Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DELHI CLOTH AND GENERAL MILLS CO., LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRI RAMESHWAR DYAL AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/11/1960
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 689 1961 SCR (2) 590
ACT:
Industrial Dispute--Dismissed workman--Interim reinstatement
by Tribunal--If valid--The Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (14
of 1947), s. 33A.
HEADNOTE:
One Sharda Singh, respondent, who was an employee of the
appellant-mills was dismissed for disobeying the orders of
the managing authority. He filed an application before the
Industrial tribunal under S. 33-A of the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947, contesting his dismissal on various grounds,
whereupon the tribunal passed an order to the effect that as
an interim measure the respondent be permitted to work in
the appellant mills and if the management failed to take him
back his full wages be paid from the date he reported for
duty. The appellant mills then filed a Writ Petition before
the High Court contesting the interim order of the Tribunal
and the High Court held that the interim relief granted to
the respondent was justified. On appeal by a certificate of
the High Court,
Held, that the interim order passed by the tribunal reinsta-
ting the respondent was erroneous. Such an interim relief
could not be given by the Tribunal as it would amount to
prejudging the respondents’ case and granting him the whole
relief at the outset without deciding the legality of his
dismissal after hearing the appellant employer.
The Management, Hotel Imperial and Ors. v. Hotel Workers’
Union, A.I.R. 1959 S. C. 1342, and Punjab National Bank v.
All India Punjab National Bank Employees’ Federation, A.I.R.
1960 S. C. 160, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 353 of 1959.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 22, 1958, of
the Punjab High Court (Circuit Bench) at Delhi in Civil Writ
No. 257-D of 1957.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India, S. N. Andley,
J. B. Dadachanji Rameshwar Nath and P. L. Vohra, for the
Appellant.
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G. S. Pathak, R. L. Anand and Janardan Sharma, for the
respondent No. 2.
591
1960. November 22. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
WANCHOO, J.-This is an appeal on a certificate granted by
the Punjab High Court. Sharda Singh (hereinafter called the
respondent) was in the service of the appellant-mills. On
August 28, 1956, the respondent was transferred from the
night shift to the day shift in accordance with para 9 of
the Standing Orders governing the workmen in the appellant-
mills. At that time an industrial dispute was pending bet-
ween the appellant-mills and their workmen. The transfer
was to take effect from August 30, 1956; but the respondent
failed to report for work in the day shift and was marked
absent. On September 1, 1956, he submitted an application
to the General Manager to the effect that he had reported
for duty on August 30, at 10-30 p.m. and had worked during
the whole night, but had not been marked present. He had
again gone to the mills on the night of August 31, but was
not allowed to work on the ground that he had been
transferred to the day shift. He complained that he had
been dealt with arbitrarily in order to harass him. Though
he said that he had no objection to carrying out the orders,
he requested the manager to intervene and save him from the
high-handed action taken against him, adding that the mills
would be responsible for his wages for the days he was not
allowed to work.
On September 4, 1956, he made an application to the
industrial tribunal, where the previous dispute was pending,
under s. 33-A of the Industrial Disputes Act, No. XIV of
1947, (hereinafter called the Act) and complained that he
had been transferred without any rhyme or reason from one
shift to another and that this amounted to alteration in the
conditions of his service, which was prejudicial and
detrimental to his interest. As this alteration was made
against the provisions of s. 33 of the Act, he prayed for
necessary relief from the tribunal under s. 33-A. On
September 5, 1956, the General Manager replied to the letter
of September 1, and told the respondent that his transfer
from. one shift to the other had been ordered on
592
August 28, and he had been told to report for work in the
day shift from August 30; but instead of obeying the order
which was made in the normal course and report for work as
directed he had deliberately disobeyed the order and
reported for work on August 30 in the night shift. He was
then ordered to leave and report for work in the day shift.
He however did not even then report for work in the day
shift and absented himself intentionally and thus disobeyed
the order of transfer. The General Manager therefore called
upon the respondent to show cause why disciplinary action
should not be taken against him for wailfully refusing to
obey the lawful orders of the departmental officers and he
was asked to submit his explanation within 48 hours. The
respondent submitted his explanation on September 7, 1956.
Soon after it appears the appellant-mills received notice of
the application under s. 33-A and they submitted a reply of
it on October 5, 1956. Their case was that transfer from
one shift to another was within the power of the management
and could not be said to be an alteration in the terms and
conditions of service to the prejudice of the workman and
therefore the complaint under s. 33-A was not maintainable.
The appellant-mills also pointed out that a domestic inquiry
was being held into the subsequent conduct of the respondent
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and prayed that proceedings in the application under s. 33-A
should be stayed till the domestic inquiry was concluded.
No action seems to have been taken on this complaint under
s. 33-A, for which the appellant-mills might as they had
prayed for stay However, the domestic inquiry continued and
on February 25, be partly responsible of those proceedings.
against the respondent 1957, the inquiry officer reported
that t e charge of misconduct was proved. Thereupon the
General Manager passed an order on March 5, 1957, that in
view of the serious misconduct of the respondent and looking
into his past records, he should be dismissed; but as an
industrial dispute was pending then, the General Manager
ordered that the permission of the industrial tribunal
should be taken before the order of dismissal was
593
passed and an application should be made for seeking such
permission under s. 33 of the Act.
In the meantime, a notification was issued on March 1, 1957,
by which 10th March, 1957, was fixed for the coming into
force of certain provisions of the Central Act, No. XXXVI of
1956, by which ss. 33 and 33-A were amended. The amendment
made a substantial change in s. 33 and this change came into
effect from March 10, 1957. The change was that the total
ban on the employer against altering any condition of ser-
vice to the prejudice of workmen and against any action for
misconduct was modified. The amended section provided that
where an employer intended to take action in regard to any
matter connected with the dispute or in regard to any
misconduct connected with the dispute, he could only do so
with the express permission in writing of the authority
before which the dispute was pending; but where the matter
in regard to which the employer wanted to take action in
accordance with the Standing Orders applicable to a workman
was not connected with the dispute or the misconduct for
which action was proposed to be taken was not connected with
the dispute, the employer could take such action as he
thought proper, subject only to this that in case of
discharge or dismissal one month’s wages should be paid and
an application should be made to the tribunal before which
the dispute was pending for approval of the action taken
against the employee by the employer. In view of this
change in the law, the appellant-mills thought that as the
misconduct of the respondent in the present case was not
connected with the dispute then pending adjudication, they
were entitled to dismiss him after paying him one month’s
wages and applying for approval of the action taken by them.
Consequently, no application was made to the tribunal for
permission in accordance with the order of the General
Manager of March 5, 1957, already referred to. Later, on
April 2, 19579 an order of dismissal was passed by the
General Manager after tendering one month’s wages to the
respondent and an application was made to the authority
concerned for approval of the action taken against the
respondent.
594
Thereupon the respondent filed another application under s.
33-A of the Act on April 9, 1957, in which he complained
that the appellant-mills had terminated his services without
the express permission of the tribunal and that this was a
contravention of the provisions of s. 33 of the Act; he
therefore prayed for necessary relief. On April 18, 1957,
an interim order was passed by the tribunal on this
application by which as a measure of interim relief, the
appellant mills were ordered to permit the respondent to
work with effect from April 19 and the respondent was
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directed to report for duty. It was also ordered that if
the management failed to take the respondent back, the
respondent would be paid his full wages with effect from
April 19 after he had reported for duty. On May 6, 1957,
however, the application dated April 9, 1957, was dismissed
as defective and therefore the interim order of April 18
also came to an end. On the same day (namely, May 6, 1957),
the respondent made another application under s. 33-A in
which he removed the defects and again complained that his
dismissal on April 2, 1957, without the express previous
permission of the tribunal was against s. 33 and prayed for
proper relief.
It is this application which is pending at present and has
not been disposed of, though more than three years have gone
by. It is also not clear what has happened to the first
application of September 4,1956, in which the respondent
complained that his conditions of service had been altered
to his prejudice by his transfer from one shift to another.
Applications under s. 33 and s. 33-A of the Act should be
disposed of quickly and it is a matter of regret that this
matter is pending for over three years, though the appellant
mills must also share the blame for this state of affairs’
However, the appellant-mills gave a reply on May 14,1957, to
the last application under s. 33-A and objected that there
was no breach of s. 33 of the Act, their case being that the
amended s. 33 applied to the order of dismissal passed on
April 2, 1957. Further, on the merits, the appellant-mills’
case was that the dismissal was in the circumstances
justified.
595
The matter came up before the tribunal on May 16, 1957. On
this date, the tribunal again passed an interim order, which
was to the effect that as a measure of interim relief, the
respondent should be permitted to work from May 17 and the
respondent was directed to report for duty. It was further
ordered that in case the management failed to take him back,
they would pay him his full wages with effect from the date
he reported for duty.
Thereupon the appellant-mills filed a writ petition before
the High Court. Their main contention before the High Court
was two-fold. In the first place it was urged that the
tribunal had no jurisdiction to entertain an application
under s. 33-A of the Act in the circumstances of this case
after the amended sections 33 and 33-A came into force from
March 10, 1957. In the alternative it was contended that
the tribunal had no jurisdiction to pass an interim order of
reinstatement or in lieu thereof payment of full wages to
the respondent even before considering the questions raised
in the application under s. 33-A on the merits. The High
Court held on the first point that in view of s. 30 of the
Industrial Disputes (Amendment and Miscellaneous Provisions)
Act, No. XXXVI of 1956, the present case would be governed
by s. 33 as it was before the amendment and therefore the
tribunal would have jurisdiction to entertain the complaint
dated May 6, 1957, under s. 33-A of the Act. On the second
point, the High Court held that the order of the tribunal
granting interim relief was within its jurisdiction and was
justified. In consequence, the writ petition was dismissed.
Thereupon the appellant-mills applied and was granted a
certificate by the High Court to appeal to this Court; and
that is how the matter has come up before us.
The same two points which were raised in the High Court have
been urged before us. We are of opinion that it is not
necessary in the present case to decide the first point
because we have come to the conclusion that the interim
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order of May 16, 1957, is manifestly erroneous in law and
cannot be supported. Apart from the question whether the
tribunal had jurisdiction
596
to pass an interim order like this without making an interim
award, (a point which was considered and left open by this
Court in The Management of Hotel Imperial v. Hotel Workers’
Union (1)), we are of opinion that where the tribunal is
dealing with an application under s. 33-A of the Act and the
question before it is whether an order of dismissal is
against the provisions of s. 33 it would be wrong in law for
the tribunal to grant reinstatement or full wages in case
the employer did not take the workman back in its service as
an interim measure. It is clear that in case of a complaint
under s. 33-A based on dismissal against the provisions of
s. 33, the final order which the tribunal can pass in case
it is in favour of the workman, would be for reinstatement.
That final order would be passed only if the employer fails
to justify the dismissal before the tribunal, either by
showing that proper domestic inquiry was held which
established the misconduct or in case no domestic inquiry
was held by producing evidence before the tribunal to
justify the dismissal: See Punjab National Bank Ltd. v. All-
India Punjab National Bank Employees’ Federation (2), where
it was held that in an inquiry under s. 33-A, the employee
would not succeed in obtaining an order of reinstatement
merely by proving contravention of s. 33 by the employer.
After such contravention is proved it would still be open to
the employer to justify the impugned dismissal on the
merits. That is a part of the dispute which the tribunal
has to consider because the complaint made by the employee
is to be treated as an industrial dispute and all the
relevant aspects of the said dispute fall to be considered
under s. 33-A. Therefore, when a tribunal is considering a
complaint under s. 33-A and it has finally to decide whether
an employee should be reinstated or not, it is not open to
the tribunal to order reinstatement as an interim relief,
for that would be giving the workman the very relief which
he could get only if on a trial of the complaint the
employer failed to justify the order of dismissal. The
interim relief ordered in this case was that the work
(1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 476.
(2) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 806.
597
man should be permitted to work: in other words he was
ordered to be reinstated; in the alternative it was ordered
that if the management did not take him back they should pay
him his full wages. We are of opinion that such an order
cannot be passed in law as an interim relief, for that would
amount to giving the, respondent at the outset the relief to
which he would be entitled only if the employer failed in
the proceedings under s. 33-A. As was pointed out in Hotel
Imperial’s case (1),ordinarily, interim relief should not be
the whole relief that the workmen would get if they
succeeded finally. The order therefore of the tribunal in
this case allowing reinstatement as an interim relief or in
lieu thereof payment of full wages is manifestly erroneous
and must therefore be set aside. We therefore allow the
appeal, set aside the order of the High Court as well as of
the tribunal dated May 16, 1957, granting interim relief.
Learned counsel for the respondent submitted to us that we
should grant some interim relief in case we came to the
conclusion that the order of the tribunal should be set
aside. In the circumstances of this case we do not think
that interim relief to the respondent is justified
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hereafter. As we have pointed above, applications under ss.
33 and 33-A should be dealt with expeditiously. We trust
that the applications dated September 4, 1956, which appears
to have been overlooked and of May 6, 1957, will now be
dealt with expeditiously and finally disposed of by the
tribunal, as all applications under s. 33-A should be. In
the circumstances we pass no order as to costs.
Appeal allowed.
(1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 476.
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598