Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 513 2000
PETITIONER:
RUTH SOREN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MANAGING COMMITTEE, EAST I.S.S.D.A. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/11/2000
BENCH:
S R Babu, S N Variava
JUDGMENT:
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J U D G M E N T
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :
The services of the appellant employed in the
establishment of respondent No.1 were terminated on
25.8.1980. She made an application under Section 26(2) of
the Bihar Shops & Establishments Act, 1953 [hereinafter
referred to as the Act] before the Labour Court, Ranchi
questioning the correctness of the same. The Labour Court
allowed the same by directing her reinstatement in service
with full back wages and continuity in service. This order
made by the Labour Court was called in question in a writ
petition, which on dismissal by a learned Single Judge, was
carried in further appeal to the Division Bench of the High
Court. Two contentions were put forth before the appellate
court, firstly that respondent No.1 is not an establishment
for the purposes of the Act and, therefore, the application
filed by the appellant is incompetent and secondly that
respondent No.1 terminated her services after giving salary
for a period of three months as provided in the relevant
rules and, therefore, was not liable to be interfered with
by the Labour Court even if it were to be held that
respondent No.1 is an establishment. The High Court, after
adverting to several decisions, in particular to Unni
Krishnan, J.P. & Ors. vs. State of Andhra Pradesh & Ors.,
1993 (1) SCC 645, took the view that an establishment
running an educational institution or imparting education
and does not carry on a business, trade or profession and
came to the conclusion that the Labour Court, therefore, had
no jurisdiction to interfere with the order of respondent
No.1 and allowed the appeal on the first contention after
noticing that it was not necessary to deal with the second
submission. For the conclusion the High Court reached, the
High Court wholly depended on the observations made by this
Court in Unni Krishnans case (supra). In that case, at
para 66, Mohan, J., while concurring with the majority view,
started the discussion by stating that in the cases before
them, depending upon the statute, either occupation or
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business has come to be defined and it cannot be contended
that establishment of an educational institution could be
business. Nor again, could that be called trade since no
trading activities are carried on. Equally it is not a
profession and it is one thing to say that teaching is a
profession but, it is a totally different thing to urge that
establishment of the category of occupation provided no
recognition is sought from the State or affiliation from the
University is asked on the basis that it is a fundamental
right. However, while analyzing the decision in Bangalore
Water Supply & Sewerage Board vs. A. Rajappa & Ors., 1978
(2) SCC 213, the learned Judge concluded that while
considering as to what would constitute an industry under
the Industrial Disputes Act, the observations made therein
is that an educational institution is an industry and
nothing could stand in the way of that conclusion and
certainly that is very different from claiming a fundamental
right under Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution. To
similar effect B.P.Jeevan Reddy, J. also stated that the
context in which the observations were made in Bangalore
Water Supply & Sewerage Board vs A. Rajappa (supra) would
have no application in the present case. A Bench of 7-Judge
of this Court examined this question and held that we have
to look at educational activity from the angle of the Act,
and so viewed the ingredients of industry are fulfilled and
education is, therefore, an industry and nothing could
stand in the way of that conclusion. The basis upon which
this conclusion is reached is that an educational
institution renders service and, therefore, falls within the
concept of industry, as was noticed by Isaacs, J. in an
Australian case, Federated Municipal & Shire Employees
Union of Australia v. Melbourne Corporation, 26 CLR 508.
An establishment for the purposes of the Act means an
establishment which carries on any a business, trade or
profession or any work in connection with, or incidental or
ancillary thereto. Concept of industry, as defined under
the Industrial Disputes Act, would include any business,
trade, undertaking, manufacture or calling of employers and
includes any calling service, employment, handicraft, or
industrial occupation or avocation of workmen. There is an
organised activity between employers and employees to impart
education. Such an activity, though may be industry will
not be a profession, trade or business for the purposes of
Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution, would not be one
falling within the scope of establishment under the Act.
Therefore, the view taken by the Division Bench of the High
Court is unexceptionable. The High Court did appreciate
that Unni Krishnans case (supra) itself made a distinction
between what was stated in Bangalore Water Supply & Sewerage
Board vs. A. Rajappa (supra).
In Corporation of City of Nagpur vs. Its Employees,
[1960] 1 LLJ 523 (540), this Court held that Education
Department of the Corporation to be an industry. The reason
given is that imparting education amounts to service and can
be done by a private person also. In University of Delhi
vs. Ramnath (1963) 2 LLJ 335, this Court held that
imparting education is not industry as the work of the
University cannot be assimilated to the position of trade,
calling, business or service and hence cannot be industry.
The majority view in Bangalore Water Supply & Sewerage Board
vs. A. Rajappa (supra) a decision of seven-Judge Bench, is
that in the case of an educational institution, the nature
of activity is exhypothesi and imparting education being
service to community is an industry. Various other
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activities of the institution such as printing press,
transport department, clerical, etc. can be severed from
teaching activities and these operations either cumulatively
or separately form an industry. Even so, the question for
consideration is whether educational institution falls
within the definition of establishment carrying business,
trade or profession or incidental activities thereto.
Establishment, as defined under the Act, is not as wide as
industry as defined under the Industrial Disputes Act.
Hence reliance on Bangalore Water Supply & Sewerage Board
vs. A. Rajappa [supra] for the appellant is not of any
help.
Thus the order made by the High Court is correct and
calls for no interference and hence the appeal is dismissed.
No costs.