Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
A.V. D’COSTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
B. C. PATEL AND ANOTHER.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/03/1955
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
BOSE, VIVIAN
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
CITATION:
1955 AIR 412 1955 SCR (1)1353
ACT:
Payment of Wages Act, 1936, (IV of 1936), Ss. 5, 7, 15(1)
(2)--Claim for wages due on account of the introduction of
upgrading of persons-Claimant’s right to be placed on
monthly wages ignored--No delay in payment of wages or
deduction of wages alleged--Authority under the Act--Whether
had jurisdiction to decide the complaint of the applicant.
HEADNOTE:
The second respondent had been an employee of the Central
Railway as a daily rated casual labourer on specified daily
wages since 1941. He continued to receive his wages at the
specified rate until October 1949. In October 1949 he made
an application through an official of the Registered Trade
Union-a person permitted by the authority under sub-section
(2) of s. 15 of the Payment of Wages Act, 1936-claiming his
wages due in respect of six months from May to October 1949.
The respondent did not allege delay in the
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payment of his wages or deduction of his wages in
contravention of the provisions of s. 5 or s. 7 of Act IV of
1936 respectively. The respondent alleged that he had been
paid his actual wages as fixed by the railway administration
but that after the introduction of the scheme of upgrading
of persons employed under the daily wages scheme, others who
were junior to him had been placed on the monthly wages
scheme whereas his claim to be so placed, had been ignored
and that he had not been paid wages on the scale to which he
would have been entitled if he had been placed on the
monthly wages scheme.
Held, per SINHA J. (VIVIAN BosE and VENYATARAMA AYYAR JJ.
concurring, JAGANNADHADAS J. dissenting), that the
respondent’s complaint fell under the category of potential
wages and the authority appointed under the Act had no
jurisdiction to decide the question of potential wages. It
had the jurisdiction to decide what actually the terms of
the contract between the parties were, that is to say, to
determine the actual wages.
On the case as made on behalf of the respondent, orders of
the superior officers were necessary to upgrade him from a
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daily wageearner to a higher cadre. The authority under the
Act has not been empowered under s. 15 to make any such
direction to the superior officers.
Per JAGANNADHADAS J.-Undoubtedly a claim to a higher
potential wage cannot be brought in under the category of
"claim arising out of deduction from the wages or delay in
payment of the wages" if that wage depended on the
determination by a superior departmental or other authority
as to whether or not a particular employee is entitled to
the higher wage-a determination which involves the exercise
of administrative judgment or discretion or certification,
and which would, in such a situation, be a condition of the
payability of the wage. But where the higher wage does not
depend upon such determination but depends on the
application of and giving effect to certain rules and orders
which, for this purpose, must be deemed to be incorporated
in the contract of employment, such a wage is not a
prospective wage merely because the paying authority
concerned makes default or commits error in working out the
application of the rules. The wage under the Act is not
necessarily the immediately pre-existing wage but the
presently payable wage. Whether or not an employee was
entitled to wages of a higher category than what he was till
then drawing would depend entirely on the scope of the rules
with reference to which he is entitled to become one in the
higher category and it cannot be assumed a priori that such
a claim is a claim to "prospective wages".
On the facts of the case as found the dispute as to the wage
was one that fell within the jurisdiction of the "authority"
concerned.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No, 147 of 1953,
1355
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated
the 24th day of August 1951 of the High Court of Judicature
at Bombay in Appeal No. 50 of 1951 arising out of the Order
dated the 19th day of June 1951 of the said Court exercising
Original Jurisdiction in Misc. No. 143 of 1951.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General.for India (Porus A. Mehta
and P. G. Gokhale, with him), for the appellant.
J. B. Dadachanji, M. V. Jayakar and Rajinder Narain for
respondent No. 2.
1955. March 4. The Judgment of Vivian Bose, Venkatarama
Ayyar and Sinha JJ. was delivered by Sinha J. Jagannadhadas
J. delivered a separate judgment.
SINHA J.-This is an appeal by special leave from the order
of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay dated the 24th
August 1951 upholding that of a single Judge of that court
sitting on the Original Side, dismissing the appellant’s
petition under art. 226 of the Constitution for a writ of
certiorari quashing the order dated the 23rd January 1951
passed by the 1st respondent, the Authority under the
Payment of Wages Act (hereinafter referred to as the Act).
The facts leading up to this appeal may shortly be stated as
follows: The 2nd respondent is and has been at all material
times an employee of the Central Railway (formerly called
the G.I.P. Rly.) represented by the appellant who has been
nominated by the Railway Administration as responsible for
payment of wages under section 3 of the Act. Ever since
1941, the 2nd respondent has been employed by the Railway
Administration as a carpenter on daily wages, and has been
treated as a daily rated casual labourer and has been paid
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his wages at the rate of Rs. 3-4-0 per day. He continued
receiving his wages at that rate until October,, 1949
without any demur, and granting receipts for the wages thus
received. On the 2nd December, 1949 an application was made
by one K. N. Pitkar " an official of Registered Trade Union,
a person
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permitted by the Authority" under sub-section (2) of section
15 of the Payment of Wages Act, 1936, against the G.I.P. Ry.
administration through its Divisional Engineer, Parel,
Bombay. It was alleged on behalf of the 2nd respondent that
his wages due in respect of six months from May to October
1949 amounting to Rs. 245 had not been paid or had been
subjected to illegal deductions as shown in the schedule.
The schedule will be set out hereinafter. A claim for Rs.
245 plus Rs. 15 by way of compensation was made.
The appellant, as the opposite party before the Authority,
resisted the claim, inter alia, on the grounds-
(1) that Rs. 245 had not been illegally deducted from the
wages of the 2nd respondent; and
(2) that the claim of the 2nd respondent who was employed
as a daily rated casual labourer on specified daily wages,
to be placed on a permanent cadre on the scale of monthly
rates of pay was unfounded.
It was further alleged that the 2nd respondent did not come
within the purview of the Railway Services (Revision of Pay)
Rules as he was a daily rated casual labourer charged to
works and that no rules had been laid down governing the
rates of pay and the conditions of service of daily rated
casual laborers like the 2nd respondent. Hence his terms of
service were the daily wages paid to him all along. It was
thus contended that there had been no deduction from his
wages. In this connection reference was made to the award
of the Railway Workers Classification Tribunal, dated the
28th May 1948.
The Authority by its orders dated the 23rd January 1951
decided that the position of the 2nd respondent was not that
of a casual labourer but that of a "temporary employee" and
that therefore he was entitled to be on the scale of Rs. 55-
150 plus the allowances admissible. In coming to this
conclusion the Authority observed that the work done by the
2nd respondent is of the same nature as that of a member of
the permanent staff. Hence the 2nd respondent could not be
called a casual labourer. It also made reference to
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article 39 (d) of the Constitution containing the direction
that there should be equal pay for equal work. The
Authority also negatived the contention raised on behalf of
the appellant that the question of classification of an
employee was outside its jurisdiction. In pursuance of the
said order the Authority allowed the 2nd respondent’s
application by its further orders dated the 2nd March 1951.
Against the said orders of the Authority the appellant moved
the High Court of Judicature at Bombay by an application
under article 226 of the Constitution for quashing the
aforesaid orders. The matter was heard in the first
instance by a learned single Judge of that court who by his
orders dated the 19th June 1951 dismissed the application.
The appellant preferred an appeal under the Letters Patent
which was heard by a Division Bench of that court. The
Division Bench by its order dated the 24th August 1951
dismissed the appeal and agreed with the conclusions of the
Judge on the Original Side that the Authority had not acted
without jurisdiction or had not exceeded its jurisdiction in
entertaining the 2nd respondent’s application. On the
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appellant’s application for leave to appeal to this court
being rejected by the High Court, the appellant moved this
court and obtained special leave to appeal on the 2nd
February 1953.
The main controversy between the parties in this court is
whether, having regard to the relevant provisions of the
Act, the 1st respondent was competent to pass the orders it
did, which orders had been upheld by the High Court of
Bombay.
The Authority set up under section 15 of the statute in
question is undisputably a tribunal of limited jurisdiction.
Its power to hear and determine disputes must necessarily be
found in the provisions of the Act. Such a tribunal, it is
undoubted,, cannot determine any controversy which is not
within the ambit of those provisions. On examining the
relevant provisions of the Act it will be noticed that it
aims at regulating the payment of wages to certain classes
of persons employed in industry. It applies
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in the first instance to the payment of wages to persons
employed in any factory or employed by a railway
administration; but the State Government has the power after
giving three months notice to extend the provisions of the
Act or any of them to the payment of wages to any class of
persons employed in any class or group of industrial
establishments. "Wages" means-
"all remuneration, capable of being expressed in terms of
money, which would, if the terms of the contract of
employment, express or implied, were fulfilled, be
payable........ to a person employed in respect of his
employment or of work done in such employment...." (omitting
words not necessary for our present purpose).
Section 3 lays down that every employer or his re-
presentative or nominee shall be responsible for the payment
to persons employed by him of all wages Section’s provides
for fixation of "wage-periods’ which shall not exceed one
month in any case. Section 5 indicates the last date within
which, with reference to the particular wage-period, wages
shall be paid. Section 7 lays down that the wages of an em-
ployed person shall be paid to him without deductions of any
kind except those authorized by or under the Act. Section
7(2) in clauses (a) to (k) specifies the heads under which
deductions from wages may be made, namely, fines; deductions
for absence from duty; deductions for damage to or loss of
goods of the employer; deductions for house accommodation
supplied by the employer; deductions for amenities and
services supplied by the employer; deductions for recovery
of advances or for adjustment of overpayments of wages;
deductions of income-tax payable by the employee; deductions
to be made under orders of a court or other competent
authority; deductions for subscriptions to, and for
repayment of advances from any provident fund; deductions
for payments to cooperative societies, etc.; and finally,
deductions made with the concurrence of the employed person
in furtherance of certain schemes approved by Government.
No other deductions are permissible. It is also laid
1359
down that every payment made by the employed person to the
employer or his ’agent shall be deemed to be deduction from
wages. Each of the several heads of deductions aforesaid is
dealt with in detail in sections 8 to 13. Section 8 lays
down the conditions and limits subject to which fines may be
imposed and the procedure for imposing such fines. It also
requires a register of such fines to be maintained by the
person responsible for the payment of wages. Section 9
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deals with deductions on account of absence from duty and
prescribes the limits and the proportion thereof to wages.
Section 10 similarly deals with deductions for damage or
loss to the employer and the procedure for determining the
same. Like section 8, this section also requires a register
of such deductions and realizations to be maintained by the
person responsible for the payment of wages. Section 11
lays down the limits of deductions for house accommodation
and other amenities or services which may have been accepted
by the employee, subject to such conditions as the State
Government may impose. Section 12 lays down the conditions
subject to which deductions for recovery of advances may be
made from wages. Finally section 13 provides that the
deductions for payment to co-operative societies and
insurance schemes shall be subject to such conditions as the
State Government may prescribe. Section 14 makes -provision
for the appointment of Inspectors for carrying out the
purpose of the Act, with power to enter on any premises and
to examine any registers or documents relating to the
calculation or payment of wages and to take evidence on the
spot. His function is to see that the registers or
documents prescribed by the Act containing the necessary
entries as regards deductions and other matters have been
properly kept by the employers or their agents in order to
be able to ascertain whether any deductions from wages in
excess of the provisions of sections 7 to 13 aforesaid have
been made. We then come to section 15 which makes provision
for the appointment of the Authority "to hear and decide for
any specified area all claims arising out of deductions from
the wages, or delay in payment of
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the wages of persons employed or paid in that area". Where
the Authority finds that any deduction has been made from
the wages of an employed person or the payment of any wages
had been delayed, he may at the instance of the wage-earner
himself or any legal practitioner or any official of a
registered trade union authorized in writing to act on his
behalf, or any Inspector under the Act or any other person
acting with the permission of the Authority, after making
such enquiry as he thinks fit and after giving an
opportunity to the person responsible for the payment of
wages under section 3 to show cause, direct the refund to
the employed person of the amount deducted or the payment of
delayed wages together with such compensation as he may
determine. The section also lays down the limits and
conditions of his power to direct payment of compensation to
the employed person or of penalty to the employer, if he is
satisfied that the application made on behalf of an employee
was either malicious or vexatious. His determination is
final subject to a very limited right of appeal under
section 17. Section 18 vests the Authority with all the
powers of a civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure,
for the purpose of taking evidence, of enforcing the
attendance of witnesses and of compelling the production of
documents. Section 22 lays down that no court shall
entertain any suit in respect of wages or of deduction from
wages in so far as the claim forms the subject matter of a
pending proceeding under the Act or has formed the subject
of a direction in favour of or against the plaintiff under
section 15, or which could have been recovered by the
application under that section. Section 26 empowers the
State Government to make rules to regulate the procedure to
be followed by the authorities and courts referred to in
sections 15 and 17 and provides that rules may be made inter
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alia, requiring the maintenance of records, registers,
returns and notices necessary under the Act and the display
in a conspicuous place of notices specifying the rates of
wages payable to persons employed on such premises; and
prescribing the authority for making a list of
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acts and omissions in respect of which fines may be imposed
and the procedure for imposing such fines.
We have set out above in some detail the relevant provisions
of the Act in order to point out that those provisions are
not applicable to the complaint made in the present case.
In this connection it is necessary to set out in extenso the
"particulars of claim" in the schedule appended to his
application which are as follows:
"The applicant is working as a carpenter-mason with the
opposite party under I.O.W., Byculla. According to the
orders on introduction of the prescribed scales, the Railway
Administration has to make the staff working under I.O.W. on
permanent monthly wages scheme under the rules of the
prescribed scales. The applicant along with others was up
till now under daily wages scheme. About 20 posts under
I.O.W. where the applicant is working were to be made per-
manent. The opposite party in supersession of claim of the
applicant has confirmed his juniors on the permanent scales
as a skilled workman in the scale of 55-3-85-4-125-5-130,
whereas the opposite party continued to pay the applicant on
daily wages scheme thus depriving him of his legitimate
wages under the prescribed scale, which resulted in the
monetary loss to the applicant of Rs. 40-13-4 per month.
Notice on behalf of the applicant was served on this count
on the opposite party but of no avail and hence this
application. The juniors have been paid under the
prescribed scales from April, 1949, from which date the
applicant was also entitled to the prescribed scale 55-130
(scale for skilled workman).".
There is no allegation of delay in payment of wages inasmuch
as it is not the respondent’s case that his wages were not
paid within the time limit laid down in section 5; nor are
there allegations to show that any payments have been made
by the employed person to the employer or his agent which
could be deemed to be a deduction from his wages within the
meaning of section 7. None of the categories of deductions
as laid down in section 7 have been referred to. In other
words, it is not alleged that his Wages
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were so much and that so much had been deducted under any of
the heads set out under section 7(2). The allegations made
by the respondent only amount to saying that he had been
paid his actual wages as fixed by the railway administration
but that after the introduction of the scheme of upgrading
of persons employed under the daily wages scheme, others who
were junior to him had been placed on the monthly wages
scheme whereas his claim to be so placed had been ignored.
The respondent’s main grievance, therefore, appears to be
that he had not been paid wages on the scale to which he
would have been entitled if he had been placed on the
monthly wages scheme.
In our opinion, the scheme of the Act as set forth above
shows that if an employee were to state that his wages were,
say Rs. 100 per month and that Rs. 10 had been wrongly
deducted by authority responsible for the payment of wages
that is to say, that the deductions could not come under any
one of the categories laid down in section 7 (2), that a
would be a straight case within the purview of the Act and
the authority appointed under section 15 could entertain the
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dispute. But it is said on behalf of the respondent that
the authority has the jurisdiction not only to make
directions contemplated by sub-section (3) of section 15 to
refund to the employed person any amount unlawfully deducted
but also to find out what the terms of the contract were so
as to -determine what the wages of the employed person were.
There is no difficulty in accepting that proposition. If
the parties entered into the contract of service, say by
correspondence and the contract is to be determined with
reference to the letters that passed between them, it may be
open to the authority to decide the controversy and find out
what the terms of the contract with reference to those
letters were. But if an employee were to say that his wages
were Rs. 100 per month which he actually received as and
when they fell due but that he would be entitled to higher
wages if his claims to be placed on the higher wages scheme
had been recognized and given effect to,
1363
that would not in our opinion, be a matter within the ambit
of his jurisdiction. The authority has the jurisdiction to
decide what actually the terms of the contract between the
parties were, that is to say, to determine the actual wages;
but the authority has no jurisdiction to determine the
question of potential wages. The respondent’s complaint in
the present case comes within the latter illustration. If
the respondent’s claim to be placed on the scheme of higher
wages had been. unduly passed over by the appellant, if
indeed he had the power to do so, the obvious remedy of the
respondent was to approach the higher authorities of the
railway administration by way of departmental appeal or
revision; but instead of doing that, he has sought his
redress by making his claim before the authority under the
Act. The question is, has the authority the power to direct
the appellant or his superior officers who may have been
responsible for the classification, to revise the
classification so as to upgrade him from the category of a
daily wageearner to that of an employee on the monthly wages
scheme. If the respondent had been on the cadre of monthly
wages and if the appellant had withheld his rise in wages to
which he was automatically entitled, without any orders of
his superior officers, be might justly have claimed the
redress of his grievance from the authority under the Act,
as it would have amounted to an underpayment. But in the
present case, on the case as made on behalf of the
respondent, orders of the superior officers were necessary
to upgrade him from a daily wage-earner to a higher care.
The authority under the Act has not been empowered under
section 15 to make any such direction to those superior
officers. The appellant is responsible to pay the
respondent only such wages as are shown in the relevant
register of wages presumably maintained by the department
under the provisions of the Act, but he cannot be directed
to pay the respondent higher wages on the determination by
the authority that he should have been placed on the monthly
wages scheme.
In that view of the matter it is not necessary to go
1364
into the merits of the controversy as to what classification
as adumbrated by the Railway Workers’ Classification
Tribunal, and adopted by the Railway administration, the
second respondent should have been brought under. If that
question were open to determination by the Authority, we
would have had to remit the case to the Authority to give a
fresh opportunity to the parties to adduce all the relevant
evidence and then to come to its final conclusions, as it
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appeared to us during the hearing of the case that all
relevant information had not been placed before the
Authority. But, as, in our opinion, that is not a matter
within its limited jurisdiction, that contingency does not
arise.
For the reasons given above we allow this appeal, quash the
orders of the Authority and of the High Court, but in the
special circumstances of this case we make no order as to
costs.
JAGANNADHADAS J.-I regret that I find myself unable to
agree.
The second respondent before us, employed as a carpenter in
the Railway since 1941, has been working as a daily-rated
casual labourer. He claimed that he should have been
absorbed as a monthly-rated permanent employee and that he
has been wrongly superseded. His claim to be treated as a
permanent employee was apparently not accepted by the Tribu-
nal (the Authority under section 15 of the Payment of Wages
Act for Bombay). But it was held that the position of the
applicant is not that of a daily-rated casual labourer but
that of a monthly-rated temporary employee. His claim was
treated and upheld by the Tribunal as one substantially
based on the ground that the Award of the Railway Workers’
Classification Tribunal in relation to the recommendations
of the Central Pay Commission was approved by the Railway
Board and directed to be implemented, and that by virtue
thereof he was no longer a mere casual labourer but was
entitled to higher wages on the footing of a monthly-rated
labourer. No question arises that the order of the Tribunal
is bad owing to the
1365
variation between the claim made and the relief granted. As
held by the High Court, pleadings in these cases have to be
liberally construed. That his claim was understood as
having been based on the Award of Railway Workers’
Classification Tribunal, by the Railway Authorities
themselves, is clear from the statement filed on their
behalf in answer to the J. employee’s claim. Apart from the
question of jurisdiction, the defence was two-fold. (1) The
applicant being a daily-rated casual labourer, charged to
works, the directive of the Railway Board did not apply to
him. (2) Even if it applied to a person in the situation of
the applicant, he was not entitled to be brought on to the
monthly-rates of pay in the skilled grade, without his
previously passing a trade test to establish himself as
skilled in his trade and he did not pass the test. The
Tribunal. on the material referred to by it in its order,
came to the conclusion (1) that the applicant did not fall
within the category of workcharged staff, (2) that under the
Award of the Railway Workers’ Classification Tribunal, no
trade test was necessary for the applicant who was a
carpenter, and (3) that as per certain instructions of the
concerned authority, the period of casual labour was to be
limited to six months, and that since this applicant was
admittedly a casual labourer under the Railway for a much
larger period, i.e. since 1941, he became entitled to be
treated as a temporary employee and not as a casual labourer
and to receive wages as such. Whether these conclusions are
right or wrong is not the question before us. The only
question is whether or not the Tribunal had the jurisdiction
to find that the applicant was entitled to the emoluments of
a monthly-rated temporary employee and not to that of a
daily-rated casual labourer, as the result of the order of
the Railway Board directing implementation of the Award of
the Classification Tribunal.
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The jurisdiction of the Tribunal arises under section 15 of
the Payment of Wages Act, 1936 (Act IV of 1936) (hereinafter
referred to as the Act). The Tribunal is set up to decide
"all claims arising out of deductions from the wages or
delay in payment of
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wages". The relief which it is authorised to award,is to
direct "the refund of the amount deducted, or the payment of
the wages delayed". Such a direction made by the Tribunal
is final, under section 17 of the Act, subject to the right
of appeal provided therein. Under section 22, no suit lies
in any court for the recovery of wages or of any deduction
therefrom which could have been recovered by an application
under section 15. However limited this jurisdiction of the
Tribunal, and however elaborate the provisions in the Act
for the preparation and display by the employer of the table
of wages payable to the employees, and for the inspection
thereof by the Factory Inspectors, it cannot be supposed
that the jurisdiction of the Tribunal is only to enforce the
wages so displayed or otherwise admitted. Such a narrow
construction would rob the machinery of the Act of a great
deal of its utility and would confine its application to
cases which are not likely to arise often, in a wellordered
administration like the Railways. Indeed, I do not gather
that such a construction was pressed for, before us, in the
arguments. Even a Tribunal of limited jurisdiction, like
the one under consideration, must necessarily have the
jurisdiction to decide, for itself, the preliminary facts on
which the claim or dispute before it depends. In the
instant case, it must have jurisdiction to decide what the
wages payable are and, for that purpose, what the contract
of employment and the terms thereof are. The judgment of my
learned brothers in this case apparently recognizes the
jurisdiction of the Tribunal as above stated, when it said
that the Tribunal has the power "to find out what the terms
of the contract were to determine what the wages of the
employed person were". Whether the Tribunal’s decision in
this behalf is conclusive or not is a matter that does not
arise for decision in this case.
But, it is said that the Tribunal has no authority to
determine the question of "potential wages". Undoubtedly a
claim to a higher potential wage cannot be brought in under
the category of "claim arising out of deduction from the
wages or delay in pay-
1367
ment of the wages" if that wage depended on the
determination by a superior departmental or other authority
as to whether or not a particular employee is entitled to
the higher wage-a determination which involves the exercise
of administrative judgment or discretion or certification,
and which would, in such a situation., be a condition of the
payability of the wage. But where the higher wage does not
depend upon such determination but depends on the applica-
tion of, and giving effect to, certain rules and orders
which, for this purpose, must be deemed to be incorporated
in the contract of employment, such a wage is, in my view,
not a prospective wage, merely because the paying authority
concerned makes default or commits error in working out the
application of the rules. In this context it is relevant to
notice that the definition of "wages" in the Act is "all
remuneration which would if the terms of the contract,
express or implied, were fulfilled, be payable". The word
"were" in this definition which I have underlined, seems to
indicate that even a "prospective wage" which would be
payable on the proper application of the rules in the sense
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which I have explained above may well fall within its scope.
he wage under the Act is not, necessarily, the immediately
pre-existing wage but the presently-payable wage.
In the case before us, the order of the Tribunal proceeded
on the view that the applicant was presently entitled to be
treated as a monthly-rated temporary employee and not as a
daily-rated casual labourer, by virtue of the directions of
the Railway Board for the implementation of the scheme of
classification and that therefore he was entitled to the
appropriate higher wage. We have not been shown any
material to indicate that this higher classification of the
applicant depended not on the mere application, of the
classification scheme and the rules thereunder, to him but
upon any determination by a departmental higher authority.
If it was the latter, undoubtedly the Tribunal cannot claim
to sit in judgment over that determination, whether it was
right or wrong. Such
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1368
determination, if wrong, could be corrected only by a
further departmental appeal, if any, available. But the
Tribunal had, to my mind, the authority to find whether the
applicant’s case falls within the scope of determination by
the departmental authority or is one of mere application of
the rules to the facts of this case. If the decision of the
Tribunal in this behalf was wrong, the appropriate remedy
for the Railway Authority was by way of an appeal under
section 17 of the Act. Since the finding of the Tribunal in
this case involved the case of as many as six persons and
the net additional amount ordered was a sum of Rs. 1,341,
its finding was appealable under section 17 of the Act.
Whether or not an employee was entitled to wages of a higher
category than what he was till then drawing would depend
entirely on the scope of the rules with reference to which
he is entitled to become one in the higher category and it
cannot be assumed a priori that such a claim is a claim to
"prospective wages".
In my view, therefore, there is no sufficient reason to
reverse the judgment of the learned Judges of the Bombay
High Court and this appeal should be dismissed with costs.
BY THE COURT. In accordance with the decision of the
majority, the appeal is allowed and the orders of the
Authority and of the High Court are quashed. There will be
no order as to costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
1369