Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NATIONAL TEXTILE WORKERS’ UNION ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
P.R. RAMKRISHNAN AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT10/12/1982
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)
CITATION:
1983 AIR 75 1983 SCR (1) 9
1983 SCC (1) 228 1982 SCALE (2)1144
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1992 SC 248 (76)
D 1992 SC2093 (17)
ACT:
Indian Companies Act, 1956-S. 433-Petition for winding-
up of company-Orders likely to adversely affect interests of
workers-Workers have right to appear and be heard-Workers
also entitled to hearing on their own request when
application for appointment of provisional liquidator is
being considered-Trade Unions representing workers competent
to intervene on behalf of workers.
Companies (Court) Rules, 1959-R. 34-Provides for
procedure only-Does not confer on workers right to appear at
hearing of Winding-up petition.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents were two groups of shareholders of a
private limited company which had a thousand persons under
its employment. A group of shareholders filed a petition for
winding-up the company under cls. (e) and (f) of s. 433 of
the Indian Companies Act, 1956 along with applications for
an interim injunction and for appointment of a provisional
liquidator. The Company Judge passed an order of injunction
restraining the company from borrowing any moneys from
banks, financial institutions or others without the prior
permission of the court. Three trade unions representing the
employees of the company filed applications for being
impleaded as respondents/interveners in the winding up
petition claiming that the interests of the employees had
been adversely affected by the interim order. The Company
Judge rejected these applications. A Division Bench of the
High Court turned down the appeal preferred by one of the
unions and that union sought special leave to appeal against
the order of the Division Bench while the other two unions
sought special leave to appeal against the order of the
Company Judge. The Court granted special leave to all the
three unions and permitted the Company Judge to pass orders
on the application pending before him for appointment of a
provisional liquidator with the direction that the
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liquidator shall not take any steps which would
prejudicially affect the employees.
It was contended on behalf of the appellants that since
an order winding up a company amounts to notice of
termination of services of its employees under s. 445(3) and
since even an interim order freezing the resources of the
company might affect the interest of the employees by making
it difficult for the company to pay their wages, etc., it
would be contrary to fair judicial procedure and violative
of the rule audi alteram partem to deny the employees the
right to be heard before any order prejudicially affecting
their interests is made. The
923
employees who contribute materially to the working of a
company and enable it to effectively play its socio-economic
role are equal, if not more important, partners in the
running of the company and they must be heard in a
proceeding for winding up of the company. It was further
urged that under r.34 of the Companies (Court) Rules, 1959
the employees have a right to appear at the hearing of a
winding-up petition either to support or to oppose it.
On behalf of the respondents it was contended that the
employees of a company have no locus standi in a winding-up
petition as the Act does not contain any provision
conferring such a right on them; that since the Act is a
self-contained Code exhaustive in regard to all matters
relating to a company, no such right could be spelt out in
their favour outside the provisions of the Act that r. 34 of
the Companies (Court) Rules, 1959 does not confer such a
right on them and that, under the various provisions of the
Act including ss. 439 and 440, it is only the creditors and
contributories and in certain specified contingencies, the
Registrar and the Central Government, who are entitled to
participate in the proceedings for winding up of a company.
It was further contended that in this case it was not even
the employees, but the three trade unions, who had applied
for being heard, and since the trade unions had no right to
be heard, their applications had been rightly rejected.
Allowing the appeals,
^
HELD : By Majority : Per Bhagwati, Chinnappa Reddy and
Baharul Islam, JJ. (Venkataramiah and Amarendra Nath Sen,
JJ. dissenting):
The workers of a company are entitled to appear at the
hearing of the winding-up petition whether to support or to
oppose it. They have a locus standi to appear and be heard
both before the petition is admitted and an order for
advertisement is made as also after the admission and
advertisement of the petition until an order is made for
winding up the company. The workers also have a right of
appeal against a winding up order. But when a winding-up
order has become final, the workers ordinarily would not
have any right to participate in any proceeding in the
course of winding up, the company though there may be rare
cases where in a proceeding in the course of winding up, the
interests of the workers may be involved and in such a case
it may be possible to contend that the workers must be heard
before an order is made by the court. Even in an application
for appointment of a provisional liquidator the workers have
a right to be heard if they so wish but neither the
petitioner in the winding up petition nor the court is under
any obligation to give notice of such application to the
workers. [956 A-E]
In the instant case the circumstance that the workers
were not heard by the Company Judge before he passed the
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order appointing the provisional liquidator would not have
the effect of vitiating the order but it would be open to
the workers to apply to the court for vacating that order.
[956 F-G]
(i) The making of a winding-up order on a petition for
winding-up would have an adverse consequence on the workers
inasmuch as the continuance of their service would be
seriously jeopardised and their right to work and earn
924
their livelihood would be disastrously imperilled. It is an
elementary principle of law that no order involving adverse
civil consequences can be passed against any person without
giving him an opportunity to be heard against the passing of
such order. If the audi alteram partem rule has been held to
be applicable in a quasi-judicial or even in an
administrative proceeding, it would a fortiori apply in a
judicial proceeding such as a petition for winding-up of a
company. No system of law which is designed to promote
justice through fair-play in action can permit the court to
make a winding-up order which has the effect of bringing
about termination of the services of the workers without
giving them an opportunity of being heard against the making
of such order. Unless there is express provision in the Act
which forbids the workers from appearing at the hearing, the
workers must be held entitled to appear and be heard in the
winding-up petition. [950 A-E]
State of Orissa v. Dr. Bina Pani, [1967] 2 S.C.R. 625;
A.K. Kraipak v. Union of India, [1970] 1 S.C.R. 457 and
Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 621
referred to.
(ii) There is no provision in the Act which excludes
the workers from appearing at the hearing of a winding-up
petition. Merely because the right to apply for winding up a
company is not given to them it does not follow as a
necessary consequence that the workers have no right to
appear and be heard in a winding-up petition filed by one or
more of the persons specified in s. 439. In fact, there
would be no point in conferring that right on the workers
since they cannot have any interest in demolishing the
enterprise which is the source of their livelihood. So also,
the circumstance that the right to make applications or be
consulted in the course of the winding up of a company is
conferred under s. 440 and other provisions of the Act only
on the creditors and contributories does not in any way
militate against the right of the workers to appear and be
heard in the winding-up petition. Once the winding-up order
is made, the assets of the company have to be realised, the
creditors to be paid and if there is any surplus it has to
be distributed among the contributories and, therefore, at
that stage, it is only the creditors and contributories who
have an interest and that is why in the course of the
winding up it is the creditors and contributories who have
been given a voice. Sections 440, 464, 466, 478, 517, 542,
543, 549, 556, 557 and 560 deal with a stage after the
winding up has commenced. These sections have nothing to do
with the question whether the company should be wound up or
not. [950 F; 948 D-F; 951 B; 951 C-E; 949 A-H]
(iii) After the amendment of ss. 397 and 398 of the Act
by ss. 10 and 11 of the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1963, the
court, while deciding whether a company should be bound up,
has to take into consideration not only the interest of the
shareholders and editors but also public interest in the
shape of the need of the community and the interest of
employees. It is therefore axiomatic that the workers must
have an opportunity of being heard for projecting and
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safeguarding their interest before a winding-up order in
made. [951 G: 952 E-F]
In the instant case, the Division Bench of the High
Court, after conceding that the court had to take into
consideration the interest of the workers, went wrong in
holding that the workers had no locus standi to file an
application for being heard in the winding-up petition. [952
G-H; 953 A-B]
925
Fertilizer Corporation Kamgar Union and Ors. v. Union
of India and Ors., [1981] 2 S.C.R. 52, referred to.
Bhalchandra Dharmajee Makaji and Ors. v. Alcock Ashdown
and Co. Ltd. and Ors., 42 Company Cases 190, approved.
(iv) It is true that according to the statement of law
contained in the leading text books on Company Law, it is
only the Company, the creditors and the contributories who
are entitled to appear in a winding-up petition and no other
persons have a right to be heard. This statement of the law
is based on a decision rendered by the English Courts over a
hundred years ago when a company was regarded merely as a
legal device brought into being as a result of a contractual
arrangement between the shareholders for the purpose of
carrying on trade or business and the workers were looked
upon as no more than employees of the company working under
a master and servant relationship and the interest of the
public as consumers or otherwise was a totally irrelevant
consideration. It can have no validity in the present times
when the entire concept of a company has changed. [953 F-H]
In re. Bradford Navigation Company [1870] 5 Ch. A.C.
600, held inapplicable.
In re. Edward Textiles Limited, 38 Company Cases 984,
overruled.
(v) Our Constitution has shown profound concern for the
workers and given them a pride of place in the new socio-
economic order envisaged in the Preamble and the Directive
Principles of State Policy. Article 43A states that the
State shall take steps by suitable legislation or in any
other way to secure the participation of workers in the
management of undertakings, establishments or other
organisations engaged in any industry. The constitutional
mandate is therefore clear and undoubted that the management
of the enterprise should not be left entirely in the hands
of the suppliers of capital but the workers should also be
entitled to participate in it. In a socialist pattern of
society the enterprise which is a centre of economic power
should be controlled not only by capital but also by labour.
It cannot therefore be contended that the workers should
have no voice in the determination of the question whether
the enterprise should continue to run or be shut down under
an order of the court. The workers who have contributed to
the building of the enterprise have every right to be heard
when it is sought to demolish that centre of economic power.
[946 C; 947 D-F]
People’s Union for Democratic Rights v. Union of India
and Ors. (W.P. No. 8143 of 1981 decided on September 18,
1982) referred to.
(vi) It is not only the shareholders who have supplied
capital who are interested in the enterprise which is being
run by a company but the workers who supply labour are also
equally, interested because what is produced by the
enterprise is the result of labour as well as capital. The
owners of capital bear only limited financial risk and
otherwise contribute nothing to production while labour
contributes a major share of the product. While the former
invest only a part of their moneys the latter invest their
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sweat and toil; in fact, their life itself.
926
The workers therefore have a special place in a socialistic
pattern of society. They are no more vendors of toil; they
are not a marketable commodity to be purchased by the owners
of capital. They are producers of wealth as much as capital;
they supply labour without which capital would be impotent.
[945 G-H: 946 A-B]
(vii) The concept of a company has undergone radical
transformation in the last few decades. The old nineteenth
century view which regarded a company merely as a legal
device adopted by shareholders for carrying on trade or
business as proprietors has been discarded and a company is
now looked upon as a socioeconomic institution wielding
economic power and influencing the life of the people. The
view that a company is the property of the shareholders can
no longer be regarded as valid. Apart from capital and
labour there are other factors which contribute to the
production of national wealth; the financial institutions
and depositors who provide the additional finance required
for production and the consumers and the rest of the members
of the community who are vitally interested in the product
manufactured. A company, according to the new socio-economic
thinking, is a social institution having duties and
responsibilities towards the community in which it functions
and one of its paramount objectives is to bring about
maximisation of social welfare and common good. This
necessarily involves reorientation of thinking in regard to
the duties and obligations of the company not only vis-a-vis
the shareholders but also vis-a-vis the rest of the
community affected by its operations such as workers,
consumers and the Government representing the society. [942
B; 943 A G; 944 C-D]
Chiranjit Lal Chowdhri v. Union of India, [1950] S C.R.
869, referred to.
Panchmahal Steel Ltd. v. Universal Steel Traders, 46
Company Cases 706 approved.
per Chinnappa Reddy, J. (concurring)
(i) Quite apart from s. 445(3), it is plain that the
future of the workers is at stake and their right to work is
in jeopardy as a result of the presentation of the winding-
up petition. The workers are so intimately tied up that
their interest in the survival and the well-being of the
company is much more than the interest of any shareholder.
They cannot be denied a hearing when their very existence is
under threat of extinction. [957 D-G]
(ii) It is not correct to say that natural justice is
exclusively a principle of administrative law. It is first a
universal principle and, therefore, a rule of administrative
law. Courts, even more than administrators, must observe
natural justice. [959 A-C]
(iii) The Act does not prohibit a hearing to the
workers. It does not provide for all situations. The law
"falls to be applied to a growing and changing subject
matter". The Company Judge must acknowledge the
transformation which corporations are presently undergoing
from capitalist contrivances into socialist instruments and
recognize the reality of the workers interest. The
927
working classes, all the world over, are demanding "workers’
control" and "industrial democracy". They want the right to
work to be secured. Our Constitution has accepted the
workers’ entitlement to control and it is one of the
Directive Principles of State Policy. It is in this context
of changing norms and waxing values that the workers’ demand
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to be heard has to be judged.
[957 G-H; 958 B-C-E-F-G]
(iv) The duty to hear those asking to be heard is not
dependent on the vesting of any right under the very statute
in respect of which jurisdiction is being exercised by the
Court but on any right whatever which may come under threat.
It is not the law that rights other than those created by a
particular statute may be taken away in proceedings under
that statute without affording a hearing to those desiring
to be heard. [959 D-E]
(v) It is not correct to say that once the workers are
allowed to enter the company court, the flood gates will be
opened, all and sundry will join in the fray and utter
confusion will prevail. The court is the master of the
proceedings and the ultimate control is with the court.
Parties may not be impleaded for the mere asking. The court
may ask the reason why, if someone asks to be heard. [960 B-
C]
(vi) The contention that since workers are not allowed
to intervene in a partition or dissolution of partnership
they should also not be allowed to intervene in a winding-up
petition cannot be accepted. There is no reason why workers
may not be allowed, in appropriate cases to intervene in
such actions to avert disaster and to promote welfare. [960
D]
(vii) There is good reason for holding that In re.
Bradford Navigation Company is not valid in the present
times. It was decided in the heydays of laissez faire at a
time when individualism dominated every field and the public
interest was but a slow runner. Now the position is
reversed. In Britain itself Corporate law and labour law
have changed considerably. After nationalisation of certain
important and crucial industries a considerable measure of
workers’ control of management of industry has been achieved
in that country. One should rather look to the Constitution
for guidance and inspiration while interpreting the laws.
After the 42nd Amendment, the Constitution is openly
Socialist. The Directive Principles of State Policy
emphasize the role and interest of the workers. Art. 43A
contemplates workers’ participation in the management of the
industry. There are several provisions in the Act itself
which take notice of the element of public interest. There
are other enactments like the Monopolies and Restrictive
Trade Practices Act and the Industries Regulation and
Development Act under whose provisions the activities of a
company may be scrutinized in public interest. There are
legislations involving employment and welfare of labour to
which the managements of the companies are subject. The
problem before the court must be considered in this context
of ferment and development.
[962 F; 961 G-H; 962 A-B; 960 G-H; 961 D-F]
In re. Bradford Navigation Company, [1870] 5 Ch. A.C.
600, held inapplicable.
Panchmahal Steel Ltd. v. Universal Steel Traders, 46
Company Cases 706 approved.
928
per Baharul Islam, J. (concurring)
The statement of law contained in the English
authorities cited by counsel for respondents may be good law
for England with altogether a different system of economy
but it is not applicable in our country, particularly after
the Constitution (42nd Amendment) Act, 1976, by which the
"Socialist" and "Secular" concepts have been incorporated in
the Preamble to our Constitution. The workers’ right to be
heard in a winding-up proceeding has to be spelt out from
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the Preamble and Arts. 38 and 43-A of the Constitution and
from the general principles of natural justice. [990 D-F]
per Venkataramiah and Amarendra Nath Sen, JJ. (dissenting)
Under the existing law the workers or their unions may
make any suggestions to the Court at any stage but they
cannot claim to be impleaded as parties to the winding-up
petition as of right. The privilege of making suggestions to
the court in public interest is different from the right to
be impleaded as a party with the concomitant right to enter
into contest with the other parties and of making an order
in appeal before higher courts. The latter right has to be
conferred expressly by the statute in any person who wishes
to exercise it. [979 D]
(i) The principles of administrative law have not much
relevance to the administration of the affairs of a company,
the primary purpose of administrative law being the
imposition of checks on the powers of government or its
officers so that they may not either abuse their powers or
go out of their legal bounds. In particular, the proceedings
relating to winding-up by court are subject to the orders of
higher courts in appeal and are not amenable to interference
by superior courts as in the case of actions of government
or its officers. [967 H, 968 A-B]
(ii) The law on the question as to who can be heard as
of right in a winding-up proceeding is clear and is based on
the decision of the English Court in In re. Bradford
Navigation Company. The decision may be of the last century
but there is hardly any justification to depart from it even
now unless compelled by the statute to do so.[970 B-D; 971
E]
In re. Bradford Navigation Company, [1870] 5 Ch. A.C.
600, referred to.
Halsbury’s Laws of England (4th Ed.) Vol. 7 Para 1028
referred to.
(iii) That only the company, creditors and
contributories (apart from the Central Government or the
Registrar when they choose to intervene under the express
provisions of the Act) are entitled to participate in the
winding-up proceedings is clear from ss. 439, 447 and 557.
Sections 450(2), 466, 478(3), 517, 518, 542, 543, 546(1),
549(1) and 556 show that only the Company, the official
liquidator, liquidator, creditors, contributories or the
Registrar have a statutory right to participate as of right
in the winding-up proceedings. The workers or their trade
unions have not been given any such right.
[969 C-D; 971 F; 972 E-H; 973 A-F]
929
In re. Edward Textiles Ltd., 38 Company Cases 284
approved.
(iv) Under s. 433, a company may be wound up by the
court on one or more of the following grounds : (a) if the
company has, by special resolution, resolved that it may be
wound up by court; (b) if default is made in delivering the
statutory report to the Registrar or in holding the
statutory meeting; (c) if the company does not commence its
business within a year from its incorporation, or suspends
its business for a whole year; (d) if the number of members
is reduced, in the case of a public company, below seven,
and in the case of a private company, below two; (e) if the
company is unable to pay its debts; and (f) if the court is
of opinion that it is just and equitable that the company
should be wound up. As regards the ground mentioned at (a),
when a company has passed a special resolution that it may
be wound up by the court, the employees and workers can have
hardly any ground to object. The position is the same when
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any of the defaults mentioned in (b) and (c) are committed
by the company. The officers and employees of the company
also cannot get over the deficiency in the required number
of members of a company referred to in (d) above. When a
company is unable to pay its debts and a creditor moves a
petition for winding-up under (e) above, he cannot be
compelled to prove his claim not merely against the company
but also against the officers and employees. When there is a
deadlock in the management of the company arising out of
disputes amongst the directors or when some directors
without any justification exclude some other directors from
the management of the company and a petition for winding-up
is filed under (f), above, it would be unreasonable to
expect the excluded directors to fight a case both against
the directors who are responsible for their exclusion and
also against the officers and employees who are neither
creditors nor contributories but who may be supporting the
contesting directors. [968 H; 969 A-B; 969 F-H; 970 A-B]
In the instant case, it is seen from the grounds of
objection filed by the trade unions that they are only
interested in supporting the cause of one set of respondents
against the other by making certain general submissions. The
petitioners in the Company Petition would be in a more
disadvantageous position if they have to face the opposition
of the trade unions also in addition to the respondents to
that petition. Such a situation should not be created by
extending the area of controversy by a liberal
interpretation of the provisions of law when there are no
compelling reasons to do so. [985 E-G]
(v) There are specific provisions in the Act and the
Rules (ss. 417 to 420, 530(1)(b) to (f) and 635-B and r. 152
read with Form No. 67) dealing with the rights of employees
of a company. The right to resist a winding-up petition is
not one such right. [975 D-E]
(vi) It is because of some doubts that had been
expressed earlier about the continuance of the employment of
the employees of a company ordered to be compulsorily wound
up that s. 445(3) was enacted making it clear that the
passing of the order of winding-up amounts to a notice of
discharge of the employees concerned. Section 445(3)
corresponds to the termination of service brought about by
the abolition of a post under a Government or by the closure
of a business, neither of which as the law stands today
requires compliance with the principles of natural justice.
[975 B-C]
930
(vii) It is true that public interest which may include
within its scope interests of employees of a company has to
be kept in view by the courts in exercising certain powers
under the Act. Sections 388-B, 394, 396, 397 and 408 do
refer to the concept of public interest. These provisions
deal with the powers of the Central Government and the
Court. They do not, however, state that trade unions can as
of right intervene in the proceedings arising under them.
[975 F-H]
Bhalchandra Dharmajee Makaji and Ors. v. Alcock,
Ashdown and Co. Ltd. and Ors., 42 Company Cases 190 referred
to.
In the instant case the High Court has passed necessary
orders to protect the interests of the employees. As these
orders stand today, the workers can always approach the High
Court by way of a company application for appropriate orders
whenever they feel that their working conditions are
adversely affected during the pendency of the proceedings.
It is not necessary that the workers or the trade unions
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should be impleaded as parties to the winding-up petition
enabling them to contest the same; their presence on record
is not necessary for a complete and effectual adjudication
of the petition. The trade unions are, therefore, neither
necessary nor proper parties to the winding-up petition on
the facts and in the circumstances of this case including
the element of public interest involved in any liquidation
proceeding. [985 H; 986 H; 987 A-C]
(viii) In Fertilizer Corporation Kamgar Union (Regd)
Sindri and Ors. v. Union of India and Ors., [1981] 2 S.C.R.
52 the court was concerned with operations in a public
sector company and the activities of the government. The
observations contained therein cannot have any relevance to
a case involving the affairs of a company which is governed
only by the express provisions of company law and other
relevant statutes. [982 C]
(ix) As the law stands today, the workers in a factory
owned by a company do not have any hand in the birth of a
company, in its workingur ding its existence and also in its
death by dissolution. Workers’ participation in the affairs
of a company or the ushering in of an industrial democracy
is quite a laudable object. That is the reason for enacting
Art. 43-A. Art. 43-A clearly states that the State shall
take steps by suitable legislation or in any other way to
secure the participation of workers in the management of
undertakings etc. The High-powered Expert Committee on
Companies and MRTP Act, has made certain recommendations in
this behalf in paragraphs 11.27 and 18.137 of its report and
it is for the Parliament to take steps to implement them.
The legislature has not taken concrete steps in this regard.
The suggestions made by the committee emphasize that at
present workers have no right to contest winding-up
proceedings. It is significant that there is no
recommendation made even in this report about the right of
trade unions to contest winding-up petitions. The court
cannot step in and introduce drastic amendments into the
company law. Many of the Directive Principles are still to
be implemented by passing appropriate legislation. This
Court cannot compel the executive by issuing writs to
implement the policy underlying them. There are well-
recognized limitations on the power of the court making
inroads into the legitimate domain of the legislature. If
the legislature exceeds its power, this Court steps in. If
the executive exceeds its power,
931
then also this court steps in. If this court exceeds its
power what can people do ? Should they be driven to seek an
amendment of the law on every occasion ? The only proper
solution is the observance of restraint by this court in its
pronouncements so that they do not go beyond its own
legitimate sphere. It may be that the workers who are likely
to be affected by the winding-up need a larger protection.
That can be done only by legislative action. This Court
cannot make any order which will conflict with the existing
law.
[982 G-H; 983 A; 977 E-F; 983 G; 983 B-D; 989 C]
(x) The proposition that law should not be static but
should grow cannot be disputed. But it should be the result
of the exercise of legislative judgment, particularly when a
departure from express provisions of a statute or an
established practice is to be made. A discussion involving a
comprehensive view of all interests which are likely to be
affected by any decision in such a matter is not possible
before a court where only the parties to a case or their
lawyers are heard. [987 D-F]
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(xi) It is not correct to say that there is no other
remedy at all for workmen who are likely to be affected by
the winding-up order made by the court. It is open to the
workers or their trade unions to move the Central Government
to take appropriate steps under the Industrial (Development
and Regulation) Act, 1951 the provisions of which provide
that where a company owning an industrial undertaking is
being wound up by or under the supervision of the High Court
and the business of such company is not being continued, the
Central Government may investigate into the possibility of
running or restarting the industrial undertaking, provide
relief to it or take steps to ensure that the undertaking is
sold as a running concern, or prepare a scheme of
reconstruction of the company and send it to the trade
unions of employees concerned inviting their suggestions and
objections. [976 A-H; 977 A-C]
(xii) When once the right to contest a winding-up
petition is extended to workers either on the principle of
equity or of administrative law, on the same principle it
would logically follow that all others who may have dealings
with the company such as commission agents, selling agents.
etc. whose contracts with the company are going to be
terminated by reason of its liquidation also have to be
allowed to contest the proceedings. Such a claim is not
permissible. [974 B]
Ex parte Maclure, [1870] L.R. 5 Ch. 737, referred to.
(xiii) It is no doubt true that the view of the High
Court is also in conformity with the view prevailing in
England. That does not mean that the High Court has
surrendered its judgment to a foreign practice because that
is the very view which is being followed till now in the
Indian Courts. A foreign decision is either worthy of
acceptance or not depending upon the reasons contained in it
and not its origin or age. There is no reason why we should
not follow a well-reasoned foreign decision unless it is
opposed to our ethics, tradition and jurisprudence or
otherwise unsuited to our conditions. Moreover, it is
difficult, even though it may not be impossible, to
administer the company law as it is now in force in India
without the aid of the principles laid down by some of the
leading English cases. [987 H: 988 A-F]
932
Needle Industries (India) Ltd. and Ors. v. Needle
Industries Neway (India) Holding Ltd. and Ors., [1981] 3
S.C.R. 698, referred to.
per Amarendra Nath Sen, J. (agreeing with Venkataramiah, J.)
(i) If the right to participate in a winding-up
proceeding is to be judged from the view-point of the
interest of any party who may be prejudicially affected as a
result of an order of winding-up being made, it must
logically follow that not only every employee of the company
but also various other parties and persons who have trade
relations or dealings with the company must necessarily be
held to have the same right to be heard in such a
proceeding; further, no suit for dissolution of a
partnership can also be decided without impleading the
employees of the firm and other parties having trade
relations with the firm.
[992 A-E; 991 H]
(ii) A company can only be wound up in accordance with
the provisions of the Act. The right to have a company
wound-up is a right created by the statute. The entire
proceeding in relation to the winding-up is governed by the
provisions of the Act and the Rules. The Act recognises that
a company may go into liquidation without any intervention
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by the Court and also under the supervision of the court.
Where the company goes into liquidation without reference to
court, the employees of the company who have to meet the
same fate of losing their employment cannot have any voice
or say in the procedure to be adopted for liquidation of the
company. [992 F-G; 993 B-C]
(iii) The right of appearance and of being heard in a
winding-up proceeding has been conferred on persons whom the
legislature considered to be necessary or proper parties for
effective adjudication of the proceeding before the court.
If a company is commercially insolvent and is unable to pay
its debts, it has necessarily to be wound up and the
employees can have hardly anything to say in such a case for
assisting the court in deciding the matter. [993 E-G]
(iv) Although an employee cannot claim to appear and be
heard in a winding-up petition as a matter of right, the
court may, in any appropriate case, require or permit any
employee to appear at any stage of a winding up proceeding
and hear him, if it is of the opinion that it is necessary
in the interest of administration of justice and for proper
disposal of any matter. [998 H; 999 A]
(v) The legislature has made suitable provisions in the
Act for safeguarding what is considered to be in the
interest of employees or in public interest. The
introduction of Art. 43A in the Constitution does not affect
the position in any way. Participation in the management
does not by itself create any right to appear and be heard
in a winding-up petition. Unless otherwise named personally
as a party to such a petition, no person, merely on the
ground that he happens to be in the management of the
company, is entitled to appear and be heard in a winding-up
proceeding. Persons in management may, if so authorised,
appear and participate in such a proceeding on behalf of the
company.
[995 D; 995 E-H]
933
(vi) The Indian and the English Companies Acts contain
similar provisions. As early as in 1870 the English court
held that no person had a right to be heard against a
petition for winding-up of a company except creditors and
contributories. That decision still holds good and is
considered good law. The English Act has undergone changes
from time to time with the passing of various legislations
for the benefit and welfare of employees. An order winding
up a company affects the employees in England in the same
way as it does in India. It cannot be said that workers in
England are not conscious of the important role they play in
the functioning of a company. Despite all these, the right
of an employee or any trade union representing the workers
to participate and be heard in a winding-up petition is not
recognised in England. Even in our country, though the
provisions of the Act have undergone changes and various
enactments for the welfare of the workers have been passed
from time to time, the legislature has not considered it
proper or necessary to amend the Act to confer any such
right on the workers. [996 A-D; 996 H; 997 A-B; 998 F]
In re Bradford Navigation Company, [1870] 5 Ch. A.C.
600, referred to.
Halsbury’s Laws of England (4th Ed.) Vol. III. p. 614;
Palmer’s Company Precedents (7th Ed.) Part II, p. 77 and
Buckley on the Companies Act, (14th Ed.) Vol. I, p. 546
referred to.
Hind Overseas Private Ltd. v. Raghunath Prasad
Jhunjhunwala and Ors., [1976] 2 S.C.R 226, distinguished.
2. By majority: Per Bhagwati, Chinnappa Reddy and
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Baharul Islam, JJ. (Venkataramiah and Amarendra Nath Sen,
JJ. dissenting): Trade unions are competent to make
applications before the Company Judge hearing a winding-up
petition on behalf of the workers represented by them. [956
H]
In this case the applications were made by the unions
on behalf of the workmen represented by them and though made
in the name of the Unions the applications were in reality
and substance applications of the workmen who were members
of each respective Union. The controversy therefore really
is not whether the unions of workmen are entitled to be
heard in a winding-up petition but whether the workmen have
such right when a winding-up petition is filed against a
company. [939 G-H]
per Venkataramiah and Amarendra Nath Sen, JJ.
(dissenting): In none of the English text books on Company
Law there is any statement to the effect that trade unions
of officers and employees of a company for whose winding-up
a petition is filed would be entitled as of right to be
impleaded as parties and to contest the petition. It is not
also shown that any such right of a trade union is
recognised by the Indian Law which more or less corresponds
to English Law in this regard. The decision of the Bombay
High Court in In re Edward Textiles Ltd. is a clear
authority for the proposition that at any rate trade unions
have no locus standi to oppose a winding-up petition. We
shall proceed to decide this case on the assumption that the
application for impleading was made in fact on behalf of the
workers and not by the trade unions. [968 C-F]
934
In re Edward Textiles Ltd., 38 Company Cases 284,
referred to.
3. By the Full Court: Rule 34 of the Companies (Court)
Rules, 1959 does not confer a right on the workers to appear
at the hearing of a winding-up petition. [955 G; 973 G; 994
E-F]
per Bhagwati, Chinnappa Reddy and Baharul Islam, JJ.:
The object and purpose of r. 34 is not to confer a right on
anyone to appear at the hearing of the winding-up petition
but merely to provide for the procedure to be followed
before a person who is otherwise entitled to appear in a
winding-up petition can be heard in support of or in
opposition to the winding-up petition. [955 F]
per Venkataramiah, J: The words "every person" in r. 34
of the Companies (Court) Rules, 1959 do not entitle a worker
who is neither a shareholder nor a contributory to support
or oppose a winding-up petition under that rule because they
refer only to a person who is otherwise entitled to do so
under the Act. An anomalous result that may flow from the
acceptance of the case of the workers is that whereas in a
winding-up by court they may get an opportunity to contest
the petition, the voluntary winding-up proceedings or
winding-up under the supervision of the court would go on
without any such contest although in all cases ultimately
the workers will be discharged from service. A construction
which leads to such a discriminatory result should be
avoided. [973 G-H; 974 A]
per Amarendra Nath Sen, J.: Rule 34 only lays down the
procedure to be followed by any person who intends to be
heard at the hearing of a petition; it does not deal with
the right of any person to appear at the hearing nor does it
create any such right in any person. Rule 9B in part III of
the Rules makes specific provision in that behalf. [994 E-F]
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 4065-
67 of 1982.
Appeals by special leave from the judgments and orders
dated 30.11.81 and 14.9.1981 of the Madras High Court in
O.S.A. No. 148 of 1981 and Company Appeal Nos. 880-881 of
1981.
M.K. Ramamurthy, Somyaji, Ambrish Kumar, Miss Nitya
Ramakrishnan for the Appellants in CA. No. 4065/82.
G. Vasanta Pai, S.N. Kacker, O.C. Mathur and D.N.
Mishra for the Respondents in CA. 4065 of 1982 and for the
Appellants in CA. Nos. 4066-67/82.
R.K Garg, A.T.M. Sampath and P.N. Ramalingam for the
Appellants in CA. Nos. 4066-67/82.
935
V.M. Tarkunde, E.C. Aggarwala, R. Satish, V.K. Pandia
and T.S. Vishwanath Rao for the Respondent Nos. 6-9 and
11.14 in CA. Nos. 4066-67 of 1982.
O.C. Mathur, Ravinder Narain and D.N. Mishra for the
Respondents in C.A. 4065 of 1982.
M. Natesan and M. Raghuraman for the Intervener.
The following Judgments were delivered
BHAGWATI J. These three appeals by special leave raise
a short but interesting question of law relating to the
right of workmen employed in a company to appear and oppose
a petition for winding up of the company. The controversy
between the parties arises out of a petition for winding up
a private limited company called Ramakrishna Industries (P)
Limited (hereinafter referred to as a company). The Company
has three units, one a textile mill in the name of Jotie
Mills which employs about 500 workmen, another, a workshop
for manufacture of textile and other machinery which employs
about 400 workmen and the third a printing press which
brings out a Tamil daily, called "Nav India" and employs
about 100 workmen. It is a closed company in which there are
two groups of shareholders, one group consisting of
respondent Nos. 1 to 5 and the other consisting of
respondent Nos 7 to 14. Respondent Nos. 1 to 5 hold 608
shares and respondent nos. 7 to 14 687 shares while the
remaining 300 shares belong to a Trust in which both the
groups are equally represented on the Board of Trustees. It
appears that a serious dispute arose between Respondent nos.
1 to 5 on the one hand and Respondent nos. 7 to 14 on the
other in regard to the management of the affairs of the
company and since the dispute could not be settled amicably,
Respondent nos. 1 to 5 filed a petition for winding up the
Company on two grounds set out in clauses (e) and (f) of
section 433 of the Companies Act, 1956. One ground was that
the Company is unable to pay its debts and the other was
that it is just and equitable that the Company should be
wound up. The winding up petition was filed by Respondent
nos. 1 to 5 not only as contributories but also as creditors
of the Company. Immediately on filing the winding up
petition on 13th July 1981, Respondent nos. 1 to 5 submitted
an application, being company application no. 844 of 1981,
for an interim injunction and on this application, an ex
parte order was made by the learned Company
936
Judge restraining the Company which was respondent no. 6 in
the winding up petition as also Respondent nos. 7 to 14 from
borrowing any monies from banks, financial institutions or
others without the prior permission of the Court and from
alienating and/or creating any charge or encumbrance over
any of the assets of the Company in its various enterprises.
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The immediate consequence of this ex parte order of
injunction was that the Jotie Mills Employees Co-operative
Store stopped issuing any provisions or supplies to the
workmen from 18th July 1981 and the workmen were also unable
from 23rd July 1981 to enjoy the benefits under the
Employees State Insurance Scheme. The workmen also
apprehended that on account of the ex parte order of
injunction, they may not be able to get their wages which
were due to be paid on 7th August 1981. Now some of the
workmen were members of the National Textile Workers Union,
some others were members of the Coimbatore District National
Textile Employees Union while still some others were members
of the Coimbatore District Engineering Workers Union. The
Coimbatore District National Textile Employees Union with a
view to protecting the interests of its members made an
application, being company application no. 880/81 on 28th
July 1981 for impleading itself as a respondent. The
Coimbatore District Engineering Workers Union also made a
similar application to the Company Judge on the same day,
being Company Application No. 881 of 1981. So also the
National Textile Workers Union made an application, being
company application no. 883 of 1981, to the Company Judge on
29th July 1981 praying that it may be permitted to intervene
in the winding up petition and that the ex parte order of
injunction may be vacated. Respondent nos. 1 to 5 filed
their affidavit in reply to these three applications and the
principal contention raised by them was that the National
Textile Workers Union, the Coimbatore District National
Textile Employees Union and the Coimbatore District
Engineering Workers Union had no locus standi to appear and
oppose the winding up petition, since the workmen who were
members of these three unions were neither creditors nor
contributories of the company. These three applications came
up for hearing before the Company Judge and after hearing
full arguments on both sides, the Company Judge made an
order dated 14th September 1981 rejecting all the three
applications on the ground that under the Companies Act
1956, the workmen had no right either to get impleaded in
the winding up petition or even to intervene in the winding
up petition. The Company Judge
937
followed the decision of a single Judge of the Bombay High
Court in In re Edward Textiles Limited(1) in taking this
view. The Company Judge conceded and this concession had to
be made because of the observations of this Court in
Fertilizer Corporation Kamgar Union and Ors. v. Union of
India and Ors.(2) and of the High Court of Bombay in
Bhalchandra Dharamaji Makaji v. Alcock Ashdown and Co.
Ltd.(3) that the factors to be taken into account by the
court while disposing of a winding up petition would include
the interest of the workmen of the company, but observed
that "the duty of the court to consider the interest of the
worker of the company would not create a right in such
workers to intervene in the absence of express provision in
the Companies Act and in the teeth of such right
specifically conferred only on the creditors and
contributories." The National Textile Workers Union
thereupon preferred an appeal before a Division Bench of the
High Court but the Division Bench also took the same view
and held that though it was undoubtedly true that while
disposing of a winding up petition preferred on the ground
that it is just and equitable to wind up the company, the
court must consider the interest of the workmen, it does not
mean "that everybody who is remotely interested in the
company can file an application to implead himself as a
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party in the petition for winding up" and "merely because in
considering the question whether to wind up or not the court
has also to take the larger point of public interest
including that of the workers into consideration, it will
not clothe the Unions with any locus standi to file
applications for impleading themselves as parties or to be
heard in the company petition." The Division Bench
accordingly rejected the appeal and this led to the filing
of Special Leave Petition No. 9661 of 1981 in this Court by
the National Textile Workers Union. The Coimbatore District
National Textile Employees Union and the Coimbatore District
Engineering Workers Union did not prefer any appeal against
the judgment of the Company Judge before the Division Bench
of the High Court but they preferred Special Leave Petitions
Nos. 10248 and 10249 of 1981 directly in this Court against
the judgment of the Company Judge. We issued notice on all
the three Special Leave Petitions and when the Respondents
appeared before us, we intimated to them that we will
dispose of the entire controversy between the parties on the
Special Leave Petitions and that is how full and detailed
arguments
938
were advanced before us at the hearing of the Special Leave
Petitions. We now proceed to dispose of these cases after
granting special leave to appeal in each of the three
special leave petitions.
Before we proceed to discuss the basic and vital
question that arises for consideration in these appeals, it
is necessary to set out a few further facts which may have
some bearing on the final relief to be granted by us. On the
same day on which respondent Nos. 1 to 5 filed the winding
up petition and applied for interim injunction, they also
made an application, being Company Application No. 843 of
1981, praying for appointment of Provisional Liquidator of
the company. Respondent Nos. 6 to 14 appeared at the time
when this application was presented and asked for time to
file their affidavit in reply and time was granted by the
Company Judge upto 10th August, 1981. Respondent Nos. 6 to
14 thereafter filed an affidavit in reply on 10th August,
1981 and after hearing both sides in a bitterly contested
argument, the Company Judge made an order on 7th December
1981 appointing the official liquidator as Provisional
Liquidator of the Company. The workmen represented by the
National Textile Workers’ Union, the Coimbatore District
National Textiles Employees’ Union and the Coimbatore
District Engineering Workers’ Union did not have an
opportunity of being heard before the order appointing
Provisional Liquidator was passed by the Company Judge,
because as pointed out above, their applications for
impleading themselves as parties in the winding up petition
or in any event, for being allowed to intervene in the
winding up petitions were rejected by the Company Judge on
14th September, 1981 and this rejection was confirmed by the
Division Bench of the High Court on 30th September 1981. The
result was that the order appointing Provisional Liquidator
of the company came to be made by the Company Judge without
any opportunity being given to the workmen represented by
these three Unions to appear and show cause against the
making of such order. It may be pointed out that the order
appointing Provisional Liquidator was stayed for some time
by the Division Bench of the High Court in an appeal
preferred by respondent Nos. 6 to 14 but the application for
stay was ultimately dismissed by the Division Bench and the
Official Liquidator immediately thereafter took charge of
the affairs of the company.
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We may now proceed to consider the question that arises
for determination before us. The question, briefly stated,
is: when a
939
petition for winding up a company is filed in court, are the
workmen of the company entitled to ask the court to implead
them as parties in the winding up petition or to allow them
to appear and contest the winding up petition or they have
no locus standi at all so far as winding up petition is
concerned and they must helplessly watch the proceedings as
outsiders though the result of the winding up petition may
be to bring about termination of their services and thus
affect them vitally by depriving them of their means of
livelihood ? It is a well established principle of
administrative law that no order entailing adverse civil
consequences can be made by the State or a public authority
unless the person affected is afforded an opportunity to
show cause against the making of such order by controverting
the allegations made against him and presenting his own
positive case, but in case of a winding up petition, it was
contended on behalf of respondents Nos. 2 to 5, that though
the result of successful termination of a winding up
petition may, and in most cases, would be to put an end to
the services of the workmen and throw them on the streets,
they are not entitled to an opportunity to be heard against
the making of the winding up order, because under the
Companies Act 1956, it is only the creditors and
contributories and in certain specified contingencies, the
Registrar and the Central Government who can present a
petition for winding up a company and the workmen have no
locus at all in a winding up petition except where their
dues have remained unpaid in which case they would be
entitled to be heard in a winding up petition, but that
would be in their capacity as creditors and not as workmen.
It was also urged on behalf of respondent Nos. 1 to 5 that
in any event, even if workmen have a right to intervene in a
winding up petition in the present case, it was not the
workmen who had applied for being heard in the winding up
petition but the applications were made by the three unions
and since a Union of workmen has no right to be heard, the
applications of the three unions were rightly rejected. This
last contention of respondent Nos. 1 to 5 is obviously
untenable and it need not detain us. It is incontrovertible-
and this indeed could not be disputed on behalf of
respondent Nos. 1 to 5-that the applications were made by
the Unions on behalf of the workmen represented by them and
though made in the name of the unions, the applications were
in reality and substance applications of the workmen who
were members of each respective union. The controversy
therefore really is not whether the unions of workmen are
entitled to be heard in a winding up petition but whether
the workmen have such right when a winding up petition is
filed against
940
a company. We may straight away point out that though the
applications made by the Coimbatore District National
Textile Employees and Coimbatore District Engineering
Workers Union were for impleading them as parties in the
winding up petition, it was conceded on behalf of these two
unions that they were not pressing their applications for
being added as parties, because there was no procedure known
to Companies Act 1956 for any one to be impleaded as a party
in a winding up petition and even the creditors and
contributories were not entitled to be added as parties and
they were claiming only the right to appear and be heard in
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support or opposition to the winding up petition. The
contention of these two unions was therefore a limited one
and that was also the narrow contention advanced on behalf
of National Textile Workers’ Union, namely, that the workmen
represented by them were entitled to intervene in the
winding up petition and to be heard before any order was
made by the Company Judge in the winding up petition,
because any such order might affect the interest of the
workmen. It was pointed out on behalf of the three unions
that even if an interim order were to be made by the Company
Judge which might prejudicially affect the workmen by
freezing the resources of the company so as to make it
difficult for the company to pay the wages of the workmen or
bringing about stoppage of the business of the company
resulting in non-payment or diminution of their wages or
termination of their services, the workmen must surely be
afforded an opportunity to be heard before any such interim
order is made. It would be contrary to every recognised
principle of fair judicial procedure and violative of the
rule of audi alteram partem which constitutes one of the
basic principles of natural justice to deny to the workmen
the right to be heard before an order is made by the Company
Judge prejudicially affecting their interest. Additionally,
reliance was also placed on behalf of the three unions on
Rule 34 of the Companies (Court) Rules 1959 which provides
as follows:
"Rule 34. Notice to be given by persons intending to
appear at the hearing of petition-Every
person, who intends to appear at the hearing
of a petition, whether to support or oppose
the petition, shall serve on the petitioner
or his advocate, notice of his intention at
the address given in the advertisement. The
notice shall contain the address of such
person, and be signed by him
941
or his advocate, and save as otherwise
provided by these rules shall be served (or
if sent by post, shall be posted in such time
as to reach the addressee) not later than two
days previous to the day of hearing, and in
the case of a petition for winding up not
later than five days previous to the day of
hearing. Such notice shall be in Form No. 9,
with such variations as the circumstances may
require, and where such person intends to
oppose the petition, the grounds of his
opposition, or a copy of his affidavit if
any, shall be furnished along with the
notice. Any person who has failed to comply
with this rule shall not except with the
leave of the Judge, be allowed to appear at
the hearing of the petition."
The argument urged on behalf of the three unions was that
this rule confers a right on the workmen to appear at the
hearing of the winding up petition either to support it or
to oppose it and clearly recognises that they are entitled
to intervene and be heard in the winding up petition.
Respondent Nos. 1 to 5 however seriously challenged the
locus of the workmen to appear and be heard in the winding
up petition and contended that so far as the winding up
petition is concerned, it is only the creditors and
contributories and in certain specified contingencies the
Registrar and the Central Government who are entitled to
appear at the hearing of the winding up petition whether to
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support or to oppose it. The right to be heard in the
winding up petition, contended respondent Nos. 1 to 5 is
governed solely by the provisions of the Companies Act 1956
and since no such right is conferred on the workmen by any
provision of the Companies Act 1956, the workmen are not
entitled to intervene in the winding up petition, even
though the making of a winding up order may result in
termination of their services. The workmen, according to
respondent Nos. 1 to 5, could appear at the hearing of the
winding up petition and make their submissions only in their
capacity as creditors if any part of their wages remained
unpaid by the company but they had no locus to appear in
their capacity as workers. These rival contentions urged on
behalf of the parties raised an interesting question of law
which we shall now proceed to consider.
942
There is one very important consideration which we must
bear in mind while dealing with this question and it is
necessary to advert to it at the present stage. The concept
of a company has undergone radical transformation in the
last few decades. The traditional view of a company was that
it was a convenient mechanical device for carrying on trade
and industry, a mere legal frame work providing a convenient
institutional container for holding and using the powers of
company management. The company law was at that time
conceived merely as a statute intended to regulate the
structure and mode of operation of a special type of
economic institution called company. This was the view which
prevailed for a long time in juristic circles all over the
democratic world including United States of America, United
Kingdom and India. That was the time when the doctrine of
laissez faire held sway and it dominated the political and
economic scene. This doctrine glorified the concept of a
free economic society in which State intervention in social
and economic matters was kept at the lowest possible level.
But gradually this doctrine was eroded by the emergence of
new social values which recognised the role of the State as
an active participant in the social and economic life of the
citizen in order to being about general welfare and common
good of the community. With this change in socio-economic
thinking, the developing role of companies in modern economy
and their increasing impact on individuals and groups,
through the ramifications of their activities, began to be
increasingly recognised. It began to be realised that the
company is a species of social organisation, with a life and
dynamics of its own and exercising a significant power in
contemporary society. The new concept of corporate
responsibility transcending the limited traditional views
about the relationship between management and shareholders
and embracing within its scope much wider groups affected by
the trading activities and other connected operations of
companies, emerged as an important feature of contemporary
thought on the role of the corporation in modern society.
The adoption of the socialistic pattern of society as the
ultimate goal of the country’s economic and social policies
hastened the emergence of this new concept of the
corporation. The socio-economic objectives set out in Part
IV of the Constitution have since guided and shaped this new
corporate philosophy. We shall presently refer to some of
the Directive Principles of State Policy set out in Part IV
which clearly show the direction in which the corporate
sector is intended to move and the role which it is intended
to play in the social and economic life of the nation. But,
one thing is certain
943
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that the old nineteenth century view which regarded a
company merely as a legal device adopted by shareholders for
carrying on trade or business as proprietors has been
discarded and a company is now looked upon as a socio-
economic institution wielding economic power and influencing
the life of the people.
It is now accepted on all hands, even in predominantly
capitalist countries, that a company is not property. The
traditional view that the company is the property of the
shareholders is now an exploded myth. There was a time when
a group controlling the majority of shares in a company used
to say: "This is our concern. We can do what we like with
it." The ownership of the concern was identified with those
who brought in capital. That was the outcome of the
property-minded capitalistic society in which the concept of
company originated. But this view can no longer be regarded
as valid in the light of the changing socio-economic
concepts and values. Today social scientists and thinkers
regard a company as a living, vital and dynamic, social
organism with firm and deep rooted affiliations with the
rest of the community in which it functions. It would be
wrong to look upon it as something belonging to the
shareholders. It is true that the shareholders bring
capital, but capital is not enough. It is only one of the
factors which contributes to the production of national
wealth. There is another equally, if not more, important
factor of production and that is labour. Then there are the
financial institutions and depositors, who provide the
additional finance required for production and lastly, there
are the consumers and the rest of the members of the
community who are vitally interested in the product
manufactured in the concern. Then how can it be said that
capital, which is only one of the factors of production,
should be regarded as owner having an exclusive dominion
over the concern, as if the concern belongs to it? A
company, according to the new socio-enconomic thinking, is a
social institution having duties and responsibilities
towards the community in which it functions. The Supreme
Court pointed out as far back as 1950 in Chiranjeetlal v.
Union of India:
"We should bear in mind that a corporation, which
is engaged in production of commodities vitally
essential to the community, has a social character of
its own and it must not be regarded as the concern
primarily or only of those who invest their money in
it."
944
Pt. Govind Ballabh Pant also pointed out in one of his
speeches:
"...industry is not an isolated concern of the
shareholders or the managing agents alone. It reacts on
the entire people in the country, on their economic
conditions, on employment or standard of living, on
everything that conduces to the material well being."
The same view was also expressed at the International
Seminar on Current Problems of Corporate Law, Management and
Practice held in New Delhi where it was observed that "an
enterprise is a citizen. Like a citizen it is esteemed and
judged by its actions in relation to the community of which
it is a member as well as by its economic performance." That
is why it is regarded as one of the paramount objectives of
a company to bring about maximisation of social welfare and
common good. This necessarily involves reorientation of
thinking in regard to the duties and obligations of a
company not only vis-a-vis the shareholders but also vis-a-
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vis the rest of the community affected by its operations
such as workers, consumers and the Government representing
the society. There was at one time a serious controversy
between two schools of thought, one represented by Adolf
Berle and the other by Professor Dodd, as regards the nature
of duties and obligations owed by directors representing
management of a company. Adolf Berle took the view that
directors are trustees only for shareholders-that is the
traditional view which directly flows from a purely
capitalistic approach which identifies ownership and
dominion with capital-while Prof. Dodd believed that
directors are trustees not only for shareholders but also
for the entire community. Ultimately, however, in his
subsequent book, "Twentieth Century Capitalist Revolution",
Adolf Berle conceded that Prof. Dodd was right and that
modern directors are not limited to running business
enterprise for maximum profit motive alone, but are in fact
administrators of community system or of a social
institution. That is why we find that in recent times there
is considerable thinking on the subject of social
responsibilities of corporate management and it is now
acknowledged even in highly developed countries like the
United States and England that maximisation of social
welfare should be the legitimate goal of a company and
shareholders should be regarded not as proprietors of the
company, but merely as suppliers of capital entitled to no
more than reasonable return and the company should be
responsible not only to shareholders but also to workers,
consumers and the other
945
members of the Community and should be guided by
considerations of national economy and progress. This new
concept of a Company was felicitously expressed by Desai, J
sitting as a Judge of the Gujarat High Court in Panchmahal
Steel Ltd. v. Universal Steel Traders(1) in the following
words:
"Time-honoured approach that the company law must
safeguard the interest of investors and shareholders of
the company would be too rigid a framework in which it
can now operate. New problems call for a fresh
approach. And in ascertaining and devising this fresh
approach, the objective for which the company is formed
may provide a guide line for the direction to be taken.
As Prof. De Wool of Belgium puts it, the company has a
three-fold reality economic, human and public-each with
its own internal logic. The reality of the company is
much broader than that of an association of capital; it
is a human working community that performs a collective
action for the common good. In recent years a debate is
going on in the world at large on the functions and
foundations of corporate enterprise. The
"preservationists" and the "reformers" are vigorously
propounding their views on the possible reform of
company, the modern trend emphasising the public
interest in corporate enterprise."
The learned judge elaborated this "modern trend" by quoting
from Prof. Gower’s book on "The Principles of Modern Company
Law": "One section of the community whose interests as such
are not afforded any protection, either under this head or
by virtue of the provisions for investor or creditor
protection, are the workers and employees of the taken-over
company. This is a particularly unfortunate facet of the
principle that the interest of the company means only the
interest of the members and not of those whose livelihood is
in practice much more closely involved."
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We are concerned in these appeals only with the
relationship of the workers vis-a-vis the company. It is
clear from what we have stated above that it is not only the
shareholders who have supplied capital who are interested in
the enterprise which is being run by a company but the
workers who supply labour are also equally
946
interested because what is produced by the enterprise is the
result of labour as well as capital. In fact, the owners of
capital bear only limited financial risk and otherwise
contribute nothing to production while labour contributes a
major share of the product While the former invest only a
part of their moneys, the latter invest their sweat and
toil, in fact their life itself. The workers therefore have
a special place in a socialist pattern of society. They are
no more vendors of toil, they are not a marketable commodity
to be purchased by the owners of capital. They are producers
of wealth as much as capital. They supply labour without
which capital would be impotent and they are, at the least,
equal partners with capital in the enterprise. Our
constitution has shown profound concern for the workers and
given them a pride of place in the new socio-economic order
envisaged in the Preamble and the Directive Principles of
State Policy. The Preamble contains the profound declaration
pregnant with meaning and hope for millions of peasants and
workers that India shall be a socialist democratic republic
where social and economic justice will inform all
institutions of national life and there will be equality of
status and opportunity for all and every endeavour shall be
made to promote fraternity ensuring the dignity of the
individual. Every one is assured under Article 14 equality
before the law and equal protection of the laws and implicit
in this provision is the guarantee of equal remuneration for
men and women for some work or work of a similar nature.
Traffic in human beings and begar and other similar forms of
forced labour are prohibited under Article 23 and Article 24
mandates that no child below the age of 14 may be employed
in any factory or mine or engaged in any other hazardous
employment. These two Articles recently came up for
construction before this Court in People’s Union for
Democratic Rights & Ors.v. Union of India & Ors.(1) Article
38 imposes obligation on the State, albeit unenforceable in
a court of law, to "strive to promote the welfare of the
people by securing and protecting as effectively as it may a
social order in which social justice shall inform all the
institutions of the national life". This is followed by
Article 39 which inter alia obliges the State to direct its
policy towards securing that the citizens, men and women
equally have the right to an adequate means of livelihood,
the ownership and control of the material resources of the
community are so distributed as best to subserve the common
good, the operation of the economic system
947
does not result in the concentration of wealth and means of
production to the common detriment, there is equal pay for
equal work for both men and women and the health and
strength of workers, men and women and the tender age of
children are not abused and citizens are not forced by
economic necessity to enter avocations unsuited to their age
or strength. The State is directed by Article 41 to make
effective provision, within the limits of its economic
capacity and development, for securing the right to work and
Article 42 requires the State to make provision for securing
just and humane conditions of work and for maternity relief.
Article 43 provides that the State shall endeavour to
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secure, by suitable legislation or economic organisation or
in any other way, a living wage, conditions of work ensuring
decent standard of life and full enjoyment of leisure and
social and cultural opportunities. Then follows Article 43A
which is intended to herald industrial democracy and in the
words of Krishna Iyer, J. mark "the end of industrial bonded
labour". That Article says that the State shall take steps,
by suitable legislation or in any other way, to secure the
participation of workers in the management of undertakings,
establishments or other organisations engaged in any
industry. The constitutional mandate is therefore clear and
undoubted that the management of the enterprise should not
be left entirely in the hands of the suppliers of capital
but the workers should also be entitled to participate in
it, because in a socialist pattern of society, the
enterprise which is a centre of economic power should be
controlled not only by capital but also by labour. It is
therefore idle to contend thirty two years after coming into
force of the Constitution and particularly after the
introduction of Article 43A in the Constitution that the
workers should have no voice in the determination of the
question whether the enterprise should continue to run or be
shut down under an order of the court. It would indeed be
strange that the workers who have contributed to the
building of the enterprise as a centre of economic power
should have no right to be heard when it is sought to
demolish that centre of economic power.
The principal argument urged against the right of the
workers to be heard in the winding up petition was that
under the scheme of the Companies Act 1956, it is only the
creditors and contributories who are entitled to appear and
be heard in a winding up petition. The Companies Act 1956 is
a self-contained code exhaustive in regard to all matters
relating to companies and since there is no provision in
that Act conferring on the workers a right to intervene
948
in a winding up petition, no such right can be spelt out in
their favour outside the provisions of that Act Respondent
Nos. 6 to 9 relied upon various provisions of the Companies
Act 1956 in support of their contention that the workers
have no locus in a winding up petition but we do not think
these provisions lend any support to that contention. The
first provision relied upon by Respondent Nos. 6 to 9 was
section 439 which inter alia provides as to who shall be
entitled to make an application for winding up of a company.
It is no doubt true that this section confers the right to
present a winding up petition only on certain specifically
enumerated persons and the workers are not included in that
enumeration and therefore obviously, the workers have no
right to prefer a petition for winding up of a company. The
right to apply for winding up of a company being a creature
of statute, none other than those on whom the right to
present a winding up petition is conferred by the statute
can make an application for winding up a company and no such
right having been conferred on the workers, they cannot
prefer a winding up petition against a company. But from
this exclusion of the workers from the right to present a
winding up petition, it does not follow as a necessary
consequence that the workers have no right to appear and be
heard in a winding up petition filed by one or more of the
persons specified in section 439. It may be that the workers
have no right to present a winding up petition against the
company, but if a winding up petition is properly filed by
any of the persons entitled to do so under section 439, they
may still be entitled to appear and be heard in support or
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opposition to the winding up petition. That would depend
upon whether their interest is likely to be affected by any
order which may be made on the winding up petition. The next
section relied upon by respondent Nos. 6 to 9 was section
440 which says that where a company is being wound up
voluntarily or subject to the supervision of the court, a
petition for its winding up by court may be presented by any
person authorised to do so under section 439 or the official
Liquidator, but the court shall not make a winding up order
unless it is satisfied that the voluntary winding up or
winding up subject to the supervision of the court cannot be
continued with due regard to the interests of the creditors
or contributories or both. It was urged on behalf of
respondent Nos. 6 to 9 that this section shows that the
winding up of a company is intended to be for the benefit of
the creditors and the contributories and the interest of the
workers has no place at all in the winding up and is not
required to be taken into account in winding up the company.
This argument
949
is also in our opinion futile because what this section
deals with is the stage after the winding up has commenced,
whether voluntary or subject to the supervision of the
court, while we are concerned with a stage anterior to the
making of a winding up order. There can be little doubt that
the object of winding up being to realise the assets of the
company, pay the preferential claims and expenses of
liquidation and then discharge the debts of the creditors in
full or pari passu and if after paying to the creditors,
there is any surplus, distribute the same among the
shareholders by way of dividend and ultimately dissolve the
company, it is only the creditors and the contributories who
would be affected by any action taken in the course of
winding up of the company and that is why we find several
provisions in the Companies Act 1956 which speak of winding
up being carried on with due regard to the interest of the
creditors and the contributories or after consultation with
them or confer rights on the creditors and the
contributories to make applications for diverse purposes
with a view to effective winding up of the company. Such
provisions are for instance to be found in section 464, 466,
478, 517, 542, 543, 549, 556, 557 and 560. These provisions
apply at a stage after a winding up order is made by the
court or the voluntary winding up has commenced or an order
is made for continuance of winding up subject to the
supervision of the court, when winding up having been
ordered or resolved, what remains to be done is only to wind
up the company, pay the creditors and if there is any
surplus, distribute the same among the shareholders. These
provisions do not deal with a situation prior to the making
of the winding up order when the question is whether the
company should be ordered to be wound up or not. While the
company is continuing to subsist, the workers would be
employed in the enterprise which is being run by the company
and they would be earning their livelihood from such
employment, but if an order for winding up is made, their
services would, except in cases where the business of the
company is continued, stand terminated by reason of sub-
section (3) of section 445 which provides that a winding up
order "shall be deemed to be notice of discharge to the
officers and employees of the company, except when the
business of the company is continued." Ordinarily when a
winding up order is made, the business of the company would
cease to continue and even if the Liquidator is authorised
to carry on the business, such continuance would be only for
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the beneficial winding up of the company and the logical and
inevitable end would be the ultimate discontinuance of the
business. The making of a winding up order
950
on a petition for winding up would therefore almost
certainly have an adverse consequence on the workers in as
much as the continuance of their service would be seriously
jeopardised and their right to work and earn their
livelihood would be disastrously imperilled. Now it is an
elementary principle of law, well settled as a result of
several decisions of this Court and particularly the
decisions in State of Orissa v. Dr. Bini Pani,(1) A.K.
Kraipa v. Union of India,(2) and Maneka Gandhi v. Union of
India(3) that no order involving adverse civil consequences
can be passed against any person without giving him an
opportunity to be heard against the passing of such order
and this rule applies irrespective of whether the proceeding
in which it is passed is a quasi judicial or an
administrative proceeding. The audi alterum partem rule
which mandates that no one shall be condemned unheard is one
of the basic principles of natural justice and if this rule
has been held to be applicable in a quasi-judicial or even
in an administrative proceeding involving adverse civil
consequences, it would a fortiori apply in a judicial
proceeding such as a petition for winding up of a company.
It is difficult to imagine how any system of law which is
designed to promote justice through fairplay in action can
permit the court to make a winding up order which has the
effect of bringing about termination of the services of the
workers without giving them an opportunity of being heard
against the making of such order. It would be violative of
the basic principle of fair procedure and unless there is
express provision in the Companies Act 1956 which forbids
the workers from appearing at the hearing of the winding up
petition and participating in it, the workers must be held
entitled to appear and be heard in the winding up petition.
That is the minimum requirement of the principle of audi
alterum partem which cannot be ignored save on pain of
invalidation of the order of winding up. Here we do not find
any provision in the Companies Act 1956 which in so many
terms excludes the workers from appearing at the hearing of
the winding up petition with a view to supporting or
opposing it and the only ground on which the right of the
workers to appear and be heard in the winding up petition is
disputed is that there is no specific provision in the Act
entitling them to do so and the right to apply for winding
up as also to participate in the proceedings in the course
of winding up is conferred only on the creditors and the
951
contributories. But, we have pointed out above that merely
because the right to apply for winding up a company is not
given to the workers it does not mean that they cannot
appear to support or oppose a winding up petition which is
properly filed by one or the other persons specified in
section 439. There would, in fact, be no point in conferring
the right to apply for winding up of a company on the
workers since they cannot have any interest in demolishing
the enterprise which is the source of their livelihood and
particularly when the only effect of the winding up order
would be to render them unemployed and to bring about
winding up of the company for the benefit of the creditors
and the contributories. So also the circumstance that the
right to be consulted or to make applications in the course
of the winding up of a company is conferred only on the
creditors and the contributories does not in any way
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militate against the right of the workers to appear and be
heard in the winding up petition because once the winding up
order is made, the assets of the company have to be
realised, the creditors have to be paid and if there is any
surplus it has to be distributed among the contributories
and therefore at that stage it is only the creditors and the
contributories who have an interest and that is why in the
course of the winding up it is the creditors and the
contributories who have been given a voice. That has nothing
to do with the question whether the company should be wound
up or not which is a question in which the workers are
vitally concerned and on which they must obviously be heard
before any decision is taken by the court.
This view which we are taking is in accord with the
decision of the High Court of Bombay, namely, Bhalchandra
Dharmajee Makaji and Ors. v. Alcock Ashdown & Co. Ltd. &
Ors. where the Company Judge, while disposing of an
application for appointment of Official Liquidator as
Provisional Liquidator, pending the hearing and final
disposal of the main petition for winding up, said:
"After the amendment of sections 397 and 398 of
the Companies Act by sections 10 and 11 of the
Companies (Amendment) Act (LIII of 1963), it would
appear that the affairs of the company have to be
conducted not only in the best interest of its members
for their profit but also in a manner which is not
prejudicial to public interest. The element of public
interest enters into the management of the companies
after 1963. The modern corporation has
952
become the accepted instrument of social policy,
because it affects a large part of the economic life of
the community. It has become an instrument for the
improvement of the economic standards of the people and
for economic growth of the nation. Society depends for
some of its needs on corporate enterprise. It has
therefore an interest in its stability and efficiency
as an economic institution. The element of public
interest also arises from the responsibility for
ensuring a minimum wage to the numerous employees in
the corporate sector. It is necessary to see that
people who put their labour and lives into a concern
get fair wages, continuity of employment and a
recognition of their jobs where they have trained
themselves to highly skilled and specialised work. In
deciding whether the court should wind up a company or
change its management the court must take into
consideration not only the interest of the shareholders
and creditors but also public interest in the shape of
the need of the community and the interest of the
employees. This, in my opinion, is the requirement of
sections 397 and 398 of the Companies Act."
If in deciding whether the court should wind up a company or
change its management the court must take into consideration
not only the interest of the shareholders and creditors but
also amongst other things the interest of the workers, it is
axiomatic that the workers must have an opportunity of being
heard for projecting and safeguarding their interest before
a winding up order is made by the court. The Division Bench
of the Madras High Court has of course conceded in the
judgment under appeal that "in considering the question
whether to wind up or not the court has to take the larger
point of public interest including that of the workers into
consideration" but that in the opinion of the Division Bench
would not "clothe the workers with any locus standi to file
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an application for being heard in the winding up petition.
With the greatest respect to the learned Judges constituting
the Division Bench, we must express our emphatic disapproval
of this approach. It amounts to the court telling the
workers: "No doubt in deciding whether the company should be
wound up or not, we are bound to take into consideration
your interest but you need not be heard because we know best
what your interest requires." This paternalistic attitude
towards the workers that though they are most vitally
concerned and their interest is required to be taken into
consideration, they need not be heard because the court in
its wisdom knows,
953
presumably more than the workers themselves, what is in
their interest and they should leave their fate into the
hands of the court without even a whisper of an argument
sounds like a relic of a by-gone age and must be abandoned.
If the interest of the workers has to be taken into account,
the workers must have a say because they know best where
their interest lies and they must have an opportunity of
placing before the court relevant material bearing upon
their interest.
Considerable reliance was however placed on behalf of
respondent Nos. 6 to 9 on the statement of the law on this
point contained in the leading text books on company law.
Respondent Nos. 6 to 9 drew our attention to Palmer Company
Precedents (17th Edn.) volume 2 at page 77 where it is
stated that any creditor or shareholder may appear to
support or oppose the petition but no one else can do so
even if he has an indirect interest in the continued
existence of the company. So also in Buckley on the
Companies Act (14th Edn.) at page 546 the law has been
stated in the following terms, namely, "the only persons
entitled to be heard are the company, its creditors and
contributories .. the court may in its discretion hear other
persons who have an interest in order to learn what public
grounds there are in favour of, or in opposition to, the
winding up.. but such persons can be heard only as amici
curiae and cannot appeal." Our attention was also invited to
Halsbury’s Laws of England 4th Ed. Vol. 7 where a similar
statement of the law is to be found at page 614 paragraph
1028. Now it is undoubtedly true that according to the
statement of the law contained in these three leading text
books, it is only the company, the creditors and the
contributories who are entitled to appear on the winding up
petition and no other persons have a right to be heard, but
this statement of the law is based on the old decision in
Re. Bradford Navigation Company which was carried in appeal
and decided as Re. Bradford Navigation Company. This
decision given by the English Courts over a hundred years
ago when a company was regarded merely as a legal device
brought into being as a result of a contractual arrangement
between the shareholders for the purpose of carrying on
trade or business and the workers were looked upon as no
more than employees of the company working under a master
and servant relationship and the interest of the public as
consumers or otherwise was a totally irrelevant
consideration and it can have no validity in the present
times when the entire concept of a company has changed and
it has been transformed into a dynamic
954
socio-economic institution in which capital and labour are
both equal partners, possibly with heavy weightage in favour
of labour and the interest of the public as consumers as
also the general welfare and common good of the community
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constitute a vital consideration. We cannot allow the dead
hand of the past to stifle the growth of the living present.
Law cannot stand still; it must change with the changing
social concepts and values. If the bark that protects the
tree fails to grow and expand alongwith the tree, it will
either choke the tree or if it is a living tree, it will
shed that bark and grow a new living bark for itself.
Similarly, if the law fails to respond to the needs of
changing society, then either it will stifle the growth of
the society and choke its progress or if the society is
vigorous enough, it will cast away the law which stands in
the way of its growth. Law must therefore constantly be on
the move adopting itself to the fast changing society and
not lag behind. It must shake off the inhibiting legacy of
its colonial past and assume a dynamic role in the process
of social transformation. We cannot therefore mechanically
accept as valid a legal rule which found favour with the
English courts in the last century when the doctrine of
laissez faire prevailed. It may be that even today in
England the courts may be following the same legal rule
which was laid down almost a hundred years ago, but that can
be no reason why we in India should continue to do likewise.
It is possible that this legal rule might still be finding a
place in the English text books because no case like the
present one has arisen in England in the last 30 years and
the English courts might not have had any occasion to
consider the acceptability of this legal rule in the present
times. But whatever be the reason why this legal rule
continues to remain in the English text books, we cannot be
persuaded to adopt it in our country, merely on the ground
that it has been accepted as a valid rule in England. We
have to build our own jurisprudence and though we may
receive light from whatever source it comes, we cannot
surrender our judgment and accept as valid in our country
whatever has been decided in England. The rule enunciated in
re: Bradford Navigation Company case (supra) does not
commend itself to us and though it has been followed by a
single Judge of the Bombay High Court in re Edward Textiles
Limited (supra), we do not think it represents correct law.
We may also mention that on behalf of the appellants
some reliance was placed on Rule 34 of the Companies (Court)
Rules 1959 in support of their contention that not only the
creditors and the contributories but also other persons are
entitled to appear at the
955
hearing of a winding up petition and the workers cannot
therefore be excluded. This Rule provides that every person
who intends to appear at the hearing of a winding up
petition, whether to support or to oppose it, shall serve on
the petitioner or his advocate notice of his intention at
the address given in the advertisement and such notice shall
be in form No. 9 and where such person intends to oppose the
winding up petition, the grounds of his opposition or a copy
of his affidavit if any shall be furnished along with the
notice. The appellants contended that under this Rule any
one who wants to appear in a winding up petition can do so,
provided he serves on the petitioner or his advocate, notice
of his intention at the address given in the advertisement
and complies with the other requirements of this Rule and
therefore if the workers desire to appear at the hearing of
the winding up petition, they are entitled to do so. The
answer given on behalf of respondent Nos. 6 to 9 to this
contention was that Rule 34 is applicable only after a
winding up petition is admitted and an order is made for
advertisement of the winding up petition and it has no
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application at the stage when the winding up petition is
before the court only for the purpose of deciding whether or
not it should be admitted and advertised. It was also urged
on behalf of respondent Nos. 6 to 9 that in any event Rule
34 does not confer a right on any and every person to appear
at the hearing of the winding up petition, intends so to
appear he must take various steps set out in that Rule
beginning with service of notice on the petitioner or his
advocate before he can be heard on the winding up petition.
We are inclined to agree with this contention of respondent
Nos. 6 to 9. It is obvious that the object and purpose of
Rule 34 is not to confer a right on any one to appear at the
hearing of the winding up petition but merely to provide the
procedure to be followed before a person who is otherwise
entitled to appear in a winding up petition can be heard in
support or opposition of the winding up petition. This rule
cannot therefore be relied upon by the appellants as
conferring a right on the workers to appear at the hearing
of a winding up petition. But, one thing is clear that this
Rule does postulate that apart from the creditors and
contributories there may be other persons who are entitled
to appear at the hearing of the winding up petition because
it is not confined in its application to the creditors and
contributories but uses the generic impression "every
person" and to this limited extent it does undoubtedly lend
some support to the contention of the appellants.
956
We are therefore of the view that the workers are
entitled to appear at the hearing of the winding up petition
whether to support or to oppose it so long as no winding up
order is made by the court. The workers have a locus to
appear and be heard in the winding up petition both before
the winding up petition is admitted and an order for
advertisement is made as also after the admission and
advertisement of the winding up petition until an order is
made for winding up the company. If a winding up order is
made and the workers are aggrieved by it, they would also be
entitled to prefer an appeal and contend in the appeal that
no winding up order should have been made by the Company
Judge. But when a winding up order is made and it has become
final, the workers ordinarily would not have any right to
participate in any proceeding in the course of winding up
the company though there may be rare cases where in a
proceeding in the course of winding up, the interest of the
workers may be involved and in such a case it may be
possible to contend that the workers must be heard before an
order is made by the court. We think that even when an
application for appointment of a provisional liquidator is
made by the petitioner in a winding up petition, the workers
would have a right to be heard if they so wish because the
appointment of a provisional liquidator may adversely affect
the interest of the workers. But we may make it clear that
neither the petitioner nor the court would be under any
obligation to give notice of such application to the
workers. It would be for the workers to apply for being
heard and if they do so, they would be entitled to appear
and be heard on the application for appointment of
provisional liquidator. The workers therefore in the present
case had a right to be heard before the provisional
liquidator was appointed by the Company Judge but the
circumstance that the workers were not so heard would not
have the effect of vitiating the order appointing
provisional liquidator, because on the view taken by us, it
would be open to the workers to apply to the court for
vacating that order and it would be for the court after
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considering the material produced before it and hearing the
parties to decide whether that order should be vacated or
not.
We accordingly allow the appeals, set aside the order,
dated 14th September 1981 made by a Single Judge of the High
Court and confirmed by the Division Bench on 13th September
1981 and direct that the three Unions shall be entitled to
appear and be heard in the winding up petition. There will
be no order as to costs of these appeals.
957
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. I agree with my brother Bhagwati. I
wish to add a few words not because I have much more to say,
nor ever hope to say what he has said, more felicitously but
because my brother Venkataramiah has disagreed and my regard
for him compels me to add a few words of explanation.
"... you take my life when you do take the means
whereby I live" (Shakespeare: The Merchant Venice).
This indeed is the cry of the workers of Ramakrishna
Industries (P) Ltd. who desire to be heard before the bread
is taken out of their mouths. A battle royal appears to be
raging between two rival groups of shareholders of the
company. A petition for winding-up the company has been
presented by one group of shareholders. And an application
for the appointment of a provisional liquidator too. Quite
apart from Sec. 445 (3) of the Companies Act which provides
that the order for winding-up shall be deemed to be notice
of discharge of the officers and employees of the company,
except when the business of the company is continued, it is
plain that the future of the workers is at stake and their
right to work is in jeopardy as a result of the presentation
of the winding-up petition. Unlike the shareholders, to most
of whom the shares they hold represent mere investments and
to some of whom, the means to control the affairs of the
company, to the workers, the life of the company is their
own and its welfare is theirs. They are so intimately tied
up that their interest in the survival and the well being of
the company is much more than the interest of any
shareholder-be he an investor, a ’corporate commander’ or a
corporate manipulator. How then is it possible that these
persons-the workers whose very existence may be under threat
of extinction-are to be denied a hearing, even if sought,
when a petition for winding-up is presented to a court. It
is said that the Companies Act does not contemplate a
hearing to the workers. Only contributories and creditors
may be heard it seems. Workers may not be allowed to throng
the company court, only those who buy, sell and control
shares and the usurers, the stockbrokers and the money
brokers. Those who invest money may be heard, those who
invest their lives may not be heard. No. The Companies Act
does not prohibit a hearing to the workers. The Companies
Act does not say who may be heard. The Companies Act does
not provide for all situations. The Company Judge must
decide some matters. He must use his imagination. He must
use his discretion. But, without transgressing any legal
norms Company Law is not a field in which
958
’finality is to be expected’. The law ’falls to be applied
to a growing and changing subject matter’. This is
recognised in the report of the Jenkins Committee in the
United Kingdom and in this country, in the Statement of
Objects and Reasons to the Companies Amendment Act of 1974.
So, when new situations arise, as indeed they are bound to
arise having regard to the complexities of growth and
change, the Company Judge cannot retreat into the Corporate
shell but must expand and expound. He must take the bull by
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the horns. as it were. He must recognise and expose the
reality of the workers’ interest and the dubiety of the
interest of the others. He must acknowledge the
transformation which corporations are presently undergoing
from capitalist contrivances into socialist instruments.
No doubt, it was the creative genius of the bourgeoisie
that invented the corporations and the companies, invested
them with a corporate soul and a juristic personality and
called them legal entities in order to meet the growing and
complex demands of modern industry and management, to
conduct business and commercial activities more conveniently
and efficiently, and essentially to foster, consolidate and
stabilise the capitalist system of society under whose aegis
alone the exploiting class could thrive and continue to
exploit the working class. Corporations became the symbol of
competitive capitalism. But the historical processes
continue at work. The movement is now towards socialism. The
working classes, all the world over, are demanding ’workers’
control’ and ’Industrial Democracy’. They want security and
the right to work to be secured. They want the control and
direction of their lives in their own hands and not in the
hands of the industrialists, bankers and brokers. Our
constitution has accepted the workers’ entitlement to
control and it is one of the Directive Principles of State
Policy that the State shall take steps, by suitable
legislation or in any other way, to secure the participation
of workers in the management of undertakings, establishments
or other organisations engaged in any industry. It is in
this context of changing norms and waxing values that one
has to judge the workers’ demand to be heard.
And, what do the workers want? They want to be heard
lest their situation be altered unheard. They invoke natural
justice, so to claim justice. They invoke the same rule
which the courts compel administrative tribunals to observe.
Can courts say natural justice need not be observed by them
as they know how to render justice without observing natural
justice? It will surely be a travesty of
959
justice to deny natural justice on the ground that courts
know better. There is a peculiar and surprising
misconception of natural justice, in some quarters, that it
is, exclusively, a principle of administrative law. It is
not. It is first a universal principle and, therefore, a
rule of administrative law. It is that part of the judicial
procedure which is imported into the administrative process
because of its universality. "It is of the essence of most
systems of justice-certainly of the Anglo-Saxon System-that
in litigation both sides of a dispute must be heard before
decision. ’Audi Alterum Partem’ was the aphorism of St.
Augustine which was adopted by the courts at a time when
Latin Maxims were fashionable". ’Audi Alterum Partem is as
much a principle of African’ as it is of English legal
procedure; a popular Yoruba saying is: ’wicked and
iniquitous is he who decides a case upon the testimony of
only one party to it" (T.O. Elias: The Nature of African
Customary Law). Courts even more than administrators must
observe natural justice.
It is said that the Companies Act does not confer any
special rights on the workers, they are virtual strangers to
the Act and so why should they be heard in the petition for
winding-up ? The duty to hear those asking to be heard is
not dependent on the vesting of any right under the very
statute in respect of which jurisdiction is being exercised
by the court, but on any right whatever which may come under
threat. Surely it is not the law that rights other than
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those created by a particular statute may be taken away in
proceedings under that statute without affording a hearing
to those desiring to be heard. If the statute says only so
and so will be heard and no other, of course, no other will
be heard. If the statute does not say who may be heard, but
prescribes the procedure for the hearing, that procedure
must be followed by every one who want to be heard and what
applies to one will apply to the other. If creditors and
contributories desire to be heard and are heard, so shall
workers. After hearing the workers, the court may say that,
on the facts and circumstances of the case, it is not
necessary to hear them further; but they cannot be turned
away at the very threshold. It may be that it is not for
them to support or oppose the winding-up petition for any of
the traditional reasons. But they may make suggestions which
may avert winding-up, save the company and save their own
lives. They may have suggestions to make for restructuring
the company or for the transfer of the undertaking as a
running business. The workers themselves may offer to run
the industry forming themselves into a society. They may
have a myriad suggestions to
960
make, which they can do if they are allowed to be heard. If
every holder of a single share out of thousands may be
heard, if every petty creditor may be heard, why can’t the
workers be heard ? It is said that once the workers are
allowed to enter the Company Court, the flood gates will be
opened, all and sundry will join in the fray and utter
confusion will prevail. These are dark forebodings for which
there is no possible justification. The interest of the
workers is limited. It is the interest of the others, those
that battle for control and for power that may create chaos
and confusion. It must not be forgotten that the court is
the master of the proceedings and the ultimate control is
with the court. Parties may not be impleaded for the mere
asking or heard for the mere seeking. The court may well ask
the reason why, if some one seeks to be heard. Workers will
not crowd the Company Court and the Court will not be
helpless to keep out those whom it is not necessary to hear.
It is said that workers will not be allowed to intervene in
a partition or a partnership action to oppose partition or
dissolution of partnership and so why should they be allowed
to intervene in a winding-up petition. That is begging the
question. There is no reason why workers may not be allowed,
in appropriate cases, to intervene in partition and
partnership actions to avert disaster and to promote
welfare. As we said, impleading and hearing are not for the
mere asking and seeking.
Re Bradford Navigation Company and passages from
textbooks for which the case is the source of authority were
relied upon, to urge that none but contributories and
creditors may be heard in winding-up petition. Re Bradford
Navigation Company is a relic of an alien past. Fortunately
it is not a binding precedent. While we have learnt and
borrowed a great deal from British Jurisprudence, we have
been drawing the line now and then, here and there, because
their law, their jurisprudence suits their genius and ours
must develop according to our genius. Our needs are
different; our social, political and economic bases are
different; our aspirations are different; our systems are
different; the stages of our development are different. We
have a written constitution which is omnipresent when our
laws are made, tested, interpreted or executed. We look to
the constitution for guidance and inspiration when we
interpret the laws. The 42nd Amendment of the Constitution
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has introduced new lights into the Constitution. The
Constitution is now openly socialist. The Directive
Principles of State Policy repeatedly emphasise the role and
interest of the workers. Article 43-A, also introduced by
the 42nd
961
Amendment contemplates workers’ participation in the
management of industry. Other Directive Principles require
the State to make provision for securing the right to work,
for securing just and humane conditions of work and for
securing the right to an adequate means of livelihood. The
State is enjoined to direct its policy towards securing that
the ownership and control of the material resources of the
community are so distributed as best to subserve the common
good and that the operation of the economic system does not
result in the concentration of wealth and means of
production to the common detriment. Obviously, it is
nationalisation that is in view and nationalisation must
mean the setting up of public corporations and the
transformation of private corporations into public
corporations. Truly the Constitution envisages workers’
control and nationalisation as two of the roads to
socialism. Private corporations hitherto regarded as
bastions of private property and leaders of capitalist
economy are undergoing transformation and, are surely
acquiring the character of public institutions. The public
interest element is now quite a predominant factor in the
Companies Act itself. There are several provisions in the
Companies Act which take notice of the element of public
interest. There are other enactments like the Monopolies and
Restrictive Trade Practices Act, the Industries Regulation
and Development Act, under whose provisions, the activities
of a company may be scrutinised in the public interest.
There are a host of other legislations involving employment
and welfare of labour, to which the managements of companies
are subject. The transformation of a company’s character
from private to public is going on right before our eyes
even as the institution of private property is also losing
its diathesis. It is in this context of ferment and
development that we must consider the problem before us.
There is no sanctity attached to the age of a judgment or to
the circumstance that the decision is that of an English
Court from where we have borrowed most of our company law.
Re Bradford Navigation Company was decided in the heydays of
laissez faire at a time when individualism dominated every
field and the public interest was but a slow runner. Now the
position is reversed. Laissez faire has long been dethroned
and all interests are increasingly subordinated to the
public interest. Corporations are themselves assuming a
public character and function like mini States but surely
they will not be allowed to function as slave States where
the voice of the slave may never be heard.
In Britain itself corporate law and labour law have
changed considerably and are still changing. Courts no
longer view trade
962
unions with suspicion, as conspiracies as they once did. The
right to work, the right to collectively bargain and the
right to strike are well recognised. After nationalisation
of certain important and crucial industries by the
successive Labour Governments, workers’ participation in
management has become a reality and today a considerable
measure of workers’ control of management has been achieved
in industry.
There are now persistent demands that Company Law too
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should recognise the interest of workers in a company. Prof.
Gower in his "The Principles of Modern Company Law" says:-
"One section of the community whose interests as
such are not afforded any protection, either under this
head or by virtue of the provisions for investor or
creditor protection, are the workers and employees of
the taken over company. This is a particularly
unfortunate facet of the principle that the interest of
the company means only the interest of the members, and
not of those whose livelihood is in practice much more
closely involved".
Again he says, later,
"The vexed question of the relationship between
the employees and the company which employs them is, in
fact, a dominant theme in the current debate which
flows over from company to labour law. It is generally
accepted that it is unreal for company law to ignore,
as at present our law largely does, that the workers
are as much, if not more, a part of the company as the
members of it".
That is the way the wind is blowing in Britain and there is,
therefore, good reason for holding that the rule in Bradford
Navigation Company is not valid in the present times.
I may conclude by a reference to the following
observations made in another connection by D.A. Desai, J in
Panchmahals Steel Ltd. v. Universal Steel Traders(1).
"Time-honoured approach that the company law must
safeguard the interest of investors and shareholders of
the company would be too rigid a framework in which it
can
963
now operate. New problems call for a fresh approach . .
. As Prof. De Wool of Belgium puts it, the company has
a three-fold reality-economic, human and public-each
with its own internal logic. The reality of the company
is much broader than that of an association of capital;
it is a human working community that performs a
collective action for the common good. In recent years,
a debate is going on in the world at large on the
functions and foundations of corporate enterprise. The
"preservationists" and the "reformers" are vigorously
propounding their views on the possible reform of
company, the modern trend emphasising the public
interest in corporate enterprise".
The case itself is an instructive one and demonstrates how
an imaginative Company Judge may help to restructure and
infuse new life into a company whose life is ebbing out,
within the four corners of the statute and keeping in view
the interests not merely of the creditors and the
contributories but also the interests of the workers.
Viewed from any angle, of natural justice, of the
constitution or of the expanding theory of company law,
there, appears to be no obstacles to a Company Judge hearing
the workers, when asked, after a winding up petition is
presented. I agree with the order proposed by Bhagwati, J.
VENKATARAMIAH, J. I had the privilege of reading the
draft judgment prepared by my learned brother, Bhagwati, J.
but I regret my inability to agree with him.
Messrs Ramakrishna Industries (P) Ltd. (hereinafter
referred to as ’the Company’) which is carrying on its
business at Coimbatore in the State of Tamil Nadu is a
closely held private limited company governed by the Indian
Companies Act, 1956 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’).
The Company’s paid up capital is Rs. 15,95,000 divided into
1595 equity shares of Rs. 1,000 each, the bulk of
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964
which is held by the members of a Hindu family whose
relationship is as follows:
V. Rangaswami Naidu = Chinnammal (wife)
(deceased) (deceased) (7 shares)
(10 shares)
V. Kamalammal =R. Venkata- P.R. Rama- = Mrs. Raje-
(wife) swami Naidu Krishnan swari
(164 shares) (20 shares) (34 shares) Ramakrishnan
(85 shares)
V. Radha- V. Mano- V. Rajkumar
krishnan haran (148 shares)
(164 shares) (146 shares) =Thulasi
= Anusuya
K. Prabhu R. Baba Chandersekhar S.R.K. Prasad
(160 shares) (168 shares) (161 shares)
The group of R. Venkataswami Naidu holds 642 shares and
the group of P.R. Ramakrishnan is holding 608 shares. 17
shares stand in the name of late V. Rangaswami Naidu and his
wife and 300 shares are held by V. Rangaswami Naidu
Educational Trust. R. Venkataswami Naidu and P.R.
Ramakrishnan are trustees for life of V. Rangaswami Naidu
Educational Trust having control over the shares held by the
Trust. They are also treated as Life Directors. Only 5
shares stand in the name of others. V. Kamalammal, Mrs.
Rajeswari Ramakrishnan, V. Radhakrishnan V. Manoharan, K.
Prabhu and R. Baba Chandersekhar are directors and V.
Rajkumar is the Managing Director of the Company. The
Company is thus under the exclusive control and management
of the members belonging to one family. Serious differences
having arisen amongst them regarding the management of the
affairs of the Company, P.R. Ramakrishnan, his wife and sons
filed a petition being Company Petition No. 30 of 1981 on
the file of the High Court of Madras on July 13, 1981 for
the winding-up of the Company under section
965
433(e) and (f) of the Act on the ground that it was just and
equitable to do so in view of the alleged deadlock that had
arisen in the administration of the affairs of the Company.
The petition charged the members belonging to the group of
R. Venkataswami Naidu with acts of misconduct, waste and
malversation, a detailed reference to which is unnecessary
for purposes of this case. Along with the above petition,
the petitioners therein filed Company Application No. 843 of
1981 praying for the appointment of a Provisional Liquidator
and Company Application No. 844 of 1981 for an interim order
restraining the Company and other respondents from borrowing
moneys from bankers and other financial institutions without
prior permission of the Court and from otherwise alienating
the assets of the Company pending disposal of the said
application. The learned Company Judge passed an interim
order on July 13, 1981 itself restraining until further
orders the eleven respondents named in the application from
borrowing any moneys from banks, financial institutions or
others without prior permission of the Court and from
alienating and/or creating any charge or encumbrance over
any of the assets of the Company in its various enterprises.
The above interim order was passed even though on the same
date application was opposed by the counsel for the
respondents therein. The case was adjourned for further
consideration to August 10, 1981. On August 19, 1981, the
above interim order was made absolute in the following terms
:-
"In the result there will be an injunction
restraining respondents 1 to 6 from borrowing any
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moneys from banks, financial institutions or others and
from alienating and/or creating any charge or
encumbrance over any of the assets of the first
respondent company in its various enterprises except
that the first respondent company is entitled to honour
any pending contract entered into by the company with
third parties before the presentation of the
application, all its existing commitments vis-a-vis its
staff and labourers, electric charges, central excise
duty, LIC premium, payments due to employees
cooperative stores, telephone bills and sales-tax dues,
availing the existing bank facilities with any of its
bankers, subject to the condition that the particulars
for all these payments and the source from which such
payments were to be met, are furnished in detail to the
applicants. It is again made clear that the company is
always at liberty to approach court for further
directions
966
and that the applicant’s right to impugn any such
transaction under section 536(2) is left untouched".
In the meanwhile three trade unions viz. the Coimbatore
District National Textile Employees’ Union, Coimbatore; the
Coimbatore District Engineering Workers’ Union, Coimbatore
and the National Textile Workers’ Union (INTUC), applicants
in Company Application Nos. 880, 881 and 883 of 1981
respectively applied to the Court to implead them as
respondents to the winding up petition i.e. Company Petition
No. 30 of 1981 alleging that their interests had been
adversely affected by the interim order which according to
them had the effect of preventing the management of the
Company from paying amounts due to workers and also making
payments for securing supplies to the stores from which the
workers were buying articles of food and other provisions.
These applications were opposed by the petitioners in the
winding-up petition stating that the trade unions being
neither creditors nor shareholders had no locus standi to be
impleaded as respondents to the petition. It may be
mentioned here that the Company Petition for winding-up had
not yet been advertised at that stage and Rule 34 of the
Companies (Court) Rules, 1959 was not attracted. The Company
Judge dismissed these applications filed by the trade unions
for impleading them as respondents by his order dated
September 14, 1981. Against that order only the National
Textile Workers’ Union (INTUC) filed an appeal before the
Division Bench of the High Court being OSA No. 148 of 1981.
That appeal was dismissed by the Division Bench on September
30, 1981. The petition for special leave to appeal (Civil)
No. 1961 of 1981 was filed before this Court under Article
136 of the Constitution by the National Textile Workers’
Union (INTUC) on November 6, 1981. The said Special Leave
Petition came up for orders before a Bench of three Judges
on November 19, 1981. On that date notices were issued to
the respondents. The High Court was permitted to pass its
orders on the application for appointment of a provisional
liquidator which was pending before it but it was ordered
that in the event of a provisional liquidator being
appointed, he should not take any steps which would
prejudically affect the workers. The above order was further
modified by this Court on December 1, 1981. The petition was
posted for hearing and disposal before a Bench of five
Judges as the matter involved an important question of law
relating to the locus standi of the trade unions to be
impleaded as respondents to a winding-up petition and their
right to oppose or support it.
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967
Petitions for Special Leave to Appeal (Civil) Nos.
10248 and 10249 of 1981 filed respectively by the Coimbatore
District National Textile Employees’ Union and the
Coimbatore District Engineering Workers’ Union directly
against the order of the Company Judge dated September 19,
1981 rejecting their applications for being impleaded as
parties to the Company Petition are also heard along with
the above Petition for special leave to appeal (Civil) No.
9661 of 1981.
At the outset it should be noted that the company law
in force in India i.e. the Act, as in England, is an amalgam
of certain principles of the law of contract, of the law of
persons and of the law of partnership which require the
partners of a firm to be just and faithful towards each
other. A company is an association of persons for some
common object or objects. A Company has a legal personality.
It is an artificial person as opposed to a natural person.
It comes into existence on its registration in accordance
with law. The memorandum of association and the articles of
association of a company which are filed at the time of its
registration are considered as the constitutional documents
which contain the fundamental terms which govern it. The
memorandum contains conditions some of which are basic to
its existence even though they may be alterable by following
the prescribed procedure. The articles which contain the
terms relating to the internal regulation may be altered by
the members by passing appropriate resolution. The articles
are, however, subject to the terms of the memorandum. Both
these documents should, however, conform to the Act. The
actions of the company are subject to the doctrine of ultra
vires whose purpose is to protect investors in the company
and to protect the interests of its creditors. The directors
of a company are its agents and they stand in a fiduciary
relationship to the company. The duties of good faith which
are imposed by this fiduciary relationship are virtually
identical with those imposed on trustees. The directors are
generally expected not to place themselves in a position
where their duties towards the company conflict with their
personal interests. A company ceases to be in existence on
its dissolution which follows the winding-up proceedings
which may be either by the Court or voluntary winding-up
(either members’ voluntary winding-up or creditors’
voluntary winding-up) or winding up subject to supervision
of the Court. There are detailed provisions in the Act
governing the different winding-up proceedings referred to
above. The principles of administrative law which concern
the control of governmental power have not much relevance to
the
968
administration of the affairs of a company, the primary
purpose of administrative law being the imposition of checks
on the powers of government or its officers so that they may
not either abuse their powers or go out of their legal
bounds. In particular, the proceedings relating to winding-
up by Court are subject to the orders of higher courts in
appeal and are not amenable to interference by superior
courts as in the case of actions of government or its
officers. The winding-up proceedings by Court are governed
by the Act and the Rules made thereunder.
We have been taken through various English text books
on Company Law such as ’Palmers Company Law’, ’Gore Browne
on Companies’, ’Buckley on the Companies Acts’ and Gower’s
Principles or Modern Company Law. In none of them there is
any statement to the effect that officers and employees (who
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are not creditors or contributories) of a company for whose
winding-up a petition is filed would be entitled as of right
to be impleaded as parties and to contest the petition.
There is also no authority of English Courts recognising
such a right in any trade union. It is not also shown that
any such right of a trade union is recognised by the Indian
law which more or less corresponds to English law in this
regard The decision of the Bombay High Court In re. Edward
Textile Ltd.(1) is a clear authority for the proposition
that any rate trade unions have no locus standi to oppose a
winding-up petition.
We shall proceed to decide this case on the assumption
that the application for impleading was made in fact on
behalf of the workers and not by the trade unions.
The main argument urged in support of these appeals is
that because under section 445(3) of the Act the passing of
a winding-up order of a company by the Court amounts to a
notice of discharge to the officers and the employees of the
Company, except when the business of the company is
continued, the officers and employees should be afforded an
opportunity to contest a winding-up petition after being
impleaded as parties and if possible avoid the winding-up of
the company. To appreciate this contention, it is necessary
to refer to some of the provisions of the Act. Section 433
of the Act sets out six circumstances in which a company may
be wound up by the Court. A company may be wound up by the
Court on one or more of the following grounds, namely, (a)
if the company has by
969
special resolution, resolved that the company may be wound
up by the Court, (b) if default is made in delivering the
statutory report to the Registrar or in holding the
statutory meeting, (c) if the company does not commence its
business within a year from its incorporation, or suspends
its business for a whole year, (d) if the number of members
is reduced, in the case of a public company, below seven,
and in the case of private company below, two, (e) if the
company is unable to pay its debts and (f) if the Court is
of opinion that it is just and equitable that the company
should be wound up. Section 439 of the Act provides that an
application to the Court for the winding-up of a company
shall be made by way of a petition presented to the Court
subject to the provisions of that section. A petition for
winding-up of a company may be filed by all or any of the
following viz. the company, its creditors including any
contingent or prospective creditors or by any contributory.
Such a petition can be filed by the Registrar of Companies
and in a case falling under section 243, by any person
authorised by the Central Government Sub-section (2) of
section 439 of the Act treats certain classes of persons as
creditors for purposes of that section. Sub-section (3) of
section 439 treats the holder of a fully paid up share also
as a contributory even though he may not be liable to
contribute any further sum to the assets of a company in the
event of its being wound up and a contributory may file a
petition for winding-up provided he is not debarred from
doing so by sub-section (4) of section 439. The Registrar
can file a petition under clauses (b), (c), (d), (e) and (f)
of section 433 of the Act subject to the conditions
specified in section 439 except in cases where he is
authorised under section 439(1)(f) Sub-sections (6), (7) and
(8) of section 439 of the Act refer to the other conditions
governing the filing of a winding-up petition.
When a company has passed a special resolution
resolving that the company may be wound up by the Court, the
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employees and workers can have hardly any ground to object
to the winding-up of the company. The position is the same
when any of the defaults mentioned in clauses (b) and (c) of
section 433 of the Act are committed by the company. The
officers and employees of the company also cannot get over
the deficiency in the required number of members of a
company referred to in clause (d) of section 433. When a
company is unable to pay its debts, a creditor may move a
petition for the winding-up of the company. Such a creditor
cannot be compelled to prove his claim not merely against
the company but also against the officers and employees.
When there is a deadlock
970
in the management of the company arising out of disputes
amongst the directors or where some directors without any
justification exclude some other directors from the
management of the company, it would be unreasonable to
expect the excluded directors to fight the case both against
the directors who are responsible for their exclusion and
also against the officers and employees who are neither
creditors nor contributories but who may be supporting the
contesting directors. The law on the question as to who can
be heard as of right in a winding-up proceeding is set out
in paragraph 1028 in Volume 7 of Halsbury’s Laws of England
(4th Edition) thus:
"....Only the petitioner, the company, and
creditors and contributories are entitled to
appear on the petition; other parties have no
right to be heard, and, even if court of
first instance elects to hear them as amici
curiae, they have no right of appeal."
The above passage is based on the decision of the
English Court in In re. Bradford Navigation Company(1) where
Sir W.M. James, L J. observed at page 601 thus:
"I am of opinion that this preliminary objection
must prevail. It appears to me that the Appellants’
argument is based upon a misconception of what a
winding-up order and what a winding-up petition is. It
is a substitute for a suit for winding-up a
partnership. It is a power applicable by the Act of
Parliament to corporations as well as to unincorporated
societies. Partners have a right to file a bill one
against the other, and to have the usual decree for the
administration of the partnership property, and for the
settling of the partnership accounts and liabilities.
In the case of large companies, winding-up was thought
to be a more convenient course than a common
partnership suit, but in every other respect it is the
same. In a common partnership suit nobody can be made a
party, or can be heard, except the partners themselves,
and, originally, a winding-up was the same thing.
Contributories were the only persons who could be
heard; but as creditors were interfered with by the
operation of the winding-up, the Act of Parliament has
made a winding-up a matter both for creditors and
contributories. A creditor may present a petition for
971
winding-up, and both creditors and contributories are
heard upon that; but it is new to me to say that any
person who has an interest in, or a right to or in
respect of, some of the property of the company, large
or small, has right to appear as a litigant here,
because that company chooses to apply for an order with
respect to itself. In this case the company was
desirous of being wound up. I am of opinion that the
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winding-up order does not in the slightest degree
derogate from any right whatever which any member of
the public has with respect to this canal The winding-
up will deal with such rights as the partners in the
partnership can deal with themselves. The Court will
deal with it just as the partners themselves could have
dealt with it"...In the Court below the Court might
very well say to a person so situated, "I should be
glad to hear you as amicus curiae, if you have an
interest, that I may know what public grounds there
are." There the Court might use its discretion, and
think it right to hear such an objection; but when it
comes before me on a Petition of Appeal from the Order,
then the Appellant must show that he fills some
character in which he has a right to litigate with the
company. I am of opinion that he does not fill any such
character, and that the Petition of Appeal must be
refused with costs."
This decision may be of the last century but there is
hardly any justification to depart from it even now unless
compelled by the statute to do so.
That only the company, creditors and contributories
(apart from the Central Government or the Registrar when
they choose to intervene under the express provisions of
law) are entitled to participate in the winding-up
proceedings is emphasised by sections 447 and 557 of the
Act. They read:
"447. Effect of winding-up order-An order for
winding-up a company shall operate in favour of all the
creditors and of all the contributories of the company
as if it had been made on the joint petition of a
creditor and of a contributory."
"557. Meetings to ascertain wishes of creditors or
contributories.-(1) In all matters relating to the
winding-up
972
of a company, the Court may-
(a) have regard to the wishes of creditors or
contributories of the company, as proved to it by
any sufficient evidence;
(b) if it thinks fit for the purpose of ascertaining
those wishes, direct meetings of the creditors or
contributories to be called, held and conducted in
such manner as the Court directs; and
(c) appoint a person to act as chairman of any such
meetings and to report the result thereof to the
Court.
(2) When ascertaining the wishes of creditors,
regard shall be had to the value of each creditor’s
debt.
(3) When ascertaining the wishes of
contributories, regard shall be had to the number of
votes which may be cast by each contributory."
That a company, the Official Liquidator, the
liquidator, creditors and contributories alone can
effectively participate in and contest the winding-up
proceedings is clear from some of the other provisions of
the Act governing the winding-up proceedings. Under section
450(2) of the Act before appointing a provisional
liquidator, the Court has to given notice to the company and
give a reasonable opportunity to it to make its
representations, if any, unless, for special reasons to be
recorded in writing, the Court thinks fit to dispense with
such notice. The Court may, under section 466 of the Act at
any time after making a winding-up order, on the application
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either of the Official Liquidator or of any creditor or
contributory, make an order staying the winding-up
proceedings on being satisfied that there are good reasons
to pass such an order. Section 478(3) authorises any
creditor or contributory in addition to the Official
Liquidator to take part in the public examination of
promoters, directors etc. held for the purpose of enquiring
into the conduct of such promotees or directors in
connection with the promotion or formation or the conduct of
the business of the company. Section 517 of the Act provides
that in a voluntary winding-up, an arrangement entered into
by the company and the creditors as provided therein is
binding on the creditors and any creditor or contributory
who is aggrieved by such arrangement may
973
appeal to the Court. Under section 518, the liquidator or
any contributory or any creditor may apply to the Court in a
voluntary winding-up proceeding to determine any question
arising in the winding-up of a company. Under section 542 of
the Act on the application of the Official Liquidator or the
liquidator, or any creditor or contributory of the company
the Court may, if it thinks fit and proper so to do, declare
that any persons who were knowingly parties to the carrying
on of business of the company with intent to defraud
creditors or any other person shall be personally
responsible for all or any of the debts or liabilities as
the Court may direct. The Court can exercise power to assess
damages against delinquent directors of a company which is
ordered to be wound-up under section 543 on the application
of the Official Liquidator, or of the Liquidator, or of any
creditor or contributory made within the prescribed time. In
the case of a voluntary winding-up under section 546 any
creditor or contributory may apply to the Court with respect
to exercise of any power by the liquidator under section
546(1). Section 549(1) of the Act provides that at any time
after the making of an order for the winding-up of a company
by or subject to the supervision of the Court, any creditor
or contributory of the company may, if the Supreme Court, by
rules prescribed so permit and in accordance with and
subject to such rules but not further or otherwise, inspect
the books and papers of the company. Any creditor or
contributory may under section 556 apply to the Court to
enforce the duty of liquidator to make returns etc. These
and other provisions of the Act show that only the company,
the Official Liquidator, liquidator, creditors,
contributories or the Registrar have a statutory right to
participate as of right in the winding-up proceedings as
provided in the Act. The workers or their trade unions have
not been given any such right.
The words ’every person’ in Rule 34 of the Companies
(Court) Rules, 1959 (which is almost similar to the
corresponding English Rule) do not entitle a worker who is
neither a shareholder nor a contributory to support or
oppose a winding-up petition under that Rule because they
refer only to a person who is otherwise entitled to do so
under the Act. We should also bear in mind that an anamolous
result that may flow from the acceptance of the case of the
workers is that whereas in a winding-up by Court they may
get an opportunity to contest the petition, the voluntary
winding-up proceedings or winding-up under the supervision
of the Court would go on without any such contest although
in all cases ultimately the
974
workers will be discharged from service. A construction
which leads to such a discriminatory result should be
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avoided.
When once we extend the right to contest a winding-up
petition to workers either on the principle of equity or of
administrative law, on the same principle it would logically
follow that all others who may have dealings with such as
commission agents, selling agents etc. whose contracts with
the company are going to be terminated by reason of its
liquidation also have to be allowed to contest the winding-
up proceedings. Such a claim is not permissible. On this
question, it may be useful to refer to the case of Ex Parte
Maclure. In that case a person entered into an agreement
with an insurance company to act as their agent for five
years, and to transact no business except for the company,
in consideration of which he was to receive a fixed salary
and also a commission of 10 percent, on all business
transacted. Before the five years expired the company was
wound up voluntarily. It was held, affirming the decision of
Romilly M.R., that the agent was not entitled to prove
against the company for the loss of his commission during
the remainder of the term of five years. James L.J. said: "I
am clearly of opinion that the Master of the Rolls was
right.....It is the case of a person engaging a servant, and
saying, ’I engage you for five years, I will pay you 500 a
year for that period-that sum is secured to you-and then, in
order to give you an inducement to carry on the business
effectually, properly, and prudently, I will give you 10 per
cent, commission upon the net profits to be earned by that
business. I am of opinion that this was a contract which did
not give the servant the right to determine what the extent
of the business was to be. He could not call upon the
directors to issue new policies to accept new premium, or to
take new risks, if they were not minded to do it. He could
not say, ’Such a person has brought in a policy of
insurance, and you must accept that." Because if he had a
right to say ’You must carry on the business’ he would also
have a right tc say ’You must carry on the business in the
usual and proper manner,’ and that would be giving a servant
the right of controlling the master in the mode in which he
chose to carry on his business. Now, I am quite satisfied
that the meaning of the contract was nothing of the kind. It
was never intended to give the servant the right of
dictating as to the extent of business, whether more or
less, or nothing, but be simply took the chance of
975
the company finding it a profitable business and carrying it
on. The company had a right to reduce the business to a
minimum ; and if they had a right to reduce it to a minimum,
they had a right to reduce it to nothing-as far as he was
concerned."
It is because of some doubts that had been expressed
earlier about the continuance of the employment of the
employees of a company ordered to be compulsorily wound up
that section 445(3) was enacted making it clear that the
passing of the order of winding-up amounts to a notice of
discharge of the employees concerned. Section 445(3)
corresponds to the termination of service brought about by
the abolition of a post under a Government or by the closure
of a business, neither of which as the law stands today
requires compliance with the principles of natural justice.
It may, however, attract section 25-FFF of the Industrial
Disputes Act; 1947 in appropriate cases.
In the Act, there are specific provisions dealing with
the rights of employees of a company. Sections 417 to 420 of
the Act deal with employees’ securities and provident funds
and clauses (b) to (f) of section 530(1) deal with
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preferential payments to be made to the employees of a
company in liquidation from out of its assets. Section 635-B
of the Act deals with the protection to which the employees
are entitled during investigation into the affairs of a
company. Rule 152 of the Companies (Court) Rules, 1959 (read
with Form No. 67) relates to proof of arrears of workmen’s
wages. The right to resist a winding-up petition is not one
such right.
It is true that public interest which may include
within its scope interests of employees of a company has to
be kept in view by the Court as observed in Bhalchandra
Dharmajee Makaji and Ors. v. Alcock, Ashdown and Co. Ltd.
and Ors.(1) in exercising certain powers under the Act.
Sections 388-B, 394, 396, 397 and 408 of the Act do refer to
the concept of public interest. These provisions deal with
the power of the Central Government to remove managerial
personnel from office on the recommendation of the High
Court, compromises, arrangements and reconstruction of
companies and power of the Court and the Government to
prevent oppression or mismanagement of affairs of a company.
They do not, however, state that trade unions can as of
right intervene in the proceedings arising under them.
976
It is not correct to say that there is no other remedy
at all for workmen who are likely to be affected by the
winding-up order made by the Court. Section 15-A of the
Industrial (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951 (Act No.
65 of 1951) which applies to textile industry as well
confers power on the Central Government to carry out
investigation into the affairs of a company in liquidation.
It reads :
"15-A. Power to investigate into the affairs of a
company in liquidation-(1) Where a company, owning an
industrial undertaking is being wound up by or under
the supervision of the High Court, and the business of
such company is not being continued, the Central
Government may, if it is of opinion that it is
necessary, in the interest of the general public and,
in particular, in the interests of production, supply
or distribution of articles or class of articles
relatable to the concerned scheduled industry, to
investigate into the possibility of running or
restarting the industrial undertaking, make an
application to the High Court praying for permission to
make, or cause to be made, an investigation into such
possibility by such person or body of persons as that
Government may appoint for the purpose.
(2)Where an application is made by the Central
Government under sub-section (1), the High Court shall,
notwithstanding anything contained in the Companies
Act, 1956 (1 of 1956) or in any other law for the time
being in force grant the permission prayed for."
The provisions of Chapters III-AA and III-AB of the
Industrial (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951 confer on
the Central Government powers regarding management or
control of industrial undertakings owned by companies in
liquidation and power to provide relief to certain
industrial undertakings including those to which Chapter
III-A is applicable. Chapter III-AC of that Act deals with
the power of the Central Government in respect of
liquidation and reconstruction of companies. In particular,
section 18-FD(1) of that Act inter alia provides that if, on
receipt of the report submitted by the authorised person,
the Central Government is satisfied in relation to a
company, owning the industrial undertaking, which is being
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wound up by the High Court, that its assets and liabilities
are such that in the interests of its creditors and
977
contributories the industrial undertaking should be solid as
a running concern, as provided in section 18-FE thereof it
may by order decide accordingly. Sub-section (2) of section
18-FD of that Act states that notwithstanding anything
contained in sub-section (1) thereof the Central Government
may prepare a scheme for reconstruction of a company if it
is satisfied having regard to all relevant circumstances
mentioned therein that it is proper to do so. When such a
scheme is prepared, the Central Government has to send it to
the registered trade unions, if any, of the employees
concerned for their suggestions and objections. (See section
18-FF(3)). Any scheme finally approved would prevail
notwithstanding anything contained in sections 391 to 394-A
(both inclusive) of the Act. It is open to the workers or
their trade unions to move the Central Government to take
appropriate steps under the aforesaid provisions in order to
protect the interests of the workers who are likely to be
affected by the winding-up orders.
Article 43A of the Constitution clearly states that the
State shall take steps by suitable legislation or in any
other way to secure the participation of workers in the
management of undertakings, establishments or other
organisation engaged in any industry. The High-powered
Expert Committee on Companies and MRTP Acts headed by
Justice Rajinder Sachar of the Delhi High Court has also
made certain recommendations about provisions to be made for
workers’ participation in management of companies. (Vide
paragraphs 18.127 to 18.143 of the Report). Parliament may
take early steps to implement some of the recommendations
made by the said Committee. It is significant that there is
no recommendation made even in this Report about the right
of trade unions to contest winding-up petitions. If the
workers are issued shares then they would no doubt be
entitled to participate in the winding-up proceedings as
contributories. This may be one way of solving the problem
by legislative means. Another way of providing a forum to
the workers representative in matters relating to the
winding-up of a company is to amend section 292 of the Act
as suggested in para 11.27 and para 18.137 of the Report of
the Sachar Committee. Those paragraphs are reproduced below
for ready reference:
"11.27 The workers’ representation on company
Board makes it necessary to provide that companies must
ensure that certain decisions are necessarily taken at
the Board level and the Board do not delegate
978
the powers in respect of these matters to committees or
other functionaries in the organisation, otherwise the
participation of workers at the Board level is likely
to prove ineffective. The powers and functions which
cannot be delegated by the Board, and which must be
within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Board to take
policy decision are in respect of the following
matters:-
(a) winding-up of the company;
(b) changes in the memorandum and articles of
association;
(c) changes in the capital structure of a company
(e.g. as regards the relationship between the
Board and the shareholders a reduction or increase
in the share capital; as regards the relations
between the Board and senior management, the issue
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of securities on a takeover or merger);
(d) disposal of a substantial part of the undertaking;
(e) the allocation or disposition of resources to the
extent not covered in (a) to (d) above; and
(f) the appointment, removal, control and remuneration
of management, whether as members of the Board or
in their capacity as executives or employees.
The suggestion regarding (a) to (e) above is on the
same line as the present power of the Board to declare
dividend. In other words, the shareholders will not be
able to exercise powers mentioned in (a) to (e) above
unless recommended by the Board. We would, therefore,
suggest that section 292 be amended to provide for the
exercise of the foregoing powers of the Board of a
company which is required by law to ensure
participation of workers in management."
"18.137 In order to ensure effective participation
by workers’ representatives at the Board level section
292 should be amended to provide that certain decisions
are necessarily taken only at the Board level and no
delegation to Committees of the Board or to other
functionaries is made."
979
These suggestions emphasise that at present workers
have no right to contest winding-up proceedings.
It is also open to Parliament to make a law on the
lines of sections 63 to 69 of the Employment Protection Act,
1975 passed by the Parliament in the United Kingdom to give
any additional protection necessary for workmen who are
likely to be affected adversely by the winding-up
proceedings. (See Palmer’s Company Law (22nd Edn. Vol. I, p.
919)). Parliament may also consider the introduction of a
provision corresponding to section 74 of the Companies Act
of 1980 passed by the British Parliament. Such steps may
mitigate any hardship that may be caused to the workers as a
consequence of the winding-up of a company.
It has to be emphasised that the privilege of making
suggestions to the Court in the public interest is different
from the right to be impleaded as a party with the
concomitant right to enter into contest with the other
parties and of taking an order in appeal before higher
courts. The latter right has to be conferred expressly by
the statute on any person who wishes to exercise it. Under
the existing law, the workers or their unions may make any
suggestions to the Court at any stage but they cannot claim
to be impleaded as parties to the winding-up petition as of
right.
The decision of this Court in Fertilizer Corporation
Kamgar Union (Regd.), Sindri and Ors. v. Union of India and
Ors.(1) does not lend any support to the case of the trade
unions. In that case which attracted the principles of
administrative law the petitioner trade union pleaded that
Article 14, Article 19(1)(g) and Article 311 of the
Constitution had been violated by the sale of the plant and
equipment of a factory in which its members were working.
Ultimately the petition was dismissed by this Court. One of
the distinguishing features of that case is that the factory
involved in that case was in the public sector and owned by
the Government against which a petition under Article 32 of
the Constitution was maintainable. Chandrachud C.J. observed
in the course of his judgment at pages 60-61 thus:
"Secondly, the right of Petitioners 3 and 4 and of
the other workers to carry on the occupation of
industrial workers is not, in any manner affected by
the impugned
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980
sale. The right to pursue a calling or to carry on an
occupation is not the same thing as the right to work
in a particular post under a contract of employment. If
the workers are retrenched consequent upon and on
account of the sale, it will be open to them to pursue
their rights and remedies under the Industrial laws.
But the point to be noted is that the closure of an
establishment in which a workman is for the time being
employed does not by itself infringe his fundamental
right to carry on an occupation which is guaranteed by
Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution. Supposing a law
were passed preventing a certain category of workers
from accepting employment in fertiliser factory, it
would be possible to contend then that the workers have
been deprived of their right to carry on an occupation.
Even assuming that some of the workers may eventually
have to be retrenched in the instant case, it will not
be possible to say that their right to carry on an
occupation has been violated. It would be open to them,
though undoubtedly it will not be easy, to find out
other avenues of employment as industrial workers.
Article 19(1)(g) confers a broad and general right
which is available to all persons to do work of any
particular kind and of their choice. It does not confer
the right to hold a particular job or to occupy a
particular post of one’s choice. Even under Article 311
of the Constitution, the right to continue in service
falls with the abolition of the post in which the
person is working. The workers in the instant case can
no more complain of the infringement of their
fundamental right under Article 19(1)(g) than can a
Government servant complain of the termination of his
employment on the abolition of his post. The choice and
freedom of the workers to work as industrial workers is
not affected by the sale. The sale may at the highest
affect their locum, but it does not affect their locus,
to work as industrial workers. This is enough unto the
day on Art. 19(1)(g)."
On the question of locus standi of workers to maintain
the petition, the learned Chief Justice observed at pages
65-66 thus:
"That disposes of the question as regards the
maintainability of the writ petition. But, we feel
concerned to point out that the maintainability of a
writ petition which
981
is correlated to the existence and violation of a
fundamental right is not always to be confused with the
locus to bring proceedings under Article 32. These two
matters often mingle and coalesce with the result that
it becomes difficult to consider them in water-right
compartments. The question whether a person has the
locus to file a proceeding depends mostly and often on
whether he possesses a legal right and that right is
violated. But, in an appropriate case, it may become
necessary in the changing awareness of legal rights and
social obligations to take a broader view of the
question of locus to initiate a proceeding, be it under
Article 226 or under Article 32 of the Constitution. If
public property is dissipated, it would require a
strong argument to convince the Court that
representative segments of the public or at least a
section of the public which is directly interested and
affected would have no right to complain of the
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infraction of public duties and obligations. Public
enterprises are owned by the people and those who run
them are accountable to the people. The accountability
of the public sector to the Parliament is ineffective
because the parliamentary control of public enterprises
is "diffuse and haphazard". We are not too sure if we
would have refused relief to the workers if we would
have found that the sale was unjust, unfair or mala
fide."
Krishna Iyer, J. in his concurring opinion observed at
pages 70-71 thus:
"A pragmatic approach to social justice compels us
to interpret constitutional provisions, including those
like Arts. 32 and 226, with a view to see that
effective policing of the corridors of power is carried
out by the court until other ombudsman arrangements-a
problem with which Parliament has been wrestling for
too long-emerges. I have dwelt at a little length on
this policy aspect and the court process because the
learned Attorney General challenged the petitioner’s
locus standi either qua worker or qua citizen to
question in court the wrong doings of the public sector
although he maintained that what had been done by the
Corporation was both bona fide and correct.
We certainly agree that judicial interference with
the Administration cannot be meticulous in our
Montesquien
982
system of separation of powers. The court cannot usurp
or abdicate, and the parameters of judicial review must
be clearly defined and never exceeded. If the
Directorate of a Government company has acted fairly,
even if it has faltered in its wisdom, the court
cannot, as a super-auditor, take the Board of Directors
to task. This function is limited to testing whether
the administrative action has been fair and free from
the taint of unreasonableness and has substantially
complied with the norms of procedure set for it by
rules, of public administration."
A reading of the aforesaid passages shows that the
Court was concerned in that case with operations in a public
sector company and the activities of the Government. These
observations cannot have any relevance to a case involving
the affairs of a company which is governed only by express
provisions of company law and other relevant statutes.
As the law stands today, workers cannot contend that a
factory owned by and individual proprietor, on his death,
should not be divided amongst his heirs, even though they
may lose their jobs. They cannot resist a partition suit, in
which one of the items of property in respect of which
relief is claimed is the factory in which they are working,
filed by a junior member of Hindu joint family against the
manager contending that the said factory is the separate
property of the manager and should not, therefore, be
partitioned merely because they may be discharged from
service in the event of the suit being decreed. They cannot
resist the suit for dissolution of a firm which owns the
factory in which they are working even though at the
distribution of the assets of the firm, the factory may have
to be dismantle and sold. The position cannot be different
in the case of a company which is wound up by the Court. As
the law stands today, the workers in a factory owned by a
company do not have any hand in the birth of a company, in
its working during its existence and also in its death by
dissolution. If the law expressly says that a memorandum of
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a company should be signed by some future employees of the
company, or that there should be workers’ representatives on
its board of directors or that the company should not be
wound up without consulting the wishes of the workers, then
they can certainly claim all such rights. Workers’
participation in the affairs of a company or the ushering in
of an industrial democracy is quite a laudable object. That
is the reason
983
for enacting Article 43-A of the Constitution which requires
the State to take steps, by suitable legislation or in any
other way, to secure the participation of workers in the
management of undertakings, establishments or other
organisations engaged in any industry. The Legislature has
not taken any concrete steps in this regard. But, can the
Court step in and introduce drastic amendments into the
company law ? Surely, it cannot. Even though there is no
express statement in our constitutional law incorporating in
it the doctrine of separation of powers, in the
interpretation of the Constitution this Court has broadly
adopted the said doctrine. (See Smt. Indira Nehru Gandhi v.
Shri Raj Narain (1). Even though by virtue of its power of
interpretation of law the Court in an indirect way is making
law, it should be stated that there are well recognised
limitations on the power of the Court making inroads into
the legitimate domain of the Legislature. If the Legislature
exceeds its power, this Court steps in. If the Executive
exceeds its power, then also this Court steps in. If this
Court exceeds its power, what can people do ? Should they be
driven to seek an amendment of the law on every such
occasion ? The only proper solution is the observance of
restraint by this Court in its pronouncements so that they
do not go beyond its own legitimate sphere.
It is true that there are now new kinds of weapons like
consumers’ protection agitations against big companies whose
activities are likely to affect the life of the community
adversely. But, for those agitations to be effective the
Legislature should wake up and make appropriate laws under
which the consumers can bring action against erring
companies. In the absence of any such law, this Court cannot
issue directions to the companies on the basis of complaints
from the members of the public.
There are several areas where it is necessary for the
Legislature to make law. A reading of the provisions in Part
IV of the Constitution shows that many of them are still to
be implemented by the passing of appropriate legislation.
Article 41 of the Constitution dealing with the right to
work, Article 43 dealing with living wages etc for workers,
Article 44 which insists upon the introduction of a uniform
civil code for all citizens and Article 47 dealing with the
duty of the State to raise the level of nutrition and the
standard of living of the people are some of the articles
which have to be implemented either by the Legislature or by
the Executive.
984
Would this Court compel the Executive by issuing a writ to
implement the policy underlying Article 41, Article 43 and
Article 47 without being backed up by necessary laws ? Would
this Court enforce a uniform civil code in respect of all
citizens, without the aid of an appropriate legislation even
though the concept of equality is enshrined in the
Constitution and Article 44 specifically requires the State
to endeavour to secure for all citizens a uniform civil code
? It may not do so The only solution for many of these
social problems is to appeal to the appropriate organs of
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the State to do their assigned job in the best interests of
the Community. It is wrong to think that by some strained
construction of law, the Court can find solution to all
problems.
In this very case, when arguments were going on I
suggested that it may be appropriate to issue notice to the
Company Law Administration of the Union of India so that the
Court could have the benefit of the views of the Government.
It was not, however, acceded to by the majority. The
presence of the Union Government in the present case as a
party might have brought to its attention the need for
initiating necessary legislation, if it really felt that it
was advisable to do so, for providing an opportunity to
workers of a company also to contest the winding-up
proceedings. It is, however, a matter for regret that no
tangible steps appear to have been taken to amend the Act
even though the Sachar Committee Report which contains many
recommendations which when implemented would make the
companies which are centres of economic power accountable to
the society at large and make them fall in line with the
current views on their social responsibilities, was
forwarded to the Government more than four years ago.
It may be that the employees or their trade unions are
interested in requesting the Court to dispose of the factory
as going concern so that their employment may not be
affected. How are they interested in supporting one set of
directors against whom charges of waste, misappropriation
and mismanagement are made by the other set who are alleged
to have been totally excluded from management by attempts
amounting to oppression ? In the instant case the trade
unions concerned have filed almost a common statement
containing their grounds of objection along with their
notice to appear in the proceedings filed under Rule 34 of
the Companies (Court) Rules 1959 pursuant to the
advertisement issued by the
985
Court. The grounds of objection filed by the Coimbatore
District National Textile Employees’ Union are set out below
in extenso :
1. That the Company Petition is not maintainable
under the Companies Act, 1956, hereinafter
referred to as the ‘Act’.
2. That no case has been made out by the petitioners
under section 433(f) of the Act.
3. That, on the facts and circumstances of the case,
it is not just and equitable that the company
should be wound up.
4. That another remedy is available to the
petitioners and hence the Company cannot be wound
up by virtue of section 443(2) of the Act.
5. That the objector craves leave to reserve his
right to amplify and elaborate the above grounds
in the counter affidavit to be filed to the
company petition."
It is seen from the foregoing that the trade unions are
only interested in supporting the cause of the respondents
against whom allegations are made by the petitioners in the
Company Petition by making certain general submissions,
without traversing the various allegations made in it. The
respondents who are already on record and who are actually
contesting the petition are capable of looking after their
interests and need not rely upon the support of the trade
unions who are neither creditors nor contributories and who
do not know the details of the internal administration of
the affairs of the Company. The petitioners in the Company
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Petition would be in a more disadvantageous position if they
have to face the opposition of the trade unions also. Such a
situation should not be created by extending the area of
controversy by a liberal interpretation of the provisions of
law when there are no compelling reasons to do so.
The High Court has in this case passed necessary orders
in order to protect the interests of the employees in
Company Application No. 844 of 1981 and in C.M.P. No. 11159
of 1981. The order passed in Company Application No. 844 of
1981 is already set out above.
986
In C.M.P. No. 11159 of 1981 the High Court has passed
the following order:-
"This is a petition filed by the appellants in
O.S.A. No. 128 of 1981 for permitting the first
appellant/company to raise with its Bankers viz., Bank
of Baroda, Coimbatore, a temporary loan of an amount
not exceeding Rs. 5,25,000 for the purpose of paying
bonus to the workers of Jothi Mills, as per the
Memorandum of settlement entered into between the
Company and its workers under section 18(1) of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 on 10.10.1979 by pledging
or charging the assets of the
Company...............Though in form the appellants
have prayed for raising of a loan for honouring the
commitment of Rs. 5,25,000 towards bonus for the
workers of Jothi Mills by pledging or charging the
assets of the company during the argument the learned
counsel for the appellants was willing to avail of the
existing facilities in the Central Bank as provided in
the order Itself. Though for availing the existing bank
facilities there is no need for any specific direction
from this Court as the order appealed against itself
gives such liberty, the learned counsel for the
appellants by way of abundant caution requires such an
interim direction in this petition. The learned counsel
for the respondents pointed out that availing of the
existing facilities referred to in the order of
Shanmukhan, J., is a facility that was available as on
13.7.1981 we think the learned counsel for the
respondents is well-founded in this contention. (sic)
But even so if the Banks as on 13.7.1981 the
petitioners are entitled to avail the same in order to
honour the commitment relating to bonus for workers.
Since the order under appeal itself permits the
petitioners to avail of the existing Bank facilities
with any of its Bank though the application in form
asked for raising of the loan with the Bank of Baroda,
Coimbatore, we make it clear that it is open to the
petitioners to avail of the Bank loan facilities with
the Central Bank within the limits prescribed as on
13.7.1981. This is the only clarification that need be
given in this petition and no further orders are
necessary."
(emphasis added)
These orders show that the High Court has kept in its
view the interests of workers while giving directions in the
case from
987
time to time and that there is no longer any ground to
complain about. According to the petitioners in the winding-
up petition the occasion for the complaint of the workers
had been cleverly engineered by the contesting respondents.
Be that as it may, as the orders of the High Court stand
today the workers can always approach it by way of a company
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application for appropriate orders whenever they feel that
their working conditions are adversely affected during the
pendency of the proceedings. It is not necessary that the
workers or the trade unions should be impleaded as parties
to the Company Petition enabling them to contest the
winding-up petition. Their presence on record is not
necessary for complete and effectual adjudication of the
winding-up petition. The trade unions are, therefore,
neither necessary nor proper parties to the winding-up
petition on the facts and in the circumstances of this case
including the element of public interest involved in any
liquidation proceeding.
Before concluding it should be stated that it is not
correct to hold that the order of the High Court ‘smacks of
elitism’ or ‘sounds like a relic of feudal age’ or is an
‘obnoxious’ one. The High Court has decided the case in
accordance with the prevailing view in the country. No case
in which a different view is taken is cited before us.
Nobody disputes the proposition that law should not be
static. It should no doubt grow but it should have its
legitimate birth and in a case like this in the precincts of
the Legislature. It should be the result of the exercise of
legislative judgment, particularly when a departure from
express provisions of a statute or an established practice
is to be made. Judges are not expected to know all aspects
of every such matter. A discussion involving a comprehensive
view of all interests which are likely to be effected by any
decision which makes a serious departure from a well-settled
principle of law would not take place before a court where
only the parties to a case or their lawyers are heard.
Members of the public also would not know what is happening
in courts. The publicity which a proceeding in the
Legislature would receive is not given to the proceedings in
Court. Even the elected representatives of the people who
are charged with the duty of making laws may not know what
is happening in a court of law. Therefore, it is always
better to leave such matters to the decision of the
Legislature, instead of the court, sometimes by a majority
of one assuming power to make a new law.
It is no doubt true that the view of the High Court is
also in conformity with the view prevailing in England. That
does not mean that the High Court has surrendered its
judgment to a foreign
988
practice, because that is the very view which is being
followed till now in the Indian courts. We should not forget
that the very concept of company law is foreign to our
country. It originated in Great Britain and our company law
contained in successive Acts passed by the Indian
Legislature is modelled on British law and experience. There
is a large body of company jurisprudence which is common to
all the Commonwealth countries. There may, however, be some
local changes but the pattern appears to be common. The
practice of relying on foreign decisions whatever may be
their age only when they are in conformity with what we wish
to hold and of condemning them only on the ground that they
are ancient foreign decisions when they do not accord with
our views is not correct. A foreign decision (even though it
may not be binding) is either worthy of acceptance or not
depending upon the reasons contained in it and not on its
origin or age. There is no reason why we should not follow a
well reasoned foreign decision unless it is opposed to our
ethics, tradition and jurisprudence or otherwise unsuited to
Indian conditions. Can we say that the law of habeas corpus
which has found its way into India from England is bad only
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because it came from a foreign country or has an ancient
origin ? The writs in the nature of habeas corpus, mandamus,
prohibition, quo warranto and certiorari referred to in Art.
32 and Art. 226 of the Constitution of India, the rule of
promissory estoppel, the principle of audi alterum partem
and many other principles which are applied by the Indian
courts are all of foreign origin. Even the socialist
principle is not entirely of Indian origin. It is difficult
to shut our eyes to realities of life.
Moreover, it is difficult even though it may not be
impossible to administer the company law as it is now in
force in India without the aid of the principles laid down
by some of the leading English cases like Salomon v. Salomon
& Co.(1) laying down the principle of corporate personality,
Ashbury Railway Carriage & Iron Co. v. Riche(2) dealing with
the rule of ultra vires, Royal British Bank v. Turguand(3)
laying down the rule of ‘indoor management’, Hedley Byrne &
Co. Ltd. v. Heller & Partners Ltd.(4) which establishes the
liability for negligent mis-statements in prospectuses, Foss
v.
989
Harbottle(1) and Burland v. Earle(2) dealing with the
principle of ‘the fraud on a minority’ and Ebrahimi v.
Westbourne Galleries(3) dealing with the application of the
‘just and equitable’ principle in ordering the winding-up of
a company. A reading of the decision of this Court in Needle
Industries (India) Ltd. & Ors. v. Needle Industries Newey
(India) Holding Ltd. & Ors.(4) rendered by Chandrachud, C.J.
shows the importance of foreign decisions in deciding case
arising under the Indian Company law which out of necessity
has to keep pace with the well established principles
prevailing in many other parts of the world for sustaining
international trade and commerce. Adoption of an universal
system of mercantile law and obedience to the conventions of
the International Labour Organisation constitute two
important compulsions of modern international economic life.
It may be that the workers who are likely to be affected by
the winding-up need a larger protection. That can be done
only by legislative action. This Court cannot, however, make
any order which will conflict with the existing law.
In the result the appeals fail and are dismissed. No
costs.
BAHARUL ISLAM, J. I have carefully read the judgments
prepared and orders proposed by my Brothers Bhagwati and
Venkataramiah JJ. I entirely agree with Bhagwati J. and
regret my inability to agree with Venkataramiah J. Any
provision of any statute has to be interpreted keeping in
view the letter and spirit of the Constitution. Any
interpretation that is not in consonance with the letter and
spirit of the Constitution is obnoxious and unacceptable.
In the winding-up proceedings in question, the National
Textile Workers’ Union filed the petition before the High
Court with a prayer to be heard before any order for
winding-up was passed. The reason was the workers’
apprehension of termination of their services in case of
winding up of the Company. It is true, there is no express
provision in the Companies Act giving the workers any right
to be heard in a winding up proceeding before the Court.
There is no express bar either. Learned counsel for
Respondents Nos. 6 to 9, in support of his contention that
the workers had no right to be
990
heard in a winding up proceeding, cited Halsbury’s Laws of
England, volume 7 page 614 para 1028 (4th Edition). The
learned author has stated the law on the subject thus :
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"Only the petitioner, the Company and creditors
and contributories are entitled to appear on the
petition ; other parties have no right to be heard, and
even if the Court at the first instance elects to hear
them as amici curiae, they have no right of appeal."
This statement of the law has been made on the
authority of the judgment in Bradford Navigation Co.
rendered as early as 1870: (1970) 5 Ch. A, Page 600).
Learned counsel also cited Palmer Company Precedents
(17th Edition) Vol. 2, page 77, in which the law to the
above effect was stated. Learned counsel has submitted that
the Company Law in India is the same as in the Company Law
in England. The law cited may be good law for England with
altogether a different system of economy ; but is abhorrent
to India, particularly after the Constitution (42nd
Amendment) Act, 1976, by which the "Socialist" and "Secular"
concepts have been added and incorporated into the Preamble
of our Constitution. Our ‘Democratic Republic’ is no longer
merely ‘Sovereign’ but is also ‘Socialist’ and ‘Secular’. A
Democratic Republic is not Socialist if in such a Republic
the workers have no voice at all. Our Constitution has
expressly rejected the old doctrine of the employers’ right
to ‘hire and fire’. The workers are no longer ciphers ; they
have been given pride of place in our economic system. The
workers’ right to be heard in a winding-up proceeding has to
be spelt out from the Preamble and Articles 38 and 43-A of
the Constitution and from the general principles of natural
justice.
AMARENDRA NATH SEN, J. I have read the judgment of my
learned brother Bhagwati, J. and also the judgment of my
learned brother Venkataramiah, J. I cannot persuade myself
to agree with the judgment of my learned brother Bhagwati,
J. I agree with the judgment and order proposed by my
learned brother Venkataramiah, J. I shall indicate my
reasons for the view that I have taken.
The material facts of this case have been set out in
the judgment of my learned brother Bhagwati J. and also in
the judgment of my learned brother Venkataramiah, J. The
arguments advanced
991
from the Bar have been considered by both of them. It does
not, therefore, become necessary for me to reproduce them in
this judgment.
Whether the employees of a Company in their capacity as
employees can claim as a matter of right to appear and be
heard in a petition presented to court for the winding-up of
the Company, is the question for decision in this case.
The right of an employee in his capacity as such to be
heard in a proceeding for winding-up of a company has been
canvassed as a proposition of law. The contention urged on
behalf of the trade unions representing the workers of the
company is that whenever a petition is presented to a Court
for the winding up of a company, the employees of the
company have the right to appear and be heard in the said
proceeding.
The principal argument advanced on behalf of the trade
unions representing the workers is that the employees of a
company are equal partners of the management of the company,
if not the more important one, and the company, in view of
the socio-economic role it plays and it has to play in the
country, can no longer be considered to be the concern of
the members of the company. Further, the argument is that
the employees very materially contribute to the working of a
company and help the company in effectively playing its
socio-economic role and promoting the interests not only of
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the company, but also the larger interests of the nation and
an order of winding up seriously affects the interest of the
employees, virtually taking away the means of their
livelihood. It has been submitted that as an order of
winding up of the company affects so seriously the interests
of the employees, the employees must have a say and must be
heard in a proceeding for winding up before the Court.
I have earlier observed that the arguments advanced
from the Bar on behalf of the trade unions have been noted
at length by my learned brothers Bhagwati and Venkataramiah,
JJ. The arguments no doubt express noble sentiments which I
share ; but, in my opinion, the arguments fail to establish
that the employees have a right to appear and be heard in a
petition presented to a Court for the winding up of a
company. If the right is to be conceded to employees on
these grounds it must logically follow that every employee
of a company, whether he is a worker within the meaning of
the Industrial Disputes Act or he is a member of the
management
992
staff, must enjoy the same right to appear and be heard in
every such proceeding for the winding up of the company. An
order for winding up affects all the employees of a company,
whether they are workers belonging to any trade union or not
or whether they are officers of the company, high or low,
not being members of any union or association. Further if
the right to participate in a winding up proceeding is to be
judged from the view point of the interest of any party who
may be prejudicially affected as a result of an order of
winding up being made, various other parties who have trade
relations with the company must necessarily be held to have
the same right to be heard in a winding up proceeding. It is
common knowledge that various persons, apart from the
employees of the company, also depend for their survival on
the supplies of various materials, ingredients and
components to the company and with the liquidation of a
company, all such persons who are making their living out of
their dealings with the company have to go without
occupation and have to face disaster. Persons having
existing contracts with the company are also seriously
prejudiced when an order of winding up of the company is
made.
If the test of injury and adversely affecting the
interests are considered to be sufficient to entitle a party
to a hearing in a proceeding on the footing that they are
persons aggrieved, no suit for dissolution of a partnership
can also be decided without impleading the employees of the
firm and various other parties having trade relations with
the firm, as the dissolution of a firm may prejudicially
affect the interests of the employees or the various other
persons dealing with the firm.
It has to be borne in mind that a company can only be
wound up in accordance with the provisions of the Indian
Companies Act. The right to have a company wound up is a
right created by the Statute. The entire proceeding in
relation to the winding up of a company is regulated by the
statute, namely, the Indian Companies Act (hereinafter
referred to as the Act) and the procedure to be followed is
further supplemented by the provisions contained in the
rules made under the Act known as the Companies (Court)
Rules, 1959 (hereinafter referred to as the Rules).
The various modes of winding up of the company, under
what circumstances a company may be wound up by Court and
who are the persons competent to present a petition to Court
for the winding up of the company and who are the persons
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entitled to
993
be heard on such a petition, are provided for in the Act and
in the Rules.
It has to be borne in mind that apart from the right of
the Court to order the winding up of a company in an
appropriate case, the Act recognises that a company may go
into liquidation without any intervention by the Court and
also under the supervision of Court, provided the necessary
conditions laid down in the Act in this regard are complied
with. Where the Company goes into liquidation without
reference to court or under the supervision of the Court,
the employees of the company who have to meet the same fate
of losing their employment, as and when the company is wound
up by the Court, do not and cannot have any voice or say in
the procedure to be adopted for the liquidation of the
company.
In the case of winding up of any company by Court, the
parties who can move the Court for winding up of the company
are specifically mentioned in the Act and only such persons
are competent to present the winding up petition. The
procedure to be followed on such a petition for winding up
of the company being presented to court and the parties who
are entitled to be heard on the petition are dealt with and
provided for in the Act and the Rules. The right of
appearance and of being heard in a winding up proceeding has
been conferred on persons whom the Legislature considered to
be necessary or proper parties for effective adjudication of
the proceeding before the Court. The Act provides that a
creditor to whom a company is indebted in a sum exceeding
Rs. 500 and whose debt has not been paid by the company
notwithstanding the statutory notice being served on the
company is entitled to present a petition for the winding up
of the company and in such a case, the creditor whose debt
cannot be properly disputed, is entitled to an order of
winding up on the ground of insolvency of the company. If a
company is commercially insolvent and is unable to pay its
debts, the company has necessarily to be wound up and the
employees of the company can have hardly anything to say in
such a case for assisting the Court in deciding the matter.
My learned brother Venkataramiah, J. has referred to
the various provisions of the Act and also to relevant
Rules, which go to indicate that no such right of the
employees to appear and participate in a winding up
proceeding is recognised. Rule 34 of the Rules on which
strong reliance was placed by the learned counsel
994
appearing on behalf of the trade unions, is not of any
assistance. The said Rule reads as follows:-
"Every person, who intends to appear at the
hearing of a petition, whether to support or oppose the
petition, shall serve on the petitioner or his
advocate, notice of his intention at the address given
in the advertisement. The notice shall contain the
address of such person, and be signed by him or his
advocate, and same as otherwise provided by these rules
shall be served (or if sent by post, shall be posted in
such time as to reach the addressee) not later than two
days previous to the day of hearing, and in the case of
a petition for winding up not later than five days
previous to the day of hearing. Such notice shall be in
Form No. 9, with such variations as the circumstances
may require, and where such person intends to oppose
the petition, the grounds of his opposition or a copy
of his affidavit if any, shall be furnished along with
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the notice. Any person who has failed to comply with
this rule shall not except with the leave of the Judge,
be allowed to appear at the hearing of the petition."
This particular Rule appears in Part I and in Part I of the
Rules, general provisions are made. This Rule only lays down
the procedure to be followed by any person who intends to be
heard at the hearing of a petition, whether to support or
oppose the petition, and this Rule does not deal with the
competence or right of any particular person to appear at
the hearing of any petition nor does this rule create any
right in any person. Part III of the Rules makes specific
provisions with regard to winding up by Court. Rule 9B in
Part III reads:-
"Every contributory or creditor of the company
shall be entitled to be furnished by the petitioner or
by his advocate with a copy of the petition within 24
hours of his requiring the same on payment of the
prescribed charges."
For properly and effectively adjudicating upon any winding-
up petition, the parties must necessarily know the grounds
contained in the petition on which the Court has been moved
for the winding-up of the company to make representation
with regard to the same. Rule 9B requires that copies of the
petition in terms of the said rules are to be furnished to
every contributory or creditor of the company and the said
rule makes no mention of the employees of
995
the company. I agree with my brother Venkataramiah, J. that
on a proper consideration of the relevant provisions of the
Act and also of the Rules, an employee of a company in his
capacity as such does not have any right to appear and be
heard in a petition presented to Court for the winding-up of
the company. It will be noticed on an analysis of the
provisions of the Act that from the stage of the formation
of the company till the very last stage of its dissolution,
company jurisprudence does not recognise any right of an
employee in his capacity as an employee of the company in
the matter of formation of the company, its functioning and
its ultimate winding-up.
The Act, however, makes necessary provisions as to
deposit of employees’ security monies with a Scheduled Bank
in S. 417 of the Act. The Act also makes suitable provision
in Section 418 about Provident Funds of Employees. Necessary
provisions for preferential payment of wages or salary of an
employee in case of winding-up of a company have been made
in Section 530 of the Act. For safeguarding what the
Legislature considers to be public interest, the Legislature
in various sections of the Act has made suitable provisions
casting various obligations on the company with penal
consequences and has conferred powers on the Government.
The introduction of Art. 43A in the Constitution which
reads-"The State shall take steps, by suitable legislation
or in any other way, to secure the participation of workers
in the management of undertakings, establishments or other
organisations engaged in any industry"-does not affect the
position in any way. Participation in the management of a
company does not by itself create any right in any such
person to appear and be heard in a winding-up petition.
Unless otherwise named personally as a party to a winding-up
petition, no person merely on the ground that he happens to
be in the management of the company is entitled as a matter
of right to appear and be heard in a winding-up proceeding.
Persons in management of the company may, if they are so
authorised, appear and participate in a winding up
proceeding on behalf of the company and representing the
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company. They will, however, be entitled to appear if they
are members or creditors of the company in such capacities,
but not as members of the management. A director of a
company must of necessity be a member of the company, as
provided in the Act.
996
It is worth mentioning that the Indian Companies Act is
based on the English Companies Act and both the Acts contain
more or less similar provisions. The provisions of the
Indian Companies Act with regard to the winding-up of the
Company are almost alike to the provisions contained in the
English Companies Act. As early as 1870 the English Court in
Re: Bradford Navigation Co.(1) held on a consideration of
the provision of the English Act that no person had a right
to be heard against a petition for winding-up of a company
except creditors and contributories. It is no doubt true
that this decision, still holds good and is considered to be
good law, as will be evident from the comments in
authoritative text books on the subject. In Halsbury’s Laws
of England (4th Edn.), Vol. VII at p. 614, it has been laid
down-"Only the petitioners, the company, and creditors and
contributories are entitled to appear on the petition; other
parties have no right to be heard, and, even if the Court of
first instance elects to hear them as amici curiea, they
have no right of appeal." In Palmer’s Company Precedents
(7th Edn), Part II, the following observations appear at p.
77:-
"Any creditor or shareholder may appear to support
or oppose the petition. But no one else can do so, even
if he has an indirect interest in the continued
existence of the company."
On the basis of the decision in Re: Bradford Navigation Co.
(supra), the following comments have been made at p. 546 in
Buckley on the Companies Act, 14th Edn. Vol. I :-
"The only persons entitled to be heard are the
company, the creditors and contributories. The Court
may, in its discretion hear other persons who have an
interest in order to learn what public grounds there
are in favour of, or in opposition to, the winding up
but such persons can be heard only as amici curiae, and
cannot appeal."
Various legislations for the benefit and welfare of the
employees have since been passed in England and the Company
Act in England also did undergo various changes from time to
time. The employees of a company in England are affected in
the same way as the employees of a company in India when an
997
order for winding up of the company is made. It cannot be
said that workers in England are not conscious of their
status and position and of the important role they play in
the proper functioning of a company and in England there are
also the trade unions of the workers for defending,
protecting and improving the conditions and rights of the
workers. Despite all these, the right of an employee or any
trade union representing the workers to participate and be
heard in a winding-up petition is not recognised in England.
I have to observe that Mr. Ramamurthi, learned counsel
appearing for one of the trade unions, has placed very
strong reliance on the following observations of this Court
in the case of Hind Overseas Private Limited v. Raghunath
Prasad Jhunjhunwala and Ors.(1):-
"Although the Indian Companies Act is modelled on
the English Companies Act, the Indian Law is developing
on its own lines. Our law is also making significant
progress of its own as and when necessary. Where the
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words used in both the Acts are identical, the English
decisions may throw good light and reasons may be
persuasive. But as the Privy Council observed long ago
in Ramanandi Kuer v. Kalawati Kuer(2).
It has often been pointed out by this Board
that where there is a positive enactment of the
Indian Legislature, the proper course is to
examine the language of that statute and to
ascertain its proper meaning uninfluenced by any
consideration derived from the previous state of
the law or of the English Law upon which it may
have been founded.
If it was true in the twenties it is more apposite
now that the background conditions and circumstances of
the Indian society, the needs and requirements of our
country call for a somewhat different treatment. We
will have to adjust and adapt, limit or extend, the
principles derived
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from English decisions, entitled as they are to great
respect, suiting the conditions of our society and the
country in general always, however, with one primary
consideration in view that the general interests of the
shareholders may not be readily sacrificed at the altar
of squabbles of directors of powerful groups for power
to manage the company."
These observations, to my mind, are of no assistance in
deciding the question involved in this appeal. These
observations were made in different context. These
observations, however, indicate that where the provisions of
the Indian Act and the English Act are alike, the decisions
of the English Courts throw good light and the reasons may
be persuasive, it is no doubt true that the decisions of the
English Courts do not have a binding effect and the proper
course for this Court while considering or interpreting an
enactment of the Indian Legislature is to examine the
language of the Statute to ascertain its proper meaning
unifluenced by any consideration derived from the provisions
of the English Law upon which it may have been founded.
Principles of construction of a statute are well settled.
It is significant to note that no decision of any Court
in India could be cited where the claim of an employee in
his capacity as an employee to participate and be heard in a
petition for winding up of the company as a matter of right
has been accepted. On the other hand, the settled legal
position in this country so far has been that no employee
could claim any such right. It is interesting to note that
though in this country also the provisions of the Companies
Act have undergone various changes from time to time and
various enactments for the welfare of the workers have been
passed from time to time, the Legislature in our country did
not consider it proper or necessary to amend the provisions
of the Indian Companies Act to confer any such right on the
workers.
I, however, wish to make it clear that although an
employee of a company as an employee of a company cannot
claim to appear and be heard in a petition for winding-up of
the company as a matter of right, yet in any appropriate
case the Court in a winding-up proceeding may require or
permit any employee to appear at any stage of a winding-up
proceeding and hear him, if the Court be of the opinion that
the employee or the employees should be heard in
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the interests of administration of justice and for proper
disposal of any matter. It appears that in this very case,
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the Court at an earlier stage of the proceeding had, in
fact, heard the employees and redressed their just
grievance.
With these observations I agree with the order proposed
by my learned brother Venkataramiah, J.
H.L.C. Appeals allowed.
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