Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
PETITIONER:
MESSRS. SHALIMAR WORKS LIMITED.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THEIR WORKMEN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/05/1959
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 1217 1960 SCR (1) 150
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Reinstatement-Pending
adjudication--Illegal strike by workmen-Management
discharging workmen without Permission of Tribunal-
Reference, delayed and vague-Whether workmen entitled to
reinstatement on such reference.
HEADNOTE:
On March 23, 1948, while certain disputes were under
adjudication the workmen pressed the same demands upon the
company for immediate solution without awaiting the award of
the tribunal. The company refused to meet the demands and
thereupon the workmen went on an illegal sit-down strike.
The company closed the works indefinitely and notified that
all those workmen who had resorted to the illegal strike
were discharged from that date. On July 5 the company
notified that the works would open on July 6 and all old
employees could apply for reengagement upto July 21. A
majority of them applied for being retaken and all those who
applied upto July 21 were taken but those who applied after
that date were refused. On November 18, 1953, the
Government made a reference in respect of the reinstatement
Of 250 old -workmen who had not been retaken. No list of
the 250 workmen was sent to the tribunal nor was such a list
filed even during the adjudication proceedings but after the
arguments on behalf of the company were over a carelessly
prepared list Of 220 persons was filed before the tribunal
by the workmen on December 14, 1953. The Tribunal ordered
reinstatement without specifying who were to be reinstated.
It directed the company to give a general notice notifying
the strikers to come and join their duties on a fixed date
and to reinstate those who applied within the time allowed.
On appeal, the Labour Appellate Tribunal upheld the order of
reinstatement in respect Of 15 workmen only.
Held, that there was no reason for ordering reinstatement of
any of the workmen-on such a vague reference made after such
an unreasonable delay. It was reasonable that disputes
should be referred as soon as possible after they had arisen
and after conciliation proceedings had failed, particularly
in cases of wholesale discharge of workmen followed by fresh
recruitment of labour. Though the workmen were discharged
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
during the pendency of a dispute in violation of s. 33 of
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, the remedy of the workmen
was to apply under s. 33-A of the Act; but that was not
done. This defect in the discharge of the workmen could be
ignored in the circumstances of this case on account of the
illegal strike, the failure to
151
avail of the remedy under S. 33-A and the delay and
vagueness of the reference which all show that the workmen
were not interested in reinstatement.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 317 & 318
of 1950.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 29th June 1955 of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of India
at Calcutta in Appeals Nos. Cal. 61 and 81 of 1954.
N. C. Chatterjee, S. N. Mukherjee and B. N. Ghose, for the
appellants in C. A. No. 317 of 56 and respondent No. 1 in C.
A. No. 318 of 56.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, A. K. Dutt and B. P. Maheshwari,
for the appellants in C. A. No. 318 of 56 and respondents in
C. A. No. 317 of 56.
1959. May 8. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
WANCHOO J.-These are two appeals by special leave against
the same decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of India
in a dispute between Messrs. Shalimar Works Ltd., Howrah
(hereinafter called the company) and its workmen represented
by two unions (hereinafter called the workmen). Appeal No.
317 is by the company while appeal No. 318 is by the
workmen. We shall dispose them of by one judgment.
There was a dispute between the company and its workmen on a
number of matters and it was referred to the Sixth
Industrial Tribunal for adjudication by the Government of
West Bengal. Only two matters now survive out of the many
referred to the Tribunal, namely, (1) profit sharing bonus
and (2) reinstatement of 250 old workmen.
We shall first deal with the question of profit sharing
bonus. It appears that the company had a profit sharing
bonus scheme in force on the following lines. It provided
that after making certain deductions, if the remaining
profit was between Rs. 1,50,000 and Rs. 1,99,999, the
workmen would be entitled to quarter of a month’s average
basic pay as bonus, When the
152
remaining profit was between Rs. 2-00 lakhs and Rs.
2,49,999, the bonus went up to half of a month’s average
basic pay. When the remaining profit was between Rs.
2,50,000 and Rs. 2,99,999, the bonus was to be three
quarters of a month’s average basic pay and when the
remaining profit was Rs. 3 lacs or more the bonus was to
equal one month’s basic pay. No bonus was to be paid if the
profit was less than Rs. 1,50,000. There were provisions
that the full bonus would be paid to a workmen who had
attended 275 days in a year (inclusive of holidays and leave
with pay) while those with less attendance were to be paid
proportionately with the condition that if the attendance of
any workman was less than 100 days he would be entitled to
no bonus. The workmen wanted this scheme to be revised and
the main revision they desired was that the bonus should
begin with a profit of Rs. 25,000 after the usual deductions
when it would be one week’s wages and should go on
increasing till it came to three months’ wages for profit
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
above Rs. 1 lakh and upto Rs. 3 lakhs; thereafter it should
increase further at the rate of 21 days’ wages for each lakh
over 3 lakhs. This was opposed by the company, though the
company agreed to a change in the quantum of bonus when
profit after deductions was Rs. 3 lakhs or above. In the
scheme in force, the bonus was equal to one month’s basic
pay when the profit was Rs. 3 lakhs or above, with no
further increase whatsoever be the profits. The company
agreed to revise this term and suggested that when profit
was-
(i)between Rs. 3 lakhs to Rs. 4 lakhs, bonus should be four
weeks’ wages;
(ii) above Rs. 4 lakhs upto Rs. 5 lakhs, bonus should be five
weeks’ wages.
(iii)above Rs. 5 lakhs, it should be six weeks’wages
The Industrial Tribunal did not accept fully the contentions
of either party in this connection, though it varied the
scheme in force in certain particulars. After the variation
the scheme was as below
153
For remaining profit after the usual deductions -
(i)from Rs.80,000 to bonus at the rate of one
Rs.1,99,999, week’s average basic pay;
(ii) from Rs.2-00 lakhs to bonus at the rate of half
Rs. 2,49,999, of a month’s average
basic pay;
(iii) from Rs.2-50 lakhs to bonus at the rate of three-
Rs. 2-99,999, quarters of a month’s
average basic.pay;
(iv) from Rs. 3-00 lakhs to bonus at the rate of four
Rs. 4-00 lakhs, weeks’ average basic
pay;
(v) from above bonus at the rate of six
Rs.4-00 lakhs up weeks’ average basic
toRs. 5-00 lakhs pay ; and
(vi) from above bonus at the rate of two
Rs. 5-00 lakhs, months’ average basic
pay.
The Industrial Tribunal also accepted 275 days’ attendance
for earning full bonus and proportionate bonus when the
attendance fell below 275 days and the minimum of 100
days’ attendance for earning any bonus at all. It also held
that bonus for the years 1951 and 1952 should be paid at the
existing rates while revised rates should be applied from
the year 1953 onwards.
Both parties appealed to the Labour Appellate Tribunal
against this revision. The company contended that no
greater revision than what it had agreed to should have been
ordered. In the workmen’s appeal it was contended that the
scheme put forward on their behalf should have been
accepted. They further contended that the condition of
minimum attendance for 100 days should not have been laid
down and that the bonus for the years 1951 and 1952 should
have been awarded at the revised rates.
The Appellate Tribunal saw no reason to interfere with the
award of the Industrial Tribunal in this respect and
dismissed the appeals with one modification,, namely, it
added that if in any year it was found
154
that the bonus worked out according to the award of the
Industrial Tribunal was less than profit bonus, calculated
according to the Full Bench formula evolved in the Mill-
Owners’ Association, Bombay v. The Rashtriya Mill Mazdoor
Sangh, Bombay (1), the workmen would be entitled to bonus
under the formula; otherwise they would get bonus under the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
scheme as modified by the Industrial Tribunal.,
In the appeals before us, the company has attacked the
revision ordered by the Industrial Tribunal, which was
upheld by the Appellate Tribunal, as also the condition
added by the latter; while the workmen have attacked the
scale fixed by the Industrial Tribunal as also the order of
payment of bonus for the years 1951 and 1952, according to
the scheme in force before the revision by the Industrial
Tribunal, and the conditions as to attendance. Learned
counsel for the parties, however, agreed before us that the
revision made by the Industrial Tribunal was acceptable to
both the parties and that the condition laid down by the
Appellate Tribunal that where the bonus according to the
scheme is less than the bonus worked out according to the
Full Bench formula that formula should be applied, should be
deleted. In view of this agreed statement, we delete the
condition laid down by the Appellate Tribunal and order that
bonus should be paid in accordance with the scheme as
revised by the Industrial Tribunal. Learned counsel for the
workmen, however, urged that the condition as to minimum
attendance of 100 days for entitlement to any bonus at all
and of minimum attendance of 275 days for entitlement to
full bonus was arbitrary and should be set aside. This
condition has been accepted by both the Tribunals and
appears reasonable and we see no reason to interfere. It
was further contended that bonus for the years 1951 and 1952
should have been ordered to be paid according to the revised
scheme. This contention was also negatived by the two
Tribunals and we see no reason to differ from them. The two
appeals therefore with respect to bonus are dismissed
subject to the modification given above.
(1) 1950 L.L.J. 1247.
155
We now come to the question relating to the term in the
reference as to the reinstatement of 250 old workmen. it is
necessary to state certain facts in this connection. It
appears that a Major Engineering Tribunal was set up by the
Government of West Bengal in October 1947 to decide disputes
between major engineering firms and their workmen. The
company as well as the workmen were parties to the disputes
which was pending before that tribunal. The issues before
that tribunal were of a very comprehensive nature and
included all kinds of disputes that could arise between
employers and employees. While that adjudication was
pending the workmen suddenly pressed certain demands upon
the company for immediate solution without awaiting the
award of the tribunal, even though the demands so put
forward were under adjudication. The company naturally
refused to meet the demands when they were under
investigation by the tribunal. Consequently, the workmen
who had come to work on March 23,1948, started a sit-down
strike after they had entered the company’s premises. This
strike continued from March 23 to 27, and it was on March 27
that the workmen were ejected from the premises by the
police according to the case of the company or were induced
to leave the premises by the police according to the case of
the workmen. Anyhow, after the workmen left the premises on
27th, the company gave notice on that day that the Works
would be ’closed indefinitely. Another notice was given by
the company on April 6, 1948, in which it was notified that
all those who had resorted to illegal strike from March 23,
1948, would be deemed to have been discharged from that
date. Thereafter no work was done till May 15, 1948. On
that date the company gave a notice that if sufficient
suitable men applied for employment on or before May 19, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
works would be opened on a limited scale from May 20. It
seems, however, that nothing came out of this notice.
Eventually on July 5, the company gave another notice to the
effect that the works would reopen on July 6, 1948, and all
old employees could apply, and if reengaged their past
services would
156
be counted and their conditions of service would be as
awarded by the Major Engineering Tribunal, which, it seems,
had given its award in the meantime. It was also said in
the notice that upto July 21, the company would only
consider engagement of former employees and no fresh labour
would be recruited till that date. Thereafter the majority
of the old workmen applied for being retaken in service and
everyone who applied upto July 21 was reengaged. Thereafter
the company refused to reengage the old employees, a few of
whom are said to have applied in November and December,
1948, August, 1951, February, 1952 and January, 1953.
It appears that in November, 1949, the Assistant Labour
Commissioner was moved by one of the trade unions about non-
employment of 249 workmen. He wrote to the company in that
connection and it replied that the workmen had been
discharged for having taken part in an illegal strike and it
could not see its way to reemploy them. For a long time
nothing seems to have happened thereafter till we come to
October 7, 1952, when the first reference was made with
respect to the reinstatement of 250 old workmen. The
original reference was to the tribunal consisting of Shri
S.K. Niyogi. That gentleman went on retirement before he
could dispose of the reference and consequently another
reference was made on November 18, 1953 to the present
tribunal consisting of Shri M.L. Chakraborty. No list of
250 workmen was sent to the Tribunal about whom it was to
consider the question of reinstatement. No list of these
workmen was filed even before the Industrial Tribunal during
the adjudication proceedings: It was only after the
arguments on behalf of the company were over on December
14,1953, that a list of names was filed before the
Industrial Tribunal. This list consisted of 220 persons
only though the reference was with respect to 250. As has
been pointed out by the Appellate Tribunal, it was a
carelessly prepared list in which some names were repeated.
Against some serial numbers there were neither names nor
ticket numbers. In spite of this, the Industrial Tribunal
ordered reinstatement without specifying who were to be
reinstated; it really
157
did not know who were the persons to be reinstated. What it
did was to order the company in order that identity of the
workmen to be reinstated might be established to give a
general notice on its notice-board notifying the strikers to
come and join their duties on a fixed date and to reinstate
whichever striker applied within the time allowed.
This award of the Industrial Tribunal has been rightly
criticised by the Appellate Tribunal, which has charactrized
this reinstatement as " vague and highly objectionable ".
The Appellate Tribunal was of the view that " no award could
be so loosely or vaguely made ". It further went on to
consider whether identity could in any manner be fixed. In
this connection it relied on the remarks made by the company
(which had, however, objected to the production of the list
at that late stage) on this list under orders of the Indust-
rial Tribunal. From these remarks the Appellate Tribunal
came to the conclusion that the identity of 115 workmen had
been established. It found that 100 out of them had
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
withdrawn their provident fund. It, therefore, held that so
far as these 100 were concerned, they accepted the order of
discharge because of the with. drawal of the provident fund
and no further relief could be granted to them. As for the
remaining fifteen workmen, it pointed out that they had not
withdrawn their provident fund. It, therefore, ordered
these fifteen workmen to be reinstated. Finally, it ordered
that no compensation could be allowed to the workmen for the
period between their discharge and their reinstatement
because of the delay on their part in asking for redress.
The reason which impelled the Appellate Tribunal to order
reinstatement was that the notice of discharge dated April
6, 1948, was not served on the workmen individually and
though the notice of July 5, 1948, inviting the former
workmen to come and join the company was given wide
publicity, it was also not served on the workmen
individually. According to the Appellate Tribunal, " the
net result was that there was defective communication of
notice of discharge to the workmen and the notice offering
reinstatement was not also sufficiently published to enable
it to hold
158
that the defect was cured ". As to the sit-down strike
itself, both the Tribunals were of the view that the strike
was the result of pre-concerted action and there was no
justification for it when the matter was pending before a
tribunal for adjudication. The plea of the workmen that the
strike resulted spontaneously because of the insult offered
by the manager to a deputation of the workmen on March 23
was disbelieved by both the Tribunals.
The main contention on behalf of the company in this
connection is that when both the Tribunals had found the
sit-down strike unjustified, they should have held that the
company was entitled to discharge the workmen, in the
particular circumstances of this case. It is also urged
that the discharge took -place in April, 1948 and the
company reopened in July, 1948; the reference of the matter
more than four years after without the list of the workmen
said to have been discharged, was not proper. On the other
hand it has been urged on behalf of the workmen that as a,
dispute was pending between the company and its workmen, the
company could not discharge the workmen without obtaining
permission of the tribunal under s. 33 of the Industrial
Disputes Act, and inasmuch as the notice of discharge of
April 6, 1948, was given without obtaining the sanction of
the tribunal before whom the dispute was then pending, it
was a breach of s. 33 and therefore the order of discharge
being in breach of law the -workmen were entitled to
reinstatement.
There is no doubt that strictly speaking the order of the
company discharging its workmen on April 6, 1948, when a
dispute was admittedly pending was a breach of s. 33; (see
Punjab National Bank Ltd. v. Employees of the Bank,(1)).
The remedy for such a, breach is provided in s. 33-A and it
can be availed of by an individual workman. If therefore it
was felt by the workmen who were discharged on April 6,
1948, that there was breach of s. 33 by the company, they
should have applied individually or collectively to the
tribunal under s. 33-A. None of them did this. It is true
that some kind of letter was written to the Assistant
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 680.
159
Labour Commissioner in November, 1949, but that was also
very late and nothing seems to have happened thereafter for
almost another three years, till the first reference was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
made on October 7, 1952. It is true that there is no
limitation prescribed for reference of disputes to an
industrial tribunal; even so it is only reasonable that
disputes should be referred as soon as possible after they
have arisen and after conciliation proceedings have failed,
particularly so when disputes relate to discharge of workmen
wholesale, as in this case. The industry has to carry on
and if for any, reason there has been a wholesale discharge
of workmen and closure of the industry followed by its
reopening and fresh recruitment of labour, it is necessary
that a dispute regarding reinstatement of a large number of
workmen should be referred for adjudication within a
reasonable time. We are of opinion that in this particular
case the dispute was not referred for adjudication within a
reasonable time as it was sent to the Industrial Tribunal
more than four years after even reemployment of most of the
old workmen. We have also pointed out that it was open to
the workmen themselves even individually to apply under s.
33-A in this case; but neither that was done by the workmen
nor was the matter referred for adjudication within a
reasonable time. In these circumstances, we are of opinion
that the tribunal would be justified in refusing the relief
of reinstatement to avoid dislocation of the industry and
that is the correct order to make. In addition, the
reference in this case was vague inasmuch as the names of
250 workmen to be reinstated were not sent to the Industrial
Tribunal and no list of these men was given to it till
practically after the whole proceeding was over. Even the
list then supplied was so bad that the Industrial Tribunal
did not think it worthwhile to act upon it, and directed the
company to give a notice to the strikers to ask for re-
employment within a certain time. This the company had
already done on July 5, 1948. That notice had gained con-
siderable publicity, for the majority of the workmen did
appear thereafter for re-employment by July 21. In the
circumstances there was no reason for ordering
160
reinstatement of any one on such a vague reference after
such an unreasonable length of time. The defect, in the
order-of discharge of April 6, due to permission not having
been obtained under s. 33 can in the circumstances of this
case be ignored on the ground that the workmen who did not
rejoin in July 1948, were not interested in reinstatement:
firstly, on account of the circumstances in which that order
came to be made after an illegal and unjustified sit-down
strike, secondly, because the workmen in their turn did not
avail themselves of the remedy under s. 33-A which. was open
to them, and thirdly, because the reference was made after
an unreasonable length of time and in a vague manner. We
are therefore of opinion that the Appellate Tribunal should
not have ordered the reinstatement of even the fifteen
workmen in the circumstances as their case was exactly the
same as the case of the hundred workmen, except in the
matter of the withdrawal of the provident fund.
After the application for special leave was allowed this
Court made an order on September 26, 1955, that seven days’
wages every month should be paid by the company to the
fifteen workmen who had been ordered to be reinstated.
Learned counsel for the company informs us that of these
fifteen, only seven have been turning up to receive this
payment while eight men never turned up. This shows that
these eight are not interested in the reinstatement. Of the
remaining seven, two, according to the learned counsel for
the company, have obtained other jobs while one is said to
be a member of Parliament. The company was prepared to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
reinstate, out of human considerations, the other four,
though, it contends that legally and rightly so-it is not
bound to reinstate any one of these fifteen workmen. These
four workmen whom the company is prepared to take back are
Nitai Manji, Satya Charan Das, Mustafa Khan and Akil-ud-Din.
The appeal of the company must therefore be allowed with
respect to the remaining eleven workmen who have been
ordered to be reinstated by the Appellate Tribunal. The
order of the Appellate Tribunal will stand with respect to
the four workmen named above in
161
view of the company’s willingness to take them back. The
appeal of the workmen on the question of reinstatment fails
and is hereby dismissed. We may, however, make it clear
that payment made pursuant to the order of this Court will
not in any event be refundable or adjustable towards the
future wages of those workmen who will be reinstated by the
company.
Both the company and the workmen have raised other points in
their respective grounds of appeal; but as they have not
been pressed before us we need not say anything with respect
to them. In these circumstances we are of opinion that both
the parties will bear their own costs of this Court.
Appeal No. 317 allowed.
Appeal No. 318 dismissed.