Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE TINNEVELLY-TUTICORIN ELECTRICSUPPLY CO. LTD.,
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ITS WORKMEN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/02/1960
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SUBBARAO, K.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1960 AIR 782 1960 SCR (3) 66
CITATOR INFO :
R 1962 SC1255 (4,9)
RF 1972 SC 70 (21,25)
R 1972 SC 330 (7)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Bonus-Full Bench formula-If applicable to
workmen in electricity undertaking-Electric Supply Act. 1948
(54 of 1948). s. 57. Sixth Schedule, Para, 17(2)(b)(xi).
HEADNOTE:
Can the Full Bench formula for calculation of bonus apply to
a claim of bonus made by workmen engaged in electricity con-
cerns and undertakings ? That was the question raised for
decision in this appeal. A Special Bench of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal held in the affirmative and the
correctness of its decision was challenged in this appeal.
It was contended on behalf of the appellant company that the
Electricity Supply Act, 1948 (54 Of 1948) was a self-
contained code intended to regulate the business and affairs
of electricity concerns and that Act and not the formula
applied to a claim of bonus by the workmen in an electricity
concern.
(1) (1933] 1 I.T.R. 197, 201.
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Held, that the Special Bench had taken a correct view of the
matter and its decision must be upheld.
It is evident from the provisions of the Electricity Supply
Act, 1948, and its schedules that the respective fields of
operation of the Act and of the principles of industrial
adjudication are wholly different, and so there can be no
conflict between them and their relevance and validity in
their own spheres are beyond question.
While the Full Bench formula seeks to ensure social justice
to workmen by apportioning a share of the profits to them
and thus minimise the gap between the actual and the living
wages, the Act does not provide for wages at all. But it is
improper to suggest on that basis that the workmen in
electricty undertakings can be denied social justice. just
as the relevant industrial principles have to be applied for
framing a wage structure for such workmen so also must the
problem of bonus be solved in a like manner.
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The working-sheet prepared under the method of accounting
required by the Act can be no basis for calculation of the
amount of bonus since it is not possible to ascertain the
gross profit therefrom and the Full Bench Formula has to be
applied on the basis of the profit and loss account which a
company has to keep under the Companies Act.
Bayoda Boyough Municipality v. Its Workmen. [1957] S.C.R.
33, referred to.
Moreover, the intention of the Legislature in enacting cl.
(vi) of paragraph 17(2)(b) of Sixth Schedule to the Act
clearly ’was to include a claim of bonus is within the
expenses covered by it and it was to set at rest any
possible doubt on that score that cl. (xiii) was added by a
subsequent amendment.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 23 of 1958.
Appeal by special leave from the decision dated September
29, 1956, of the Labour Appellate Tribunal, Bombay, in
Appeal (Mad.) No. 96 of 1956, arising out of the Award dated
April 9, 1956, of the Industrial Tribunal., Madras, in I.D.
No. 52 of 1954.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, and Naunit Lal, for the
appellants.
T. S. Venkataraman and M. K. Ramamurth, for the
respondents.
1960. February, 22. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-The appellant, the Tinnevelli-Tuticorin
Electric Supply Co., Ltd., Tuticorin, is an electric supply
undertaking, and it carries on its business as a licensee
under the State Government of
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Madras subject to the provisions of the Indian Electricity
Act, 1910 (Act 9 of 1910) and the Electric Supply Act, 1948
(Act 54 of 1948). This latter Act will hereinafter be
called the Act. The business of the appellant consists of
buying electric supply from the State Hydro-electric
Projects and of supplying the same to consumers within the
areas specified in its licence; this area is in and around
Tinnevelli and Tuticorin Municipalities. The appellant’s
workmen (hereinafter called the respondents) made several
demands in respect of their terms of employment. These
demands gave rise to an industrial dispute which was
referred by the Madras Government to the Industrial Tribunal
at Madurai for adjudication under s. 10(1)(c) of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (XIV of 1947). Amongst the
items thus referred for adjudication was included the
respondents’ claim for additional bonus for the year 1952-
53. Without prejudice to its contention that the appellant
was not liable to pay bonus it had in fact voluntarily paid
two months’ basic wages by way of bonus to the respondents.
The respondents, however, claimed additional bonus and this
claim was one of the items of dispute referred to the
tribunal for its adjudication.
Before the industrial tribunal the appellant contended that
since it was working as a licensee under the Act no claim
for bonus was admissible outside the provisions of the Act.
In support of this plea the appellant relied on the scheme
of the Act which restricted the profit-making of the
electricity concerns to a prescribed limit with a
possibility of a surplus only in cases of overcharging
provided for in the rules. The appellant’s case was that,
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having regard to the scheme, object and the background of
the Act under which the appellant was carrying on its busi-
ness, the respondent’s claim for additional bonus was wholly
misconceived. No claim for bonus can be entertained, it was
urged on behalf of the appellant, without reference to the
provisions of the Act which governs the business of the
appellant.
The tribunal, however, rejected the appellant’s contentions
and held that the appellant was liable to pay two months’
basic wages as additional bonus to
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the respondents. This award was passed on March 4, 1955.
Against this award the appellant preferred an appeal, No. 56
of 1955, to the Labour Appellate Tribunal, and contended
that no additional bonus should have been awarded in the
absence of proof of an excess of "clear profits over
reasonable return" ; it was the appellant’s case that it was
only from excess of clear profits over reasonable return as
defined by the Act that bonus can be legitimately awarded to
the respondents. It appears that about this time a number
of appeals raising the same question were pending before the
Labour Appellate Tribunal, and decisions given by the Labour
Appellate Tribunal showed divergence of opinion on the
question about the effect of the Act in respect of the claim
for bonus made by employees of electricity concerns and
undertakings. That is why the Chairman of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal issued an administrative order that all
appeals which raised the said question should be grouped
together and posted for hearing before a specially
constituted fuller bench of five members. The Chairman
thought that a decision by a fuller bench would finally
resolve the apparent conflict disclosed in several decisions
pronounced thereto, and give proper guidance to the
tribunals in future.
The special bench of the appellate tribunal then heard the
group of appeals including the appeal preferred by the
appellant. It held that bonus could be ordered to be paid
notwithstanding the limitations of the Act, and that the
quantum of bonus should be determined even in the case of
electricity concerns or undertakings by the application of
the Full Bench formula laid down in that behalf. Having
decided the question of law in this manner, the appeals were
remanded to the respective benches of the Labour Appellate
Tribunal for disposal in accordance with law. The appeal
preferred by the appellant was in due course taken up by the
Industrial Tribunal at Madras the Industrial Tribunal at
Madurai having been in the meanwhile abolished and the
appeals on its file transferred to the Industrial Tribunal
at Madras. This latter tribunal considered the merits
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of the contentions raised by the parties, applied the Full
Bench formula, and ultimately passed an award on April 9,
1956, directing the appellant to pay ’an additional bonus of
two months’ basic wages to the respondents.
Thereupon the appellant preferred another appeal to the
Labour Appellate Tribunal, and it was numbered as Appeal
(Madras) No. 96 of 1956. Certain contentions were raised
before the appellate tribunal on the merits, and it was
urged that the direction to pay an additional bonus of two
months basic wages was improper and unjustified. The
appellate tribunal negatived most of the contentions raised
by the appellant, but it was satisfied that the calculation
made by the tribunal in regard to the quantum of available
surplus was erroneous, and so, after rectifying the said
error, it held that the additional bonus which the appellant
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should pay to the respondents was one month’s basic wage.
It is against this decision of the appellate tribunal that
the present appeal by special leave has been filed by the
appellant before this Court. The main question which the
appeal raises for our decision is whether the fuller bench
of the Labour Appellate Tribunal was justified in holding
that the Full Bench formula can and should be applied in
adjudicating upon the respondents’ claim for bonus against
the appellant.
Incidentally, we may point out that the fuller bench of the
Labour Appellate Tribunal in the case of U. P. Electricity
Supply Co. Ltd. & Ors. v. Their Workmen (1) has decided two
questions of law. The first was in regard to the
applicability of the Full Bench formula to the employees’
claim for bonus against their employers carrying on the
business of the supply of electricity, and the second was in
regard to the extent of the statutory depreciation allowed
by the Full Bench formula. The question was whether it
should not include initial depreciation and additional
depreciation which are given for the purpose of allowing
relief in the matter of taxation under s. 10(2) (vi-b) of
the Income-tax Act. The fuller bench had decided that in
allowing a prior charge in the
(1) (1955) L.A.C. 659.
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working of the formula it is only the normal incometax
depreciation (including multiple shift depreciation) that
should be allowed. The correctness of this latter decision
was challenged before this Court in Sree Meenakshi Mills
Ltd. v. Their Workmen (1) but the challenge failed and the
decision of the fuller bench was confirmed. In the present
appeal it is the correctness of the fuller bench decision on
the first question which is challenged before us.
Let us being by stating briefly the appellant’s contention.
It is urged on behalf of the appellant that it is only where
the " clear profits " are in ’excess of the " reasonable
return " under the Act that a case for the payment of bonus
can really arise in regard to the electricity concerns and
undertakings. The Act is a self-contained code intended to
regulate the business and affairs of electricity concerns
including the claim of their employees for bonus, and as
such an industrial dispute between such concerns and their
employees in regard to bonus must be determined solely by
reference to the provisions of the Act and and not by the
application of the Full Bench formula. As to the quantum of
bonus which should be awarded it would depend upon the
circumstances in each case; but it is urged that it may as
an ad hoe measure be decided that 1/4th of the excess
between clear profits and the reasonable return may be taken
as a fair quantum of bonus which electricity concerns should
be ordered to pay to their employees. Before dealing with
the validity of this argument it is necessary to examine the
scheme of the Act. -
Let us first consider some of the provisions in the Indian
Electricity Act 9 of 1910 which may be relevant. Section
3(2)(d)(i) provides that the State Government may, on an
application made in the prescribed form, and on payment of
the prescribed fee (if any), grant, after consulting the
State Electricity Board, a licence to any person, and that
the said licence may prescribe such terms as to the limits
within which and conditions under which, the supply ,of
energy is to be compulsory or permissive, and generally as
to such matters as the State Govern-
(1) [1458] S. C. R. 878.
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ment may think fit. Section 3(f) provides that the
provisions contained in the Schedule shall be deemed to be
Incorporated with, and to form part of, every licence
granted under this Part, except as in the manner therein
described. Section 4(1)(b) empowers the State Government
inter alia to revoke the licence where the licensee breaks
any of the terms or the conditions of his licence the breach
of which is expressly declared by such licence to render it
liable to revocation. Section 7(1) provides to the
authorities specified in it option to purchase the
undertaking. Section 11 requires the licensee to prepare
and render to the State Government or to such authority as
the State Government may appoint in that behalf, on or
before the prescribed date in each year an annual statement
of account of his undertaking made up to such date, in such
form and containing such particulars, as may be prescribed
in that behalf. Section 22 imposes on the licensee
obligation to supply energy subject to the conditions
prescribed ; and s. 23 provides that a licensee shall not,
in making any agreement for the supply of energy, show undue
preference to any person. The licensee cannot also charge
for such supply any rates higher than those permitted. The
appropriate Government is authorised to fix the maximum
charges, and by appropriate rules both the maximum and
minimum charges have been prescribed. These are the
relevant provisions of Act 9 of 1910.
Let us now refer to some of the relevant provisions of the
Act. Section 57 provides the licensee’s charges to
consumers. According to it the provisions of the Sixth
Schedule and the Seventh Schedule shall be deemed to be
incorporated in the licence of every licensee, not being a
local authority, in the manner specified by it. This
section further provides inter alia that as from the
specified date the licensee shall comply with the provisions
of the said Schedules and not provisions of Act 9 of 1910,
and the licence granted to him thereunder and of any other
law, agreement or instrument applicable to the licensee
shall, in relation to the licence, be void and of no effect
in so far as they are inconsistent with the
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provisions of s. 57A and the said Schedules. Section 57
deals with the licensee’s charges to the consumers and lays
down provisions which shall have effect in relation to the
licence where the provisions of the Sixth Schedule and the
table appended to the Seventh Schedule are under sub-s. (1)
deemed to be incorporated in the said licence. These
provisions relate to the appointment of the Board and the
rating committee. Section 57A prescribes the principles and
the procedure which has to be followed by the rating
committee in making its report to the State Government
regarding the charges for electricity which the licensee may
make to any class or classes of consumers. This provision
gives us an idea as to the object which the Legislature had
in mind in ultimately fixing the minimum and maximum rates
chargeable to the consumers. Sections 78 and 79 provide for
power to make rules and regulations. Nine Schedules are
attached to the Act. Schedule Six deals with the financial
principles and their application; Schedule Seven deals with
the depreciation of assets; Schedule Eight provides for the
determination of cost of production of electricity at
generating stations; and schedule Nine prescribes the method
for allocation of costs of production at generating
stations.
It is necessary at this stage to refer briefly to some of
the provisions contained in the Sixth Schedule, because Mr.
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Viswanatha Sastri, for the appellant, has relied on the
scheme of the said Schedule in support of his principal
argument. These provisions prescribe the financial
principles which have to be followed by the electricity
concerns and undertakings covered by the Act. It is urged
by the appellant that these principles along with the rest
of the Schedules and the provisions of the Act constitute a
self-contained code which govern the business and the
financial affairs of electricity concerns, and as such even
the claim of the appellant’s employees for bonus must be
dealt with in the light of these provisions. Paragraph 1 of
Sixth Schedule provides:-
" 1. Notwithstanding anything contained in the Indian
Electricity Act, 1910 (9 of 1910) (except sub-s. (2) of s.
22A), and the provisions In the
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licence of a licensee, the licensee shall so adjust his
rates for the sale of electricity whether by enhancing or
reducing them that his clear profits in any year of account
shall not, as far as possible, exceed the amount of
reasonable return;".
This provision is made subject to four provisos which it is
unnecessary to mention.
Paragraph 2 reads thus:-
" II. (1) If the clear profit of a licensee in any year of
account is in excess of the amount of reasonable return,
one-third of such excess, not exceeding five per cent. of
the amount of reasonable return, shall be at the disposal of
the undertaking. Of the balance of the excess, one-half
shall be appropriated to a reserve which shall be called the
Tariffs and Dividends Control Reserve and the remaining half
shall either be distributed in the form of a proportional
rebate on the amounts collected from the sale of electricity
and meter rentals or carried forward in the accounts of the
licensee for distribution to the consumers in future, in
such manner as the State Government may direct.
(2) The Tariffs and Dividend Control Reserve shall be
available for disposal by the licensee only to the extent by
which the clear profit is less than the reasonable return in
any year of account.
(3) On the purchase of the undertaking under the terms of
its licence any balance remaining in the Tariffs and
Dividends Control Reserve shall be handed over to the
purchaser and maintained as such Tariffs and Dividends
Control Reserve."
Paragraph 3 provides for the creation from existing reserve
or from the revenue of the undertaking a reserve to be
called Contingencies Reserve. Paragraph 4 prescribes the
manner in which the licensee shall appropriate to
Contingencies Reserve from the revenues of each year of
account. Paragraph 6 directs that there shall be allowed in
each year in respect of depreciation of fixed assets
employed in the business of electricity supply such an
amount as would if set aside annually throughout the
prescribed period and accumulated at compound interest at 4
per
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cent. per anum, produce by the end of the prescribed period
amount equal to 90 per cent. of the original cost of the
asset after taking into account the sums already written off
or set aside in the books of the undertaking; annual
interest on the accumulated balance will be allowed as
expense from revenue as well as the annual incremental
deposit. Paragraph 7 deals with assets which have ceased to
be avilable for use through obsolescence, inadequacy,
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superfluity or for any other reason, and it allows the
licensee to describe the said assets as no longer in use,
and no further depreciation in respect thereof shall be
allowed as a charge against the revenue. Paragraph 8 prohi-
bits any further depreciation where an asset has been
written down in the books of the undertaking to 10 per cent.
or less of its original cost. Under paragraph 9, where a
fixed asset is sold for a price exceeding its written down
cost, the excess has to be credited to the Contingencies
Reserve. Paragraph 10 requires the consent of the State
Government to carry sums to a reserve or to declare a
dividend in excess of 3 per cent. on share capital or other
matters specified therein. Paragraph 13 imposes limitations
in respect -of ordinary remunerations of managing agents;
whereas paragraph 14 provides that the Board of Directors
shall not contain more than 10 directors; and paragraph 15
prescribes the way in which the licensee can make any
capital expenditure which exceeds Rs. 25,000 or 2 per cent.
of the capital base within three years before the next
option of purchase under the licence arises. Paragraph 16
contains an arbitration clause. Paragraph 17 gives
definitions for the purpose of this Schedule. Capital base
is defined by paragraph 17(1); clear profit is defined by
paragraph 17(2) as meaning the difference between the amount
of income and the sum of expenditure plus specific
appropriations made up in each case as prescribed in several
sub-clauses of clauses (a), (b) and (c). It is necessary to
refer to two sub-clauses under clause (b) :-
" (xi) other expenses admissible under the law for the time
being in force in the assessment of, Indian Income-tax and
arising from and ancillary or incidental to the business of
electricity supply;
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(xii) contributions to Provident Fund, staff pension,
gratuity and apprentice and other training schemes. "
Paragraph 17(9) defines a reasonable return as meaning :-
" in respect of any year of account, the sum of the
following:
(a) the amount found by applying the standard rate to the
capital base at the end of that year;
(b) the income derived from invesments than those made
under paragraph IV of this Schedule;
(c) an amount equal to one half of one per centum on any
loans advanced by the Board under subparagraph (2) of
paragraph I of the First Schedule." One of the points which
we have to decide in the present appeal is whether an amount
of bonus paid by the employer to his employees is included
under paragraph 17 (2) (b)(xi) of the Sixth Schdule.
It would thus be clear that the provisions of the Act in
general and those of the Sixth Schedule in particular, are
no doubt intended to control and regulate the rates
chargeable to consumers and to provide the method and the
machinery by which the electrical system of the country
could be properly coordinated and integrated. The rates
chargeable are fixed, so is a reasonable return provided
for. But it is not as if the Act intends to guarantee a
minimum return to the undertaking. What it purports to do
is to prohibit - a return higher than the one specified.
Appropriations permissible under revenue receipts are also
defined and enumerated and a clear profit as contemplated by
the Act is also prescribed and defined. Large powers have
been given to the Electricity Authority, Boards and Councils
for the purpose of canalising the activities of the concerns
as well as for adjusting their activities for changing
conditions and circumstances. Just as the Act has made
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provision for the control of rates chargeable to consumers
its policy also is to give a fair deal to the undertaking
and persons engaged in the business of supplying
electricity. ’It is with this twin object that a working-
sheet is required to be prepared under the provisions of the
Act. It is, however, clear that the working-sheet thus
prescribed is essentially
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different from the balance-sheet and profit and loss account
which companies keep under the provisions of the Companies
Act. The determination of clear profits on the basis of the
working-sheet ::proceeds on the consideration of previous
losses, contributions towards the arrears of depreciation
and several appropriations authorised by the State
Government, matters which have no relevance to commercial
accounting. The principles of commercial accounting on
which the balance, sheets are prepared and profit and loss
account made are very different from the principles on which
the working-sheet as specified in the Act is required to be
prepared. The question which arises for our decision is
whether the appellant is right in contending that the
present dispute arising from the respondents’ claim for
bonus must be decided by the provisions of the Act alone and
that the Full Bench formula is wholly inapplicable for the
purpose.
In dealing with this contention it is necessary to bear in
mind that the fields covered by the Full Bench formula and
by the provisions of the Act are entirely different. The
Full Bench formula has been evolved by industrial
adjudication for the purpose of doing social justice to
workmen and it is. now well-established that the workmen’s
claim for bonus is justified on the ground that they
contribute to the employer’s profit and are entitled to
claim a share in the said profit with a view to fill the gap
between their actual wages and the living wage which they
aspire to earn. On the other hand, the Act does not purport
to deal with this problem at all. It is significant that
though the Act makes detailed provisions in respect of
matters intended to be covered by it, it does not refer to
the wages which the employer may have to pay to his
employees. Can it be said that in fixing the wage.
structure as between an electricity undertaking and its
employees considerations of social justice would be
irrelevant? In fixing such wage-structure none of the
provisions of the Act can afford the slightest assistance to
industrial tribunals. That task must be attempted by the
tribunals in the light of principles of social justice and
other relevant considerations such as the capacity of the
employer to pay and the wages
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received by employees in comparable trades in the same
region. Just as the problem of wage-structure has to be
solved in the case of electricity concerns apart from the
provisions of the Act and in the light of the relevant
industrial principles, so must the problem of bonus be
resolved in the like manner. There is really no conflict
between the Act and the principles of industrial
adjudication. In fact they cover different fields and their
relevance and validity is beyond question in their
respective fields.
As we have just indicated the method of accounting required
by the Act in preparing the working-sheet is substantially
different from the commercial method of accounting which
yields the gross profits in the form of profit and loss
account. Determination of gross profit is the first step
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which industrial tribunals take in applying the Full Bench
formula. Such gross profit cannot be ascertained from the
working-sheet prepared under the Act. It is not denied that
the appellant has to keep accounts under the Companies Act
on a commercial basis. That being so, in dealing with the
respondents claim for bonus, it is the balance-sheet and the
profit and loss account , prepared by the appellant that
must be taken as the basis in the present proceedings, and
that is precisely what the tribunals below have done.
Therefore, we are satisfied that the Labour Appellate
Tribunal was right in coming to the conclusion that the
respondents’ claim for bonus must be governed by the
application of the Full Bench formula.
In this connection it may be useful to refer to the decision
of this Court in the case of Baroda Borough Municipality v.
Its Workmen (1). One of the points raised on behalf of the
Baroda Borough Municipality in resisting the claim for bonus
by its workmen was that the scheme of the Bombay Municipal
Boroughs Act 18 of 1925 by which the Municipality was
governed did not permit the making of any claim for bonus :
and so it was not open to the, labour court or tribunal to
direct payment of bonus to municipal employees.- This
argument was rejected. "The demand for bonus as an
industrial claim ", it was
(1) [1957] S.C.R. 33.
81
observed, "is not dealt with by the Municipal Act; it is
dealt with by the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. Therefore,
it is not a relevant consideration whether there are
provisions in the Municipal Act with regard to bonus. The
provisions of the Municipal Act are relevant only for the
purpose of determining the quality or the nature of the
municipal property or fund; those provisions cannot be
stretched beyond their limited purpose for defeating a claim
of bonus ". That is why this Court came to the conclusion
that the absence of provisions in the Municipal Acts for
payment of bonus to municipal employees was not a
consideration which was either determinative or conclusive
of the question at issue before it.
The next question which arises is whether a claim for bonus
can be said to be included under paragraph 17 (2) (b) (xi).
This provision includes under expenditure other expenses
admissible under the law for the time being in force in the
assessment of Indian Income-tax and arising from. and
ancillary or incidental to, the business of electricity
supply. It is admitted that bonus paid by an employer to
his employees constitutes expenses admissible under section
10(2)(vi) of the Income-tax Act, but it is urged that it is
not an expense which can be said to arise from, and
ancillary or incidental to, the business of electricity
supply. The argument is that cl. (xi) lays down two tests,
one of which is satisfied viz., that it is expense
admissible under the lndian Income-tax Act, but the other is
not satisfied, and so the clause is inapplicable to the
amount paid by way of bonus. The appellate tribunal has
held that even the other test is satisfied and that the
expenditure in question can be said to arise from, or to be
ancillary, or incidental to, the business of electricity
supply. In our opinion, it is difficult to accept the
appellant’s argument that the construction placed by the
appellate tribunal on the latter part of this clause is not
reasonably possible. Besides, it may be relevant to point
out that by a subsequent amendment made in 1957 cl. (xiii)
has been added under paragraph 17(2)(b) of the Sixth
Schedule. This clause which is numbered (xiii) reads thus:
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" Bonus paid to the employees it
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of the undertaking-(a) where any dispute regarding such
bonus has been referred to any tribunal or other authority
under any law for the time being in force, relating to
industrial or labour disputes in accordance with the
decision of such tribunal or authority ; (b) in any other
case, with the approval of the State Government ". After the
insertion of this clause there can be no doubt that the
amount paid by the employer to his employees by way of bonus
would definitely be admissible expenditure under paragraph
17(2)(b). In our opinion, the insertion of this clause can
be more reasonably explained on the assumption that the
Legislature has thereby clarified its original intention.
Even when cl. (xi) was enacted the intention was to include
claims of bonus under expenses covered by the said clause,
but in order to remove any possible doubt the Legislature
thought it better to provide specifically for bonus under a
separate category. Otherwise, it is difficult to appreciate
how contributions to Provident Fund were treated as
admissible expenditure all the time since they were covered
by cl. (xii) and bonus could not have been treated as
admissible expenditure under cl. (xi). That is why we are
on the whole prepared to agree with the construction put
upon cl. (xi) by the appellate tribunal. If that be the
true position then bonus has always been an admissible
expenditure under the scheme of the Act, and as such there
is no conflict between the scheme of the Act and the claim
made by the respondents in the present case. Incidentally,
we may add that this point appears to have been conceded by
the appellant before the appellate tribunal. We must
accordingly hold that the appellate tribunal was right in
coming to the conclusion that the Full Bench formula applied
in adjudicating upon the respondents’ claim for bonus
against the appellant in the present proceedings. As we
have already indicated, before the fuller bench reached this
decision there was a conflict of opinion in the decisions of
the Labour Appellate Tribunals, but in view of our
conclusion it is unnecessary to refer to the said earlier
decisions.
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That takes us to the merits of the award. The first point
is in regard to the appellant’s claim for rehabilitation.
-Before the Labour Appellate Tribunal it was fairly conceded
by the respondents that at least income-tax at seven annas
in a rupee on the gross profits less depreciation, and also
a contingency reserve of Rs. 6,047 have to be allowed in
arriving at the figure of net available surplus for the
purpose of bonus payable to the respondents ; and that in
regard to normal statutory depreciation the correct figure
must be taken to be Rs. 99,038 instead of Rs. 90,393 as
given by the industrial tribunal. Then, as to the
rehabilitation the appellant has led no evidence at all and
so the appellate tribunal refused to grant any sum by way of
rehabilitation in addition to the total amount of Rs.
1,13,950. In our opinion, the appellate tribunal was right
in holding that the adoption of a factor of 2-7 for all
assets purchased before 1945 was not justified, and that the
adoption of the figures of the estimated life of the assets
from the Schedule to the Electric Supply Act without even
deducting the respective portions of the life of the assets
which had already expired was equally unjustified. In that
view of the matter we do not see how’ the appellant can make
any grievance against the finding of the appellate tribunal
on the question of rehabilitation. The appellate tribunal
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has fairly observed that, in future if a dispute arises
between the appellant and its employees, the appellant may
substantiate its claim for rehabilitation by leading proper
evidence.
The claim of the appellant for the triple shift allowance in
respect of the mains has been allowed by the appellate
tribunal and there is no dispute in respect of it; but it is
urged that rule 8 of the Incometax Rules justifies the
appellant’s claim in respect of all its electric plant and
machinery under Entry IIIE (1). Rule 8 provides that the
allowance under s. 10 (2) (vi) of the Act in respect of
depreciation of buildings, machinery, plant or furniture
shall be a percentage of the written down value or original
cost, as the case may be, equal to one-twelfth the number
shown in the corresponding entry in the second column of the
following statement. There are two
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provisos to this rule which it is not necessary to set out.
The appellant makes a claim under IIIE (1) which deals with
electric plant, machinery and boilers, whereas, according to
the respondents, the appellant’s case in this behalf falls
under IIIC (4) and (5) which respectively deal with
underground cables and wires and overhead cables, and wires.
The argument for the respondents is that in respect of these
items the appellant’s claim is inadmissible. In support of
this argument the respondents rely upon the remark against
item 3 on page 8 of the Rules. This remark would show that
the benefit claimed by the appellant does not apply to an
item of machinery or plant specifically excepted by the
letters N, E, S, A being shown against it. These letters
are the contraction of the expression " No Extra Shift
Allowance ". There is no doubt that these letters are to be
found against items in IIIC (4) and (5). Therefore, the
point which arose for decision before the appellate tribunal
was whether the appellant’s claim falls under IIIE (1) or
IIIC (4) and (5). The appellate tribunal has observed that
the appellant made no attempt to show that any such claim
for shift depreciation in respect of its cables and wires
had been put forward by it before the income-tax
authorities, or that it was held to be admissible by them.
It has also observed that if the appellant’s case was true
that the cables and wires fell under IIIE (1) it was
difficult to understand why separate provision should have
been made in respect of depreciation of cables and wires
under IIIC (4) and (5). Besides, the appellate tribunal was
not satisfied that such cables and wires would depreciate in
value to a materially greater extent when electrical energy
is allowed to pass through them for more than one shift.
That is why, on the materials as they were available on the
record, the appellate tribunal saw no reason why the
appellant should be allowed any extra shift depreciation in
respect of underground and overhead cables by way of a prior
charge. The appellant’s claim for the provision of Rs.
23,516 in that behalf was’ therefore, rejected. It would
thus be seen that the appellant seeks to claim this amount
by way of prior charge;
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and in substance this claim has been rejected by the
appellate tribunal on the ground that sufficient material
has not been placed before it by the appellant on which the
claim could be examined and granted. In such a case we do
not see how we can interfere in favour of the appellant.
The present decision will not preclude the appellant from
making a similar claim in future and justifying it by
leading proper evidence.
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In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.