Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UPTRON INDIA LIMITED
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHAMMI BHAN & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/02/1998
BENCH:
S. SAGHIR AHMAD, M. JAGANNADHA RAO
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S. SAGHIR AHMAD, J
Respondent 1 was appointed as an operator (Trainee) on
13.6.1980 in the petitioner’s establishment. On completion
of training, she was absorbed on that post with effect from
13.7.1981 and was confirmed on 13.7.1982. She thus acquired
the status of a permanent employee.
2. With effect from 7th of November, 1984, respondent 1
proceeded, and remained till 29th January, 1985, on
maternity leave. Thereafter, she allegedly remained absent
with effect from 30.1.1985 to 12.4.1985 without any
application for leave and consequently, by order dated 12th
April, 1985, the petitioner informed respondent 1 that her
services stood automatically terminated in terms of Clause
17 (g) of the Certified standing Orders. Respondent 1 raised
an Industrial Dispute and made prayer to the State
Government in 1985 that her case may be referred to the
Industrial Tribunal for adjudication. Her application, filed
before the Deputy Labour Commissioner, Lucknow, was
registered as C.B. Case No. 310-1985. The State Government,
by its order dated 18.7.1990, referred the following
question for adjudication to the Industrial Tribunal,
Lucknow:
"Whether the termination of the
services of female Smt. Shammi
Bhan, operator, daughter of C.N.
Kaul, by the management by its
letter dated 12.4.1985 is proper
and legal. If not, the relief which
the employee will be entitled to?"
(Translated from Hindi)
3. The Tribunal, by its Award dated 21st July, 1992, held
that the termination of services of respondent 1 amounted to
"Retrenchment" within the meaning of Section 2(00) of the
Industrial Disputed Act and since all other legal
requirements had not been followed, the termination was bad
and consequently she was entitled to reinstatement as also
fifty per cent of back wages from the date of termination
till reinstatement.
4. This Award was challenged by the petitioner through a
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Writ Petition in the Allahabad High Court (Lucknow Bench)
and the High Court, by the impugned judgment dated
28.10.1997, dismissed the writ petition upholding the
findings of the Tribunal that termination of respondent’s
services was "retrenchment". The High Court further held
that while invoking the provisions of Clause 17(g) of the
Certified Standing Orders, the petitioner ought to have been
given an opportunity of hearing to respondent.
5. Mr. Manoj Swarup, learned counsel appearing for the
petitioner in this Special Leave Petition, has contented
that since there was a specific provision contained in Para
17(g) of the Certified Standing Orders that if the employee
overstays the leave without permission for more than seven
days his services would be liable to automatic termination,
the Industrial Tribunal as also the High Court were wrong in
holding that the termination of her services was bad. He has
also contented that the termination of respondent’s services
on account of her continued absence would not amount to
"retrenchment" as defined in Section 2(00) of the Industrial
Disputes Act (for short, ‘the Act 6’) and, therefore, there
was no occasion for the High Court or the Industrial
Tribunal to grant reinstatement or direct payment of back
wages.
6. The Tribunal as also the High Court have recorded a
categorical finding of fact that the respondent was a
permanent employee in the petitioner’s establishment.
7. We have to see whether the services of the respondent,
who had acquired the status of a permanent employee, could
be terminated in the mode and manner adopted by the
petitioner, who maintains that it was done in accordance
with Clause 17 (g) of the Certified Standing Orders and no
grievance can, therefore, be raised by the respondent on
that account.
8. Before examining Clause 17(g) of the Certified Standing
Orders, we may point out that the concept of employment
under industrial law involves, like any other employment,
three ingredients:
(i) management/industry/factory/
employer, who employs or, to
put it differently, engages
the services of the workman;
(ii) employee/workman, that is to
say, a person who works for
the employer for wages or
monetary compensation; and
(iii) contract of employment or the
agreement between the employer
and the employee whereunder
the employee/workman agrees to
render services to the
employer, in consideration of
wages, subject to the
supervision and control of the
employer.
9. The general principles of the Contract Act applicable
to an agreement between two persons having capacity to
contract, are also applicable to a contract of industrial
employment, but the relationship so created is partly
contractual, in the sense that the agreement of service may
give rise to mutual obligations, for example, the obligation
of the employer to pay wages and the corresponding
obligation of the workman to render services, and partly
non-contractual, as the States have already, by legislation,
prescribed positive obligations for the employer towards his
workmen, as, for example, terms, conditions and obligations
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prescribed by the Payment of Wages Act, 1936; Industrial
Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946; Minimum Wages Act,
1948; Payment of Bonus Act, 1965; Payment of Gratuity Act,
1972 etc.
10. Prior to the enactment of these laws, the situation, as
it prevailed in many industrial establishments, was that
even terms and conditions of service were often not reduced
into writing nor were they uniform in nature, though
applicable to a set of similar employees. This position was
wholly incompatible to the notions of social justice,
inasmuch as there being no statutory protection available to
the workmen, the contract of service was often so unilateral
in character that it could be described as mere
manifestation of subdued wish of the workmen to sustain
their living at any cost. An agreement of this nature was an
agreement between two unequals, namely those who invested
their labour and toil, flesh and blood, as against those who
brought in Capital. The necessary corollary of such an
agreement was the generation of conflicts at various levels
disturbing industrial peace and resulting necessarily in
loss of production and sometimes even closure or lock out of
the industrial establishment. In order to overcome this
difficulty and achieve industrial harmony and peace, the
Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946 was
enacted requiring the management to define, with sufficient
precision and clarity, the conditions of employment under
which the workmen were working in their establishments. The
underlying object of the Act was to introduce uniformity in
conditions of employment of workmen discharging similar
functions in the same industrial establishment under the
same management and to make those terms and conditions
widely known to all the workmen they could be asked to
express their willingness to accept the employment.
11. The Act also aimed at achieving a transition from mere
contact between unequals to the conferment of "Status" on
workmen through conditions statutorily imposed upon the
employers by requiring every industrial establishment to
frame "Standing Orders" in respect of matter enumerated in
the Schedule appended to the Act. The standing Orders so
made are to be submitted to the certifying officer who is
required to make an enquiry whether they have been framed in
accordance with the Act and on being satisfied that they are
in consonance with provisions of the Act, to certify them.
Once the standing orders are so certified, they become
binding upon both the parties, namely, the employer and the
employees. The certified Standing Orders are also required
to be published in the manner indicated by the Act which
also sets out the Model Standing Orders. Originally, the
jurisdiction of the Certifying Officer was limited to
examine the draft Standing Orders and compare them with the
model Standing Orders. But in 1956, the Act was radically
amended and Section 4 gave jurisdiction to the Certifying
Officer, as also the Appellate Authority, to adjudicate and
decide the questions, if raised, relating to the fairness or
reasonableness of any provision of the Standing Orders.
12. In pursuance of the above powers, the petitioner framed
its own Standing Orders which have been duly certified.
Clause 17(g) of the Certified Standing Orders, which
constitutes the bone of contention between the parties, is
quoted below:
"The services of a workman are
liable to automatic termination if
he overstays on leave without
permission for more than seven
days. In case of sickness, the
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medical certificate must be
submitted within a week."
13. It was in pursuance of the above provision that the
services of the respondent were terminated by the petitioner
by observing in its letter dated 12th April, 1985, as under:
"The services of Mrs. Shammi Bhan,
Token No. 158, Operator ceased
automatically from Uptron
Capacitors Ltd., Lucknow with
immediate effect, in accordance
with the clause 17(g) of the
Certified Standing orders of Uptron
Capacitors Limited."
14. Respondent No.1, admittedly, was a permanent employee.
15. Conferment of ‘permanent’ status on an employee
guarantees security of tenure. It is now well settled that
the services of a permanent employee, whether employed by
the Government, or Govt. company or Govt. instrumentality or
Statutory Corporations or any other "Authority" within the
meaning of Article 12, cannot be terminated abruptly and
arbitrarily, either by giving him a month’s or three months’
notice or pay in lieu thereof or even without notice,
notwithstanding that there may be a stipulation to that
effect either in the contract of service or in the Certified
Standing Orders.
16. This Court in West Bengal State Electricity Board &
Ors. vs. Desh Bandhu Ghosh & Ors. (1985) 3 SCC 116. held
that any provision in the Regulation enabling the management
to terminate the services of a permanent employee by giving
three months’ notice or pay in lieu thereof, would be bad as
violative of Article 14 of the Constitution. Such a
Regulation was held to be capable of vicious discrimination
and was also held to be naked ‘hire and fire’ rule. This
view was reiterated in Central Inland Water Transport
Corporation Limited & Anr. vs. Brojo Nath Ganguly & Anr.
(1986) 3 SCC 156.
17. Again in O.P. Bhandari vs. Indian Tourism Development
Corporation Ltd. & Ors. (1986) 4 SCC 337, this Court held
that Rule 31 (v) of the Indian Tourism Development
Corporation (Conduct. Discipline & Appeal) Rules, 1978,
which provided that the services of a permanent employee
could be terminated by giving him 90 days’ notice or pay in
lieu thereof, would be violative of Articles 14 and 16 of
the Constitution.
18. The whole case law was reviewed by the Constitution
Bench in Delhi Transport Corporation vs. D.T.C. Mazdoor
Congress & Ors. 1991 Supp (1) SCC 600, and except the than
Chief Justice Sabyasachi Mukharji, who dissented, the other
4 judges reiterated the earlier view that the services of a
confirmed employee could not be legally terminated by a
simple notice.
19. This being the legal position, the action taken against
the respondent, who, as pointed out earlier, was a permanent
employee, was wholly illegal.
20. There is another angle of looking at the problem.
Clause 17(g), which has been extracted above, significantly
does not say that the services of a workman who overstays
the leave for more than seven days shall stand automatically
terminated. What it says is that "the services are liable to
automatic termination." This provision, therefore, confers a
discretion upon the management to terminate or not to
terminate the services of an employee who overstays the
leave. It is obvious that this discretion cannot be
exercised, or permitted to be exercised, capriciously. The
discretion has to be based on an objective consideration of
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all the circumstances and material which may be available on
record. What are the circumstances which compelled the
employee to proceed on leave; why he overstayed the leave;
was there any just and reasonable cause for overstaying the
leave; whether he gave any further application for extension
of leave; whether any medical certificate was sent if he
had, in the meantime, fallen ill? These are questions which
would naturally arise while deciding to terminate the
services of the employee for overstaying the leave. Who
would answer these questions and who would furnish the
material to enable the management to decide whether to
terminate or not to terminate the services are again
questions which have an answer inherent in the provision
itself, namely, that the employee against whom action on the
basis of this provision is proposed to be taken must be
given an opportunity of hearing. The principles of natural
justice, which have to be read into the offending clause,
must be complied with and the employee must be informed of
the grounds for which action was proposed to be taken
against him for overstaying the leave.
21. This Court in D.K. Yadav vs. J.M.A Industries Ltd.
(1993) 3 SCC 259 has laid down that where the Rule provided
that the services of an employee who overstays the leave
would be treated to have been automatically terminated,
would be bad as violative of Articles 14, 16 and 21 of the
Constitution. It was further held that if any action was
taken on the basic of such a rule without giving any
opportunity of hearing to the employees, it would be wholly
unjust, arbitrary and unfair. The Court reiterated and
emphasised in no uncertain terms that principles of natural
justice would have to be read into the provision relating to
automatic termination of services.
22. Learned counsel for the petitioner has placed strong
reliance upon a decision of this Court in Civil Appeal No.
3486 of 1992, Scooters India & Ors. vs. Vijay E.V. Eldred,
decided on 10.301996, in support of his contention that any
stipulation for automatic termination of services made in
the Standing Orders could not have been declared to be
invalid. We have been referred to a stray sentence in that
judgment, which is to the following effect:
"It is also extraordinary for the
High Court to have held clause
9.3.12 of the standing orders as
invalid."
This sentence in the judgment cannot be read in isolation
and we must refer to the subsequent sentences which run as
under:
"Learned counsel for the respondent
rightly made no attempt to support
this part of the High Court’s
order. In view of the fact that we
are setting aside the High Court’s
judgment, we need not deal with
this aspect in detail."
23. In view of this observation, the question whether the
stipulation for automatic termination of services for
overstaying the leave would be legally bad or not, was not
decided by this Court in the judgment relied upon by Mr.
Manoj Swarup. In that judgment the grounds on which the
interference was made were different. The judgment of the
High Court was set aside on the ground that it could not
decide the disputed question of fact in a writ petition and
the matter should have been better left to be decided by the
Industrial Tribunal. Further, the High Court was approached
after more than six years of the date on which the cause of
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action had arisen without there being any cogent explanation
for the delay. Mr. Manoj Swarup contended that it was
conceded by the counsel appearing on behalf of the employee
that the provision in the Standing Orders regarding
automatic termination of services is not bad. This was
endorsed by this Court by observing that "Learned counsel
for the respondent rightly made no attempt to support this
part of the High Court’s order." This again cannot be
treated to be a finding that provision for automatic
termination of services can be validly made in the Certified
Standing Orders. Even otherwise, a wrong concession on a
question of law, made by a counsel, is not binding on his
client. Such concession cannot constitute a just ground for
a binding precedent. The reliance placed by Mr. Manoj on
this judgment, therefore, is wholly out of place.
24. It will also be significant to note that in the instant
case the High Court did not hold that Clause 17(g) was ultra
vires but it is did hold that the action taken against the
respondent to whom an opportunity of hearing was not given
was bad.
25. In view of the above, we are of the positive opinion
that any clause in the Certified Standing Orders providing
for automatic termination of service of a permanent
employee, not directly related to "production" in a Factory
or Industrial Establishment, would be bad if it does not
purport to provide an opportunity of hearing to the employee
whose services are treated to have come to an end
automatically.
26. We may now consider the question of "Retrenchment"
which is defined in Section 2(00) as under:-
"2(00) ‘retrenchment’ means the
termination by the employer of the
service of a workman for any reason
whatsoever, otherwise than as a
punishment inflicted by way of
disciplinary action, but does not
include-
(a) voluntary retirement of the
workman; or
(b) retirement of the workman on
reaching the age of superannuation
if the contract of employment
between the employer and the
workman concerned contains a
stipulation in that behalf; or
(bb) termination of the service of
a workman as a result of the non-
renewal of the contract of
employment between the employer and
the workman concerned on its expiry
or of such contract being
terminated under a stipulation in
that behalf contained therein; or
(c) termination of the service of a
workman on the ground of continued
ill-health."
27. The definition of "Retrenchment" was introduced in the
Act by Act 43 of 1953 with effect from 24th of October,
1953, Clause (bb) was inserted in the definition by Act 49
of 1984 with effect from 18.8.1984.
28. The definition is conclusive in the sense that
"retrenchment" has been defined to mean the termination of
the service of a workman by the employer for any reason
whatsoever. If the termination was by way of punishment as a
consequence of disciplinary action, it would not amount to
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"Retrenchment". Originally, there were two other exceptions,
namely,
(i) voluntary retirement of the workman and
(ii) retirement of the workman on reaching the age of
superannuation if the contract of employment contained
a stipulation to the effect.
29. By the Amending Act 49 of 1984, two further exceptions
were introduced in the definition by inserting (bb) with
effect from 18.8.84; one was the termination of service on
the ground of continued ill-health of the workman and the
other was termination of service on account of non-renewal
of the contract of employment on the expiry of the term of
that contract. If such contract of employment contained a
stipulation for termination of service and the services of
the workman are terminated in accordance with that
stipulation, such termination, according to Clause (bb),
would also not amount to "Retrenchment".
30. What was contended before the Tribunal as also before
the High Court was that the termination of the services of
respondent was covered by Clause (bb) of Section 2(00) and,
therefore, it could not be treated as "Retrenchment" with
the result that other statutory provisions, specially those
contained in Section 25F of the Act were not required to be
complied with. This argument which was not accepted by the
Tribunal and the High Court has been stressed us also and
here also it must meet the same fate as it is without any
substance or merit.
31. From the facts set out above, it would be seen that the
respondent was a permanent employee of the petitioner. There
was no fixed-term contract of service between them. There
was, therefore, no question of services being terminated on
the expiry of that contract. In the absence of a fixed-term
contract between the parties, the question relating to the
second contingency, namely, that the termination was in
pursuance of a stipulation to that effect in the contract of
employment, does not arise.
32. The contract of employment referred to in the earlier
part of Clause (bb) has to be the same as is referred to in
the latter part. This is clear by the use of words "such
contract" in the earlier part of this Clause. What the
clause, therefore, means is that there should have been a
contract of employment for a fixed-term between the employer
and the workman containing a stipulation that the services
could be terminated even before the expiry of the period of
contract. If such contract, on the expiry of its original
period, is not renewed and the services are terminated as a
consequence of that period, it would not amount to
"Retrenchment". Similarly, if the services are terminated
even before the expiry of the period of contract but in
pursuance of a stipulation contained in that contract that
the services could be so terminated, then in that case also,
the termination would not amount to "retrenchment". This
view finds support from a decision of this Court in Escorts
Ltd. vs. Presiding Officer, (1997) 11 scc 521.
33. This case does not fall in either of the two situations
contemplated by Clause (bb). The ‘Rule of exception’,
therefore, is not applicable in the instant case and
consequently the finding recorded by the Tribunal on
"retrenchment" cannot be disturbed.
34. For the reasons stated above, we find no merit in this
petition which is dismissed at the SLP stage.