Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF KERALA & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
R. E. D’SOUZHA
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/02/1971
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M. (CJ)
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M. (CJ)
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
DUA, I.D.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 832 1970 SCR (3) 711
ACT:
Factories Act, 1948, s. 2(1) -"Worker"-Who is-Constitution
of India Article 134(1) (c)-Principles already settled by
Supreme Court-Questions concerning application thereof-
Whether raise issues fit for appeal to Supreme Court.
HEADNOTE:
After catches of prawns made from time to time were brought
to the respondent’s premises, a casual and irregular group
of women and girls of the locality came at their convenience
to do the peeling, washing, etc. at piece-rates. There were
no.specified hours of work and after finishing their work,
the workers would go on to do similar work at other premises
in the locality. The respondent’s conviction under s. 92 of
the FactoriesAct for, inter alia, using his premises as a
factory without obtainingregistration, etc. was set
aside in revision by the High Court on the viewthat the
workers in question were not "workers" within the meaning of
the Factories Act. On appeal to this Court,
HELD:The High Court had rightly decided that the
workers in the present case were not "workers" covered by s.
2(1) of the Factories Act. [714 C]
Dharangadhara Chemical Works Ltd. v. State of Saurashtra,
A.I.R. [1957] S.C. 264, Chintaman Rao & Another v. The State
of Madhya Pradesh, [1958] S.C.R. 1340; State of Kerala v. V.
M. Patel, [1960] K. L. J. 1524 and Birdhichand Sharma v.
First Civil Judge, Nagpur, [1961] 3 S.C.R. 161; applied.
Obiter :
After this Court had laid down a test to be applied for
determining who were "workers" within the meaning of the
Factories Act, the High Court should have treated the
question of principle as no longer open. The High Court had
certified the case to be fit for appeal as it felt that the
question involved is of general importance in the State. If
the question of principle has been settled by this Court,
the application of the principle to the facts of a
particular case does not make the question a fit one for the
Supreme Court within Article 134(1) (c) of the Constitution.
[714 D]
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeals Nos. 205
and 206 of 1968.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated February 21 1968 of
the Kerala High Court in Criminal Revision Petitions Nos.
415 and 416 of 1967.
D.P. Singh and M. R. K. Pillai, for the appellants (in both
the appeals).
712
G.B. Pai, P. N. Tiwari, O. C. Mathur and Bhajar Ram
Rakhiani, for the respondent (in both the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri, C.J. These appeals are on certificates granted by the
High Court of Kerala. The only question in these appeals is
whether the workmen doing work in the premises of the res-
pondent are workers within the meaning of Sec. 2(1) of the
Factories Act, 1948.
Section 2(1) of the Factories Act, 1948 reads as follows
"Worker’ means a person employed, directly or
through any agency, whether for wages or not,
in any manufacturing process, or in cleaning
any part of the machinery or premises used for
a manufacturing process, or in any other kind
of work incidental to, or connected with, the
manufacturing process, or the subject of the
manufacturing process;"
The respondent was convicted under Sec. 92 of the Factories
Act for using a building as a factory without obtaining the
previous permission in writing of the Chief Inspector of
Factories, for failing to apply for registration and grant
of licence for the factory and for failing to maintain a
muster roll of the workers employed in the factory in one
case, and for failing to give attendance cards to every
person employed in the factory in the, other case. The
respondent was sentenced to pay a fine of Rs. 20/ in each
case. He was also directed under Sec.102 of the Factories
Act to rectify the defects within a specified period.
The respondent filed a Revision Petition in the High
Court. The High Court held that the work that was being
carried out in the premises of the respondent amounted to
manufacturing Process. This question has not been debated
before us. The High Court further held that the workmen
working in the premises of the respondent were not ’workers’
within the meaning of Sec. 2 (1) of the Factories Act. It
is this part of the decision that has been’ challenged in
appeal by the State of Kerala.
The nature of the work done was described in a letter pro-
duced by the prosecution. This letter is not printed on the
record but the High Court summaries the document as follows
"This document shows that as and when catches
of prawns are made, a consignment of prawns is
brought to the premises in a lorry at any time
of the day or the night, that the women and
girls of the locality, who form a "casual,
heterogeneous, miscellaneous and irre-
gular group" come at their convenience and do
the peeling, washing etc., at piece-rates; and
that there are no specified hours of work, nor
is there any control by the Petitioner over
the irregularity and attendance or of the
nature, manner or quantum of their work. The
same workers after finishing the work in the
premises of the petitioner, go to other
similar premises in the locality where other
lorry loads of prawns are taken. In other
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words, if more prawns are caught at a
particular time, they are brought and
distributed among several premises are brought
and distributed among several premises like
the Petitioner’s and the local women and girls
collect at the several premises and do the
work at piece rates. The same workers do not
go to the same premises on different
occasions, and the owners of the several.
premises do not have any control over the
manner or quantum of work these women and
girls do’ The rates of remuneration naturally
depend upon the quantity of prawns available,
the number of women and girls that come to do
the work-, the hour of the day or the night
when the catches arrive, etc. Sometimes, for
days no work is done in the premises."
The High Court after referring to the decisions of this
Court in Dharangadhara Chemical Works Ltd. V. State of
Saurashtra(1), a decision under the Industrial Disputes Act,
Chintaman Rao & Another V. The State of Madhya Pradesh(1)
and. State of Kerala v. V. M. Patel(1). decisions under the
Factories Act, held
"It will be apparent that the women and girls
who assemble and do the work when a catch of
prawns is brought to the premises of the
petitioner are not ’workers’ coming within the
definition of the Factories Act. The
Petitioner does not insist a,% to who should
do the job or how it should be done; he only
wants the work to be done for the agreed
remuneration without spoiling the prawns i.e.
within a short time. (A quantity of prawns is
taken for peeling, cleaning, washing etc. by a
particular individual for a fixed
remuneration, and that individual, with the
assistance of others whom she employs,
finishes the job as quickly as possible.."
The learned Counsel for the appellant contended that it was
erroneous on the part of the High Court to have applied the-
(1) A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 264 (2) [1958] S.C.R. 1340
(3) [1960] K.L.J. 1524
714
decision of this Court in Dharangadhara Chemical Works Ltd.
Vs. State of Saurashtra(1), a case under the Industrial
Disputes Act, to the definition of ’worker’ in the Factories
Act. He fairly pointed out that another Division Bench
applied the same test in a dispute arising under the
Factories Act. (see Birdhkhand Sharma v. First Civil Judge
Nagpur) (2) . But, nevertheless, he urged that we should
refer the case to a larger Bench. We see nothing wrong in
the decision of this Court in Chintaman Rao & Another v. The
State of Madhya Pradesh(3). On the contrary, we are of the
opinion that the case has been rightly decided. The scheme
of the Factories Act clearly shows that the test adopted by
this Court is the correct one. It would be impossible to
apply many provisions of the Factories Act to the ’workers’
of the type we are concerned with here if we were to hold
that they were workers’ within the definition of the
Factories Act. We are really surprised that the High Court
certified this case to be a fit case for appeal to this
Court. After this Court had laid down a test to be applied
for determining who were ’workers’ within the meaning of the
Factories Act, the High Court should have treated the
question of principle as no longer open. The High Court had
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certified the case to be fit for appeal as it felt that the
question involved is of general importance in the State. If
the question of principle has been settled by this Court,
the application of the principle to the facts of a
particular case does not make the question a fit one for the
Supreme Court within Article 134(1)(c) of the Constitution.
In the result the appeals fail and are dismissed.
R K. P. S. Appeals dismissed.
(1) A.I.R. 1957 S.C. 264 (2) [1961]3 S.C.R. 161
(3) [1958] S.C.R. 1340.
715