Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HINDUSTAN LEVER LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAM MOHAN RAY & ORS. (With connected appeal)
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/03/1973
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
DUA, I.D.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1973 AIR 1156 1973 SCR (3) 924
1973 SCC (4) 141
CITATOR INFO :
D 1975 SC1856 (9)
R 1984 SC 516 (7,20)
ACT:
Industrial Disputes Act (14 of 1947) ss. 9A, 33A and 33C and
4th Schedule items 8, 10 and 11-Scope of Industrial Dispute-
Reference to Tribunal Applications by Workers pending
reference-Disposed of by different Tribunal-Contradictory
findings-Procedure not illegal.
Constitution of India, 1950, Article 136-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
Before September 1966 the marketing Organisation of the
employercompany was in three divisions. Thereafter it was
organised into two divisions. There were extensive and
prolonged consultations between the employer and the
employees but the reorganisation was not approved by the
employees. The new scheme was introduced on the 5th or 6th
September and the industrial dispute arising therefrom was
referred to the Tribunal on 30th September. The workers
presented themselves for work every day and offered to work
according to the old scheme but they were not given any
work. They were told that as long as they refused to work
under the new scheme they would not be paid any wages. Some
workers had voluntarily retired and the vacancies were not
filled. Therefore, pending the adjudication on the
reference already made, seven workers filed applications
under s. 33A of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, alleging
that during the pendency of the adjucation, their service
conditions had been changed adversely and that their salary
for the month of October had not been paid. The Industrial
Tribunal was different in the two cases as also the evidence
let in in the two cases. In the main reference, the
Tribunal held in favour of the employer. With reference to
the applications of the employees, the other Tribunal held
in favour of the employees on the grounds that the
conditions of work had been changed to the workers’
prejudice, that the reorganisation was likely to lead to re-
trenchment, that the matter thus fell under item 10 of
Schedule 4 to the Act and that therefore, the employees were
justified in refusing to work. Both parties appealed to
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this Court,
HELD : On a consideration of the material in each of the
awards ’both the awards should be upheld. [628 A-B]
(1) The evidence given in the main reference not being a
part of the evidence in the applications filed by the
employees it is not open tothis Court to take it into
consideration in deciding the appeals filed by the employer
as against the award in favour of the employees. [628A]
(2) This Court, in considering a matter under Art. 136, does
not ordinarily reassess the evidence on the basis of which
the Tribunalcame to its conclusion. It will interfere
with findings of facts only if they are unsupported by any
evidence or are wholly perverse. [628 D-E]
(3) The reorganisation is neither a change in usage falling
under item 8 of the 4th Schedule to the Act, nor
rationalisation falling under item 10, nor an increase or
reduction in the number of persons employed in any
department falling under item 11; and hence, it was not
necessary to give any notice under s. 9A of the Act. [633
D-E]
625
(a) The employer has a right to organise his work in the
manner he pleases. [631C]
(b) The various decisions show that whether any particular
practice or allowance or concession had become a condition
of service would always depend upon the facts and
circumstances of each case., On the evidence and findings
given by the Tribunal it cannot be held that there has been
any change in the terms and conditions of service of the
workers in this case to their detriment. [633 C-E]
Parry & Company’s [1970], 1 L.L.J. 429; Dharangadhara
Chemical ,Works Ltd., v. Kanju Kalu & Ors. [1955] 1 L.L.J.
316; Chandramalai Estate v. Its Workmen [1960] 2 L.L.J. 243;
The Graham Trading Co. (India) Ltd. v. Its Workmen [1960] 1
S.C.R. 107; Workmen of Hindustan Shipyard Ltd. v. I.T.
[1961] 2 L.L.J. 526; McLeod & Co. v. Its Workmen [1965] 1
L.L.J. 396; Indian Overseas Bank v. Their Workmen [1967-
68] 33 F.J.R. 457; Indian Oxygen Limited v. Udaynath Singh
[1970] 2 L.L.J. 413, Oil & Natural Gas Commission v. Their
Workmen [1972] 42 F.J.R. 551 and Tata Iron & Steel Co. v.
Workmen A.I.R. [1972] S.C. 1917, referred to.
(c) The Tribunal held on the basis of oral as well as
documentary evidence that the contention of the workers that
it was a condition of service of every employee to work for
only one division at a time was not established. The
arrangement of the words and phrases in item 10 shows that
only rationalisation or standardisation or improvement of
plant or technique, which is likely to lead to retrenchment
of workmen that would fall under that item and not mere
rationalisation or standardisation. The retrenchment
contemplated is retrenchment as defined in s. 2(00), which
does not include voluntary retirement of the workmen.
Therefore, the workers cannot make a grievance of the
voluntary retirement and non-filling of vacancies and try to
bring the matter under item 10. The employer had the right
to decide the staff complement and to fill only such jobs as
continued to exist and not automatically replace every
individual. [630 A-H]
Alembic Chemical Works Co. Ltd. v. The Workmen, [1961] 3
S.C.R. 297, referred to..
Therefore, there is no reason for differing from the
findings of the. Tribunal that there has been no change in
usage adversely affecting the workers coming under item 8,
and that there has been no retrenchment under item 10.
[632D]
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(4) The 4th schedule relates to conditions of service for
change of which the notice is to be given, and s. 9(A)
requires the employer to give notice under that section to
the workmen likely to be affected by such. change. The word
’affected’ in the circumstances could only refer to the
workers being adversely affected and unless it could be
shown that the abolition of one department has adversely
affected the workers it cannot be brought under item 11.
[631 A-C]
[The question whether the prolonged and detailed discussion
between the parties was a substantial compliance with the
provisions of s. 9A not decided].[633E]
(5) But the non-payment of wages in the circumstances of
this case amounts to an alteration in the conditions of
service and the fact that the scheme was introduced before
the reference under s. 10 was made does not bar an
application under s. 33A. The tribunal was justified in
coming to the conclusion that this alteration in the
conditions of service could not have been made without the
notice under s. 9A. [634 C-D; 635 B-C]
626
(a) The applications in this case were not for wages due for
the month of September but for October. [634E]
(b) The refusal to pay wages was not a solitary instance in
respect of which an application could have been made under
s. 33C. it was a continued refusal and the cause of action
arises de die in diem. If the refusal of the workers to
work under reorganisation scheme is justified then the
refusal by management to pay unless they work under the
reorganisation scheme would amount to alteration of the
conditions of service of Workers. [634 G-H]
(c) Even if an application had been made under s. 33C the
whole scheme would have been considered and it is not fair
at this distance of time to drive the workers to file
application under that section, the procedure for which
would be the same as under s. 33A, merely on the ground that
the introduction of the scheme had taken place before the
reference to the adjudication was made. [636 B-C]
(d) The Tribunal had found that the reorganisation scheme
had rendered some workers surplus, that the scheme had
seriously prejudiced. the workers, and that the apprehension
of the workers that the reorganisation would result in some
members of the staff becoming surplus had come true. [635 A-
B]
North Brooke Jute Co. Ltd. [1960] 3 S.C.R. 364, National
Coal Co. v. L. P. Dave, [1956] A.I.R. Patna 294, Shama
Biscuit Co. v. Their Workmen [1952] 2 L.L.J. 353, referred
to :
Ram Nath Koeri v. Lakshmi Devi Sugar Mills & Ors. [1956] 2
L.L.J., 11, approved.
(e) If all the evidence which was let in in the main
reference were available to the Tribunal which decided the
applications of the workers, the result might have been
different. But it could not be said that the Tribunal is
wrong in having proceeded to dispose of the matter in the
way it did. [636 A-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 675 to 681
of 1967.
Appeals by special leave from the Award dated March 23 1967
of the Third Industrial Tribunal, West Bengal in Misc.
Cases Nos. 161, 160, 162-64 and 167 of 1966.
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AND
Civil Appeal No. 1759 of 1971
Appeal by special leave from the Award dated August 11, 1969
of the Third Industrial Tribunal, West Bengal, Calcutta in
Case No. VIII:-373 of 1966 published in the Calcutta Gazette
dated 27-9-1969.
S. V. Gupte, G. B. Pai, Bhuvanesh Kumari, B. Ram Rakhjani
and J. B. Dadachanji & Co. for the appellant. (In C.As. 675-
681/67).
V. M. Tarkunde, Rathin Das, Jitendra Sharma and S. K.
Ganguli & Co. for the appellant. (In C.A. 1759/71).
627
V. M. Tarkunde, Jitendra Sharma and Janardan Sharma, for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
ALAGIRISWAMI, J.-The first batch of appeals are by the
Hindustan Lever Ltd. (hereinafter called the Employer) and
Civil Appeal No. 1759 of 1971 is by the Mazdoor Sabha of the
workers of the same employer in its Calcutta Branch.
The Calcutta Branch was concerned only with marketing. From
the year 1956 at least, if not earlier, the company’s
marketing Organisation was in three divisions, the Soaps
Division, the Foods Division and the Toilet Preparations
Division. From 6-9-66 the Company reorganised this
marketing Organisation into two divisions- the Main Lines
Division and the Speciality Lines Division. On 30-9-66 the
Government of West Bengal referred to the Third Industrial
Tribunal the following question for adjudication :
"Is the human rationalisation as a measure of
economic reorganisation of the Company
reflected through job-integration that have
either been effected or proposed to be
effected justified,? To what relief, if any,
are the workmen entitled?"
Pending adjudication of this issue seven workers filed
applications under section 33A of the Industrial Disputes
Act before the same. Tribunal alleging that during the
pendency of the adjudication their service conditions had
been changed adversely and their salary for the month of
October 1966 had not been paid. The Tribunal held in favour
of the workers and passed its award on 23-3-1967. By
special leave granted by this Court the employer has filed
the above 7 appeals. The main reference was finally
disposed of on 11-8-69 by the same Tribunal holding in
favour of the employer and the workers have, therefore,
filed Civil Appeal No. 1759 of 1971 by special leave granted
by this Court.
It should be mentioned that the Presiding Officer of the
Industrial Tribunal was different in the two cases but the
different conclusions arrived at by the two Presiding
Officers were not due to the accident of difference in
personnel. There was a vast mass of evidence let in by the
employer in the main reference on a consideration of which
the Tribunal held in favour of the employer. On the other
hand the evidence in the applications, filed under section
33A of the Industrial Disputes Act, let in by the employer
was meagre and the Tribunal came to the conclusion on the
material available before it that the conditions of work of
workers had been changed to their prejudice, that the
reorganisation was likely to lead to retrenchment and that
the matter thus fell under Item 10 of Schedule IV of the
Industrial Disputes Act. The evi-
628
dence given in the main reference not being part of the
evidence in these 7 cases it is not open to this Court to
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take it into consideration in deciding these 7 appeals. On
an exhaustive consideration of the material in both the
awards we have come to the conclusion that both the awards
should be upheld.
Though the decision in the appeals by the management is
based on the finding of the Tribunal that the conditions of
work had been changed to the disadvantage of the workers,
and the decision in the appeal filed by the workers is in
effect that the conditions have not been so changed, that is
due to the evidence available in the two cases. Mr.
Tarkunde appearing on behalf of the workers in the appeal
filed by them in C.A. No. 1759 of 1971 in effect invited us
to re-assess the evidence in that case. His whole point was
that the reorganisation effected by the management in
September 1966 was one which attracted items 8, 10 and 11 of
the IVth Schedule to the Industrial Disputes Act and as such
a notice in accordance with Rule 34 of the West Bengal
Industrial Disputes Rules and Form (E) appended to those
rules, under section 9A of that Act was necessary. He was
at pains to establish this proposition lest it should effect
the workers in the others 7 appeals filed by the employer.
This Court in considering a matter under Article 136 does
not ordinarily re-assess the evidence on the basis of which
the Tribunal came to its conclusions. It will interfere
with the findings of facts by the Tribunal only if it is
unsupported by any evidence or is wholly perverse. It will
not interfere with findings of the facts if two views are
possible as to the conclusions to be arrived at on the basis
of the evidence even though the conclusions arrived at by
the Tribunal might not commend itself to this Court. Mr.
Tarkunde even indicated that he was not very much interested
in the success of the appeal of the workers in the sense
that he wanted the scheme of reorganisation introduced by
the employer to be dropped. According to him the employer
had the right to reorganise his business subject only to his
compliance with the provisions of section 9A of the
Industrial Disputes Act, which according to him has not been
done in this case. He wanted to establish this proposition
only for laying a foundation for the argument that when
after the introduction of the reorganisation by the employer
the workers refused to work except on the basis of the
previous system of working, they were perfectly within their
rights and it was, therefore, illegal for the management to
have refused to pay them their salary and that this was an
alteration of the conditions of their service during the
pendency of an adjudication of an industrial dispute before
the Industrial Tribunal. But in the view we are taking
regarding the correctness of the award of the Industrial
Tribunal on the applications of the workers under section
33A the workers would probably have no grievance.
629
We shall first of all deal with the appeal by the workers.
Two points were raised by Mr. Tarkunde :
1. That it was necessary to give notice under
section 9A and wait for 21 days before
implementing the scheme of reorganisation, and
2. as notice was necessary, the scheme cannot
be said to be justified when it was
implemented.
As regards nonpayment of wages, as subsidiary points, he
raised the questions
1.the workmen were _justified in refusing to
work under the new scheme, and
2. the non-payment of wages amounted in the
circumstances of the case to an alteration in
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the conditions of service to the prejudice of
workers.
These two are really questions which arise in the appeals
filed by the employer and not in this appeal. According to
Mr. Tarkunde the very fact that three Divisions were sought
to be reduced to two would show that it would increase the
workload on the workmen and result in retrenchment. We do,
not think that the matter could be disposed of on such a
priority consideration. His grievance also was that the
employer had agreed to consult the workers but did not do
so. He also urged that three godowns which previously
existed were reduced to. two godowns and that proved a
greater burden on the Godown Keeper. He further urged that
the Journey Cycles, i.e. the period during which salesmen
were expected to be on tour contacting the various dealers
were increased from 4 weeks to 6 1/2 weeks and that this
also proved a greater burden on the salesmen. He urged that
the Sabha had a reasonable apprehension that there will be
retrenchment if the 612 week cycles were introduced. But he
conceded that this was avoided in actual working. As
already mentioned earlier, he contended that the Sabha has
now no objection to the present arrangement but the employer
contends that conditions are very unstable and they now have
3 and even 4 divisions. According to him the reorganisation
is either a change in usage falling under item 8 of 10th
Schedule to the Act or rationalisation falling under item 10
or increase or education in the number of persons employed
in any department not occasioned by circumstances over which
the employer has no control falling under item 11.
According to him the workers having been accustomed to
working under 3 divisions, reorganisation into 2 divisions
amounted to a change in usage.
He also urged that rationalisation and standardisation per
se would fall under item 10 even if they were not likely to
lead to retrenchment of workmen and only improvement of
plant or technique would require that they should lead to
retrenchment of
8--L761Sup.C.I./73
630
workmen in order to fall. under item IO. A further
submission of his was that standardisation merely meant
standardisation of wages. We are not able to accept this
argument. It appears. to us that the arrangement of words
and phrases in that item shows that only rationalisation or
standardisation or improvement of plant or technique, which
is likely to lead to retrenchment of workmen would fall
under that item. In other words, rationalisation or
standardisation by itself would not fall under item 10
unless it is likely to lead to retrenchment of workmen. The
reference to rationalisation at page 257 of the report of
the Labour Cornmission and the reference to standardisation
of wages in it are not. very helpful in this connection.
Standardisation can be of anything, not necessarily of
wages. It may be standardisation of workload,
standardisation of product, standardisation of working hours
or standardisation of leave privileges. Indeed in one deci-
sion in Alembic Chemical Works Co. Ltd. v. The Workmen(1)
there is reference to standardisation of conditions of
service, standardisation of hours of work, wage structure.
That case itself was concerned with standardisation of
leave. The whole question whether this reorganisation falls
under item 10 depends upon whether it was likely’ to lead to
retrenchment of workmen. On this question, as already
indicated, the two Tribunals have arrived at two different
conclusions. But as already indicated, it depended upon the
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evidence in each case. It is not disputed that the re-
organisation has not resulted in any retrenchment.
Moreover, during the course of rather prolonged negotiations
between the parties the employer made it abundantly clear
again and again that no body would be retrenched. It was
clearly made part and parcel of the scheme of
reorganisation. Hindustan Lever Ltd. being a large
organisation covering the whole of the country there was no
difficulty about giving effect to this reorganisation scheme
without retrenching anybody. It was, however, urged on
behalf of the workers that there have been a number of’
voluntarily induced retirements and ;that many posts were
not filled after the holders of these posts had retired or
left. We are of opinion that the retrenchment contemplated
under item 10 is retrenchment as defined in clause (oo) of
section 2 where it is defined as the termination by the
employer of the service of a workman for any reason what-
soever, otherwise than as a punishment inflicted by way of
disciplinary action, but does not include voluntary
retirement of the workman. The workers cannot, therefore.
make a grievance of the voluntary retirement and non-filling
of vacancies and try to bring it under item 10.
As regards item 1 1 it was urged that as one department out
of three has been abolished, this item applies. Though to
bring the matter under this item the workmen are not
required to show
(1) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 297.
631
that there is increase in the workload, it must be
remembered that the 4th Schedule relates to conditions of
service for change of which notice is to be given and
section 9A requires the employer to give notice under that
section ’to the workmen likely to be affected by such
change. The word ’affected’ in the circumstances could only
refer to the workers being adversely effected and unless it
could be shown that the abolition of one department has
adversely affected the workers it cannot be brought under
item 11. The same consideration applies to the question of
change in usage under item 8. Let us, therefore, see what
was the scheme of reorganisation to which the workers took
exception.
There can be no dispute that the employer has got the right
to organise his work in the manner he pleases as was held in
Parry & Company’s(1) case. As we have pointed out earlier
there was extensive and prolonged consultation between the
parties. The real grievance of the workers seems to be that
the reorganisation of the working did not have their
approval. Before the Tribunal the objection of the Sabha to
the Company’s scheme of reorganisation was that it was a
condition of service. of every employee to work for only one
division at a time after amalgamation of the three companies
and for only one company prior to amalgamation. But the
conditions in the letters of appointment of every worker in
the company show the contrary. The Tribunal also found that
the Salesmen of the company did in fact handle products of
more than one division at, a time in the course of joint
selling operation since 1960. It was admitted that they
also did it in the course of integrated selling in Assam
since 1964 but that is said to be because that was done on
an experimental basis. It was admitted that there are many
employees in different departments of the company who by
virtue of their _jobs cannot be attached to any one
division. The Tribunal, therefore, held on the basis of
oral as well as documentary evidence that the contention of
the workers that it was a condition of service of every
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employee to work for only one division at a time was not
established. It is in evidence that the company on
occasions transferred products from one group to the other
group to meet the business exigencies of the company. After
referring to such instances the Tribunal has held that in
certain cases a system of joint selling of products of the
three divisions by the same salesmen through ’Sales Vans in
several markets in India was adopted. According to the
employer if the three divisional set up had ’been continued,
it would have adversely affected the business of the company
and kept a large number of salesmen of the Foods Division
only partly occupied and the company could have had no
option but to retrench some number of salesmen work-
(1) [1970] I.L.L.J. 429.
632
ing in the Foods Division. It, therefore, effected the
reorganisation to meet the challenge of change in marketing
conditions.
The scheme of reorganisation in this case was : Firstly, as
a result of the regrouping of the products from the three
divisions into two lines, the sales management staff of the
company was redeployed on a geographical basis instead of
product group basis. Secondly, the employer reorganised its
trade outlets so that ReDistribution Stockists would handle
all the products of the company rather than the products of
any particular division. Thirdly, the entire sales force
was redeployed over two products groups, i.e. Main Lines and
Speciality Lines. The Tribunal following the decision of
this Court in Parry & Co. case held that the employer has
the right to decide the staff complement and to fill only
such jobs as continued to exist and not automatically
replace every individual. The Tribunal has gone elaborately
into the question of workload and come to the conclusion
that there is no increase in the workload. We have already
referred to the question of journey cycles. We see no
reason to differ from the finding of the Tribunal that there
has been no change in usage adversely effecting the worker,
and that as there has been no retrenchment item 10 of
Schedule IV is not attracted nor is item 11.
It is hardly necessary to refer to the various decisions
which were cited before us as to what would constitute
conditions of service the change of which would require
notice under section 9A of the Act.. In Dharangadhara
Chemical Works Ltd. v. Kantu Kalu & Ors.(1) the Labour
Appellate Tribunal of India held that the increase in the
weight of bags to be carried from cwt to 11/2 cwt was a
change in the workload and the company was bound ,to pay
wages as the workmen were willing to work but did not work
on account of the unreasonable attitude adopted by the
management. In Chandramalai Estate v. Its Workmen(2) the
payment of Cumbly allowance was held to have become a condi-
tion of service. In The Graham Trading Co. (India) Ltd. v.
Its Workmen(3) it was held that the workmen were not
entitled to Puja bonus as an implied term of employment. In
Workmen of Hindustan Shipyard Ltd. v. I.T.(4) in the matter
of withdrawal of concession of coming late by half an hour
(than the usual hour), it was held that the finding of the
Industrial Tribunal that section 9A did not apply to the
case did not call for interference. But the decision
proceeded on the basis that the Court will not interfere in
its jurisdiction unless there was any manifest injustice.
In McLeod & Co. v. Its Workmen (5) the provision for
tiffin was held to be an amenity to which the employees were
entitled, and
(1) [1955] I L.L.J. 316.
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(2) [1960] 2 L.L.J. 243.
(3) [1960] I S.C.R. 107.
(4) [1961] 2 L.L.J. 526.
(5) [1964] 1 L.L.J. 386.
633
the provision of cash allowance in lieu of free tiffin
directed to be made by the industrial tribunal could not be
considered to be erroneous in law. In India Overseas Bank
v. Their Workmen(1) "key allowance " was treated as a term
and condition of service. In Indian Oxygen Limited v.
Udaynath Singh(2) withdrawal by the management of the supply
of one empty drum at a time at reasonable intervals was held
not to contravene section 9A and 33. In Oil & Natural Gas
Commission v. Their Workmen(3) where there was nothing to
show that it was a condition of service that a workman
should work for 61 hours only, no notice of change was held
to be required under section 9A for fixing the hours of work
at eight. In Tata Iron & Steel Co. v. Workmen (4) change in
weekly days of rest from Sunday to some other day was held
to require notice. A close scrutiny of the various
decisions would show that whether any particular practice or
allowance or concession had become a condition of service
would always depend upon the facts and circumstances of each
case and no rule applicable to all cases could be culled out
from these decisions. In the face of the elaborate
consideration of the evidence and findings made by the
Tribunal we are unable to hold that there has been any
change in the terms and conditions of service of the workers
in this case to their detriment. It follows, therefore,
that section 9A is not attracted. It is, therefore,
unnecessary to consider the question whether the argument
advanced by Shri Gupte on behalf of the employer that in
view of the very prolonged and detailed discussions that
went on between the parties there was a substantial
compliance with provisions of section 9A and the mere fact
that a formal notice was not given under section 9A would
not make the reorganisation scheme not valid.
In the applications filed by the workers the Tribunal was
conscious of the employer’s right to reorganise his business
in any fashion he likes for purposes of economy or
convenience and that no body is entitled to tell him how he
should conduct his business. But it was of the opinion that
this right of the employer is subject to the limitations
contained in section 9A. It specifically considered the
applicability of item 10 of the Fourth Schedule to the Act
and relying upon the decision in North Brooke Jute Co. Ltd.
(1) held that no scheme of rationalisation could be given
effect to if it was not preceded by a notice under section
9A. It did not consider it necessary to give a final
decision regarding ’the legality or otherwise of the scheme
introduced by the company. But it considered whether the
workers" refusal to work under *,he new scheme was
justified. On the evidence it held that the Union had the
apprehension that the proposed reorganisation would
(1) (1967-68) (33) F.J.R. 457. (2) [1970] 2 L.L.J. 413.
(3) (1972) 42 F.J.R. 551. (4) A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 1917.
(5) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 364,
634
result in some members of the staff becoming surplus, and
that this apprehension was not without justification, and
that the apprehension became true when the reorganisation
was actually introduced. It also held that the workload of
the various applicants increased as a result of the
reorganisation. It, therefore, held that workers were
within their legitimate right to refuse to do the work under
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the new scheme as no notice has been given under item 9A..
It held that however laudable the object of the
reorganisation may be, it cannot be doubted for a moment on
the evidence on record, that the scheme has seriously
prejudiced the workers. It, therefore, directed the
employer to pay all the workers their wages for October
1966.
Mr. Gupte appearing for the employer contended relying on
the decision in the case of North Brook Jute Co. Ltd. v.
Their Workmen (supra) that the alteration of the conditions
of service in this case, even if it should be held that non-
payment of wages amounted to alteration of conditions of
service, was made not when a reference tinder section 10 was
pending but that the reference itself having been made after
the reoganisation, no application could be made under
section 33A. Technically no doubt this contention is
correct because the scheme was introduced on the 5th or 6th
of September and the reference was made on 30th of
September. But the applications in this case were not for
the wages due for the month of September but for October.
The applications proceeded on the basis that the non-
payment of wages was an alteration in the conditions of
service, and it is to that question that we must first
address ourselves. Mr. Gupte contended that non-payment of
wages is not an alteration of conditions of service and that
no application under section 33A could be made in such cases
as the remedy available was under section 33C. We are not
able to appreciate this argument. Indeed payment of wages,
is one of the most important among the workers’ conditions
of service. The worker works essentially only for the wages
to be paid to him. Therefore, the question that would
really have to be answered is whether the refusal of the
worker to work was justified or not. It is in evidence that
the workers, presented themselves for work every day and
offered to work according to the old scheme but that they
were not given any work according to the old scheme They
were told that as long as they refused to work under the new
scheme they would be paid no wages. The refusal to pay,
therefore, was not a solitary instance in respect of which
an application could have been made under section 33C. It
was a continued refusal. It was, therefore, a permanent
alteration of the conditions of service. The cause of
action, so to say, arises de die in diem. If the refusal of
the workers to work under the reoganisation scheme is
justified then the refusal of the management to pay unless
they worked under the reorganisation scheme would amount
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to alteration of the conditions of service of workers. If
on ’the other hand the workers were not justified in doing
so then no other question arises. But in the face of the
finding of the Tribuanal that the reorganisation scheme
rendered some workers surplus and that the scheme had
seriously prejudiced the workers, and that the apprehension
of the workers that the reorganisation would result in some
member of the staff becoming surplus came true, it cannot be
said that the failure of the employer to give notice under
section 9A and introducing the scheme of reorganisation
without such notice is justified. It means that the workers
were justified in refusing to work under the new scheme. It
follows that the refusal to pay their wages amounted to
alteration of conditions of service and the applications
were, therefore, rightly made under section 33A.
Even apart from that it was urged by Mr. Gupte relying upon
the decision in National Coal Co. v. L. P. Dave(1) that non-
payment of wages was neither an alteration in, the
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conditions of service nor is it a punishment and as such
cannot come within the mischief of section 33 of the Act.
The Patna High Court relied also for its decision on the
decision in Shama Biscuit Co. v. Their Workmen(2). The
facts of that case are not quite clear, The Court gives no
reason for its view that the non-payment of wages is not an
alteration of conditions of service applicable to workmen
and that it was only a case of default of payment of wages
on the pay day falling under Payment of Wages Act. The
facts there were in any case different from the facts of the
present case. We may refer to the decision of the Allahabad
High Court in Rain Nath Koeri v.Lakshmi Devi Sugar Mills &
Ors. (3) where it was observed that the payment of wages is
one of the essential ingredients of the contract of
employment and that the word ’conditions’ includes the idea
conveyed by the word ’terms’ but goes beyond it and is not
confined, to what is included in that word. The Court also
held that ’terms and conditions of employment’ is wider in.
scope than the expression ’terms and conditions of labour’.
But as we have already observed failure or refusal to pay
wages for a certain period may necessitate proceeding under
section 33C, but refusal to pay wages indefinitely on the
refusal of the workers to work according to a scheme of
reorganisation which was not a valid one, because of the
failure to give notice under section 9A, cannot but be
considered to be an alteration in the conditions of service
of the workers.
Mr. Gupte complained that the Tribunal has not decided the
question whether the reorganisation was justified. He also
contended that the applications by the workers as well as
the reference
(1) A.I.R. 1956 Patna 294.
(3) [1956] 2 L.L.J. 11.
(2) [1952] 2 L.L.J. 353.
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made by the company should have been heard together and
should not have been disposed of separately. That is really
the main complaint of the employer. As we have pointed out
earlier if all the evidence which was let in in the
reference were available to tile Tribunal which decided the
applications of the workers, the result might well have been
different. But we do not consider that the Tribunal was
wrong in having proceeded to dispose of the matter in the
way it did. Mr. Tarkunde rightly contended that even if an
application had been made under section 33C, the whole
scheme would have to be considered and it is not fair at
this distance of time to drive the workers to file
applications under section 33C, the procedure for which
would be the same as under section 33A, merely on the ground
that the introduction of the scheme had taken place before
the reference to adjudication was made. We consider that as
an application under section 33A has to be decided as if it
were a reference under section 10, the fact that the scheme
had been introduced earlier than the reference to
arbitration under section 10, does not bar-,an application
under section 33A in the circumstances we have explained.
We thus come to the conclusion (1) that non-payment of wages
in the circumstances of this case amounts to an alteration
in the conditions of service, (2) the fact that the scheme
was introduced before the reference under section 10 was
made does not bar an application under section 33A, and (3)
that the Tribunal was justified in coming to the conclusion
that this alteration in the conditions of service could not
have been made without notice under section 9A.
The result is that all the appeals are dismissed. There
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will be no order as to costs.
V.P.S.
Appeals dismissed.
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