Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6430 of 2003
PETITIONER:
M P State Textile Corpn. Ltd.
RESPONDENT:
Mehendra & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/04/2005
BENCH:
N Santosh Hegde & S B Sinha
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
N SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
This appeal arises out of a judgment of the High Court of
Madhya Pradesh, Indore Bench, made in Writ Petition No.1974
of 2000 whereby the High Court by its order dated 17.9.2002
dismissed the writ petition filed by the appellant, challenging an
award made by the Labour Court, Ujjain, dated 4.5.2000 in
Case No.36 of 1999 whereby the said Labour Court allowed the
application of the respondent-workmen herein and while
holding that the respondent-workmen were employees of the
appellant-Corporation, set aside their retrenchment made by
Indore Textile Mills Ltd., Ujjain, and also directed the appellant
to pay the salary and benefits at par that is available to the
employees of the appellant-Corporation.
In this appeal, the appellant-Corporation contends that
the respondent-workmen were recruited by the appellant-
Corporation for and on behalf of Indore Textile Mills, Ujjain
and since the said Mills was closed, services of the workmen
were lawfully retrenched, hence, the Labour Court and the High
Court erred in directing their reinstatement in the appellant-
Corporation. It is nextly contended that assuming that the
respondent-workmen were employees of the appellant-
Corporation, still they were appointed on a personal pay-scale
of each of these respondent-workmen as evidenced by their
letter of appointment and their services were liable to be
transferred in terms of the said letters of appointment, therefore,
the Labour Court and the High Court were not justified in
directing the payment of salary to these workmen on a scale
which is otherwise available only to the workmen in the
appellant-Corporation.
On behalf of the respondent-workmen it is contended that
the workmen were appointed by the appellant-Corporation after
regular procedure being followed and after interview and
though they were transferred to other establishments under the
appellant-Corporation like Indore Textile, Ujjain, they remained
to be the workmen of the appellant-Corporation and their
services could not have been terminated by Indore Textile,
Ujjain assuming that that Mill had closed. In such an event,
they are entitled to be transferred back to the parent body i.e.
the appellant herein. It was also contended that they are entitled
to the pay-scale of the appellant-Corporation that is being paid
to the employees in the similar cadre in the appellant-
Corporation. They also contended that there have been
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instances of other workmen who were similarly selected like
the respondent-workmen who have been transferred to the
appellant-Corporation on a pay-scale available to the employees
of the appellant.
We have heard learned counsel for the parties and
perused the records. The respondent-workmen were appointed
by the appellant-Corporation and their appointment letters are
on record. One such appointment letter of respondent No.1
shows that the appellant-Corporation entertaining an
application from him and after interviewing him appointed him
as a Shift Assistant (Spinning) and posted him at Indore Textile,
Ujjain on the terms and conditions mentioned in the said letter.
The first of the terms stated that the said respondent will be
paid a basic pay of Rs.850/- p.m. plus Industrial Dearness
Allowance and other allowances as per the rules in the pay-
scale of Rs.680-1050 plus House Rent Allowance @ 15% of
the basic pay. Clause 3 of the terms of appointment says that
the respondent-workmen were liable to be transferred in terms
of the said letter of appointment to any unit managed by the
Corporation directly or indirectly. A reading of the said letter of
appointment along with the evidence led by the parties before
the Labour Court clearly shows that the respondent-workmen
applied for employment in the appellant-Corporation and it was
the appellant-Corporation which entertained their applications,
interviewed the said workmen and appointed them on the pay-
scale mentioned in their letter of appointment. Under the said
appointment letter, the appellant had retained its right to
transfer the workmen to any unit managed by the appellant,
directly or indirectly. From this material on record, it is clear
that the workmen were appointed by the Corporation as its
employees and were transferred or deputed to various Textile
Mills under it, in the instant case, to Indore Textile, Ujjain,
therefore, if Indore Textile, Ujjain, suffered a closure, the
services of the respondent-workmen could not have been
terminated by the management of Indore Textile, Ujjain,
because the respondent-workmen were not its employees.
Therefore, the Labour Court as well as the High Court were
justified in coming to the conclusion that the respondent-
workmen were the employees of the appellant-Corporation and
their retrenchment by Indore Textile, Ujjain is without authority
of law since they were not the employees or workmen of Indore
Textile, Ujjain.
Coming to the next question whether the respondent-
workmen are entitled to the pay-scale of Indore Textile, Ujjain,
or the appellant-Corporation, the Labour Court and the High
Court held that since the respondents were the workmen under
the appellant-Corporation, they ought to be paid the pay-scale
that is available to similarly situated workmen in the appellant-
Corporation. We are unable to agree with the findings of the
High Court and the Labour Court in this regard. It is seen from
the letter of appointment that the respondent-workmen were
appointed on certain terms and conditions which included a
personal Pay to each one of the respondent-workmen, for
example in case of first respondent herein, it was on a basic pay
of Rs.850 plus Industrial D.A. and other allowances in the pay-
scale of Rs.680-40-800-50-1200-60-1500 plus House Rent
Allowance @ 15% of the basic pay. The respondent-workmen
without demur accepted this pay and it remained to be their
personal pay even after their posting in Indore Textile and this
was not challenged by the workmen even though their
appointment was made as far back as 1979. It is only for the
first time when the services were retrenched along with the
challenge to the retrenchment, a claim for the pay-scale
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available in the appellant-Corporation was made as a
consequential relief. We think the respondent-workmen who
having accepted their employment on a contract, the terms of
which specified the pay-scale of each of these workmen,
cannot claim the pay-scale of the appellant-Corporation when
their services were retrenched by Indore Textile, Ujjain. In our
opinion, since the respondents accepted the pay-scale and did
not challenge the same for more than a decade, it is not open for
them to demand the pay-scale that may be available to similarly
situated workmen in the appellant-Corporation. To that extent
we are of the opinion that the Labour Court has erred.
For the reasons stated above this appeal is partly allowed
while confirming the findings of the Labour Court and the High
Court in regard to the relationship between the appellant and the
respondents, and the direction to reinstate the workmen in the
appellant-Corporation, the direction for payment of salary at par
with the workmen of the appellant is set aside. We direct the
appellant to pay to the respondent-workmen wages due in
accordance with the pay-scale offered in their letter of
appointment. This, however, will not prevent the respondent-
workmen from seeking parity of pay with the other workmen of
the appellant in future, if permissible in law.
With the above observations, this appeal is partly
allowed.