Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 8569 of 1997
PETITIONER:
BANK OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SECRETARY, BANK OF INDIA STAFF UNION & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/04/2001
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu & Shivaraj V. Patil
JUDGMENT:
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
This appeal is filed against an award made by the
Industrial Tribunal, Kanpur on a reference made to it on the
following question:
Whether the action of the management of Bank of India
in not paying special allowance to the staff posted at
clearing house of Lucknow, Agra, Unnao, Varanasi and Kanpur
as per list enclosed is justified? If not to what relief
were the workmen entitled?
The Tribunal held that the concerned workmen are
entitled for special assistant allowance for the number of
days they have worked at various collection centres and the
same shall be payable for the number of days they have
actually worked with effect from the date of reference. The
workmen in question worked at various centres including
Collection Centre, Kanpur, Lucknow and Varanasi and Main
Branches, Agra and Unnao of their Banks as detailed in
Annexure thereof. They claimed that they performed the
duties as authorised representatives of the Bank of clearing
house at the Reserve Bank of India, Kanpur and State Bank in
clearing house at the Reserve Bank of India, Kanpur and
State Bank of India, Lucknow, Agra, Unnao and Varanasi which
fall under the duties of Special Assistant. The workmen
claimed that they are checking or scrutinizing all the
schedules and/or vouchers received along with the cheques
and other instruments as per para XIX(III) of Appendix B
of 1st Bi-partite Settlement dated 19.10.1966. The workmen
claimed that they are entering each cheque, demand draft,
pay slips, etc. with their respective credit voucher i.e.,
Branch Debit Note drawn on Regional Collection Centres and
Main Branch in clearing house register and balancing as per
paragraph 45.5 of Manual of Instruction, Volume I, Chapter
127 to the following effect:
Particulars of all cheques drawn on other local
clearing banks received by the Branches for collection
should thereafter be sorted and listed bankwise. The total
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of cheques entered in the clearing cheques register should
agree with the total amount of cheques listed on all the
clearing schedules and also with the total amount of the
relatives paying-in-slips.
The workmen further claimed that the cheques/instruments
are sorted bankwise and posted the cheques etc. in
totalling and numbering as per paragraph 45.5 of Manual of
Instruction; that the workmen are to check crossing and
clearing stamp on each cheques and other instruments on
front face of these instruments and endorsement stamps of
the bank on each instrument; that the checking of total in
List of Cheques with the books of the Bank i.e. clearing
cheques register, mentioned in each sheet for the different
bank; that checking each list of cheques in clearing
schedule of the bankwise with cheque numbers in the column
Delivered in left hand side drawn on other banks and
totalling all the amounts of the cheques mentioned in the
different list of cheques mentioned in the different list of
cheques register; that the workmen receive various cheques,
demand draft, pay slip and other instruments in the clearing
house from different banks and also make the entry in the
column Received bankwise with cheque numbers in the right
side and totalling all the amount and cheques mentioned in
their different sheets of the bank; that the checking is
for the correctness of endorsement crossing stamp, clearing
stamps, date of the returning of the cheques, date of the
cheques, comparison of cheques and totalling the amount
delivered by the different banks as per para III(I)(xi) and
(iii) of Appendix B of Bi-partite Settlement; that the
workmen prepare debit and credit vouchers according to
cheques and the instruments after checking the clearing
schedule on account of cheques received from other banks
daily; that the workmen also sign the difference of the
entries such as to pay or receive in the independent
capacity of authorised representative of clearing house as
Clearing in-charge at the Reserve Bank of India and State
Bank of India on behalf of the Bank in the clearing house
after delivering and receiving the different instruments in
sheet for submissions and receiving the different
instruments in sheet for submission to the Reserve Bank of
India and State Bank of India; that the workmen are holding
banks valuable cheques, drafts and other instruments
signally and are accountable for them and are responsible
for the clearing department of the bank and prepare, sign
independently clearing and transfer vouchers such as to pay
or receive on account of the cheques delivered or received
from different banks through the sheet in the bank account
mentioned by the Reserve Bank of India and the State Bank of
India which constitute the additional duties and fucntions
requiring the greater skill and responsibility over and
above the routine duties of the workmen in terms of Para
III(I)(xi)(ii).
The appellant-Bank filed a written statement contending
that though the workmen have performed the duties of
attending the clearing house on behalf of the Bank, they
have not discharged any of the duties so as to attract
payment of special allowance by way of Special Assistant as
none of the duties are being performed by them to attract
such allowance and denied the various claims made by the
workmen. They submitted that they are simply delivering
cheques of the Bank drawn on other banks and receiving
cheques drawn by other banks on their Bank at the clearing
house after counting the number of cheques/instruments as
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per schedule listing it bankwise in the sheets, arriving at
the clearing different and preparation of the different
vouchers, segregation of the instruments categorywise and
preparation of debit in nature and in no way require any
greater skill and responsibility warranting payment of any
special allownace. It was also contended that the duties of
Special Assistant as laid down in Bi-partite Settlement
dated 19.10.1966 have been modified in the subsequent
Bi-partite Settlement dated 17.9.1984 and the duties of
special assistant as laid down in the said Bi-partite
Settlement 1984 are as listed in the Annexure A thereto. It
was contended that para 5.267 of the Desai Award has not
been modified by any subsequent Bi-partite Settlement and is
still in existence and that the clerks deputed to the
clearing house are not in charge of the Banks clearing
department but are simply clerks posted in that department
and the overall incharge of the department is an officer
under whom these clerks are functioning. It was
specifically claimed by the appellant that the Special
Assistant will be accountable and responsible for running of
the department/section under them and their duties will
involve looking after and checking the work of other clerk
or clerks and sub-staff and will include several other
duties set out in Anneuxre A to the Bi-partite Settlement of
1984.
An affidavit was filed by Jai Bahadur Singh on behalf of
the appellant and it was stated therein as follows :
That the clerk attached to my department amongst the
other clerical duties are on rotation basis sent to the
Bankers clearing house for delivering the cheques/drafts
etc of our bank drawn on other Bank and receiving
cheques/drafts etc drawn by other banks on our bank as per
the schedule which he carries with him in duplicate.
Specimen of which is marked as Annexure A to the affidavit.
Under the column delivered of the said schedule the
cheques/drafts etc. drawn on other banks and delivered by
him at the clearing house are entered bankwise and total is
arrived at this represents the amount of cheques delivered
by the Bank is clearing. The cheques delivered by other
banks are entered in the column received of the schedule
bank wise and the total is arrived at, this represents the
amount of cheques received. Thereafter the difference
between the amount delivered and received is arrived at
which is known as clearing difference. Thereafter a copy of
clearing schedule is delivered to the officer in charge of
the clearing house. As such the duties being performed by
the clerks attending the clearing house is purely clerical
in nature.
The Tribunal, after setting out the case of the parties
and the evidence put forth before it in the shape of the
affidavits, stated that though affidavits have been filed by
several persons, only two witnesses, namely, V.K.Srivastava
and Baikunth Lal, were produced for cross-examination on
behalf of the workmen and Jai Bahadur Singh on behalf of the
management and, therefore, their affidavits alone are
admissible. However, the Tribunal chose not to examine that
evidence on the following basis:
.the concerned workmen have been sent to the Regional
Collection Centres of the Reserve Bank of India and State
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Bank of India at other places for verification of cheques
issued by their Banks. It is also not disputed that when
these persons went to these centres none of the officer of
the bank had accompanied. I am of the view that when a
member of award staff handles and deals with cheques and
other instruments within the bank premises and during the
office hours there is no element of risk and there cannot be
said to be doing any work involving extra responsibility.
However, the moment such workman is asked to carry cheques
and the instruments outside the bank as is being done by the
concerned workmen. I am of the view officer accompanied
them at such occasion there would be no responsibility of
these workmen. Hence since in the instance case the
concerned workmen had been carrying cheques independently,
and checking the same at the Regional Collection Centres and
without any officer accompanying them, I come to the
conclusion that had been performing the job involving
greater responsibility as well.
Proceeding thus, the Tribunal made the award without any
further examination of the matter.
In this background, it becomes necessary to consider
whether the award made by the Tribunal can be sustained or
not. It is the contention of the respondents that the
decision of this Court in Central Bank of India Ltd. vs.
Sisir Kumar Shaw, 1976 (2) SCC 859, fully covers the case of
the workmen in question. In that decision, it was stated
that it was not necessary to refer to the details of the
Sastry Award of 1953 or the Desai Award which ceased to
apply in the year 1966, when the Bi-partite Settlement came
into force. The preamble to the Bi-partite Settlement dated
19.10.1966 states that the parties have agreed that the
provisions of the award known as the Sastry Award as
modified by the Desai Award shall govern the service
conditions therein covered except to the extent that the
same have been modified by the Bi-partite Settlement of
1966. If that is so, it will not be accurate to state that
the Sastry Award or the Desai Award has ceased to apply and
this position is clarified by this Court in C.A.No.7752 of
1996 Bank of India vs. Presiding Officer and Ors.,
disposed of on 28.11.2000. However, that aspect will not
settle the problem arising in the present case. The
question for consideration is whether the principles set out
by this Court in Sisir Kumar Shaws case [supra] would be
applicable to the facts of the present case. In that case,
there was a specific finding by the Labour Court as to the
nature of the duties of the clerk working as the clearing
house representative on behalf of the bank. While in the
present case, the duties discharged by the clearing house
representative are in serious dispute. Unless the same are
adjudicated by appropriate examination of the facts of the
case with reference to the contentions advanced by either
party and the evidence adduced, it cannot be concluded in
the manner done by the Tribunal. There is no finding that
the workmen discharge certain duties and, therefore, are
entitled to special allowance in the category of Special
Assistant. The Tribunal has proceeded as if it was dealing
with a fresh matter before it without reference either to
the Bi-partite Settlement or to the Sastry or the Desai
Award. Necessarily, the Tribunal had to examine whether the
workmen in question fall in any one of the categories to
which special allowance is to be given or refused by the two
Awards [Sastry/Desai Awards] or in the Bi-partite Settlement
that part has been modified or a new clause has been
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introduced thereto inconsistent with the Sastry/Desai Award
so as to entitle to such allowance. Unless such an exercise
is undertaken and the details of the duties assigned to each
of the workman are considered it will not be possible for
the Tribunal to decide a matter of this nature. Therefore,
we are constrained to set aside the award made by the
Tribunal and remit the matter to the Tribunal for fresh
consideration in the light of the observations made by us
above and in accordance with the law.
The appeal shall stand allowed accordingly. No costs.