Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S KUNDAN SUGAR MILLS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ZIYAUDDIN AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/02/1960
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1960 AIR 650 1960 SCR (2) 918
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Rights of employer to transfer a workman-
if implicit in every contract of service.
HEADNOTE:
The General Manager of the appellant Mills ordered the
transfer of four workmen from the appellant mill to a new
mill, which had been purchased subsequently. The only
connection between the two mills was the identity of
ownership and, but for it, one had nothing to do with the
other. The concerned workmen protested to the said order of
transfer and did not acceed to the request, thereupon they
were served with notice for disobedience of standing orders
and were called upon for explanation which the workmen did
and thereafter they were dismissed from service. The Labour
Appellate Tribunal found that the management had no right to
transfer the workmen to the new factory and therefore the
order dismissing them was illegal. The appellants came up
by special leave before the Supreme Court and contended that
the right to transfer an employee by an employer from one of
his concerns to another is implicit in every contract of
service. The question is whether a person employed in a
factory can be transferred to some other independent concern
started by the same employer at a stage subsequent to the
date of the employment.
Held, that apart from any statutory provision, the right of
an employee and an employer are governed by the terms of
contracts between them or by the terms necessarily implied
therefrom; but in the absence of an express agreement
between the employer and employees it cannot necessarily be
implied that the employer has the right to transfer the
employee to any of its concerns in any place, and that the
employee has a duty to join the concern to which he may be
transferred.
In the instant case, it was not a condition of service of
employment of the concerned workmen either express or
implied that the’ employer had the right to transfer them to
a new concern started by the employer subsequent to the date
of the employment.
Alexandre Bouzourou v. The Ottoman Bank, A.I.R. 1930 P.C.
118, Mary (Anamalai Plantation Workers’ Union) v. Selali
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arai Estate, (1956) I.L.L.J. 243 and Bata Shoe Company, Ltd
v. Ali Hasan, (1956) I.L.L.J. 278, discussed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 136 of 1958.
Appeal by special leave from the decision dated April
30,1956, of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of India at
Lucknow in Appeeal No. III-45 of 1956, lip
919
arising out of the award dated February 6, 1956 of the State
Industrial Tribunal, Allahabad, in reference No. 96 of 1955.
Ram Lal Anand, I.M. Lal and S. S. Sukla, for the appellants.
B. D. Sharma, for respondents Nos. 1 to 5.
C.P. Lal and G. N. Dikshit, for respondent No. 6.
1960. February 9. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
dy
SUBBA RAO, J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
order of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of India setting
aside the award of the Industrial Tribunal, Allahabad, and
directing the reinstatement of the workers in Kundan Sugar
Mills at Amroha. " Kundan Sugar Mills " is a partnership
concern and owns a sugar mill at Amroha. The respondents I
to 4 were-employed by the appellant as seasonal masons in
the year 1946. In 1951 the partners of the appellant-Mills
purchased the building machinery and other equipment of
another sugar mill at Kiccha in the district of Nainital.
They closed the said mill at Kiccha and started it at
Bulandshahr. The new factory was named Pannijee Sugar &
General Mills, Bulandshahr. On January 19, 1955, the
General Manager of the appellant-Mills ordered the transfer
of the respondents I to 4 from the appellant-Mills to the
new mill at Bulandshahr. The said respondents through their
representative, the fifth respondent, protested to the
General Manager against the said transfer. But the General
Manager, by his letter dated January 22/24, 1955, insisted
upon their joining the new mill at Bulandshabr. But the
said respondents did not accede to his request. On January
28, 1955, the General Manager served a notice on the
respondents 1 to 4 stating that they had disobeyed his
orders and thereby committed misconduct under Standing Order
No. L(a). They were asked to submit their explanation as to
why action should not be taken against them under the
Standing Order. The Labour Union, by its letter dated
January 31, 1955, denied the charges. On February 2, 1955,
the General Manager made an order dismissing the respondents
1 to 4 from service on the ground that
117
920
they had disobeyed his order of transfer and thus they
were guilty of misconduct under Standing Order No. LI(a).
The Labour Union thereafter raised an industrial dispute and
the Government of U.P. by its notification dated November 7,
1955, referred the following issue for decision to the State
Industrial Tribunal for U, P. at Allahabad:
" Whether the employers have wrongfully and/or unjustifiably
terminated the services of Sarva Shri Zia Uddin, Raisuddin,
Shafiquddin and Ahmed Bux for refusal to obey the orders of
tranfer to M/s. Pannijee Sugar and General Mills Co.,
Bulandshahr. If so, to what relief are the workmen
entitled."
The State Industrial Tribunal by its order dated February 6,
1956, made its award holding that the management was within
its rights and that, as the respondents 1 to 4 had disobeyed
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the order of the management, they were properly dismissed by
the management. The said respondents through their Union,
respondent No. 5, perferred an appeal to the Labour
Appellate Tribunal of India and the said Appellate Tribunal
held that the management had no right to transfer the
respondents 1 to 4 to the new factory and therefore the
order dismissing them was illegal. The management has
preferred the present appeal against the said order of the
Labour Appellate Tribunal.
Learned counsel for the appellant raised before us the
following two questions: (1) The right to transfer an
employee by an employer from one of his concerns to another
is implicit in every contract of service; (2) the State
Industrial Tribunal having held that both the concerns,
i.e., the mills at Amroha and the mills at Bulandshahr,
formed one unit, the Appellate Tribunal had no jurisdiction
to set aside that finding under s. 7(1) of the Industrial
Disputes (Appellate Tribunal) Act, 1950.
To appreciate the first contention, it is necessary to
notice the undisputed facts in this case. It is true that
the partners of the Sugar Mills at Amroha own also the Sugar
Mills at Bulandshahr; but they were proprietors of the
former Mills in 1946 whereas they purchased the latter mills
only in the year 1951 and
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started the same in Bulandshahr in or about 1955. The
respondents 1 to 4 were employed by the owners of the
appellant-Mills at the Sugar Mills at Amroha at a time when
they were not proprietors of the Sugar Mills at Bulandshahr.
It is conceded that it was not an express term of the
contract of service between the appellant and the
respondents I to 4 that the latter should serve in any
future concerns which the appellant might acquire or start.
It is also in evidence that though the same persons owned
both the Mills they were two different concerns. In the
words of the Appellate Tribunal, the only connection between
the two is in th identity of ownership and, but for it, one
has nothing to do with the other. It is also in evidence
that an imported workman at Amroha is entitled to house-
rent, fuel, light and travelling expenses both ways, while
at Bulandshahr the workmen are not entitled to any of these
amenities. The workmen at Amroha are entitled to benefits
under the Kaul Award while those at Bulandshahr are not so
entitled. The General Manager, E.W.1, in his evidence
stated that the interim bonus of the Bulandshahr factory as
ordered by the Government in November 1955 was Rs. 1 1,000
while for Amroha it: was nearly 1-1/2 lacs ". He also stated
that "the bonus for last year at Amroha would be probably
equal to II months’ wages and at Bulandshahr equal to about
4 or 5 days’ wages." It is also in evidence that apart from
the disparity in the payment of bonus, the accounts are
separately made up for the two mills. It is clear that the
two mills are situated at different places with accounts
separately maintained and governed by different service
conditions, though they happened to be under the common
management; therefore, they are treated as two different
entities.
The question of law raised in this case must be considered
in relation to the said-facts. The argument of the learned
counsel for the appellant that the right to transfer is
implicit in every contract of service is too wide the mark.
Apart from any statutory provision, the rights of an
employer and an employee are governed by the terms of
contracts between them or by the terms necessarily implied
therefrom. It is
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922
conceded that there is no express agreement between the
appellant and the respondents where under the appellant has
the right to transfer the respondents to any of its concerns
in any place and the respondents the duty to join the
concerns to which they may be transferred. If so, can it be
said that such a term has to be necessarily implied between
the parties ? When the respondents 1 to 4 were employed by
the appellant, the latter was running only one factory at
Amroha. There is nothing on record to indicate that at that
time it was intended to purchase factories at other places
or to extend its activities in the same line at different
places. It is also not suggested that even if the appellant
had had such an intention, the respondents I to 4 had
knowledge of the same. Under such circumstances, without
more, it would not be right to imply any such term between
the contracting parties when the idea of starting new
factories at different places was not in contemplation.
Ordinarily the employees would have agreed only to serve in
the factory then in existence and the employer would have
employed them only in respect of that factory. The matter
does not stop there. In the instant case, as we have
indicated, the two factories are distinct entities, situated
at different places and, to import a term conferring a right
on the employer to transfer respondents I to 4 to a
different concern is really to make a new contract between
them.
The decisions cited at the Bar do not in the least sustain
the appellant’s broad contention. In Alexandre Bouzourou v.
The Ottoman Bank (1) the appellant was an employee of the
respondent-bank. The bank transferred him from one branch
to another branch of the bank situated in different towns.
As he refused to comply with the order of transfer, he was
dismissed. Thereafter, he filed a suit to recover damages
from the bank for wrongful dismissal. It was argued before
the Judicial Committee that under the terms of his contract
of service the sphere of his employment included only the
head office and not the branches of the bank. The evidence
in that case showed that transfer was one of the ordinary
incidents of the bank’s employment, being usually concurrent
with an
(1) A.T.R. [1930] P.C. 118, 119.
923
increase of salary and responsibility, and suggest no more
than that the bank considered their officials convenience
where possible. Indeed the appellant therein did not even
suggest in his correspondence thatthe transfer was a breach
of his contract. On these circumstances the Judicial
Committee observed as follows at p. 119:
" From the point of view of proper organization of
their staff it is difficult to assume that the Bank would
willingly agree that their employees should not be bound to
serve outside the place where the contract was made except
with their consent, and, in their Lordships’ opinion such a
condition of the contract would require to be clearly
established."
The essential distinction between that case and the
present one is that there the bank with its branches was one
unit and the records clearly indicated that transfer was one
of the ordinary incidents of service in the Bank. In such
circumstances when a person joined such a service, the Privy
Council found it easy to imply a term of transfer. That
decision is therefore not of any relevancy to the present
case. In Mary (Anamalai Plantation ’Workers’ Union) v.
Seliparai estate (2), labour was recruited in the
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plantations without any differentiation being made between
factory and field workers and it had been the common
practice prevailing for several years to transfer
the factory workers to the field and vice-versa, according
to the exigencies of work. A worker who had been appointed
in such a plantation was transferred, owing to mechanisation
in the factory, from the factory to the field. The Labour
Appellate Tribunal of India held that in the circumstances
of the case the liability to be so transferred must be
deemed to be an implied condition of service. So too in
Bata Shoe Company, Ltd. v. Ali Hasan (Industrial Tribunal,
Patna & Ors.) (3) transfer of an employee in the
circumstances of that, case from one post to another was
held not to be an alteration of any service condition within
the meaning of s. 33 of the Industrial Disputes Act. That
was a case of a management employing a worker in one
concern and transferring him from one post to
(2) [1956] I.L.L.J. 343.
(3) [1956] 1 L.L.J. 278.
924
another. In such a case it was possible to imply
the condition of right of the management to transfer the
employee from one post to another. S. N. Mukherjee v. Kemp
& Co. Ltd. (4) was a case arising out of s. 23 of the
Industrial Disputes (Appellate Tribunal) Act, 1950. The
complaint there was that an employee was transferred by
the management with a view to victimize him and that it
amounted to alteration in the conditions of employment. It
was held that if an employer employed a person it was
implicit in the appointment that he could be transferred to
any place where the business of the employer in the same
line was situated, unless there was an express condition to
the contrary in the contract of employment. In that case
the worker was employed by Kemp & Co., Limited, which had
branches in different places. The decision assumed that the
business was one unit and that the only question raised was
that he should not be transferred to a place different from
the place where he was actually discharging his duties.
These observations must be limited to the facts of that
case.
It is not necessary to multiply the citation, for the
other decisions relied on by the learned counsel for the
appellant pursue the same reasoning followed in the
aforesaid cases.
We have referred to the decisions only to distinguish them
from the present case, and not to express our opinion as to
the correctness of the decisions therein. It would be
enough to point out that in all the said decisions the
workers had been employed in a business or a concern and the
question that arose was whether in the circumstances of each
case the transfer from one branch to another was valid or
amounted to victimization. None of these decisions deals
with a case similar to that presented in this appeal,
namely, whether a person employed in a factory can be trans-
ferred to some other independent concern started by the same
employer at a stage subsequent to the date of his
employment. None of these cases holds, as it is suggested
by the learned counsel for the appellant, that every
employer has the inherent right to transfer his employee to
another,place -where he chooses to start
(4) [1954] L.A.C. 903
925
a business subsequent to the date of the employment. We,
therefore, hold that it was not a condition of service of
employment of the respondents either express or implied
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that the employer has the right to transfer them to a new
concern stared by him subsequent to the date of their
employment.
The respondents also relied upon a Government Order No. 6122
(ST)/XXXVI-A-640(S)-T-1953 in support of their contention
that the order of transfer was bad. By this Order the
Government of U. P. had directed that the employment of
seasonal workmen in all vacuum pan sugar factories in the
Uttar Pradesh should be governed by the rules contained in
the annexure thereto. Rule I in the said annexure is to the
following effect:
" A worker who has worked or but for illness or any
other unavoidable cause would have worked in a factory
during the whole of the second half of the last preceding
season will be employed in this season in such factory."
This rule has no relevancy to the question raised in the
present case. This rule only enjoins upon an employer to
employ a worker in the circumstances mentioned therein in
the same factory in which he was working in the previous
season during the next season also. This does not prevent
the employer to transfer an employee if he has the right
to do so under the contract of service or under any
statutory provisions. We have already held that the
employer in the present case has no such right.
Lastly it is said that the Appellate Tribunal had no
jurisdiction to set aside the finding of the State
Industrial Tribunal, as it did not give rise to any
substantial question of law within the meaning of s. 7(1) of
the Industrial Disputes (Appellate Tribunal) Act, 1950. The
question raised was one of law, namely, whether the
appellant had the right to transfer the respondents 1 to 4
from one concern to another. A substantial question of law
involved between the parties and that raised also an
important principle governing the right of an employer to
transfer his employees from one concern to another of his
in the circumstances of this case. We, therefore, hold that
926
a substantial question of law arose in the case and
that it was well within the powers of the Labour Appellate
Tribunal to entertain the appeal.
In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.