Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE CENTRAL BANK OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THEIR WORKMEN(and connected appeals)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
12/05/1959
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 12 1960 SCR (1) 200
CITATOR INFO :
R 1960 SC 653 (4)
R 1961 SC 853 (7)
RF 1962 SC 171 (9)
D 1962 SC1221 (22)
R 1964 SC 864 (19)
R 1969 SC 530 (2A)
R 1986 SC1760 (35)
R 1987 SC2310 (11)
RF 1988 SC 782 (29,40)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Bonus-Banking Companies-Bank Employees-
Whether disentitled to bonus-" Remuneration " meaning of
-Banking Companies (Amendment) Act, 1956 (95 of 1956),
amended s. 10, whether retrospective-Banking ’Companies
Act, 1949, (1O Of 1949), s. 10.
HEADNOTE:
Section 10(1)(b)(11) of the Banking Companies Act, 1949
provided:" No banking company shall employ any person whose
remuneration or part of whose remuneration takes the
form ... of a share in the profits of the company."
The dispute between the appellant Banks and their employees
related, inter alia, to the question whether the provisions
of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, prohibit the grant Of
bonus to bank employees. The Labour Appellate Tribunal took
the view that s. 10 of the Act did not stand in the way of
granting bonus to bank employees, because bonus according to
it was not a share in the profits of the company. On
appeal, it was contended for the appellant Banks that bonus
as awarded by the Industrial Courts is remuneration within
the meaning of s. 10
201
read with s. 2 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, and that
it was also a share in profits, and therefore, the express
provisions of s. 10 read with S. 2 override the provisions
of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, so far as banking
companies are concerned, and prohibit the award of bonus to
employees of Banks.
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Held : (1) that the expression " shall employ any person in
s. 10 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, means and includes
" shall have in employment any person " and that in this
respect the amendment of 1956, merely makes clear what was
already meant by the section ;
(2) that the word " remuneration " in s. 10 of the Act has
been used in the widest sense and includes bonus ;
(3) that bonus in the industrial sense comes out of the
available surplus of profits, and when paid, it fills the
gap, wholly or in part, between the living wage and the
actual wage. It is labour’s share in the profits, and as it
is a remuneration which takes the form of a share in
profits, it comes within the mischief of s. 10 of the Act;
(4) The Banking Companies (Amendment) Act, 1956, is not a
declaratory Act, and except in the small matter of the
expression " shall continue to employ " in sub-s. (1), it
does not purport to explain any former law or declare what
the law has always been. Consequently, though s. 10 as
amended by the Act Of I956 does not stand in the way of the
grant of industrial bonus, for the period relating to the
present appeals, the amended section had no retrospective
effect.
Accordingly, s. 10 of the Banking Act, prior to the amend-
ment of 1956, prohibited the grant of industrial bonus to
bank employees inasmuch as such bonus is remuneration which
takes the form of a share in the profits of the banking
company.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 56 to 62 of
1957.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 28. 1954 of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of India
(Special Bench-Banks), Bombay,in Appeals Nos. 122, 129, 130,
142, 144, 145, 152, 153, 154, 155, 162, 169, 217 & 218 of
1953.
N. A. Palkhiwala, J. B. Dadachanji and S. N. Andley, for
the appellants in C. As, Nos. 56 & 60 of 1957.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, J. B.
Dadachanji and S. N. Andley, for the appellants in
C. As. Nos. 57, 58, 59 & 61 of 1957,
6
202
M. C. Setalvad Attorney-General for India and Naunit Lal,
for the appellant (Punjab National Bank) in C. A. No. 62 of
1957.
N. V. Phadke, T. S. Venkataraman, K. R. Sharma and K. R.
Choudhury, for respondent No. 1 in C. A.
No.’ 56 of 1957.
N. C. Chatterjee, Sadhan Chandra Gupta, Janardan Sharma,
M. K. Ramamurthi and M. R. K. Pillai, for respondents in C.
As. Nos. 57 to 61 of 1957 (Represented by All India Bank
Employees Association)
B. P. Maheshwari, for respondent No. 3 (Association of the
Punjab National Bank Employees) in C. A. No. 62 of 1957.
B.P. Maheshwari, for Surat Bank Employees Union.
B. C. Ghose, and I. S. Sawhney, for All India Central Bank
Employees’ Association.
1959. May 12. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
S. K. DAS J.-These are seven appeals on behalf of
different Banks working in this country, some incorporated
in India and some outside India. It is necessary that we
should very briefly state the background of the industrial
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dispute which has given rise to these appeals. It is now
well-known that there was a sharp rise in the prices of
commodities during and after World War No. 11. This rise in
prices very seriously affected salaried employees belonging
to the middle class including such employees in the banking
industry. In or about the year 1946 trade unions of bank em-
ployees presented demands for higher salaries and allowances
and better conditions of service. In some cases notices of
threatened strike were also served on the employers. The
unrest became particularly acute in the provinces of Bombay,
the United Provinces, and Bengal as they were then known.
The local Governments of those provinces referred these
industrial disputes for adjudication: this resulted in some
regional awards which came to be known in Bombay as the
Divatia Award, in the United I Provinces as the B B. Singh
203
Award and in Bengal as the Gupta, Chakravarty and Sen
Awards. Notwithstanding these awards, the general unrest
amongst Bank employees continued and there was a clamor for
control of the banking industry by the Central Government.
On April 30, 1949, was passed the Industrial Disputes
(Banking and Insurance Companies) Ordinance (Ordinance VI of
1949) under the provisions of which all banking companies
having branches or other establishments in more than one
province came under the jurisdiction of the Central
Government for the purposes of the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947 (XIV of 1947). By a notification dated June 13, 1949,
the Central Government constituted an ad hoc Tribunal
consisting of Shri K. C. Sen, a retired Judge of the Bombay
High Court, as Chairman, with two other persons as members
to adjudicate upon an industrial dispute between several
banking companies and their workmen. On the same day, the
industrial dispute was referred to the Tribunal by a
separate order. The dispute covered several items, and some
more were added from time to time. For the sake of
convenience, we shall hereafter refer to this Tribunal as
the Sen Tribunal and its award as the Sen Award. After a
very exhaustive enquiry, the Sen Tribunal made its award
which was published on August 12, 1950. Some of the leading
Banks being dissatisfied with the award applied to Supreme
Court and obtained special leave to appeal against the said
award, as it had been specially exempted from the
jurisdiction of the Labour Appellate Tribunal constituted
under the Industrial Disputes (Appellate Tribunal) Act, 1950
(XLVIII of 1950). This Court ultimately held that the award
of the Sen Tribunal was void in to for want of jurisdiction,
but did not go into the merits of the award With regard to
any of the matters dealt with therein. The consequence of
this decision was that the dispute in the banking industry
remained unresolved. Soon after there were some strikes
consequent on certain action taken by some of the Banks.
The result was that the Central Government had to take steps
afresh to settle this long standing dispute. Attempts were
at first made through the machinery of
204
conciliation to settle the dispute, but these attempts
failed. On June 26, 1951, was enacted the Industrial
Disputes (Amendment and Temporary Provisions) Act, 1951 (XL
of 1951) which had the effect of temporarily freezing some
of the gains of labour under the Sen Award. In July 1951
the Central Government made a fresh reference to an
Industrial Tribunal consisting of Shri H. V. Divatia, a
retired Judge as. Chairman and two other members, but the
Chairman and the members resigned within a short time. On
January 5, 1952, two notifications were made. By one
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notification a new Tribunal was constituted to be called the
All India Industrial Tribunal (Bank Disputes). The Chairman
of this Tribunal was Shri Panchapagesa Sastry, another
retired Judge. The other two members were Shri M. L. Tannan
and Shri V. L. D’Souza. Hereafter we shall refer to this
Tribunal as the Sastry Tribunal. By another notification of
the same date the Central Government referred the matters
specified in such. II of the notification, which’.. were
the matters in dispute between the employers and workmen of
the banking companies specified in sch. 1, to the Tribunal
for adjudication. We need not set out here the matters
specified in sch. 11, but shall presently refer to those
items only with which we are concerned in these appeals.
The Sastry Tribunal made its award which was published on
April 20, 1953. This award came up for consideration of a
Special Bench of the Labour Appellate Tribunal on appeals
preferred by the employees of banks all over India and of
the Banks themselves. The decision of the Labour Appellate
Tribunal was given on April 28, 1954. Some of the Banks
moved this Court for special leave to appeal from the
decision dated April 28, 1954, of the Labour Appellate
Tribunal and such leave was granted on October 4,1954. The
same order which granted special leave also directed that
the appeals be consolidated. These seven appeals on behalf
of different Banks against their workmen have been filed in
pursuance of the aforesaid leave granted by this Court.
In Civil Appeal No. 56 of 1957 in which the Imperial Bank
(now substituted as the State Bank of India) is
205
the appellant, a preliminary objection has been taken on
behalf of the respondent workmen of the Bank to the effect
that the appeal is incompetent. We shall presently consider
this preliminary objection, but before we do so, it will be
convenient to indicate the principal questions which arise
for consideration in these seven appeals.
These questions have been formulated under four heads :
(1) what is the scope of item 5 of schedule II of the
notification dated January 5, 1952, the item being expressed
in the following words-" Bonus, including the qualifications
for eligibility and method of payment ";
(2) does s. 10 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949 (prior to
its amendment by Act 95 of 1956) prohibit the grant of bonus
to Bank employees;
(3) whether an industrial tribunal is entitled in law to
compel Banks to disclose " secret reserves " and " other
necessary provisions" made by them, for the purpose of
adjudication;
(4) whether the Full Bench formula laid down by the Labour
Appellate Tribunal in Mill Owners’ Association, Bombay v.
Rashtriya Mill Mazdoor Sangh, Bombay (1) for the payment of
bonus to employees in the textile industry is applicable to
Banks.
Of the aforesaid four questions, the first two directly fall
for decision in the appeals before us. For reasons which we
shall presently give, we consider that questions (3) and (4)
do not call for any decision at the present stage.
We shall now state how the Sastry Tribunal and the Labour
Appellate Tribunal dealt with the first two questions. We
have stated that item 5 of sch. II of the notification
dated January 5, 1952, referred to the claim of bonus by
Bank employees. We have also quoted earlier the words in
which item 5 was expressed. The Banks contended before the
Sastry Tribunal that the dispute referred to in item 5 did
not contemplate the determination of the quantum of bonus
payable by
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(1) [1952] L.A.C. 433.
206
any of the Banks for any particular year, but the item
merely referred to the question of bonus in general with
special reference to qualifications for eligibility and
method of payment. This contention of the Banks was upheld
by the Sastry Tribunal which said:
" The primary duty is on the Government to be satisfied
subjectively whether a reference should be made or not. In
the circumstances aforesaid, we hesitate to hold that we are
concerned with the question of quantum of benefits for
particular banks and for particular years in the past in the
light of profits of such banks durina those periods. We
ruled out a request that evidence should be taken for
determination of the question. It may yet be open to the
concerned parties where there is a real grievance to
approach the Government to get a suitable reference for the
future as well as for the account years 1949, 1950 and
1951."
What the Sastry Tribunal did was to consider the question
whether there could be a bonus scheme for future years and
whether it should be made to apply retrospectively to all
Banks and for all years; and as to the guiding principles
for the ascertainment of bonus, the Sastry Tribunal
suggested certain lines of approach and recommended them for
the earnest consideration of both the parties. The Labour
Appellate Tribunal, however, came to, a different conclusion
with regard to the scope of item 5 and held that it embraced
the claims to bonus for the relevant years. Accordingly, it
said :-
" It follows, therefore, that the claims to bonus made for
the relevent years have not yet been adjudicated upon and
that the terms of the reference have not been exhausted.
The ad hoe Tribunal to which this reference was made is no
longer in existence and some other Tribunal will have -to
decide what bonus, if any, is payable by the Banks to its
employees for the relevant years. "
The correctness of this part of the judgment of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal has been seriously contested before us on
behalf of the appellants and this is the first question
which we have to decide.
207
On the second question, namely as to the interpretation of
s. 10 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949 (prior to its
amendment in 1950) there was again a difference between the
Sastry Tribunal and the Labour Appellate Tribunal. The
Chairman of the Sastry Tribunal was of the view that s. 10
of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, did not stand in the way
of a grant of bonus to Bank employees, but the other members
of the Sastry Tribunal apparently felt that the matter was
not free from doubt and the Tribunal as a whole recommended
to Government that the alleged legal difficulty by reason of
s. 10 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, should be removed
by suitable -legislation. Perhaps, it was as a result of
this recommendation that s. 10 of the Banking Companies Act,
1949, was amended in 1956. The Labour Appellate Tribunal,
however, by a majority of 2 to I came to the conclusion that
s. 10 was no bar to a claim for bonus by Bank employees.
One member of the Appellate Tribunal, Shri D.E. Reuben,
recorded a note of dissent in which he held that by reason
of s. 10 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, as it stood at
the relevant time, the Industrial Courts could not grant
bonus to the workmen of a Bank. On behalf of the appellants
it has been contended that the view of the majority of the
Labour Appellate Tribunal with regard to s. 10 of the
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Banking Companies Act, 1949, is not correct. This is the
second question for our decision. As we are not deciding
the other two questions, no useful purpose will be served by
setting out the findings of the Tribunals below with regard
to them.
We now proceed to consider the preliminary objection taken
on behalf of the respondent workmen in Civil Appeal No. 56
of 1957. Some more facts must be stated with reference to
this preliminary objection. After the decision of the
Labour Appellate Tribunal and before it could be
implemented, several Banks appealed to Government to set
aside the decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal as they
felt that the total burden imposed by it was entirely beyond
their capacity to bear. Therefore, the Reserve Bank of
India, under directions of the Central Government
208
carried out a rapid survey of the possible effect of the
decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal on the working of
a few typical banks which were parties to the dispute. On a
study of the evidence so collected, the Central Government
concluded that it; was inexpedient on public grounds to give
effect to parts of the decision. Consequently, the Labour
Appellate Tribunal’s decision was modified by them by an
order dated August 24, 1954. This decision was debated in
Parliament and ultimately Government announced their
decision to appoint a Commission (known as Bank Award
Commission) to help them assess more fully the effect of the
award. The Commission submitted its report on July 25,
1955, and with regard to the claim for bonus it said:
" In regard to the claim for bonus, no general principles
can be invoked and the case of each individual bank would
have to be considered on its merits. Since this dispute has
not been resolved so far, it is likely that it may have to
be dealt with in the near future. The claim for bonus is
not within the terms of my reference and I do not wish to
trespass in the area of this dispute. I am, however,
referring incidentally to this aspect of the matter because
the fixation of a wage structure is likely to have an effect
on employees’ claim for bonus." (see paragraph 51 at page 34
of the Commission’s report).
Thereafter, the Industrial Disputes (Banking Companies)
Decision Act, 1955 (XLI of 1955) was passed to provide for
the modification of the decision of the Labour Appellate
Tribunal in accordance with the recommendations of the
Commission. This Act in so far as it is relevant for our
purpose said in s. 3 thereof that the decision of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal shall have effect as if the modifications
recommended in Ch. XI of the report of the Commission dated
July 25, 1955, had actually been made therein and the appel-
late decision as so modified shall be the decision of the
Appellate Tribunal within the meaning of the Industrial
Disputes (Appellate Tribunal) Act, 1950 and the award shall
have effect accordingly. It is clear that the Commission
did not make any recommendation in
209
respect of the bonus claim and the Industrial Disputes
(Banking Companies) Decision Act, 1955, does not affect the
present appeals; that Act merely gave effect to the
modifications recommended by the Commission, but did not
give the decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal any
higher sanctity as a statutory enactment. Now, the
preliminary objection taken on behalf of the respondent
workmen is that the decision of the Labour Appellate
Tribunal merely says that the claims to bonus for the
relevant years have not been adjudicated and therefore the
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terms of the reference have not been fully worked out; it is
contended that this means that some other Tribunal -"-ill
have to decide what bonus, if any, is payable by the Banks
to their employees, and no sucr Tribunal having been so long
appointed, there is at the present stage no enforceable
award within the meaning of the Industrial Disputes Act
1947, and the appeal accordingly is premature and
incompetent. We are unable to accept this contention as
correct. On behalf of the appellant Banks it has been
submitted that the Labour Appellate Tribunal misconceived
the scope of item 5 of sch. 11 of the relevant notification
and on that misconception it came to the conclusion that the
terms of reference had not been exhausted, a conclusion the
correctness of which the appellants are entitled to
challenge by way of appeal or else they will be bound by the
decision that the reference is still pending and can be
worked out by another Tribunal. This submission we think is
correct. In the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, an ’award’
means an interim or final determination by an Industrial
Tribunal of any industrial dispute or of any question
relating thereto. The dispute between the parties in the
present case related to bonus: on behalf of the banks it was
contended (a) that item 5 of sch. 11 did not include claims
of bonus for particular years in respect of particular banks
but related to a general scheme of bonus including
qualifications for eligibility and method of payment, and
(b) that even a general scheme cf bonus could not be made by
reason of the provisions of s. 10 of the Banking
27
210
Companies Act, 1949; on behalf of the Bank employees it was
contended that (a) item 5 included claims for bonus for
particular years in respect of particular banks and (b) s.
10 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, did not stand in the
way of such claims. These rival contentions led to an
industrial dispute which the Labour Appellate Tribunal
determined by its decision dated April 28, 1954. We do not
see why that decision is not an ’award’ within the meaning
of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. In our opinion, in no
sense can the appeals be said to be premature or
incompetent. It is worthy of note that these appeals have
been filed in pursuance of special leave granted by this
Court tinder Art. 136 of the Constitution. That Article
enables this Court to grant, in its discretion, special
leave to appeal from any judgment, decree, determination,
sentence or order in any cause or matter passed or made by
any court or tribunal in the territory of India. The powers
of this Court under the said Article are wide and are
subject to such considerations only as this Court has laid
down for itself for the exercise of its discretion. The
argument before us is not that these appeals do not come,
within those considerations and special leave should not
have been granted; but the argument is that they are
incompetent for other reasons. Even those reasons, we
think, are not sound. Learned counsel for the respondent
workmen has cited before us some decisions, one Australian
’In re the Judiciary Acts, etc. (1)); and another American
(David Muskrat v. United States (2)) in support of his
contention. We consider, however, that the point is so
clear and beyond doubt that it is unnecessary to embark on
an examination of decisions which relate to entirely
different facts. There is, in our opinion, no substance in
the preliminary objection which must be overruled.
Now, we proceed to consider the true scope of item 5 of sch.
11 of the notification dated January 5, 1952. Schedule 11
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of the notification dated June 13, 1949, by which a
reference was made to the Sen Tribunal contained an
identical item which was item 6. That
(1) (1921) 29 C.L.R. 257.
(2) (1910) 219 U.S. 346 ; 55 L. Ed. 246.
211
item was expressed exactly in the samewords as item 5 of
sch. 11 of the notification underour consideration. The
Sen Tribunal dealt with thescope of that item and said
that a large number ofdemands had been made by the unions
for bonus for particular years in respect of particular
banks. The Sen Tribunal then said:-
" We have been unable to deal with such individual demands,
except such matters as were pending in the different States
at the time of our appointment and have been specifically
referred to us under the provisions of s. 5 of Ordinance VI
of 1949 or Act LIV of 1949. Apart from the great deal of
time that we should have to spend on such questions, had we
to hear and dispose of every application for a particular
year in respect of a particular bank, we believe that the
kind of disputes regarding bonus that have been referred to
us are disputes of a general nature, e.g., questions
regarding ’qualifications for eligibility and method of
payment’."
Thus it is clear that the Sen Tribunal also understood the
item as a reference, of a dispute of a general nature which
did not include demands for bonus for particular years in
respect of particular banks. The Central Government which
made the reference to the Sastry Tribunal by the
notification dated January 5, 1952, had before it the
interpretation which the Sen Tribunal had made in respect of
the self-same item. Having that interpretation before it,
the Central Government used identical language to express
the dispute which it referred to the Sastry Tribunal in item
5 of sch. 11. This, in our opinion clearly shows that item
5 of sch. 11 of the notification relating to the Sastry
Tribunal has the same meaning as item 6 of sch. 11 of the
notification relating to the Sen Tribunal as interpreted by
that Tribunal. The various items in sch. 11 of the relevant
notification are not items in legislative lists, but are
items in an administrative order and it would not be right
to apply the same canon of interpretation to the items in an
administrative order as is applied to items in a legislative
list. It is worthy of note that some of the items in
212
the Sen reference were modified when the subsequent
reference was made to Sastry Tribunal. Item 38 of the Sen
reference read as follows:-
In what manner and to what extent do the decisions of the
Tribunal require modification in the case of employees of
banks in liquidation or moratorium ?"
This item was dealt with by the Sen Tribunal at pp. 157 to
160 of its award and it pointed out certain defects in the
wording of the item. When a similar item was referred to
the Sastry Tribunal, necessary changes were made in the
wording of the item to remove the defects pointed out by the
Sen Tribunal (see item 11 of sch. 11 of the notification
relating to the Sastry Tribunal. Another example of a
similar character is item 5 of sch. 11 of the Sen reference,
an item which related to " other allowances " payable to
bank employees including conveyance allowance for clerks for
journeys to and from the clearing house. A point taken
before the Sen Tribunal was that by conveyance allowance was
meant an allowance for journeys to and from the place of
work. The Sen Tribunal confined conveyance allowance to
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expenditure incurred for going out on the Bank’s work while
the Bank employee was on duty. The scope of the reference
was made clearer by changing the phraseology of the item
when the subsequent reference to the Sastry Tribunal was
made; see in this connection the phraseology of item 28 of
sch. 11 of the notification relating to the Sastry Tribunal.
It would thus appear that we have two kinds of examples: (1)
in some cases the phraseology of the items is changed when
the subsequent reference is made taking into consideration
the criticisms made by the Seti Tribunal and (2) there are
other cases where no change in phraseology is made even
though the Sen Tribunal has understood a particular item in
a particular sense. Judged in the light of these examples,
it seen-is to us that the true scope of item 5 of -,ch. 11
is what the Sastry Tribunal understood it to be, namely.,
whether bonus was payable to Bank employees and, if so, what
were the qualifications for eligibility and method of
213
payment. The reference in item 5 of schedule 11 did not
include within itself claims of bonus for particular years
in respect of particular banks. The Sastry Tribunal further
pointed out that there were specific references with regard
to the claims for bonus in respect of some Banks. Those
reference did not, however, come within item 5 of sch. 11.
If they did, it was completely unnecessary to make separate
and specific references with regard to such claims. Item 5
was not the only item which raised a general question.
There were many other items of a similar nature, such as
items 3, 6, 9 etc.
The Labour Appellate Tribunul itself realised the difficulty
of deciding under item 5 of sch. 11 the particular claims
for bonus for particular years. The Sastry Tribunal pointed
out that there were 129 banks before it and no evidence was
given to substantiate the claims for bonus for particular
years in respect of particular banks. The Sastry Tribunal
said:-
"We cannot assume that, for all these 129 banks before us
and for all these years there were live disputes about this
matter which the Government had considered fit and proper to
be referred to us after applying their minds to the problem
whether such a reference should be made to an industrial
tribunal. There is also this additional circumstance that
there had been two special and specific references by the
Govern cut in relation to the payment of bonus by the
central bank of India, the Allahabad Bank and the, Unitted
commercial Bank for the years 1951 and 1951. Moreover, even
apart from the general character of the various heads of of
disputes in the reference to us individual cases pertaining)
only to Some banks Wherever the Government wanted to make
such a reference have been particularised and set out, e.g,
absorption of Bharat Bank employees-itein 31 in schedule It
of the, notification. . . . It may be mentioned that the
claim before us in connection with the bonus payable I)v the
Imperial Bank of India for the years 1948, lb49, 1950 and
1951 would involve a payment of very nearly a crore of
rupees over and above the
214
payments already made for these years. It is not possible
for us to affirm what the attitude of the Government would
have been on the question of referring a dispute of this
character to us under s. 10 of the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947. "
Faced with the difficulty referred to by the Sastry
Tribunal, the Labour Appellate Tribunal also said that it
could not deal with individual claims for bonus in the
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present proceedings. The Labour Appellate
Tribunal said that it would be acting in vacuo if it
attempted to decide individual claims for bonus without
having before it specific cases of bonus, particularly when
there were no materials on the record on which the Tribunal
could make a decision as to the quantum of bonus payable by
a particular bank for a particular year. This difficulty
instead of leading the, Labour Appellate Tribunal to give a
proper interpretation to the true scope of item 5 of sch. 11
led it to the conclusion that item 5 of sch. 11 embraced
within itself individual claims for bonus for particular
years and those claims must be dealt with by another
tribunal on the footing that the reference had not been
completely worked out. We consider this to be a complete
non sequitur. Item 5 of sch. IL must be interpreted as an
item in an order of reference in the context in which the
item has been used, the words in which it has been expressed
and against the background in which the dispute has arisen.
The practical difficulty which may arise in deciding
individual claims for bonus in respect of particular banks
is merely a circumstance to be taken into consideration. It
cannot be decisive on the question of determinination the
true scope and effect of item 5 of sch. 11.
On a consideration of all relevant circumstances and having
regard to the context and the words in which item 5 of sch.
11 has been expressed, we are of the view that the Labour
Appellate Tribunal was wrong in its conclusion that the
reference had not been worked out and that individual claims
for bonus in respect of particular banks must be determined
by another tribunal on the basis of the reference made in
1952.
215
We now proceed to a consideration of the more important
question, as to the effect of s. 10 of the Banking Companies
Act, 1949. We have stated earlier that s. 10 of the Banking
Companies Act, 1949, hereinafter called the Banking Act, was
amended in 1956. We shall first read the unamended section,
the provisions whereof were in force at the time relevant to
these appeals. We shall later read also the amended section
in connection with an arguement presented on behalf of the
Bank employees that the Banking Companies (Amendment) Act,
1956 (XCV of 1956) was not remedial in nature but was
declaratory of the law as it always was.
Section 10 of the Banking Act prior to its amendment in
1956, was in these terms-
" S. 10. (1) No banking Company(a) shall employ or be
managed by a managing agent or,
(b) shall employ any person-
(i)who is or at any time has been adjudicated insolvent,
or has suspended payment or has compounded with his
creditors, or who is or has been convicted by a criminal
court of an offence involving moral turpitude; or
(ii)whose remuneration or part of whose remuneration takes
the form of commission or of a share in the profits of the
company; or
(iii)whose remuneration is, according to the normal
standards prevailing in banking business, on a scale
disproportionate to the resources of the Company; or
(c) shall be managed by any person:-
(1)who is a director of any other company, not being a
subsidiary company of the banking company; or
(ii)who is engaged in any other business or vocation ; or
(iii)who has a contract with the company for its
management for a period exceeding five years at any one
time:
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216,
Provided that the said period of five years shall in
relation to contracts subsisting on the 1st day of July,
1944, be computed from that date Provided further that any
contract with the company for its management may be renewed
or extended for a further period not exceeding five years at
a time if and so often as the directors so decide.
(2)If any question arises in any particular case whether
the remuneration is, according to the normal standards
prevailing in banking business, on a sctle disproportionate
to the resources of the company for the purpose of sub-
clause (iii) of clause (b) of subsection (1), the decision
of the Reserve Bank thereon shall be final for all purposes.
"
Before we proceed to a consideration of the construction of
the section, a little history may not be out of place. The
Companies (Amendment) Act, 1936 introduced a new Ptrt XA in
the Indian Companies Act, 1913 (VIl of 1913). Part XA
contained certain special provisions applicable to banking
companies only. The section with which we are concerned was
s. 277HH, and that section was introduced by an amending Act
of 1944. It was the precursor of s. 10 of the Banking Act
and it may, perhaps, be advisable to read s. 277HH in so far
as it is relevant for our purpose:
" 277HH. No banking company...... shall, after the expiry
of two years from the commencement of the Indian Companies
(Amendment) Act, 1944, employ or be, managed by a managing
agent, or any person whose remuneration or part of whose
remuneration takes the form of commission or a share in the
profits of the company, or any person having a contract with
the company for its management for a period exceeding five
years at any one time ;
Provided that the period of five years shall, for the
purposes of this section, be computed from the date on which
this section comes into force;
217
Provided further that any such contract may be be renewed or
extended for a further period not exceeding five years at a
time if and so often as the directors think fit."
Obviously, the most undesirable feature in the structure and
management of banking companies which the section tried to
remedy was the appointment of managing directors or managers
on long term contracts on payment of remuneration by
commission or a share in the profits. However, the section
was not confined to a managing agent or manager only, though
by a reference to the statement of objects and reasons in
relation to the amendment of 1944 it was suggested on behalf
of the respondents that the section was so confined. The
statement of objects and reasons is not admissible, however,
for construing the section; far less can it control the
actual words used. The section in express terms said that
’no banking company . . . . shall employ any person whose
remuneration or part of whose remuneration takes the form
of . . . a share in the profits of the company’.
Then, in 1949 came the Banking Act. As its long title and
preamble indicate, it is an Act to consolidate and amend the
law relating to banking companies. It repealed the whole of
Part XA of the Indian Companies Act, 1913 including s. 277HH
referred to above, but s. 2 said:
" S. 2. The provisions of this Act shall be in addition to,
and riot, save as hereinafter expressly provided, in
derogation of the Indian Companies Act, 1913, and any other
law for the time being in force."
The Indian Companies Act, 1913 itself stood repealed by the
Indian Companies Act, 1956 (I of 1956).
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We now come back to s. 10, the proper interpretation of
which is the immediate problem before us. Shorn of all such
details as are unnecessary for our purpose, the section says
that no banking company shall employ any person, whose
remuneration or part of whose remuneration takes the form of
a share in the profits of the company. The section opens
with a negative,
218
and says that no banking company shall employ any person;
the expression ’any person’ is followed by the adjectival
clause descriptive of the person who shall not be employed.
The adjectival clause says that the person, who shall not be
employed, is one whose remuneration or part of whose
remuneration takes ’- the form of a share in the profits of
the company. Two questions at once confront us: (1) is I
bonus remuneration; and (2) is it a share in the profits of
the company. The argument on behalf of the appellant Banks
is that I bonus’ as awarded by Industrial Courts is
remuneration within the meaning of s. 10 and it is also a
share in profits; therefore. the express provisions of s. 10
read with s. 2 of the Banking Act override the provisions of
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 so far as banking
companies are concerned, and prohibit the award of bonus to
employees of Banks. On behalf of the Bank employees the
argument is that bonus as awarded by Industrial Courts is
not ’remuneration’ within the meaning of s. 10 of the
Banking Act, nor is it a share in profits in its true
nature. The argument on both sides hinges on the two key
expressions: I remuneration’ and’ share in profits’. The
meaning of these expressions we shall consider in some
detail. But it is convenient at this stage to get rid of
some minor points.
Section 10 in its operative part says that ’no banking
company shall employ any person etc.’ The amendment of 1956
says that I no banking company shall employ or continue the
employment of any person’. The question has been mooted
before us if the expression ’shall employ’ means and
includes, prior to the amendment of 1956, ’shall continue
the employment of’. We think it does; otherwise the very
purpose of the section is defeated. Take, for example, the
case of an insolvent. The section says that no banking com-
pany shall employ any person who is or at any time has been
adjudicated insolvent. Suppose that at the time the bank
employs a person, he has not incurred any of the
disqualifications mentioned in s. 10; but subsequently,
there is an order of adjudication against him and he is
adjudicated an insolvent, The section
219
obviously means that such a person can no longer be employed
by the bank. If subsequent disqualification is not within
the mischief of the section, then the very purpose of the
section which must be the safety and well-being of the bank
will be rendered nugatory. We must, therefore, hold that
the expression ’shall employ a person’ in s. 10 means and
includes ’shall have in employment’ and in this respect the
amendment of 1956 merely makes clear what was already meant
by the section.
We may also dispose of here an argument based on s. 2. When
an industrial dispute as to bonus between an employer and
his workmen is referred to a tribunal for adjudication, the
tribunal has the power to resolve the dispute by an award.
Such an award may grant bonus to workmen, if certain
conditions are fulfilled. The argument before us is that
the provisions of the Banking Act are not to be interpreted
in derogation of the provisions of the Industrial Disputes
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Act, 1947, but in addition thereto. This argument, however,
ignores an essential qualification embodied in s. 2-namely,
the qualification in the clause ’save as hereinafter ex-
pressly provided’. If s. 10 expressly provides that no
banking company shall employ a person whose remuneration or
part of whose remuneration takes the form of a share in
profits, and I bonus’ is both remuneration and a share in
profits, then s. 2 can be of no assistance to the
respondents. The express provisions of s. 10 must then
override any other law for the time being in force, so far
as banking companies are concerned.
This brings us back to the two key expressions remuneration’
and ’share in profits’. We take the expression
’remuneration’ first. The dictionary meaning of the word is
reward, recompense, pay for service rendered (see the
Concise Oxford Dictionary) ; and that is the ordinary
meaning of the word. The word was judicially noticed in a
very early decision (R. v. Postmaster General (1); and on
appeal (2); Blackburn, J., said: " I think the word ’
remuneration.......... means,, a quid pro quo. If a man
gives his services. whatever consideration lie gets for
giving his services seems to
(1) (1876) 1 Q.B.D. 658.
(2) (1878) 3 Q.B.D. 428.
220
me a remuneration for them. Consequently, I think if a
person was in receipt of a payment, or in receipt of a
percentage, or any kind of payment which would not be an
actual money payment, the amount he would receive annually
in respect of this would be remuneration." The word was
again noticed in several English decisions in connection
with s. 13 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, 1906, which
enacted that a workman did not include a person employed
otherwise than by way of manual labour whose " remuneration
" exceeded pound, 50 ; and in Skiles v. Blue, Anchon Line,
Ltd.(’) it was observed that remuneration was not the same
thing as salary or cash payment by the employer but involved
the same considerations as earnings. This was a case in
which the purser of a ship received, in addition to his
regular wages, at the end of each voyage, at a fixed rate
per month, a bonus or extra wages; he also made a profit by
the sale on board ship of whisky in nips. The majority of
Judges held that both the bonus and the profit on the whisky
ought to be taken into account in estimating the purser’s
remuneration. In an earlier decision, Penn v. Spiers and
Pond Limited (2), the gratuities and tips which the deceased
workmen, employed as a waiter on a restaurant car, received
from passengers using the restaurant car were held to be I
earnings in the employment of the same employer’. The
decision in Penn v. Spiers and Pond, Limited (supra) (2) was
approved by the House of Lords in Great Western Railway v.
Helps (a). In his speech Lord Dunedin repelled the argument
addressed for the appellants of that case that the meaning
of the expression " earnings " should be limited to what the
workman gets from direct contract from his employer by
saying that the simple answer to the argument was that the
statute did not say so; it used the general term I earnings’
(in our case the general term ‘remuneration) instead of the
term " wages" or the expression " what he gets from his
employer ". It is, we think, unnecessary to multiply
decisions. In a recent Australian decision, Conally v.
Victorian -Railways
(1) [1911] 1 K.B- 36o. (2) [1908] 1 K.B. 766.
(3)[1918] A.C. 141.
221
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Commissioner,s (1) the matter has been tersely put as
follows: " It (the word remuneration) should be given its
natural meaning unless there is reason to do otherwise."
This is a salutary rule of construction and should, we
think, be adopted in the present case.
Is there anything in the Banking Act to give the word
’remuneration’ a restricted meaning? Three meanings have
been canvassed before us. The widest meaning for which the
learned Attorney-General appearing for some of the banks has
contended is the natural meaning of the word ’remuneration’
in the sense of any recompense for services rendered,
whether the payment is voluntary or under a legal
obligation. The second meaning, which is intermediate
between the widest and the narrowest, is that it means what
is payable under any legal obligation, whether under a
contract, statute, or an award. The narrowest meaning for
which Shri N.C. Chatterjee, learned counsel for the
respondent workmen, has canvassed is that remuneration in s.
10 of the Banking Act means contractual wages, viz., what is
payable under the terms of the contract of employment only.
He has put his argument in the following way: section 10,
when it says that I no banking company shall employ a person
etc.’, refers to the contractual relationship of employer
and employee created by an act of parties, and its purpose
is to put a, ban on one kind of employment of a person who
is to be paid a particular remuneration under the terms of
his employment. It is stated that the prohibition is
against any remuneration in the nature of profit sharing
being fixed under a contract of service between the bank and
its employees and it is contended that the legislature made
the-prohibition dependent on the terms of employment. It is
submitted that the adjudication of an industrial tribunal in
awarding bonus does not create any obligation by act of
parties, and even if it imports some kind of implied term,
it is de hors the contract of employment and is the result
of a judicial verdict under the industrial law.
The argument is attractive but does not in our opinion stand
the test of close scrutiny. Lot us look a
(1) (1957) V.R. 466 (also 1957 Australian Law Reports
1097).
222
little more closely to s. 10 of the Banking Act. It says
inter alia that no banking company shall employ or be
managed by a managing agent or shall employ a person who is
or has been convicted by a criminal court of an offence
involving moral turpitude etc; see el. (b)(1). It is
obvious that when the section says ’shall employ’, it means
’shall have in the employment of. It is not suggested that
the disqualifications mentioned in cl. (b) (1) refer only to
the contract of employment. If that were so, the section
would hardly serve the purpose for which it must have been
meant. We may take another example which brings out the
meaning of the section even more clearly. Let us suppose
that the Bank employs a manager on a contract of service
which makes no mention of bonus or commission. On the
argument of learned counsel for the respondents, s. 10 does
not stand in the way of the bank to pay voluntarily and ex
gratia any amount to the manager by way of commission or
bonus, as long as the contract of service does not contain
any term as to such payment. This, in our opinion, makes
nonsense of the section. Learned counsel for the
respondents had himself suggested in the course of his
arguments that having regard to the legislative history of
the enactment, the section was intended to prevent banks
from having managers, by whatever name they might be called,
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who were paid by commission or a share in the profits; and
yet the Bank can make such payment if it adopts the
subterfuge of not saying anything about such payment in the
contract of service.
There are, in our view, clear indications in the section
itself that the word ’remuneration’ has been used in the
widest sense. Firstly, cl. (b) (iii) also uses the word
remuneration. It says-" whose remuneration is, according to
normal standards prevailing in banking business, on a scale
disproportionate to the resources of the company ". Sub-
section (2)-unamended-states inter alia that if any question
arises in any particular case whether the remuneration is
according to the normal standards prevailing in banking
business on a scale disproportionate to the resources of the
company etc., the decision of the Reserve Bank
223
shall be final. It is clear that in cl. (b) (iii) of sub-s.
(1) and also in sub-s. (2), the word,remuneration has been
used in the widest sense. We may invite attention in this
connection to r. 5 of the Banking Companies Rules, 1949
(which are statutory rules) which requires a banking company
to send periodically to the principal office of the Reserve
Bank a statement in Form I showing the remuneration paid
during the previous calendar year to officers of the company
etc. Form I has a footnote which says: " Remuneration
includes salary, house allowance, dearness
allowance, . . . . bonus . . . fees and allowances to
directors etc." We do not say that a statutory rule can
enlarge the meaning of s. 10; if a rule goes beyond what the
section contemplates, the rule must yield to the statute.
We have, however, pointed out earlier that s. 10 itself uses
the word ’remuneration’ in the widest sense, and r. 5 and
Form I are to that extent in consonance with the section.
Shri Phadke appearing for some of the respondents has urged
a somewhat different contention. He has argued that
assuming that the word ’remuneration’ has been used in the
widest sense in s. 10 and therefore includes bonus, r. 5 and
Form 1, show that payment of bonus is permissible: this is
intelligible only on the footing that the provisions of s.
10 are restricted in their application to such employees of
a banking company as are employed in a managerial or admini-
strative capacity; they do not apply to ’workmen’ as defined
in the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. We find it difficult
to accept this argument. The section says that ’no banking
company shall employ any person’, and we do not see how the
expression ’any person’ can be restricted to those on the
managerial or administrative staff only. We cannot
arbitrarily cut down the amplitude of an expression used by
the legislature.
It is necessary to refer here to the decision in Wrottesley
v. Regent Street Florida Restaurant (1) on which learned
counsel for the respondent workmen has placed great
reliance. It is necessary to refer to the
(1) [1951] 2 K.B. 277.
224
facts of the case, which are stated in the headnote. The
waiters employed at an unlicensed restaurant, by an oral
agreement amongst themselves and between them and their
employers, paid into a pool all the tips received by them
during the course of their employment. The tips were placed
in a locked box, and the contents were distributed weekly in
shares calculated in accordance with the agreement. The
total weekly sum received by each waiter including the share
of the tips exceeded, but the weekly wage paid by the
employers was itself less than, the minimum wage prescribed
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by the Wages Regulations (Unlicensed Place of Refreshment)
Order, 1949. The proprietors of the restaurant were
prosecuted for failing to pay the minimum wage. It was held
that the sums paid from the pool were riot remuneration, and
the earlier decisions relating to the calculation of the
earnings of a waiter in connection with the Workmen’s
Compensation Acts were distinguished. Lord Goddard, C.J.,
thus explained the distinction:
" The amount of a man’s earnings in an employment and the
amount of remuneration which his employer pays to him are
not necessarily the same thing. The section creating the
offence, and under which the proceedings are taken, is s. 9,
sub-s. 2, of the Catering Wages Act, 1943. That section
provides that, if an employer fails to pay to a worker to
whom a wages regulation order applies remuneration not less
than the statutory minimum remuneration clear of all
deductions, he shall be guilty of an offence. Section 10
contains somewhat elaborate provisions for the computation
of remuneration. Not only the short title but the structure
of the Act -setting up a wages commission, permitting the
establishment of wages boards, and providing for wage
regulation orders-clearly indicates that it is with wages
that the Act is intended to deal. The use of the word "
remuneration " in both s. 9 and s. 10 and, indeed, in other
sections, is probably because there are certain deductions
from wages which are authorized by s. 10, so that
remuneration is an apt word to indicate the net payment,
225
What we have to decide is whether, when a waiter, receives a
payment from the tronc in the manner found in the case, that
sum can be regarded as remuneration paid to him by, or as
remuneration obtained by him in cash from, his employer. In
our opinion, when a customer gives a tip to a waiter the
money becomes the property of the latter."
We think that the decision itself shows that the word
remuneration’ must be given its meaning with reference to
the context in which the word occurs in the statute. In the
context of the Catering Wages Act, 1943, it meant the net
payment after certain deductions from wages paid by the
employer; and in the Workmen’s Compensation Acts, it meant
the amount of a man’s earnings in an employment. We have
pointed out that in the Banking Act with which we are con-
cerned, the word I remuneration’ has been used in the widest
sense. In that. sense, it undoubtedly includes bonus.
We proceed now to a consideration of the second key
expression for our purpose, viz., ’takes the form of a share
in the profits of the company’. The conception of
industrial bonus (that is, profit bonus claimed by employees
and granted amicably, through conciliation or as a result of
an industrial award) has had a chequered development. In
some of the earlier Bombay decisions of Industrial
Adjudicators, it was held that the grant of bonus was
entirely a matter of grace and not of right; some decisions
characterized bonus as a gift, a sort of bakshis or
pourboire (see D. G. Damle’s Labour Adjudications in India.
p. 408). By 1948, however, the conception had crystallised,
and it was judicially recognised that the claim of profit
bonus could not any longer be regarded as an ex gratia
payment. In Millowner’s Association, Bombay v. Rashtriya
Mill Mazdoor Sangh Bombay (1) the Full Bench of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal evolved the formula for determining the
quantum of bonus, and the general principles governing the
claim of bonus were also laid down. These are,: (1) as both
capital
(1) 1950 L.L.J. 124.
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29
226
and labour contribute to the earnings of the industrial
concern, it is fair that labour should derive some benefit,
if there is a surplus after meeting prior or necessary
charges; (2) the claim of bonus would only arise if there
should be a residue after making provision for (a) prior
charges and (b) a fair return on paid up capital and on
reserves employed as working capital .and (3) bonus is a
temporary satisfaction, wholly or in part, of the needs of
the employee where the capacity of the industry varies or is
expected to vary from year to year, so that the industry
cannot afford to pay ’living wages’. The Labour Appellate
Tribunal recognised that where the goal of living wages had
been attained, bonus like profit sharing in the technical,
narrow sense would represent more the cash incentive to
greater efficiency and production. The conception of the
living wage itself is a growing conception, and the goal has
been reached in very few industries, if any, in this
country. The general principles laid down by the aforesaid
Full Bench decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal were
generally approved by this Court in Muir Mills Co. Ltd. v.
Suti Mills Mazdoor Union, Kanpur (1), and have been fully
considered again and approved in Civil Appeals Nos. 459 and
460 of 1957 (Associated Cements) in which judgment was
delivered on May 5, 1959.
We have to consider the expression I takes the form of a
share in the profits of the company’ in the context of the
meaning of the word bonus’ as explained above. It is
necessary to state that we are not considering here the
question of production bonus or Puja bonus, which may not
necessarily come out of profits and these stand on a
different footing. There can be now no doubt, however, that
profit bonus, in the industrial sense in which we now
understand it, is a share in the profits of the company; it
is labour’s share of the contribution which it has made in
the earning of the profits. The two grounds on which it has
been contended that bonus is not a share in the profits are
(1) that it is not a fixed or certain percentage of the
available surplus of profits and (2) it partakes of the
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 991
227
nature of a contingent, supplementary wage. These two
grounds weighed considerably with the majority of members of
the Labour Appellate Tribunal who expressed the view that s.
10 of the Banking Act did not stand in the way of granting
bonus to bank employees, because bonus according to them was
not a share in the profits of the company. We do not think
that either of these two grounds is valid. The first ground
arises out of a confusion between the expression ’takes the
form of a share in profits’ and the expression ’profit
sharing’ used in a narrow, technical sense. It is
undoubtedly true that the bonus formula does not lay down
any fixed percentage which should go to labour out of the
available surplus. The share of labour will depend on a
number of circumstances; but once the amount which should go
to labour has been determined, it is easy enough to
calculate what proportion it bears to the whole amount of
available surplus of profits. There is thus no difficulty
in identifying bonus as a share in the profits of the
company. It is true that the International Congress on
Profit-sharing held in Paris in 1889 adopted the definition
of ’profit sharing’ in the technical, narrow sense. That
definition said that profit sharing was an agreement (formal
or informal) freely entered into, by which the employees
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receive a share, fixed in advance, of the profits " (see
Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, Seligman and Johnson,
Vol. XII, p.487). But that is not the sense in which bonus
has been understood in our industrial law, and it is worthy
of note that s. 10 of the Banking Act does not use the
technical expression ’profit-sharing’ but the more general
expression I takes the form of a share in the profits etc.’.
We are unable to hold that this general expression has a
technical meaning in the sense that the share in profits
must be fixed in advance, as in technical profit-sharing;
such a meaning would, without sufficient reason, exclude
from its purview schemes under which the workers are granted
regularly a share in the net profits of industry, but in
which the share to be distributed among the workers is not
fixed in advance but is decided from time to time on ad hoc,
228
basis by an independent authority such as an industrial
court or tribunal.
The second ground also appears to us to be equally
untenable. Bonus in the’ industrial sense as understood in
our country does come out of the available surplus of
profits, and when paid, it fills the gap, wholly or in part,
between the living wage and the actual wage. It is an
addition to the wage in that sense, whether it be called
Contingent and supplementary. None the less, it is labour’s
share’ in the profits, and as it is a remuneration which
takes the form of a share in profits, it come’s within the
mischief of S. 10 of the Banking Act. It may be asked why
should the legislature seek to deprive bank employees, who
are not on the managerial or administrative staff, of their
industrial claim to bonus when they contribute to the
prosperity of the banks? This really is a question of
policy on which we are not permitted to speculate. On the
one side there is the necessity for safeguarding the
integrity and stability of the banking industry, and on the
other side there is the claim of employees for a share in
the profits. Which claim has a greater urgency at a
particular time is really a matter for the legislature to
say. We may refer here by way of contrast to S. 31A of the
Insurance Act, 1938. - That section’ is in terms similar to
S. 10 of the Banking Act, but has some marked differences.
Firstly, it specifically mentions bonus, along with a share
in profits, in cls. (b) and (c) of sub-S. (1); secondly, it
has a proviso which says inter alia that nothing in subS.
(1) shall prohibit the payment of bonus in any year on a
uniform basis to all salaried employees I etc., or such
bonus which in the opinion of the Central Government is
reasonable having regard to the circumstances of the case.
This merely shows that it is for the legislature to decide
how to adjust the claim of employees with the safety and
security of the business in which the employees are in
employment.
The learned Attorney-General has relied on a number of
decisions in support of his contention that bonus comes
within the expression ’takes the form of a share in
profits’. In re Young, Ex Parte Jones (1) it was held
(1) [1896]2Q.B.484.
229
that a contract that a person shall receive a fixed sum "
out of the profits" of a business was equivalent to a
contract that he shall receive "a share of the profits"
within the meaning of sub-s. 3(d) of s. 2 of the Partnership
Act, 1890. A similar question arose in Admiral Fishing
Company v. Robinson (1) in connection with s. 7, sub-s. 2,
of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, 1906 which said: " This
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Act shall not apply to such members of the crew as are
remunerated by shares in the profits or gross earnings of
the working of such vessel." The claimant who was the
engineer of a fishing smack was entitled to one share of the
net profits of the working of the vessel on the particular
voyage. The question was-was he remunerated by shares in
the profits ? The answer given was that he clearly was so
remunerated. In Costello v. Owners of Ship Pigeon (2) the
claimant was employed as a boatswain on a steam fishing
trawler and was remunerated by wages, maintenance, and
poundage dependent on the profits of the fishing expedition.
The House of Lords decided by a majority that the claimant
was remunerated by a share in profits within the meaning of
s. 7, sub s. 2, of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, 1906.
Shri N. C. Chatterjee has invited our attention to Newstead
v. Owners of Steam Trawler Labrador (3). That was a case of
a claim for compensation by the widow of a member of the
crew of a fishing vessel, which was lost with all hands.
The claim was resisted by the owners on the ground that the
deceased was remunerated by a share in the profits or gross
earnings of the vessel within s. 7, sub-s. 2 of the
Workmen’s Compensation Act, 1.906, and therefore that the
Act did not apply to him. He was employed as chief engineer
on board a steam trawler at a fixed weekly wage of pound 2.
5s. It was the custom of the owners when the gross earnings
of the boat exceeded pound 100 for any one trip (each trip
being usually of about a week’s duration) to allow a sum of
pound 2 by way of bonus, of which pound, I went to the
captain and 2s. 6d. to each of the remaining eight members
of the crew. If the gross earnings of the
(1) [1910] 1 K.B. 540. (2) [1913] A.C. 407.
(3) [1916] 1 K. B. 166.
230
boat exceeded pound 125 the bonus was proportionately
increased and so on, but it was not further increased if the
gross earnings realised more than pound, 175. The decision
proceeded on the footing that the bonus in that case was not
a share in profits but an additional sum for wages
determined by the amount of the gross earnings. Lord Cozens
Hardy, M. R., expounded the ratio of the decision in the
following words :-
" The question is whether, having regard to the
circumstances, that can be said in the present case. It
seems that by the custom of this firm and by the
understanding and arrangement between the parties, if the
vessel made pound, 100 the skipper was entitled to pound 1,
and in that particular case each member of the crew was
entitled to half a crown. If the vessel made more the
skipper and crew were entitled to larger sums. Now what was
the effect .of that? The bonus was not, as it seems to me
any part of the profits, nor was it a share in the gross
earnings of the vessel. There was an obligation on the part
of the owners of the trawler to pay the half a crown (to
take that as one instance) in a certain event, which event
was to be determined by the gross earnings of the vessel. I
see no ground for holding that it was in any sense of the
word a share of the gross earnings of the working of the
vessel any more than the actual wages which were payable to
the seamen could be treated as being a share of the gross
earnings of the vessel, although the bonus as well as the
wages would figure in the ship’s accounts as against the
receipts on the other side."
It seems clear to us that the ratio of the decision does not
apply here. The bonus we are dealing with here is not
additional wage determined by the amount of profits; it is
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really part of the availiable surplus of profits distributed
to labour for its contribution to the earnings. It does not
arise out of any contract to pay, though the claim is
recognised as one based on social justice.
Shri Phadke has relied on the decision In re The Spanish
Prospecting Company Limited That
(1) [1911] 1 Ch. 92.
231
decision proceeded on the meaning of the word ’profits’, of
which a classic definition was given by Fletcher MOUITON, L.
J. In view of the decisions of this Court referred to
earlier, it is now beyond dispute that bonus in the
industrial Sense comes out of profits. If it does, we do
not see how it can be held that it is not a share in
profits. Shri Phadke suggested that the concept of a share
in profits pre-supposes the idea of either a definite amount
or a definite proportion determined in advance. This
submission we have dealt with at an earlier stage and no
useful purpose will be served by repeating what we have said
already.
We must now notice two other arguments advanced on behalf of
the respondent workmen. These arguments are based on the
amendments made in 1956. Section 10 as amended by the
Banking Companies (Amendment) Act, 1956 (XCV of 1956) reads,
in so far as it is relevent for our purpose-
S. 10. No Banking Company
(a)shall employ or be managed by a managing agent ; or
(b) shall employ or continue the employment of any person
(i) who is, or at any time has been, adjudicated
insolvent or has suspended payment or has compounded with
his creditors, or who is, or has been, convicted by a
criminal Court of an offence Involving
(ii)whose remuneration or part of whose remuneration takes
the form of commission or of a share in the profits of the
company:
Provided that nothing contained in this clause shall apply
to the payment of any bonus by any banking company in
pursuance of a settlement or award arrived at or made under
any law relating to industrial disputes or in accordance
with any scheme framed by such banking company or in
accordance with the usual practice prevailing in banking
business ; or
(iii)whose remuneration is, in the opinion of the
Reserve Bank, excessive; or
(
c) ........................................................
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Explanation.- For the purpose of sub-clause (iii) of clause
(b), the, expression "remuneration", in relation to a person
employed or continued in employment, shall include salary,
fees and perquisites but shall not include any allowances or
other amounts paid to him for the purpose of reimbursing him
in respect of the expenses actually incurred by him in the
performance of his duties.
(2)................................
(3)If any question arises in any particular case wither
the remuneration is excessive within the meaning of sub-
clause (iii) of clause (b) of subsection (1), the decision
of the Reserve Bank thereon shall be final for all
purposes."
It will be noticed that the amended section has a proviso
which makes it clear that nothing in the relevent clause in
subs-s. (1) shall apply to the payment of any bonus by any
banking company in pursuance of a settlement or award
arrived at or made under any law relating to industrial
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disputes or in accordance with any scheme framed by such
banking company or in accordance with the usual practice
prevailing in banking business. It is clear that the
amended section does not stand in the way of the grant of
industrial bonus. It was, however, not in force at the time
relevent in these appeals, and there is nothing in the
Banking’ Companies (Amendment) Act, 1956, which would make
it retrospective in operation. Shri N. C. Chatterjee has,
however, contended that the amending Act is declaratory of
the law as it always was, and Shri Phadke has contended that
the amending Act is parliamentary exposition of the true
meaning of s. 10 of the Banking Act. We are unable to
accept any of these two contentions. The amending Act
states in its long title that it is an Act to amend the
Banking Companies Act, 1949. Section 2 states: "For section
10 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949, the following section
shall be substituted." There is nothing in the amending Act
to indicate that it was enacted to remove any doubt, explain
any former statute, or correct any omission or error, What
is a declaratory Act The
233
following observations in Craies on Statute Law, Fifth.
edition, pp. 56-57 are apposite:
" For modern purposes a declaratory Act may be defined as an
Act to remove doubts existing as to the common law, or the
meaning or effect of any statute. Such Acts are usually held
to be retrospective. The usual reason for passing a
declaratory Act is to set aside what Parliament deems to
have been a judicial error, whether in the statement of the
common law or in the interpretation of statutes. Usually,
if not invariably, such an Act contains a preamble, and also
the word "declared" as well as the word ’enacted’.
A remedial Act, on the contrary, is not necessarily
retrospective; it may be either enlarging or restraining and
it takes effect prospectively, unless it has retrospective
affect by express terms or necessary intendment. We are of
the view that the amending Act of 1956 is not a declaratory
Act, and except in the small matter of the expression ’shall
continue to employ’ in sub-s. (1), it does not purport to
explain any former law or declare what the law has always
been. It is an ordinary remedial piece of legislation which
came into effect from January 14, 1957. For the period
relating to the appeals before us, the amended section was
not in force.
This brings us to ail end of the two questions, (1) and (2),
which directly fall for decision in these seven appeals.
Contrary to the findings of the Labour Appellate Tribunal,
we have come to the conclusion that (1) the scope of item 5
of sch. II of the relevant notification is not what the
Labour Appellate Tribunal thought it to be and the reference
of 1952 is not pending for determining the quantum of bonus
for the relevant years in respect of particular banks and
(2) in any event, s. 10 of the Banking Act, prior to the
amendment of 1956, prohibited the grant of industrial bonus
to bank employees inasmuch as such bonus is remuneration
which takes the form of a share in the profits of the
banking company.
We do not think that the other two questions, (3) and (4),
require any decision at this stage. It is to be remembered
that we are exercising our appellate
234
jurisdiction in these seven appeals and not our advisory
jurisdiction. These seven appeals stand completely disposed
of on the findings which we have given on the two questions
already discussed. On our findings the dispute as to bonus
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referred to the Industrial Tribunal in 1952 has come to an
end. The reference is no longer pending and in the view
which we have expressed as respects the interpretation of
unamended section 10 of the Banking Act no claim for bonus
can be adjudicated on for the past relevant years. It is,
therefore, not necessary for us to decide hypothetical
questions which may arise in any future reference that may
be made under the amended section. In the exercise of its
appellate powers this Court does not give speculative
opinions on hypothetical questions. It would be, contrary
to principle, inconvenient and inexpedient that opinion
should be given on such questions. If and when, they arise,
they must arise in concrete cases and to use the words of
the Earl of Halsbury, L. C., in Attorney General of Ontario
v. Hamilton Street Railway (1):-
" It would be extremely unwise for any judicial Tribunal to
attempt beforehand to exhaust all possible cases and facts
which might occur to qualify, cut down, and override the
operation of the particular words when the concrete case is
not before it."
It is also to be remembered that no evidence was allowed to
be given either by the banks or the bank employees as to the
claims for bonus for particular years in respect of
particular banks. The dispute was treated, rightly in our
opinion, as a dispute relating to the general question of
bonus. That general question is now disposed of on the
findings which we have already given. We are aware that if
and when a future reference as to an industrial dispute
relating to bonus is made by the appropriate Government and
the amended section falls for consideration, questions (3)
and (4) may fall for decision. It would be time enough to
decide those questions when they actually arise in concrete
cases and we consider that it is not only unwise but
inexpedient that we should forestall questions which may
arise in future cases and decide
(1) [1903] A.C.524, 529.
235
them more or less in vacuo and in the absence of necessary
materials for the decision of those questions. These are
our reasons for holding that questions (3) and (4) should
not now be decided. It is necessary to state, however, that
any observations which the Tribunals below may have made
with regard to questions (3) and (4) would be in the nature
of obiter- dicta and it would be open to both parties to
canvass those questions if and when they arise in any
concrete case in future. Therefore, we have not considered
it necessary to state in detail the contentions -raised
before us on behalf of the parties concerned with regard to
questions (3) and (4).
A few words regarding Civil Appeal No. 62 of 1957 before we
conclude. Besides the question of bonus two other questions
were raised in this appeal: (1) whether the Labour Appellate
Tribunal had jurisdiction to order cancellation and refund
of cash deposits and (2) whether the Tribunals below were
wrong in holding that the taking of cash deposits etc.,
should be restricted to workmen of three categories only.
When it was pointed out that the cash deposits had already
been refunded in accordance with the decision of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal the learned Attorney-General who appeared
for the appellant in Civil Appeal No. 62 of 1957 (The Punjab
National Bank, Limited) did not press those points.
Therefore, in Civil Appeal No. 62 of 1957 also the only
surviving question is the question of bonus on which we have
already given our decision.
Shri Sadhan Chandra Gupta appeared on behalf of the
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respondents in Civil Appeal No. 62 of 1957 and made his
submissions on the question of bonus. He has taken a stand
on s. 2 of the Banking Act and has contended that even if
bonus is remuneration which takes the form of a share in
profits, s. 2 saves the power of industrial tribunals to
award such bonus under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947,
and such award, if made, will impose an obligation on banks
to pay the bonus awarded and would not make them liable to
penalty under s. 46 of the Banking Act. We have dealt with
this argument at an earlier stage and have pointed out that
s. 2 is a saving provision with regard
236
to any other law for the time -being in force, provided
there is no express provision to the contrary in the Banking
Act. If, as we hold, unamended s. 10. of the Banking Act
expressly prohibits the employment of any person by a bank
whose remuneration takes the form of a share in the profits
of the company, then s. 2 of the Banking Act is of no help
and cannot permit something which is expressly prohibited by
s. 10.
For the reasons given above, we allow these seven appeals to
the extent already indicated, namely, (1) the reference of
1952 is not now pending for determining the question of
bonus for the relevant years in respect of particular banks
and (2) section 10 of the Banking Act prior to the amendment
of 1956 prohibits the grant of industrial bonus to bank
employees when such bonus is remuneration which takes the
form of a share in the profits of the banking company. In
the circumstances of these cases and in view of the long
drawn out nature of the dispute, we make no direction as to
costs.
Appeals allowed in part.