Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHARAT BARREL & DRUM MANUFACTURINGCOMPANY PVT. LIMITED
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHARAT BARREL EMPLOYEES UNION
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/04/1987
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 1415 1987 SCR (2) 825
1987 SCC (2) 591 JT 1987 (2) 87
1987 SCALE (7)716
ACT:
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947--Ss. 10, 25F & 25FFF
--Res judicata--Doctrine of--Applicability to industrial
disputes--Whether a person is or not an employee cannot be
reagitated in a later industrial dispute if it has been
finally decided in an earlier dispute.
HEADNOTE:
In the factory of the appellant-Company there were about
1100 permanent as well as temporary workmen. On account of
non-availability of raw materials and other compelling
circumstances the appellant-Company issued a ’closure no-
tice’ dated September 30, 1971 intimating all its workmen
that their services would stand terminated due to the clo-
sure of the factory with effect from November 1, 1971 and
that they would be paid compensation under s. 25FFF of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. Thereafter, the workmen
indulged in go slow tactics and various acts of sabotage
rendering the running of factory and office virtually impos-
sible and an atmosphere of terror, intimidation and vilifi-
cation prevailed. On October 30, 1971 the workers and mem-
bers of the staff became more and more aggressive and after
threatening the managerial staff resorted to acts of riot-
ing, hooliganism and destroyed considerable part of the
Company’s properties. To control the situation police had to
be summoned. The workers became more violent and prevented
the Directors and Senior Officers from leaving the factory
and threw missiles on them and the police. A good number of
Police Officers and Constables were injured and the police
then arrested about 183 workers.
The Company terminated the services of the workmen with
immediate effect by its notice dated October 30, 1971 issued
under the Standing Orders applicable to its employees and
the notice was duly published.
Thereafter, the workmen raised an industrial dispute
which was referred for adjudication to the Industrial Tribu-
nal being I.T. No. 325 of 1971.
826
The factory was completely closed down from November 1,
1971 and there was no production till May, 1972. Pursuant to
notice dated June 7, 1972 by the appellant, many workmen
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rejoined the factory.
Before the Tribunal the case of the Union and the work-
ers was that the services of the workers were terminated due
to closure and although the Tribunal cannot go into the
question of legality or illegality of the closure, yet they
would be entitled to compensation under s. 25 FFF of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. The contention of the appel-
lant-company was that the workers were validity discharged
on October 30, 1971 under Standing Order 21 i.e. before the
alleged closure became operative and that it was not liable
to pay compensation under s. 25 FFF.
The question before the Tribunal was whether the workmen
continued to be in employment till the closure took effect
on November 1, 1971 or whether they ceased to be the employ-
ees of the appellant on October 30, 1971 or October 31, 1971
by virtue of the notice of the discharge issued under Stand-
ing Order 21.
The Tribunal held that the workers were validly dis-
charged on 30th October, 1971 before their services could be
terminated due to closure and, therefore, could not be said
to have been retrenched due to closure; that the workers’
services stand to have been terminated at least from 10.30
a.m. on October 31, 1971 when the order of discharge became
effective; that thereafter the workers were not in service
of the company and also were not in the service at the time
of the alleged closure and that since the termination of
services of the workers is not connected with the closure,
they would not be entitled to any compensation due to clo-
sure. The reference was rejected by the Tribunal by its
order dated October 30, 1974. The award remained unchal-
lenged and became final.
Thereafter at the instance of 440 workers another refer-
ence being IT No. 245 of 1975 was made. The Tribunal held
that the workmen included in the Schedule to the reference
should be deemed to have been retrenched on March 20, 1980
i.e. the date of the Award, that they were entitled to
retrenchment compensation under s. 25 F of the Act and they
were entitled to recover 75% of their back wages from Octo-
ber 31, 1971 till March 20, 1980. The Tribunal rejected the
contention of the management that the present case was
barred by the principle of res judicata and held that the
termination of the services of workers under the notice of
discharge dated October 30, 1971 was invalid.
827
The management challenged the latter award in a writ
petition before the High Court. The petition was dismissed
by a Single Judge. The Division Bench dismissed the appeal.
In the appeal, to this Court on behalf of the appellant
management it was submitted that the latter Industrial
Tribunal was in error in treating the workmen in question as
being in the employment of the management until it made the
Award even though the first Tribunal had held that the
workmen had been validly discharged by the notice dated
October 30, 1971 issued under Standing Order 21 and the
enquiry into the very same question between the same parties
was barred by the principle of res judicata.
Allowing the Appeal and disposing of the Special Leave
Petition,
HELD: 1. That the rule of res judicata applies to pro-
ceedings before the Industrial Tribunals is beyond question.
However, it is not that a question which is once decided can
never be re-agitated. There are certain classes of cases
like disputes regarding wage structure, service conditions
etc. which arise as circumstances change and new situations
arise which may not be barred by the rule of res-judicata.
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[834F; 836D-E]
Burn & Co., Calcutta v. Their Employees, [1956] S.C.R.
781; Workmen of the Straw Board Manufacturing Company Limit-
ed v. M/s Straw Board Manufacturing Company Limited, [1974]
3 S.C.R 703; Workmen of Balmer Lawrie and and Co. v. Balmer
Lawrie and Co. [1964] 5 S.C.R. 344 and Associated Cement
Staff Union and another v. Associated Cement Company and
others, [1964] Vol. 1 L.L.J. 12, followed.
2. The question whether the workmen concerned were
entitled to retrenchment compensation under s. 25F as on the
date of the Award and payment of back wages from October 31,
1971 to March 20, 1980 depends upon their right to be in
service from the date on which they ceased to work in the
factory upto the date of the Award. In the first reference
the workmen specifically prayed for payment of compensation
under s. 25 FFF on the ground that the factory had been
closed with effect from November 1, 1971 as per notice of
closure thereby accepting the position that they had ceased
to be the employees of the management on November 1, 1971.
That claim was resisted by the management on the footing
that the workmen had been discharged pursuant to the notice
of discharge dated October 30, 1971. Even though the first
Tribunal had observed that it had considered the question of
828
discharge as an "incidental question in view of the defence
taken by the Company" the case was decided only on the basis
of its finding that the workmen had been validly discharged
by the notice dated October 30, 1971. Though the said Tribu-
nal had observed "that there is nothing on the record to
show at this stage that the discharge order is not proper",
it did not mean that the validity of the discharge order
could be reagitated later on because the first Tribunal
further observed, "it would then be evident that all the
workers of the Company were discharged by the Company on
30th October, 1971 before the closure could become effec-
tive". [836F-H; 837A-B]
3. The one and the only ground on which the claim of the
workmen for compensation under s. 25 FFF was rejected was
that the workmen had ceased to be employees of the appellant
by reason of the notice of discharge dated October 30, 1971.
The validity of that notice of discharge was directly and
substantially in issue in the first reference. [837B-C]
4. Before the first Tribunal the workmen could have
urged that the discharge was invalid and, therefore, they
continued to be in service till November, 1, 1971 and hence
were entitled to compensation under s. 25 FFF. The case of
the workmen that they were entitled to compensation under s.
25 FFF was negatived by the first Tribunal holding that the
workmen had been validly discharged by the notice dated
October 30, 1971. The decision of the first Tribunal may be
erroneous and could have been set right if its Award had
been challenged but it was allowed to become final. The
decision of the first Tribunal was not one rendered without
jurisdiction nor can it be characterised as a nullity on any
ground known to law. [837D-F]
5. The question whether a person was or was not an
employee under a management after a particular date is one
which cannot be re-agitated in a subsequent case if it has
already been decided finally by an industrial Tribunal of
competent jurisdiction in an earlier case where the said
question necessarily arose for decision. [837F]
Buran & Co., Calcutta v. Their Employees, [1956] S.C.R.
781 and Workmen of the Straw Board Manufacturing Company
Limited v. M/s Straw Board Manufacturing Company Limited,
[1974] 3 S.C.R. 703, followed.
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6. The workmen did not claim before the first Tribunal
the relief of reinstatement or compensation under s. 25F
even though the factory had been reopened in 1972 before the
first Award was passed but only
829
confined their relief to compensation under s. 25 FFF. The
workmen could not have, therefore, been permitted to re-
agitate the said matter before the second Tribunal which
decided the second reference and to contend that they had
continued to be employees of the management on the ground
that the notice of discharge and the notice of closure were
both invalid. The second Tribunal should have rejected the
said contentions by holding that the validity of notice of
discharge dated October 30, 1971 was not open to question
before it. The second Tribunal was in error in re-examining
the issue relating to the validity of the notice of dis-
charge and in expressing a contrary view. The Award dated
March 20, 1980 passed by the second Tribunal is, therefore,
liable to be quashed. [837G-H; 838A-C]
[The Court appreciated and accepted the submission of
the appellant-management that it would give up its right to
claim the refund of Rs.48,00,000 lying with the Commissioner
of Labour even though the Award is set aside and the same
may be distributed ex-gratia amongst the 440 workmen in-
volved in the second reference equally and issued necessary
directions in that behalf. The Court also directed that the
amount of Rs.1,63,000 realised by the Collector shall be
refunded to the appellant.]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1463 of
1986 etc.
From the judgment and Order dated 26.3.1985 of the
Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 264 of 1985.
F.S. Nariman, A. Sande, S. Sukumaran, S.C. Sharma, Miss
Godbole and D.N. Mishra for the Appellant.
Dr. Y.S. Chitale, N.B. Shetye, P.H. Parekh, Dr. B.Y.
Chandrachud and P.K. Manohar for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J. This appeal by special leave is filed
against the judgment of the High Court of Bombay in Appeal
No. 264 of 1985 dated March 26, 1985 affirming the decision
of the learned Single Judge of that Court in Writ Petition
No. 867 of 1980 dated January 18, 1984.
The appellant is a company engaged in the business of manu-
830
facturing barrels and drums at its factory in Bombay. In the
year 1971 it had engaged about 1100 workmen--about 600
permanent workmen and 500 temporary workmen. It is alleged
that since 1968 the factory was working intermittently and
that the situation had worsened on account of non-availabil-
ity of raw materials and other compelling circumstances. By
1971 the company could see no other alternative but to close
down its factory and accordingly it issued a ’closure no-
tice’ dated September 30, 1971 which was duly displayed on
the Notice Board and that it also intimated all its workmen
that their services would stand terminated due to the clo-
sure of the factory with effect from November 1, 1971. The
workmen also were informed that they would be paid compensa-
tion under section 25 FFF of the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’). The appellant
alleges that soon after the display of the ’closure notice’
dated September 30, 1971 the workmen indulged in go slow
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tactics and various acts of sabotage rendering the running
of the factory and office virtually impossible. The whole
work was paralysed. It is alleged that during the month of
October there were meetings of workmen and an atmosphere of
terror, intimidation and vilification prevailed. On October
30, 1971 with the commencement of the first shift i.e.
practically on the eve of the effective date of the closure
on November 1, 1971 in terms of the ’closure notice a very
grave and tense atmosphere prevailed on the premises of the
factory of the appellant and by the afternoon all the work-
ers and members of the staff became more and more aggressive
and after threatening the managerial staff resorted to acts
of rioting, hooliganism and destroyed considerable part of
the appellant’s properties. The situation further aggravated
by the workmen of the second shift joining the said workmen
of the first shift. The workmen of the first shift continued
to remain in the precincts of the factory and squatted in
the passage leading to the office of the appellant where the
directors and senior officers were present and thus blocked
the passage. The union leaders addressed the workers using
inflammatory and defamatory language against the directors
and officers. At that stage the management requested the
assistance of the police. The police force arrived accord-
ingly. The Assistant Commissioner of Police S.N. Minocher
Homji appealed to the workers not to prevent the directors
and senior officers from leaving the factory. Ignoring the
said appeal, the union leaders "gheraoed" the directors and
senior officers and when the police tried to assist the
directors and senior officers to leave, the workers pounced
upon the police party and tried to attack them. When the
police tried to resist the workers became more violent and
threw missiles like nuts, grinding wheels, soda water bot-
tles, stones, brick bats etc. at the police and the
831
directors and officers including their cars and the police
van. One sharp missile struck the eye of the Assistant
Commissioner of Police and he lost his eye. About 26 Police
Officers and constables were injured. A grinding wheel
thrown at the car of the director would have caused fatal
injury but only the car was badly damaged. Machinery to the
tune of Rs.6,50,000 was damaged. The police then arrested
183 workers while the rest of them fled away.
In view of the grave law and order situation, the compa-
ny decided to terminate the services of the workmen with
immediate effect by its notice dated October 30, 1971 is-
sued’ under the Standing Orders applicable to the employees
of the appellant. The ’said notice was duly published on the
Notice Board as well as in the daily newspaper ’Navshakti’
and ’Free Press Journal’ both dated November 1, 1971.
Thereafter the workmen raised an industrial dispute and
the Government of Maharashtra by its order of reference
dated November 9, 1971 referred the dispute for adjudication
by the Industrial Tribunal of Shri G.K. Patankar. The terms
of reference were:
"(i) Whether the nature of closure
declared by the company by its notice dated
September 30, 1971 is for temporary period and
to defeat the pending claims of the workmen
before the various authorities.
(ii) Whether the said closure is
legal and bonafide, if not what further relief
be given to the workmen in addition to wages
for the period of enforced unemployment?
(iii) In case the closure is legal
and bonafide whether the workmen are entitled
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to compensation in accordance with the provi-
sions of section 25 F of the Industrial Dis-
putes Act, 1947 or under the provisions of
section 25 FFF."
0
The above reference was numbered as I.T. No. 325 of
1971. It is alleged by the management that the factory was
completely closed down from November 1, 1971 and there was
no production till May, 1972. During this period there used
to be meetings of the workmen and skirmishes near the facto-
ry. In may, 1972 the High Court of Delhi by its order dated
May 19, 1972 in a writ petition filed by the appellant
directed M/s Hindustan Steel Ltd. to resume forthwith supply
of steel sheets to the appellants. In view of this order the
appellant put up a
832
notice dated June 7, 1972 both on the Notice Board in the
office as welt as at the main gate of the factory advising
the ex-workers who desired to offer themselves for employ-
ment to intimate the same to the appellant. It also stated
that preference would be given to such of the exemployees
who may abide to work peacefully. This notice was followed
by two more such notices dated August 10, 1972 and October
13, 1972. Many workmen rejoined the factory.
Now, we shall revert to the reference made to the Tribu-
nal in I.T. No. 325 of 1971. In that case although various
pleas were taken by the parties in their pleadings at the
hearing it was the case of the union that the services of
the workers were terminated due to closure whereas the
company contended that they were discharged before the
alleged closure became operative (Page 147 of the Paper
Book). On behalf of the workmen it was contended "that the
services of the workers stand terminated due to closure and
although the Tribunal cannot go into the question of legali-
ty or illegality of the closure, yet when the services of
the workers are terminated due to closure they would be
entitled to compensation under section 25 FFF of the ID Act"
(P. 150 of the Paper Book). The management reiterated before
the Tribunal that it was not liable to pay compensation
under section 25 FFF of the Act as the workmen had been
discharged on October 30, 1971 under Standing Order 21. In
the above situation the Tribunal was required to decide
whether the workmen continued to be in employment till the
closure took effect on November, 1, 1971 or whether they
ceased to be the employees of the management on October 30,
1971 or October 31, 1971 by virtue of the notice of dis-
charge issued under Standing Order 21. On the above question
the Tribunal recorded its findings. We shall state them in
its own words. The Tribunal observed: "It would then follow
that the workers were discharged before their services could
be terminated due to closure. The workers, therefore, cannot
be said to have been retrenched due to closure in the exist-
ing circumstances" (Page 155 of the Paper Book). "The said
ruling is applicable and the workers’ services, therefore,
stand to have been terminated at least from 10.30 a.m. on
October 31, 1971 due to the order of discharge" (Page 155 of
the Paper Book). "The discharge order, therefore, in any
case became effective from 10.30 a.m. on October 31, 1971.
The workers, therefore (were) not in service of the company
thereafter and also were not in service at the time of the
alleged closure" (Page 159 of the Paper Book). "The fact
remains that the services of the workers were terminated
because they were validly discharged and hence as mentioned
above, they would not be entitled for any relief due to
closure even if it is assumed that there was closure
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833
as alleged" (underlining by us) (Page 159 of the Paper
Book). "The point as to whether the workers would have been
entitled to compensation under section 25 FFF ..........
The same was argued for the union by Shri Kamerkar and I
agree with the fact that if the services of the workers had
been terminated due to closure, then they would have been
entitled for compensation under section 25 FFF of the ID
Act, 1947. It has however already been found that the serv-
ices of the workers were not terminated due to closure and
hence question of compensation would not arise" (Page 162 of
the Paper Book). "It would then be evident that all the
workers of the company were discharged by the company on the
30th October, 1971 before the closure could become effective
(Page 164 of the Paper Book). "Since the termination of
services of the workers is not connected with the closure
the workers would not be. entitled to any compensation due
to closure" (Page 165 of the Paper Book). With these find-
ings the reference was rejected by the Industrial Tribunal
by its order dated October 30, 1974. The above Award made in
I.T. No. 325 of 1971 remained unchallenged and became final.
Thereafter at the instance of 440 workers only another
reference was made by the Government of Maharashtra on July
10, 1975 to the same Industrial Tribunal Shri G.K. Patankar
under section 10(1)(d) of the Act which was numbered as
reference (I.T.) 245 of 1975 and this time the points of
dispute referred were as follows:
"(1) All employees whose names are
mentioned at Annexure ’A’ be reinstated with
full back Wages and continuity of service,
restoring their status, rights and privileges
as if there was no break in service.
(2) These employees should be paid
one year’s wages as an interim relief till the
final disposal of the case."
In the Schedule to the reference the names of 440 work-
men, who were employees prior to their discharge on October
30, 1971/October 31, 1971 were included. They were workmen
on whom the earlier Award passed in I.T. No. 325 of 1971 was
binding. By the time the second reference, reference (I.T.)
245 of 1975, was disposed of the membership of the Tribunal
had changed and Shri M.A. Deshpande had been appointed in
the place of Shri G.K. Patankar. Shri M.A. Deshpande passed
his Award on March 20, 1980. He held that the workmen in-
cluded in the Schedule to the reference should be deemed to
have been retrenched on March 20, 1980 i.e. the date of the
Award, that they were entitled to the retrenchment compensa-
tion as laid down in section 25F of the Act and that they
were entitled to recover 75% of
834
their back wages from October 31, 1971 till March 20, 1980.
The above Award was passed by the Tribunal rejecting the
contention that the present case was barred by the principle
of res judicata and holding that the termination of the
services of workers under the notice of discharge dated
October 31, 1971 was invalid. It is not necessary to refer
to all other findings at this stage since the only point
which requires to be examined in this case is whether the
decision on the question of res judicata is correct or not.
Aggrieved by the latter Award dated March 20, 1980 the
management filed a writ petition before the High Court in
Writ Petition No. 867 of 1980. The learned Single Judge who
heard the said petition dismissed it on January 18, 1984 and
an appeal filed against his decision in Appeal No. 264 of
1985 was dismissed by the Division Bench of the High Court
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on March 26, 1980. This appeal by special leave is filed by
the management against the said decision of the High Court.
The principal question which is urged before us by the
management is that the latter Industrial Tribunal (Shri M.A.
Deshpande) was in error in treating the workmen in question
as being in the employment of the management until it made
the Award even though the first Tribunal (Shri G.K. Patan-
kar) had held that the workmen had been validly discharged
by the notice dated October 30, 1971 issued under Standing
Order 21 and the enquiry into the very same question between
the same parties was barred by the principle of res judica-
ta.
That the rule of res judicata applies to proceedings
before the Industrial Tribunals is beyond question. In Burn
& Co., Calcutta v. Their Employees, [1956] S.C.R. 781 at
pages 789-90 this Court has observed thus:
"Are we to hold that an award given on a
matter in controversy between the parties
after full hearing ceases to have any force if
either of them repudiates it under section
19(6), and that the Tribunal has no option,
when the matter is again referred to it for
adjudication, but to proceed to try it de
novo, traverse the entire ground once again,
and come to a fresh decision. That would be
contrary to the well recognised principle that
a decision once rendered by a competent au-
thority on a matter in issue between the
parties after a full enquiry should not be
permitted to be re-agitated. It is on this
principle that the rule of res judi-
835
cata enacted in section 11 of the Civil Proce-
dure Code is based. That section is, no doubt,
in terms inapplicable to the present matter,
but the principle underlying it, expressed in
the maxim "interest rei publicae ut sit finis
litium", is founded on sound public policy and
is of universal application. (vide Broom’s
Legal Maxims, Tenth Edition, page 218). "The
rule of res judicata is dictated" observed Sir
Lawrence Jenkins, C.J. in Sheoparsan Singh v.
Ramnandan Prasad Singh, [1916] L.R. 43 I.A.
91. "by a wisdom which is for all time". And
there are good reasons why this principle
should be applicable to decisions of Industri-
al Tribunals also. Legislation regulating the
relation between Capital and Labour has two
objects in view. It seeks to ensure to the
workmen who have not the capacity to treat
with capital on equal terms, fair returns for
their labour. It also seeks to prevent dis-
putes between employer and employees, so that
production might not be adversely affected and
the larger interests of the society might not
suffer. Now, if we are to hold that an adjudi-
cation loses its force when it is repudiated
under section 19(6) and that the whole contro-
versy is at large, then the result would be
that far from reconciling themselves to the
award and settling down to work it, either
party will treat it as a mere stage in the
prosecution of a prolonged struggle, and far
from bringing industrial peace, the awards
would turn out to be but truces giving the
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parties breathing time before resuming hostile
action with renewed vigour. On the other hand,
if we are to regard them as intended to have
long term operation and at the same time hold
that they are liable to be modified by change
in the circumstances on which they were based,
both the purposes of the legislature would be’
served. That is the view taken by the Tribu-
nals themselves in The Army & Navy Stores
Ltd., Bombay v. Their Workmen, [1951] 2 L.L.J.
31 and Ford Motor Co. of India Ltd. v. Their
Workmen.[1951] 2 L.L.J. 231., and we are of
opinion that they lay down the correct princi-
ple, and that there were no grounds for the
Appellate Tribunal for not following them."
Same view is expressed in Workmen of the Straw Board
Manufacturing Company Limited v. M/s Straw Board Manufactur-
ing Company Limited, [1974] 3 S.C.R. 703. This Court has
observed this at page 717:
836
"It is now well established that, although the
entire Civil Procedure Code is not applicable
to industrial adjudication, the principles of
res judicata laid down under section 11 of the
Code of Civil Procedure, however, are applica-
ble, wherever possible, for very good reasons.
This is so since multiplicity of litigation
and agitation and re-agitation of the same
dispute at issue between the same employer and
his employees will not be conducive to indus-
trial peace which is the principal object of
all labour legislation bearing on industrial
adjudication. But whether a matter in dispute
in a subsequent case and earlier been directly
and substantially in issue between the same
parties and the same had been heard and final-
ly decided by the Tribunal will be of perti-
nent consideration and will have to be deter-
mined before holding in a particular case that
the principles of res judicata are attracted".
We would hasten to add that the above observations do
not mean that a question which is once decided can never be
re-agitated. There are certain classes of cases like dis-
putes regarding wage structure, service conditions etc.
which arise as circumstances change and new situations arise
which may not be barred by the rule of res judicata. The
disputes which arose for consideration in Workmen of Balmer
Lawrie and Co. v. Balmer Lawrie and Co., [1964] 5 S.C.R. 344
and in Associated Cement Staff Union and another v. Associ-
ated Cement Company and others, [1964] Vol. 1 L..L.J. 12
belong to this category of cases.
In the instant case we are concerned with the question
whether the workmen concerned were entitled to retrenchment
compensation under section 25F of the Act as on the date of
the Award and payment Of back wages from October 31, 1971 to
March 20, 1980. This question depends upon their right to be
in service from the date on which they ceased to work in the
factory upto the date of the Award. In the first reference
I.T. No. 325 of 1971 the workmen specifically prayed for
payment of compensation under section 25FFF of the Act on
the ground that the factory had been closed with effect from
November 1, 1971 as per notice of closure thereby accepting
the position that they had at any rate ceased to be the
employees of the management of November 1,1971. That claim
was resisted by the management on the footing that the
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workmen had been discharged pursuant to the notice of dis-
charge dated October 30, 1971. Even though in the course of
its Award the 1st Tribunal had observed that it had consid-
ered the question of discharge as an "incidental question in
view of the defence
837
taken by the company" the case was decided only on the basis
of its finding that the workmen had been validly discharged
by the notice dated October 30, 1971. It is true that the
said Tribunal had observed "that there is nothing on the
record to show at this stage that the discharge order is not
proper." But it did not mean that the validity of the dis-
charge order could be re-agitated later on because in the
very next sentence the 1st Tribunal observed: "It would then
be evident that all the workers of the company were dis-
charged by the company on 30th October, 1971 before the
closure could become effective." The one and the only ground
on which the claim of the workmen for compensation under
section 25FFF of the Act was rejected was that the workmen
had ceased to be employees of the appellant by reason of the
notice of discharge dated October 30, 1971. The validity of
that notice of discharge was directly and substantially in
issue in the first reference. The above observations of the
1st Tribunal on which the learned Single Judge has relied,
therefore, do not carry the case of the workmen any further.
Before the 1st Tribunal it was open to the workmen to urge
that the discharge was invalid and, therefore, the workmen
continued to be in the service till November 1, 1971 and
hence were entitled to compensation under section 25FFF of
the Act. Their case that they were entitled to compensation
under section 25FFF of the Act was negatived by the 1st
Tribunal on its firm conclusion that the workmen had been
validly discharged by the notice dated October 30, 1971. It
may be that the decision of the 1st Tribunal was erroneous
and could have been set right if its Award had been chal-
lenged before Higher Courts. But it was allowed to become
final. The decision of the 1st Tribunal was not one rendered
without jurisdiction. Nor can it be characterised as a
nullity on any ground known to law. The question whether a
person was or was not an employee under a management after a
particular date is one which cannot be re-agitated in a
subsequent case in the circumstances which are referred to
above if it has already been decided finally by an Industri-
al Tribunal of competent jurisdiction in an earlier case
where the said question necessarily arose for decision. This
case falls within the scope of the decision in Burn & Co.’s
case (supra) and in the case of Straw Board Manufacturing
Co. Ltd. (supra). We have extracted above the several pas-
sages from the Award of the 1st Tribunal which leave no
scope for re-agitating the issue relating to the validity of
the notice of discharge dated October 30, 1971. It is sig-
nificant that the workmen did not claim before the 1st
Tribunal the relief of reinstatement or compensation under
section 25F of the Act even though the factory had been
reopened in 1972 before the first Award was passed but only
confined their relief to compensation under section 25FFF of
the Act. The workmen could
838
not have, therefore, been permitted to re-agitate the said
matter before the Second Tribunal which decided the second
reference and to contend that they had continued to be
employees of the management on the ground that the notice of
discharge and the notice of closure were both invalid. The
Second Tribunal should have rejected the said contentions by
holding that the validity of notice of discharge dated
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October 30, 1971 was not open to question before it. The
second Tribunal was in error in re-examining the issue
relating to the validity of the notice of discharge and in
expressing a contrary view. The Award dated March 20, 1980
passed by the second Tribunal Shri M.A. Deshpande is there-
fore liable to be quashed and it is accordingly quashed.
Before concluding we should refer to a concession made
by the management before us. When the writ petition filed
against the Award dated March 20, 1980 was pending before
the High Court, the workmen proceeded to enforce it under
section 33-C(i) of the Act before the Assistant Commissioner
of Labour. He issued a certificate for recovery of
Rs.96,98,492.48 against the management. When the Collector
took steps to recover the above amount, the appellant filed
a writ petition before the High Court in Writ Petition No.
2081 of 1983 against the order passed under section 33-C(1)
of the Act. That petition was dismissed in limine. An appeal
filed against that order before the Division Bench in Appeal
No. 394 of 1984 was dismissed on June 27, 1984. Against that
order the management filed a special leave petition before
this Court in Special leave Petition (Civil) No. 9337 of
1984. When that petition came up for hearing, this Court
issued notice on the petition and also issued an order or
stay of recovery of the amount for which a certificate had
been issued on August 27, 1984 subject to the appellant
depositing Rs.48,00,000 (Rupees Forty-eight lakhs) in in-
stalments on the dates specified in that order. The manage-
ment deposited the entire sum of Rs.48,00,000 though not on
the dates specified above and the said sum ultimately came
into the possession of the Commissioner of Labour, Commerce
Centre, Tardeo Bombay. Out of the said sum, some amount has
already been distributed amongst some of the workmen (or
their legal representatives, wherever the workman was dead)
at whose instance the second reference was made as per
interim order passed by this Court. The learned counsel for
the appellant-management has submitted before us that it
would give up its right to claim the refund of the said
amount of Rs.48,00,000 even though the Award is set aside
and that the said amount of Rs.48,00,000 (less expenses, if
any,) may be distributed ex-gratia amongst the 440 workmen
involved in the second reference
839
equally. He also prayed that the sum of Rs.1,63,000 recov-
ered separately by the Collector may be refunded to the
appellant. We very much appreciate the submission made on
behalf of the management. This brings substantial relief to
the workmen concerned since the sum of Rs.48,00,000 now
offered is equivalent to a little more than three times the
amount which the workmen would have got under section 25FFF
of the Act, if they had succeeded in the 1st Reference. It
is stated that under section 25FFF of the Act they would
have been entitled to get in 1971 about Rs.14,00,000 and
even if interest calculated at a reasonable rate till today
on that sum is added, the total amount payable would be less
than Rs.48,00,000. The amount of Rs.48,00,000 now offered
is, therefore, on the liberal side. We, therefore, direct
that the sum of Rs.48,00,000 which is with the Commissioner
of Labour shall be distributed equally amongst the 440
workmen. If any of the workmen or their legal representa-
tives have already received any amount out of it, that
amount shall be adjusted against the amount due to them. If
any workman has received the whole of the amount due to him
under this order then nothing more need be paid to him.
There appears to be some dispute about the identity of the
workmen. The Commissioner of Labour shall publish the names
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of all the 440 workmen in a local newspaper informing that
they would be entitled to the amounts to be distributed
under this order and he shall disburse the amount after
fully satisfying himself about the identify of the workmen
as ordered by this Court on March 13, 1986 in C.M.P. No.
7068 of 1986. He shall meet the cost of publication in the
newspaper from the amount available with him and only the
balance shall be equally distributed as directed above. If
the entire amount is not distributed as per this order on
account of the non-availability of the concerned workmen,
the amount shall not be refunded to the management. The
Commissioner of Labour shall seek directions of this Court
as to how the balance of the amount should be appropriated.
In any event the management shall not get back any part of
it. This order is passed in full settlement of all the
claims of all the workers who were employed before October
30, 1971. Nobody else shall be permitted to raise any dis-
pute of this kind. The amount of Rs.1,63,000 realised by the
Collector shall, however, be refunded to the appellant.
The appeal is accordingly allowed and the Award dated
March 20, 1980 in reference (I.T.) 245 of 1975, the judgment
of the Single Judge and of the Division Bench of the High
Court are set aside subject to the above directions. No
costs.
840
Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 9337 of 1984 referred
to above is also disposed of by this judgment. It is, howev-
er, evident that the recovery proceedings pursuant to the
certificate issued by the Assistant Commissioner of Labour
cannot be proceeded with since the Award itself has been
quashed by this judgment.
A.P.J. Appeal
allowed.
841