Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT. USHA RANI DATTA, AAYA/ATTENDANT AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE INDUSTRIAL COURT, INDORE & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT30/04/1985
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
KHALID, V. (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 1016 1985 SCR (3)1049
1985 SCC (3) 148 1985 SCALE (1)1065
ACT:
Industrial Disputes Act:
Family Planning Clinic-Financial Expenditure incurred
by Central Government-Taken over by Public Sector
Undertaking Steel Plant-Employees of Clinic-Whether
employees of Steel Plant.
HEADNOTE:
Urban Family Clinic was set up by a Steel Plant for
implementation of family welfare schemes. The Chief Medical
Officer of The Plant was the administrative officer for the
Clinic. The financial expenditure of the Clinic was borne by
the Government of India. Subsequently the Clinic was treated
as an integral part of the administration of the Plant and
its employees were absorbed with effect from February 4,
1976.
The appellants who were serving as Aaya/Attendants
moved an application before the Labour Court for a relief
that they are being wrongly treated as fresh employees from
the date of absorption and that their services since the
commencement of employment be treated as continuous for the
purpose of gratuity, retrenchment and leave etc.
The management of the Plant contested the application
contending that the Clinic was an independent unit set up by
the Government of India and that it was not an integral part
of the administration and, therefore, the services rendered
prior to the absorption could not be treated as service
under the Plant and, therefore, the application deserves to
be dismissed.
The Labour Court allowing the application held that the
Clinic had hardly any independent existence and that the
employees of the Clinic were in reality and for all
practical purposes the employees of the Plant.
Two revision petitions were filed before the Industrial
Court-one on behalf of the Plant, and the other on behalf of
the appellants. The Industrial Court dismissed the revision
petition of the appellants with a further direction
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that the application before the Labour Court was liable to
be dismissed. While allowing The revision petition of the
management, the Industrial Court held that family planning
centers were run by different public undertakings and it was
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started as part of the general policy of the Government of
India and even though the expenditure of the centre was
reimbursed by the Government, the Clinic of the centre could
not be said to be an industry within the meaning of
expression in the Act nor could it be said to be incidental
to the main business of the Plant. The prayer in the
application before the Labour Court that the appellants
should be given additional and better wages and service
conditions was beyond the competence of the Labour Court and
consequently the application was not maintainable.
The writ petition filed by the appellants was dismissed
by the High Court,
Allowing the Appeal,
^
HELD: 1. The findings of facts as recorded by the
Labour Court and which have neither been departed from nor
questioned by the High Court clearly point to the
inescapable conclusion that the Clinic had no independent -
existence of its own and that for all practical purposes it
was under the administrative control of the Plant. [1053 F]
2. The Clinic had no independent existence. In fact it
was an euphemism to call it an independent undertaking. It
was part and parcel of the administrative set up. The Clinic
was managed by tho Chief Medical Officer of the Plant with a
designation of Administrative Officer, and was accountable
for the money received from the Government of India. The
labour Court was perfectly justified in holding that the
employees of the Clinic were the employees of the Plant
working in a department under the administrative control of
Chief Medical Officer who was under the overall
administrative control of the management of the Plant. The
Labour Court was perfectly justified in holding that since
the inception of the Clinic the employees were the employees
of the Plant and that the absorption was an acceptance of
reality avoiding the pretence. [1054 E; G-H; 1055 A-B]
3. The Industrial Court was in error in concluding that
whether the application as made was not maintainable. The
reasons which appealed to the Labour Court for holding that
the application was maintainable are indisputably
unquestionable and the view to the contrary is untenable.
[1055 C] 4. The High Court has overlooked that Family
Planning Scheme has to be implemented in larger national
interest. Public sector undertakings owned by the Government
of India may be directed to carry out the scheme. For this
purpose the Clinic was set up under the administrative
control of the Chief Medical Officer of the Plant. If a
hospital can be said to be run for the welfare of the
employees of the Plant how the Clinic which would also be
described as a hospital for giving advice in family planning
could be differentiated from a hospital.A modern hospital
can as well have a family planning clinic. The distinction
drawn by the High Court lacks logic. The Clinic was an
integral
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department of the Plant and had hardly any independent
existence. The independent paper existence was found
unworkable in the long run and therefore the Public
Enterprises Committee directed to absorb the employees of
the Clinic in the establishment of the Plant. Accordingly no
other view is possible than the on taken by the Labour
Court. [1055 E-H]
Bangalore water Supply &.. Sewerage Board etc. v. R.
Rajappa & others, 11978] 3 SCR 207, referred to.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2231 of
1985.
From the Judgment and Order dated 8.3.1983 of the
Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. Petition No. 1124 of
1982.
R. Satish for the Appellants.
S.K. Mehta for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DESAI, J. Special leave granted.
A trivial dispute disposed of by an eminently just
and legally correct order by the Labour Court was
unnecessarily interfered with by the Industrial Court,
Madhya Pradesh which has forced employees working in a
comparatively lower grade to knock at the doors of this
Court.
Urban Family Planning Clinic (’Clinic’ for short) was
set up at Bhilai for implementation of family welfare
schemes of the Government of India in accordance with
approved pattern set out in the letter of Ministry of Health
dated May 16, 1963. The Chief Medical Officer of the Bhilai
Steel Plant was to be the administrative officer for the
Clinic The entire expenditure of the Clinic was met by the
Government of India by giving 100% grant though it was
stated as a fact that this amount was not brought into the
bank account of Bhilai Steel Plant but was deposited in a
separate bank account in the State Bank of India under the
name and style of Bhilai Steel Plant Urban Family Planning
Clinic Grant-in-aid Account. Subsequently on the
recommendation of Bureau of Public Enterprises, the Clinic
was treated as an integral part of the
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administration of Bhilai Steel Plant and the employees
working in the Clinic were absorbed as employees of the
Bhilai Steel Plant effective from February 4, 1976.
Smt. Usha Rani Datta and 11 others who were serving as
Aaya/Attendants etc. (presumably Class IV employees) moved
an application before the Labour Court for a relief that
they are being wrongly treated as fresh employees from the
date of absorption and that their services since the
commencement of employment somewhere in 1964 be treated as
continuous for the purpose of gratuity, retrenchment and
leave etc. The application was moved in the Labour Court,
Durg but it came to be transferred to Labour Court at
Raipur.
The management of the Bhilai Steel Plant contested the
application contending that the Clinic was an independent
unit set up by the Government of India and that it was not
an integral part of the administration of Bhilai Steel
Plant and therefore the services rendered prior to the
absorption on February 4, 1976 could not be treated as
service under the Bhilai Steel Plant and therefore the
application deserves to be dismissed.
The learned Presiding Officer of the Labour Court after
hearing both sides and taking into consideration the
evidence produced before it held that the Clinic had hardly
any independent existence and that the employees of the
Clinic were in reality and for all practical purposes the
employees of the Steel Plant. Accordingly the application
was allowed and the necessary relief was given.
Two revision petitions came to be filed before the
Industrial Court at Madhya Pradesh set up under the Madhya
Pradesh Industrial Relations Act. One Revision Petition
being No. 10/MPlR/81 was filed by the Executive Director,
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Bhilai Steel Plant questioning the correctness of the
decision of the Labour Court. Original applicants before the
Labour Court Smt. Usha Rani Datta and others filed a
Revision Petition being No. 2/MPIR/81 praying for relief not
granted by the Labour Court. ‘
Both the revision petitions were disposed of by a
learned Member of the Industrial Court by a common
judgement.
Taking up the revision petition of the management it
was held
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family planning centres were run by different public
undertakings
and it was started as part of the general policy of the
Government of India and even though the entire expenditure
of the Centre was reimbursed by the Government of India, the
clinic of the centre could not be said to be an industry
within the meaning of the expression in the Act nor could it
be said to be incidental to the main business of the Bhilai
Steel Plant. The learned Member further held that the prayer
in the application before the Labour Court was that the
petitioners before the Labour Court who were formerly
employed in the Family Planning Clinic should be given
additional and better wages and service conditions and this
subject was beyond the competence of the Labour Court, and
for these reasons the application was not maintainable.
Accordingly the revision petition filed by the management
was allowed and the revision petition of the original
petitioners was dismissed with a further direction that the
application before the Labour Court was liable to be
dismissed.
After an unsuccessful writ petition No. 1124/82 in the
High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Jabalpur, theoriginal
applicants have filed this appeal by special leave.
The findings of facts as recorded by the Labour Court
and which have neither been departed from nor questioned by
the High Court clearly point to the inescapable conclusion
that the Clinic had no independent existence of its own and
that for all practical purposes it was under the
administrative control of the Bhilai Steel Plant. Let us
recapitulate those findings, of facts. The Clinic was set up
at Bhilai somewhere in 1964 according to the approved
pattern set out in the letter of the Ministry of Health
dated May 16, 1963. This letter was annexed as Annexure R-l
to the writ petition, in the High Court. Bhilai Steel Plant
is an wholly owned Government of India undertaking. It
received grant to meet the entire expenditure of the Clinic.
After the independent existence on paper from 1964 to 1976,
the pretence was removed and the reality accepted in that
all the employees of the Clinic were absorbed as employees
of the Bhilai Steel Plant. This becomes clear from the
letter of the Senior Personnel Manager, Bhilai Steel Plant
dated February 4, 1976. It provides that the General Manager
has approved absorption of Family Planning staff as regular
employees of the Bhilai Steel Plant under Chief Medical
Officer with imme-
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diate effect, against posts and scales set out in the
letter. It was further stated that the posts, designations
and scales are personal to the existing incumbents and on
finalisation of standard manning & designations, the
absorbed personnel would be suitably adjusted, to the extent
feasible. Therefore till the absorption, the pretence was
that the Clinic even though it wholly under the
administrative control of the Chief Medical Officer, Bhilai
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Steel Plant who was none other than a full-time employee of
the Bhilai Steel Plant, was treated independent. Absorption
erased the pretence. These facts are not in dispute and were
not controverted before us.
The learned Member of the Industrial Court with whom
High Court appears to have agreed, was of the opinion that
when the Clinic had its separate existence it was not
covered in the expression ’industry’ and that even though
Bhilai Steel Plant is an industry, the Clinic could not be
styled as industry. In our opinion this distinction drawn is
entirely meaningless. If Bhilai Steel Plant is an industry
and if under the decision of this Court in Bangalore Water
Supply & Sewerage Board etc. v R. Rajappa & others (1) an
hospital is an industry, this distinction drawn between two
branches of administration of Bhilai Steel Plant attaches
importance to a shadow without substance and substance
without significance The Clinic had no independent existence
In fact it was an euphimism to call it an independent
undertaking. lt was part and parcel of Bhilai Steel Plant
administrative set-up. May be for purpose of accounting 100%
grant received from the Government of India was kept in a
separate account but that does not clothe the Clinic with
any independent existence. lt was nowhere suggested that the
employees of the Clinic were employees of the Government of
India This aspect did agitate the mind of the High Court
when it observed that: ’it is a moot question whether the
employees in the Clinic were employees of the Government of
India or of the Plant. The undisputed fact is that the
Clinic was managed by Chief Medical Officer of Bhilai Steel
Plant with a designation of Administrative Officer of the
Clinic and was accountable for the money received from the
Government of India as grant to the Undertaking called
Bhilai Steel Plant and if it was never contended that the
employees of the Clinic were the employees of the Government
of India, indisputably the Labour Court was perfectly
justified in holding that the employees of the Clinic were
the employees of the Bhilai Steel
(l) [1978] 3 SCR, 207
1055
Plant working in a department called Clinic under the
administrative control of Chief Medical Officer who was
under the overall administrative control of the management
of Bhilai Steel Plant. In our opinion, therefore the Labour
Court was perfectly justified in holding that since the
inception of the Clinic the employees were the employees of
the Bhilai Steel Plant and that the absorption was an
acceptance of reality avoiding the pretence.
The learned Member of the Industrial Court was in error
in concluding that whether the application as made was not
maintainable. The reasons which appealed to the Labour Court
for holding that the application was maintainable are
indisputably unquestionable and the view to the contrary
does not commend to us.
Lastly we may refer to one observation of the High
Court which may create confusion in future and therefore
requires to be properly understood. Says the High Court that
the Clinic was not a canteen or a hospital run for the
welfare of the employees in the main industry and it was not
opened as an operation incidental to the main industry- The
High Court concluded that for this reason the employees
working in the Clinic, could not be taken to be the
employees employed i‘n the Iron and Steel Industry carried
on by the Plant. Unfortunately the High Court overlooked
that family planning scheme has to be implemented in larger
national interest. Public, Sector undertakings owned by the
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Government of India may be directed to carry out this
scheme. Probably imbued with this idea, the Clinic was set
up under the administrative control of the Chief Medical
Officer of the Plant. If a hospital can be said to be run
for the welfare of the employees of the plant as observed by
the High Court one fails to understand, how a clinic which
could also be described as a hospital for giving advice in
family planning could be differentiated from a hospital
modern hospital can as well have a family planning clinic.
The distinction drawn by the High Court lacks logic.
Therefore also one can safely conclude that the clinic was
an integral department of the, Plant and had hardly any
independent existence. The independent paper existence was
found unworkable in the long run and therefore the Public
Enterprises Committee directed public enterprise to absorb
the employees of the Clinic in the establishment of the
Plant. Accordingly no other view is possible than the one
taken by the Labour Court.
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Accordingly this appeal is allowed and the decision of
the learned Member of the Industrial Tribunal as well as the
judgment of the High Court are set aside and the one given
by the Labour Court is restored with costs throughout. The
total costs is quantified at Rs. 5,000
A.P.J. Appeal allowed.
1057