Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. SASA MUSA SUGAR WORKS (P) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHOBRATI KHAN AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/04/1959
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 923 1959 SCR Supl. (2) 836
CITATOR INFO :
R 1959 SC1111 (7)
R 1959 SC1342 (17,18,19)
E 1963 SC1756 (8)
R 1964 SC 708 (29,30)
R 1965 SC1803 (11)
R 1972 SC 136 (33)
RF 1972 SC1031 (51)
D 1976 SC1760 (7,12)
RF 1979 SC1652 (18)
RF 1980 SC1896 (152)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Go-slow-Employer’s application for Per-
mission to dismiss workmen-Tribunal’s power-Perverse finding
Grant of Permission-Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (14 Of
1947),s. 33.
HEADNOTE:
Pending an adjudication proceeding between the workmen and
the Mills, the management of the appellant Mills served
notices on thirty-three of its workmen and thereafter
suspended them for taking a leading part in a protracted go-
slow in contravention of the Industrial Disputes Act. For
similar reasons, a few days later, it again served similar
notices on fifteen others and suspended them. Thereafter
the management made two applications under s. 33 Of the
Industrial Disputes Act for permission to dismiss the said
workmen. The forty-eight workmen in their turn applied
under s. 33A of the Act alleging breach of s. 33 by the
management in suspending them by way of punishment. The
Industrial Tribunal found that the suspension was not by way
of punishment and that there was a deliberate resort to go-
slow by the workmen which was unjustified; it refused the
permission with respect to sixteen of the workmen on the
ground of want of evidence but granted leave to the
management to suspend the rest for seven days, thus
disallowing the prayer for dismissal. It also rejected the
workmen’s application under s. 33A of the Act. Appeals were
filed by both the parties and when they came up for hearing,
the Appellate Tribunal allowed the workmen to withdraw their
appeal so far as it related to their application under S.
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33A of the Act, with the result that the finding of the
Tribunal that the suspension was not a punishment but only
pending enquiry by the management and proceedings before the
Tribunal, stood confirmed. While agreeing with all other
findings of the Tribunal, the Appellate Tribunal took the
view that the suspension ordered by the-management was
substantive punishment since the notices did not state that
it was pending enquiry, and the subsequent application for
permisson to dismiss the workmen was, therefore, mala fide
and dismissed the appeal of the management.
Held, that the material findings arrived at by the
Industrial Tribunal not having been upset by the Appellate
Tribunal, the only possible order on the applications of the
management under s. 33 of the Act was to permit it to
dismiss the workmen provided there was evidence against them
all. It was not open to the Industrial Tribunal to
substitute some other form of punisliment and give
permission therefor.
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The Appellate Tribunal was clearly in error in holding that
suspension, in the instant case, was not an interim order
pending .enquiry and proceedings before the Tribunal under
S. 33, but substantive punishment, contrary to the finding
of the Industrial Tribunal which stood confirmed by its own
order permitting the withdrawal of the appeal against it by
the workmen.
The finding of the Industrial Tribunal that there was no
evidence against sixteen workmen was, on the face of it,
perverse, since the evidence against them was the same as
against the thirty-two others.
As go-slow was serious misconduct, insidious in nature and
could not be countenanced, and since the workmen were found
guilty of such misconduct, the management must be granted
the permission to dismiss them.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 746 and 747
of 1957.
Appeals by special leave from the judgments and orders dated
June 3, 1955, and May 21, 1956, of the Labour Appellate
Tribunal of India, Calcutta, in Appeal No. Cal. 366/52 and
Misc. Case No. 145 of 1955 respectively, arising out of an
Award dated September 22, 1952, of the Industrial Tribunal,
Bihar, and published in the Bihar State Government Gazette
on October 21, 1952.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India and
R. C. Prasad, for the appellant.
The respondent did not appear.
1959. April 29. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
WANCHOO, J.-These are two appeals by the management by
special leave in an industrial matter arising out of two
applications under s. 33 of the Industrial Disputes Act
(hereinafter called the Act). The facts of the case are
briefly these : The appellant, Messrs. Sasa Musa Sugar
Works (Private) Ltd. is a sugar factory in District Saran
(Bihar). The factory was established in 1932. In June
1942, a trade union was formed in this factory. In July
1943, trouble arose between the workmen and the management
resulting in the discharge of three office-bearers of the
union, including one Shams-ud-din, who was then the
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joint secretary. That matter ",as referred to adjudication
and the discharged workmen were ordered to be reinstated in
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the beginning of 1944. In December 1944, there was trouble
again and a large number of workmen were dismissed,
including Shams-ud-din, who had by now become the president
of the union. This dispute was again referred to an
Industrial Tribunal, which again ordered reinstatement of
the dismissed workmen in August 1947. There was peace for
some time after this. But in June 1951, the management
again discharged seventeen workmen, including Shams-ud-din,
who was at that time secretary of the union. The trouble
continued up to December 1951, when an agreement was arrived
at between the union and the management, as a result of
which twelve of the workmen were reinstated but five,
including Shams-ud-din, were not and their cases were to be
referred to adjudication. It appears, however, that another
reference between the management and its workmen was already
pending since September 8, 1951, before an Industrial
Tribunal, when this agreement was arrived at. Thereafter
the work in the factory proceeded smoothly for some time.
But on January 1, 1952, a notice was issued by the union to
the management enlisting as many as 40 demands and it was
threatened that if the demands were not met within seven
days, the union would have to advise the work-men to adopt
go-slow and call upon them to offer passive resistance with
effect from January 9, 1952, and take all legitimate means
to see that the decision of go-slow was carried out till the
demands of the union were fulfilled. This notice was
received by the management on January 4, which immediately
contacted the officers of the Labour Department as well as
the Sub-Divisional Magistrate at Gopalganj. On January 8,
the Deputy Labour Commissioner wrote to the union that as
the conciliation officer was busy in the general elections,
the status quo should be maintained till the elections were
over, so that the matter might be looked into by the
conciliation officer. The union, however, gave no heed to
this advice and go-slow began from January 9 and
839
was continued till January 12, 1952. Then the Labour
Commissioner himself came to the factory on January 12 and
advised Shams-ud-din who was the s moving spirit behind all
this to call off the go-slow, as it was proposed to start
conciliation proceedings at Patna on January 17, 1952.
Conciliation proceedings then began on January 17 and an
agreement was arrived at as to some of the demands on
January 23, and it was decided that further conciliation
proceedings would be held in February. But in spite of this
agreement go-slow was again resorted to from January 24 to
January 31. In the meantime, the Labour Officer had arrived
at the factory on January 28, 1952, and further talks took
place. The workmen, however, did not pay heed to the advice
of the Labour Officer. He, therefore, reported on January
31 to the Labour Commissioner that go-slow was still
continuing. The Labour Commissioner then ordered the Labour
Officer to tell the workmen that no further conciliation
proceedings would take place until the goslow was called of.
The Labour Officer then informed the management that it
could take disciplinary action against the workmen concerned
with the permission of the Industrial Tribunal.
Consequently, the management suspended thirty-three workmen
by a notice given on the night of January 31 as from
February 1. It was said in the notice that these thirty-
three workmen had been found taking a leading part in the
unjustified go-slow which was in contravention of the Act
and they were therefore suspended from service until further
orders. This notice had some good effect and work improved
for four days; but from February 5 goslow was started again.
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Consequently, the management suspended seven more workmen
from February 6 and eight more from February 7 by giving
notice to them in the same terms in which the notice had
been given to the thirty-three workmen, on January 31. As
adjudication proceedings were pending since September 1951
between the management and its workmen, the former applied
on February 6, 1952, under s. 33 of the Act for permission
to dismiss the thirty-three workmen and on February 11,
1952, for permission to
840
dismiss the remaining fifteen workmen who had been suspended
later. The forty-eight workmen in their turn applied on
March 29, 1952, under s. 33-A of the Act to the Industrial
Tribunal and their case was that they had been suspended as
a measure of punishment and that as this was done without
the sanction of the Industrial Tribunal, the management had
committed a breach of s. 33.
The three applications were tried together by the Industrial
Tribunal and the contentions raised before it were these :
(1) The management’s applications under s. 33 had not been
preceded by any enquiry into the misconduct of the workmen
and were, therefore, liable to be rejected ;
(2) The order of suspension in this case amounted to
punishment and therefore s. 33 had been contraven-
ed; and
(3) There was an unjustified go-slow by the workmen in
January and February 1952.
On the first point, the Industrial Tribunal found that Do
enquiry had been held by the management before the two
applications, under s. 33 were made; but it held that all
the evidence which could have been taken in the enquiry by
the management had been led before it and it was in full
possession of the facts, and no question of any prejudice to
the workmen arose, as it would be open to it on a review of
the entire evidence before it to decide whether the applica-
tions for permission to dismiss should be granted or not.
On the second point, it held that the order of suspension
was not as a measure of punisment in the circumstances of
this case and that it was an order pending enquiry by the
management and proceedings under s. 33 before the tribunal
and that, as there were no Standing Orders as to suspension
in this factory, the management’s liability to pay the
workmen their wages during the period of suspension
remained. On the third point, the Industrial Tribunal,
after an elaborate discussion of the evidence, came to the’
conclusion that there was a deliberate go-slow resorted to
by the workmen in January and February 1952 and
841
that it was unjustified as it took place while conciliation
proceedings were pending.
Having given these findings, the Industrial Tribunal had
then to decide what orders it should pass on the
applications under s. 33 and s. 33-A. It held that there
was no evidence to show that of the forty-eight workmen
concerned, sixteen workmen named by it had taken part in the
go-slow or instigated it. It therefore refused the
application under s. 33 with respect to these sixteen
workmen. As to the remaining thirtytwo workmen it held that
as some Standing Orders which were under contemplation at
the time provided either dismissal or suspension for seven
days in case of misconduct, it was proper to grant leave to
the management to suspend the workmen for seven days, in
view of some opinion expressed by a Go-Slow Committee
appointed some time before by the Bihar Central (Standing)
Labour Advisory Board. In effect, therefore, it rejected
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the prayer of the management for dismissal with respect to
these thirty-two workmen also. Finally, it rejected the
application under s. 33-A.
This award led to two appeals before the Labour Appellate
Tribunal; one was by the management against the entire award
so far as it related to its applications under s. 33, and
the other by the workmen against the dismissal of their
application under s. 33-A and against the award relating to
the applications of the management under s. 33. When the
matter came up for hearing before the Appellate Tribunal,
the workmen withdrew their appeal with respect to their
application under s. 33-A and it was consequently dismissed.
The result of the dismissal of the appeal of the workmen was
that the finding of the Industrial Tribunal that the
suspension was not a punishment and was only pending enquiry
by the management and the proceedings before the tribunal,
stood confirmed.
As to the *appeal by the management with respect to the
applications under s. 33, it was contended on its behalf
before the Appellate Tribunal that the Industrial Tribunal
had gone wrong on two substantial questions of law, namely-
(1) the Industrial Tribunal could either grant or
106
842
refuse permission to dismiss on an application for such
permission under s. 33 and it could not substitute its own
judgment about the quantum of punishment; and
(2) it was wrong in rejecting the applications against
sixteen workmen on the ground that there was no evidence.
The Appellate Tribunal was of the opinion that the
contention of the management on both these points was
correct and that the appeal involved substantial questions
of law. It also found that the Industrial Tribunal’s
finding that the workmen had resorted to go-slow was not
perverse and could be the only finding on the evidence. It
then went on to say that go-slow was insidious in nature and
could not be countenanced, and that it was serious
misconduct normal punishment for which was dismissal. It
also held that the Industrial Tribunal was not right in
relying upon the recommendations of the Go-Slow Committee
and the contemplated Standing Orders which were not till
then in force. Having said all this, we should have expect-
ed that the Appellate Tribunal would set aside the order of
the Industrial Tribunal and grant permission to the
management to dismiss the workmen for what was serious
misconduct of an insidious nature which could not be
countenanced. But it went on to say that it was well
settled that where an employer could not punish a workman
without obtaining permission from the tribunal under s. 33,
an application for permission would be mala fide if it was
made after any punishment had already been meted out to the
workman. It held that in the present case, the suspension
of the workmen by the management was substantive punishment,
because the notice did not in so many words state that it
was pending enquiry and therefore the applications for
permission having been made after punishment had been meted
out were mala fide. In coming to this conclusion, the
Appellate Tribunal seems to have forgotten that it had
already dismissed the appeal of the workmen from the order
of the Industrial Tribunal on their application under s. 33-
A, which in effect amounted to confirming the order of the
Industrial Tribunal that the suspension was not a punishment
but was rightly made pending enquiry by
843
the management and proceedings before the tribunal. The
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Appellate Tribunal supported its decision on this question
of punishment by stating that the mala fides of the
management were clear from the fact that though the
suspensions had been made between January 31 and February 7,
1952, the application was filed by the management on March
29, 1952, after the application by the workmen under s. 33-
A had been filed. This observation was clearly wrong, for
the applications under s. 33 were filed on February 6 and 11
by the management, and it was the application of the workmen
under s. 33-A which was filed on March 29. Having thus
inverted the order in which the applications were made to
the Industrial Tribunal, the Appel. late Tribunal held that
the applications of the management under s. 33 were Dot bona
fide. It then dismissed the appeal of the management, thus
upholding the order of the Industrial Tribunal so far as the
suspension of thirty-two workmen for seven days was con-
cerned on the ground that the workmen had withdrawn their
appeal, though in the earlier part of the judgment all that
-was said was that the workmen had withdrawn their appeal
against the order under s. 33-A.
As the Appellate Tribunal had obviously made a mistake and
inverted the order in which the applications under ss. 33
and 33-A had been made, a review application was filed by
the management. It, however, held that though the dates had
been wrongly mentioned by accident, it saw no reason to
review its order. That is how the management filed two
special leave petitions in this Court.
We are of opinion that on the findings of the Industrial
Tribunal on the three points formulated by it which have not
been upset by the Appellate Tribunal, the only order
possible on the applications of the management under s. 33
was to permit it to dismiss the forty -eight workmen,
provided there was evidence against them all. It was not
open to the Industrial Tribunal when it was asked to give
permission to dismiss to substitute some other kind of
punishment and give permission for that. The Industrial
Tribunal was satisfied that there was misconduct and that
finding has been upheld by the Appellate Tribunal. As such
844
if there was evidence that these forty-eight workmen were
guilty of misconduct, the Industrial Tribunal was bound to
accord permission asked for. We cannot agree with the
Appellate Tribunal that the suspension in this case was
substantive punishment and was not an interim order pending
enquiry and proceedings before the Industrial Tribunal under
s. 33. We have already pointed out that the Labour Officer
told the management on January 31, 1952, that it was free to
take disciplinary action with the permission of the
Industrial Tribunal. It was thereafter that thirtythree
workmen were suspended on January 31 and the notice clearly
said that the suspension was pending further orders, thus
intimating to the workmen that the order of suspension was
an interim measure. This notice of January 31 was followed
by an application on February 6 to the Industrial Tribunal
for permission to dismiss the thirty-three workmen involved
in it, and this also clearly shows that the suspension was
pending enquiry (if any) by the management and proceedings
before the Industrial Tribunal. Similarly, the suspension
notices of February 5 and 6 relating to fifteen workmen said
that they were suspended till further orders and were
followed on February II by an application under s. 33 to the
Industrial Tribunal for permission to dismiss them. In the
circumstances it is quite clear that suspension in this case
was not a punishment but was an interim measure pending
enquiry and proceedings before the tribunal. We have
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already pointed out that this was the finding of the
Industrial Tribunal on the basis of which the application
under s. 33-A was dismissed and this finding stood confirmed
when the workmen withdrew their appeal with respect to their
application under s. 33-A. The Appellate Tribunal therefore
was clearly in error in holding . that the suspension was
punishment.
The only question that remains is about the sixteen workmen
about whom the Industrial Tribunal held that there was no
evidence to connect them with the go-slow. The Appellate
Tribunal’s view in this matter was that the contention of
the management that the Industrial Tribunal was wrong in
holding that there was no evidence against these sixteen
workmen was
845
correct. It has been shown to us that evidence against
these sixteen workmen is of exactly the same witnesses and
of the same kind as the evidence against the remaining
thirty-two. The finding, therefore, of the Industrial
Tribunal that there was no evidence against the sixteen
workmen is patently perverse, for there was the same
evidence against them as against the remaining thirty-two.
It follows, therefore, that all the forty-eight workmen (two
of whom are since said to have died) are exactly in the same
position. As held by the. Appellate Tribunal, go-slow is
serious misconduct which is insidious in its nature and
cannot be countenanced. In these circumstances as these
fortyeight workmen were taking part in the go-slow and were
thus guilty of serious misconduct, the management was
entitled to get permission to dismiss them. But as the
management held no enquiry after suspending the workmen and
proceedings under s. 33 were practically converted into the
enquiry which normally the management should have held
before applying to the Industrial Tribunal, the management
is bound to pay the wages of the workmen till a case for
dismissal was made out in the proceedings under s. 33; (see
the decision of this Court in the Management of Ranipur Col-
liery v. Bhuban Singh (1) ). As already pointed out, this is
the view taken by the Industrial Tribunal while dealing with
the application under s. 33-A which stood confirmed by the
dismissal of the appeal by the workmen in that behalf. The
management will therefore have to pay the wages during the
period of suspension till the award of the Industrial
Tribunal.
We therefore allow the appeals and set aside the orders of
the two Tribunals so far as the applications under s. 33 are
concerned and grant the appellant the permission sought for
by it in these applications subject to the workmen being
paid all their wages during the period of suspension up to
the date of the award of the Industrial Tribunal, i. e., 22-
9-1952. As the workmen did not appear to contest these
appeals, we pass no order as to costs.
Appeals allowed.
(1) [1959] Suppl. 2 S.C.R. 719.
846