Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SILVER JUBILEE TAILORING HOUSE AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHIEF INSPECTOR OF SHOPS AND ESTABLISHMENTS AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT25/09/1973
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 37 1974 SCR (1) 747
1974 SCC (3) 498
CITATOR INFO :
R 1974 SC1832 (38)
F 1984 SC 23 (5)
E&R 1987 SC 447 (9)
ACT:
Andhra Pradesh ’Telengana Area’ Shops and Establishments Act
1951, Sections 2(14)--Determination of relationship of
employer and employee--Right to control manner of work not
an exclusive test--Factors relevant for determination
indicated--Court must balance the various factors.
HEADNOTE:
The second respondent representing the tailors working with
the, appellants filed certain claims under s. 37-A of the
Andhra Pradesh (Telengana Area), Shops and Establishments
Act r/w s. 15 of the Payment of Wages Act, 1936, contending
that they were the employees of the appellants and that the
Andhra Act was applicable. The facts as established on
evidence were as follows :
The petitioners generall attended the shops every, if there
was work. The rate depended upon the skill of the worker and
the nature of the work. When the cloth is given for
stitching to a worker, after it has been cut, the worker was
told how he could stitch it. If he not stitch it according
to the instructions, the employer rejected the work and
would generally ask the worker to re-stitch the same. When
the work is not according to the instructions, generally, no
further work would be given to him. If a worker did not
want to come for work to the shop on a particular day, he
did not make any application for leave nor was there any
obligation on his part to inform the employer that he would
not attend the work on that day. If there was no work, the
employee was free to leave the shop before the shop closed.
Almost all the workers worked in the shop. Some workers
were allowed to take the cloth for stitching at their homes
on certain days, with the permission of the proprietor. The
sewing machine installed in the shop belonged to the
proprietor of the shop and the premises of the shop in which
the work was carried on also belonged to him. The material
part of Section 2 (14) reads as follows :-
"Person employed means (i) in the case of a
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shop a person wholly or principally employed
therein in connection with the business of the
shop.,,
The Chief Inspector or Shops and Establishments and the High
Court of Andhra Pradesh held that the tailors we’re the
employees of the appellants and that the Andhra Pradesh
Shops and Establishment Act applied to them.
Rejecting the appeal,
HELD : (1) During the last two decades the emphasis in the
field is shifted from and no longer rests exclusively or so
strongly upon the question of control. In deciding upon the
question of relationship of the employer and an employee,
"control" is obviously an important factor and in many
cases, it may still be a decisive factor. But it is wrong
to say that in every case it is decisive. It is now no more
than a factor although an important one. A search for a
formula in the nature of a single test will not serve the
useful purpose, and all factors that have been referred to
in the cases on topic, should be considered to tell a
contract of service. Clearly, not all these factors would
be relevant in all these cases or have the same weight in
all cases. It is equally clear that no magic formula can be
Propounded which factors should, in any case, be treated as
determining ones. The plain fact is that in a large number
of cases, the Court can only perform a balancing operation
weighing up the factors which point in one direction and
balancing them against those pointing in the opposite
direction. [756H-757c]
(2) The ’Control’ idea was more suited to the agricultural
society prior to Industrial Revolution. It reflects a state
of-society in which the ownership of the means of production
coincided with the profession of technical knowledge and
skill in which that knowledge and skill was largely acquired
by being handed down from one generation to the next by oral
tradition and not by being systema-
748
tically imparted in institutions of learning from
universities down to the technical schools. The exclusive
test of control would not in modem times be consistent with
the changing modes and method of production and division of
labour.
[756F]
Casaidy v. Ministry of Health, [1951 1 All E.R. 574, 579,
Montreal v. Montreal Locomotive Works Ltd. et-at, [1947] 1
D.L.R. 161 at p. 169, Bank Voor Handel en Hebeepkaart N.V.
v. Elatford Danning L.J., [1952] 2 All E.R. 956 at 971, U .
S. v. Silk, 331 U.S. 704, Market Investigations Ltd. v.
Minister of Social Security [1968] 3 AII.E.R. 732, Prof.
Kahn-Freund in [1951] 14 Modem Law Rev. at p. 505, Atiyah
P.S., "Vicarious Liability in the, Law of Torts" pp. 37-38
Argent v. Minister of Social Security and Another, [19681 1
W.L.R. 1749 at 1759, referred to.
2. Held further
(i) When the services are performed generally in the
employer’s premises, this is some indication that the
contract is a contract of service.
(ii) If the employer provides the machine and equipment on
which the worker works, this is some indication that the
contract is a contract of service whereas if the other party
provides the equipment, this is some evidence that he is an
independent contractor. However, where it is customary for
servants to provide their own equipment, no sensible
inference can be drawn from this factor. [757 F-G]
Atiyah P.S. "Vicarious Liability in the Law Torts" p. 65,
referred to.
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(iii) The employer’s right to reject the end product if
it does not conform to the instructions of the employer
speaks for the element of control and supervision. So also,
the right of removal of the worker or not to give the work
has the element of control and supervision. The degree of
control and supervision would be different in different
types of business. However, if the element of authority
over the worker in the performance of his work rested in the
employer so that he is subject to latter’s direction, he is
an employee and not the independent contractor. [758E]
Humberstone v. Norther Timber Mills, [1949] 79 C.L.R. 389,
referred to.
(iv) Working with more than one employers does not militate
against being the employee of the proprietor of the shop
where he attends work. A servant need not be under
exclusive control of one master. So also, the fact that the
workers are not obliged to work for the whole day in the
shop is not very material. Sec. 2(14) of the Act do not
require that the Person should be wholly employed but it is
sufficient that he is principally employed in the shop.
[759D]
3. The right of the employer to reject the end product
signifying the control and supervision is important in case
of tailoring. The reputation of a tailoring establishment
depends not only on the cutter but also upon the tailor. In
many cases, stitching is a delicate operation when the cloth
upon which it is to be carried on is expensive. The defect
in stitching might mar the appearance not only of the
garment but also of its wearer. So when the tailor returns
the garment the proprietor has got to inspect it to see that
it is perfect. He has to keep the customers pleased and he
has also to be punctual, which means that the stitching must
be done according to the instructions of the employer and
within the time specified. The fact that sewing machines
generally belong to the employer is an important
consideration for deciding that the-relationship is that of
Master and servant. That some employees take up the work
from other tailoring establishments and do that work also
does not militate against their being employees of the
establishment in question. A servant need not be the
exclusive control of one master. That the workers are not
obliged to work for the whole day in the shop is not very
material, as even part-time employment can suggest a
contract of service. S. 2(14) of the Act merely requires
that a person wholly or principally employed therein in
connection with the business of the shop. Considering the
above facts and circumstances, the Chief Inspector Of Shops
and Establishment and High Court came to the right
conclusion that employer and employee relationship existed
between the parties and that the Act was applicable. [758 D,
F, G; 759C]
749
Dharagahaa Chemical Works Ltd. v. State of Saurashtra,
L1957] S.C.R. 152, Birdhichand Sharma V. The First Civil
Judge, Nagpur and others, [1961] 3 S.C.R. 161, D.C. Dewan
Mohideen Sahib and Sons v. The Industrial Tribunal, Madras,
[1964] 7 S.C.R. 646,, Shankar Balaji Wage V. State of
Maharashtra, [1962] Supp. I S.C.R. 249, V. P. Gopala Rao v.
Public Prosecutor, Andhra Pradesh, [1969] 3 S.C.R. 875 at
880 and Stevanson Jordan and Harrison v Mac donald and.
Evana, [1952] 1 T.L.R. 101 C.A., referred to.
JUDGMENT:
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CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1706 of
1969.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and order dated
the31st December, 1968 of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh
in Writ Appeal No. 564 of 1968.
S. I/. Gupte, and S. Markandya for the Appellant.
P. Rama Reddy and A. P. Nair, for Respondent No. 1.
B. P. Maheshwari and Suresh Sethi for Respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by_
MATHEW, J. In this appeal, by, special leave, the question
for consideration is whether the High Court of Andhra
Pradesh was right in accepting the conclusion arrived at by
the Chief inspector of Shops and Establishments, Hyderabad
that, employer and employee relationship existed between the
Silver Jubilee, Tailoring House and others, the appellants,
and the workers represented by the second respondent, and
that the provisions of Andhra Pradesh (Telengana Area) Shops
and Establishments Act, 1951, hereinafter referred to as the
Act, was therefore applicable to the establishments in
question.
The, second respondent representing the workers, made
certain claims before ’the competent authority’ under
Section 37A of the Act read with Section 15 of the Payment
of Wages Act 1936 against the Silver Jubilee Tailoring House
and Others, the appellants. Thereafter, "the competent
authority" referred for the decision of the State Government
under Section 49 of the Act, the question whether the
provisions of the Act are applicable to the establishments.
The Government in turn referred the matter to the
Commissioner of Labour to whom the power to decide the
question was delegated under S. 46 of the Act. He enquired
into the matter, heard the parties, but before he could pass
the order, the power to decide the question by the State
Government under S. 49 was delegated to the Chief Inspector
of Shops and Establishments, Hyderabad. The Chief Inspector
of Shops and Establishments thereafter heard the parties and
came to the conclusion that the provisions of the Act were
applicable to the establishments, as employer and employee
relationship- -existed between the appellants and the
workers represented by the second respondent.
The appellants filed a writ petition before the High Court
to quash this order. The writ petition was dismissed by a
learned Single Judge, on the basis of his finding that the
workers represented by the second respondent union were
employed in the establishment within the meaning of S. 2
(14) of the Act, and, therefore, the Act was applicable.
The appellants filed an appeal against the decision to the
Divi Bench of the same Court. The Division Bench dismissed
the appeal in
limite.
750
The material part of S. 2(14) reads as follows : "person
employed" means-(I) in the case of a shop, a person wholly
or principally employed therein in connection with the busi-
ness of the shop".
Two witnesses were examined to show the nature and character
of the work done by the workers. One was the proprietor of
one of the establishments and the other the Assistant
Inspector of Labour.
The following facts appear from the finding of the learned
Single Judge. All the workers are paid on piece-rate basis.
The workers generally attend the shops every day if there is
work. The rate of wages paid to the workers is not uniform.
The rate depends upon the skill of the worker and the nature
of the work. When cloth is given for stitching to a worker
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after it has been cut, the worker is told how he should
stitch it. If he does not stitch it according to the
instruction, the employer rejects the work and he generally
asks the worker to restitch the same. When the work is not
done by a worker according to the instructions generally no
further work would be given to him. If a worker does not
want to go for work to the shop on a day, -he does not make
any application for leave nor is there any obligation on his
part to inform the employer that he will not attend for work
on that day. If there is no work, the employee is free to
leave the shop before the shop closes. Almost all the
workers work in the shop. Some workers are allowed to take
cloth for stitching to their homes on certain days. But
this is done always with the permission of the proprietor of
shop. The ’machines installed in the shop belong to the
proprietor of the shop and the premises and the shop in
which the work is carried on also belong to him.
The question is whether from these circumstances the
conclusion drawn by the Chief Inspector of Shops and
Establishments and the High Court that there existed
employer and employee relationship between the appellants
and the workers represented by the 2nd respondent was
correct.
It was argued for the appellants that according to the
decisions of this Court the test to determine whether
employer and employee relationship existed between the
parties is to see whether the so called employer has the
right to control and supervise the manner of work done by
the workers and from the facts found by the High Court it is
impossible to come to the conclusion that the appellants had
any right to control the manner of work or that they had
actually exercised any such control. It is therefore
necessary to examine the question whether the right to
control the manner of work is an exclusive test to determine
the nature of the relationship and even if it is found that
that is the test’, whether facts proved would satisfy the
requirements of the test.
In Dharangadhara Chemical Works Ltd. v. State of
Saurashtra(l) the appellants before this Court were lesseses
holding a licence for the manufacture of salt on the lands
in question there. The salt was manufactured by a class of
professional labourers known as agarias from rain water that
got mixed up with saline matter in the soil. The work
(1) [1957] S. C. R. 152..
751 (Mathew, J.)
was seasonal in nature and commenced in October after the
rains and continued till June. After the manufacture of
salt the agarias were paid at the rate of 5 as. 6 pies per
maund. At the end of each season the accounts were settled
and the agarias paid the balance due to them. The agarias
who worked themselves with the members of their families
were tree to engage extra labour on their own account and
the appellants had no concern therewith. No hours of work
were prescribed, and no muster rolls were maintained. The
appellants had also no control over the working hours.
There were no rules as regards leave or holidays and the
agarias were free to go out of the factory after making
arrangements for the manufacture of salt.
The question for decision was whether the agarias were
workmen as defined by S. 2(s) of the Industrial Disputes Act
of 1947 or whether they were independent contractors. The
Court said that the prima facie test to determine whether
there was relationship between employer and employee is the
existence of the right in the master to supervise and
control the work done by the servant not only in the matter
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of directing what work the, employee is to do but also the
manner in which he had to do the work. In other words, the
proper test according to this Court is, whether or not the
master has the right to control the manner of execution of
the work. The Court further said that the nature of extent
of the control might vary from business to business and is
by its nature incapable of precise definition, that it is
not necessary for holding that a person is an employee that
the employer should be proved to have exercised control over
his work, that even the test of control over the manner of
work is not one of universal application and that there are
many contracts in which the master could not control the
manner in which the work was done.
In Birdhichand Sharma v. The First Civil Judge, Nagpur and
others(’) the question was whether the bidi rollers in
question there were "workmen" within the meaning of that
term in the Factories Act, 1948. The facts found were : The
workers who rolled the bidis had to work at the factory and
where not at liberty to work at their houses their
attendance was noted in the factory and they had to work
within the factory hours, though they were not bound to work
for the entire period and could come and go away when they
liked, but if they came after midday they were not supplied
with tobacco and thus not allowed to work even though the
factory closed at 7 p.m.Further, they could be removed front
service if absent for eight days. Payment was made on piece
rates according to the amount of work done, and the bidis
which did not come upto the proper standard could be
rejected.
On these facts, it was held that the workers were workmen
under the Factories Act and were not independent
contractors. This Court pointed out that the nature and
extent of control varied in different industries and could
not by its very nature be precisely defined. The Court said
that when the operation was of a simple nature and did not
require supervision all the time, the control could be
exercised
(1) [1961] 3 S. C. R. 161.
752
at the end of the day by the method of rejecting bidis which
did not come upto the proper standard : such supervision by
the employer was sufficient to make the workers, employees
of the employer, and not independent contractors.
In D. C. Dewan Mohideen Sahib and Sons. v. The Industrial
Tribunal, Madras(’) the question was again considered by
this Court. On the basis of evidence led, the industrial
Tribunal found as follows
The contractors took leaves and tobacco from the appellant
and employed workmen for manufacturing bidis. After bidis
were manufactured, the contractors took them back from the,
workmen and delivered them to the appellants. The workmen
took- the leaves home and cut them there; however the
process of actual rolling by filling the leaves with tobacco
took place, in what was called contractors’ factories. The
contractors kept no attendance register for the workmen,
there was no condition for their coming and going at fixed
hours, nor were they, bound to come for work every day
sometimes they informed the contractors if they wanted to be
absent and some times they did not. The contractors said
that they could take no action if the workmen absented
themselves even without leave. The payment was made to the
workmen at piece rates after the bidis were delivered to the
appellants. The system was that the appellant paid a
certain sum for the manufactured bidis, after deducting
therefrom the cost of tobacco and the leaves already fixed,
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to the contractors, who, in their turn, and to the workmen
who rolled bidis, their wages. Whatever remained after
paying the workmen would be contractors’ commission for the
work done. There was no sale either of the raw materials or
of the finished products, for, according to the agreement,
if the bidis were not rolled, raw materials had to be
returned to the appellants and the contractors were for-
bidden from selling the raw materials to anyone else.
Further the manufactured bidis could only be delivered to
the appellants who supplied the raw materials. Further the
price of raw materials and finished products fixed by the
appellants always remained the name and never fluctuated
according to market rate. The Tribunal concluded that the
bidi workers were The employees of the appellants and not of
the so-called contractors who were themselves nothing more
than employees or branch managers of the appellants. There-
upon, the appellants filed writ petitions in the High Court,
which held that neither the bidi roller nor the intermediary
was an employee of the appellants, and allowed the writ
petitions. On appeal by the workmen the appellate Court
allowed the appeal and restored the order of the Tribunal.
On appeal by certificate, this Court said that, on the facts
found, the appellate Court was right in holding that the
conclusion reached by the Tribunal that the intermediaries
were merely branch managers appointed by the management, and
thatthe relationship of employers and employees subsisted
betweenthe appellants and the bidi rollers, was correct.
In following thetest
(1) [964] 7 S.C.R. 646.
753
laid down in Birdhichand’s case (supra) the Court said since
the work is of such a simple nature, supervision all the
time is not required, and that supervision was made through
a system of rejecting the defective bidis at the end of day.
In Shankar Balaji Wage v. State of Maharashtra(l) the
question again came up for consideration in this Court. The
appellant before the Court was the owner of a factory
manufacturing bidis and one Pandurang alongwith other
labourers used to roll bidis in the factory with tobacco and
leaves supplied to him by the factory. The following facts
were established in the evidence. There was no contract of
service between the appellant and Pandurang. He was not
bound to attend the factory for rolling bidis for any fixed
hours or period; he was free to go to the factory at any
time during working hours and leave the factory at any time
he liked. He could be absent from the work any day he liked
and for ten days without even informing the appellant. He
had to take the permission of the appellant if he was to be
absent for more than 10 days. He was not bound to roll the
bidis at the factory. He could do so at home with the
permission ofthe appellant for taking home the tobacco
supplied to him. There was no actual supervision of the
work done by him in the factory and at the close of the day,
rolled bidis were delivered to the appellant- Bidis not upto
the standard were rejected. He was paid at fixed rates on
the quantity of bidis turned out and there was no
stipulation for turning out any minimum quantity of bidis.
The questions which arose for decision were whether
Pandurang was a workman within the meaning of that
expression under the Factories Act and whether he was
entitled to any leave wages under S. 80 of that Act.
The majority found that Pandurang was not "workman", and
distinguished the decision in Birdhichand’s case (supra) and
said that the appellant had no control or supervision over
the work of Pandurang.
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The reasoning of the majority was as follows
"The appellant could not control his (Pandurang’s) hours of
work. He could not control his days of work. Pandurang was
free to absent himself and was free to go to the factory at
any time and leave it at any time according to his will.
The appellant could not insist on any particular minimum
quantity of bidis to be turned out per day. He could not
control the time spent by Pandurang on the rolling of a bidi
or a number of bidis. The work of rolling bidis may be, a
simple work and may require no particular supervision and
direction during the process of manufacture. But there is
nothing on record to show that any such direction could be
given. The mere fact that the person rolling bidis has to
roll them in a particular manner can hardly be said to give
rise to such a right in the management as can be said to be
a right to control the manner of work. The manner of work
is to be distinguished from the type of work
(1) [l962] Supp. (l) S. C. R. 249.
754
to be performed. In the present case, the management simply
says that the labourer is to produce bidis rolled in a
certain form. How the labourer carries out the work is his
own concern and is not controlled by the management, which
is concerned only with getting bidis rolled in a particular
style with certain contents".
Subba Rao, J. as he then was, dissented. He said. The
appellant engages the labourers; he entrusts them with work
of rolling bidis in accordance with the sample; he insists
upon their working in the factory, maintains registers
giving the particulars of the labourers absent, amount of
tobacco supplied and the number of bidis rolled by each one
of them, empowers the gumasta and superviser, who regularly
attends the, factory to supervise the supply of tobacco and
leaves, and the receipt of the bidis rolled. The nature and
pattern of bidis to be rolled is obviously well understood,
for, it is implicit in the requirement that the rolled in
bidis shall accord with the sample. ’The rejection of bidis
found not in accord with the sample is a clear indication of
the right of the employer to dictate the manner in which the
labourers shall manufacture the bidis. The fact that a
labourer is not compelled to work throughout the working,-,
hours is not of much relevance, because, for all practical
purposes, a labourer will not do so since his wage depend
upon the bidis he rolls, and, as he cannot roll them outside
the factory necessarily he will have to do so in the
factory. If he absents himself, it is only at his own risk.
In V. P. Gopala Rao v. Public Prosecutor, Andhra Pradesh(’)
the Court said that there in no abstract a priori test of
the work control required for establishing a contract of
service and after refering to Bridhichand’s case (supra)
observed that the fact that the workmen have to work in the
factory imply a certain amount of supervision by the
management, that the nature and extent of control varied in
different industries, and that when the operation was of a
simple nature, the control could be exercised at the end of
the day by the method of rejecting the bidis which did not
come upto the proper standard.
In Cassidy v. Ministry of Health(2) Lord Justice Sommerwell
pointed out that the test of control of the manner of work
is not universally correct, that there are many contracts of
service where the master cannot control the manner in which
the work is to be done as in the case of a captain of a
ship.
In many skilled employments, to apply the test of control
over the manner of work for deciding the question whether
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the relationship of master and servant exists would be
unrealistic.
In Montreal v. Montreal Locomotive Works Ltd. et-al(3) Lord
Wright said that a single test, such as the presence or
absence of control, was often relied on to determine whether
the case was one of master and servant, mostly in order to
decide issues of tortious liability on
(1) [19691 3 S.C.R. 875, at 880. (2) [19511 1, All.
E. R. 574,579.
(3) (1947] 1 D. L. R. 161 at p. 169.
7 5 5
the part of the master or superior and that in the more
complex conditions of modern industry, more complicated
tests have often to be applied. He said that it would be
more appropriate to apply, a complex test involving (i)
control; (ii) ownership of the tools; (iii) chance of
profit; (iv) risk of loss, and that control in itself is not
always conclusive. He further said that in many cases the
question can only be settled by examining the whole of the
various elements which constitute the relationship between
the parties.
In Bank Voor Handel en Scheepvaart N. V. v. Slatford(l)
Denning L. J., said :
". . the test of being a servant does not rest
nowadays on submission to orders. It depends
on whether the person is part and parcel of
the Organisation......."
In U.S. v. Silk(2) the question was whether men working for
the plaintiffs, Silk and Greyvan, were "employees" within
the meaning of that word in the Social Security Act, 1935.
The judges of the Supreme Court of U.S.A., agreed upon the
test to be applied, though not in every instance upon its
application to the facts. They said that the test was not
"the common law test," viz., "power of control, whether
exercised or not, over the manner of performing service to
the undertaking," but whether the men were employees "as a
matter of economic reality." Important factors were said to
be "the degrees of control, opportunities of profit or loss,
investment in facilities, permanency of relations and skill
required in the claimed independent operation."
Silk sold coal by retail, using the services of two classes
of workers, unloaders and truck drivers. The unloaders
moved the coal from railway vans into bins. They came to
the yard when they wished and were given a wagon to unload
and a place to put the coal. They provided their own tools
and were paid so much per ton for the coal they shifted.
All the nine judges held that these men were employees :
"Giving full consideration to the concurrence of the two
lower courts in a contrary result, we cannot agree that the
unloaders in the Silk case were independent contractors.
They provided only picks and shovels. They had no
opportunity to gain or lose except from the work of their
hands and these simple tools. That the unloaders did not
work regularly is not significant. They did work in the
course of the employer’s trade or business. This brings
them under the coverage of the Act. They are of the group
that the Social Security Act was intended to aid. Silk was
in a position to exercise all necessary supervision over
their simple tasks. Unloaders have often been field to be
employees in tort cases."
(1) (1952] 2 All E. R. 956 at p. 971. (2)
331 U. S. 704.
7 56
In Market Investigations Ltd. V. Minister of Social
Security(l) the Court said :
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"I think it is fair to say that there was at
one time a school of thought according to
which the extent and degree of the control
which B. was entitled to exercise over A. in
the performance of the work would be a
decisive factor. However, it has for long
been apparent that an analysis of the extent
and degree of such control is not in itself
decisive".
It is in its application to skilled and particularly
professional work that control test in its traditional form
has -really broken down. It has been said that in
interpreting ’Control’ as meaning the power to direct how
the servant should do his work, the Court has been applying-
a concept suited to a past age.
"This distinction (viz., between telling a
servant what to do and telling him how to do
it) was based upon the social conditions of an
earlier age; it assumed that the employer of
labour was able to direct and instruct the
labourer as to the technical methods he should
use in performing his work. In a mainly
agricultural society and even in the earlier
stages of the Industrial Revolution the master
could be expected to be superior to the
servant in the knowledge, skill and experience
which had to be brought to-bear upon the
choice and handling of the tools. The control
test was well suited to govern rela
tionships
like, those between a farmer and an
agricultural labourer (prior to agricultural
mechanization) a craftsman and a journeyman, a
householder and a domestic servant, and even a
factory owner and an unskilled ’hand’. It
reflects a state of society in which the
ownership of the means of production coincided
with the profession of technical knowledge and
skill in which that knowledge and skill was
largely acquired by being handed down from one
generation to the next by oral tradition and
not by being systematically imparted in
institutions of learning from universities
down to technical schools. The control test
postulates a combination of managerial and
technical functions in the person of the
employer, i.e. what to modern eyes appears as
an imperfect division of labour.(2)
It is, therefore, not surprising that in recent years the
control test as traditionally formulated has not been
treated as an exclusive test.
It is exceedingly doubtful today whether the search for a
formula in the nature of a single test to tell a contract of
service from a contract for service will serve any useful
purpose. The most that profitably can be done is to examine
all the factors that have been referred to in the cases on
the topic. Clearly, not all of these factors would be
relevant in all these cases or have the same weight in all
cases. it
(1) [19681 3 All. E. R. 732.
(2) See Prof. Kahn-Freund in (I 951) , 14 Modern Law Rev.
at p. 505.
757
is equally clear that no magic formula can be propounded
which factors should in any case be treated as determining
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ones. The plain fact is that in a large number of cases,
the court can only perform a balancing operation weighing up
the factors which point in one direction and balancing them
against those pointing in the opposite direction. (1)
During the last two decades the emphasis in the field has
shifted and no longer rests so strongly upon the question of
control. Control is obviously an important factor and in
many cases it may still be the decisive factor. But it is
wrong to say that in every case it is decisive. It is now
no more than a factor, although an important one.(2)
The fact that generally the workers attend the shop which
belongs to the employer and work there, on the machines,
also belonging to him, is a relevant factor. When the
services are performed generally in the employer’s premises,
this is some indication that the contract is a contract of
service. It is possible that this is another facet of the
incidental feature of employment. This is the sort of
situation in which a court may well feel inclined to apply
the "Organisation" test suggested by Denning, L.J. in
Stevenson Jordan and Harrison v. Mac. donal and Evans.(3)
The further fact that "a worker can be removed" which means
nothing more than that the employer has the liberty not to
give further work to an employee who has not performed his
job according to the instructions of the employer, or who
has been absent from the shop for a long time as spoken to
by the Inspector of Labour in his evidence, would bespeak of
control and supervision consistent with the character of the
business.
That the workers work on the machines supplied by (fie
proprietor of the shop is an important consideration in
determining the nature of the relationship. If the employer
provides the equipment, this is some indication that the
contract is a contract of service, whereas if the other
party provides the equipment, this is some evidence that he
is an independent contractor. It seems that this is not
based on the theory that if the employer provides the
equipment he retains some greater degree of control, for, as
already seen, where the control arises only from the need to
protect one’s own property, little significance can attach
to the power of control for this purpose. It seems, there-
fore, that the importance of the provision of equipment lies
in the simple fact that, in most circumstances, where a
person hires out a piece of work to an independent
contractor, he expects the contractor to provide all the
necessary tools and equipment, whereas if he employs a
servant he expects to provide them himself. It follows from
(1) See Atiya’h. P. S. "Vicarious Liability in the Law of
Torta" pp. 37-38.
(2) See Argent U. minister of Social Security and Another,
[1968] 1, W.T...R. 1749 at 1959.
(3) [19521 1 T. L. R. 101 C. A.
758
this that no sensible inference can be drawn from this
factor in circumstances where it is customary for servants
to provide their own equipment.(’)
Section 220(2) of the American Restatement, Agency 2d.
includes among the relevant factors :
"(e) Whether the employer or the workman
supplies the instrumentalities, tools, and the
Place of work for ’the person doing the work".
The comment on the first part of this
paragraph is in these words:
"Ownership of instrumentalities. The
ownership of the instrumentalities and tools
used in the work is of importance. The fact
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that a worker supplies his down tools is evi-
dence that he is not a servant. On the other
hand, if the worker is using his employer’s
tools or instrumentalities, especially if they
are of substantial value, it is normally
understood that he will follow the directions
of the owner in their use, and this indicates
that the owner is a master. This fact is,
however, only of evidential value."
It might be that little weight can today be put upon the
provisions of tools of minor character as opposed to plant
and equipment on a large scale. But so far as tailoring is
concerned, I think the fact that sewing machines on which
the workers do the work generally belong to the employer is
an important consideration for deciding that the
relationship is that of master and servant.
Quite apart from all these circumstances, as the employer
has the right to reject the end product if it does not
conform to the instruction of the employer and direct the
worker to restitch it, the element of control and
supervision as formulated in the decisions of this court is
also present.
The reputation of a tailoring establishment depends not only
on the cutter but also upon the tailors. In a many cases,
stitching is a delicate operation when the cloth upon which
it is to be carried on is expensive. The defect in
stitching might mar the appearance not only of the garment
but also of its wearer. So when the tailor returns a
garment, the proprietor has got to inspect it to see that it
is perfect. He has to. keep his customers pleased and he
has also to be punctual, which means that the stitching must
be done according to the instruction of the employer and
within the time specified. ]-he degree of control and
supervision would be different in different types of busi-
ness. If an ultimate authority over the worker in the
performance of his work resided in the employer so that he
was subject to the latter’s direction. that would be
sufficient. - In Humberstone v. Norther Timber HIlls(2),
Dixon, J. said :
"The question is not whether in practice the
work was in fact done subject to a direction
and control exercised by
(1) SeeP. S.. "Vicarious Liability in the
Law of Torts", p. 65.
(2) [19471 79 C. L. R. 389.
759
an actual supervision or whether an actual
supervision was possible but whether ultimate
authority over the man in the performance of
his work resided in the employer so that he
was subject to the latter’s order and
directions".
That some of the employees take up the work from other
tailoring establishments and do that work also in the shop
in which they generally attend for work, as spoken to by the
proprietor in his evidence, would not in any way militate
against their being employees of the proprietor of the shop
where they attend for work. A person can be a servant of
more than one employer. A servant need not be under the
exclusive control of one master. He can be employed under
more than one employer.(1)
That the workers are not obliged to work for the whole day
in the shop is not very material. There is of course no
reason why a person who is only employed part time, should
not be a servant and it is doubtful whether regular part
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time service can be considered even
prima facie to suggest anything other than a contract of
service. According to the definition in s.2(14) of the Act,
even if a person is not wholly employed, if he is
principally employed in connection with the business of the
shop, he will be a "person employed" within the meaning of
the sub-section. Therefore, even if he accepts some work
from other tailoring establishments or does not work whole
time in a particular establishment, that would not in any
way derogate from his being employed in the shop where he is
principally employed.
We think that on the facts and circumstances of the case the
Chief Inspector of Shops and Establishments and the High
Court came to the right conclusion that employer and
employee relationship existed between the parties and that
the Act was therefore applicable. We therefore dismiss the
appeal, but in the circumstances, we do not make any order
as to costs.
S.B.W.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) See "The Modern Law of Employment" by G. H. I-.
Fridman, P). 18, -ad also Between Patwardhan Tailors, Poona
and Their workmen, [1960]1 L.L.J.
P. 722 at 726.
760