Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
WORKS MANAGER, CENTRAL RAILWAY WORKSHOP,JHANSI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VISHWANATH AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/10/1969
BENCH:
DUA, I.D.
BENCH:
DUA, I.D.
SHELAT, J.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 488 1970 SCR (2) 726
1969 SCC (3) 95
ACT:
Factories Act, 1948 (63 of 1948)-S. 2(1)-Time keepers-If
workers within the meaning of the section.
HEADNOTE:
In an application under s. 15 of the Payment of Wages Act,
1936 the respondents claimed that they were workers within
the meaning of s. 2(1) of the Factories Act, 1948. The
Additional District Judge found that some of the respondents
were time keepers who maintained attendance of the staff.
job card particulars of the various jobs under operation and
the time sheets of the staff working on various shops
dealing with the production of Railway spare parts and
repairs etc. and that other respondents were head time
keepers entrusted with the task of supervising the work of
other respondents. He, therefore, came to the conclusion
that the work done by the respondents was "incidental to" or
"connected with" the manufacturing process. The High Court
in revision affirmed this order. On the question whether
the respondents fell within the purview of the definition of
"worker" in s. 2(1) of the Factories Act.
HELD : (ii) The conclusion of the Additional District Judge
on the nature of the work of the respondents being one of
fact must be held to be binding on the High Court on
revision and also not open to reassessment on the merits in
this Court on special leave appeal from the order of the
High Court.
(ii) The definition in s. 2(1) is fairly wide because it
takes within its sweep not only persons employed in
manufacturing process but also in cleaning any part of the
machinery or premises used for a manufacturing process and
goes far beyond the direct connection with the manufacturing
process by extending it to other kinds of work which may
either be incidental to or connected with not only the
manufacturing process itself but also the subject of the-
manufacturing process. The definition therefore does not
exclude those employees who were entrusted solely with
clerical duties, if they otherwise fell within the
definition of the word " worker". All legislation in a
welfare state is enacted with the object of promoting
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general welfare, but certain types of enactments are more
responsive to some urgent social demands and also have more
immediate and visible impact on social vices by operating
more directly to achieve social reforms. The Factories Act
belongs to this category and, therefore. demands an
interpretation liberal enough to achieve the legislative
purpose, without doing violence to the language. [728 C-D;
731 B-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal.No. 1644 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
January 18, 1966 of the Allahabad High Court in Civil
Revision Application 24 of 1966.
V. A. Sevid Muhammad and S. P. Nayar, for the appellant.
S. C. Agarwal, R. K. Garg, D. P. Singh and S. Chakravarty.
for respondents Nos. 1 to 28 and 30 to 57.
727
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Dua, J. This appeal by special leave is directed against the
order of a learned Single Judge of the Allahabad High Court
affirming on revision under s. 115 Civil P.C. the order of
the learned Additional District Judge, Jhansi, who had
allowed the respondent’s appeal from the order of the
learned City Magistrate, Jhansi, made on an application
presented by the respondents under s. 15 of the Payment of
Wages Act IV of 1936. The City Magistrate was the
"’authority" appointed under s. 15 and the district court
was the court of appeal under s. 17 of the said Act. The
respondents through the Assistant Secretary of the National
Railway Mazdoor Union Work-shop Branch, Jhansi had asserted
in their application under s. 15 that they were workers
within the meaning of s. 2(1) of the Factories Act (63 of
1948) and complained that they were denied wages for
overtime work done by them on the erroneous ground that they
were not workers within the aforesaid provision. The
learned Magistrate held that the respondents had been
entrusted with purely clerical duties and they were not
connected in any manner with the manufacturing process. On
this conclusion their application was dismissed.
On appeal the learned Additional District Judge disagreed
with this view and came to the conclusion that the work done
by the respondents was incidental to or connected with the
manufacturing process. It was observed in the order that
some of the respondents were entrusted with the duty of
checking the time work of each worker in the workshop, a few
others were timekeepers and the remaining respondents
prepared account sheets on the basis of the time sheets and
did other work incidental to the running of the work-shop
including payment of wages to the staff of the workshop and
the office. The High Court on revision as already observed,
affirmed the order of the learned Additional District Judge.
On appeal in this Court the short question we are called
upon to decide is whether the respondents, who are time-
keepers fall within the purview of the definition of
"worker" as contained in s. 2 (1) of the Factories Act.
The respondents have raised a preliminary objection that
the appeal is incompetent on the ground that respondent No,
29 (T. A. Kolalkar) had died after the order of the High
Court but his name continued to appear in the array of
respondents. As his legal representatives had not been
brought on the record, the appeal against him is incompetent
and since there was a joint application on behalf of all
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the respondents which was dealt with and decided by a common
order by the learned Magistrate, the appeal against the
other respondents must also be held to be incompetent. The
impugned order having become final as the
728
deceased T. A. Kolalkar, the present appeal against other
respondents should, according to the argument, be held to be
incompetent because the reversal of the impugned order as
against them would give rise to conflicting decisions on the
point. Recently this Court disallowed.a similar objection
in Indian Oxygen Ltd. v. Shri Rani Adhar Singhand others(1)
and when the attention of the respondent’s learned counsel
was drawn to that decision, the objection was not seriously
pressed. We now turn to the merits of the appeal. The word
"worker" is defined in s. 2(1) of the Factories Act to mean
"a person employed directly or through any agency, whether
for wages or not, in any manufacturing process, or in
cleaning any part of the machinery or premises used for a
manufacturing process, or in any other kind of work
incidental to, or connected with, the manufacturing process,
or the subject of the manufacturing process." This
definition seems to us to be fairly wide because it takes
within its sweep not only persons employed in any manu-
facturing process but also in cleaning any part of the
machinery or premises used for a manufacturing process and
goes far beyond the direct connection with the manufacturing
process by extending it to other kinds of work which may
either be incidental to or connected with not only the
manufacturing process itself but also the subject of the
manufacturing process. The word " manufacturing process" is
defined in s. 2(k) of the Factories Act in fairly wide
language. It means any process for :
"(i) making, altering, repairing, ornamenting,
finishing, packing.. oiling, washing, cleaning
breaking up, demolishing, or otherwise
treating or adapting any article or substance
with a view to its use, sale, transport,
delivery or disposal, or
(ii) pumping oil, water or sewage, or
(iii) generating, transforming or transmitting
power; or
(iv) composing types for printing by letter
press, lithography, photogravure or other
similar process or book binding;
(v) constructing, reconstructing, repairing,
refitting, finishing or breaking up ships or
vessels;"
Now the conclusion of the learned Additional District Judge
on the nature of work of the respondents, which, in our
opinion,
(1) Civil Appeal No. 1444 of 1966 decided on 24th Sept.
1968.
729
being one of fact, must be held to be binding on the High
Court on revision and also not open to reassessment on the
merits in this Court on special leave appeal from the order
of the High Court on revision, is that, the time keepers
prepare the pay sheets of the workshop staff, maintain leave
account, dispose of settlement cases and maintain records
for statistical purposes. Fourteen of the respondents,
according to this conclusion, are timekeepers who maintain
attendance of the staff, job card particulars of the various
jobs under operation and time-sheets of the staff working on
various shops dealing with the production of Railway spare-
parts and repairs etc. Four of the respondents are head
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time-keepers entrusted with the task of supervising the work
of other respondents. The question arises if on this
conclusion it can be held that as a matter of law the
respondents fall outside the definition of "worker" as
contemplated by s. 2( 1) of the Factories Act and that the
High Court erred in dismissing the revision.
The appellant’s learned counsel has submitted that the
expression "incidental to" or "connected with" connotes a
direct connection with the manufacturing process and
therefore if the duties assigned to the respondents have no
such direct connection with the manufacturing process then
they cannot fall within the purview of the word "worker".
In support of his submission lie has referred to some law
dictionaries. In Law Lexicon in British India by Ramanathan
Iyer "incidental power" is stated to be, power that is
directly and immediately appropriate to the existence of the
specific power granted and not one that has a slight or
remote relation to it. The word "incidental" in the
expression "incidental labour" as used in Mechanic’s Lien
Statutes allowing liens for work and labour performed in the
construction, repairs etc. of a building etc. is stated in
this Law Lexicon to mean labour directly done for and
connected with or actually incorporated in the building or
improvement : service indirectly or remotely associated with
the construction work is not covered by this expression.
Reference has next been made by the counsel to the Law
Dictionary by Ballentine where also the expression
"incidental power" is stated in the same terms. In Stroud’s
Judicial Dictionary the meaning of the words "incident" and
"incidental" as used in various English statutes have been
noticed. We do not think they can be of much assistance to
us. The decision in Haydon v. Taylor(1) noticed in this
book at first sight appeared to us to be of some) relevance,
but on going through it, we do not find it to be of much
help in construing the statutory provisions with which we
are concerned. Similarly the decision in Frederick Hayes
Whymper v. John Jones Harney(2) seems to be of little
guidance.
(1) 122 E.R. 554
(2) 144 E.R. 436
730
On behalf of the respondents our attention has been drawn to
a decision of this Court. in Nagpur Electric Light and Power
Co. Ltd. V. Regional Director Employees State Insurance
Corporation Etc.(1). This decision deals with the Employees
State Insurance Act and on a comparison of the definition of
the word "employee" as contained in s. 2(9) of that Act with
the definition of the word "worker" in s. 2 (1) of the
Factories Act, it is observed That the former definition is
wider than the latter. It is further added that the benefit
of the Factories Act does not extend to field workers
working outside the factory whereas the benefit of the
Employees State Insurance Act extends inter alia to the em-
ployees mentioned in s. 2 (9) (i) whether working inside the
factory or establishment or elsewhere. Reliance has,
however, been Placed on behalf of the respondents on the
observations at page 99 of the report where reference is
made to the clerks entrusted with the duty of time-keeping
and it is observed that all these employees are employed in
connection with the work of the factory. A person doing
non-manual work has been held in this case to be included in
the word "employee" within the meaning of s. 2 (9) (i) if
employed in connection with the work of the factory. The
ratio of this decision which is concerned with the construc-
tion of different statutory language intended to serve a
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different object and purpose is of no direct assistance in
construing the definition of the word "worker" as used in
the Factories Act.
The respondents’ counsel has then submitted that the
previous history of the Act throws helpful light on the
legislative intendment and in this connection he has
referred to the definition of the word "worker" in the
Factories Act XXV of 1934. The word "Worker in s. 2 (h) of
that Act was defined to mean :
"a person employed, whether for wages or not,
in any manufacturing process, or in cleaning
any part of the machinery or premises used for
a manufacturing process, or in any other kind
of work whatsoever incidental to or connected
with the manufacturing process or connected
with the subject of the manufacturing
,process, but does not include any person
solely employed in a clerical capacity in any
room or place where no manufacturing process
is being carried on."
It is argued that the deletion of the words conveying exclu-
sion of persons solely employed in a clerical capacity in a
place where no manufacturing process is carried on suggests
that the present definition of "worker" is wide enough to
take within its fold even those persons who are employed
solely in clerical capacity if otherwise they fall within
the definition. The appellant counsel has, on his part, by
reference to tile definition in the Act
(1) [1967] 3 S.C.R. 92
731
of 1934, argued that the deletion of the word "whatsoever"
after " any other kind of work" is indicative of the
legislative intention to restrict the scope of "any other
kind of work" in the current Act.
The Factories Act was enacted to consolidate and amend the,
law regulating labour in factories. It is probably true
that all legislation in a welfare state is enacted with the
object of promoting general welfare; but certain types of
enactments are more responsive to some urgent social demands
and also have more immediate and visible impact on social
vices by operating more directly to achieve social reforms.
The enactments with which we are concerned, in our view,
belong to this category and, there-. fore, demand an
interpretation liberal enough to achieve the legislative
purpose, without doing violence to the language. The
definition of "worker" in the Factories Act, therefore, does
not seem to us to exclude those employees who are entrusted
solely with clerical duties, if they otherwise fall within
the definition of the word "worker". Keeping in view the
duties and functions of the respondents as found by the
learned Additional District Judge, we are unable to find
anything legally wrong with the view taken by the High Court
that they fall within the definition of the, word "worker".
Deletion of the word "whatsoever" on which the appellant’s
counsel has placed reliance does not seem to make much
difference because that word was, in our view, redundant.
We have not been persuaded to hold that the High Court was
in error in affirming the decision of the learned Additional
District Judge. In the result this appeal fails and is
dismissed with costs.
R.K.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
732