
Standing Order. Even so, it cannot cover the case of
abandonment of service by the employee which is inferred
under Standing, Order 8(ii). Therefore, we do not think the
High Court was justified in taking the view that the
termination of Venkatiah’s services under S.O. 8(ii) to
which the appellant has given effect by refusing to take him
back, contravenes the provisions of s. 73(1).
Mr. Dolia argued that on the appellant’s construction 73(1)
would afford very unsatisfactory and poor protection to the
employees. If all that s. 73(1) does is to prevent any
punitive action being taken against the employee during the
period that he is ill, there is not much of protection given
to him at all, says Mr. Dolia. There is no doubt some force
in this argument: but as we have already observed, the words
used in s. 73(1) read with subs. (2) cannot reasonably lead
to the construction for which, Mr. Dolia contends. It
would, we think, be unreasonable, if not illegitimate, to
construe the relevant section merely on the hypothesis that
the legislature intended to provide a larger protection to
the employees when the said hypothesis cannot be worked out
in the light of the words used by the statute.
By virtue of the power conferred on the State Government by
s. 96 to make rules, certain regulations had been framed
under the Act in 1950. Chapter III of these
278
Regulations deals with the benefit claims. Regulations 53
to 86 in this Chapter are concerned with the certification
and claims for sickness and temporary disablement. Regu-
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lation 54 provides for the persons competent to issue medi-
cal certificate and Regulation 55 required that the Medical
Certificate should be filled in the prescribed form. Regu-
lation 57 deals with the Medical Certificate on first exa-
mination and Regulation 58 refers to the final Medical
Certificate. Regulation 63 prescribes the form of claim for
sickness or temporary disablement. An insured person
intending to claim sickness benefit has to submit the said
form to the appropriate Local Office by post or otherwise.
Regulation 64 lays down that if such a claimant fails to
submit to the appropriate Local Office by post or otherwise
the first medical certificate or any subsequent medical
certificate within the period therein prescribed, he shall
not be eligible for that benefit in respect of the period
indicated thereunder. It is in the light of these
regulations that Regulation 53 has to be considered. This
regulation provides that every insured person claiming
sickness benefit shall furnish evidence of sickness in
respect of the days of his sickness by means of a medical
certificate given by an Insurance Medical Officer in
accordance with the Regulations in the appropriate form.
There is, however, a proviso to Regulation 53 which says
that the Corporation may accept any other evidence of
sickness or temporary disablement if in its opinion the
circumstances of any particular case so justify. In the
present case, the Regional Director has accepted the Civil
Assistant Surge’on’s certificate under the proviso to
regulation 53 when he directed that cash benefit may be paid
to Venkatiah under s. 73(1). Having regard to these
Regulations, it is difficult to see how the view taken by
the Regional Directors about the effect of the certificate
issued by the Civil Assistant Surgeon can be said to be
binding on the appellant. There is no provision in the Act
or the Regulations, to which S. 73(1) refers by which it
could be contended that once the illness of an insured
employee is accepted by the appropriate authority under the
Act, it must automatically be accepted by the employer in
dealing with the said employee’s case under the Standing
Orders. Therefore, the argument that inconsistent results
may follow if two views
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are allowed to be taken about the illness of a given em-
ployee, does not help the appellant. Besides, as we have
already indicated, this argument has hardly any relevance in
view of the construction which we are inclined to put on s.
73(1) of the Act. In view of our construction of the said
section, Mr. Dolia’s argument that there is inconsistency
between the said section and Standing Order 8(ii) also has
no validity.
Before parting with this case, we ought to add that at the
very outset, Mr. Sastri for the appellant made it clear to
us that the appellant was fighting this appeal not so much
to resist the order of reinstatement passed in favour of
Venkatiah as to get a decision from this Court about the
true scope and effect of s. 73(1) of the Act. In other
words, he argued that this case was fought as a test case on
the question of the construction of the said section.
Therefore, when we suggested to Mr. Sastri that the appel-
lant who is a very big prosperous employer should not resist
the reinstatement of a single employee whose case has been
brought to this Court, he assured us that he would recommend
to the employer to take Venkatiah back on the terms
prescribed by the Labour Court in the first instance in this
case.
In the result, the appeal is allowed, the order passed by
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the Division Bench of the Madras, High Court is set aside
and that of the Single Judge restored. There would be no
order as to costs.
Appeal allowed.
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