Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
G. T. LAD & ORS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHEMICALS & FIBRES OF INDIA LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/12/1978
BENCH:
SINGH, JASWANT
BENCH:
SINGH, JASWANT
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
KOSHAL, A.D.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 582 1979 SCR (2) 613
1979 SCC (1) 590
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1980 SC1896 (150)
ACT:
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947-Workmen went on peaceful
strike-Did not Join duty to response to company’s notices-If
amounts to abandonment of duty-Words Phrases-Abandonment-
Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
In support of their demand for reinstatement of certain
dismissed union leaders a number of workmen, including the
appellants had gone on an indefinite peaceful strike. The
Company (respondent) put up a notice that the strike was
illegal and that the striking workmen were liable to
disciplinary action for misconduct. A week later, the
company issued individual notices to the appellants and
other workmen calling upon them to report for duty, failing
which their absence would be construed as voluntary
abandonment of service and that their names would be struck
off the muster rolls. A few days later the company informed
the workmen concerned that by not reporting for duty they
had confirmed its presumption that they were no longer
interested to continue in its service that they had totally
abandoned its service. The names of the appellants had been
struck off the rolls. In final settlement of the workers’
claims for gratuity, leave salary and a month’s salary a
cheque was sent to each of the appellants. But the
appellants returned the cheques to the company pointing out
that they were interested in the service of the company and
that they had neither voluntarily abandoned the service nor
did they wish to do so and that they would report for work
as soon as the strike was called off. Thereafter, although
there were prolonged negotiations between the union and the
company, the company did not take them into its service.
Since a dispute was pending before an Industrial
Tribunal application was made under s. 33A of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947. The Tribunal rejected the workers’
demand for reinstatement.
In appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf of
the appellants, that (i) removing their names from the rolls
was illegal and arbitrary; (ii) the appellants had not
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voluntarily abandoned the company’s service and (iii) since
termination of service could only be in accordance with
standing orders, and since the standing orders in this case
did not provide for treating the workmen as having abandoned
the service in case they were absent in connection with a
strike, the company’s action in terminating the appellants’
services was illegal.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD: The impugned action of the company and the award
of the Tribunal were illegal. [619 E]
1. To constitute abandonment there must be total or
complete giving up of duties so as to indicate an intention
not to resume the same. Failure to perform duties pertaining
to an office must be with actual or imputed intention on
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the part of the officer to abandon and relinquish the
office. The intention may be inferred from the acts and
conduct of a party and is a question of fact which could be
determined in the light of surrounding circumstances in each
case. Temporary absence is not ordinarily sufficient to
constitute abandonment of office. [617 D-F]
Buckingham Co. v. Venkatiah & Ors., [1964] 4 SCR 265;
referred to.
2. The absence of workmen from duty was purely
temporary and cannot be construed as their voluntary
abandonment of the company’s service. There was nothing in
the surrounding circumstances or the conduct of the workmen
indicating or suggesting an intention on their part to
abandon service. To abandon service means to detach,
unfasten, undo or untie the binding knot or link which holds
one to the office and obligations and privileges that go
with it. [618 C-E]
In the instant case the workmen went on a peaceful
strike. By their letters they unequivocally intimated to the
company that they did not intend to abandon service. They
had returned the cheques sent to them by the company.
Union of India v. Gopal Chandra Misra [1978] 2 SCC 301-
[1978] 3 SCR 12 referred to.
3. Since there was no provision in the certified
standing orders, by virtue of which the company could have
terminated the services of the workmen, the impugned action
amounted to change in the conditions of service of the
workmen during the pendency of the industrial dispute which
adversely affected them. [619 A]
Express Newspapers (P) Ltd. v. Michael Mark & Anr.,
[1963] 3 SCR 405; applied.
4. In cases where reinstatement had been directed by
the Court it is the rule that the entire back wages must
follow as a matter of course. In the special circumstances
of this case the workmen are entitled to wages at 75% for
the entire period from the date of termination of their
services to the date of reinstatement. [619]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1188 of
1976.
Appeal by special leave from the Award dated 27-2-1976
of the Industrial Tribunal, Maharashtra in Complaints (I.T.)
Nos. 48-53 and 55-63 of 1973 in Ref. (I.T.) No. 375 of 1972
published in the Maharashtra Govt. Gazette part I-L dated 3-
6-1976.
M. K. Ramamurthi and Naunit Lal for the Appellant.
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Sachin Chaudhuri and B. R. Aggarwala for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JASWANT SINGH, J. This appeal by special leave is
directed against the common award dated February 27, 1976 of
the Industrial Tribunal,
615
Maharashtra, Bombay rejecting as not maintainable complaints
Nos. 48 of 1973 to 63 of 1973 made by the appellants against
the respondent (hereinafter referred to for brevity as ’the
Company) under s. 33(A) of the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947 (hereinafter called ’the Act’) in reference (IT) No.
336 of 1972.
The facts material for the purpose of this appeal are:
The appellants (hereinafter described as ’Workmen’)
were employees of the Company. During the pendency of the
above mentioned reference No. 336 of 1972 before the Second
Labour Court, Bombay for adjudication of a dispute, 344
workmen of the Company including the appellants went on an
indefinite peaceful strike with effect from August 30, 1972,
pursuant to the strike notice given to the Company by their
registered union called ’The Association of Chemical
Workers’ in support of its demand for re-instatement of
three of the union leaders who had been dismissed by the
Company. On the even date i.e. August 30, 1972, the Company
put up a notice stating that the strike embarked upon by the
workmen was illegal and those participating in the said
strike were liable to disciplinary action for misconduct as
per Company’s certified standing orders Nos. 22(b) and
24(a). On September 7, 1972, the Company issued notices to
the appellants and 10 others asking them to report for duty
on or before September 18, 1972, failing which their absence
would be construed as voluntary abandonment of service and
their names would be struck off from the muster rolls of the
Company. On September 19, 1972, the Company sent separate
communications to the appellants and 10 others informing
them that since "by not reporting for duty they had
confirmed its presumption that they were no longer
interested to continue in service of the Company and had
totally abandoned the Company’s service" their names had
been struck off from the rolls of the Company from that
date. Along with its communication, the Company sent a
cheque to each one of the appellants for the amount due to
him on account of gratuity, leave salary and one month’s
salary. On September 26, 1972, the appellants wrote to the
Company returning the cheques sent by the Company and
stating that its letter dated September 7, 1972 which had
reached them only on September 20, 1972 had already been
replied by letter dated September 21, 1972, that they were
interested in the service of the Company and had neither
voluntarily abandoned the service of the Company and did
they wish to do so, and that they would, report for work the
moment the strike was called off
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by their union. On October 23, 1972 the Company wrote to the
appellants acknowledging their letter dated September 26,
1972 but stating therein that it did not wish to revise its
earlier decision under which their names had been struck off
the rolls. It is to be noted that in its letter the Company
did not refute the averment made by the appellants in their
letter dated September 26, 1972 that the Company’s letter
dated September 7, 1972 had reached them only on September
20, 1972. On the even date i.e., September 26, 1972, the
appellants’ union wrote to the Labour Commissioner
complaining about the arbitrary termination of service of 25
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workmen (including the appellants) and emphasising that they
had not abandoned service. On October 2, 1972, the
appellants and other striking workmen addressed letters to
the Works Manager of the Company protesting against the
action of the Company in removing them from service and
asserting that the said action was by way of victimization
for their participation in the strike. On March 30, 1973,
the union made a formal demand calling upon the Company to
re-instate the appellants and others who had been removed
from service on the ground that they had abandoned their
service. On May 19, 1973, certain proposals for settlements
were made on behalf of the employees whose services were
terminated by the Company and requesting the Company for re-
instatement of the appellants and 10 other workmen. On July
5, 1973, the union wrote a letter to the Assistant
Commissioner of Labour, Naupada, soliciting his intervention
in the dispute concerning the re-instatement of the 16
employees including the appellants. The Assistant
Commissioner thereupon summoned the parties for discussion
on July 19, 1973 but his attempts at conciliation did not
bear any fruit. Thereafter, the appellants made the
aforesaid complaints before the Industrial Tribunal with the
result as stated above.
Appearing in support of the appeal Mr. Ramamurti has
vehemently urged that the action of the Company in removing
the names of the appellants from its rolls was illegal and
arbitrary, that the appellants had not abandoned the
Company’s service, that at any rate the termination of their
services could only be in terms of the Company’s standing
orders and since the standing orders did not provide for
treating the workmen as having abandoned service in case
they were absent in connection with the notified strike, the
Company’s action was manifestly illegal and invalid.
Three questions arise for consideration in this
case, namely:
(1) what is the true meaning of the expression
’abandonment of service’;
617
(2) whether in the circumstances of the case it
could be said that the appellants had
voluntarily abandoned the service of the
Company; and
(3) whether the action of the Company in removing
the names of the appellants from its rolls on
the presumption that they had abandoned
service would constitute a change in the
conditions of service of the appellants ?
We will deal with these questions seriatim:
Re. Question No. 1: In the Act, we do not find any
definition of the expression ’abandonment of service’. In
the absence of any clue as to the meaning of the said
expression, we have to depend on meaning assigned to it in
the dictionary of English language. In the unabridged
edition of the Random House Dictionary, the word ’abandon’
has been explained as meaning ’to leave completely and
finally; for- sake utterly; to relinquish, renounce; to give
up all concern in something’. According to the Dictionary of
English Law by Earl Jowitt (1959 edition) ’abandonment’
means ’relinquishment of an interest or claim’. According to
Blacks Law Dictionary ’abandonment’ when used in relation to
an office means ’voluntary relinquishment. It must be total
and under such circumstances as clearly to indicate an
absolute relinquishment. The failure to perform the duties
pertaining to the office must be with actual or imputed
intention, on the part of the officer to abandon and
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relinquish the office. The intention may be inferred from
the acts and conduct of the party, and is a question of
fact. Temporary absence is not ordinarily sufficient to
constitute an abandonment of office’.
From the connotations reproduced above it clearly
follows that to constitute abandonment, there must be total
or complete giving up of duties so as to indicate an
intention not to resume the same. In Buckingham Co. v.
Venkatiah & Ors. it was observed by this Court 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 evi-
618
dence in that behalf. Thus, whether there has been a
voluntary abandonment of service or not is a question of
fact which has to be determined in the light of the
surrounding circumstances of each case.
Re.-Question No. 2: This takes us to the consideration
of the second question, namely, whether in the circumstances
of the instant case, it could be said that the appellants
had voluntarily abandoned the service of the Company. It may
be recalled that the appellants had along with 229 other
workmen gone on indefinite and peaceful strike which ended
on October 22, 1972) in response to the strike notice given
by the union to the Company to press its demand for re-
instatement of its three dismissed leaders and had not only
by their letters dated September 21, 1972 and September 26,
1972 unequivocally intimated to the Company that they did
not intend to abandon the service but had also returned the
cheques sent to them by the Company on account of their
leave salary gratuity etc. The appellants stand that the
letter of the Company dated September 7, 1972 was received
by them on September 20, 1972 and not earlier was never
denied or refuted by the Company in the correspondence that
passed between the parties. Thus, there was nothing in the
surrounding circumstances or the conduct of the appellants
indicating or suggesting an intention on their part to
abandon service which in view of the ratio of Gopal Chandra
Misra’s case, can be legitimately said to mean to detach,
unfasten, undo or untie the binding knot or link which holds
one to the office and the obligations and privileges that go
with it Their absence from duty was purely temporary and
could by no stretch of imagination be construed as voluntary
abandonment by them of the Company’s service. In Express
Newspaper (P) Limited v. Michael Mark & Anr.,(2) which is on
all fours with the present case, it was held that if the
employees absent themselves from the work because of strike
in enforcement of their demands, there can be no question of
abandonment of employment by them. In the present case also
the appellant’s absence from duty was because of their
peaceful strike to enforce their demand. Accordingly, we are
of the view that there was no abandonment of service on the
part of the appellants.
Re-Question No. 3: Let us now advert to the last but
the most crucial question, namely, whether the action of the
Company in removing the names of the appellants from its
rolls during the pendency of the proceedings before the
Labour Court in respect of the industrial dispute on the
presumption that they had abandoned Company’s service
619
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constituted an alteration in the conditions of service
applicable to them immediately before the commencement of
the said proceedings which prejudiciously affected them.
Although the learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
respondent has taken us through the certified standing
orders as applicable to the appellants, he has not been able
to point out anything therein to indicate that the company
could terminate the services of the appellants on the ground
of abandonment of service because of their going on strike
in enforcement of their demands. Thus, their being no
provision in the certified standing orders by virtue of
which the Company would have terminated the services of the
appellants in the aforesaid circumstance, the impugned
action on the part of the Company clearly amounted to a
change in the condition of service of the appellants during
the admitted pendency of the industrial dispute before the
Labour Court which adversely affected them and could not be
countenanced. We are fortified in this view by the aforesaid
decision of this Court in Express Newspapers (P) Limited v.
Michael Mark & Anr. (Supra) where repelling an identical
contention to the effect that the failure of the workmen to
return to work by a notified date clearly implied
abandonment of their employment, it was held that the
management cannot by imposing a new term of employment
unilaterally convert the absence of work into abandonment of
employment. It was further held in that decision that if the
strike was in fact illegal, the management could take
disciplinary action against the employees under the standing
orders and dismiss them. If that were done, the strikers
would not have been entitled to any compensation under
standing orders but that was not what the appellants
purported to do and the respondents were, therefore,
entitled to relief.
For the foregoing reasons, we are unable to uphold the
impugned action of the Company and the award under appeal
which are manifestly illegal. In the result, we allow the
appeal, set aside the aforesaid award of the Industrial
Tribunal and direct the Company to reinstate the appellants.
The appellants shall also be entitled to the costs of the
appeal.
A point which requires to be clarified and has been
brought to the notice of the Court after the judgment was
delivered relates to back wages from 19-9-72 to the date of
reinstatement. The rule in such cases is that where
reinstatement has been directed by the Court, the entire
back wages must follow as a matter of course. Of course
there is a discretion in the court having regard to special
circumstances if any to modify this normal rule. In the
present case the period stretches over six years and Shri
Sachine Chaudhary brings to our notice the fact that
620
back wages have to be computed, if ordered in full, on a
much higher scale because of two settlements which have
raised the scales of wages substantially. While there is no
case specifically put forward that the workmen concerned
have been employed elsewhere during this period, still we
take a total view the whole case and direct that for the
entire period from 1972 to the date of reinstatement, 75 per
cent of the wages will be paid to all the workmen concerned
on the scales and revised scales as the case may be.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed.
621