Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CHINUBHAI HARIDAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/09/1959
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
CITATION:
1960 AIR 37 1960 SCR (1) 654
ACT:
Factories--Precautions against dangerous fumes-Duty of
occupier-Liability for accident-" Be Permitted to enter ",
meaning of-Indian Factories Act, 1948 (LXVIII Of 1948), S.
36(3) and (4).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was the occupier of a factory where there was
a pit in which dangerous fumes were likely to be present.
The pit was securely covered and enclosed and no one was
expected to go down into it for normal work as it was worked
by gadgets fixed nearby above the ground. Something went
wrong with the machinery inside the pit and five workers
went down without wearing suitable breathing apparatus and
without, wearing a belt securely attached to a rope the free
end of which could be held by some person standing outside.
All the workers were overcome by poisonous gases and died.
It was found that suitable breathing apparatus, reviving
apparatus, belts and ropes were not available anywhere in
the factory and were not kept for ready use near the pit.
The appellant was prosecuted as the occupier for breach of
the provisions Of s. 36(3) and (4) of the Indian Factories
Act, 1948. The trial Court held that no offence under S.
36(3) had been made out and it was not proved that any
permission, express or implied, had been given to the
workmen to enter the pit, and I that no offence under S.
36(4) had been made out because no permission having been
given it was ’not necessary to keep the breathing apparatus
etc., near the pit or anywhere else in the factory and
consequently it acquitted the appellant. On appeal by the
State, the High Court set aside the
(1) [1952] S.C.R. $67.
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acquittal and directed the trial Court to decide the case
against the appellant in the light of the interpretation of
the law made by the High Court. The High Court was of the
view that as c, the appellant had failed to prevent the
entry of the workers he must in law be held to have
permitted the entry and committed breach Of s. 36(3) ; and
that it was not sufficient compliance with s. 36(4) to
provide breathing apparatus etc., only after coming to know
that some person was about to enter the pit but that such
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apparatus must be immediately available at the pit at all
times.
Held, that s. 36(3) did not cast an absolute duty on the
occupier to prevent the entry into the pit and the mere fact
that a person had entered the pit did not by itself prove
that he had been "permitted to enter " within the meaning of
that, subsection. The primary duty was on the worker
prohibiting him from entering the pit. At the same time the
occupier was also liable if his permission to the entry,
whether express or implied, could be inferred from the facts
and circumstances of the case.
Held, further, that s. 36(4) cast an absolute duty on the
occupier to see that the breathing apparatus etc., was
always available in the-factory and was periodically
examined and certified fit for use and a sufficient number
of persons were trained in its use. But there was no -duty
to keep the apparatus at the pit at all times; such a duty
arose when some person was about to enter the pit with the
permission of the occupier.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No. 193 of
1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
August 1, 1957, of the Bombay High Court in Criminal Appeal
No. 365 of 1957, arising out of the judgment and order dated
the November 28, 1956, of Joint Civil Judge, Junior
Division, and Judicial Magistrate First Class, Broach, in
Summary Case No. 57 of 1956.
Rajni Patel and M. S. K. Sastri, for the appellant.
H. J. Umriyar, T. M. Sen and R. H. Dhebar, for the
respondent.
1959. September 4. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
WANCHOO J.-This appeal by special leave against the judgment
of the Bombay High Court raises the question of the
interpretation of sub-ss. (3) and (4) of s. 36 of the
Facts Act, (LXIII of 1948), (hereinafter called the Act).
The brief facts necessary for the
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purpose are these. The appellant is the occupier of the
Gopal Mills Co. Ltd., Broach, which is a factory as defined
in the Act. It appears that there is a pit in the factory
in which dangerous fumes are likely to be present. This pit
was securely covered as required by s. 33(1) of the Act and
no one was expected to go down into the pit for the normal
work of the factory as the pit was worked by gadgets fixed
nearby above the ground. It appears, however, that
something went wrong with the machinery inside the pit on
July 4, 1955. Fakirji Dhanjishaw was the person in-charge
of those who were working in the purification plant with
which this pit is connected when the accident took place at
about, 9-30 a. m. on July 4, 1955. It seems that when
something went wrong with the machinery inside the pit, a
labourer named Melia Dadla was asked to go down into it to
attend to it and he went down without wearing suitable
breathing apparatus and a belt securely attached to a rope,
the free end of which should have been held by a person
standing outside the confined space. The result was that
Melia Dadla was seen overcome by poisonous gases and died.
Thereafter Fakirji Dhanjishaw, Maganlal Gordhandas, Chunilal
Bochar and Chhotalal Nathubbai went down into the pit
without wearing breathing apparatus and were overpowered
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with poisonous gases and died one after the other. It is
not clear when the superior officers in the mill were
informed of this tragedy. But it appears that after the
death of these five persons the Superintendent, Municipal
Fire Brigade, was sent for with breathing apparatus and
other appliances and he went down into the pit to save the
dying persons; but be was also attacked by the fumes and
became unconscious. The mill doctor and some other doctors
also came but nothing could be done to revive the five
persons who were dead. The matter was reported to the
Inspector of Factories and he went and made enquiries. It
was then found that suitable breathing apparatus, reviving
apparatus, belts and ropes were not available anywhere in
the factory and were not kept ready for instant use beside
the confined space. Consequently,
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the appellant was prosecuted as the occupier for the breach
of s. 36 (3) and (4) of the Act.
The appellant took advantage of s. 101 of the Act and filed
a complaint against the manager S. D. Vashistha and the
engineer H. P. Tripathi. In view of this complaint of the
appellant, the first question that the magistrate had to
decide was whether the commission of the offence had been
proved. If the commission of the offence was proved, the
magistrate would have to consider whether the appellant
could be discharged from liability if he proved to the
magistrate’s satisfaction that he had used due diligence to
enforce the Act and that the other two persons committed the
offence in question without his knowledge, consent or
connivance.
In considering the question whether an offence had been
committed, the magistrate had to interpret sub ss. (3) and
(4) of s. 36 of the Act. He was of the view that no offence
under s. 36 (3) had been made out as the prosecution had
failed to prove any permission, express or implied, to
Fakirji Dhanjishaw and others to enter the pit. He was
further of the view that no offence under s. 36 (4) had been
committed because no permission under sub-s. (3) having been
granted to anybody to enter the pit, it was not necessary to
keep the breathing apparatus etc., near the pit or anywhere
else in the factory. He, therefore, held that no offence
had been committed and acquitted the appellant as well as
the manager and the engineer.
There was an appeal by the State of Bombay to the High Court
against the acquittal, of the appellant alone. The High
Court disagreed with the interpretation of sub-ss. (3) and
(4) of s. 36 by the magistrate and held that-
" For attracting the application of sub-section (3) it is
not necessary that a positive act of obtaining permission
must be done by a worker or a positive act of granting
permission must be done by the occupier or manager. If the
occupier or manager acquiesces in the entry, he permits the
entry. If he connives at the entry, then also he permits
the entry. If he fails to prevent the entry, then also he
permits the entry."
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It went on to say--
The scheme of the Act, which is a welfare legislation, is
to require an employer to take precautionary measures for
safeguarding the lives of his workers, prudent or imprudent,
rash or careful, against all possible danger while they are
working on the premises of the factory."
It therefore held that as the appellant had not taken all
reasonable steps to prevent the workers from entering the
pit in case of the machinery getting out of order, he had
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failed to prevent the entry of the workers into the pit and
therefore must be held in law to have permitted the entry
and committed the breach of sub. s. (3) of s. 36. As to
sub-s. (4) the High Court was of the view that it was not
sufficient compliance with it to provide breathing apparatus
etc. only after coming to know that some person was about to
enter the confined space and that the apparatus must be kept
ready for instant use and must be immediately available near
the confined space not only to the person who might enter
the confined space with permission but even to the person
who might enter the confined space without permission. The
High Court, therefore, set aside the acquittal of the
appellant and directed that the appellant’s complaint
against Vashistha and Tripathi should be first decided by
the magistrate, (thus, in effect, setting aside the
acquittal of Vashistha and Tripathi) and thereafter the
magistrate should proceed to decide the case against the
appellant in the light of the law laid down. There was then
an application for a certificate to enable the appellant to
appeal to this Court which was rejected. The appellant then
applied to this Court for special leave to appeal which was
granted; and that is how the matter has come up before us.
The relevant part of s. 36 is in these terms:-
" (3) No person in any factory shall enter or be permitted
to enter any confined space such as is referred to in sub-
section (1) until all practicable measures have been taken
to remove any fumes which may be present and to prevent any
ingress of fumes and unless either-
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(a) a certificate in writing has been given by a competent
person, based on a test carried out by himself, that the
space is free from dangerous fumes’ and fit for persons to
enter, or
(b) the worker is wearing suitable breathing apparatus and
a belt securely attached to a rope, the free end of which is
held by a person standing outside the confined space.
(4) Suitable breathing apparatus, reviving apparatus and
belts and ropes shall in every factory be kept ready for
instant use-beside any such confined space as aforesaid
which any person has entered, and all such apparatus shall
be periodically examined and certified by a competent person
to be fit for use; and a sufficient number of persons
employed in every factory shall be trained and practised in
the use of all such apparatus and in the method of restoring
respiration.
Taking sub-s. (3) first, the question that falls for
consideration is the meaning of the words " be permitted to
enter ". The contention on behalf of the State before the
High Court was that these words cast an absolute duty on the
occupier to prevent the entry of any person in a pit etc. of
the kind mentioned in sub-s. (1) of s. 36 and this seems to
have been accepted by the High Court. Learned counsel for
the appellant, however, urges that in the context of this
provision, the duty cast on the occupier is not absolute and
there must be some kind of permission, whether express or
implied, to the person entering the pit etc. before the
occupier is made liable. In other words, it is submitted
that it will be for the court on the facts and circumstances
of each case to infer whether there was permission, express
or implied, of the occupier to the person who enters the pit
etc. Mr. Umrigar appearing for the State of Bombay urges
before us that this latter construction would make the
provision liable to evasion by the occupier. According to
him, this provision means that whenever anyone enters such a
pit etc. the burden is cast on the employer to show that the
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entry was against the occupier’s instructions. He even went
to the length of saying that if a worker
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entered the pit in order to commit suicide, it would still
be for the occupier to show that the entry was against his
instructions and that he did all that he could to prevent
it. In this connection he drew our attention to certain
other sections in the Act where similar words are used, for
example, ss. 51, 52, 54, 60, 64, 67, 68, and 71. We do not
think it necessary to consider these other sections in
detail. It is enough to point out that there is one vital
difference between the provisions of these other sections
and the provision contained in s. 36(3). Section 36(3)
prohibits the worker from entering the pit etc. while these
other sections have no such prohibition against the worker
and cast the entire duty on the employer. Section 36(3)
therefore will have to be construed in the context of the
words used therein. It begins with prohibiting any person
from entering any such pit etc. The primary prohibition
therefore is of the person working in’ the factory and
others and the effect of this prohibition is worked out in
s. 97 of the Act. Sub-section (1) of s. 97 provides that if
a worker employed in a factory contravenes any provision of
this Act imposing any duty or liability on workers, he shall
be punishable with fine. Sub-section (2) of this section
then lays down that if a worker is convicted of an offence
under sub-s. (1), the occupier or manager of the factory
shall not be deemed to be guilty of an offence in respect of
that contravention unless it is proved that he fails to take
all reasonable measures for its prevention. Reading s.
36(a) with s. 97, it is clear that the prohibition of the
worker against entering any such pit etc. is absolute and if
any worker enters such a pit etc. he is guilty under s.
97(1). In this case, if the five workers who are dead, were
alive, they would have been guilty under s. 97(1) for
contravening s. 36 (3) by entering the pit. Then s. 97 (2)
would come into operation and it would be for the
prosecution to prove that the occupier or the manager had
failed to take all reasonable measures for preventing the
entry. The burden thus is on the prosecution to prove that
the occupier or the manager had not taken all reasonable
steps for preventing the entry and not on the occupier or
the manager to prove that he
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had taken all such reasonable steps. The Court will
therefore have to consider all the facts and circumstances
in a particular case to see if the burden has, been
discharged by the prosecution. It is in this background
that we have to consider the meaning to be given to the
words " be permitted to enter " appearing in s. 36 (3). It
seems to us that in the circumstances these words do not
cast an absolute duty on the employer to prevent the entry
and the mere fact that a person has entered such a pit etc.,
would not by itself prove that he bad been permitted to
enter. The Court will have to look into the facts and
circumstances of the case to come to the conclusion whether
the person who entered the pit was permitted to do so and
mere entry would not necessarily lead to the conclusion that
there was permission to enter, whether express or implied.
The magistrate in this case seems to have thought that a
positive act of obtaining permission must be done by the
worker or a positive act of granting permission must be done
by the occupier or the manager, though he has not said so in
so many words. It is not necessary that there should be a
positive act of obtaining permission by the worker or a
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positive act of granting permission by the occupier or the
manager. What the court has to see is whether on the facts
and circumstances of a particular case it will be reasonable
to infer that the entry was with permission, whether express
or implied. The High Court also, with respect, seems to
have gone too far on the other side when it said that it was
the duty of the employer to take all the precautionary
measures for safeguarding the lives of his workers, prudent
or imprudentrash or careful, against all possible danger
whilethey are working on the premises of the factory.
Thiswould imply that there was an absolute duty cast on the
employer to prevent the entry irrespective of the
considerations that might arise on the facts and
circumstances of a particular case. The true view of s. 36
(3), in our opinion, is that the primary duty is cast on the
worker or any other person prohibiting his entry into any
such pit etc. At the same time the occupier is also liable
if his permission
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to the entry, whether express or implied, can be inferred on
the facts and circumstances of the case; IS but this
permission cannot in all cases be inferred by the mere fact
of the entry. The High Court has remanded the case to the
magistrate for retrial and in that retrial the magistrate
will proceed to consider the liability of the occupier in
the light of the observations made by us on the construction
of s. 36 (3).
Turning now to sub-section (4), it will be found that it is
in two parts. The first part provides that suitable
breathing apparatus, reviving apparatus, belts and ropes
shall in every factory be kept ready for instant use beside
any such confined space as aforesaid which any person has
entered. This to our mind means that if for any reason a
person has to enter such confined space, the apparatus etc.,
shall be kept ready for instant use beside such space. The
duty for keeping the apparatus ready beside the space arises
only when a person is entering the confined space, obviously
with the permission of the occupier or the manager. We do
not think that sub-s. (4) contemplates that the apparatus
etc., shall always be kept ready near the confined space
whether there is any occasion for any person to enter it or
not. The necessity of keeping the apparatus etc: ready,
near the confined space arises when any person is about to
enter such space, obviously with the permission of the
employer.
The second part of the section provides that all such
apparatus shall be periodically examined and certified by a
competent person to be fit for use and a sufficient number
of persons employed in every factory shall be trained and
practised in the use of all such apparatus and in the method
of restoring respiration. This clearly shows that the
apparatus etc., must always be available in the factory,
though it need not be kept near the confined space till such
time as some one is about to enter it. There will be no
possibility of periodical examination and training of
sufficient number of persons in the use of the apparatus
unless the apparatus was always available in the factory.
The duty cast by sub-s. (4) is absolute. So far as the
first part is concerned, the duty of keeping the apparatus
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ready for instant use near the confined space arises as soon
as a person is about to enter it, obviously with the
permission of the occupier. So far as the second part is
concerned, it is the duty of the occupier to see that the
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apparatus is always available in the factory and is
periodically examined and certified fit for -use and a
sufficient number of persons are trained in its use. The
view taken by the magistrate of the effect of this section
is not correct and the view taken by the High Court is right
except that it is not necessary to keep the apparatus all
the time near the confined space. The High Court has
ordered retrial with respect to the contravention of sub-s.
(4) also and the magistrate who now retries the case will do
so in accordance with the construction of the sub-section
given by us. We have carefully refrained from saying
anything on the facts of this case as there is going to be a
retrial and it will be for the magistrate to consider all
the facts and circumstances before coming to a decision one
way or the other. The appeal is hereby dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.