Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HUKAM CHAND JUTE MILLS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SECOND INDUSTRIAL TRIBUNAL, WEST BENGAL & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/04/1979
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 876 1979 SCR (3) 644
1979 SCC (3) 261
ACT:
Payment of Bonus Act, 1965-Customary and contractual
bonus-If excluded by the Act-Amending Act 23 of 1976-Effect
of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant mills had been paying customary bonus to
its employees for a number of years. Consequent to the
amendment of the Bonus Act, 1965 in 1976 by Act 23 of 1976
the management denied the customary bonus claimed by the
workmen, whereupon the dispute regarding "customary bonus
for the year 1976" was referred by the State Government to
the Industrial Tribunal. The Management’s plea that
customary bonus was no longer payable, in view of the
provisions of the 1976 Amendment, was negatived by the
Tribunal.
In the appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf
of the appellant that the Bonus Act as amended by Act 23 of
1976, annihilates all species of bonus including customary
and contractual bonus.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: 1. The Bonus Act (1965) though a complete code
was confined to profit-oriented bonus only. The other kinds
of bonus that have flourished in Indian industrial law have
been left uncovered by the Bonus Act. The legislative
universe spanned by the said statute cannot therefore,
affect the rights and obligations belonging to a different
world or claims and conditions. [647-E]
2. The amending Act, 23 of 1976 amended the long title
of the Bonus Act to provide for the payment of bonus "on the
basis of profits or on the basis of production or
productivity, and for matters connected therewith." The
inference that flows therefrom is that customary or
contractual bonus goes beyond the pale of the amending Act
which modifies the previous one by bringing within its range
bonus on the basis of production or productivity also.
[648G-649B].
3. Section 17 of the Bonus Act in express terms refers
to puja bonus and other customary bonus as available for
deduction from the bonus payable under the Act, thus making
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a clear distinction between the bonus payable under the Act
and "puja bonus or other customary bonus". This section has
been left intact. So long as this section remains without
amendment the inference is clear that the categories covered
by the Act, as amended, do not deal with customary bonus.
[649-C]
4. Section 31A relates to bonus linked with production
or productivity in lieu of bonus based on profits. It speaks
nothing of the other kinds of bonus. [649-G]
5. The Bonus Act (1965) does not deal with customary
bonus and is confined to profit-based or productivity-based
bonus. The provisions of the Act have no say, on customary
bonus and cannot, therefore, be inconsistent therewith.
645
Conceptually, statutory bonus and customary bonus operate in
two fields and do not cash with each other. [649H-650A]
In the instant case, both parties have agreed that
throughout they have been dealing with customary bonus only
and whenever there has been a settlement or agreement it has
been not the source of the right but the quantification
thereof. The claim was rooted in custom but quantified by
contract. It did not originate in any agreement, but was
organised by it. The customary bonus as claimed is neither
impaired nor eliminated by the 1976 Amendment Act. [650 C,
B]
Mumbai Kamgar Sabha, Bombay v. M/S. Abdulbhai
Faizullabhai & Ors. [1976] 3 SCR 591 at 608-609 & 612;
Sanghi Jeevaraj Ghewar Chand & Ors. v. Secetary Madras
Chillies, Grains Kirana Merchants Workers’ Union and Anr.
[1969] 1 SCR 366; referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1118 of
1978.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Order dated 12-5-1978
of the Second Industrial Tribunal, West Bengal in Case No.
VIII-169/77 G.O. No. 3000 IR dated 26-7-77.
G. B. Pai, R. C. Shah, S. R. Agarwal, O. P. Khaitan and
Praveen Kumar for the appellant.
M. K. Ramamurthi, D. T. Sen Gupta, S. R. Gupta and P.
K. Chakravorti for Respondent No. 3.
M. K. Ramamurthi, and Ramesh C. Pathak for the
Intervener (The Bank of Tokyo Staff Association).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-Industrial jurisprudence, based on the
values of social justice which is integral to our
Constitution, has been built around several legislations
enacted by Parliament, one of which is the Payment of Bonus
Act, 1965, (the Bonus Act, for short). The bonus branch of
labour law, however, is not exhausted by this enactment and
has been replenished by judge-made law, drawing sustenance
from practice and precedent, custom and contract. Against
this backdrop, we have to state and assess the single issue
strenuously canvassed before us by the appellant-management
challenging the award of the Industrial Tribunal and urging
that the Bonus Act, as amended by Act 23 of 1976,
annihilates all species of bonus including customary and
contractual bonus. The claim of the Union of Workmen is for
customary bonus, the reference to industrial adjudication
relates to customary bonus, and the special leave to appeal
granted by this Court is confined to customary bonus as the
common basis and focuses on the sole legal issue of negation
of that kind of bonus by virtue of the provisions of the
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amending Act 23 of 1976.
646
The matrix of minimal facts necessary to highlight the
limited controversy may lay bare the crucial issue we have
to decide. The appellant is a jute mill in Bengal employing
several thousand workers but we are directly concerned here
with a dispute between the Management and the employees in
its head office. Certain indisputable facts, fundamental to
the case, make a useful beginning. Customary bonus has been
claimed, conceded and settled between the parties for long
years since the early sixties at least. From time to time,
this demand has been the subject of dispute and,
fortunately, of agreed solution right down to 1975. But in
1976-the year in which Art. 43A making participation of
workers in Management of industries was made a Directive
Principle in our Constitution-the Bonus Act was,
paradoxically, amended restricting workers claim to Bonus by
Act 23 of 1976 although much of the curtailment has been
cancelled by the next Amending Act, 1977. Anyway, the
changes wrought by the 1976 amendment emboldened the
Management to deny the legality of Customary bonus claimed
by the workmen. This conflict led to a reference by the
State Government to the Industrial Tribunal of the following
dispute:
"CUSTOMARY BONUS FOR THE YEAR, 1976"
What is material to notice is that the demand and the
denial, the reference and the adjudication and, finally, the
special leave itself revolved round customary bonus. The
specific case of the Management was that customary bonus
could no longer be payable, in view of the provisions of the
1976 amendment. A statutory fatality was sought to be spelt
out of its provisions before the Tribunal and before us. We
emphasize this to exclude a hazy, though half-hearted plea
mentioned by Shri G. B. Pai for the appellant that here the
bonus was based on agreement and no agreement as such could
avail in view of s. 34, read with s. 31A, (as amended by the
1976 Act). Apart from the law relied on, it is somewhat
starting that bonus paid by settlement between the parties
qua customary bonus at least since 1962-63 (see page 4 of
the Paper Book) should be anathematized as untenable in
1976, suggesting that labour law, viewed from the social
justice angle, is making headway steadily backwards. Even
so, we will examine the law as the statute speaks.
The payments over the years have been of customary
bonus. The demand for 1976, which alone directly concerns
us, is also for customary bonus. The dispute referred is of
customary bonus. The legal objection urged is to customary
bonus. The award has upheld the tenability of customary
bonus. The special leave petition complained about the
legality of customary bonus and
647
the order granting leave clinched the issue by treating the
dispute as one for customary bonus. Likewise, throughout,
the only defence of the management was the lethal impact on
customary or other bonus, save profit or productivity-based
bonus of Act 23 of 1976. So the sole question is the
soundness of the legicidal impact of the 1976 amendment on
the customary bonus claim which otherwise was valid and,
indeed, was honoured by the appellant by progressively
escalating rates by agreement. This part of the narration
may be concluded by excerpting the order granting leave:
"Mr. Pai states on behalf of the petitioner-
Management that if they fail on the legal issue,
namely, because of the amendment in the Bonus Act
customary bonus is not payable, then they will not ask
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for the trial of that issue on merits and straightway
they will pay the customary bonus they have been paying
as per the agreement dated 20-3-1975. In view of this
undertaking we grant special leave to appeal and even
if the appellants succeed in this appeal, they will not
ask for costs against the workmen concerned."
The Bonus Act (1965) was a complete code but was
confined to profit-oriented bonus only. Other kinds of bonus
have flourished in Indian Industrial law and have been left
uncovered by the Bonus Act. The legislative universe spanned
by the said statute cannot therefore affect the rights and
obligations belonging to a different world or claims and
conditions. This has, in the Mumbai Kamgar’s case(1)
exhaustively dealt with the anatomy of the Bonus Act, its
functional scope its modalities and its operational
frontiers to reach the following conclusion:
"It is clear further from the long title of the
Bonus Act of 1965 that it seeks to provide for bonus to
persons employed ’in certain establishments’-not in all
establishments. Moreover, customary bonus does not
require calculation of profits, allocable surplus,
because it is a payment founded on long usage and
justified often by spending on festivals and the Act
gives no guidance to fix the quantum of festival bonus;
nor does it expressly wish away such a usage. The
conclusion seems to be fairly clear, unless we strain
judicial sympathy countrarywise, that the Bonus Act
dealt with only profit bonus and matters connected
therewith and did not govern customary, traditional or
contractual bonus.
648
The end product of our study of the anatomy and
other related factors is that the Bonus Act spreads the
canvas wide to exhaust profit-based bonus but beyond
its frontiers is not void other cousin claims bearing
the caste name ’bonus’ flourish-miniatures of other
colours ! The Act is neither proscriptive nor
predicative of other existences."
After dealing with Ghewar Chand’s case(1), the Court
arrived at the final view that
"A discerning and concrete analysis of the scheme
of the Act and the reasoning of the Court leaves us in
no doubt that it leaves untouched customary bonus."(2)
This ruling has our concurrence and, indeed, the
principal plea of Shri Pai, counsel for the appellant, is
that the effect of the 1976 amending Act has been left open
in that decision and that is precisely the justification for
his submission that the new provisions nullify all kinds of
claims of bonus except profit-or-productivity-based bonuses,
having regard to ss. 31A and 34A brought into the statute
Act.
Counsel made his goal-oriented submissions by taking us
through the new provisions. As we have stated earlier many
of the statutory modifications brought about in 1976 in the
then wisdom of Parliament have been repealed and the
original position restored in 1977 by the later wisdom of
the new Parliament. However, we are concerned only with the
import and effect of the few provisions incorporated by Act
23 of 1976. The fundamental fact which we must reiterate is
that the Bonus Act before the 1976 amendment had nothing to
say on bonus not oriented on profit. What then was the
departure made ? Did it travel beyond the broad territory of
the original statute and invade other forms of bonus ? Apart
from the clauses which we will presently deal with, a key to
the understanding of the changes is the long title. The long
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title of the Bonus Act was also amended in 1976 and the
substituted one runs thus:
"An Act to provide for the payment of bonus to
persons employed in certain establishments on the basis
of profits or on the basis of production or
productivity and for matters connected therewith."
The clear light that we glean from the new long title
is contrary to the intent of Shri Pai’s argument.
Specifically, the new
649
long title purports to provide for the payment of bonus "on
the basis of profits or on the basis of production or
productivity and for matters connected therewith". The
emphatic inference flows therefrom that customary or
contractual bonus goes beyond the pale of the amending Act
which modifies the previous one by bringing within its range
bonus on the basis of production or productivity also.
Nothing more-unless the text expressly states to the
contrary. It is important to remember that s. 17 of the
Bonus Act has been left intact. That Section in express
terms refers to puja bonus and other customary bonus as
available for deduction from the bonus payable under the
Act, thus making a clear distinction between the bonus
payable under the Act and "puja" bonus or other customary
bonus. So long as this Section remains without amendment the
inference is clear that the categories covered by the Act,
as amended, did not deal with customary bonus
Strong reliance was placed by counsel for the appellant
on new s. 31A read with substituted s. 34. It is proper to
read s. 34 at this stage:
"34. Subject to the provisions of section 31A, the
provisions of this Act shall have effect
notwithstanding anything inconsistent therewith
contained in any other law for the time being in force
or in the terms of any award, agreement, settlement or
contract of service."
The only changes that we notice as between this Section and
its predecessor are (i) that agreements, settlements and
contracts of service inconsistent with the provisions of the
Act regardless of whether they were made before 29th May,
1965 or after would now stand superseded; and (ii) s. 24
shall be subject to the provisions of s. 31A newly inserted.
We may straightway dispose of the argument based on s.
31A. That relates to bonus linked with production or
productivity in lieu of bonus based on profits. We are not
concerned with such a situation and we agree that in regard
to productivity bonus s. 31A shall have operation but it
speaks nothing about the other kinds of bonus and cannot,
therefore, be said to have the spin-off benefits claimed by
the appellant. Similarly, the submission that all agreements
inconsistent with the Bonus Act shall become inoperative
also has no substance vis-a-vis customary bonus. The fallacy
is simple. Once we agree-and this is incontestable now-that
the Bonus Act (1965) does not deal with customary bonus and
is confined to profit-based or productivity-based bonus, the
provisions of the Act have no say
650
on customary bonus and cannot, therefore, be inconsistent
therewith. Conceptually, statutory bonus and customary bonus
operate in two fields and do not clash with each other.
We have reached the end of journey because the focal
point of the debate is as to whether customary bonus, as
claimed in this case, is impaired or eliminated by the 1976
amendment Act. Moreover, both parties have agreed that
throughout they have been dealing with customary bonus only
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and whenever there has been a settlement or agreement it has
been not the source of the right but the quantification
thereof. The claim was rooted in custom but quantified by
contract. It did not originate in any agreement, but was
organised by it. We are, therefore, satisfied that the
appeal must fail.
We should have unhesitatingly directed costs to be paid
by the management-appellant to the respondent-workmen; but
during the course of the hearing we were far from impressed
with the attitude taken up by the respondent. While the
merits of the matter have to be decided indifferent to such
factors, costs are discretionary and we are constrained to
dismiss the appeal, directing both the parties to bear their
respective costs.
N.V.K. Appeal dismissed.
651