Full Judgment Text
1
REPORTABLE
2023 INSC 1033
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1320 OF 2010
UNION OF INDIA & ORS. …APPELLANTS
VERSUS
K. SURI BABU …RESPONDENT
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NO.1323 OF 2010
UNION OF INDIA & ORS. …APPELLANTS
VERSUS
M. KIRAN KUMAR …RESPONDENT
J U D G M E N T
SUDHANSHU DHULIA, J.
1. These are the two appeals filed by the Union of India; Appeal
No.1320/2010, is against the order dated 14.10.2008
passed by a Division Bench of the High Court of Judicature,
Andhra Pradesh at Hyderabad in Writ Petition No.9541 of
2008 and Appeal No. 1323/2010 is against the order dated
Signature Not Verified
22.01.2009, of a Division Bench of the High Court of
Digitally signed by
NEETA SAPRA
Date: 2023.11.30
16:59:56 IST
Reason:
Judicature, Andhra Pradesh at Hyderabad passed in Writ
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Petition No.494/2009. The issue in both the Civil Appeals
raised is identical, but for the sake of convenience, for facts
we would be only referring to Civil Appeal No.1320 of 2010.
2. The High Court in the impugned order dated 14.10.2008 has
allowed the Writ Petition of the respondent by setting aside
the order (dated 18.03.2008), passed by the Central
Administrative Tribunal, Hyderabad (for short ‘CAT’) which
upheld the initiation of the disciplinary proceedings by the
Nuclear Fuel Complex-Hyderabad (hereinafter referred to as
‘NFC’ or ‘Department’), against the respondent under the
Central Civil Services (Classification, Control and Appeal)
Rules, 1965 (for short ‘CCA Rules 1965’). The short question
which was there before the High Court and which is now
before us, is whether the disciplinary proceedings against
the respondent (who is admittedly a workman), could be
initiated under the CCA Rules 1965 or it could be done only
under the Standing Orders certified for the NFC-Hyderabad
on 27.08.1973 (hereinafter referred to as “Standing Orders”),
under the Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act,
1946 (hereinafter referred to as ‘1946 Act’).
3. NFC was set up in the 1970s, as a constituent unit of the
Department of Atomic Energy, Government of India. The
3
respondent was appointed as a ‘helper’ w.e.f. 05.05.2001 in
NFC. Helper is the class IV post and it seems that the
eligibility requirement for the post was a Class VI certificate
which the respondent had submitted in order to get the
appointment. On 23.04.2003 he received a memorandum
which said that he had given a false declaration that he had
passed Class VI as the transfer certificate of Class VI
submitted by him was found to be fake for which a
disciplinary action was to be initiated against him under
CCA Rules 1965. In response, the respondent denied the
allegations and asserted that his certificate is genuine and
further contended that the disciplinary proceedings, if any,
would be governed by the Standing Orders and not under
the CCA Rules 1965, and ultimately, he filed an OA before
the CAT, Hyderabad, with a prayer to set aside the
proceedings against him, inter alia , on the grounds that the
disciplinary proceedings against him can only be initiated
under the “Standing Orders”, and not under the CCA Rules.
The CAT, dismissed his O.A. vide its order dated 18.03.2008.
The CAT relied on his appointment order, as well as the
circular dated 12.05.2005 issued by the Department to
clarify that their employees were governed by the CCA Rules
4
and not Standing Orders. This order of CAT, was challenged
by the respondent in a writ petition before the High Court
which was allowed and the order of the CAT was set aside
and the disciplinary proceedings against the respondent
were quashed.
4. The case of the respondent is that he being a workman will
be covered by the Standing Orders which contain provisions
to deal with matters, inter alia , of disciplinary proceedings,
and therefore the proceedings initiated against him under
the CCA Rules, 1965 are without jurisdiction. On the other
hand, the appellants before this Court would argue that the
respondent-workman is governed by the CCA Rules 1965,
being an employee of NFC, Hyderabad. One of the terms and
conditions stated in his appointment order was that he
would be governed under the CCA Rules, even for
disciplinary proceedings. Further, it is under the CCA Rules
where a large number of benefits are liable to be given to the
employees of the Department. On the date, an employee
reaches the age of superannuation, he gets his pension only
under the CCA Rules 1965, apart from a large number of
other benefits and therefore it is not open for the employee
to say that as long he enjoys the benefits, the Rules will be
5
applicable, but the same Rules will not be applicable in the
disciplinary proceedings against him. Such an argument is
not tenable under the law, the department would argue.
5. We have heard Mr. Arkaj Kumar, learned counsel for the
appellants and Mr. Anand Padmanabhan R. learned counsel
for the respondent workman, at length and have perused the
material on record.
6. Learned counsel appearing for the Department has drawn
our attention to the appointment order dated 05.05.2001,
which states that in matters of disciplinary proceedings the
employee will be governed by the CCA Rules. The relevant
provision mentioned in the appointment order is as under:
“3. I am to add that other terms and
conditions of your service including
discipline will be governed by the rules as
applicable to Central Government
employees of your status in NFC from time
to time. Your leave entitlement will be
admissible to Industrial employees in
departmental undertakings under
Appendix-XI of CSR Vol. II (8th Edition)
(Ref. Ministry of finance Memo No. 7(84) E-
IV(A)/B1, dt. 17.11.61 as amended vide
Ministry of Finance Memo No. B(1)-E-
IV(A)/70, dt. 27.03.71). Other conditions of
service will be governed by the Rules and
Orders of the Central Government in force
from time to time.”
6
Since the Rules applicable to Central Government
employees are the CCA Rules 1965, the reference in the
appointment order to the applicable Rules, is of CCA Rules,
1965.
7. Standing Orders made under the Industrial Establishment
(Standing Orders) Act, 1946 are however Rules specific to
workmen in an industrial establishment. Industrial
Employment (Standing Orders) Act 1946, Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947 and a number of other legislations of this
period, are worker friendly legislations, which were enacted
with a purpose i.e., to regulate the working conditions of
workmen. Standing Orders grant a protection to a workman,
inter alia , when he faces a disciplinary proceeding initiated
by the employer. The employer is undoubtedly on a much
powerful position than a workman and has much stronger
bargaining power and consequently the statute has been
made to create a balance. This position has been held by this
Court in a catena of decisions, namely, Salem-Erode
Electricity Distribution Co. (P) Ltd. Employees’ Union
v.
1
(1966) 2 SCR 498 , Management, Shahdara (Delhi)
1
Paragraph No. 8
7
Saharanpur Light Railway Co. Ltd. v. S.S. Railway
2
Workers Union (1969) 2 SCR 131 and Agra Electric
Supply Co. Ltd. v. Sri Alladdin and Others (1969) 2 SCC
3
598 etc.
8. The protection of the 1946 Act, cannot be denied to a
workman merely for the reason that the employer grants him
other services benefits such as pension, gratuity etc. under
CCA Rules. The purpose behind this worker-friendly
legislation was explained by this Court in Sudhir Chandra
Sarkar v. Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. ( 1984) 3 SCC 369:
“11. Parliament enacted the Industrial
Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946 (“1946
Act” for short). The long title of the Act provides
that it was an act to require employers in
industrial establishments formally to define
conditions of employment under them. The
preamble of the Act provides that it is expedient
to require employers in industrial establishments
to define with sufficient precision the conditions
of employment under them and to make the said
conditions known to workmen employed by
them. By Section 3, a duty was cast on the
employer governed by the Act to submit to the
Certifying Officer draft standing orders proposed
by him for adoption in his industrial
establishment. After going through the procedure
prescribed in the Act, the Certifying Officer has to
certify the draft standing orders. Section 8
requires the Certifying Officer to keep a copy of
2
Paragraph No. 7
3
Paragraph No. 5
8
standing orders as finally certified under the Act
in a register to be maintained for the purpose.
Sub-section (2) of Section 13 imposes a penalty
on employer who does any act in contravention
of the standing orders finally certified under the
Act. The Act was a legislative response to the
laissez faire rule of hire and fire at sweet will. It
was an attempt at imposing a statutory contract
of service between two parties unequal to
negotiate, on the footing of equality. This was
vividly noticed by this Court in Western India
Match Company Ltd. v. Workmen [(1974) 3 SCC
330 : 1974 SCC (L&S) 531 : (1974) 1 SCR 434 :
(1973) 2 LLJ 403] as under : [SCC para 10, p. 334
: SCC (L&S) p. 536]
“In the sunny days of the market
economy theory people sincerely
believed that the economic law of
demand and supply in the labour
market would settle a mutually
beneficial bargain between the
employer and the workman. Such a
bargain, they took it for granted,
would secure fair terms and
conditions of employment to the
workman. This law they venerated
as natural law. They had an abiding
faith in the verity of this law. But the
experience of the working of this law
over a long period has belied their
faith.”
The intendment underlying the Act and the
provisions of the Act enacted to give effect to the
intendment and the scheme of the Act leave no
room for doubt that the Standing Orders certified
under the 1946 Act become part of the statutory
terms and conditions of service between the
employer and his employee and they govern the
relationship between the parties. Workmen v.
Firestone Tyre & Rubber Co [(1973) 1 SCC 813,
832 : 1973 SCC (L&S) 341, 360 : (1973) 3 SCR
9
587, 612 : (1973) 1 LLJ 278] Workmen v.
Buckingham and Carnatic Mills [(1970) 1 LLJ 26,
29 (SC)] and Glaxo Laboratories v. Presiding
Officer Labour Court, Meerut [(1984) 1 SCC 1 :
1984 SCC (L&S) 42]”
9. The submission made by the learned counsel for the NFC
Shri Arkaj Kumar is that since the appointment order itself
provides that disciplinary issues will be governed by the CCA
Rules 1965, there should be no room for any doubt as to the
applicability of the Rules in the disciplinary proceedings.
This may not be always correct. An appointment order
cannot lay down terms of service which are against what is
provided in the Standing Orders, as they are binding on the
employer. This Court in the case of Western India Match
Co. Ltd. v. Workmen (1974) 3 SCC 330 had directed
reinstatement of a worker, who had been illegally terminated
from service during his probation period, as this period was
wrongly extended beyond what was permissible in the
Standing Orders. This is what was said by this Court in
Paragraph 11:
“11. The special agreement, in so far as it
provides for additional four months of
probation, is an act in contravention of the
Standing Order. We have already held
that. It plainly follows from Sections 4, 10
and 13(2) that the inconsistent part of the
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special agreement cannot prevail over the
Standing Order. As long as the Standing
Order is in force, it is binding on the
Company as well as the workmen. To
uphold the special agreement would mean
giving a go-by to the Act’s principle of
three-party participation in the settlement
of terms of employment. So we are of the
opinion that the inconsistent part of the
special agreement is ineffective and
unenforceable.”
In Sudhir Chandra Sarkar (supra) it was ultimately held
by this Court that the terms of a statutory contract of service
was illegal because it denied gratuity to an employer which
was against the Standing Orders that were legally binding
on the employer.
10. Standing Orders are defined under Section 2(g) of the 1946
Act as under:
“2(g) “standing orders’ means rules relating
to matters set out in the Schedule”
In the schedule to the 1946 Act, a whole list of topics is given
which are related to workman, such as classification of
workmen, their attendance, closing and reopening of the
industrial establishment to suspension or dismissal for
misconduct and as to what constitutes misconduct, etc.
11
The 1946 Act mandates under Section 3 that the
employer shall submit before the certifying officer, draft
standing orders proposed by him, for adoption in his
industrial establishment. The draft standing orders after
scrutinization under Section 4 of the 1946 Act are finally
certified under Section 5 of the 1946 Act.
The standing orders are then notified under Section 7 of
the Act, when it becomes effective. However, before these
standing orders are notified under Section 7, it may go
through a quasi-judicial process, as any party aggrieved by
any provisions of the standing orders has a right to appeal
under Section 6 of the 1946 Act before the Appellate
Authority. The standing orders which are finally notified are
then prominently posted by the employer in English as well
as in the language understood by the majority of the
workmen. Section 10 of the 1946 Act provides that the
standing orders shall not be modified except by agreement
between the parties within six months of the certification or
the last modification of the Standing Orders. The Standing
Order which the workman/respondent claims in the present
case have gone through the above process and there is no
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order under Section 10 of the 1946 Act which modifies the
Standing Order applicable herein.
11. A standing order is hence no ordinary order. It has a
statutory mandate. The 1946 Act mandates all owners of
industrial establishments which are employing 100 or more
workmen to prepare standing orders which should cover all
matters relating to employment of a workman which have
been given in the schedule of the 1946 Act and then these
standing orders further need to be certified by the authority
under the 1946 Act. The objective and purpose of the 1946
Act was to have a certainty in service conditions of workmen
and a responsibility was placed upon the employer to
formulate fair conditions of industrial employment,
including in its disciplinary proceedings against a workman.
In other words, standing orders are a set of Rules which have
to be strictly followed and cannot be ignored, modified or
changed, except in accordance with law.
12. The CCA Rules, 1965 on the other hand were framed under
the proviso to Article 309 of the Constitution of India which
are applicable to employees of Central Government. The
CCA Rules, 1965 are not specific to workmen as these are
13
general service rules applicable to all employees who work
under the Central Government. These are not workman
specific Rules, unlike the standing orders. Rule 3 of the CCA
Rules, 1965 provides for the applicability of the Rules, which
reads as under:
“3. Application.– (1) These rules shall apply to
every government servant including every
civilian Government servant in the Defence
Services, but shall not apply to–
(a) any railway servant, as defined in rule 102
of Volume I of the Indian Railway
Establishment Code,
(b) any member of the All India Services.
(c) any person in casual employment,
(d) any person subject to discharge from service
on less than one month’s notice,
(e) any person for whom special provision is
made, in respect of matters covered by these
rules, by or under any law for the time being in
force or by or under any agreement entered
into by or with the previous approval of the
President before or after the commencement of
these rules, in regard to matters covered by
such special provisions.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-
rule (1), the President may by order exclude
any class of Government servants from the
operation of all or any of these rules.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-
rule (1), or the Indian Railway Establishment
Code, these rules shall apply to every
Government servant temporarily transferred to
a Service or post coming within exception (a) or
(e) in sub-rule (1), to whom, but for such
transfer, these rules would apply.
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(4) If any doubt arises–
(a) whether these rules or any of them apply to
any person, or
(b) whether any person to whom these rules
apply belongs to a particular Service.
the matter shall be referred to the President,
who shall decide the same.
13. The standing orders, on the other hand, as we have seen,
cover a whole range of activities of work related to a
workman in an industrial establishment which not only
includes his working hours, the facilities to be given to a
workman, his duties and responsibilities but even minor
activities of a workman in an industrial establishment.
There is hardly any area which is not covered under these
standing orders. Another important feature of the standing
orders is that it is totally focused on the activities, nature of
work of a workman and the treatment he deserves vis-a-vis
the employer and the duties towards his employer. All these
are comprehensively laid down. The CCA Rules, 1965 do not
comprehensively cover the service conditions of a workman
as a standing order does.
14. The purpose and the scope of 1946 Act is explained best in
the words of Justice O. Chinnappa Reddy in U.P. State
15
Electricity Board and Another v. Hari Shankar Jain
and Others, AIR 1979 SC 65 , which held as under:
| “6. Let us now examine the various | ||
|---|---|---|
| statutory provisions in their proper context | ||
| with a view to resolve the problem before us. | ||
| First, the Industrial Employment (Standing | ||
| Orders) Act, 1946. Before the passing of the | ||
| Act, conditions of service of industrial | ||
| employees were invariably ill-defined and | ||
| were hardly ever known with even a slight | ||
| degree of precision to the employees. There | ||
| was no uniformity of conditions of service for | ||
| employees discharging identical duties in the | ||
| same establishment. Conditions of service | ||
| were generally ad-hoc and the result of oral | ||
| arrangements which left the employees at | ||
| the mercy of the employer. With the growth | ||
| of the trade union movement and the right of | ||
| collective bargaining, employees started | ||
| putting forth their demands to end this sad | ||
| and confusing state of affairs. Recognising | ||
| the rough deal that was being given to | ||
| workers by employers who would not define | ||
| their conditions of service and the | ||
| inevitability of industrial strife in such a | ||
| situation, the legislature intervened and | ||
| enacted the Industrial Employment | ||
| (Standing Orders) Act. It was stated in the | ||
| statement of objects and reasons: | ||
| “Experience has shown that ‘Standing | ||
| Orders’, defining the conditions of | ||
| recruitment, discharge, disciplinary | ||
| action, holidays, leave etc., go a long | ||
| way towards minimising friction | ||
| between the management and workers | ||
| in industrial undertakings. Discussion | ||
| on the subject at the tripartite Indian | ||
| Labour Conferences revealed a | ||
| consensus of opinion in favour of | ||
| legislation. The Bill accordingly seeks to |
16
| provide for the framing of ‘Standing | ||
|---|---|---|
| Orders’ in all industrial establishments | ||
| employing one hundred and more | ||
| workers.” | ||
| It was, therefore, considered, as stated in the | ||
| preamble “expedient to require employers in | ||
| industrial establishments to define with | ||
| sufficient precision the conditions of | ||
| employment under them and to make the | ||
| said conditions known to workmen | ||
| employed by them”. The scheme of the Act, | ||
| as amended in 1956 and as it now stands, | ||
| requires every employer of an industrial | ||
| establishment as defined in the Act to submit | ||
| to the Certifying Officer draft Standing | ||
| Orders, that is, “Rules relating to matters set | ||
| out in the Schedule”, proposed by him for | ||
| adoption in his industrial establishment. | ||
| This is mandatory. It has to be done within | ||
| six months after the commencement of the | ||
| Act. Failure to do so is punishable and is | ||
| further made a continuing offence. The draft | ||
| Standing Orders are required to cover every | ||
| matter set out in the schedule. The Schedule | ||
| enumerates the matters to be provided in the | ||
| Standing Orders and they include | ||
| classification of workmen, shift working, | ||
| attendance and late coming, leave and | ||
| holidays, termination of employment, | ||
| suspension or dismissal for misconduct, | ||
| means of redress for wronged workmen etc. | ||
| Item 11 of the Schedule is “Any other matter | ||
| which may be prescribed”. By a notification | ||
| dated November 17, 1959 the Government of | ||
| Uttar Pradesh has prescribed “Age of | ||
| superannuation or retirement, rate of | ||
| pension or any other facility which the | ||
| employer may like to extend or may be | ||
| agreed upon between the parties” as a | ||
| matter requiring to be provided in the | ||
| Standing Orders. On receipt of the draft | ||
| Standing Orders from the employee, the |
17
Certifying Officer is required to forward a
copy of the same to the trade union
concerned or the workmen inviting them to
prefer objections, if any. Thereafter the
Certifying Officer is required to give a hearing
to the employer and the trade union or
workmen as the case may be and to decide
“whether or not any modification of or
addition to the draft submitted by the
employer is necessary to render the draft
Standing Orders certifiable under the Act”.
Standing Orders are certifiable under the Act
only if provision is made therein for every
matter set out in the schedule, if they are in
conformity with the provisions of the Act and
if the Certifying Officer adjudicates them as
fair and reasonable. The Certifying Officer is
invested with the powers of a civil court for
the purposes of receiving evidence,
administering oaths, enforcing the
attendance of witnesses etc. etc. The order of
the Certifying Officer is subject to an appeal
to the prescribed Appellate Authority. The
Standing Orders as finally certified are
required to be entered in a register
maintained by the Certifying Officer. The
employer is required to prominently post the
Certified Standing Orders on special boards
maintained for that purpose. This is the
broad scheme of the Act. The Act also
provides for exemptions. About that, later.
The Act, as originally enacted, precluded the
Certifying Officer from adjudicating upon the
fairness or reasonableness of the Draft
Standing Orders submitted by the employer
but an amendment introduced in 1956 now
casts a duty upon the Certifying Officer to
adjudicate upon the fairness or
reasonableness of the draft Standing
Orders. The scheme of the Act has been
sufficiently explained by this Court
in Associated Cement Co. Ltd. v.P.D.
Vyas [AIR 1960 SC 665 : (1960) 2 SCR 974 :
18
| (1960) 1 LLJ 563 : 20 FJR 59] , Rohtak | |
|---|---|
| Hissar District Electricity Supply Co. | |
| Ltd. v. State of U.P. [AIR 1966 SC 1471 : | |
| (1966) 2 SCR 863 : (1966) 2 LLJ 330 : 29 FJR | |
| 76] , and Western India Match Co. | |
| Ltd. v. Workmen [(1974) 3 SCC 330 : 1973 | |
| SCC (L&S) 531 : (1974) 1 SCR 434] . The | |
| Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act | |
| is thus seen to be an Act specially designed | |
| to define the terms of employment of | |
| workmen in industrial establishments, to | |
| give the workmen a collective voice in | |
| defining the terms of employment and to | |
| subject the terms of employment to the | |
| scrutiny of quasi-judicial authorities by the | |
| application of the test of fairness and | |
| reasonableness. It is an Act giving | |
| recognition and form to hard-won and | |
| precious rights of workmen. We have no | |
| hesitation in saying that it is a special Act | |
| expressly and exclusively dealing with the | |
| schedule-enumerated conditions of service of | |
| workmen in industrial establishments.” | |
| (emphasis supplied) |
Thus, it was held in Hari Shankar Jain (supra) that
the Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act is a special
act under which Standing Orders are laid down which deals
with specific conditions of a workman in an “industrial
establishment”, and the hard won right of a workman
cannot be taken away by a general enactment such as CCA
Rules, 1965.
19
“10. We have already shown that the
Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act
is a special Act dealing with a specific
subject, namely the conditions of service,
enumerated in the schedule, of workmen in
industrial establishments. It is impossible to
conceive that Parliament sought to abrogate
the provisions of the Industrial Employment
(Standing Orders) Act embodying as they do
hard-won and precious rights of workmen
and prescribing as they do an elaborate
procedure, including a quasi-judicial
determination, by a general, incidental
provision like Section 79(c) of the Electricity
(Supply) Act. It is obvious that Parliament did
not have before it the Standing Orders Act
when it passed the Electricity Supply Act
and Parliament never meant that the
Standing Orders Act should stand pro tanto
repealed by Section 79(c) of the Electricity
Supply Act. We are clearly of the view that
the provisions of the Standing Orders Act
must prevail over Section 79(c) of the
Electricity Supply Act, in regard to matters to
which the Standing Orders Act applies.”
15. The NFC was established in the 1970s as a unit of
department of Atomic Energy, Government of India. The
management of NFC after its establishment, in the capacity
of an employer submitted draft Standing Orders under
Section 3 of the 1946 Act before the certifying officer which
th
was duly certified on 27 August, 1973, and thereafter
notified. These Standing Orders are applicable to all
industrial employees of NFC Hyderabad who are workmen
20
as defined under the 1946 Act. There is no doubt that the
private respondents come under the definition of workman.
Clauses 38 to 44 of the Standing Orders certified for the
NCF-Hyderabad in 1973 provided for misconduct,
disciplinary action, penalties, procedure, appeal and review.
It is, however, true that the Ministry of Labour, Government
th
of India had issued an OM dated 29 July, 1977 where it
had clarified that wherever Section 13B of the 1946 Act was
applicable for the establishments, the standing orders need
not be certified any longer and in case they have already
been certified they would become invalid. All the same, the
High Court of Andhra Pradesh in its impugned order
correctly makes a distinction here which is that whereas for
the Madras Atomic Power Project (similarly constituted as
NFC-Hyderabad) there is an exclusionary clause in terms of
Section 13B of the 1946 Act in its Standing Orders but in
the Standing Orders certified for NFC-Hyderabad, there is
no mention of Section 13-B of the 1946 Act.
16. It is also true that in the present case, both the private
respondents when they were given employment, their
appointment orders clearly said that their service
21
conditions, including disciplinary proceedings, if any, would
be governed under the CCA Rules, 1965. Therefore, the case
of the employer is that disciplinary proceedings also have to
be initiated under the CCA Rules, 1965 and the standing
orders will have no applicability in the present case.
The employer also relies upon Section 13B of the 1946 Act,
which reads as follows:
“13B. Act not to apply to certain industrial
establishments.—Nothing in this Act shall apply
to an industrial establishment in so far as the
workmen employed therein are persons to
whom the Fundamental and Supplementary
Rules, Civil Services (Classification, Control and
Appeal) Rules, Civil Services (Temporary
Services) Rules, Revised Leave Rules, Civil
Service Regulations, Civilians in Defence Service
(Classification, Control and Appeal) Rules or the
Indian Railway Establishment Code or any
other rules or regulations as may be notified in
this behalf by the appropriate Government in the
Official Gazette, apply.”
Relying on the above provision, the argument of the
employer is that the 1946 Act will not apply to an industrial
establishment, if for the industrial establishment CCA
Rules, 1965 have been made applicable, and since the CCA
Rules, 1965 have been made applicable and it was
specifically stated in the appointment orders of the
respondents, the standing orders will have no application.
22
17. Section 13B of the 1946 Act declares that to those workmen
in an industrial establishment to whom the CCA Rules, 1965
are applicable, the provisions of the 1946 Act will not apply.
The question which still remains is whether in order to oust
the 1946 Act a separate notification under Section 13 B
would be necessary as Section 13 B speaks of “… as may be
notified in this behalf by the appropriate Government in the
Official Gazette, apply”.
The Andhra Pradesh High Court, in the impugned
judgment, though is of the opinion that there is some
ambiguity in Section 13B of the 1946 Act as to whether a
separate notification is required for only unspecified rules
mentioned in Section 13B or will a separate notification also
be necessary for the specified Rules such as CCA Rules,
1965. All the same, this question has been answered to a
large extent by this Court in Hari Shankar Jain (supra).
The question before this Court was whether the standing
orders would be applicable to a workman or will it be the
regulations framed under the Electricity Supply Act, 1948.
In the said case, there were standing orders for the
workmen, who were working for the U.P. State Electricity
23
Board (as it was then), but subsequently a notification was
th
issued by the Government of India on 28 May, 1970
specifically under Section 13B of the 1946 Act. The
notification read as under:
“In pursuance of the provision of Section 13-B
of the Industrial Employment (Standing
Orders) Act, 1946 (Act No. 20 of 1946), the
Governor is pleased to notify in the official
Gazette that the U.P. State Electricity Board
has made the following Regulations under
sub-section (c) of Section 79 of the Electricity
(Supply) Act, 1948 (Act No. 54 of 1948):
Notwithstanding any rule if an order or
practice hitherto followed, the date of
compulsory retirement of an employee of the
Board will be the date on which he attains the
age of 58 years; provided that—
(i) in the case of the inferior servants of the
Board, whose counterparts under State
Government are at present entitled to serve up
to the age of 60 years, the age of compulsory
retirement will be the date on which they
attain the age of 60 years.
(ii) the Board or its subordinate appointing
authority may require an employee to retire
after he attains or has attained the age of 55
years on three months' notice or three months'
salary in lieu thereof without assigning any
reason.”
We have also noticed that in the above case, there was a
specific notification under Section 13B of the 1946 Act,
which admittedly is not there in the case at hand. What is
important is that the notification (in the above case), was not
24
of a general nature but it was specific to “compulsory
retirement”, of employees of the Electricity Board. An
employee was to be compulsory retired after attaining the
age of 58 years, subject to certain provisions. This Court
held that essentially the Regulations, made under the
Electricity Supply Act are of a general nature, and the
Standing Orders are the special rules. Therefore, the special
rules would override the general. Nevertheless, since there
is also an exclusion clause under Section 13B of the 1946
Act and there was indeed a notification under the said Act
which we have already referred above, it will be the
regulations made under the 1948 Act which will be
applicable, but only so far as it relates to compulsory
th
retirement, since the notification dated, 28 May, 1970 was
only limited to compulsory retirement. It has been held as
under:
“17. … In our view the only reasonable
construction that we can put upon the
language of Section 13-B is that a rule or
regulation, if notified by the Government, will
exclude the applicability of the Act to the
extent that the rule or regulation covers the
field. To that extent and to that extent only
‘nothing in the Act shall apply’. To understand
Section 13-B in any other manner will lead to
unjust and uncontemplated results. For
instance, most of the Service Rules and
25
Regulations expressly mentioned in Section
13-B do not deal with a large number of the
matters enumerated in the schedule such as
‘Manner of intimating to workmen periods and
hour of work, holidays, pay-days and wage
rates’, ‘shift working’, ‘Attendance and late
coming”, ‘conditions of, procedure in applying
for, and the authority which may grant leave
and holidays’, ‘Closing and reopening of
sections of the industrial establishments and
temporary stoppages of work and the rights
and liabilities of the employer and workmen
arising therefrom, etc. To exclude the
applicability of Standing Orders relating to all
these matters became the Fundamental
Rules, the Civil Service Rules or the Civil
Services Control, Classification and Appeal
Rules provide for a few matters like
‘Classification of workmen’ or ‘suspension or
dismissal for misconduct’ would be to reverse
the processes of history, apart from leading to
unjust and untoward results. It will place
workmen once again at the mercy of the
employer be he ever so benign and it will
certainly promote industrial strife. We have
indicated what according to us is the proper
construction of Section 13-B. That is the only
construction which gives meaning and sense
to Section 13-B and that is a construction
which can legitimately be said to conform to
the Directive Principles of State Policy
proclaimed in Articles 42 and 43 of the
Constitution.”
It, then, went on to hold as further:
“18. We, therefore, hold that the Industrial
Employment (Standing Orders) Act is a
special law in regard to the matters
enumerated in the schedule and the
regulations made by the Electricity Board
with respect to any of those matters are of no
effect unless such regulations are either
26
notified by the Government under Section 13-
B or certified by the Certifying Officer under
Section 5 of the Industrial Employment
(Standing Orders) Act. In regard to matters in
respect of which regulations made by the
Board have not been notified by the Governor
or in respect of which no regulations have
been made by the Board, the Industrial
Employment (Standing Orders) Act shall
continue to apply. In the present case the
regulation made by the Board with regard to
age of superannuation having been duly
notified by the Government, the regulation
shall have effect notwithstanding the fact that
it is a matter which could be the subject-
matter of Standing Orders under the
Industrial Employment (Standing Orders)
Act.”
Relying upon the aforesaid decision, the Delhi High Court in
Air India v . Union of India, ILR (1991) 1 Del 88 held that
in order to make the exclusion clause (under Section 13B of
the 1946 Act) applicable a notification is required to be made
and that too by none other than the Government of India.
The logical conclusion therefore would be that CCA
Rules, 1965 are the general Rules whereas Standing Orders
are the Special Rules, and therefore the Standing Orders
would override the CCA Rules, 1965. Moreover, the Standing
Orders cover a wide area of activities of a workman and are
workmen specific yet in view of Section 13B of 1946 Act a
specific notification can be made applying CCA Rules, 1965
27
to that specific aspect. But a notification is necessary. In
view of the Hari Shankar Jain (supra), this can be the only
interpretation of Section 13B of the 1946 Act.
18. The NFC was established much after the 1946 Act and the
CCA Rules, 1965 had come into force. Yet a conscious
decision was taken by the management of NFC to submit
draft Standing Orders under Section 3 of the 1946 Act,
which was duly certified by the certifying authority and then
notified which then became applicable since then. Once the
standing orders have been notified and have come into force,
there is a procedure prescribed under the 1946 Act for
modifying or withdrawing such a standing order, which we
have stated in the preceding paragraphs. There is nothing
or record to show that after the standing orders, which stood
certified in the year 1973 and were in force, any subsequent
modification was made or any order passed curtailing these
standing orders, under Section 10 of the 1946 Act.
Nothing has also been placed on record to suggest that
a notification under Section 13B of the 1946 Act was made
by Government of India, making its intentions clear that
from henceforth for such and such matters, it will be the
28
CCA Rules, 1965 which will be applicable and not the
standing orders. In the absence of such notification, we do
not find any fault with the order of the Andhra Pradesh High
Court which has held that it will be the standing orders and
not the CCA Rules, 1965 which will be applicable.
4
19. This Court in the case of Hari Shankar Jain (supra) held
that Standing Orders have the nature of Special Rules. It is
a settled principle of law that only in those cases, where the
Special Rules fail to lay down provisions for dealing with
certain subjects, can the General Rules be pressed into
service. The CCA Rules are General Rules which apply to all
Government Servants. When the Standing Orders for the
Department have clearly laid down a procedure to be
followed in cases of Disciplinary proceedings under Order
Nos. 38, 39 & 40, there is no reason for the Department to
initiate the said proceedings under the CCA Rules.
20. Any modification sought to be made to the service conditions
of the respondent can only be done as per the procedure
which is given under Section 10 of the Standing Orders Act,
1946. This Court in the case of Oil and Natural Gas
4
Paragraph No. 10
29
Corporation Ltd. v. Petroleum Coal Labour Union & Ors.
(2015) 6 SCC 494 was deciding the validity of a policy
decision taken by ONGC to appoint CISF personnel to
security posts. The temporary workmen who were appointed
on the said posts were opposing this decision and it was
their contention that their services should be regularised
instead. This Court observed that the temporary workmen
who had completed 240 days in 12 months had acquired a
right to be regularised under Clause 2(ii) of the ‘Certified
Standing Orders for Contingent Employees of the Oil and
Natural Gas Commission’. Further, that any modification to
the service conditions of the temporary workmen could only
be done as per Section 10 of the 1946 Act. Replying upon
the seminal decision of this Court in Hari Shankar Jain
(supra), it reads as under :-
“For the Corporation to implement such a
provision which affects the service
conditions of its employees, it is necessary
for the Corporation to first modify the
Certified Standing Orders by following the
procedure provided under Section 10 of
the Industrial Employment (Standing
Orders) Act, 1946 as the same is a special
enactment and therefore, prevails over the
provisions under the ONGC Act and the
Recruitment Rules. The Corporation
undisputedly has not made any such
modification to its Certified Standing
30
Orders by following the procedure for
modification of conditions of service as per
Section 10 of the Industrial Employment
(Standing Orders) Act, 1946.”
As we have already stated above NFC, Hyderabad has failed
to place on record any modification made under Section 10
of the 1946 Act to show that the Standing Orders certified
for NFC-Hyderabad would not be applicable to the
respondent.
Service conditions of respondents will be governed by
the ‘Standing Orders’ as far as the disciplinary proceedings
are concerned. ‘Standing Orders’ being in the nature of
special Rules will override any other general Rule including
CCA Rules, 1965. Further, in view of the law laid down in
Hari Shankar Jain (supra) the ‘Standing Order’ will in any
case prevail until modified under Section 10 of the 1946 Act,
which has not been done. This position has been reiterated
by this Cout in Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited
(supra) where conditions of appointment were held to be void
and inapplicable to a worker if it makes any other Rule
applicable in suppression of the ‘Standing Orders’ without
31
there being a modification under Section 10 of the Standing
Orders.
21. In view of our findings given above, we dismiss these appeals
and uphold the order dated 14.10.2008 passed by the High
Court of Judicature, Andhra Pradesh at Hyderabad. The
order of status quo granted by this Court on 02.03.2009 is
hereby vacated.
No orders as to cost.
……..............................J.
[SANJAY KISHAN KAUL]
……..............................J.
[C.T. RAVIKUMAR]
.…….............................J.
[SUDHANSHU DHULIA]
New Delhi,
November 29, 2023.