Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAIPUR UDYOG LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CEMENT WORK KARMACHARI SANGH, SAHU NAGAR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/01/1972
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
DUA, I.D.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 1352 1972 SCR (3) 296
1972 SCC (1) 691
ACT:
Industrial Disputes Act--S. 10(1)(d)--Tribunal cannot go
beyond the scope of reference.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a public Limited Company, had a Cement
Factory and at a distance, a limestone quarry. it had two
standing orders for the workman employed in the factory and
in the quarries. Upto April, 1967, both sets of standing
orders provided for superannuation of the workmen at the age
of 55 with a stipulation for extension upto 60 years if a
workman was found fit to work. After a dispute at the
Cement Factory, a settlement was arrived at by which it was
agreed that the standing order applicable to the Cement
Factory be amended by raising the age of superannuation from
55 to 58 without making any provision for further extension
and accordingly, the amendment was made. Nothing was,
however, done with regard to the superannuation age of the
employees at the quarry.
On April 3, 1968, the appellant intimated the incline driver
at the quarry that he had reached the age of retirement on
3-4-68 and accordingly he was given notice of retirement in
terms of the standing order. On April 30, 1968, the said
workman wrote to the appellant that although service records
showed him to be 55 years of age, his proper age according
to his horoscope, was about 50 years and so his service
records should he amended accordingly, but the appellant
refused. The Union took up the cause of the worker and
requested the Regional Labour Commissioner to put the worker
back to work. On a reference under S. 10(1) (d) of the
Industrial Disputes Act, the Tribunal took the view that the
Cement Factory and the quarries were two units of the same
establishment and so, there should be a uniform set of rules
for the workmen of the Company as a whole. In the result,
the Tribunal held that there could not be a lower age limit
of superannuation for workmen at the quarry specially in
view of the fact that workmen were admittedly transferred
from one unit to the other. As a consequence, the Tribunal
quashed the order of dismissal and directed the
reinstatement of the workman with full back wages.
It was contended by the Company before this Court that the
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Tribunal was wrong in construing the order of reference to
include a dispute as to whether it was open to the Company
to have two sets of standing orders providing for different
ages of superannuation. According to the appellant, the
dispute between the parties was whether or not the Company
was justified in coming to the conclusion that the workman
concerned had reached the age of 55 on April 3, 1968, and as
such, was to be superannuated in terms of the standing
orders, Setting aside the award,
HELD : The Tribunal had not taken care to examine what was
the dispute between the parties when the government made the
order of reference. No dispute was ever raised either by
the workman or the Union that the age of superannuation
governing the workman was not
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55 years. The finding of the Tribunal that the Company
could not fix a lower age limit of superannuation for the
workman at the quarries went beyond the scope of reference.
The Tribunal never addressed itself to the point of view of
the workman that his proper age was only 50 and not 55; nor
did it come to a finding that the true age of the workman
being 50 years in 1968, there was no question of his
superannuation in that year. [302 C]
The Sindhu Resettlement Corporation Ltd. vs. The Industrial
Tribunal, Gujarat & Ors. [1968] 1 S.C.R. 515 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1166 of 1971.
Appeal by special leave from the Award dated December 19,
1970 of the Central Government Industrial Tribunal, Jaipur
in Case No. CIT-10 of 1968.
M. C. Setalvad, K. K. Jain, C. N. Sharma, C. S. Patel and
Bishamber Lal, for the appellant.
M. K. Ramamurthi and J. Ramamurthi, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mitter, J. This is an appeal by special leave from an award
of the Central Government Industrial Tribunal, Rajasthan
directing the reinstatement of one Bhisham Verma in the
service of the appellant with full back wages.
The facts are as follows. The appellant is a public limited
company with its registered office at Sawaimadhopur in the
State of Rajasthan. It has a cement factory at the said
place besides a limestone quarry at Phallodi situate at a
distance of 24 kms. from the cement factory. It has two
separate sets of Standing Orders for the workmen employed in
the factory and in the quarries.Both sets of Standing Orders
were certified in accordance with the provisions of the
Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act,1946. The
Standing Orders applicable to the workmen employed in the
factory were certified in the year 1954 while those
applicable to the workmen of the quarries were certified in
the year 1961.Up to April 1967 both sets of Standing Orders
provided for superannuation of the workmen at the age of
55 with a stipulation for extension up to 60 years if a
workman was found fit to work.On a dispute having been
raised for the raising of the age of superannuation of the
workmen at the cement factory, a settlement was arrived at
between the appellant and the respondent (a registered trade
union of the employees) on 16th December 1966 whereby it was
agreed that Standing Order No. 21 applicable to the cement
factory be amended by raising the age of superannua(ion from
55 to 58 years without making any provision for further
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extension. A joint application following upon the agreement
was moved by the appellant and the respondent for modifying
the, Standing Order No. 21 with respect to the age of
superannuation which was accordingly done. Nothing was
however done with regard to the age of superannuation of
the, employees at the quarry, the relevant clause in the
Standing Order remaining unaltered.
On April 3, 1968 the appellant intimated the said Bhisham
Varma, incline driver at the quarry, that he "had exceeded
the age of retirement on 3-4-1968" and as such he was given
"notice of retirement in accordance with clause 21 of the
Standing Orders of the quarries with effect from the close
of work on 2-5-1968". On April 30, 1968 the said workman
wrote to the appellant that although according to the
service file he had completed the age of 55 years as
indicated, his proper age according to his horoscope was
about 50 years and his service record should be amended
accordingly. The appellants’ reply to the above dated July
9, 1968 was to the effect that his case had been reexamined
and that his retirement, as already intimated on 3-4-1968
would stand. The Union took up the cause of the worker and
addressed a letter on July 18, 1968 to the Regional Labour
Commissioner requesting that arrangements may be made to put
the worker back to work and take proper legal proceedings.
On behalf of the workman it was represented that he had been
working in the company since October 11, 1957, that the
Personnel Manager of the, quarry had, given orders
dismissing him from service on April 3, 1968 and that in
spite of objections made by the workman that there was a
mistake in the papers of the company with regard to his age
which was 50 as supported by his horoscope and doctor’s
certificates the action of the quarry manager was illegal
and contrary to service contract. The record does not show
what if any other steps were taken by the parties when the
Central Government made an order of reference under s. 10(1)
(d) of the Industrial Disputes Act ,reading :
"Whether the action of the management of the
Jaipur Udyog Limited, P.O. Phallodi Ouarry,
Sawaimadhopur in terminating the services of
Bhisham Varma, incline driver, with effect
from 9th July 1968, on grou
nds of
superannuation was legal and justified ? If
not to what relief is he entitled ?
Before the Tribunal, the respondent Union filed a statement
of claim wherein after reciting the action taken by the
appellant and the representation made by the workman it was
stated that the quarry and the cement factory were under one
and the same management and there was complete financial
integrality between the activities of the company at both
the places. It was also said
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that workmen could be transferred from one place to another
and that a,. a result of the settlement mentioned, the
company could not retire any workman before he attained the age
of 58 years. The settlement was said to apply to the
workmen employed. at both the places. The Union further
submitted that the company could not insist on two sets of
conditions of service covering different sections of the
same workmen in the same establishment, that the age of
retirement was not a subject mentioned in the Schedule to
the Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act and as such.
no Standing Order could be certified on this topic.
In its reply to the above, the company took the stand that
the settlement arrived at in respect of the cement works
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Karmachari Sangh, Sawai Madhopur was not ipso facto
applicable to the quarry inasmuch as the proper authority
under the Industrial Disputes Act 1947 in respect of the
cement works was the Government of Rajasthan whereas the
appropriate Government in respect of the quarries was the
Government of India. It was said further that in pursuance
of the settlement arrived at in 1966 the Standing Orders
were amended by the Certifying Officer of the Government of
Rajasthan as a result whereof the age of superannuation in
the works at Sawai Madhopur was raised to 58. This however
did not alter or modify the position prevailing in the
quarries which were governed by a separate set of orders
certified by the Certifying Officer of the Government of
India.
The Tribunal took the view that the cement factory and the
quarries were two units of the same establishment and that
consequently there should be a uniform set of rules for the
workmen of the company as a whole and it was immaterial that
in the case of one unit the Standing Orders had to be
certified by the Certifying Officer of the Government of
India and in the other by the Officer appointed by the
Government of Rajasthan. The Tribunal was further of the
view that the clause as to superannuation could not be
provided in the Standing Orders under the relevant Act and
certification could not attach enforceability to them even
on the ground that the workers did not challenge such
provision before the Certifying Officer. In the result the
Tribunal held that there could not be a lower age limit of
superannuation for workmen at the Phallodi Quarry specially
in view of the fact that workmen were admittedly
transferable from one place to the other. As a consequence
of the above finding, the Tribunal quashed the order and
directed the reinstatement of the workman with full back
wages.
On behalf of the company the first contention raised by Mr.
Setalvad was that the Tribunal had gone wrong in construing
the order of reference to include a dispute as to whether it
was open to the company to have two sets of Standing Orders
providing for
300
different ages of superannuation. Mr. Setalvad argued that
in view of the correspondence terminating with the
representation by the Union to the Conciliation Officer, it
was abundantly clear that the dispute between the parties
was whether or not the company was justified in coming to
the conclusion +hat the workman concerned had reached the
age of 55 on April 3, 1968 and as such was to be
superannuated in terms of the Standing Orders. The letter
of the 9th July 1968 by the Company to the workman reads as
follows
Please refer to your application dated 30-4-
1968 received by us on 8-5-1968 along with a
copy of your horoscope in Hindi. The
Management has reexamined your case and come
to a final conclusion that your retirement
from the service of the company as intimated
to you vide our memo No. Pq/B/186 dated 3-4-68
should stand. You are, therefore, directed to
collect your dues, if any, from our Accounts
Department on any working day after producing
necessary clearance certificate."
Of necessity, reference had to be made by the Tribunal to
,the application of the workman dated April 30, 1968 with a
copy of his horoscope. The said latter expressly complained
of the alleged inaccuracy in the service record pertaining
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to him according to which the writer had not completed the
age of 55 years on the 3rd April.The workman’s
representation was that his age had been inaccurately
recorded, ,’,hat his proper age was 50 and that the records
should be corrected accordingly.
In our view, if the Tribunal had taken care to examine what
was the dispute between the parties when the Government
made ,the order of reference it would have had no difficulty
in realising that no dispute was raised either by the
workman or the Union that the age of superannuation
governing the workman was not 55 years. It was certainly
open to the workman to contend that his age of
superannuation should be fixed at 58 and not 55 years and it
would have been equally open to the Union to raise the point
in their representation to the Conciliation Officer. If
that had been done, the Government of Rajasthan could have
property made a reference of a dispute between the parties
regarding the correct age of superannuation and the
adjudication of the dispute regarding the superannuation of
the workman concerned on that basis. Nothing was however
shown to us, apart from the documents already referred to,
to enable us to find that any question had been raised
before the Government of Rajasthan relating to the age of
superannuation of the workmen at the quarries or that there
was any basis for apprehension of such a dispute and it was
therefore not open to the Tribunal to enlarge the ambit of
the dispute between the parties by reference to the
difference in the
301
age of superannuation under the two sets of Standing Orders.
Mr. Setalvad drew our attention to the judgment of this
Court in Tile Sindhu Resettlement Corporation Ltd. V. The
Industrial Tribunal of Gujarat & Ors.(1) for the proposition
that unless a dispute was raised by the workman with their
employer it could not become an industrial dispute.
Respondent No. 3 before this Court in that case was employed
by the appellant as an accounts Clerk at Gandhidham in the
year 1950. Some years thereafter his services were placed
at the disposal of the subsidiary. company of the appellant.
The respondent was appointed in the said subsidiary company
on a different set of conditions of service. He worked with
that company up to February 1958 when his services were
terminated after payment of retrenchment compensation and
other dues by the said subsidiary company. The respondent
then went to the appellant and requested that he might be
given- posting orders. The appellant declined to do so on
the ground that the post which he was occupying in 1953 had
been permanently filled up. Thereupon the respondent
demanded retrenchment compensation from the appellant also.
As the representations of the respondent were not fruitful,
conciliation proceedings were started and ultimately, on the
report of the Conciliation Officer, the State of Gujarat
referred the dispute to, the Industrial Tribunal. The
matter referred for adjudication was, "whether the said
respondent should be reinstated in the service of the
appellant and be paid back wages from 21st February, 1958."
The Tribunal directed reinstatement and payment of back
wages. In allowing the appeal, this Court observed that the
respondent workman had only asked for payment of
retrenchment compensation and did not raise any dispute for
reinstatement. According to this Court (see p. 522):--
". . . . the evidence produced clearly showed
that no such dispute (i.e. relating to
reinstatement) had ever been raised by the
respondent with the management of the
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appellant. If no dispute at all was raised by
the respondents with the management, any
request sent by them to the Government would
only be a demand by them and not an industrial
dispute between them and their employer.
Relying on the above decision Mr. Setalvad argued that in
order that a reference can be construed to embrace a
particular dispute it must be shown that a demand had been
made by the workman and not accepted by the employers so as
to give rise to a dispute which in the view of the
Government required adjudication. Mr. Ramamurty on behalf
of the respondents drew our attention to the provisions of
s. 10(1) of the Industrial Disputes Act and in particular to
clauses (c) and (d) thereof. He argued that it was open to
the appropriate Government in an appropriate case to
(1) [1968] 1. S.C.R. 515.
302
refer a dispute along with any matter appearing to be
connected with or relevant to the dispute and no objection
could be taken to the award of a Tribunal where the Tribunal
had not transgressed the limits of cls. (c) and (d) of S.
10(1) of the Act. It was further contended that the proper
age of superannuation applicable to the company as a whole
was so intimately connected with or relevant to the dispute
which actually arose between the parties prior to the order
of reference as to lead us to hold that the Tribunal had not
gone beyond its jurisdiction in construing the order of
reference to embrace an adjudication as to proper age of
superannuation of a workman like Bhisham Verma. In our
view, the finding of the Tribunal that the Company could not
fix a lower age limit of superannuation for workmen at the
quarries went beyond the scope of reference which had to be
gathered from the circumstances preceding the Government
Order. The Tribunal never addressed itself to the point of
view of the workman that his proper age was only 50 and not
55; nor did it come to a finding that the true age of the
workman being 50 years in 1968 there was no question of his
superannuation in that year.
Mr. Setalvad raised a further point that so, long as the
quarried, had a different set of Standing Orders prescribing
a different age of superannuation from that fixed under,the
Standing Orders relating to the cement works, the tribunal
could not have disregarded the Standing Orders as it had
purported to do and lay down that the age of superannuation
of all workmen should be 58 as found" by it. Our attention
was drawn to s. 2 (g) of the Industrial Employment (Standing
Orders) Act and to S. 3(2) of the said Act under which
provision had to be made in Standing Orders for all matters
set out in the Schedule to the Act. According to Mr.
Setalvad, item 8 of the Schedule reading:
"Termination of employment, and the notice
thereof to be given by employer and workmen."
allowed the framing of Standing Orders with regard to age of
superannuation. Mr. Ramamurty on the other hand contended
that this item could not possibly embrace such a matter as
the age of superannuation but was limited to voluntary acts
of the employer or the workmen to put an end to the
employment without any question of superannuation.
Arguments were advanced at some length by counsel on either
side on this point, but in the view which we have taken on
the first point as to the jurisdiction of the Tribunal, we
find it unnecessary to decide this point.
in the result we hold that the award of the Tribunal was in-
competent as the dispute which it sought to adjudicate upon
was not the one referred. The award will therefore be set
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aside, but in the circumstances of the case, we make no
order as to costs.
S.C. Award set aside.
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