Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
J. K. SYNTHETICS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
J. K. SYNTHETICS MAZDOOR UNION
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/09/1971
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 1954 1972 SCR (1) 651
1971 SCC (3) 509
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1976 SC 611 (15)
D 1976 SC1207 (218)
ACT:
Bonus-When dividends on shares are extraneous income for the
purpose of payment of Bonus Act, 1965 The principle for
determining the share required for rehabilitation.
HEADNOTE:
A dispute for Bonus was raised by the workers of the
Appellant company before the Tribunal for the Bonus year
1962-63, as the appellant company which made profit during
the year, did not pay any bonus to the workers; but only a
gratuity of one month was paid to them. According to
revised returns filed by the workers, there was an available
surplus of Rs. 5.34 lakhs; but according to the management,
there was a deficit. There were two main points of dispute
: (1) the workers challenged the deduction of Rs. 4.1 lakh
received as dividend by the company as extraneous income.
According to the management however, as the company invested
part of the paid up capital in hares which earned an income
of Rs. 4.1 lakh, the company was entitled to claim this
amount as an extraneous income because the workers had made
no contribution in its earning and so this amount should be
deducted from the gross profit. (2) The workers also
disputed Rs. 75.89 lakhs shown by the management as the
annual share required for rehabilitation. The management
divided the plant and machinery of the company into two
blocks. The original cost of the plant and machinery for
firdt block was 133.00 lakhs and Rs. 15.0 lakhs for the
second block. The appellant company claimed the ‘multiplier’
(which is the probable increase in the price of assets at
the time of rehabilation over the original cost) for each of
the two blocks as 6 and the ‘deviser’ (number of years after
which the asset require s replacement) for the first block
as 10 and for the second block as 11.
The Tribunal decided the first point against the management
because even though there was share capital available to the
appellant, instead of utilising it as working capital, it
had borrowed amounts to work the Nylon factory for which it
bad to pay an interest of over Rs. 5 lakhs. In these
circumstances, it disallowed the claim for deduction on the
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ground that it would be unfair to allow the management to
treat the income from investments as extraneous income and
still reduce the profits by raising loans and pay interests
resulting in diminution of the surplus. On the second point
the Tribunal admitted only a fraction of the total amount as
annual share required for ’rehabilitation. It held the
’Multipliee as 4 for the first block and 2 for the second
block and the ’deviser’ as 13 and 14 respectively. After
deducting the prior charges from the gross profits, the
tribunal computed the available surplus to be Rs. 3.25 lakhs
and of this, 60 per cent payable as bonus would come to Rs.
2,11,000/-. As the company bad already distributed Rs.
90,000 the tribunal directed payment of the balance of Rs.
1,21,000/- a# bonus. In appeal by special leave, a further
point was agitated before the Court as to whether the
Respondent can challenge a finding by the Tribunal in the
absence of an appeal by it. Dismissing the appeal,
HELD, : (i) Since the dividend in the present case is the
return from investment-, of part of the paid up capital of
the company which is invested for the purpose of earning an
income, it cannot be construed as
652
,extraneous income and the Tribunal is justified in
disallowing tile dividend on shares as a valid deduction.
The return on paid up capital is one of the prior charges
admissible as a valid deduction and if any amount is .earned
from the employment of capital unconnected with the business
of the company, the labour cannot claim the right to
participate in its returns. Further if any reserve is
utilised for working capital, whether this .reserve is
depreciation reserve or any reserve, a return in respect of
they are also allowed as prior charges, at a reduced rate.
The company has the discretion to invest its capital in
various activities; but it cannot deprive the workmen of the
benefits of the returns derived therefrom unless the
investments in such activity is extraneous to the activities
of the company, in the earning of which the workers had not
made any contribution. In the present case, the return from
the investments is a return on a part ,of the paid up
capital which is invested for the purpose of earning an
income and therefore, it is not extraneous income as claimed
by the management. [656 G-B]
(ii) The elements which are important for the computation of
annual rehabilitation is the price of the asset at original
cost, the period for which these assets can be used before
requiring rehabilitation due to rise in prices, devaluation
etc. In other words, for computation of annual
rehabilitation, the ’multiplier’ and the ’deviser’ is to he
found out. In the present case, the management failed to
place satisfactory evidence before the Tribunal to arrive at
a proper ’multiplier’ and ’deviser’ and in absence of any
proof as to how and on what basis the Tribunal had arrived
at its own ’multiplier’ and ’deviser’ on a pure conjecture
and guess work, the appeal cannot be sustained. Further,
the Tribunal is not justified in including the trading
investments to be available for the purpose of re-
habilitation as these investments were made prior to 1960
when the company was an investment company and as such these
investments were not connected with the activities of the
present company, which was floated only in 1960. [666 G]
(iii)In appeal, the respondents are entitled to
challenge or support the judgmentin his favour given
before the High Court even upon grounds which are negatived
in the judgment.
Workmen of M/s. Hindustan Motors Ltd. v. M/s. Hindustan
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Motors Ltd. & Anr. [1968] 2 S.C.R. 311, M/s. Gannon
Dunkerley & Co. v. Their Workmen, [1971] 22 F.L.R. 158,
Management of Northern Railway Cooperative Society Ltd. v.
Industrial Tribunal, Rajasthan, [1967] 2 S.C.R. 476,
Ramabhal Ashabhai Patel v. Dabhai Ajit Kumar Fulshingji
[1965] 1 S.C.R. 712, Associated Cement Co. Ltd. v. Its
Workmen, [1959] S.C.R. 925, Khandesh spinning & Wvg. Mills
Co. Ltd. v. Rashtriya Gir Kamgar Samiti Jalgoan, [1960] 2
S.C.R. 841, Bengal Kagazkar Mazdoor Union v. Titaghar Paper
Mills Co. Ltd., [1964] 3 S.C.R. 38, National Engineering
Indnstries Ltd. v. Its Workmen, [1968] 1 S.C.R. 779 and
Honorary Secretary, Coimbatore District Textile Workers
Union [1962] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 926, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1675 of 1970.
Appeal by special leave from the Award dated February 18,
1970 of the Industrial Tribunal, Rajasthan, Jaipur in Case
No. 1.T. 12 of 1967.
G. B. Pai, P. N. Tiwari and O. C. Mathur, for the
appellant.
M. K. Ramamurthi and Vineet Kumar, for the respondent,
653
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
P. Jagamohan Reddy, J.-This Appeal is by Special’. Leave
against the Award of the Industrial Tribunal, Rajasthan
directing the payment of a bonus of Rs. 1,21,000/- apart
from an amount of Rs. 90,000/- already disbursed to the
workmen of the Appellant for the year 1962-63. The dispute
for the bonus year beginning 1st July ’62 and ending 30th
June ’63 was raised by the workmen because the Company which
had admittedly made profits, did not pay them a bonus though
a gratuity of one month was given to them. The following
dispute was therefore referred to the Tribunal:
"Whether workmen of M/s. J.K. Synthetic Ltd.,
Kota are entitled to any bonus for the year
1962-63 and whether payment of one month’s
wages as gratuity by the management can be
regarded as payment towards bonus for the,
year in question?".
The Mazdoor Union (hereinafter called ’the Union’) on behalf
of the Workmen contended that on the basis of the
calculation,; of available surplus they were entitled to a
bonus of 60% in accordance with the bonus formula which will
entitle them to a five months wages apart from the one
month’s wages already paid to them. The first statement of
computation filed on behalf of the workers was obviously
incorrect because it did not take-into account the various
prior charges such as Income Tax, return on reserves,
rehabilitation reserve etc. which are deductible under Full
Bench formula as approved and accepted by this Court from%
time to time. It therefore filed another revised return
showing an available surplus of Rs. 5.34 lakhs. The
management on the other hand challenged the validity of the
claim as according to it there was no available surplus for
distribution even though they had already paid one month’s
bonus wrongly styled as gratuity. The calculations given by
it were also found to be equally wanting. As such it filed
a revised calculation showing a net deficit of Rs. 72.35
lakhs. It may however, be mentioned that as pointed’ out by
the Tribunal, there was no dispute with regard to any of the
eight items which comprised the computation of gross profits
amounting to Rs. 62.16 lakhs. The Union also did not
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dispute the deduction of interest on debentures of Rs. 0.06
lakhs; share transfer fee of Rs. 0.05 lakhs; the notional
normal depreciation of Rs. 30.57 lakhs; and the return on
share capital of Rs. 7.50 lakhs. It had however challenged
the deduction of Rs. 4.1 lakhs received as dividend on
shares as extraneous income which was being claimed as a
deduction by the management. It also disputed an amount of
Rs. 1, 11,000/- shown as return on reserves employed in the
business and Rs. 75.89 lakhs shown as the annual share
required for rehabilitation. The method of calculation of
income tax amounting to Rs. 15.23 lakhs was also objected
to. The four"
654
items upon which the Tribunal was called on to adjudicate
therefore were: ( 1 ) Deduction of Rs. 4. 10 lakhs received
as dividend on shares from the gross profits as extraneous
income; (2) Rs. 1, 11,000/- as return on reserves employed
in business; (3) Rs. 75.89 lakhs as annual share required
for rehabilitation, and (4) Rs. 15.23 lakhs towards Income
tax.
With respect to the first issue the Tribunal felt that even
though there was share capital available to the Appellant,
instead of utilising it as working capital it had borrowed
amounts to work the Nylon factory for which they had to pay
an interest of over Rs. 5 lakhs. In these circumstances it
disallowed the claim for deduction on the ground that it
would be unfair to allow the management to treat the income
from Investments as extraneous income and still reduce the
profits by raising loans and pay interests resulting in
demunition of the surplus. On the second issue the
objection of the Union for a deduction of Rs. 1,11 lakhs as
return on reserves employed as working capital was
disallowed-on the ground that the statement M.W. 2/1
produced by Talwar, established that the excess of liability
over the assets was utilised as working capital during the
course of the bonus. year. The claim of the management for
deduction of Rs. 75.89 lakhs as share required for
rehabilitation was however disallowed, as the oral and
documentary evidence produced on behalf of the Management
did not according to the Tribunal either establish that the
life of the Plant and machinery was only 10 years for 1961-
62 Block (hereinafter called ’the first Block’) and 11 years
for 1962-63 Block (hereinafter called ’the second Block’)
nor was the deviser of six years for both the first and the
second Block reasonable. It found that the more reasonable
multiplier was 13 years for machinery purchased in respect
of the first Block and 14 years for machinery purchased in
respect of, the second Block and likewise a reasonable
deviser for these two Blocks would be four years and two
years respectively. In so far as rehabilitation
requirements for buildings was concerned the Union did not
raise any dispute to the claim of the management amounting
to Rs. 0.90 lakhs. As there was also no dispute about the
original cost of plant & machinery, the Tribunal by applying
the multiplier and deviser as aforesaid computed the annual
rehabilitation replacement for plant, machinery and
buildings as follows :
Rupees in lakhs
Block Origi Mul- Repla- Break- Balan- Funds Net Life Annu--
of nal tip cement down ce avail Repla al re
plant lier cost value able cement quire
& Mach cost cost ment
61-62 133 -004 522 .006 -65 525 -35113 -28412 -07 1331 -70
62-63 15-00 2 -0 30 -00 0 .’75 29 -25 29 -25 14 2 -10
--------
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33.80
655
Rehabilitation replacement for machinery.......33.80
Rehabilitation replacement for building (as per Company
calculation)................................0.90
Total 34.70
Accordingly the additional rehabilitation to be providedfor
was calculated as under
Funds available :
Depreciation upto 31-3-62............Rs. 15 .68 lakhs
General reserves ....... 12.00
Investments .....................85.60
113 -28
Annual rehabilitation replacement........34.70
Less : Depreciation provided during the year30 -57
_________________
Additional rehabilitation to be provided . .4.23
In so far as Income tax calculation of Rs. 15.18 lakhs was
accepted being in accordance with the calculations under the
Income Tax Act with respect to which it was said the Union
did not find itself in a position to contest. The Tribunal
after giving its finding on the matters in issue computed
the available surplus as follows:
1. Gross profit............Rs. 62 -11 lakhs
2, Deduct prior charges:
Rs.
1. Notional normal depreciation.........30.57 lakhs
2. Direct tax...........................15.18
3. Return on share capital..............7.50
4. Return on reserves...................1.11
5. Additional requirement for rehabilitation4 -23
---------
58.59
Available suprlus ....... Rs. 3 .25 lakhs
of the 60% payable as bonus would come to Rs. 2,1 1,000/-.
As the Company had already disbursed Rs. 90,000/-, the
Tribunal directed payment of the balance of Rs. 1,21,000/-.
Before us only two items of controversy have been urged
namely:(1) relating to extraneous income of Rs. 4.10 lakhs
and(2) relating to rehabilitation requirement amounting
to Rs. 75.89 lakhs, the first of which the Tribunal
disallowed while in respect of the second it only admitted
Rs. 4.23 lakhs. With respect to the first item, the
disallowance of Rs. 4.10 lakhs, the management not only
claimed this amount but also Rs. 7.5 lakhs as return on paid
up capital of Rs. 125 lakhs @ 6% per annum. Obviously even
on a cursory glance it would appear that the management was
seeking to obtain double benefit in respect of investments
656
made out of the paid up capital. The reasons which impelled
the Tribunal to reject the claim of the management have,
already been noticed and it would therefore be unnecessary
to reiterate them. It however, appeared to the Tribunal
that if the Company wanted to exclude income from
investments it cannot also be allowed 6% return on that part
of the share capital which is invested elsewhere and at the
same time be allowed to treat the income of Rs. 4.10 lakhs
earned therefrom as extraneous income, because apart from
deducting income tax on this amount the Company also meets
the expenses of administration and management in respect of
the said investments. In this view it sustained the
objection of the Union.
The return on paid up capital is one of the prior charges
admissible under the Full Bench formula as approved by this
Court. It is based on the principle that while the claim of
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labour to a share in the profits by way of bonus is in
furtherence of social justice, the claim of the capital for
a fair return to the investor and also to keep the industry
running efficiently which will in the long run enure for the
benefit of labour is equally based upon that principle. If
therefore any amount is earned from the employment of
capital unconnected with the business of the Company, the
labour cannot claim the right to participate in its returns.
Apart from this if any reserves are utilised for working
capital whether these reserves are depreciation reserves or
any other, a return in respect of these also is allowed as a
prior charge at a reduced rate because utilisation of such
reserves would obviate the borrowing from outside sources
for which a higher interest has to be paid and which in the
long run will not be for the benefit of the- workers. These
principles have been laid down by this Court as well
accepted in Industrial adjudication. While it is true that
the Company has the discretion to invest its capital in
various activities it cannot on that account deprive the
workmen of the benefits of the returns derived therefrom
unless of course the investments in such activity is
extraneous to the activities of the Company, in the earning
of which they had not made any contribution. Whether in any
particular case the return on investments amounts to an
extraneous income will depend on the facts and circumstances
of each case. So far as the case before us is concerned
there can be no doubt that the return from the investments
is a return on a part of the paid up capital of the Company
which is invested for the purpose of earning an income. It
cannot therefore be construed as extraneous income. In
Workmen of M/s. Hindustan Motors Ltd. v. M/s. Hindustan
Motorv Ltd. & Anr.,(1) to which one of us was a party
(Vaidialingam, J.) no doubt where the income of the Company
was from interest on
(1) (1968) 2 S.C.R. 31 1.
657
fixed deposits, it was treated as extraneous income because
it was held that it accrued to the Company without any
contribution by the workmen. At the same time the Company
was not permitted on equitable ground to claim the interest
paid by it on its borrowings as business expenditure.
Further in that case even the income received by the Company
from its foreign collaborators as commission on sales
effected by the said collaborators of their own cars in
India was treated as extraneous income to which the
Company’s workmen made no contribution and was therefore not
to be taken into account in calculating the available
surplus. In the recent case of MI? Gannon Dunkarley & Co.
Ltd. v. Their Workmen(1), by a reference to the decision in
the Hindustan Motor’s this principle was again reiterated.
In that case one of the question which this Court considered
was whether dividends received from trade investments should
be deducted from the gross profits- for calculating the
surplus available for bonus. It was held that "these trade
investments have to be treated as capital assets of the
Company forming part of their trading activities. The
income accruing from these dividends must therefore be re-
lated to the business of the Company as a whole and hence
the income from these dividends has to be included in the
income for purposes of calculation of surplus available for
bonus". In this view we think the Tribunal was justified in
disallowing the deduction of Rs. 4.10 lakhs and in fact on
behalf of the Appellant it was frankly conceded before us
that the claim in respect of the said item cannot be pressed
on any tenable or valid grounds.
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This brings us to the only remaining controversy, the provi-
sion for rehabilitation requirement. The claim for a prior
charge on this account like any other prior charge has to be
established by evidence but As this item results in a
substantial deduction from the gross profits and reduces
available surplus, materially, effecting the claim of the
employees for bonus, each constituent element which is
necessary for computing the amount to be provided for must
be proved by satisfactory evidence and cannot be left to
surmises and conjectures. It is idle to suggest that as the
employees have not in any particular case given any evidence
or have not produced any material to controvert the claim of
the management that claim must be admitted, because it is
the management that is in possession of all the relevant
material and is accordingly required to satisfactorily
substantiate that claim. The elements which are important
for the computation of annual rehabilitation requirement,
is, the price of the assets at the original cost, the period
for which these assets can be used before requiring
rehabilitation and the probable increase in the cost of
rehabilitation, due to rise in prices, devaluation etc. The
probable increase in the price of assets at the time of the
rehabilitation over the original
(1) (1971) 22 F.L.R. 148.
L3SupCI/72
658
cost is the multiplier, as it is measured in terms of
multiples of the original cost. The number of years after
which the asset requires replacement, rehabilitation or
modernisation is termed the deviser because the probable
cost on a future date has to be provided annually and
therefore has to be divided by the number of years at the
end of which the amount would be required. There is in this
case no dispute between the parties as to the original cost
of the plant and machinery which is for the first block Rs.
133.00 lakhs and for the second block Rs. 15.00 lakhs. The
only controversy is about the multiplier and the deviser
which has been adopted by the Tribunal. The Appellant had
in its written statement claimed the multiplier for each of
the two blocks as six and the deviser for the first block as
10 and for the second block as 11 but as we have already
noticed earlier the Tribunal has accepted the multiplier as
4 for the first block and 2 for the second block and the
deviser as 13 and 14 respectively. Even in respect of these
the learned Advocate for the Appellant admitted that he is
not in a position to contest the reasonableness of what has
been adopted by the Tribunal but the Respondent has
challenged the very basis adopted by the Tribunal as being
more dependent on guess work than on any evidence or
material before it.
On behalf of the management the right of the Union to chal-
lenge the multiplier and deviser, in the absence of an
Appeal by it is strenuously contested but in our view there
is little force in this objection. The appeal by the
employer is against the grant of bonus to the employees
which implies that the method of computation of the gross
profits, as well as of the available surplus and the rate at
which the bonus is granted can be subjected to scrutiny. It
is needless to recount the several priorities that have to
be deducted and the items in respect of which amounts have
to be added, before arriving at the available surplus. In
an Appeal, the several steps which have to be taken for
computation of the available surplus either in respect of
the actual amounts or the method adopted, can be challenged.
If so the Union, even where it has not appealed against the
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Award, can support it on a method of computation, which may
not have been adopted by the Tribunal but nonetheless is
recognised by the Full Bench formula of this Court so long
as in the final result the amount awarded is not exceeded.
We are supported in this view by a decision of this Court in
Management of Northern Railway Cooperative Society Ltd. v.
Industrial Tribunal, Rajasthan, Jaipur & Anr.(1) where it
was held that the Respondents were entitled to support the
decision of the Tribunal even on grounds which were not
accepted by the Tribunal or on other grounds which
(1)[1967] 2 S.C.R. 476.
659
may not have been taken notice of by the Tribunal while they
were patent on the face of the record.
A passage from the case of Ramanbhai Ashabhai Patel v. Dabhi
Ajithkumr Fulsinji & Ors. (1), will give the reasons adopted
by this Court for the aforesaid view. That no doubt was an
election appeal but it was said that though the rules framed
by this Court in exercise of its rule making powers do not
contain any provisions analogous to Order XLI Rule 22 of the
Civil Procedure Code, which permits a party to support the
Judgment appealed against upon a ground which has been found
against him in the Judgment, it was held that this Court has
the jurisdiction to sustain the Judgment on grounds which
have been found against the Respondent. Mudholkar, J.
speaking for himself, Gajendragadkar, C.J., Wanchoo,
Hidayatullah, and Raghubar Dayal, JJ.. after considering
whether the provisions of Order XVIII, Rule 3 of the Rules
of this Court which requires parties to file statement of
the case could limit it only to those contentions which deal
with the points found in favour of that party in the
Judgment appealed from, observed at page 724:
"Apart from that we think that while dealing
with the appeal before it this Court has the
power to decide all the points arising
from the Judgment appealed against and even in
the absence of an express provision like
O.XLI, R. 22 of the Code of Civil Procedure it
can devise the appropriate procedure to be
adopted at the hearing. There could be no
better way of supplying the deficiency than by
drawing upon the provisions of a general law
like the Code of Civil Procedure and adopting
such of those provisions as are suitable. We
cannot lose sight of the fact that normally a
party in whose favour the Judgment appealed
from has been given will not be granted
special leave to appeal from it.
Considerations of justice, therefore, require
that this Court should in appropriate cases
permit a party placed in such a position to
support the judgment in his favour even upon
grounds which were negatived in that
Judgment".
In the view we have taken, we will have to consider the plea
on behalf of the Respondents that the rehabilitation
requirement has not been properly established, but this need
only be entertained if we come to the conclusion that the
main contention that the rehabilitation requirement has not
been properly computed and if so computed there will be no
available surplus for awarding bonus to the employees.
(1) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 712.
660
The learned Advocate for the Appellant as we said earlier
has not seriously insisted on the adoption of the multiplier
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and the deviser claimed by the Appellant but on the other
hand contends that even if the multiplier and the deviser as
adopted by the Tribunal is followed the trade investments
amounting to Rs. 85.6 lakhs cannot be said to be available
for computation of rehabilitation requirement. On this
assumption while not disputing the computation of the
Tribunal in respect of the original cost which as we have
earlier mentioned has not been disputed, even by accepting
the multiplier, the break-down value and the deviser as
adopted by the Tribunal the annual amount required would be
Rs. 10.71 lakhs and not Rs. 4.23 lakhs as computed by the
Tribunal. The only variation between the computation of the
appellant and that of the Tribunal is in respect of the
funds available which according to the Tribunal is Rs.
113.28 lakhs including the trade investment of Rs. 85.6
lakhs and according to the Appellant it is Rs. 27.8 lakhs
comprising of only two items namely depreciation of Rs.
15.68 lakhs and general reserve of Rs. 12 lakhs. If this
computation isaccepted then there will be a negative
balance of Rs. 2.9 lakhs.This result is arrived at as
follows :
Gross profits .............................Rs. 62.11 lakhs
1. Notional normal depreciation..Rs. 30.57 lakhs
2. Direct tax ....................Rs. 15 .18
3. Return on share capital.........Rs. 7 .50
4. Return on reserves..............Rs. 1 .11
5. Additional requirement for rehabilitationRs. 10 .71
Rs.65. 07"
Negative balance. (-) Rs. 2 .96 lakhs
It will be observed that the prior charges comprised in
items 1 to 4 are not really in dispute. It is only the
additional requirement for rehabilitation that- is the bone
of contention between the parties and this is challenged on
two grounds; firstly that the trade investment of Rs. 85.6
lakhs are available funds for rehabilitation requirement as
admitted by the Appellant to be so available in the
statement which it furnished to the Tribunal; secondly that
no claim for rehabilitation requirement has been
substantiated.
On the first ground it is contended that the question, what
was the: available amount for the annual requirement was
specifically before the Tribunal, and that it was the case
of the management and not of the workmen that an amount of
Rs. 1,23,90,000/- was available consisting of Rs. 26.30
lakhs towards depreciation, Rs. 12 lakhs towards general
reserves and Rs. 85 6 lakhs towards investments. In these
circumstances the Tribunal was not called upon to
investigate the question as to what exactly was the nature
of the investments or whether any of
661
them were realisable or were not available for meeting the
rehabilitation requirements. Further there was no grievance
made in this behalf in the Special Leave Petition and
therefore the management is, it is submitted stopped from
challenging before his Court the validity of inclusion of
this amount in the amount available for rehabilitation. It
is further submitted that assuming that this question can be
agitated, in the absence of any specific investigation as to
the nature of the investments and more particularly when the
management itself had shown this amount as being available,
the Appellant cannot be permitted to say that it is not
available. The contention of the respondents proceeds on a
basic error namely that the Appellant had held out that the
trade investments were available for rehabilitation
requirement. This is not so. In the amended written
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statement filed on 4-7-69 after obtaining the permission of
the Tribunal on 3-7-69, the Appellant claimed the annual
share required for rehabilitation as Rs. 93,56,207/-. Even
in the statement filed earlier on 10-4-69 it showed two
amounts as being available namely depreciation of Rs. 26.31
lakhs and general reserves of Rs. 12 lakhs. It is submitted
by the Appellant that only when the arguments were completed
on behalf of the Company on 9-12-69, having regard to the
claim made by it for deduction of Rs. 4.1 lakhs as
extraneous income derived from the trade investments, the
corpus of Rs. 85.6 lakhs which earned that income was also
shown as available and a statement to ’hat effect was filed
on the same day to facilitate the Tribunal in arriving at an
Award. In as much as we are not allowing the deduction of
Rs. 4.1 lakhs as extraneous income, the question whether the
corpus should be treated as being available also has to be
considered in the light of the decisions of this Court. The
Appellant in our view is fully justified in urging this
contention before us, as it cannot be said that this was not
raised before the Tribunal. The Tribunal had ample
opportunity of considering this aspect since it did
specifically consider the nature of the income therefrom.
Assuming for the present that the adoption by the Tribunal
of the multiplier and deviser can be justified, though the
validity of the Tribunal’s award in this behalf has been
seriously challenged ’before us, the question to be
determined is whether the investments of the Appellant
amount to Rs. 85.6 lakhs is available for rehabilitation
which in turn will depend upon whether these investments are
made in the course of the business of the Company or are
unconnected with its business and only invested with a view
to earning extraneous income. The principles upon which
rehabilitation grant is to be calculated as laid down by
this Court is that the depreciation reserves, or in the case
of other reserves only if they are available as liquid
assets and cash and not earmarked for any specific purposes,
are deemed to be available and can be taken into account in
computing the annual requirement. The
662
depreciation reserve, the object of which is to meet the
requirement of replacement, rehabilitation and modernisation
at a future date is considered to be always available
whether it is in the form of a liquid asset or not. It is
obvious that even this amount will not achieve the purpose
of recouping the cost of replacement of the wasted assets
and it is for that reason the claim of the industry for
rehabilitation in addition to the admissible depreciation
has been recognised. Then there are the general reserves,
capital reserves and development reserves all of which will
be considered to be available if they are in the form of
liquid assets or cash. The question in some of these cases
will be whether they are considered to be the capital assets
of the Company kept in that form in the course of its
business or kept as investments outside the business of the
Company for the purposes of earning an extraneous income.
If it is the former then they are available but if it is the
latter they cannot be brought into account for calculating
the rehabilitation requirement. As it happens in most cases
the claim by the employer is that the reserves are either
wholly or partly not available because they have been used
as working capital and consequently the, amount to be
utilised should not be excluded from the amount claimed
towards rehabilitation. The principles governing what
deductions should be made from out of reserves before
calculating the amount in respect of rehabilitation for the
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bonus year were set out in the Full Bench formula and have
been restated in the Associated Cement Co. Ltd. v. Its
Workmen(1). The two items according to that decision that
are to be taken into consideration are the general reserves
available to the employer and the reserves which have been
reasonably earmarked for specific purposes of the industry.
In explaining what was meant by availability of the reserves
or the earmarking for specific purposes Subba Rao, J. as he
then was in Khandesh Spinning & Wvg. Mills Co. Ltd. v. Th.?
Rashtriya Girni Kamgar Sang Jalgaon(2), observed at page
845-846 :-
"We do not think that by using the said words
this Court meant to depart from the well
recognized principle that if the general
reserves have not been used as working
capital, they cannot be deducted from the
rehabilitation amount. The reserves may be of
two kinds. Moneys may be set apart by a
company to meet future. payments which the
Company is under a contractual or statutory
obligation to meet, such as gratuity etc.
These amounts are set apart and tied down for
a specific purpose and, therefore, they are
not available to the employer for
rehabilitation purposes. But the same thing
cannot be said of the general reserves : they
would be available to
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 925 @ 970.
(2) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 841.
663
The use of the words "reasonably earmarked" is
also deliberate and significant. The mere
nominal allocation for binding purposes, such
as gratuity etc. in the Company’s books is not
enough. It must be ascertained by the
Industrial Court on the material placed before
it whether the said amount is far in excess of
the requirements of the particular purpose for
which it is so earmarked and whether it is
only a device to reduce the claim of the
labour for bonus".
What is meant by the above observations in the Khandesh
Spinning & Wvg. Mills case was later explained by Wanchoo
J, as he then was in Bengal Kagazkal Mazdoor Union & Anr. v.
The Titaghur Paper Mills Co. Lid.(1). This was what was said
at page 54
"All that that decision lays down is that that
part of the reserves which go to make up the
working capital which is in the shape of raw
materials etc. or earmarked reserve will not
be deducted from the I gross-rehabilitation
amount; it does not lay down that all cash
reserves in the shape of depreciation reserve,
general reserve, renewal reserve and so on and
also in the shape of investments and advances
cannot be deducted from the gross
rehabilitation amount as they may be used as
working capital next year".
Now the question of trade investments unconnected with the
purposes of the industry fell for consideration in the
National Engineering Industries Ltd. v. Its Workmen (2). In
this case the Company had an investment of Rs. 18.22 in
shares, which were treated by this Tribunal as liquid assets
available for rehabilitation. But the Company contended
that this investment can either -be treated as a trading
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transaction carried out in the ordinary course of business
or as a capital asset. If it was the former then it should
have been allowed the loss of Rs. 1.72 lakhs as trading
expenditure but instead the tribunal had added the profits
therefrom to the gross profits, thereby treating the
investment as capital asset. It could not therefore deduct
Rs. 18.22 lakhs as a fund available for rehabilitation cost.
Negativing this contention of the Company, Shelat J,
observed at page 796-797 :-
"We fail to see any contradiction on the part
of the Tribunal. The balance sheet for the
year 1957-58 contains two schedules; Schedule
A shows fixed assets and schedule B shows
trade investments of the value of
(1) [1964] 3 S.C.R. 38.
(2) [1968] 1 S.C.R. 779
664
Rs. 18,21,571/-. The Company not being an
investment Company the investment of Rs. 18.22
acs in shares of other joint stock Companies
prima facie represents extra capital not
required as working capital for otherwise the
Company could not have spared this amount for
investment in the stocks of other Companies.
The Tribunal was right in treating this
investment as a capital asset and in refusing
to treat the loss therefrom as trading
expenditure. ’the Tribunal at the same time
could deduct this amount from the
rehabilitation cost because that amount was
available to meet the rehabilitation cost.
The investment in shares could easily, if the
Company was so minded, be converted into cash
and utilised for replacement of its worn out
machinery".
In Gannon Dunkerley’s case also these principles were
reiterated. It was held in that case that in calculating
rehabilitation grant one of the principles which this Court
has laid down is that the depreciation reserve must always
be deducted irrespective of the fact whether it is available
or not as a liquid asset. In addition other reserves like
general reserve are also to be deducted if they are
available as liquid reserves and are not ear-marked for any
specific purpose. The capital reserve and the development
reserve can also be deducted if there is material to show
that they existed in the form of liquid assets or cash. The
question would be whether they are capital assets of the
Company kept in that form in the course of its business or
whether they have been treated as investments outside the
business for the purposes of earning extraneous income. If
they are investments made in the course of its business they
are to be treated as part of the capital but otherwise if
they are extraneous to the business they do not form part of
the reserves available for rehabilitaion.
It may be observed that in the National Engineering
Industries Ltd. v. lts Workmen(1), an exception had been
made in the case of an investment Company the investment of
which is to be treated as working capital employed in the
business of the Company. The Companies Act placed
restrictions on the purchase of shares by one Company, of
shares of any other body corporate except to the extent and
except in accordance with the restrictions and conditions
specified in Sec. 372 of that Act as amended by Act 65 of
1960. By. Sec. 373 it is enjoined on Companies investing
after 1st April 1952 in shares of any other body corporate
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in exercise of the limit specified in sub-section (2) and
the second proviso to the said-sub-section of Sec. 372 to
obtain the authority of ’he Central Government within six
months from the commencement of the Act and if such
authority and approval is not so obtained
665
the Board of Directors must dispose of the investments in
excess of the limits specified in the aforesaid provision
within two years from the commencement of the Act. It is
also provided by Sec. 372(10) that after the commencement of
the Companies Amendment Act a statement should be annexed to
the balance-sheet giving the details of, the investments
acquired; the bodies corporate in the same group, of which
the shares have been acquired, whether the investments are
existing or not, and the nature of the said investments. An
exception however has been made by the proviso to the said
sub-section in the case of investment Companies (which are
those whose principal business is the acquisition of shares
etc.) that it shall be sufficient if the investments,
existing on the date as at which the balance-sheet to which
the statement is annexed has been made out
From these provisions it is contended that the balance-sheet
in this case shows only those details which are required to
be given by an investment Company which is also consistent
with the plea,, ,that the investments of the Appellant were
made prior to 1952 when it was an investment Trust Company
and these investments, which are the same exceeded the
limits prescribed by the Companies Amendment Act without
having to conform to the conditions of having either to
obtain approval of the Central Government or to dispose of
the excess within two years i.e. by 31st March 1962.
On behalf of the Respondents however it is submitted that
there has been no finding by the Tribunal that the Company
is an Investment Company or that the investments were made
prior to, 1952 as an Investment Company which would entitle
it to treat those investments as not available for the
purposes of rehabilitation within the exception indicated in
the National Engineering Industries case. In our view this
submission has no force. There is ample justification in
the contention of the Appellant’s Advocate that the Tribunal
did advert to the fact that the Company invested initially a
capital of Rs. 75 lakhs as an investment Trust Company and
from its inception these investments have been made and that
it is only after the amendment in 1960 when it was not
possible for it to invest further amounts that it changed
its name, increased its capital and started the present
industry. On this, aspect of the matter the Tribunal stated
thus :
"Originally the Company was floated as J. K.
Investments Trust Ltd. It had a share capital
of Rs. 75 lakhs. They invested this amount
and some loans in debentures and loans. Due
to amendments in Company law they had to stop
further investment from 1960 onwards and
changed the name of the Company to J. K.
Synthetics Limited, raised additional Rs.
50.00 lacs
666
share capital and started this Nylon factory.
Thus to date the share capital of the Company
is Rs. 125.00 lacs including the old share
capital of Rs. 75.00 lacs of J. K. investments
Trust Ltd. Now instead of utilising the old
share capital and loans invested in debentures
the Company took separate loans to work the
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Nylon factory for which according to the
balance sheet they had to pay over Rs. 5 lacs
as interest on loans".
It is also apparent from Schedule ’E’ statement forming part
of the balance-sheet as at 30th June, 1963 that a list of
trade investments held by the Appellant have been given.
There are two notes attached thereto. Note (1) states-
Investments in the Companies marked with asterisks exceed
ten per cent of their respective subscribed capital. These
investments were acquired before the commencement of the
Companies (Amendment) Act, 1960, while Note (2) states-The
Total investments of the Company exceed thirty per cent of
its subscribed capital. These investments were acquired
before the commencement of the Companies (Amendment) Act,
1960.
Having regard to these undisputed facts it appears to us
clear that the trading investments were made prior to 1960
when the Company Was an Investment Company, as such these
investments are not connected with the activities of the
Company, are extraneous to its business and do not form part
of the reserves available ,for rehabilitation. In the
circumstances the Tribunal is not justified in including
this amount in the amounts available for rehabilitation
purposes.
While this is so and the result of the non-exclusion of Rs.
85.60 lakhs would result in a negative balance, the
respondents as we have already held are entitled to-
challenge the claim for rehabilitation on the ground that
the essential requisites have not been established by any
cogent or sufficient evidence. In computing the
requirements for rehabilitation as has been stated often,
regard must be had, to two imponderables out of the three
main elements because one of them namely the original cost
of the asset is specifically ascertainable while the other
two have to be established as near as possible which might
to some extent involve an estimate based on evidence
deducible therefrom. These two imponderables are the
multiplier and the deviser. Unless all these elements are
determined the amount required for rehabilitation cannot be
ascertained. of course the scrap value of the old assets
has also to be ascertained but this does not involve any
difficulty because normally it is taken as 5% of the value
of the assets at cost. Even so the determination of the
amount for rehabilitation no doubt poses problems but it is
suggested that a reasonable method would be to divide them
into blocks, accord-
667
ing to the nature of the asset and the year in which the
assets have been acquired. The cost of the separate blocks
has then to be ascertained and their probable future life
has to be estimated. Once this estimate is made it becomes
possible to anticipate approximately the year when the plant
and machinery would need replacement and the probable price
of such requirement at a future date when the asset requires
replacement. In determining this difficult question the
Tribunal as already observed must have before it all
available evidence from which a reasonable and probable
adjudication can be made in respect of these essential
requisites.
The Respondent’s Advocate submits that the Tribunal while
quite properly rejecting the evidence produced on behalf of
the Appellants indulged in guess work when it adopted
arbitrarily the multiplier and the deviser. It is his case
that the determination of the life of machinery depends on
various factors such as for instance nature of the
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machinery, its quality, the nature of the industry, the
efficiency of workmen etc. In the Hindustan Motor’s case,
Bhargava, J, after examining the several cases relating to
this aspect of the matter observed at page 319 :
"The life of machinery of one particular
factory need not necessarily be the same as
that of another factory. Various factors come
in that affect the useful life of a machinery.
There is, first the consideration of the
quality of machinery installed. If the
machinery is purchased from a country
producing higher quality of machines, it will
naturally have longer life than the machinery
purchased from another country where the
quality of production is lower. Again, the
articles on which the machinery operates may
very markedly vary the life of a machine. If,
for example, a machine is utilised for
grinding of cement the strain on machine will
necessarily not be the same as on a machine
which operates on steel or iron".
In the Honorary Secretary South India Millowners’
Association & Ors. v. The Secretary, Coimbatore District
Textile Workers’ Union(1), to which a reference had been
made in the above case, after accepting, on the facts of
that case, that the life of the textile machinery was
adopted as 25 years, this Court laid down the following
principle at p. 933.
"We are not prepared to accept either argument
because, in our opinion, the life of the
machinery in every case has to be determined
in the light of evidence adduced by the
parties".
(1) [1962] 2 Supp. S.C.R. 926.
668
The Advocate on behalf of the Appellant on the other hand
says that the Full Bench Formula for determining
rehabilitation as accepted in Associated Cement Companies(1)
case laid down an elastic measure for determining the
probable cost which was to be estimated "as near actualities
or realities as possible". At pages 967-968 Gajendragadkar
J, as he then was observed :
"The estimate about the probable life of the
plant and machinery’is itself to some extent a
matter of guess work and any anticipation,
however, intelligently made, about the
probable trend of prices during the interven-
ing period would be nothing but a guess. That
is how, in determination of this problem,
several imponderables face the tribunals. One
of the points which raises a controversy in
this connection is : What level of prices
should the tribunal consider in making its
calculations about the probable cost of
replacement..... It seems to us that in order
to enable the Tribunal to make an estimate in
this matter as near actual ties of realises as
possible it is necessary that the Tritunal
should be given full discretion to admit all
relevant evidence about the trend in price
levels .... The problem of determining the
probable cost of replacement itself is very
difficult; but the difficulty is immediately
increaser when it is remembered that the claim
for rehabilitation covers not only cases of
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replacement pure and simple but of
rehabilitation and modernisation. In the
context rehabilitation is distinguished from
ordinary repairs which go into the working
expenses of the industry. It is also dis-
tinguished from replacement .... That is why
we think it is necessary that the tribunals
should exercise their discretion in admitting
all relevant evidence which would enable them
to determine this vexed question
satisfactorily".
Keeping these observations in view what we must see is
whether the Tribunal was justified on the evidence in
adopting the particular multiplier and the deviser. The
stand taken by the management is that it had produced
sufficient evidence in support of its own multiplier and
deviser and in any case the learned Advocate says the
Tribunal is right in arriving at its own conclusion. In
fact it is submitted, the management had made an application
for appointment of an assessor to assist the Tribunal as an
expert for determining the several questions appertaining to
the computation of rehabilitation requirements, but that was
rejected as the Tribunal did not feel any necessity for it
and there is nothing more which the management could do in
the circumstances.
(1)[1959] S.C.R. 925 @970.
669
It is pointed out that the Nylon industry was a new industry
at the time when it was started and the evidence of the
General Manager, who had been with the Company from the
initial stages and throughout the negotiation for purchase
of the machinery, says that according to the manufacturers
the life of the machinery could only be six years. That
apart the management also produced sample invoices for each
year and adduced the evidence of the Manager to prove what
would be the cost of rehabilitation. In fact it is said
that the Appellant was fortunate in having actual invoices
of machinery purchased because the Company had only then
expanded its undertaking. The Tribunal rejected the oral
evidence on the ground that the witnesses produced by the
management were no experts and they did not throw any
material light on the matters to be adjudicated by it. It
also rejected the documentary evidence on the ground that
the machinery which was said to have been purchased was not
the same as was sought to be replaced and in any case there
was not sufficient evidence for it to accept the multiplier
and deviser as claimed by the management. Whether this
criticism is valid or not will depend largely on what in
fact weighed with the Tribunal in arriving at the multiplier
and the deviser. No doubt the employer did make an appli-
cation to the Tribunal as noticed earlier and the same was
rejected on 5-8-69 as it did not find it necessary to
appoint an assessor. The application itself was for
requesting the Tribunal to appoint an assessor if it thinks
necessary. The management cannot without discharging its
duty of placing all the necessary material before the
Tribunal ask it to appoint an assessor who would be useless
without that material. We do not think in the circumstances
the Tribunal was wrong in rejecting the application.
The Tribunal considered the evidence of S/Shri Jain,
Aggarwal and that there had been hundred per cent increase
in prices also machinery worth about Rs. 10 lakhs had
already been replaced and that there had been hundred
percent increase in prices also due to devaluation. The
witness was however, not able to give any details as to when
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the replacement of the parts and machinery took place even
though the management kept the record of the replacement of
the machinery. He could not also explain what exactly was
the impact of the devaluation of Rupee on prices. He did
not see the quotations of the machinery. It was therefore
concluded that his statement both with regard to the life of
the machinery and the replacement cost was quite us--less
and was based on hearsay. Shri Aggarwal’s evidence was also
considered unsatisfactory, both with respect to the estimate
of the replacement cost and the life of the machinery. His
calculations were based on a comparison of the original cost
of machinery in invoices Ex. M. 1, M. 2 and M. 3 and their
cost in 1967, as given in the corresponding invoices Ex. M.
4, M. 5 and M. 6 and the devalua-
670
tion of the Rupee. The Tribunal then considered the
discrepancy between the machines mentioned in various
exhibits. No doubt there is some justification in the
comment of the learned Advocate by the Tribunal merely
because the machines mentioned therein for the Appellant
that some of these invoices were not relied upon were
different in size and weight to those which were installed
in the factory. Undoubtedly there would be a variation
because the ingenuity of the inventor and technician is not
static and as time goes on there are improvements,
renovations and changes that make the machine more
sophisticated and efficient. While this is so the question
is whether satisfactory evidence has been produced to prove
the total cost of rehabilitation and also the life of the
machinery. The evidence of Talwar was equally found to be
defective. He was greatly relying on the Handbook of
Chemical Engineers by John Parry, for establishing the life
of the machinery. He said that in that Book the life of a
Chemical plant working in three shifts is shown to be 11
years. He also admitted that the Author gives only the
guideline for Income tax purposes only. An extract of the
Parry’s Handbook was also given by the Tribunal, which
stated its conclusions as under :
"In view of the above said infirmities it is
evident that the management’s claim for
rehabilitation is very much inflated. The
selection of the average multiplier is rather
arbitrary or at least quite generous to the
management and their estimate about the life
of the machinery is slightly conservative.
From the available evidence on record he then
proceeds to make his own estimates which as
far as the life of the machinery is concerned
was placed between that adopted for textile
machinery of 25 years and the life given in he
Chemical Engineers Handbook of 11 years. It
said after referring to the statement in the
Chemical Engineer’s Handbook that the life of
a Chemical machinery must be more than II
years in America where they work efficiently
to the maximum capacity of the machinery. It
was observed here the working conditions being
different the machinery is likely to last
longer and certainly due to poor economic
conditions in the country the management also
cannot afford to discard such valuable
machines in eleven years only. The life of
the plant therefore must be more than 11
years. On the other hand the ordinary life of
textile machinery is taken to be 25 years or
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more. In this view of the matter if we take
the life of the machinery as 14 years it would
still be on the side of the conservative
estimate".
671
Regarding the multiplier the Tribunal said that :
"The 1961-62 Block of the machinery would
require replacement according to our estimate
in 1975-76. The Company’s claim of six times
the original cost based on a comparative study
of invoices Ex. M. 1 to M. 3 on the one hand
and Ex. M. 4 to M. 6 on the other is very
much inflated .... The Company has not
produced the current price list also of the
machinery or any price indices indicating the
trend of prices of machines. The prices of
machines are more stabilised than prices of
consumer goods. The production of the
machines has also gone up in the country and
it is not impossible that by 1975 we might
manufacture our own machines for Nylon factory
also. Even otherwise the prices of imported
machines are not likely to be more than four
times. Therefore, in our opinion the
multiplier should only be four for the block
of 1961-62. In awards also relied upon by
Shri Talwar even though they considered only
prewar block of machines, in no case they
allowed a multiplier of six. For the block of
machines installed in the accounting year,
ordinarily the unit is taken as the multiplier
but as there has been in the meantime deva-
luation of the rupee we think it would on the
whole be fair to adopt two as a suitable
multiplier for the block installed in the
accounting year".
It appears to us that this is an unsatisfactory way of
determining the two most important factors required for
computing the rehabilitation requirement. The evidence
produced before the Tribunal consisted only of a few
invoices which were to serve as samples of the price of
machines to show that they have gone up. We are not
impressed with the submission of the learned Advocate for
the Appellant that a complete set of invoices in respect of
all the Departments of the industry which required
rehabilitation had been placed before the Tribunal. Indeed
the very application for appointment of Assessor
demonstrably contradicts this assumption. In this
application the management stated that it did ,’examine
S/Shri S. S. Aggarwal, A. C. Talwar as its expert witnesses
and have filed some invoices by way of example to show the
trend in rising cost in plant and machinery. With regard to
useful life of the plant the Respondent places reliance on
Chemical Engineer’s Handbook IVth Edition by John Parry"
(emphasis ours).
It is apparent from this application that the management was
relying only on a few sample invoices which they said they
had produced while depending heavily only on Parrv’s
Handbook for ascertaining the life of the machinery and the
probable cost.
672
We have also gone through the evidence of the three
witnesses and the invoices referred to and we think that the
Tribunal rightly rejected this evidence as not being of much
assistance. It is quite probable that the price of the
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indigenous industry as appearing from the bulletin of the
Reserve Bank of India has gone up but that does not furnish
a basis for arriving at any specific multiplier or deviser
for the Appellant’s plant. All that the invoices produced
before the Tribunal establish is only the probable cost of
machinery of 2 1/2 lakhs, in an attempt to prove the cost of
replacement of plant and machinery worth Rs. 825 lakhs. The
Tribunal was therefore, amply justified in saying that the
only evidence given is of the few invoices the value of
which is only 2 1/2 % of the requirement of the replacement
cost which in our view is not sufficient to establish, how
many machines in each Department of the industry are
required, what is the nature of those machines and what is
the probable cost of each of those machines. We are far
from satisfied that the management has placed before the
Tribunal any satisfactory evidence much less sufficient
evidence to arrive at a multiplier and deviser nor has the
Tribunal any bases for arriving at its own multiplier and
deviser except it be on a pure conjecture and guess work.
The result is that though the appellant is able to succeed
in one of the main points of his Appeal, the Appeal will
have to be dismissed as the Respondents are able to sustain
the Award on other grounds. The circumstances of the case
justify a direction for each party to bear its own costs.
S.C. Appeal
dismissed.
673