Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 639 of 2003
PETITIONER:
Rourkela Shramik Sangh
RESPONDENT:
Steel Authority of India Ltd. & Anr.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/01/2003
BENCH:
CJI,S.B. Sinha & A.R. Lakshmanan.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of S.L.P. (Civil) No.14567 of 2000)
S.B. SINHA, J :
Leave granted.
Interpretation of an order passed by this Court in R.K. Panda &
Others. vs. Steel Authority of India and Others [(1994) 5 SCC 304] is in
question in this appeal which arises out of the judgment and order dated 25th
May, 2000 passed by the High Court of Delhi in L.P.A. No.335 of 1998
whereby and whereunder an appeal preferred by the appellant from the
judgment and order dated 15th July, 1998 passed by a learned Single Judge
of the said Court dismissing the writ petition filed by the appellant was
upheld.
The basic fact of the matter is not in dispute. The workers of the
Rourkela Steel Plant filed a writ petition before this Court, inter alia, for a
direction that they be held to be entitled to be paid the same pay as is paid to
the regular employees and be treated as such on the premise that they had
been employed by various contractors and were doing jobs which are
perennial in nature and identical to what were being done by regular
employees of the Plant. This Court having regard to the various interim
orders passed from time to time did not relegate the workmen to avail the
remedies under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 and, inter alia, directed :-
"(i) All labourers, who had been initially engaged
through contractors but have been continuously
working with the respondent for the last ten years
on different jobs assigned to them in spite of the
replacement and change of the contractors, shall
be absorbed by the respondent, as their regular
employees subject to being found medically fit
and if they are below 58 years of age, which is
the age of superannuation under the respondent.
xxx xxx xxx xxx
(vi) The respondent shall be at liberty to retrench
workmen so absorbed, in accordance with law.
This order shall not be pleaded as a bar to such
retrenchment.
(vii) If there is any dispute in respect of the
identification of the contract labourers to be
absorbed as directed above, such dispute shall be
decided by the Chief Labour Commissioner
(Central), on material produced before him by the
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parties concerned.
(viii) This direction shall be operative only in respect of
142 jobs out of 246 jobs, in view of the fact that
contract labour has already been abolished in 104
jobs."
The appellants therein, however, filed interlocutory applications for
directions marked as I.A. Nos. 8 and 9 of 1991 before this Court wherein the
following prayers were made :-
"(a) That the respondents be directed to regularize
the service of all the workmen working in
any of the 246 jobs at the time of filing of
this petition and continuously working since
then;
(b) Clarify that the standards of medical fitness
to be applied in case of these workmen
should be the standards used for regular
workmen for their retrenchment;
(c) Clarify that this judgment dated 12.5.94
would also apply to those workmen who had
been retrenched in 1990 and 1992 and have
not yet been taken back in employment;
(d) Direct the respondents to pay wages to those
292 workmen who were kept out of
employment for the period 22.5.89 to
30.11.89, contrary to the orders of this
Court."
Prayers (a) and (b) were not pressed and in relation to prayers (c) and
(d), this Court clarified that if any of the workmen is not
absorbed/regularized despite this Court’s directions/orders, the workmen
concerned would be at liberty to pursue any other remedy or may approach
any other authority prescribed under law.
Pursuant to or in furtherance of the said directions of this Court
(quoted supra), 5340 applications were received and out of said applicants
2677 applicants were found eligible for absorption by the management.
Cases of 2663 workmen were referred to the Chief Labour Commissioner
(Central) in terms of the said judgment.
In its order dated 4th January, 1995, the Chief Labour Commissioner
(Central) New Delhi put the workmen in eight different categories which
are as under :-
"Category 1 : Applicants otherwise eligible but
above 58 years of age.
Category 2 : Applicants above 58 years of age
and also otherwise not ineligible
for not completing ten years of
continuous working.
Category 3 : (A) Not completed ten years of
continuous working on the
applicant’s own declarations.
Category 3 : (B) Applicant admits gap in claim for
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continuous working for ten years.
Category 4 : Applicants claimed 10 years of
continuous working in the jobs
continuing to exist but not established
on the basis of records enclosed with
the application and those available
with the Department including E.S.I.
registration date.
Category 5 : Applicants claimed 10 years of
continuous working had not
substantiated only due to short gap in
finalization and award of the
concerned contract.
Category 6 : Applicants claimed more than 10
years of continuous working
admitting gap to the period of 10
years which corresponds to the actual
short gap in finalisation and award of
the contract.
Category 7 : Applicants claimed 10 years of
continuous working or admitted that
gap in contract having short gap in
finalisation and award of contract but
claim not established even
otherwise on the basis of records
enclosed with the applications and
those available within department
including E.S.I. registration date.
Category 8: Claim not entertained as names of
claimants do not appear in the wage
sheets of covered jobs."
The said authority further laid down a criteria that the matter relating
to identification of the concerned workmen and determination of their period
of work would be made on the basis of the Employees State Insurance Card
and Employees Provident Fund Card. Applying the said norm he arrived at
a finding that 360 workmen were eligible for absorption. The appellant
Association filed an application for review before the Chief Labour
Commissioner (Central) on 31st January, 1995 and upon consideration of the
matter again he found that 523 workmen were also eligible for absorption.
In support of the said finding he assigned sufficient and cogent
reasons. The said order was implemented by the respondent herein.
The appellants therein filed an interlocutory application marked as
I.A. No.10 of 1995 on 24th July, 1995, praying for the following reliefs :
"(a) direct the respondents to take back those
1800 and odd workmen who had been
illegally retrenched by the respondents on
10.4.95 and not to retrench them until there
is a need for retrenchment on the ground of
surplusage of labour;
(b) direct that all those workmen who had
completed 10 years of service by 10.4.1995
would be eligible for regularization."
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However, when the matter came up for consideration before this
Court on 16th October, 1995, they sought leave to withdraw the said petition
whereupon, the following order came to be passed :-
"The applicant may, if so advised, seek a reference
of any fresh alleged dispute which has arisen
between the workmen and the management or
approach the authority in accordance with law.
The I.A. is dismissed as withdrawn."
We may notice that in the said application, the appellants therein
made the aforementioned prayers, inter alia, alleging :-
"That thereafter, after various hearing and
reports sought and given by the Deputy Chief
Labour Commissioner (Central), Dhanbad, the
Chief Labour Commissioner (Central) finally
passed an order dated 1.5.95 by which he directed
another 522 workmen to be eligible; thus, still
leaving out approximately 1800 workmen out of
those who had applied for regularization on the
basis that they had put in more than 10 years
continuous service.
That the Chief Labour Commissioner
(Central) while deciding the applications of the
workmen took cognizance of only the entry date in
the Employees State Insurance Registration Card
and the Employees Provident Fund declaration
forms. This was despite the fact that the
Employees State Insurance Registration Card of a
large number of workmen were not made till 1986
and despite the fact that the Provident Fund
declarations were also not done by the contractors
in respect of many workmen till 1986 when this
petition was filed in this Court. In those cases, the
workmen were not given Employees State
Insurance Registration cards and Employees
Provident Fund declarations prior to 1986. The
workmen concerned, therefore, produced various
documentary evidences of their employment since
1984 such as wage sheets signed by the officers of
the principal employer, contractor and the
workmen, Annual Provident Fund account slips,
Service Certificates issued by the
Contractor/officers of the Respondent company,
tripartite agreements giving the names of the
workmen, identity cards, wages slips etc."
It was further alleged :
"..The fact is that the retrenchment of these
1800 workmen is not a planned one or
retrenchment forced due to surplusage of labour
but merely an attempt to get rid of these workmen
who had the courage to approach this Hon’ble
Court for relief. In fact, all these workmen were,
in fact and in law, employed through contractors.
They were clearly covered by the principles laid
down by this court in the recent decision of Justice
P.B. Sawant in Gujarat Electricity Board versus
Hind Mazdoor Sabha & Ors. JT 1995 (4) SC 264.
It was unfortunately, however, this Hon’ble Court
could not go into the question whether these
workmen were in fact and in law entitled to be
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considered to be employed by the Respondent
company in this writ petition. The petitioners now
will have to approach the Industrial Tribunal for
this, which would take considerable time. In the
meanwhile, these 1800 workmen and their families
are on the streets. It may also be pointed out that
the management of Rourkela Steel Plant have not
yet complied even with the orders of the Chief
Labour Commissioner (Central) dated 1.5.1995 in
which he had held another 523 workmen to be
eligible for regularsation."
It is, thus, evident that the contentions raised herein and in the said
interlocutory application, are identical.
Despite the aforementioned order dated 16th October, 1995, the writ
petition was filed by the appellant herein which was marked as C.W.P.
No.2963 of 1995. By an order dated 15th July, 1998, the said writ petition
was dismissed. Aggrieved thereby, the appellant filed a L.P.A. which was
also dismissed by reason of the impugned order.
Mr. Shanti Bhushan, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of
the appellant, has raised two contentions in support of this appeal. Firstly, it
was submitted that keeping in view the clear and unequivocal directions of
this Court in the aforementioned judgment, the Chief Labour Commissioner
(Central) could not have directed that the identity of the concerned workmen
would be established only with reference to the E.S.I. Card or P.F. Card
although several workmen had various documents in their possession, e.g.,
identity card, service certificate, wage-sheet etc. to prove their case. It was
next submitted that some workmen had even been retrenched during the
earlier proceedings despite an order of injunction having been passed in that
behalf, and, thus, were entitled to the benefit of the judgment of this Court.
The learned counsel would submit that the approach of the High Court in
passing the impugned judgment must be held to be erroneous inasmuch the
writ petition could not be dismissed only because the appellant withdrew
I.A. No.10 of 1995 wherein the said order dated 16th October, 1995 was
passed. It was submitted that the reliefs prayed for in the said interlocutory
application had nothing to do with the subject matter of the writ petition
which was disposed of by this Court.
Mr. Shanti Bhushan would further urge that as the High Court is also
an authority, the appellants herein could also file a writ petition pursuant to
or in furtherance of the observations made by this Court in its order dated
16th October, 1995.
Mr. C.S. Vaidyanathan, learned senior counsel appearing on behalf of
the respondents, on the other hand, submitted that the appellants having filed
I.A. No. 9 of 1991 and I.A. No. 10 of 1995 before this Court raising identical
questions could not raise the same again by filing an application under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India and the remedy therefor available to
them, if any, was merely to approach the Industrial Court in terms of the
provisions of the Industrial Disputes Act.
Mr. Vaidyanathan would contend that at the later stage of the enquiry,
the Chief Labour Commissioner, Central, had also taken into consideration
other documents produced by the workmen and arrived at a finding that no
reliance can be placed thereupon.
The question as to whether the concerned workmen had been
continuously working for a period of ten years so as to enable them to derive
benefit of the judgment of this Court in R.K. Panda’s case was essentially a
question of fact. The Chief Labour Commissioner (Central) while
determining the said question was not acting as a statutory authority. He
was merely acting pursuant to or in furtherance of the directions of this
Court.
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The appellants herein, as noticed hereinbefore, immediately after the
pronouncement of the judgment of this Court apprehended that a large
number of workmen may be retrenched. They, therefore, sought for
clarification by filing the aforementioned I.As. No. 8 and 9 of 1991, which
as noticed hereinbefore, were disposed of directing that in the event they are
aggrieved by an order of the Chief Labour Commissioner (Central), they
may take recourse to such proceedings as are available to them in law.
It is interesting to note that in the interlocutory application marked as
I.A. No.10 of 1995, the appellants themselves stated :
"The petitioners now will have to approach the
Industrial Tribunal for this, which would take
considerable time. In the meanwhile, these 1800
workmen and their families are on the streets.."
There cannot, thus, be any doubt whatsoever that the appellants were
fully aware of the fact that they were required to approach the Industrial
Tribunal in terms of the provisions of the Industrial Disputes Act for
ventilating their grievances. The submission of Mr. Shanti Bhushan to the
effect that the High Court acts as an authority while exercising its power
under Article 226 of the Constitution of India cannot be countenanced. The
order of this Court dated 16th October, 1995, as quoted supra, is absolutely
clear and unambiguous. The term ’authority’ used in this Court’s order
dated 16th October, 1995 must be read in the context in which it was used.
The appellant in terms thereof could seek a reference which would mean a
reference in terms of Section 10 of the Industrial Disputes Act. It could also
approach ’the authority in accordance with law’ which would mean
authority under a statute. The High Court, by no stretch of imagination, can
be an authority under a statute.
Furthermore, even otherwise, a disputed question of fact normally
would not be entertained in a writ proceeding. This aspect of the matter has
also been considered by a Constitution Bench of this Court in Steel
Authority of India Ltd. and others vs. National Union Waterfront Workers
and others [(2001) 7 SCC 1]. In any event, the orders of the Chief Labour
Commissioner dated 4th January, 1995 also shows that other documents
which were placed on record by the workmen had also been scrutinized and
they had not been found reliable.
We are, therefore, of the opinion that no case has been made out for
interference with the impugned judgment.
This appeal is accordingly dismissed but in the facts and
circumstances of the case, there shall be no order as to costs.