Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AHMEDABAD MFG. & CALICO PTG. CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAM TAHEL RAMNAND & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/04/1972
BENCH:
DUA, I.D.
BENCH:
DUA, I.D.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 1598 1973 SCR (1) 185
1972 SCC (1) 898
CITATOR INFO :
F 1973 SC2297 (9)
RF 1976 SC1207 (72)
RF 1986 SC1272 (97,99,100,102)
ACT:
Bombay Industrial Relations Act 11 of 1947, s. 3(13) and
(14)Malis employed under a contractor to look after garden
adjacent to a factory whether ’employees’ of factory-
Maintenance of garden whether work ordinarily Part of
undertaking considerations of social justice, relevancy of-
Conistitution of India, Art. 227-Jurisdiction of High Court
under Art. 133(1)(c)-Certificate-High Court must give
reason,
HEADNOTE:
The respondents were malis who under a contractor looked
after the maintenance of a garden adjacent to but outside
the Premises of the appellant company which produced
textiles. In an application before the Labour Court the
respondents claimed that they were employees of the company
within the meaning of s. 3(13) of the Bombay Industrial
Relations Act 11 of 1947 and therefore entitled to dearness
allowance. The Labour Court rejected the claim on the
ground that the respondents worked under a contractor. On
appeal the Industrial Court held that the company was under
no legal obligation to maintain the garden and therefore the
respondents did not fall within the definition of employee.
The High Court in a petition under Art. 227 of the
Constitution held that statutory obligation was not
necessary condition of an activity being considercd a part
of the ordinary work of an undertaking but what had to be
seen was whether the activity was reasonably attributable to
the undertaking in its usual and ordinary course in the
conduct of the business or undertaking. Since the appellant
company contended before the High Court for the first time
that the garden area in question did not pertain only to the
appellant but to several other employers the High Court
remanded the matter to the Industrial Court for a fresh
decision in the light of the observations of High Court.
The appellant company in appeal by certificate contended
that the High Court had exceeded its jurisdiction under Art.
227 of the Constitution, that a employed through an
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independent contractor could not be an employee and that
maintenance of a garden could not be considered to be work
which was ordinarily Li part of the undertaking within the
meaning of s. 3(14) of the Act. The respondents raised a
preliminary objection that the order of the High Court was
not a. ’final order’ and, therefore, the certificate granted
by the High Court under Art. 133 was incompetent.
HELD : (i) in this case Art. 227 appears to have been used
as a substitute for Art. 226 for quashing the orders of the
subordinate tribunals. If, therefore, while disposing of
the petition under Art. 227 theHigh Court finally settles
some points then to that extent the impugned order may be
considered to, operate as a final order just as an order
under Art. 226 would. [194F]
(ii) The mere grant of a certificate would not preclude
this Court from determining whether the conditions pre-
requisite for the grant are satisfied. it is, therefore,
always desirable and expedient for the High Court to give
its reasons for granting the certificate. That would assist
this Court better in appreciating if such conditions are
satisfied. [192H] LI208SupCII72
186
Waryam Singh v. Amar Nath, [1954] S.C.R. 566, Tarapur & Co.
v. Mls. Y/O Tractors Export, [1969] 2 S.C.R. 699, Asbestos
Cement Ltd. v. Savarkar, A.I.R. 1971 S.C. 100, Ramesh v.
Ganda Lal, A.I.R. 1966 S.C. 1445 at 1449 and Surinder Nath
v. Stiphen (P) Ltd., [1966] 3 S.C.R. 458, referred to.
(iii) As held by this Court in J.K. Cotton Spg. and Wvg.
Mills an employee engaged in any work or operation which is
incidentally connected with main industry is a workman if
other requirements of s. 2(s) of the Industrial Disputes Act
14 of 1947, are satisfied. The bunglows and’ gardens on
which the malis in that ease worked were a kind of amenity
supplied by the mills to its officers and on this reasoning
the malls were heldp to be engaged in operations
incidentally connected with the main industry carried on by
the employer. The High Court rightly relied on that
decision in arriving at its conclusion in the present case
that the workers in order to come within the definition of
’employee’ need not necessarily be directly connected with
the manufacture of textile fabrics. The problem has to be
looked at from the considerations of social justice which
has become an integral part of our industrial law. [198F]
J. K. Cotton Spg. & Wvg. Mills Co. Ltd. v. Labour
Appellate Tribunal of India, [1964] 3 S.C.R. 724, applied.
Thyagaraja Chettiar v. Employees State Insurance Corporation
[1963] It L.L.J. 207; Kesar Lal Narsing Bhai V. Calico
Printing Ltd., 1955 Industrial Court Reporter, 1105, Hakim
Singh v. J.C.Mills Ltd., 1963 M.P.L.J. 714, Messrs Godavari
Sugar Mills Ltd. v. D. K. Worlikar. [1960] 3 S.C.R. 350,
Begibhai M. , Chokshi v. Ahmedabad Manufacturing & Calico
Printing Co. Ltd., [1958] 11 L.L.J. 126, New India Tannis v.
Aurora Singh Moibi, A.I.R. 1947 Cal. 613, S. M. Ghose v.
National Sheet & Metal Works Lid., A.I.R. 1950 Cal. 548 and
Basti Sugar Mills Ltd. v . Ramjagar, [1964] 2 S.C.R. 838,
referred to.
(iv) The High Court had remanded the case to the industrial
Court because the appellant’s contention that the garden
pertained to several ,other offices and buildings in the
area and not to the appellant’s factory alone, had not began
considered by the industrial Court. There was no cogent
ground why this matter should be decided by this Court and
not by the Industrial Court. The order of the High Court
was legally correct and it was within its authority under
Art. 227 to quash the decisions of the Labour Court and the
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Industrial Court which were based on misconception of the
legal position. [200A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1044 of 1968.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated October 3, 1967 of
the Gujarat High Court in Special Civil Application No. 380
of 1965.
S. T. Desai, V. B. Patel and I. N. Shroff, for the
appellant.
S. S Shukla, for respondents Nos. 1 to 9.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Dua, J.-This appeal has been presented to this Court by the
Ahmedabad Manufacturing & Calico Printing Co., Ltd.,
pursuant to the certificate granted by the Gujarat High
Court under Art.
187
133(1)(c) of the Constitution. The Gujarat High Court had,
on being approached by the respondents under Art. 227 of the
Constitution, quashed and set aside the order of the
Industrial Court, Gujarat dated February 5, 1964 which had
affirmed the order of the Second Labour Court, Ahmedabad
dated August 9, 1963, and after setting aside that order had
directed the Industrial, Court to decide the matter afresh
in the light of the observations made by the High Court in
the impugned order.
The respondents in this Court had applied to the Labour
Court under s. 79 of the Bombay Industrial Relations Act,
No. XI of 1947 (hereinafter called the Act) in December,
1962 complaining that the appellant company was liable to
pay to the respondents (applicants before the Labour Court)
dearness allowance every month according to the Dearness
Allowance Award made by the Industrial Court but the same
had not been paid for the month of September, 1962 which was
distributed in October, 1962. It was alleged that from
October, 1962 the Company had been committing breach of the
Dearness Allowance Award of the Industrial Court. In that
application the present respondents had based their claim on
the following averments in para 3:
"..the applicants are being paid Rs. 68 as
basic pay by the opponent. The maintenance of
the garden is the legal responsibility of the
opponent and for the health, welfare,
recreation of the employees working in the
several departments and for the decency of the
adjacent offices the opponents are maintaining
it. The applicants are doing the entire work
in respect thereof."
In the written statement the appellant company raised
several pleas in opposing that application. The pleas which
were pressed in the Second Labour Court and in the
Industrial Court and which are now strongly pressed before
us are contained in paras 3. 8 and 10 which so far as
relevant may be reproduced:
3. That the applicants not being in the
employment of the opponent they have no locus
standi to make an approach or to file this
application.
8. That the opponent is not the employer of
the applicants and the applicants are not its
employees within the meanings of those words
in the Act and as such the application is
misconceived and not legally tenable.
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10. With respect to the allegations and
averments made in paras 1 to 4 of the
application it is denied that the applicants
are the employees of the opponent within the
meaning of that term of the Act as alleged or
that
188
they are entitled to the benefits of the
dearness allowance as alleged or otherwise.
The true fact is that the applicants are not
employed in any work which is ordinarily a
part of the undertaking and as such they are
not the employees within the definition of
that word in the Act. The applicants are
employed as coolies by a gardening contractor
Messrs Dbiraj Painters and they are paid by
the said contractor. The said garden lands
include a large area of offices of some other
concerns, a Government Post Office and a
Museum which are open to the public, some
quarters for workers as well as assistants and
officers a hospital. It is for the garden of
the area which comprises these buildings and
the area round caustic plant factory as well
as the field in Dani Limda that this agreement
was entered into with the contractor for
keeping the trees and plants in proper trim.
Hence the work which they are performing has
been held to be not ordinarily a part of the
undertaking and as such the application is
wholly misconceived and not legally tenable
and is clearly barred by res judicata."
The Second Labour Court dismissed the respondent’s appli-
cations. In that Court’s view the real question in issue
was whether the appellants did any work which is ordinary
part of the undertaking. The plea of res judicata based on
the decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of India,
Bombay (Appeal No. 135 of 1954 reported in 1955 I.C.R. 1105)
was negatived but it was observed that the principle laid
down in the earlier case would govern the present case as
well. After quoting the following passage from the earlier
case
"Now the Industrial Court was correct in
holding that the agreement applied to the area
which was outside the factory proper. But to
our mind the principle question involved is
whether the maintenance of trees and plants
can be said to be work which is ordinarily
part of the undertaking. In another case,
this Tribunal had decided that a ration shop
was a part of the work which is ordinarily a
part of the, undertaking, but the maintenance
of these trees and plants stands on a
different footing and can hardly be regarged
as part of the work of this particular
undertaking which in fact is concerned with
the production of cloth. We can see no
intrinsic connection between the maintenance
of the trees and plants and the work which is
ordinary part of the undertaking."
the Labour Court observed that the "applicants’ gardeners or
malis who are contractor’s employees cannot thus invoke the
statutory definition of the employer".
189
On appeal by the aggrieved malis the Industrial Court in the
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course of its judgment observed that there was no dispute
that the appellants in that court had been working as
gardeners or garden mazdoors and had been employed through a
contractor and not directly by the mill. After referring to
the decision of this Court in J.K. Cotton Spg. & Wvg. Mills
Co. Ltd., v. Labour Appellate Tribunal of India (1) and to
the decision of the Madras High Court in Thyagaraja Chettiar
v. Employees State Insurance Corporation(’-’) the,
Industrial, Court observed :
"Shri Jyotikar had urged that the term ’mill
premises’ as interpreted by the courts would
include even Places around the factory and so
the question whether the appellants were
working in one compound or the other would not
be material. But it is not necessary to
consider this contention because looking to
the nature of the work done by the appellants
and to the fact that they were .not directly
employed by the employer but through a
contractor, it has been held that they cannot
be covered within the scope of section 3(13).
Shri Jyotikar had also argued that under the
Standing Orders, the term ’operative’has been
defined to include persons employed through
contractor; but the Standing Orders would
apply to a particular person only if he is an
employee as defined under the Bombay
Industrial Relations Act. The definition
under the Standing Orders cannot; therefore.
be of any help in considering whether a person
is covered within the scope of the Bombay
Industrial Relations Act or not. Shri
Jyotikar had then urged that in view of the
fact that matters concerning health, safety
and welfare of the employees are included in
Item 3 of Schedule III, maintenance of gardens
would be an ordinary part of the work of the
undertaking. It is true that maintenance of
gardens may be a matter concerning health or
welfare of the employees, but there is no,
legal obligation to maintain such gardens.
Had any such obligation been created under any
provision of law, the position might have been
as urged by Shri Jyotikar; but, as the facts
stand at present, it is not mandatory on a
management of a cotton textile undertaking to
maintain any garden and hence the work of
maintenance of a garden cannot be said to be a
work which is a part of the ordinary work of a
cotton textile mill.
It is clear from the above that the appellants cannot be
held to be employees as, defined under the Bombay Industrial
Relations Act and so the Labour Court was right in
dismissing the a plication."
(1) [1964] 3 S.Ck.-24. (2) [1963] II
L.L.J. 207.
190
The High Court, on being approached by the aggreived malis
tinder Art. 227 of the Constitution, went into the matter at
considerable, length and after copiously quoting from the
decision in the case of J. K. Cotton Spg. & Wvg. Mills case
(supra) the High Court found it difficult to agree with the
reasoning of the Industrial Court that the work of
maintaining the garden was not a part of the ordinary work
of a cotton textile mtill. Earlier in the course of its
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judgment the High Court, after referring to the definitions
of the term "employee" in s. 3(13) and of the word
"industry" in
s. 3(19) of the Act had observed :
". . . The definition of the term ’industry’
is thus wide enough to include a workman
employed in any calling, service, employment,
handicraft, or industrial occupation or
avocation of employees and it would not be
correct to assume that simply because a
workman happened to be engaged as a gardener,
he would not fall within the definition of the
term ’employee’ as given in the Bombay
Industrial Relations Act. A garden when
attached to a mill is an amenity that is
provided to the workers employed in the mill
and it is not necessary that an amenity should
arise from a statutory requirement or
obligation and it hardly makes any difference
if the garden was provided for voluntarily or
under a statutory obligation. The activities
in an undertaking suck as a textile mill are
not confined purely to factory work of
manufacturing textile fabric within the mill
premises, but various other incidental and
connected institutions such as hospital, a
canteen, a playground and a garden might be
maintained by the mill to provide amenities to
its workers and these activities could be
considered as the activities made in relation
to and in the usual course of conducting the
affairs of the mill. Not merely within the
turning of the wheels of the machine which, no
doubt, is directly responsible for the
production of the article for which the plant
of the particular industry was installed and
not merely in utilising the power to move the
machine to action, the field of activities of
the undertaking is restricted and exhausted,
but there are many more varieties though
allied and complementary activities which are
being carried on by the management and which
help, though in an indirect manner, in creat-
ing a healthy atmosphere of well being and
cooperation amongst the workers by providing
essential facilities such as means for
treating of their ailments, for general
entertainment and care not only of the workers
but of the children who are left unattended
while their parents are engaged in their work
in the factory. While, there-
191
fore, construing the words ’in the course of’
and ’ordinarily a part of the undertaking’ we
must give them a meaning which is natural and
consistent with the working of a factory as it
exists in the present times and while doing
so, our approach should not be theoretical and
academic but pragmatic and practical. The
activities that are usually conducted as a
part of an undertaking by which not only
workers participate in the actual running of
the machinery but also activities which
conduce to the smooth working of the plant as
a whole must be considered to fall within the
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ambit of the definition. We are, therefore,
unable to agree with the contention of Mr.
Patel that the application of the Act must be
restricted to only those workers who are
directly engaged in the manufacture of
textile
fabric."
While commenting on the order of the Industrial Court where
it is stated that the maintenance of gardens though a matter
concerning health or welfare of the employees was not
mandatory on the management of a cotton textile mill
undertaking and hence the work of maintenance of a garden
could not be said to be part of the ordinary work of such
mill, the High Court observed that
" an activity undertaken as a part of the
undertaking and in the course of its conduct
may be undertaken voluntarily or as a result
of a statutory duty or obligation but what is
necessary is that the activity must reasonably
be attributable to the undertaking in its,
usual and ordinary course in the conduct of
the business or undertaking, and if that be so
then such an activity could be considered as
the activity of a, worker who would fall
within the definition of employee within s.
3(13) of the Act."
It was, however, contended in the High Court on behalf of
the present appellant that the garden in which the present
respondents had been working as gardeners was not situated
within the premises of the mill and that the garden area
included office of some other concerns, a Government post
office and a museum which was open to the public and, some
quarters for workers as well as assistance and officers of
the hospital. The garden area, according to Mr. Patel who
reprented the present appellants in the High Court comprised
of the buildings just mentioned and the area round the
caustic plant factory as well as the field at Dami Limda in
respect of which an agreement had been entered into with the
contractor for keeping the trees and plants in proper trim.
This contention having not been considered by the
192
Industrial Court the High Court, as already observed, sent
the case back to the Industrial Court for a fresh decision
in the light of the observations of the High Court.
In this Court Shri Desai on behalf of appellants contended
that the High Court, while exercising its jurisdiction under
Art. 227 of the Constitution, was not =powered to reverse
the findings of the Industrial Court and the Labour Court
because under that Article it could not perform the
functions of an appellate or a revisional court. On the
merits also he contended that having regard to S. 2(3) of
the Act read with the notification dated May 30, 1939, the
Act only applied to cotton spinning and cotton weaving
department, mechanics shops, dyeing and bleaching and
printing departments and offices of the appellant, and to no
other activities of the appellant company. The counsel
further contended that cis. (13) and 14(e) of s. 3 of the
Act have to be road together and when so read they could not
take within their fold a person employed by an independent
contractor because such a person could by no means be
considered as an employee of the appellant company unless
the work done by him can be described as "ordinarily part of
the textile undertaking". While developing this point the
learned counsel said that the word "ordinarily" occurring in
the context "work which is ordinarily a part of the
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undertaking" in s. 3 (14) (e) conveys the idea that the work
should be in the line or in the regular or norm* course of
the textile undertaking or any part of it. The work ’it was
explained, should be such as, in the regular or normal
course, is part and parcel of the textile undertaking and
not merely having some sort of incidental connection with
the same. The work of gardening, added the counsel, cannot
be considered to have done in "execution" of any "work"
which is "ordinarily" part of the textile undertaking.
Before considering these points it would not be out of place
to mention that in the certificate of fitness granted by
the High Court there is no indication about the precise
point or points which induced the High Court to certify the
case to be fit for appeal under cl.(c) of Art. 133(1). This
clause though couched in general terms is intended to apply
to special cases in which the question raised is of such
great public or private importance as deserves appropriately
to be authoritatively settled by this Court. This clause of
course does not in terms say so but it has always been so
construed. The question whether or not to certify a given
case to be fit for appeal under this clause is a matter for
the judicial discretion of the High Court. The word
"certify" used in this clause suggests that the High Court
is expected to apply its mind before certifying the case to
be fit for appeal. The mere grant of a certificate would,
however, not preclude this Court from determining whether
the conditions pre-requisite for the grant are
193
satisfied. It is, therefore, always desirable and expedient
for the High Court to give its reasons for granting the
certificate. That would assist this Court better in
appreciating if the conditions pre-requisite are satisfied.
In the application for certificate in the present case a
number of grounds were stated for securing it. We are
unable to find from the certificate as to which ground was
considered by the High Court to be important enough to
justify the certificate.
Now, in this case the respondents in fact questioned before
us the competence of the High Court to grant the certificate
of fitness but the objection raised by Shri Shukla was based
only on the Submission that Art 133 is inapplicable because
the impugned order is not a final order, We may first deal
with this preliminary objection.
Article 227 of the Constitution no doubt does not confer on
the High Court power similar to that of an ordinary court of
appeal. The material part of this Article substantially
reproduces the provisions of s. 107 of the Government of
India Act, 1915 except that the power of superintendence has
been extended by this Article to Tribunals as well. Section
107 according to preponderance of judicial opinion clothed
the High Courts with a power of judicial superintendence
apart from and independently of the provisions of the other
laws conferring on them revisional jurisdiction The power
under Art. 227 of the Constitution is intended to be used
sparingly and only in appropriate cases, for the purpose of
keeping the subordinate courts and tribunals within the
bounds of their authority and, not for correcting mere
errors: see Naryan Singh v. A mar Nath (1). At this stage
we consider it proper to refer to some of the judicial
pronouncements by this Court with regard to the right of
appeal under Art. 133 from interlocutary orders. In Tarapur
& Co. v. M/s. V/O Tractors Export(2) it was observed that
an order of the High Court in appeal which does not dispose
of the suit but merely refuses to grant an interim
injunction is not a final order within the meaning of Art.
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133 even though as a result thereof the pending suit as
framed may become infructuous requiring amendment of the
plant. On the other hand, an order dismissing a writ
petition challenging industrial award which disposes of only
one of the items of a charter of demands by the workmen,
leaving the rest of the items to be adjudicated by a
subsequent award was held in Asbestos Cement Ltd. v.
Savarkar(3) to be a final order in a civil proceeding and,
therefore, appealable under Art. 133. Under Art. 226 of the
Constitution it may in this connection be pointed out the
High Court does not bear an appeal or a revision : that
court is moved to interfere after
(2) [1969] 2 S.C.R. 699.
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 565.
(3) A.I.R. 1971 S.C. 100.
194
bringing before itself the, record of a case decided by or
pending before a court, a tribunal or an authority, within
its jurisdiction. A decision in the exercise of this
extraordinary jurisdiction which finally disposes of the
proceedings is a final order, in an original proceeding. An
appeal or a revision on the other hand is generally.
considered to be a continuation of the original suit or
proceeding and in a case, where the High Court deals with an
appeal or a revision, finality for the purpose of Art. 133
must attach to the whole of the matter so that after the
decision of the High Court the matter is not a live one.,
(see Ramesh v. Ganda Lal(1)
The impugned order before us was made by the Gujarat High
Court on an application under Art. 227 of the Constitution,
the prayer in that application being, to remove the record
of the case of the High Court "and after examining the same"
(a) to quash the order and judgment of respondent no. 2 at
Annexure ’B’ and (b), to direct respondent no. 2 to dispose
of the appeal of the petitioner according to law." Now, in
some, High Courts Art. 227 is utilised for the purpose of
securing relief by way of writs or directions in the nature
of writs more accurately contemplated by Art. 226 of the
Constitution : (Ramesh v. Ganda Lal(1) and in some this
Article is invoked for getting orders of tribunals revised
just as s. 115, C.P.C. is utilised for revision of orders of
subordinate courts : (Surinder Nath v. Stiphen ( 2 ) (P)
Ltd. As such power under Art. 227 may also be exercised suo
motu. In the present case Art. 227 appears to us to have
been used in effect as a substitute for Art. 226 for seeking
a direction in nature of a writ for quashing the orders of
the subordinate tribunals. At least it appears that the
proceeding before the High Court was so treated by all
concerned. We should, however, not be understood to express
our approval of the use of Art. 227 for seeking relief by
way of writs or directions in the nature of writs for which
purpose Art. 226 is expressly and in precise language
designed. From that point of view if otherwise the High
Court, while disposing of a petition under Art. 227, finally
settles some points affecting the rights of the parties then
to that extent the impunged order may be considered to
operate as a final order just as an order made under Art.
226 would. As to whether the High Court has jurisdiction to
make the impugned order while exercising its power under
Art. 227 will depend on our conclusion when considering the
merits of the case.
Coming to the merits of the case we should like first to
reproduce the notification dated May 30, 1939 and the
definitions of the word "employee" and "employer" so far as
relevant for our purpose as contained in the Act. The
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notification reads :
(1) A.T.R. 1966 S.C. 1445 at 1449.
(1) [1966] 3 S.C. R. 458.
195
"BOMBAY CASTEL, 30th May, 1939
BOMBAY INDUSTRIAL DISPUTES ACT, 1939
No. 2847/34-A.-In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-
section (3) of Section 2 of the Bombay Industrial Disputes
Act, 1938 (Bom. XXV of 1938), and in supersession of
Government Notification in the Political and Service
Department No. 2847/34-2 dated the 14th March, 1939, the
Government of Bombay is pleased to direct that the
provisions of the Act which have been extended to the
Province of Bombay under Government Notification in the
Political and Services Department No. 2847/34-1, dated the
14th March, 1939, shall apply to the cotton Textile Industry
as specified below:--
(a) All concerns using power and employing
twenty or more workers which are engaged in
cotton spinning;
(b) all concerns using power and employing
twenty or more workers which are engaged in
cotton weaving with or without an admixture of
silk, rayon, artificial silk or one or more of
these;
(c) all mechanics shops attached to and (all
dyeing bleaching and printing departments,
whether situated within or outside the
precincts, of and forming integral part of)
the concerns falling under clause (a) or (b).
(d) All the offices, whether situated within
or outside the precincts of the concerns
falling under clause
(a) or (b)."
"Employee" and "employer" so far as relevant
for our purpose ,ire defined as
"3. In this Act unless there is anything
repugnant in the subject or context-
(13) ’employee’ means any person employed to
do any skilled or unskilled work for hire or
reward in any industry, and includes-
(a) a person employed by a contractor to do
any work for him in the execution of a
contract with an employer within the meaning
of sub-clause
(e) of clause (14);
(14) ’employer’ includes-
(e) where the owner of any undertaking in the
course
of or for the purpose of conducting the
undertaking
196
contracts with any person for the execution by
or under the contractor of the whole or any
part of any work which is ordinarily part of
the undertaking, the owner of the
undertaking."
Shri Desai on behalf of the appellant submitted that the
respondents in this Court who were gardeners employed by a
contractor cannot fall within the definition of the word
employee as contained in s. 14(e) of the Act. He further
contended that the notification issued under the Act
extending its applicability to the textile undertaking does
not take within its fold the respondents who are not
directly connected with any part of the activity with which
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the appellant textile industry is directly concerned. In
support of his contention he relied on some decided cases.
The first decision to which our attention was drawn is
reported as Kesar Lal Narsing Bhai v. Mls. Calico Printing
Ltd.(1). This is a decision by the Labour Appellate Tribunal
of India, Bombay and the present appellant was a respondent
in that case. There, the gardeners who used to work outside
the gate of the factory and had been employed through a
contractor had applied under s. 78(1 ) (A) (c) of the Act
for a declaration from the first Labour Court that the
mill’s failure to pay wages and Dearness Allowance in
-accordance with the Standardisation Award amounted to an
illegal change. The Labour Court had granted their
application but the Industrial Court on appeal had reversed
that decision. The employees took the matter on further
appeal to the Appellate Tribunal but without success. In
that case the employees had wrongly asserted in their
applications that they were direct employees of the mills in
question and the relief claimed was based on this erroneous
assertion. The Standardisation Award by which the company
was bound, it is pertinent to point out, was given only in
respect of those persons who had been employed directly for
the purpose of looking after the garden of, the factory
proper. it would thus be obvious that the employees’ claim
there was liable to fail on the short ground that they were
not direct employees as wrongly claimed by them and that the
relief under the award was confined to direct employees
only. But this apart, it is further clear from the decision
of the Appellate Tribunal that under the agreement with the
contractor there the latter had been employed for the
purpose of looking after the garden not within the factory
compound proper but beyond it. Indeed, the contractor’s
obligation to look after the garden extended further beyond
even that area. It is in this context and background that
the Appellate Tribunal observed in the concluding part of
its order that "statutory definition of an employee in our
opinion cannot be invoked by a gardener who has been
employed through a contractor for the work as undertaken
here." (emphasis supplied). This decision,
(1) 1955 Industrial Court Reporter 1105.
197
therefore, does not assist us on the precise question
raised. The next decision relied upon by Mr. Desai is
reported as Hakim Singh v. J. C. Mills Ltd.(1). In that case
the mills had employed a contractor to supply packing
material. The contractor because of the nature, of his work
was given a room in the mills premises for preparing a
particular packing material. An employee of the contractor
applied to the Industrial Court for relief under the pro-
visions of the Act. It was held that he could not be deemed
to be an employee of the mills because the work which was
carried on by the employer of the petitioner was not a part
of the industrial undertaking. While commenting on the
scope of s. 3 (13) (a) and s. 14(e) of the Act which define
the words "employee" and " employer", it was said that for
the purpose of these provisions, there must be an industrial
undertaking owned by somebody’ some work, which is ordinary
part of the undertaking must have been entrusted by the
owner to the contractor: that contractor must be employed an
employee’ that employee can then by the combined operation
of these provisions insist upon being treated as employee of
the owner himself, the obvious idea behind this scheme being
that the owner of an industrial undertaking should not be
allowed to evade responsibilities towards his employees
which are imposed by the labour laws, by entrusting a part
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or whole of the undertaking to a contractor. The actual
decision of this case is on different facts and is clearly
not of much help though the observations regarding the
purpose of the provisions of the definitions admit of no
controversy. Reliance was further placed by Shri Desai on
the decision of this Court in Messrs Godavari Sugar Mills
Ltd. v. D. K. Worlikar(2) where a notification applicable to
the manufacture of sugar and its by-products was held not to
cover the head-office of the sugar mills at Bombay and the
employees engaged there, when the head-office was Separated
from the factories by, hundreds of miles. The notification
was held not to cover sugar industry as such Shri Desai also
sought support from Begibhai M. Chokshi v. Ahmedabad
Manufacturing & Calico Printing Co. Ltd. (3 ) (a decision of
the Industrial Court, Bombay) which dealt with running of a
retail shop; New India Tannis v. Aurora Singh Moibi ( 4 ) a
case of doing repairs to the machinery of the factory and
from S. M. Ghose v. National Street & Metal Works Ltd.(5) a
case of an employee of a contractor engaged to paint the
premises. Both the Calcutta. decisions are under the
Workmen’s Compensation Act.
(1) [1963] M.P.L.J.714. (2) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 350. (3) (1958)
11 L.L.J. 126- (4) A.I.R. 1947 Cal. 613.
(5) A.t.R. 1950 Cal. 548-
198
The respondents’ learned counsel, apart from urging that the
High Court has sent the case back for deciding the nature of
work done by the malis in this case and that, there are, tie
appellant cannot appropriately ask this Court to determine
these questions which are awaiting decision by the
Industrial Court, also relied on Basti Sugar Mills Ltd. v.
Ramjagar(1) and on J. K. Colton Spg. & W. v. Mills (supra).
In the former case the respondents there employed by a
contractor to remove press and from the sugar factory were
held to be workmen employed by the factory because removing
press. mud was considered ordinarily to be a part of the
sugar industry. The latter case is an authority for the
proposition that an employee engaged in any work or
operation which is incidentally connected with the main
industry is a workman if other requirements of s. 2(s) of
the Industrial Disputes Act, 14 of 1947 ,are satisfied and
that the malis in that case were workers within the meaning
of s. 2 of U.P. Industrial Disputes Act, 28 of 1947. The
bungalows and gardens on which the malis in that case worked
were a kind of amenity supplied by the mills to its officers
and on this, reasoning the malis were held to be engaged in
operations incidentally connectd with the main industry
carried on by the employer. It was by relying on the ratio
of this decision that the High Court in the present case
came to the conclusion that the workers in order to come
within the definition of "employee" need not necessarily be
directly connected with the manufacture of textile fabrics.
This decision. is binding on us and indeed Shri Desai also
fairly accepted its ratio. He only contended that the malis
employed by a contractor unless, directly connected with the
textile operations cannot get the benefit of this decision.
In our view on the conclusions of the High Court which have
not been shown to be erroneous justifying interference it is
not possible to reverse its decision on the basis of the
abstract submission advanced by Shri Desai. As observed in
J. K. Cotton Spg. & Wvg. Mills case (supra) the problem has
to be looked at from the considerations of social justice
which has become an integral part of our industrial law.
This concept of social justice has a comprehensive sweep and
it is neither pedantic nor one-sided but, is founded on
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socioeconomic equality. It demands a realistic and
pragmatic approach for resolving the controversy between
capital and labour by weighing it on an even scale with the
consciousness that industrial operations in modem times have
become complex and complicated and for the efficient and
successful functioning of an industry various amenities for
those working in it are deemed as essential for a peaceful
and healthy atmosphere. The High Court has left open for
the decision by the Industrial Court the question as to the
nature of the work done by the
(1) [1964]2 S.C.R. 838.
199
respondents for determining whether or not, in view of the
fact that they are employed through a contractor and not
directly, their case falls within s. 3(13). This is what
the High Court has said
"It was urged by Mr. Patel that the garden in which the
petitioners were working as gardeners was not situated
within the premises of the mill and that the garden area
included a large area of offices of some other concerns, a
Government Post Office and Museum which were open to public
and some quarters for workers as well as assistants and
officers of a hospital. It was also urged by Mr. Patel that
the garden area comprised of the above buildings and the
area round the caustic plant factory as well as the field at
Dani Limda in respect of which an agreement was entered into
with the contractor for keeping the trees and plants in
proper trim. It appears that this contention made on behalf
of the mills was not considered by the Industrial Court as
it appears from para 7 of the order of the Industrial Court
because according to the Industrial Court, looking to the
nature of the, work done by the petitioners and to the fact
that they were not directly employed by the employer but
through a contractor, they could not be covered within the
scope of section 3 (13) of the Bombay Industrial Relations
Act. Since this contention has not been considered by the
Industrial Court, we do not wish to express any opinion as
regards the merits of this contention-and it would be open
to Respondent No. 1 to raise the contention before the
Industrial Court which will decide on the merits of the
contention if raised.
Subject to this, the order of the Second Labour Court
Ahmedabad dated 9th August, 1963 passed in Application No.
2005 of 1962 and the order of the Industrial Court,
Ahmedabad dated 5th February, 1964 passed in Appeal (I.C)
No. 123 of 1963 must be quashed and set aside and we direct
that the matter should now be decided by the Industrial
Court in the light of the observations made above
200
There is no cogent ground why this matter should be, decided
by this Court and not by the Industrial Court in the normal
course as directed by the High Court, In our opinion the
order of the High Court is legally correct and is also
eminently. just and fair. We are unable, therefore, to.
agree with Mr. Desai that this order requires any
intereference. The principle followed by the High Court is
the one which was laid down by this Court in J. K. Cotton
Spg. & Wvg. Mills case (supra). The decisions of the
Labour Court and the Industrial Court were based on
misconception of the legal position and the High Court was
within its authority to interfere under Art. 227 of the
Constitution to quash them.
The appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed with costs.
G.C. Appeal
dismissed.
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