Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJ KUMAR GUPTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LT. GOVERNOR, DELHI AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/11/1996
BENCH:
J.S. VERMA, K. RAMASWAMY, S.P. BHARUCHA
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
BHARUCHA.J.
On 16th April, 1991, the first respondent passed the
following order, acting under the provisions of Section 34
of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (hereinafter referred
to as "the said Act"):
"Whereas it has been made to appear
to the Lt. Governor of the Union
Territory of Delhi that the
management of M/s. Garden Silk
Mills Ltd. Bella Mill Compound,
Outside Seharagate, Surat (ii) M/s.
Garden Silk Mills Ltd., 4959-Kucha
Rehman, Chandni Chowk, Delhi-6 have
indulged in unfair labour practices
as enumerated in the Fifth Schedule
of the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947 and thereby contravened
section 25-T of the aforesaid Act
which is an offence punishable
under section 25-D of the Act ibid.
2. Now, therefore, in exercise of
the powers conferred under section
34 of the said Act read with the
Government of India, Ministry of
Home Affairs Notification
No.2/2/61-Judl.I dated the 24th
March 1961 and after having
considered the matter carefully,
the Lt. Governor of the Union
Territory of Delhi, is pleased to
authorise Shri Raj Kumar Gupta,
Patron, Garden Silk Mills,
Karamchari Sangh (Regd), 5239-
Ajmeri Gate, Delhi to file a
complaint in the Court of Competent
jurisdiction, against the above
said establishment and the
following of its Officers, Which is
punishable under section 25-U of
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the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947,
as amended up-to date.
i)Sh.Praful A. Shah
Managing Director,Garden Silk Mills
Ltd.,Bella Mill Compound, Outside
Seharagate,Surat.
ii)Sh. S.J. Bhesania Whole-time
Director, Garden Silk Mills Ltd.,
Bella Mill Compound, Outside
Seharagate,Surat.
iii) Sh. I.P. Singh Regional
Manager, Delhi Garden Silk Mills
Ltd., 4959-kucha Rehman,Chandni
Chowk, Delhi-6."
The order was challenged by the employer (the third
respondent) in a writ petition filled in the High Court of
Delhi. The writ petition was allowed by the order under
appeal, which reads thus:
"In view of our judgment in C.W.P.
No. 1715 of 1991 (M/s. Tobu
Enterprises Limited and others vs.
The Lt. Governor, Delhi, and
others) the impugned order is bad
in law and is set aside. There
will be no order as to costs. Rule
is made absolute."
This appeal by special leave is filled by the person to
whom the authorisation under Section 34 was given.
Section 34 reads thus:
"34. Cognizance of offences.-(i) No
Court shall take cognizance of any
offence punishable under this Act
or of the abetment of any such
offences, save on complaint made by
or under the authority of the
appropriate Government.
(2) No Court inferior to that of a
Metropolitan Magistrate or a
Judicial Magistrate of the first
class shall try any offence
punishable under this Act."
In the case of M/s. Tobu Enterprises Limited, the only
question which arose for consideration was whether a private
person could be authorised under Section 34 to file a
complaint for an offence under Section 25-U of the said Act.
[Section 25-U prescribes the penalty for committing an
unfair labour practice. The Delhi High Court came to the
conclusion that under the provisions of Section of Section
34, the appropriate Government could file the complaint
itself or the complaint could be filed under its authority,
but there could not be two extremes, that is either the
appropriate Government itself filed the complaint or it
could authorise any private party to do so. The complaint
had to be filed either by the appropriate Government or its
functionaries. If the authority to file a complaint was
given to a private person it was likely to be abused. There
would be no check on the complainant to prosecute the
complaint with due diligence. He would not be interested in
a fair trial and might be actuated by personal vendetta
against the accused, frustrating a fair and speedy trial.
The appropriate Government had to have control over the
whole of the prosecution.
The Delhi High Court found itself unable to agree with
the view taken to the contrary by a Full Bench of the
Karnataka High Court in S.N. Hada vs. The Binny Ltd Staff
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Association LAB. I.C. 165 165. The identical question had
been raised before the Full Bench of the Karnataka High
Court and the Full Bench held that if the view was taken
that only the Government or its agent could file the
complaint, then the provisions of Section 30 providing for
the filling of the complaint by or on behalf of a trade
union or a business which was affected, would become
redundant. This could not have been the intention of the
Legislature. Viewed from any angle, the Full Bench found it
difficult to hold that under Section 34 a private body or a
person other than an agent of the Government could not be
authorised by the Government to file a complaint.
Section 30 reads thus:
"30. Penalty for disclosing
confidential information.- Any
person who willfully discloses any
such information as is referred to
in section 21 in contravention of
the provisions of that section
shall, on complaint made by or on
behalf of the trade union or
Individual business affected, be
punishable with imprisonment for a
term which may extend to six months
or with fine which may extend to
one thousand rupees, or with both."
Learned counsel for the appellant relied upon the
decision of the Full Bench of the Karnataka High Court and
submitted that there was no justification for reading
Section 34 on a restricted manner, as had been done by the
Delhi High Court in the case of M/s. Tobu Enterprises Ltd.
Learned counsel for the employer submitted that the
words "under the authority of the appropriate Government" in
Section 34 were only clarificatory and an amplification of
the provisions of Section 39.
Section 39 reads thus:
"39. Delegation of powers.- The
appropriate Government may, by
notification in the Official
Gazette, direct that any power
exercisable by it under this Act or
rules made thereunder shall, in
relation to such matters and
subject to such conditions, if any,
as may be specified in the
direction, be exercisable also.-
(a) Where the appropriate
Government is the Central
Government, by such officer or
authority subordinate to the
Central Government or by the State
Government, or by such officer or
authority subordinate to the State
Government, as may be specified in
the notification; and
(b) Where the appropriate
Government is a State Government by
such officer or authority
subordinate to the State Government
as may be specified in the
notification."
In learned counsel’s submission, only a delegate of the
appropriate Government appointed under the provisions of
Section 39 could be authorised by the appropriate Government
to file a complaint under Section 34. There was, in any
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event, an implied limitation in Section 34 having regard to
the nature of a criminal prosecution and the general policy
that a prosecution could only be at the instance of the
Government. Learned counsel cited the judgment of this
Court in Ishwar Singh Bagga and Ors. vs. State of Rajasthan,
1987 (1) S.C.C. 101, upon which the Delhi High Court had
relied in the case of M/s. Tobu Enterprises Ltd.
Ishwar Singh Bagga’s case related to the provisions of
Section 129-A of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1939, which dealt
with the power to detain vehicles used without certificate
of registration or permit. Section 129-A provided, "Any
police officer authorized in this behalf or other person
authorized in this behalf by the State Government
may.......... seize and detain the vehicle....." It was
held by this Court that the expression "other person" in
Section 129-A had to be read ejusdem generis with the
expression "any police office" which preceded it. The
expression could refer only to an officer of the Government
and not to an officer or employee of a statutory corporation
or any other private person. Having regard to the nature of
the power conferred by Section 129-A, it could not have been
the intention of the Legislature to confer such power on
persons who were not officers of the Government. if had been
so intended, the provision would have so stated. Ordinarily,
whenever a statute empowered the Government to appoint
persons to administer any of the provisions of a statute the
persons who could be so appointed by the Government could
only be persons appointed in connection with the affairs of
the State. In other words, they would be employee s or
officers of the Government who were directly subject to its
administrative and disciplinary control. The powers of
search seizure and detention of vehicles belonging to
private parties under Section 129-A and of launching
prosecutions in that regard were incidental to the sovereign
powers of the State and they could not ordinarily be
entrusted to private persons unless the statute concerned
made express provision in that behalf. It was a different
matter if a private person, on his own, filed a complaint
before a Magistrate and wised to establish a criminal
charge. In such a case the private person would not be
investigating in to the crime with the aid of the statutory
powers of search , seizure or detention.
In our view, the judgment in Ishwar Singh Bagga’s case
is clearly distinguishable. The provisions of Section 129-A
of the Motor Vehicles Act deal with the power to seize and
detain vehicles. This is the police power of the state. It
was in the context of this power that it was held by this
Court that the "other person" would be exercising the
sovereign powers of the state and therefore, should be an
employee of the state. This view was reinforced by reading
the words "other person" ejusdem generis with the words "any
police officer" used in the provision just earlier. This
Court noted that a private person could file the complaint
but he would not be entitled to the powers of search,
seizure and detention conferred by Section 129-A, It was,
therfore, the nature of the power conferred by Section 129-A
which led this Court to hold that "other person" in Section
129-A meant an employee of the Government.
Penalties under the said Act are prescribed for the
officers of illegal strikes and lock-outs (Sections 26, 27
and 28), of breach of a settlement or award (Section 29), of
disclosing confidential information (Section 30) of closure
without notice (Section 30A), and of altering conditions of
service pending proceedings (Section 31 read with Section
33). These offences most closely concern workmen, the
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representative trade unions and employers.
The provisions of Section of Section 34 require that no
Court shall take cognizance of any offence punishable under
the said Act is of the abetment of such offence save on a
complaint made by the appropriate Government or under the
authority of the appropriate Government. There is no
limitation therein in regard to the party to whom the
authorisation may be given. It is the workman, the trade
union and the employer who are most concerned with offences
under the said Act and neither the terms of Section 34 nor
public policy require that they should be exclude from
making such complaints.
At the same time, the provisions of Section 34 are in
the nature of a limitation on the entitlement of a workman
or a trade union or an employer to complain of offences
under the said Act. They should not, in the public interest
be permitted to make frivolous, vexatious or otherwise
patently untenable complaints, and to this end Section 34
requires that no complaint shall be taken cognizance of
unless it is made with the authorisation of the appropriate
Government.
The argument that the words "or under the authority of"
in Section 34 (1) are only clarificatory and an
amplification of the provisions of Section 34 must be
rejected. Section 39 empowers the appropriate Government to
delegate the powers exercisable by it under the said Act.
This is altogether different from the concept of
authorisation to file a complaint under Section 34. If the
powers under Section 34 have ben delegated under Section 39,
the delegate can file the complaint himself or authorise
someone else to file it. Learned counsel’s argument, if
accepted, would render the words "or under the authority of"
in Section 34 otiose and that is impermissible. These words
necessarily must be given due meaning and the meaning is
that the appropriate Government may authorise someone other
than itself, even a non-Government servant, to file a
complaint under Section 34.
Learned counsel submitted that , in any event, the writ
petition should be remitted to the Delhi High Court because
contentions had been taken therein which had not been dealt
with in the order under appeal. We see no good reason to do
so, but we make it clear that it shall be open to those
against whom the complaint is filed to take all available
deferences before the criminal court.
In the result, the appeal is allowed. The order under
appeal is set aside. The writ petition filed before the
Delhi High Court is dismissed. shall be no order as to
costs.