Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 9
PETITIONER:
PAYMENT OF WAGES INSPECTOR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SURAJMAL MEHTA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/12/1968
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 590 1969 SCR (3)1051
ACT:
Payment of Wages Act (4 of 1936), ss. 2(vi)d and 15, and
Industrial Disputes Act, (14 of 1947), ss. 25FF and 33C(2)-
Retrenchment compensation under s. 25FF, Industrial Disputes
Act-If wages under Payment of Wages Act-Jurisdiction of
Authority under s. 15, Payment of Wages Act-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The State Electricity . Board revoked the licence of
a company and took over the undertaking. The 1st
respondent, who was the director of the company, served
notices on the employees that their services would not be
required. Thereupon, the appellant filed an application
under s. 15(2) of the Payment of Wages Act, 1936, on
behalf of the employees, for recovering from the it
respondent wages for the notice month and retrenchment
compensation under s. 25FF of the Industrial Disputes Act.
1947. The 1st respondent contested the claim as well as
the jurisdiction of the authority under the Payment of
Wages Act to deal with the application, on the ground
’that he was not the person responsible for payment of com-
pensation and that the right of the workmen was defeated by
reason of the proviso to s. 25FF of the Industrial
Disputes Act, because there was no interruption in their
employment and the new employer (the Electricity Board)
was responsible for payment of the compensation. But the
Authority held against the 1st respondent. The 1st
respondent then filed a writ petition in the High Court
and the High Court held that s. 15 of the Act did not
apply and that the proper forum for such an application was
the Labour Court under s. 33C(2) of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947.
In appeal to this Court, on the questions: (1) Whether
compensation payable under s. 25FF of the Industrial
Disputes Act can fall under the amended definition of
wages in s. 2(vi)d of the payment of Wages Act, as it is a
’sum which by reason of the termination of employment of the
person employed, is payable under any law .... which
provides for the PaYment of such sum whether with or without
deductions but does not provide for the time within which
the payment is to be made’ and (2) Whether the authority
under s. 15 of the Payment of Wages Act had jurisdiction to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 9
entertain the application,
HELD: (1) The three sections, namely s. 25F introduced
into the Industrial Disputes Act, by Act 43 of 1951, and
ss. 25FF and 25FFF incorporated by Act 18 of 1957, involve
termination of service in consequence of retrenchment,
transfer and closure respectively. In ss. 25FF and 25FFF
notice and compensation have been provided for ’in
accordance with the provisions of s. 25F’. These words are
used only as a measure of compensation and are not used for
laying down any time within which the employer must pay
compensation. Since section 25FF unlike s. 25F, does not
contain any conditions precedent, it can be said not to have
provided any time within which such compensation is to be
paid. Therefore, the compensation payable under s. 25FF
read with s. 25F of the Industrial Disputes Act would be
wages within the meaning of s. ’2 (vi)(d )of the Payment
of..Wages Act. [1055 C--E]
1052
M/s. Hatisingh Mfg. Co. Ltd. v. Union of India, [1960]
3 S.C.R. 528 and ,Anakapalla Co-operative Agricultural and
Industrial Society Ltd. v. Workmen, [1963] Supp. 1 S.C.R.
730, followed.
(2) The words ’where. contrary to the provisions of the
Act, in s. 15(2) of the Payment of Wages Act being the
governing words, the Authority appointed under s. 15(1) has
jurisdiction to entertain applications only in two classes
of cases, namely, of deductions and fines not authorised
under ss. 7 to 13 of. the Payment of Wages Act and of delay
in payment of wages beyond the wage periods fixed under s. 4
and time in payment laid down in s. 5. Section 15(1)
provides that the Authority has the power to determine all
matters incidental to the claim arising from deductions from
or delay in payment of wages, but while deciding whether a
particular matter is incidental to the claim or not. care
should be taken neither to unduly expand or curtail the
jurisdiction of the Authority, because, the jurisdiction
is a special jurisdiction. Section 15(2) postulates that
the wages payable by the person responsible for payment
under s. 3 are certain and such that they cannot be
disputed. [1058 B--D]
In the present case, (a) the claim was not a simple.
case of deduction/ions having been unauthorisedly made or
payment having been delayed beyond the wage periods or the
time of payment fixed under ss. 4 and 5 of the Act;
(b) In view of the defence taken by the 1st respondent,
the failure to pay compensation did not fall under ss. 4 and
5 of the Act; and
(c) The claim for compensation denied by the employer
in the circumstance could not fall within the ambit of s.
15(2). [1059 H]
It could not have been intended that such matters could
be tried by the Authority under the Act as matters
incidental to the claim of compensation under s. 25FF. The
proper forum would be the Labour Court which can decide
such questions under s. 33C(2) of the Industrial Disputes
Act, since such court can go up into those matters fully,
expeditiously and without expense. [1060 C]
Punjab National Bank Ltd. v. Kharbanda, [1962] Supp. 2
S.C.R. 977, Central Bank of India Ltd. v. Rajagopalan,
[1964] 3 S.C.R. 140, Bombay Gas Co. Ltd. v. Gopal Bhiva,
[1964] 3 S.C.R. 709, D’Costa v. B.C. Patel, [1955] 1 S.C.R.
1353 and Shri Ambica Mills Co. Ltd. v. 5. B. Bhatt [1961] 3
S.C.R. 220, referred to.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 9
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1577 of 1966.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated March 25, 1964
of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. Petition No. 31 of
1963.,
I. N. Shroff for the appellant.
The respondent did not appear.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. This appeal, by certificate, is directed
against the judgment and the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh and
1053
raises the question of the scope of jurisdiction of the
Authority under the Payment of Wages Act, 4 of 1936
(hereinafter referred to as the Act.)
On the licence of the Barnagar Electric Supply and
Industrial Company, of which respondent 1 was at all
material times ’the managing director, having been revoked
by the Madhya Pradesh Government and the company’s
undertaking having been taken over by the Madhya Pradesh
Electricity Board, respondent 1 served notices on the
company’s employees that their services would no longer be
required,as from October 1, 1962. Thereupon the appellant
on behalf of 20 employees of the company filed an
application under sec. 15(2) of the Act to recover from
respondent 1 wages for the notice month and retrenchment
compensation mounting to Rs. 12,853.60P. payable to the
employees under sec. 25FF of the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947. On respondent 1 contesting the claim as also the
jurisdiction of the Authority, the Authority raised certain
preliminary. issues, namely: (1) whether the said
application was maintainable in view of the revocation of
the company’s licence, (2) whether the Authority had
jurisdiction to determine the liability of respondent 1 for
retrenchment compensation before the amount thereof was
ascertained under sec. 33C(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act
and (3) whether in view of the services of the workmen not
having been interrupted by the said transfer and the terms
and conditions of service applicable to them after the said
transfer being not in any way less favourable than’ before
and the said Board as the new employer being liable after
the transfer for compensation in the event of retrenchment,
the employees were entitled to claim any compensation. By
his order dated May 21, 1963 the Authority held against
respondent 1 on the question of jurisdiction. Respondent 1
thereupon filed a writ petition in the High Court and
Division Bench of the High Court held that sec. 15 of the
Act did not apply and that the proper forum for such an
application was a Labour Court under sec. 33C(2) of the
Industrial Disputes Act. This appeal challenges the
correctness of this order.
Mr. Shroff for the appellant contended that after the
amendment of the definition of ’wages’ in the Act by Act 68
of 1957 and the amended definition having now included "any
sum which by reason of the termination of employment of the
person employed is payable under any law,. contract or
instrument which provides for payment of such sum whether
with or without deductions but does not provide for the time
within which the payment is to be made" as wages, there
could be no doubt that the legislature has conferred
jurisdiction’ on the Authority under the Act to determine
compensation payable under sec. 25FF of the
Industrial Disputes Act in an application under sec. 15(2)
of the Act and that therefore the High Court Was in error in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 9
quashing the order :passed by the Authority. Mr, Chagla
appearing for the
1054
Respondents 1 and 2 in ,the next appeal,on the other hand,
contended (1 ) that the Authority under the Act was a
special Authority with limited jurisdiction, that it has to
deal only with the subject matters specified in the Act and
its jurisdiction must therefore be strictly construed, and
(2) that the Act and the Industrial Disputes Act deal with
different subjects, provide different tribunals with
different jurisdictions and therefore it is not possible to
hold that Parliament which enacted both the Acts could
possibly have contemplated that claim arising under the
Industrial Disputes Act should be determined by a tribunal
set up under a different Act.
On these contentions the first question’ which arises
for determination is whether compensation payable under sec.
25FF of the Industrial Disputes Act can fall under the
amended definition in sec. 2(vi)(d) of the Act and can be
Called ’wages’. The High Court. thought that it was not but
Mr. Shroff relied on certain decisions of’ this Court to
contest that part of the conclusion of the High Court. The
Industrial Disputes Act, which as enacted in 1947, was a
piece of ’legislation which mainly ’provided machinery for
investigation and settlement of industrial‘ disputes, has
since then undergone frequent modifications. In 1953, by
Act 43of that year Chapter VA consisting of secs. 25A to 25J
was incorporated providing therein compensation for lay-off
and retrenchment. It also provided a definition of
retrenchment in sec. 2(00). Chapter VA, as it then stood,
did not expressly provide for compensation for termination
of service on account of transfer of an undertaking by an
agreement or as a result of operation of law or the closure
of the undertaking. Consequently, in Hariprasad v.
Divikar(1) this Court held that retrenchment as defined in
sec. 2(00) and the word ’retrenched’ in sec, 25F meant
discharge of surplus labour or staff by the employer for any
reason whatsoever otherwise than as a punishment inflicted
by way of disciplinary action and did not include
termination of services of all workmen on a bona fide
closure of an undertaking or on a change of ownership or
management thereof. This decision was followed first by an
ordinance and then by Act 18 of 1957 incorporating in the
Act the present ss..25FF and 25FFF. It will he noticed
that -both these sections use the words "’as ’if the workman
had been retrenched". The intention of the legislature was,
therefore, clear that it did not wish to place transfer and
closure ’on the same footing as retrenchment under sec. 25F.
This is apparent also from the fact that it left the
definition of retrenchment in sec, 2(00) untouched in spite
of the decision in Hariprasad’s case(1). The three
sections, ss. 25F, 25FF and 25FFF ’also ;show’ that while
under sec. 25F.no retrenchment Can be made until Conditions
therein set out are Carried. out the other two sections
do’ not lay down any such conditions. All the ,three
sections however,
(1)[1957] S.C.R. 121.
1055
involve termination of service whether it results in
consequence of retrenchment or transfer or closure, and
notice and compensation in both ss. 25FF and 25FFF have been
provided for "in accordance with the provisions of sec.
25F". (see M/s Harisingh Mfg. Co. Ltd. v. Union of India(1)
and Anakapalla Co-operative Agricultural and Industrial
Society Ltd. v. Workmen(2). That being the position a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 9
workman whose service is terminated in consequence of a
transfer of an undertaking, whether by agreement or by
operation of law, has a statutory right under sec. 25FF to
compensation unless such right is defeated under the proviso
to that section. The same is the position in the case of
closure under sec. 25FFF. Such compensation would be wages
as defined by sec. 2(vi)(d) of the Act as it is a "sum which
by reason of the termination of employment of the person
employed, is payable under any law .... which provides for
the payment of such sum whether with or without deductions
but does not provide for the time within which the payment
is to be made." Since ss. 25FF and 25FFF do not contain any
conditions precedent, as in the case of retrenchment under
sec. 25F, and transfer and closure can validly take place
without notice or payment of a month’s wages in lieu thereof
or payment of compensation, sec. 25FF can be said not to
have provided any time within which such compensation is to
be paid. It is well established that the words "in
accordance with the provisions of sec. 25F" in ss. 25FF and
25FFF are used only as a measure of compensation and are not
used for laying down any time within which the employer must
pay the compensation. It would, therefore, appear that
compensation payable under ss. 25FF and 25FFF read with
sec. 25F would be ’wages’ within the meaning of sec.
2(vi)(d) of the Act.
It must, however, be remembered that though such
compensation falls within the definition of wages, cases may
arise where it would not be a simple question of recovery of
wages. In the present case, for instance, the defence taken
by respondent 1 was that he was not the person responsible
for payment of compensation and that the right of the
workmen was defeated by reason of the proviso to sec. 25FF
being, according to him, applicable inasmuch as these
workmen were continued in the employment by the said Board,
the new employer, that therefore there had been no
interruption in their employment, that the terms and
conditions of service given to them by the new employer were
in no way less favourable than those they. had when the
company was the employer, and that the new employer was
responsible for payment of compensation if any retrenchment
took place in future. The question, therefore, is whether
in view of the limited jurisdiction of the Authority under
see. 15(2) of the Act, it was intended to deal with such
questions, which in some cases might well raise complicated
problems of both fact and law.
(1) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 528. (2) [1963] Supp. (1) S.C.R.
730.
L 6Sup CI/69-16
1056
While considering the scope of jurisdiction of the
Authority under sec. 15 of the Act it is relevant to bear in
mind the fact that the right to compensation is conferred by
the Industrial Disputes Act which itself provides a special
tribunal for trying cases of individual workmen to whom
compensation payable under Ch. VA has not been paid.
Section 33C of that Act provides both a forum and the
procedure for computing both monetary as well as non-
monetary benefits in terms of money and further provides
machinery for recovery of such claims. In Punjab National
Bank Ltd. v. Kharbanda(1) this Court held that while sub-
sec. 1 of sec. 33C applied to cases where any money was due
to a workman from an employer under a settlement, award or
under the provisions of Ch. VA and the amount was already
computed or calculated or at any rate there could be no
dispute about its calculation or computation, sub-sec. 2
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 9
applied to benefits including monetary benefits conferred on
a workman under an award, settlement etc., but which had not
been calculated or computed and there was a dispute as to
their calculation or computation. The Court rejected the
contention that sub-sec. 2 applied only to a non-monetary
benefit which had to be converted in terms of money. The
Court also observed that sec. 33C was a provision in the
nature of execution and where the amount to be executed was
worked out or where it might be worked out without any
dispute sub-sec. 1 would apply, but where such amount due to
the workman was not stated or worked out and there was a
dispute as to its calculation, sub.sec. 2 would apply and
the workman would be entitled to apply thereunder to have
the amount computed provided he was entitled to a benefit,
whether monetary or non-monetary, which was capable of being
paid in terms of money. In the Central Bank of India Ltd.
v. Rajagopalan(2) this Court held that where the right of a
workman was disputed by his employer the Labour Court could
go into the question as to whether he had a right to receive
such a benefit. Sub-sec. 3 of sec. 33C under which the
Labour Court can appoint a commissioner to take evidence for
computing the benefit postulates that it has the
jurisdiction to decide whether the workman claiming benefit
was entitled to it where such right was disputed by the
employer. In Bombay Gas Co. Ltd. v. Gopal Bhiva(3) this
Court held that the Labour Court could in an application
under sec. 33C(2) go even into the question whether the
award under which the workman had made a claim was a
nullity. Being in the nature of an executing court it could
interpret the award and also consider the plea that the
award sought to be enforced was a nullity. It is thus clear
that a workman whose claim, monetary or otherwise, is
disputed by his employer can lodge such a claim before a
specified Labour Court under sec. 33C and obtain an
inexpensive and expeditious remedy. The
(1) [1962] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 977. (2) [1964] 3
S.C.R. 140.
(3) [1964] 3 S.C.R. 709.
1057
question then is whether for such a claim the legislature
intended to provide alternative remedies both under the
Industrial Disputes Act and the Payment of Wages Act. For
deciding this question it is necessary to refer to some of
the provisions of and the scheme of the Payment of Wages
Act.
The Act was passed to regulate the payment of wages to
certain classes of persons employed in any factory or by a
railway administration or by a person fulfilling a contract
with a railway administration or in any industrial
establishment to which a State Government by notification
has extended the Act. Section 3 lays down as to who shall be
responsible for payment of wages. Section 4 provides for
the fixation of wage periods and sec. 5 lays down the time
within which payment of wages has to be made. Sec. 7
provides that wages shall be paid without any deductions
except those authorised by the Act and sec. 8 provides that
no fine shall be imposed on any employed person save in
respect of such acts or omissions on his part as the
employer with the previous approval of the State Government
or the prescribed authority may have specified by notice.
Sections 9 to 13 lay down the deductions which an employer
is authorised to make and the conditions under which such
deduction can be made. Section 13A provides for the
maintenance of certain registers and records by the employer
and ss. 14 and 14A provide for appointment of inspectors
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 9
under the Act, their powers and the facilities to be
afforded by the employer to such inspectors. Section 15 (1
) provides for the appointment of a person to be the
Authority under the Act to hear and decide for any specified
area claims arising out of (a) deduction from wages or (b)
delay in payment of wages of persons employed or paid in
that area including all matters incidental to such claims.
Sub-sec. 2 provides that "Where contrary to the provisions
of this Act any deduction has been made from the wages of an
employed person, or any payment of wages has been delayed,
such person himself, or any legal practitioner or any
official of a registered trade union or any inspector under
this Act, or any other person acting with the permission of
the authority ..... may apply to such authority for a
direction under sub-sec. 3." The first proviso to sub-
sec. 2 lays down a period of limitation of 12 months from
the date of deduction or the due date of payment and the
second proviso empowers the Authority to admit applications
beyond the period of limitation on sufficient cause being
shown. Sub-sec. 3 empowers the Authority to direct refund to
the employed person of the amount deducted, or the payment
of the delayed wages and also empowers it to award
compensation specified therein without prejudice to any
other penalty to which the employer guilty of unauthorised
deduction or delay in payment is liable under the Act.
Under sub-sec. 5 of sec. 15 the amount
1058
awarded by the authority can be recovered as if it were a
fine imposed by a magistrate. Section 20 provides for
penalty for offences under certain provisions of ss. 5, 7,
8, 9, 10 and 11 to 13 extending upto Rs. 500/-.
It is explicit from the terms of sec. 15(2) that the
Authority appointed under sub-sec. 1 has jurisdiction to
entertain applications only in two classes of cases, namely,
of deductions and fines not authorised under ss. 7 to 13 and
of delay in payment of wages beyond the wage periods fixed
under sec. 4 and the time of payment laid down in sec. 5.
This is clear from the opening words of sub-sec. 2 of sec.
15, namely, "where contrary to the provisions of this Act"
any deduction has been made or any payment of wages has been
delayed. These being the governing words in the sub-sec.
the only applications which the Authority can entertain are
those where deductions unauthorised under the Act are made
from wages or there has been delay in payment beyond the
wage period and the time of payment of wages fixed or
prescribed under ss. 4 and 5 of the Act. Section 15(2)
postulates that the wages payable by the person responsible
for payment under sec. 3 are certain and such that they
cannot be disputed.
In D’Costa v.B.C. Patel(1) this Court held after
considering the scheme of the Act that the jurisdiction of
the Authority under sec. 15 was confined to deductions and
delay in payment of the actual wages to which the workman
was entitled and that the Authority under the Act had no
jurisdiction to enter into a question of potential wages,
i.e., where the workman pleads that he ought to have been
up-graded as persons junior to him were upgraded and that he
ought to have been paid wages on a scale paid to those so
up-graded. This Court held that the Authority had
jurisdiction to interpret the terms of a contract of
employment to find out the actual wages payable to the
workman where deduction from or delay in payment of such
wages is alleged, but not to enter into the question whether
the workman should have been up-graded from being a daily
rated worker to a monthly rated workman. In Shri Ambica
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 9
Mills Co. Ltd. v.S.B. Bhatt(2) this Court again examined the
scheme of the Act and held that the only claims which could
be entertained by the Authority were claims arising out of
deductions or delay made in the payment of wages. The
Court, however, observed that in dealing with claims arising
out of deductions or delay made in payment of wages the
Authority inevitably would have to consider questions
incidental to these matters, but in determining the scope of
these incidental matters care must be taken to see that
under the guise of deciding incidental matters the limited
jurisdiction was not unreasonably or unduly expanded.
Equally, care must also be taken
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1353. (2) [1961] 3 S.C.R.
220.
1059
to see that the scope of these incidental matters was not
unduly curtailed so as to affect or impair the limited
jurisdiction conferred on the Authority. The Court declined
to lay down any hard and fast rule which would afford a
determining test to demarcate the field of incidental facts
which could be legitimately considered by the Authority and
those which could not be so considered.
It is true, as stated above, that the Authority has the
jurisdiction to try matters which are incidental to the
claim in question. Indeed, sec. 15(1) itself provides that
the Authority has the power to determine all matters
incidental to the claim arising from deduction from or delay
in payment of wages. It is also true that while deciding
whether a particular matter is incidental to the claim or
not care should be taken neither to unduly expand nor
curtail the jurisdiction of the Authority. But it has at
the same time to be kept in mind that the jurisdiction under
sec. 15 is a special jurisdiction. The Authority is
conferred with the power to award compensation over and
above the liability for penalty of fine which an employer is
liable to incur under sec. 20.
The question, therefore, is whether on the footing that
compensation payable under ss. 25FF and 25FFF of the
Industrial Disputes Act being wages within the meaning of
sec. 2(vi)(d) of the Act, a claim for it on the ground that
its payment was delayed by an employer could be entertained
under sec. 15(2) of the Act. In our view it could not be so
entertained. In the first place, the claim made in the
instant case is not a simple case of deductions having been
unauthorisedly made or payment having been delayed beyond
the wage-periods and the time of payment fixed under ss. 4
and 5 of the Act. In the second place, in view of the
defence taken by Respondent 1, the Authority would
inevitably have to enter into questions arising under the
proviso to sec. 25FF, viz., whether there was any
interruption in the employment of the workmen, whether the
conditions of-service under the Board were any the less
favourable than those under the company and whether the
Board, as the new employer, had become liable to pay
compensation to the workmen if there was retrenchment in the
future. Such an inquiry. would necessarily be a prolonged
inquiry involving questions of fact and of law. Besides, the
failure to pay compensation on the ground of such a plea
cannot be said to be either a deduction which is
unauthorised under the Act, nor can it fall under the class
of delayed wages as envisaged by ss. 4 and 5 of the Act.
It may be that there may conceivably be cases of claims of
compensation which are either admitted or which cannot be
disputed which by reason of its falling under the definition
of wages the Authority may have jurisdiction to try and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 9
determine. But we do not think that a claim for compensation
under sec. 25FF which is denied by the employer on the
ground that it
1060
was defeated by the proviso to that section, of which all
the conditions were fulfilled, is one such claim which can
fall within the ambit of sec. 15(2). When the definition of
wages was expanded to include cases of sums payable under a
contract, instrument or a law it could not have been
intended that such a claim for compensation which is denied
on grounds which inevitably would have to be inquired into
and which might entail prolonged inquiry into questions of
fact as well as law was one which should be summarily
determined by the Authority under sec. 15. Nor could the
Authority have been intended to try as matters incidental to
such a claim questions arising under the proviso to sec.
25FF. In our view it would be the Labour Court in such
cases which would be the proper forum which can determine
such questions under sec. 33C(2) of the Industrial Disputes
Act which also possesses power to appoint a commissioner to
take evidence where question of facts require detailed
evidence. Mr. Shroff, however, drew our attention to the
decision in Uttam Chand v. Kartar Singh(1) a decision of a
learned Single Judge of the High Court of Punjab, taking a
view contrary to the one which we are inclined to take. But
that decision contains no reasons and is, therefore, hardly
of any assistance.
In the result we agree with the High Court that the
Authority had no jurisdiction under sec. 15(2) of the Act to
try these applications. The appeal consequently must fail
and is dismissed. But we make no order as to costs.
y.p. Appeal dismissed.
(1)[1967] 1 LL.J. 232.
1061