Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 18
PETITIONER:
C.V. RAMAN, ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MANAGEMENT OF BANK OF INDIA AND ANOTHER, ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/04/1988
BENCH:
OJHA, N.D. (J)
BENCH:
OJHA, N.D. (J)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 1369 1988 SCR (3) 662
1988 SCC (3) 105 JT 1988 (2) 167
1988 SCALE (1)800
ACT:
Tamil Nadu Shops and Establishment Act, 1947-Andhra
Pradesh Shops and Establishments Act, 1966 Kerala Shops and
Commercial Establishments Act, 1960-Whether nationalised
banks and State Bank of India are establishments under
Central Government within the meaning of-Whether provisions
of the Acts are not applicable to these Banks in view of
exemption contained therein.
HEADNOTE:
These appeals raised an identical question. Civil
Appeals Nos 4291 and 4292 of 1984 were preferred against the
judgment of the Madras High Court in Writ Appeals Nos. 561
and 562 of 1983. The appellant in these two appeals, an
employee in the Bank of India, which is a Nationalised Bank,
was dismissed. Aggrieved, he preferred an appeal under
section 41(2) of the Tamil Nadu Shops and Establishments
Act, 1947 (the Tamil Nadu Shops Act). A preliminary
objection was raised by the Bank to the effect that the
Tamil Nadu Shops Act was not applicable to the Bank in view
of the exemption contained in Section 4(1)(c) thereof. The
Appellate Authority held that the preliminary objection
might be decided along with the appeal. The bank thereupon
filed two writ petitions in the High Court, one for a
direction to the Appellate Authority to dispose of the
preliminary objection before disposing of the appeal on
merits, and the other, for a direction to the Appellate
Authority not to proceed with the appeal. Both the Writ
Petitions were allowed by a Single Judge of the High Court
on the ground that the Bank was an establishment under the
Central Government and consequently the provisions of the
Tamil Nadu Shops Act were not applicable to it in view of
the exemption contained in this behalf in section 4(1)(c).
Against that decision, two writ appeals aforementioned were
filed, which were dismissed by a Division Bench of the High
Court by the Judgment under appeal in these two appeals. The
same judgment of the High Court had disposed of Writ
Petition No. 1550 of 1981 also, which had arisen out of an
application under section 51 of the Tamil Nadu Shops Act
made by the employees of the State Bank of India before the
Commissioner of Labour for a direction that all the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 18
provisions of that Act would apply to them, being employed
in the State Bank. The State Rank had contended that it was
an establishment under the Central
663
Government within the meaning of Section 4(1)(c) of the
Tamil Nadu Shops Act and consequently the provisions of that
Act were not applicable to it. The Commissioner of labour
had rejected the plea of the State Bank and held that the
provisions of the Act were applicable to it. Civil Appeal
No. 4329 of 1984 was preferred against the said Judgment by
the State Bank’s Staff Union and Civil Appeal No. 4735 of
1984 was preferred by the employees concerned.
Civil Appeal No. 1120 of 1976 was preferred by
Syndicate Bank, a Nationalised Bank, against the judgment of
the Andhra Pradesh High Court (Division Bench), dismissing
the Writ Appeal No. 268 of 1975 and upholding the order of a
Single Judge dismissing the Writ Petition No. 5973 of 1973
filed by the appellant Syndicate Bank. The services of
Respondent No. 3 in the appeal had been terminated by the
appellant Syndicate Bank. An appeal was preferred by the
said respondent before the Labour officer under the Andhra
Pradesh Shops and Establishment Act, 1966 (the Andhra
Pradesh Shops Act). The Labour officer allowed the appeal
which was confirmed in a second appeal by the Labour Court.
Aggrieved by these orders, the Bank filed the Writ Petition
above-said. It was urged by the appellant Bank that it being
an establishment under the Central Government within the
meaning of Section 64(1)(b) of the Andhra Pradesh Shops Act,
the provisions of that Act including the provisions of
appeal were not applicable to it in view of the exemption
contained in this behalf. Civil Appeal No. 1042 was
preferred by the Syndicate Bank against the judgment of the
Andhra Pradesh High Court, dismissing the Writ Petition No.
86 of 1979. Respondent No. 3 in the appeal had been
dismissed by the appellant bank. He preferred an appeal
which was allowed. The Bank preferred a second appeal before
the Labour Court, which was dismissed. The Bank filed the
aforesaid writ Petition before the High Court and urged that
it being an establishment under the Central Government
within the meaning of Section 64(1)(b) of the Andhra Pradesh
Shops Act, the provisions of that Act were not applicable to
it in view of the exemption contained in this behalf. The
High Court dismissed the Writ Petition.
Civil Appeal No. 837 of 1984 was preferred by the Bank
of India a nationalised bank, against the judgment of the
Kerala High Court dismissing the Writ Petition No. 1419 of
1978. Respondent No. 1 in the appeal had preferred an appeal
under section 18 of the Kerala Shops and Commercial
Establishments Act, 1960 (the Kerala shops Act) against an
order passed by the appellant Bank, discharging him from
service. A preliminary objection was raised by the Bank with
regard to the maintainability of the appeal on the ground
that it being an establish-
664
ment under the Central Government within the meaning of
section 3(1)(c) of that Act, the provisions thereof
including section 18 above said were not applicable to it.
The objection was overruled by the appellate authority. The
Bank filed the original Petition abovementioned in the High
Court which dismissed the same.
Dismissing the Civil Appeals Nos . 4291 and 4292 of
1984, 4329 of 1984 and 4735 of 1984, and allowing the Civil
Appeal Nos. 1120 of 1976, 1042 of 1979 and 837 of 1984, the
Court,
^
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 18
HELD: The common question which arose for consideration
in all these appeals was as to whether the Nationalised
Banks and the State Bank of India were establishments under
the Central Government within the meaning of the Acts above-
said and consequently the provisions of the said Acts were
not applicable to these Banks in view of the exemption
contained therein in this behalf. [670E]
In view of the definition of the term "establishment"
read with that of "commercial establishment" contained in
the said Acts, it was not disputed even by counsel for the
banks, that a bank is an establishment. Consequently, unless
exempted, the provisions of the said Acts would apply to the
State Bank of India and the nationalised banks also.
[670F-G]
A conspectus of the provisions of the State Bank of
India Act, 1955 (Act No. 23 of 1955) and the Banking
Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act,
1970 (Act No. 5 of 1970), read with the dictionary meaning
of the term "under" leaves no manner of doubt that the State
Bank of India and the nationalised banks are clearly
establishments under the Central Government.[677D]
For the employees of these banks, it was urged that
these banks were autonomous corporations having distinct
juristic entity with a corporate structure of their own and
could not as such be treated to be owned by the Central
Government. According to counsel, the word "under" used in
the expression "under the Central Government" con noted
complete control in the sense of being owned by the Central
Government. Disagreeing with that submission it was held
that the mere fact that the State Bank of India and the
nationalised banks are different entities as corporate
bodies for certain purposes cannot by itself be a
circumstance from which it may be deduced that they cannot
be establishments under the Central Government.
[677E-F; 678A]
665
If the criteria laid down in Ajay Hasia, etc. v. Khalid
Mujib Sehravardi & Ors. etc., [1981] 2 S.C.R. 79 decided by
a Constitution Bench of this Court, was applied to the facts
of these cases, it is obvious that even though the State
Bank of India and the nationalised banks may not be owned as
such by the Central Government and their employees may not
be the employees of the Central Government, they certainly
will fall within the purview of the expression "under the
Central Government", in view of the existence of deep and
pervasive control of the Central Government over these
banks. As pointed out by this Court in Biharilal Dobray v.
Roshan Lal Dobray, AIR 1984 S.C. 385, the true test of
determination of the question whether a statutory
corporation is independent of the Government depends upon
the degree of control. [679G-H;682E-F]
In view of these considerations, no exception could be
taken to the view of the Madras High Court in its judgments
which were the subjectmatter of the Civil Appeal Nos. 4291
and 4292 of 1984, 4375 of 1984 and 4329 of 1984. As regards
the judgment of the Kerala High Court and the judgment of
the Andhra Pradesh High Court under appeal even if the
decisions dealing with Article 12 of the Constitution are
not made the foundation for deciding the point in issue, the
principles enumerated therein particularly with regard to
deep and pervasive control are relevant for deciding the
point in issue, and also it was sufficient to point out that
for holding that the State Bank of India and the
nationalised banks are establishments under the Central
Government which have a corporate structure and have freedom
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 18
in the matter of day-to-day administration, it is not
necessary that these banks should be owned by the Central
Government or be under its absolute control in the sense of
a department of the Government. As regards the circumstances
that even though the Reserve Bank of India is mentioned
specifically in the relevant clause containing exemption,
neither the State Bank of India nor the nationalised banks
are so mentioned, it is to be pointed out that the Reserve
Bank of India was established as shareholders’ Bank under
Act 2 of 1934. The Kerala Shops Act and the Andhra Pradesh
shops Act, of the years 1960 and 1966, were modelled almost
on the pattern of the Tamil Nadu Shops Act, which is of the
year 1947. When section 4(1)(c) of this Act referred to the
Reserve Bank of India in 1947, it obviously referred to it
as the Shareholders’ Bank. The Reserve Bank Transfer to
Public ownership Act (Act 82 of 1948) came into force on 1st
January, 1949, and it was thereafter that the shares in the
capital of the Reserve Bank came to belong to the Central
Government. In this background, no undue emphasis could be
placed on the circumstances that the State Bank of India or
the nationalised banks did
666
not find mention in the provision containing exemption even
though the Reserve Bank of India was specially mentioned
therein. For the response stated above, the aforesaid
decisions of the Kerala High Court and the Andhra Pradesh
High Court deserved to be set aside.[683C-H]
On the view the Court had taken that the State Bank of
India and the nationalised banks are establishments under
the Central Government, the Court did not consider the
question as to whether these banks were establishment, which
not being factories within the meaning of the Factories Act,
1948, were, in respect of matters deal with in the Tamil
Nadu Shops Act, governed by a separate law for the time
being in force in the State so as to be entitled to claim
exemption under clause (f) of sub-section (1) of section 4
of the said Act or of the corresponding provisions in the
Kerala Shops Act and the Andhra Pradesh Shops Act. [684A-B]
Civil Appeals Nos. 4291 and 4292 of 1984, 4329 of 1984
and 4735 of 1984 were dismissed. Civil Appeal No. 1120 of
1976 was allowed and the judgment of the High Court in Writ
Appeal No. 268 of 1975 as also the Judgment of the Single
judgement the Writ Petition No. 5973 of 1973 as well as the
orders of the Labour officer in the appeal filed by
respondent No. 3 and of the Second Appellate Authority m the
second appeal filed by the appellant Bank under the
provisions of the Andhra Pradesh Shops Act were set aside.
Civil Appeal No. 1042 of 1979 was allowed and the judgment
of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in the Writ Petition No. 86
of 1979 as also the orders passed by the first and second
appellate authorities in the appeals preferred by respondent
No. 3 and the bank under the Andhra Pradesh Shops Act were
set aside. Civil Appeal No. 837 of 1984 was allowed and the
judgment of the Kerala High Court in Writ Petition No. 1419
of 1978 was set aside. The preliminary objection raised by
the bank before the Appellate Authority in the appeal filed
by respondent No. I under section 18 of the Kerala Shops Act
to the effect that the said appeal was not maintainable was
upheld, with the result that if the said appeal was still
pending would be disposed of as not maintainable and in case
it had been decided, the said decision should be treated as
without jurisdiction.[684C-F]
The various employees whose appeals preferred under the
Kerala Shops Act or the Andhra Pradesh Shops Act referred to
above had been held to be not maintainable and the orders
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 18
passed therein had been set aside, would be at liberty to
take recourse to such other remedies as might be available
to them in law. [684G]
667
Ajay Hasia, etc. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi & etc.,
[1981] 2 SCR 79; Heavy Engineering Mazdoor Union v. The
State of Bihar & Ors., [1969] 3 SCR 995; Hindustan
Aeronautics Ltd. v. The Workmen and Ors., [1976] 1 SCR 231;
Graham v. Public Works Commissioner, [1901] 2 K.B. 781;
Regional Provident Fund Commissioner, Karnataka v. Workmen
represented by the General Secretary, Karnataka Provident
Fund Employees’ Union and Another, [1984] II L.L.J. 503;
Western Coalfields Ltd. v. Special Area Development
Authority, Korba and Anr., [1982] 2 SCR 1; Rashriva Mill
Mazdoor Sangh, Nagpur v. The Model Mills, Nagpur and Anr.,
[1985] 1 SCR 751; Union of India & Ors. v. N. Hargopal and
Ors., [1987] 1 LLJ 545; Thote Bhaskara Rao v. The A.P.
Public Service Commission and Ors., Judgment Today 1987 (4)
SCC 464 and Biharilal Dobray v. Roshan Lal Dobray, AIR 1984
SC 385, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 4291-
4292 of 1984 etc.
From the Judgment and Order dated 18.4.1984 of the
Madras High Court in W.A. Nos. 561 and 562 of 1983.
K.N. Bhatt, V.C. Mahajan, Ms. R. Vegai, Mr. N.G.R.
Prasad, C.S. Vaidyanathan, Ravinder Bhatt, K.V. Mohan, S.R.
Setia, Raj Birbal, Ambrish Kumar, R.P. Kapoor, Vijay Kumar
Verma, G.N. Rao, K. Ram Kumar, M.A. Firoz, P.K. Pillai, C.V.
Subba Rao, M. Satyanarain Rao and G. Narasihamalu for the
appearing parties.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
OJHA, J. These appeals raise an identical question and
are as such being decided by a common judgment. Before
coming to the question involved in these appeals it would be
necessary to give in brief the facts of each of these cases
to indicate the circumstances in which the said question
arises. Civil Appeal Nos. 4291-4292 of 1984 have been
preferred against the judgment dated 18th April, 1984 of the
Madras High Court in Writ Appeal Nos. 561 and 562 of 1983.
C.V. Raman, the appellant in these two appeals was an
employee in the Bank of India which is a Nationalised Bank.
He was dismissed from service in pursuance of disciplinary
action for certain charges framed against him. Aggrieved, he
preferred an appeal under Section 41(2) of the Tamil Nadu
Shops and Establishments Act, 1947 (hereinafter referred to
as the Tamil Nadu Shops Act). A preliminary objection was
raised on behalf of the Bank of India to the effect that the
Tamil
668
Nadu Shops Act was not applicable to the Bank in view of the
provisions contained in Section 4(1)(c) thereof which
exempted inter alia an establishment under the Central
Government from the purview of that Act. The Appellate
Authority, however, took the view that it was a case where
the preliminary objection may be decided along with the
appeal. The Bank of India thereupon filed two writ petitions
in the High Court being Writ Petition Nos. 2013 and 2014 of
1979. The prayer contained in Writ Petition No. 2013 of 1979
was for the issue of a writ of mandamus directing the
Appellate Authority to dispose of the preliminary objection
before taking up the appeal for hearing on merits. In Writ
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 18
Petition No. 2014 of 1979 on the other hand a prayer was
made for the issue of a writ of prohibition directing the
Appellate Authority not to proceed with the appeal. Both
these writ petitions were allowed by a learned Single Judge
of the Madras High Court accepting the plea raised by the
Bank of India that it was an establishment under the Central
Government and consequently the provisions of the Tamil Nadu
Shops Act were not applicable to it in view of the exemption
contained in this behalf in Section 4(1)(c). The two writ
appeals referred to above were filed by the appellant
against the decision in the aforesaid writ petitions which,
however, were dismissed by a Division Bench of the High
Court by the judgment which is under appeal in these two
civil appeals. By the same judgment a Division Bench of the
High Court also dismissed Writ Petition No. 1550 of 1981.
The petitioners of the said writ petition who were employees
of the State Bank of India made an application under Section
51 of the Tamil Nadu Shops Act before the Commissioner of
Labour with a request to hold that all the provisions of
that Act would apply to them as persons employed in the
State Bank of India. A preliminary objection was raised on
behalf of the State Bank of India that it was an
establishment under the Central Government within the
meaning of Section 4(1)(c) of the Tamil Nadu Shops Act and
consequently the provisions of that Act were not applicable
to it. The Commissioner of Labour, however, rejected the
plea of the State Bank of India and held that the provisions
of the Act were applicable to it. It is this order of the
Commissioner of Labour which was sought to be quashed by a
writ of certiorari in Writ Petition No. 1550 of 1981. On the
view that the State Bank of India was also an establishment
under the Central Government the writ petition was allowed.
Civil Appeal No. 4329 of 1984 has been preferred against the
said judgment by the State Bank’s Staff Union whereas Civil
Appeal No. 4735 of 1984 has been preferred by the employees
concerned.
Civil Appeal No. 1120 of 1976 has been preferred
against the
669
judgment of the Andhra Pradesh High Court dated 3rd
February, 1976 in Writ Appeal No. 268 of 1975 upholding the
order of a learned Single Judge dated 14th November, 1974 in
Writ Petition No. 5973 of 1973. S. Rama Moorthy who is
Respondent No. 3 in this appeal was an employee of the
appellant, Syndicate Bank which is a Nationalised Bank. His
services were terminated and an appeal was preferred by
Respondent No. 3 before the Labour Officer under the Andhra
Pradesh Shops and Establishment Act, 1966 (hereinafter
referred to as the Andhra Pradesh Shops Act). The Labour
officer allowed the said appeal which was confirmed in a
second appeal by the Labour Court. Aggrieved by these orders
the appellant-Bank filed writ petition No. 5973 or 1973 for
quashing of these orders. One of the pleas raised in the
writ petition by the appellant was that it being an
establishment under the Central Government within the
meaning of Section 64(1)(b) of the Andhra Pradesh Shops Act
the provisions of that Act including the provisions of
appeal were not applicable to it in view of the exemption
contained in this behalf and consequently the orders passed
in the appeals by the Labour officer and the Labour Court
were without jurisdiction. This plea, however, did not find
favour with the learned Single Judge who decided the writ
petition and the writ petition was consequently dismissed.
The Writ Appeal No. 268 of 1975 preferred by the appellant-
Bank against that judgment was dismissed by a Division Bench
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 18
of the High Court by the judgment which is the subject
matter of this civil appeal.
Civil Appeal No. 1042 of 1979 has been preferred
against the judgment of the Andhra Pradesh High Court dated
24th January, 1979 in Writ Petition No. 86 of 1979. N.
Satyanarayan Murthy who is Respondent No. 3 in this appeal
was an employee of the appellant- Syndicate Bank which is a
Nationalised bank and was dismissed after being found guilty
of certain changes in disciplinary proceedings initiated
against him. He preferred an appeal which was allowed. The
Bank preferred a second appeal before the Labour Court which
was dismissed. Thereafter the appellant-Bank filed the
aforesaid Writ Petition No. 86 of 1979 before the High Court
and urged that it being an establishment under the Central
Government within the meaning of Section 64(1)(b) of the
Andhra Pradesh Shops Act the provisions of that Act were not
applicable to it in view of the exemption contained in this
behalf. Relying on the judgment in Writ Appeal No. 268 of
1975 which is the subject-matter of Civil Appeal No. 1120 of
1976 this writ petition was dismissed by the judgment which
is under appeal in this civil appeal.
670
Civil Appeal No. 837 of 1984 has been preferred against
the judgment dated 8.4.1981 of the Kerala High Court in a
writ petition being original Petition No. 1419 of 1978. P.A.
Stalin, Respondent No. 1 in this appeal who was an employee
of the Bank of India, a Nationalised Bank, preferred an
appeal under Section 18 of the Kerala Shops and Commercial
Establishments Act, 1960 (hereinafter referred to as the
Kerala Shops Act) against an order passed by the Bank
discharging him from service after conducting a domestic
inquiry. A preliminary objection was raised by the
appellant-Bank with regard to the maintainability of the
appeal on the ground that it being an establishment under
the Central Government within the meaning of Section 3(1)(c)
of that Act, the provisions thereof including Section 18
under which the appeal had been preferred were not
applicable to it. This objection was, however, overruled by
the Appellate Authority and original Petition No. 1419 of
1978 was filed by the Bank in the High Court challenging the
order of the Appellate Authority. The High Court did not
agree with the contention of the appellant-Bank and
dismissed the original Petition aforesaid by its judgment
dated 8.4.1981 and it is this judgment which is under
appeal, as seen above, in this civil appeal.
The common question which arises for consideration in
all these appeals is as to whether the Nationalised Banks
and the State Bank of India are establishments under the
Central Government within the meaning of the Acts referred
to above and consequently the provisions of the said Acts
are not applicable to these Banks in view of the exemption
contained in this behalf therein.
In view of the definition of the term "establishment"
read with that of "commercial establishment" contained in
the Acts referred to above it has not been disputed even by
the learned counsel for the various banks that a bank is an
establishment. Consequently unless exempted the provisions
of the said Acts shall apply to the State Bank of India and
the nationalised banks also. Tamil Nadu Shops Act which is
of the year 1947 and which really seems to be the precursor
and foundation of the Kerala Shops Act and the Andhra
Pradesh Shops Act which are of the years 1960 and 1966
respectively contains exemptions in Section 4. Sub-section
(1) of Section 4 starts with the words "Nothing contained in
this Act shall apply to-". Thereafter it contains clauses
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 18
(a) to (f) which describe the persons and establishments who
are exempted from the operation of the Act. Clauses (c) and
(f) read as hereunder:
671
"(c) establishments under the Central and State
Governments, local authorities, the Reserve Bank
of India, a railway administration operating any
railway as defined in clause (20) of Article 366
of the Constitution and cantonment authorities;
(f) establishments which, not being factories
within the meaning of the Factories Act, 1948,
are, in respect of matters dealt with in this Act,
governed by a separate law for the time being in
force in the State."
What has to be considered is as to whether the State
Bank of India and the nationalised banks can be said to be
establishments under the Central Government as contemplated
by clause (c) aforesaid. What does the word "under" in the
said clause mean in the context in which it appears? That is
the crucial question which arises for consideration in these
cases. The said word ’under’ not having been defined in the
concerned Acts, recourse may be had to its dictionary
meanings. Some of them are as follows:
"In or into a condition of subjugation, regulation
or subordination. " (Webster’s Third New
International)
"Subordinate or lower rank or position".
"In senses denoting subordination or subjugation,
with abstract or other subject, denoting the
authority or control, direction, case, examination
restraint, etc."
"In or into a position or state of subjugation or
submission." (Shorter oxford English Dictionary)
"Subordinate subjected to." (The Compact Edition
of the oxford Dictionary)
"Subject to the authority, rule, control of"
"subject to the supervision instruction or
influence of" (The Grolier International
Dictionary)
"In a position of inferiority or subordination to,
subject to the rule, government, direction
guidance, instruction, or influence of, as, he is
under my care, I served under his father "
672
"In a state of liability, obligation."
"Lower in authority, position,, power etc.,
subordinate."
"held in control or restraint, used
predicatively." (Webster’s Dictionary of the
English Language-Encyclopaedia)
"The term sometimes used in its literal sense of
’below in position’ but more frequently in its
secondary meaning of ’inferior’ or subordinate."
(Boviar’s Law Dictionary)
"Inferior, subordinate of lower rank or position
(10)- Denoting subordination to; or control by, a
person or persons having or exercising,
recognising authority or command."
"with abstract or other subs. denoting authority
or control, with or without specification of the
person or persons exercising it." (The Compact
Edition of the oxford English Dictionary)
"Under has the same significance as ’by virtue of’
by or through the authority of" (In
Venkataramiya’s Law Lixicon)
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 18
"The word "under" may be used in statute in its
literal sense as indicating condition of
inferiority or subservience or as meaning subject
to or in conformity with, denoting curtailment or
restriction of, but nevertheless agreement or
congruity with, something else to which it is made
applicable. Alsop v. pierce, 19 SO 2d 799, 802,
155 Fla. 184" (Words and Phrases Permanent
Edition)
We may now advert to the composition and constitution
of the State Bank of India and the nationalised banks. The
preamble of the State Bank of India Act, 1955 (hereinafter
referred to as Act No. 23 of 1955) reads as under:
"Whereas for the extension of banking facilities
on a large scale, more particularly in the rural
and semi-urban areas, and for diverse other public
purposes it is expedient to constitute a State
Bank for India, and to transfer to it the
673
undertaking of the Imperial Bank of India and to
provide for other matters connected therewith or
incidental thereto."
Section 3 provides that a bank to be called the State Bank
of India shall be constituted to carry on the business of a
banking and other business in accordance with the provisions
of the Act and for the purpose of taking over the
undertaking of the Imperial Bank. It further provides that
the Reserve Bank together with such other persons as may
from time to time become shareholders in the State Bank in
accordance with the provisions of this Act, shall, so long
as they are shareholders in the State Bank, constitute a
body corporate with perpetual succession and a common seal
under the name of the State Bank of India and shall sue and
be sued in that name. It shall have power to acquire and
hold property, whether movable or immovable for the purposes
for which it is constituted to dispose of the same.
According to Section 4 the authorised capital of the State
bank is to be twenty crores of rupees divided into twenty
lakhs of fully paid up shares of one hundred rupees each.
The Central Government, however has been given the power to
increase or reduce the authorised capital as it thinks fit
so, however that the shares in all the cases shall be fully
paid up shares of one hundred rupees each. Likewise the
Central Government under Section 5(2) has been given the
power from time to time to increase issued capital in the
manner stated therein. Sub-section (3) contemplates that no
increase in the issued capital beyond twelve crores and
fifty lakhs of rupees shall be made without the previous
sanction of Central Government. Section 6 contemplates that
all shares in the capital of the Imperial Bank shall be
transferred to and shall vest in the Reserve Bank free of
all trusts, liabilities and encumbrances and the undertaking
of the Imperial Bank shall be transferred to and shall vest
in the State bank subject to the other conditions laid down
therein. Under sub-section (2) of Section 7 the power to
determine as to whether persons mentioned therein have
observed the conditions contemplated by the said sub-section
has been given to the Central Government and its decision
has been made final. Sub-section (3) of Section 7
contemplates that the appointment, promotion or increment
contemplated by the said sub-section as have been confirmed
by the Central Government shall have effect or be payable or
claimable. Likewise, the continued grant of the pension,
allowance or other benefit, as the case may be, has been
made subject to the direction of the Central Government in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 18
this behalf. Section 8 contemplates that for the persons who
immediately before the appointed day were the trustees of
the funds mentioned therein, there shall be substituted as
trustees such persons
674
as the Central Government may by general or special order
specify. Sub-section (1) of Section 16 contemplates that the
Central office of the State Bank shall be at Bombay. The
Central Government, however, has been conferred with the
power to provide otherwise by Notification in the official
Gazette. Sub-section (5) of Section 16 provides that
notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (4) the
State Bank shall establish not less than four hundred
branches in addition to the branches referred to in sub-
section (3) within five years of the appointed day, or such
extended period as the Central Government may specify in
this behalf and the places where such additional branches
are to be established shall be determined in accordance with
any such programme as may be drawn up by the Central
Government from time to time in consultation with the
Reserve bank and the State Bank. Even though in view of
Section 17 the general superintendence and direction of the
affairs and business of the State Bank have been entrusted
to the Central Board, Section 18 contemplates that in the
discharge of its functions the State Bank shall be guided by
such directions in matters of policy involving public
interest as the Central Government may in consultation with
the Governor of the Reserve Bank and the Chairman of the
State Bank, give to it and that if any question arises
whether the direction relates to a matter of policy
involving public interest, the decision of the Central
Government thereon is to be final. Section 19 deals with the
composition of the Central Board. Clauses (a), (b), (c),
(ca), (cb) and (e) of sub-section (1), sub-sections (1A),
(2) and (3A) indicate that the Central Government has been
given extensive power in the matter of composition of the
Central Board. Section 45 provides that no provision of law
relating to the winding up of companies shall apply to the
State Bank and the State Bank shall not be placed in
liquidation save by order of the Central Government and in
such manner as it may direct. This Section, therefore,
entitles the Central Government even to liquidate the State
Bank. Section 49 confers power on the Central Government in
consultation with the Reserve Bank to make rules to provide
for all matters mentioned therein. The power given under
section 50 to the Central Board to make regulations has been
made subject to the previous sanction of the Central
Government. These provisions indicate that the Central
Government has a deep and pervasive control over the State
Bank of India.
Almost similar is the position with regard to the
nationalised banks also. The Banking Companies (Acquisition
and Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1970 (hereinafter
referred to as Act No. 5 of 1970) was enacted to provide for
acquisition and transfer of the undertakings
675
of certain banking companies having regard to their size,
resources, coverage and organisation, in order to control
the heights of the economy and to meet progressively and
serve better the needs of development of the economy in
conformity with national policy and objectives and for
matters connected therewith or incidental thereto. Clauses
(d) and (f) of Section 2 of this Act define "corresponding
new banks" and "existing banks". First Schedule to the Act
in column 1 enumerates the names of the existing banks
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 18
whereas in column 2 the names of the corresponding new
banks. Sections 3 and 4 indicate that the corresponding new
banks which are constituted on the commencement of this Act
have taken over the undertakings of the concerned existing
banks. Section 6 contemplates that every existing bank shall
be given by the Central Government such compensation in
respect of transfer under Section 4 to the corresponding new
banks of the undertakings of the existing banks as is
specified against each such bank in the Second Schedule.
Section 7 provides that the Head officer of each
corresponding new bank shall be at such place as the Central
Government may by Notification in the official Gazette
specify in this behalf. The general superintendence,
direction and management of the affairs and business of a
corresponding new bank are to vest in a Board of Directors
and it is the Central Journeymen which in consultation with
the Reserve Bank has been given the power under sub-section
(3) to constitute the first Board of Directors consisting of
not more than seven persons to be appointed by the Central
Journeymen. The proviso to the said sub-section authorises
the Central Government if it is of opinion that it is
necessary in the interests of the corresponding new bank so
to do to remove a person from the membership of the first
Board of Directors and appoint any other person. in his
place. The proviso to sub-section (5) to Section 7
contemplates that the Central Journeymen may if the Chairman
of an existing bank declines to become or to continue the
function as a Custodian of the corresponding new bank or it
is of opinion that it is necessary in the interests of the
corresponding new bank, so to do, appoint any other person
as the Custodian of a corresponding new bank and the
Custodian so appointed shall receive such emoluments as the
Central Journeymen may specify in this behalf. According to
sub-section (6) thereof the Custodian is to hold office
during the pleasure of the Central Journeymen. Section 8 on
the other hand contemplates that every corresponding new
bank shall in the discharge of its functions be guided by
such directions in regard to matters of policy involving
public interest as the Central Government may after
consultation with the Governor of the Reserve Bank give.
Sub-section (1) of Section 9 of this Act confers power on
the Central Journeymen to make a scheme for carry-
676
ing out the provisions of this Act after consultation with
the Reserve Bank. Sub-section (2) of Section 9 provides that
in particular and without prejudice to the generality of the
power contained in sub-section (1) of the scheme may provide
for the capital structure of the corresponding new bank, the
constitution of the Board of Directors by whatever name
called of the corresponding new bank and all such matters in
connection therewith or incidental thereto as the Central
Government may consider to be necessary or expedient, the
reconstitution of any corresponding new bank into two or
more corporations, the amalgamation of any corresponding new
bank with any other corresponding new bank or with another
banking institution, the transfer of the whole or any part
of the undertaking of a corresponding new bank to any other
banking institution or the transfer of the whole or any part
of the undertaking of any other banking institution to a
corresponding new bank and such incidental, consequential
and supplemental matters as may be necessary to carry out
the provisions of this Act. Sub-section (4) entitles the
Central Government in consultation with the Reserve Bank to
make a scheme to amend or vary any scheme made under sub-
section (1). Sub-section (5) inter alia contemplates that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 18
the scheme so prepared by the Central Government shall be
binding on the corresponding new banks or corporation or
banking institutions and also on all other persons mentioned
therein. Section 10 deals with closure of accounts and
disposal of profits. Sub-section (2) thereof contemplates
that the remuneration payable to every auditor of a
corresponding new bank shall be such as the Reserve Bank may
fix in consultation with the Central Government. Under
subsection (4) every auditor of a corresponding new bank has
to make a report to the Central Government upon the annual
balance sheet and accounts and such report shall contain
what is provided for in clauses (a) to (e). Sub-section (7)
contemplates that after making provision for monies
specified therein a corresponding new bank shall transfer
the balance of profits to the Central Government. Sub-
section (7A) makes it obligatory on every corresponding new
bank to furnish to the Central Government the annual balance
sheet, the profit and loss account and the auditor’s report
and a report by its Board of Directors on the working and
activities of the bank during the period covered by the
accounts. In view of sub-section (8) the Central Government
shall cause every auditor’s report and report on the working
and activities of each corresponding new bank to be laid
before each House of Parliament. Sub-section (9) without
prejudice to the provisions contained earlier authorises the
Central Government, at any time, to appoint such number of
auditors as it thinks fit to examine and report on the
accounts of a corresponding new bank. Sub-section (3) of
Section 12
677
contemplates that for the persons who immediately before the
commencement of this Act were the trustees for any pension,
provident, gratuity or other life fund constituted for the
officers or other employees of an existing bank there shall
be substituted as trustees such persons as the Central
Government may by general or special order specify. Section
18 of this Act is in pari materia with Section 45 of the
State Bank of India Act. It provides that no provision of
law relating to winding up of corporations shall apply to a
corresponding new bank and no corresponding new bank shall
be placed in liquidation save by order of the Central
Government and in such manner as it may direct. A
nationalised bank also can, therefore, like the State Bank
of India, be liquidated by the Central Government. Under
Section 19 the power of the Board of Directors of a
corresponding new bank to make regulations is subject to
obtaining the previous sanction of the Central Government.
A conspectus of the provisions of Act No. 23 of 1955
and Act No. 5 of 1970 read with the meanings of the term
"under" referred to above leaves no manner of doubt that the
State Bank of India and the nationalised banks are clearly
establishments under the Central Government
For the employees of these banks it was urged by their
learned counsel that these banks are autonomous corporations
having distinct juristic entity with a corporate structure
of their own and cannot as such be treated to be owned by
the Central Government. According to learned counsel the
word "under" used in the expression "under the Central
Government" connotes complete control in the sense of being
owned by the Central Government. We find it difficult to
agree with this submission. We shall shortly deal with the
legal position with regard to an autonomous corporation
having distinct juristic entity with a corporate structure.
Suffice it to say at this place that to uphold the
submission of learned counsel for the employees the word
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 18
"under" will have to be substituted by the word "of" in the
relevant subsection. It is obvious that the word "under"
’cannot be taken to have the same meaning as word "of" which
may bring in the notion of ownership. Had that been the
intention of the Legislature we find no cogent reason as to
why the word "of" was not used in place of the word "under"
in the relevant sub-section. Indeed the concept of "under"
can be relevant only when there are two entities one of
which may be under the other. A department of the Government
strictly speaking is a part of the Government and can only
loosely be termed as under the Government. Consequently the
mere fact that the State
678
Bank of India and the nationalised banks are different
entities as corporate bodies for certain purposes cannot by
itself be a circumstance from which it may be deduced that
they cannot be establishments under the Central Government.
Some of the cases on which reliance was placed by the High
Court of Madras in taking the view that these banks were
establishments under the Central Government had been
rendered with reference to Article 12 of the Constitution.
It was urged by learned counsel for the employees that since
Article 12 of the Constitution defining the term "State" so
as to include authorities under the control of the
Government of India occurs in Part III of the Constitution
dealing with fundamental rights, the decisions in the cases
dealing with Article 12 could not be made the basis for the
decision that the State Bank of India and the nationalised
banks were establishments under the Central Government
within the meaning of the Acts referred to above with regard
to shops and commercial establishments. Even though that be
so, it cannot be gainsaid that the salient principles which
have been laid down in those cases with regard to the
authorities having a corporate structure and exercising
autonomy in certain spheres will certainly be useful for
determining as to whether the State Bank of India and the
nationalised banks are establishments under the Central
Government. Ajay Hasia etc. v. Khalid Mujib Sehravardi &
Ors. etc., [1981] 2 S.C.R. Page 79 is a decision of a
Constitution Bench of this Court. The question which came up
for consideration in that case was whether Jammu and Kashmir
Regional Engineering College, Srinagar registered as a
society under the Jammu and Kashmir Registration of
Societies Act, 1898 was a "State" under Article 12 of the
Constitution and as such amenable to writ jurisdiction. It
was held:
"But as the tasks of the Government multiplied
with the advent of the welfare State, it began to
be increasingly felt that the framework of civil
service was not sufficient to handle the new tasks
which were often specialised and highly technical
in character and which called for flexibility of
approach and quick decision making. The inadequacy
of the civil service to deal with these new
problems came to be realised and it became
necessary to forge a new instrumentality or
administrative device for handling these new
problems. It was in these circumstances and with a
view to supplying this administrative need that
the corporation came into being as the third arm
of the Government and over the years it has been
increasingly utilised by the Government for
setting up and running public enterprises
679
and carrying out other public functions. Today
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 18
with increasing assumption by the government of
commercial ventures and economic projects, the
corporation has become an effective legal
contrivance in the hands of the Government for
carrying out its activities, for it is found that
this legal facility of corporate instrument
provides considerable flexibility and elasticity
and facilitates proper and efficient management
with professional skills and on business
principles and it is blissfully free from
"departmental rigidity, slow motion procedure and
hierarchy of officers". The government in many of
its commercial ventures and public enterprises is
resorting to more and more frequently to this
resourceful legal contrivance of a corporation
because it has many practical advantages and at
the same time does not involve the slightest
diminution in its ownership and control of the
undertaking. In such cases "the true owner is the
State, the real operator is the State and the
effective controllorate is the State and
accountability for its actions to the community
and to Parliament is of the State". It is
undoubtedly true that the corporation is a
distinct juristic entity with a corporate
structure of its own and it carries on its
functions on business principles with a certain
amount off autonomy which is necessary as well as
useful from the point of view of effective
business management, but behind the formal
ownership which is cast in the corporate mould,
the reality is very much the deeply pervasive
presence of the Government. It is really the
Government which acts through the instrumentality
or agency of the corporation and the juristic veil
of corporate personality worn for the purpose of
convenience of management and administration
cannot be allowed to obliberate the true nature of
the reality behind which is the Government."
(Emphasis supplied)
If the criteria laid down above is applied to the facts
of the instant cases it is obvious that even though the
State Bank of India and the nationalised banks may not be
owned as such by the Central Government and its employees
may not be the employees of the Central Government they
certainly will fall within the purview of the expression
"under the Central Government", in view of the existence of
deep and pervasive control of the Central Government over
these banks.
680
Learned counsel for the employees placed reliance on
the decision of this Court in Heavy Engineering Mazdoor
Union v. The State of Bihar & Ors., [1969] 3 S.C.R. Page 995
where at page 998 it was held that the words "under the
authority of" mean pursuant to the authority, such as where
an agent or a servant acts under or pursuant to the
authority of his principal or master and that the same
obviously cannot be said of a company incorporated under the
Companies Act whose constitution, powers and functions are
provided for and regulated by its memorandum of association
and the articles of association and which has a separate
existence recognised as a juristic person. In our opinion
that decision is clearly distinguishable. The question which
came up for consideration in that case was whether an
industry carried on by a company incorporated under the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 18
Companies Act was an industry carried on "under the
authority of" the Central Government so that the Central
Government may be the appropriate Government for making a
reference under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. In the
instant cases we are not concerned with the question as to
whether the various banks referred to above are carried on
"under the authority of" the Central Government. The
question, as seen above, which falls in these cases for
consideration is whether in view of the existence of deep
and pervasive control of the Central Government over these
banks they are establishments under the Central Government
for purposes of the Acts aforesaid dealing with Shops and
Commercial Establishments. Reliance was also placed by
learned counsel on Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. v. The Workmen
and Ors., [1976] 1 S.C.R. 231 where again in the context of
the Industrial Disputes Act the same view was taken relying
on the earlier decision in the case of Heavy Engineering
Mazdoor Union (supra). In this connection it may be noticed
that even in the case of Heavy Engineering Mazdoor Union
(supra) it was observed that the question whether a
corporation is an agent of the State would depend upon the
facts of each case. After referring to the decision in
Graham v. Public Works Commissioner, [1901] 2 KB 781 it was
observed that where a State setting up a corporation so
provided such a corporation could be easily identified as
the agent of the State. This distinction was noticed in a
subsequent decision of this Court in Regional Provident Fund
Commissioner, Karnataka v. Workmen represented by the
General Secretary, Karnataka, [1984] II L.L.J. Page 503
Provident Fund Employees’ Union and Another. Reliance was
then placed by learned counsel for the employees on the
following observations in the case of Western Coalfields
Ltd. v. Special Area Development Authority, Korba and Anr.,
[1982] 2 S.C.R. Page 1:
681
"The third contention of the Attorney General
flows from the provisions of article 285(1) of the
Constitution which says that the property of the
Union shall, save in so far as Parliament may by
law otherwise provide, be exempt from all taxes
imposed by a State or by any authority within a
State. Section 127A(2) of the Madhya Pradesh
Municipalities Act and Section 136 of the Madhya
Pradesh Municipal Corporation Act also provide
that the property tax shall not be leviable, inter
alia, on "buildings and lands owned by or vesting
in the Union Government". Relying on these
provisions, it is contended by the Attorney
General that since the appellant companies are
wholly owned by the Government of India, the lands
and buildings owned by the companies cannot be
subjected to property tax. The short answer to
this contention is that even though the entire
share capital of the appellant companies has been
subscribed by the Government of India, it cannot
be predicated that the companies themselves are
owned by the Government of India. The companies,
which are incorporated under the Companies Act,
have a corporate personality of their own,
distinct from that of the Government of India. The
lands and buildings are vested in and owned by the
companies; the Government of India only owns the
share capital."
In our opinion this decision too is hardly of any assistance
inasmuch as in the instant cases the Banks are not asserting
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 18
that they are owned by the Central Government. The other
case on which the learned counsel for the employees relied
on is Rashtriya Mill Mazdoor Sangh, Nagpur v. The Modal
Mills, Nagpur and another, [1985] 1 S.C.R. Page 751. That
case again is distinguishable. The question which came up
for consideration in that case was with regard to the
consequence that ensued on the issue of a notified order
appointing authorised Controller under Section 18A of the
Industries (Development & Regulation) Act, 1951. It was
pointed out that the consequence of such a notified order
being issued is to divert the management from the present
managers and to vest it in the authorised Controller. It
could not be said that on the issue of such an order the
industrial undertaking is engaged in the industry carried on
under the authority of the department of the Central
Government inasmuch as the expression "under the authority
of any department of the Central Government" in ordinary
parlance means that the department is directly responsible
for the management of the industrial undertaking. It was
further pointed out that the power to regulate the
management or control the management is entirely
682
distinguishable from the power to run the industry under the
authority of the department of the Central Government. As
seen above, no such question arises in the instant cases
while determining the point as to whether the banks referred
to above are establishments under the Central Government.
Union of India and others v. N. Hargopal and others, [1987]
1 L.L.J. Page 545 on which reliance was next placed was a
case where the question arose as to whether establishments
in public sector were covered by the provisions of the
Employment Exchange (Compulsory Notification of Vacancies)
Act, 1959. In the context of certain executive instructions
issued by the Government of India it was held that while the
Government was at perfect liberty to issue instructions to
its own departments and organisations provided the
instructions do not contravene any constitutional provision
or any statute, these instructions cannot bind other bodies
which are created by statute and which function under the
authority of a statute. This decision also obviously is of
no assistance in deciding the point which has been raised in
the instant cases.
Learned counsel for the employees also referred to the
decision of this Court in Thote Bhaskara Rao v. The A.P.
Public Service Commission and others, Judgment Today 1987
(4) S.C.C. Page 464 where it was held that employees in
Hindustan Shipyard which was a Government owned undertaking
could not be equated with the employees of the Government.
Since in the instant cases the employees of the State Bank
of India or the nationalised banks are not asked to be
treated as employees of the Central Government this decision
too is of no assistance. As pointed out by this Court in
Bihari Lal Dobray v. Roshan Lal Dobray AIR 1984 SC 385 the
true test of determination of the question whether a
statutory corporation is independent of the Government
depends upon the degree of control. In this view of the
matter we are of opinion that no exception can be taken to
the view of the Madras High Court in its judgments which are
the subject-matter of Civil Appeal Nos. 4291-4292 of 1984,
4735 of 1984 and 4329 of 1984. As regards the judgment of
the Full Bench of the Kerala High Court which is the
subject-matteer of Civil Appeal No. 837 of 1984 and the
judgments of the Andhra Pradesh High Court which are the
subject-matter of Civil Appeal Nos. 1042 of 1979 and 1120 of
1976 it may be pointed out that what has weighed with the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 18
learned Judges who decided these cases is:
(1) that the decisions dealing with the term "other
authorities" within the meaning of Article 12 of
the Constitution were not of much assistance;
683
(2) that the Central Government exercises control over
the nationalised banks only to a limited extent
and that there was nothing to enable such banks to
identify with the Central Government particularly
when as a legal person these banks have got a
right to hold and acquire property and have almost
full freedom in the matter of day to
dayadministration
(3) Even though in the relevant clause containing
exemption the Reserve Bank of India had been
mentioned there was no such mention with regard to
nationalised banks.
As regards the first reason referred to above we have
already pointed out that even if the decisions dealing with
Article 12 of the Constitution are not made the foundation
for deciding the point in issue, the principles enumerated
therein referred to above particularly with regard to deep
and pervasive control are relevant for deciding the point in
issue. As regards the second reason referred to above
suffice it to point out that for holding that the State Bank
of India and the nationalised banks are establishments under
the Central Government which have a corporate structure and
have freedom in the matter of day to day administration it
is not necessary that these banks should be owned by the
Central Government or be under its absolute control in the
sense of a department of the Government. With regard to the
last reason namely the circumstance that even though Reserve
Bank of India is mentioned specifically in the relevant
clause containing exemption neither State Bank of India nor
the nationalised banks are so mentioned, it may be pointed
out that the Reserve Bank of India was established as
Shareholders’ Bank under Act 2 of 1934. As seen above, the
Kerala Shops Act and the Andhra Pradesh Shops Act which are
of the years 1960 and 1966 respectively were modelled almost
on the pattern of the Tamil Nadu Shops Act which is of the
year 1947. When Section 4(1)(c) of this Act referred to the
Reserve bank of India in 1947 it obviously referred to it as
Shareholders’ Bank. The Reserve Bank Transfer to Public
Ownership Act (Act 82 of 1948) came into force on 1st
January, 1949 and it was thereafter that the shares in the
capital of the Reserve Bank came to belong to the Central
Government. In this background no undue emphasis can be
placed on the circumstance that the State Bank of India or
the nationalised banks did not find mention in the provision
containing exemption even though Reserve Bank of India was
specifically mentioned therein. For the reasons stated above
the aforesaid decisions of the Kerala High Court and the
Andhra Pradesh High Court deserve to be set aside.
684
On the view which we have taken namely that the State
Bank of India and the nationalised banks are establishments
under the Central Government we do not find it necessary to
consider the question as to whether these banks are
establishments which not being factories within the meaning
of the Factories Act, 1948 are, in respect of matters dealt
with in the Tamil Nadu Shops Act governed by a separate law
far the time being in force in the State so as to be
entitled to claim exemption under clause (f) of sub-section
(1) of Section 4 of the said Act or of the corresponding
provisions in the Kerala Shops Act and the Andhra Pradesh
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 18
Shops Act.
In the result, Civil Appeal Nos. 4291-4292 of 1984,
4329 of 1984 and 4735 of 1984 are dismissed. Civil Appeal
No. 1120 of 1976 is allowed and the judgment of the Division
Bench of the High Court dated 3rd February, 1976 in Writ
Appeal No. 268 of 1975 as also the judgment of the learned
Single Judge dated 14th November, 1974 in Writ Petition No.
5973 of 1973 as well as the orders of the Labour Officer in
the appeal filed by Respondent No. 3 and of the Second
Appellate Authority in the second appeal filed by the
appellant-bank under the provisions of the Andhra Pradesh
Shops Act are set aside. Civil Appeal No. 1042 of 1979 is
also allowed and the judgment of the Andhra Pradesh High
Court dated 24th January, 1979 in Writ Petition No. 86 of
1979 as also orders passed by the first and second appellate
authorities in the apeals preferred by Respondent No. 3 and
the bank respectively under the Andhra Pradesh Shops Act are
set aside. Civil Appeal No. 837 of 1984 is also allowed and
the judgment of Kerala High Court in Writ Petition No. 1419
of 1978 is set aside. The preliminary objection raised on
behalf of the bank before the Appellate Authority in the
appeal filed by Respondent No. 1 under Section 18 of the
Kerala Shops Act to the effect that the said appeal was not
maintainable is upheld. With the result that if the said
appeal is still pending it shall be disposed of as not
maintainable and in case it has been decided the said
decision shall be treated as without jurisdiction. The
various employees whose appeals preferred under the Kerala
Shops Act or the Andhra Pradesh Shops Act preferred to above
have been hold to be not maintainable and the orders passed
therein have been set aside shall be at liberty to take
recourse to such other remedies as may be available to them
in law. In the circumstances of the case, however, there
shall be no order as to costs in any of these appeals.
S.L. Civil Appeal Nos. 4291-4292,4329 & 4735/84
dismissed and
C.A. Nos. 1120/76, 1042/79 & 837/84 allowed.
685