Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ORIENTAL TEXTILE FINISHING MILLS, AMRITSAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LABOUR COURT, JULLUNDUR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT31/08/1971
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
MITTER, G.K.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 277 1972 SCR (1) 490
1971 SCC (3) 646
CITATOR INFO :
F 1975 SC1689 (11)
RF 1980 SC1896 (136)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Discharge of workmen without domestic
inquiry Misconduct of discharged workmen proved before
Labour Court-Propriety of termination of set-vices.
HEADNOTE:
While a reference was pending before the Labour Court the
respondent workmen went on strike because some workmen were
suspended. The Labour Officer as well as the management
tried to persuade the workers to rejoin duty, but the
respondents, made it a condition of their joining duty that
the suspended workmen should also be taken back. The
management thereafter gave the respondents notices on
different dates asking them to join duty by a date specified
in the notices and subsequently, by another letter, called
upon them to justify their absence, failing which. the
respondents were informed, that their names would be struck
off from the muster roll. Notwithstanding those notices and
the willingness of management to take them back the
respondents gave no reply but continued the strike and they
were informed by letters that their names were removed from
the muster roll. No domestic inquiry however, was held into
the misconduct of the respondents.
The Labour Court, to which the dispute was referred directed
reinstatement of the respondents.
In appeal to this Court, on the: question whether the
termination of the employment of the respondents, in the
circumstances of the case, without an inquiry, was
justified.
HELD : (1) It is an accepted principle of industrial
adjudication that workmen can resort to strike in order to
press for their demands without snapping the relationship of
employer and employee., Equally, the management have the
right to carry on work, in furtherance of which, they could
employ other workmen and justify their action on merits in
any adjudication of the dispute arising therefrom. [497 C-E]
(2) Merely because workmen go on strike, even where the
strike is illegal, it does not justify the management in
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terminating their services without a domestic inquiry. [497
C]
(3) In the case of a domestic inquiry where misconduct is
held to he proved, the industrial tribunal or labour court
can only interfere with that order if there is mala fide, or
want of good faith or there was victimisation or unfair
labour practice or the management has been guilty of basic
errors or violation of principles of natural justice or if
on the materials, the finding is completely baseless or
perverse. If, however, the management does not hold an
inquiry, or the inquiry is, due to some omission or defi-
ciency, not valid, the management can nonetheless support
the order of discharge, termination or dismissal when the
matter is referred for industrial adjudication by producing
satisfactory evidence and proving misconduct of the
concerned workmen. The evidence to substantiate and justify
the action taken against the workmen is not as stringent as
that
491
which is required in a court of law, but should be such as
would satisfy the tribunal that the order of termination was
proper. In such a case, there is no difference between a
reference under s. 10 of the Industrial Disputes Act and a
dispute raised under s. 33A of the Act, and, no distinction
can be made between cases where the domestic inquiry is
invalid and those where no inquiry has, in fact, been ,held.
That is, the management can justify and substantiate its
action on evidence duty place before the Tribunal. [498 E-G;
499 E-F; 500 C-D; 501 A-B]
(4) In the present case, there were no Standing Orders
applicable to the appellant-company. A domestic inquiry
should have been held in order to entitle the management to
dispense with the services of its workmen on the ground of
misconduct. [498 A-B]
(5) But the management had proved before the Labour Court
that there was persistent and obdurate refusal by the
workmen to join duty notwithstanding the fact that the
management had done everything possible to persuade them and
gave them opportunities to come back to work; and that the
respondents had, without any sufficient cause refused to do.
The strike was illegal and it was not necessary for the
management to prove that the respondents were guilty of
overt acts of intimidation, incitement or violence. There,
is nothing to justify the allegation that the management
wanted to terminate to their services under some pretext
with a view to recruit them afresh and deprive them of
accrued benefits., The notices clearly mentioned that the
workmen would be free to join duty by a certain date, and it
was only after that date the management was willing to
entertain them only as new entrants. Therefore, though no
domestic, inquiry was held, the management had proved the
misconduct of the respondents before the Labour Court and
hence the termination of their services was not improper,
and there was no justification for directing their
reinstatement. [501 C-G]
Express Newspapers (P) Ltd. v. Michael Mark & Anr., [1963] 3
S.C.R. 405, India General Navigation & Railway Co. Ltd. v.
Their Workmen, [1960] 2 S.C.R., 1, Punjab National Bank Ltd.
v. Its Workmen [1960] 1 S.C.R. 806, Workmen of Motipur Sugar
Factory (P) . Ltd. v. Motipur Sugar Factory, [1965] 3
S.C.R. 588 and Hindustan General Electrical Corporation Ltd.
v. Bishwanath Prasad & Anr. C.A. No. 2167/66 dt. 17-8-71,
followed.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION:-Civil Appeal No. 1071 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the Award dated September 10,
1965, of the Labour Court, Jullundur in Reference No. 157 of
1959.
A. B. Sinha, and B. P. Maheshwari, for the appellant..
Hardev Singh, for respondents Nos. 2 to 24.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
P. Jaganmohan Reddy, J While reference No 150 of 1958 was
pending in respect of an Industrial dispute between the
appellant and its workmen relating to bonus, casual leave
and sick
492
leave etc., and. after the management had suspended six of
its workmen on certain charges of misconduct for having
refused to ,operate some machines, another worker Shri
Darshan Singh, a Helper of a Blowing Machine also refused
on 25-1-59 when called upon by the management to work the
machine in tile absence ,of Shri Daulat Ram, Machineman and
was accordingly suspended the same day. On hearing this
news the workmen went to see one of the partners of the
appellant and demanded that the order of suspension passed
against Shri Darshan Singh should be cancelled and he be
reinstated as a Helper. As the management was not agreeable
to reinstate the Helper workman, the workers went on a
lightening strike. Since the workmen came on strike con-
ciliation efforts were made but in spite of the persuasion
of the Labour Officer, M.W. 2, the Labour Inspector M.W. 4
and by the management, Respondents 2 to 24 along with other
did not report for duty although it is stated the Appellant
was willing to employ them. Certain charge-sheets were
served on the working on towards the end of January to which
replies were given. Thereafter notices were sent to the
Respondents 2 to 15 and 17 to 24 asking them to resume work
by certain specified dates and when they did not resume work
other notices were sent requiring the said Respondents to
show why their names should not be struck,off and asked them
to submit their reply by a certain date. In so far as
Respondent 16 is concerned a notice was served oil him ,on
4-3-59 in which it was mentioned that he was absent since
13-2-59 without any leave and that he should resume duty by
6-3-59. He was further asked to explain by 8-3-59 why his
name should not be struck off. None of the Respondents Nos.
2 to 24 either acknowledged these notices nor sent a reply.
The management thereafter by letters dated 23-2-59, 4-3-59
and 17-3-59 informed the aforesaid Respondents that since
they were no longer interested in the employment their names
were struck off from the muster rolls. It is alleged that
from 25-1-59 till their names were struck off from the
muster rolls, the Respondents sat outside the Mill gate and
in spite of persuasion by the Labour Officer as well as by
the management were genuinely desirous of their resuming
work, they did not join duty and as a consequence the
management was compelled to employ others in order to keep
the mill going. It is also stated that during this period
those workmen who wanted to join duty were permitted to do
so and their services were entertained. It is also the case
of the management that the strike fizzled out after the
striking-workmen failed to get rations and thereafter they
had abandoned the service. On 19-3-59 a demand notice on
behalf of the workmen was served on the management as a
result of which the conciliation proceedings commenced. But
even then according to the report of the Conciliation
Officer while the management was willing to employ the
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workmen, the Respondents
493
were, not willing to resume work till the suspended workmen
were also ’allowed to resume duty.
Ultimately on 26-8-59 the matter was referred to the Labour
Court at Jullundur under Sec. 10 of the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’), to
determine whether the termination of services of 31 workmen
whose names were mentioned therein was justified. It may be
mentioned here that out of these 31 workmen 8 workmen had
resumed their duties and were no longer interested in the
proceedings. The Labour Court after receiving the statement
of claim and recording the evidence on behalf of both the
management and the workmen. passed an Award on 31-10-61
which was published in the Gazette of 8-12-61. By this
Award the claim of the workmen was rejected on the ground
inter-alia :-
(a) that they had resorted to illegal
strike;
(b) that the management did not in fact
terminate the services of the workmen
concerned in the case and never meant to take
action against them for having gone on strike.
On the other hand management was always
prepare to take them back and was requesting
them through the Labour Inspector and the
Labour Officer to end the strike and to resume
duty but the workers went on insisting that
the suspension orders passed on their co-
workmen should first be cancelled;
(c) that the workmen were adamant and as
such there was no alternative for the
management except to terminate their services
and take fresh hands who are still continuing
in its service; and
(d) that no evidence was produced by the
workmen to prove that any of them ever
requested the, management to resume duty or
that the management had turned down any such
request.
Against this Award of the Labour Court a Writ Petition was
filed by the Respondents in the High Court of Punjab. A
Single Bench of that Court by its Judgment dated 6-12-64
held that in law the plea that the workers had abandoned the
services of the Appellant could not be sustained, but on the
other hand it was the management which had terminated their
services. In this view the case was remanded to the Labour
Court for a fresh decision. A Letters Patent Appeal was
filed by the management against this decision but later it
was dismissed as withdrawn. On remand the Labour Court by
an Award dated 10-9-65 which was published in the Gazette on
1-10-65 held that the plea of the
-L 1340 Sup CI/71
494
workmen that there was a lock out by the management was not
substantiated, on the other hand it was they who had gone on
strike; that the strike was illegal because of the
proceedings pending before the Labour Court in Reference No.
150 of 1958; that the question as to whether the management
had terminated the services of the concerned workmen or not
was not a matter which was res-integra in view of ,the
judgment of the Punjab High Court in the Writ Petition
referred to above; and in the alternative as the termination
took place by virtue of letters dated 23-2-59, 4-3-59 and
17-3-59 without holding an enquiry, it was not valid. In
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the result the Labour Court directed reinstatement of
Respondents 2 to 24. In so far as Surat Singh Respondent
No. 16 was concerned, it was found that there were no
standing orders in force applicable to the Appellant, as
such it was not justified in dismissing him for absence
without leave. It was also held that the Respondents were
not entitled to wages from 25-1-59 to 17-3-59. They would
however only be entitled to half the back wages from 18-3-59
to the date on which the Award would become enforceable and
from that date till the date of their reinstatement,
Respondents Nos. 2 to 24 would be given full back wages.
Against the said Award this ’A peal has been filed by
Special Leave.
The short question for our consideration is whether the ter-
mination of employment of the Respondents in the
circumstances of the case without an enquiry was justified.
There is no doubt that it has been conceded at the very
outset that there being no ,standing orders applicable to
the Appellant, the termination of the services of Shri Surat
Singh, Respondent No. 16 is not valid and the Award
pertaining to his reinstatement cannot be assailed. In so
far as the validity of the action of the management in
terminating the employment of the other Respondents is
concerned a great deal would depend on whether the
management was able to justify its action before the
Tribunal. It would be useful to set ,out at the outset
certain undisputed facts namely :
(1) that the Respondents went on a strike on
25-1-59;
(2) that as there was a reference pending
before the Labour Court that strike would be
illegal, under Chapter V of the Industrial
Disputes Act 1947;
(3) that both the Labour Officers as well as
the management tried to persuade the workers
to join duty and after the demand notice dated
19-3-59 conciliation efforts were made but
they did not resume work and made it a
condition of their joining duty that the
suspended workmen also should be taken back;
495
(4) that the management gave workers on
strike notices on different dates asking them
to join duty by a date specified therein and
subsequently by another letter called upon
them to justify their absence failing which
they were informed that their names would be
struck off from the muster roll;
(5) that notwithstanding those notices and
the willingness of the management to take them
back the Respondent gave no reply and
continued the strike till they were informed
by letters dated 25-2-59, 4-3-59 and 17-3-59
that their names were removed from muster
roll; and
(6) that no domestic enquiry was held into
the misconduct of the Respondents.
On these admitted facts it is sought to be contended on
behalf of the Appellant that the Management took every
possible step to get the workmen back into their factory but
they were adamant in continuing the strike. In these
circumstances they could do nothing else but to terminate
their services and take in fresh hands in order to keep the
factory going. It may be mentioned that the management
immediately after the strike served charge-sheets calling
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upon them to show cause why proper legal action should not
be taken against them. In those charge-sheets they had al-
leged that the Respondents had indulged in intimidation,
unjustified slogan mongering and inciting the workers to
remain on strike. The workmen by their letters denied the
allegations against them. Thereafter the management seem to
have dropped these charges and tried to persuade them to
join work. It would be useful to examine the correspondence
of a typical case. On 5-2-59 by Ex. A3 the management
served a notice and wrote to Amar Nath son of Brijlal, as
follows :
"Please take notice that from the afternoon of
25-1-59 you are on strike, which is illegal
due to the pendency of proceedings before the
Punjab Labour Court, Amritsar in reference No.
150 of 1958. This Strike of yours is wholly
unjustified. In spite of the various
persuasive attempts by the management and the
Labour Department, Amritsar, you have failed
to resume work. If you will not come to duty
on 8th Feb. 59 the management would employ
fresh hand in your stead as the management can
ill-afford to keep the work at a standstill.
You will have in that event no claim to any
reinstatement or compensation. Management is
however prepared to consider you as one of the
new entrants, should you be selected for
appointment. This application should reach in
writing by 9th Feb. ’59".
496
A copy of this letter was given to the Labour Commissioner,
Ambala Cantt. as well as Labour Inspector and Labour
Officer, Amritsar. When this Workman did not join his duty
the management by Ex. A4 wrote another letter to him on 21-
2-59.It said :
"You were served with a registered notice on
5-2-59 that you since the afternoon of 25th
Jan. ’59 are on illegal and unjustified
strike along with other workers You were given
an opportunity to report for duty upto 8-2-59.
But uptil today you did not report yourself
for duty by which it is clearly patent that
you do not want to work in the factory.
Therefore show cause as to why your name be
not struck off from the muster roll of the
factory. The factory management also gave you
a chance that you can join on new services.
but you did not do even that, which clearly
shows that your stand is totally illegal and
baseless. Factory cannot be closed in any
event, thus your coming on duty was necessary.
If you will not give any satisfactory reply
then your name will be struck off from the
muster roll of the factory. Your repl
y should
reach upto 25-2-59".
Copies of this letter were also given to the Labour Officer
referred to above.- When no reply was received to this
letter the management terminated the services by Ex. A7
dated 4-3-59 which is as follows:
"For your continued absence since the
afternoon of 25-1-59 and in spite of repeated
requests to come and join duty you have failed
to resume work. You have also failed to show
cause in pursuance to our letter dt. 21-2-59
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as already intimated for your abandonment of
service and/or illegal strike. In view of
your these illegal activities the management
has struck off your name from the muster roll
of the Mills w.e.f. 4-3-59".
The Respondent’s advocate while not denying these letters as
above contends that the earlier letters had charged them
with incitement and stay in strike and intimidation etc. but
the management gave the go by to it and have terminated the
service for merely going on a peaceful strike and by
subsequent letters it was made clear that the object of the
management was to employ the workmen afresh and deprive them
of the past benefits which had accrued to them. He further
submits that merely because workmen have gone on a strike
which is a weapon for obtaining their redress, the
relationship of employer and employee does not come to an
end and if the workmen have behaved in a violent manner or
incited or intimidated other workmen, even then the
management cannot terminate their services without holding
an
497
enquiry into the alleged misconduct but as no such enquiry
was held the termination is illegal.
The question however would be whether before the services of
the workmen, who are on strike, are terminated, is an
enquiry into their misconduct obligatory and would an
omission to comply with this requirement, make the order of
termination illegal? It appears to us that merely because
workmen go on strike it does not justify the management, in
terminating their services. In any case if allegations of
misconduct have been made against them those allegations
have to be enquired into by charging them with specific acts
of misconduct and giving them an opportunity to defend
themselves at the enquiry. Even where a strike is illegal
it does not justify the management from terminating their
services merely on that ground, though if it can be shown on
an enquiry that the conduct of the workmen amounted to
misconduct it can do so. While it is an accepted principle
of industrial adjudication that workmen can resort to strike
in order to press for their demands without snapping the
relationship of employer and employee, it is equally a well
accepted principle that the work of the factory cannot be
paralysed and brought to a standstill by an illegal strike,
in spite of legal steps being taken by the management to
resolve the conflict. The management have the right in
those circumstances to carry on the work of the factory in
furtherance of which it could employ other workmen and
justify its action on merits in any adjudication of the
dispute arising thereform.
In Express Newspapers (P) Ltd. v. Michael Mark & Anr.,(1)
where certain’ employees who had indulged in ill--gal strike
did not join their duty in spite of notices given by the
management and their places were filled up by others,
applied for relief under the Payment of Wages Act but the,
application was dismissed. The workers moved the High Court
under Art. 226 and their Writ Petitions were allowed. This
Court in Appeal held that the Standing Orders contemplated
termination of employment by the employer and in those cases
there could be no doubt that the Appellant had terminated
the employment, ,of the Respondents by removing their names
from the muster roll without giving them any notice of such
removal. It was also held that if employees absent
themselves from work because of strike in enforcement of
their demands, there can be no question of abandonment of
employment by them and that if the strike was in fact
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illegal, the Appellant could take disciplinary action
against the employees under the Standing Order and dismiss
them.
(1) [1963] 3 S.C.R, 405.
498
This case merely illustrates what has been stated by us that
even where the strike is illegal a domestic enquiry must be
held. In the case before us admittedly there were no
Standing Orders applicable to the appellant. Nonetheless a
domestic enquiry should have been held in order to entitle
the management to dispense with the services of its workmen
on the ground of misconduct. This view of ours is also
supported by another case of this Court in India General
Navigation &- Railway Co. Ltd. v. Their Workmen(1) where it
was held that mere taking part in an illegal strike without
anything further would not necessarily justify the dismissal
of all the workers taking part in the strike and that if the
employer, before dismissing a workman, gives him sufficient
opportunity of explaining his conduct and no question of
mala-fides or vicitimisation arises, it is not for the
Tribunal in adjudicating the propriety of such dismissal, to
look into the sufficiency or otherwise of the evidence led
before the ’enquiring officer or insist on the same degree
of proof as is required in a Court of Law, as if it was
sitting in appeal over the decision of the employer., It may
be mentioned that in the case of a domestic enquiry where
misconduct is held to be proved the Tribunal can only
interfere with that order if there is mala fides or want of
good faith, there was victimisation or unfair labour
practice or the management has been guilty of basic error or
violation of the principles of natural justice or on the
materials the finding is completely baseless or perverse.
If however the management does not hold such an enquiry or
the enquiry is due to some omission or deficiency not valid
it can nonetheless support its order of discharge,
termination or dismissal when the matter is referred for
Industrial adjudication by producing satisfactory evidence
and proving misconduct. Even in such cases the evidence
which is produced to substantiate and justify the action
taken against the workmen is not as stringent as that which
is required in a Court of Law. At any rate the evidence
should be such as would satisfy the Tribunal that the order
of termination is proper.
The Appellant before us on the evidence produced before the
Tribunal seeks to justify its order removing the names of
the Respondents from the muster roll. In the Punjab
National Bank Ltd. v. Its Workmen,(2) though there was no
enquiry held by the management it sought to justify the
action of termination of services of its employees before
the Industrial Tribunal. The employees of the Appellant
Bank had commenced pen down strikes which were followed by
general strike Pending arbitration of an industrial dispute
between them. On the intervention of the Govt. the Bank
reinstated all the employees
(1) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 1.
(2) [1960] S.C.R. 806.
499
except 150 against whom it had positive objection and it is
in respect of those workmen that a dispute was referred
under Section 10 of the Act for adjudication. One of the
two issues that was referred to the Tribunal was whether 150
employees had been wrongly dismissed. The Tribunal did not
hear any evidence and by its final award held that the
strike was illegal, the Bank, was, on that ground alone,
justified in dismissing the employees. On Appeal the Labour
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Appellate Tribunal held that even though the strikes were
illegal under Sec. 23(b) read with 24(1) of the Act, the
Bank had by entering into, the agreement with the Govt. of
India, waived its right to take penal action against its
employees for joining the illegal strikes and that
therefore, an enquiry should be held on additional evidence
to decide the disputes on merits. Against this
interlocutory order the Bank appealed to this Court which
held that while the strikes were no doubt illegal under Sec.
23 (b) of the Act, the orders of dismissal passed by the
Bank were no less so under See. 33 of the Act and it
dismissed the Appeal. The Appellate Tribunal thereafter,
heard the cases on merits, directed the reinstatement of 136
of the said employees, but refused to reinstate the rest
whom it found guilty of issuing posters and circulars
subversive of the credit of the Bank. Both the Bank and the
workers appealed to this Court. It was held that under Sec.
33A of the Act as construed by this Court the jurisdiction
of the Tribunal was not limited to an enquiry as to the
contravention of Sec. 33 of the Act. Even if such
contravention was proved, the employer could still justify
the impugned dismissal on merits and there was no difference
in this regard between a reference under Sec. 10 of the Act
and a dispute raised under Sec. 33A of the Act.
In Workmen of Motipur Sugar Factory (P) Ltd., v. Motipur
Sugar Factory,(1) the workers of the Respondent started a go
slow in its Sugar Factory. Therefore the Respondent issued
a general notice to those workmen and individually to each
workman notifying-that unless he recorded his willingness to
discharge his duties faithfully and diligently so as to give
a certain minimum output, he will be no longer employed and
the willingness he was required to record was to be done
within a certain time failing which he was notified that he
would be discharged without further notice. Respondents
held no enquiry as required by the Standing Orders before
dispensing with the services of the Appellant. A general
strike followed resulting in a joint application by both the
parties to the Govt. and the Govt. referred the question to
the Tribunal. In the notice given by the Respondents it was
stated that the go slow tactics was likely to injure the
(1) [1965] 3 S.C.R. 588.
500
factory resulting in a major breakdown of the machinery.
The Tribunal came to the conclusion that there was go slow
during ,the period and consequently held that the discharge
of the workmen was fully justified. It was contended before
this Court that what the Tribunal had to concern itself was
whether the discharge of the workmen for not giving an
undertaking was justified or not and that it was no part of
its duty to decide that there was go slow which would
justify the order of discharge and ,that since the
Respondents held no enquiry as required by the .Standing
Orders it could not justify the discharge before the
Tribunal. It was pointed out in that case that the
Court had consistently held that if the domestic
enquiry is irregular, invalid or improper the Tribunal
may give an opportunity to the employer to prove his case
and in doing so the Tribunal tries the merits itself and
that no distinction can be made between cases where the
domestic enquiry is invalid and those where no enquiry has
in fact been held. It was observed at page 603:
"Looking at the matter in this broad way-and
that is all that we are prepared to do, for we
are examining a finding of fact of the
tribunal-we cannot say that its conclusion
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that there was go-slow between November 27 and
December 15 is not justified .... But as we
have already indicated, the charge in the
notice ,of December 15 was that the workmen
had been going slow from November 27 and they
were asked to give an undertaking to improve
and the respondent was apparently willing to
overlook the earlier lapse. Even assuming
that the demand of an undertaking was un-
justified, it does appear that the attitude of
the workmen was that they would do no better;
and in those circumstances they were
discharged on December 17, 1960, on the basis
of misconduct consisting of go-slow between
November 27 and December 16, 1960. That
misconduct has been held proved by the
Tribunal and in our opinion that decision of
the Tribunal cannot be said to be wrong. In
the circumstances the Tribunal was justified
in coming to the conclusion that the discharge
was fully justified."
In a recent case-the Hindustan General Electrical
Corporation Ltd. v. Bishwanath Prasad & Anr.,(1) while
considering this aspect of the matter we had held that even
though no enquiry was held or there was contravention of the
provisions of Sec. 33 ,of the Act, in a dispute referred
under Sec. 10 the Labour Court had to adjudicate upon the
dispute which was referred to it with regard to the
Respondent and had to go into the question
(1) Civil Appeal No. 2167 of 1966-Judgment delivered on 17-
8-71,
501
as to whether he had been properly dismissed. In other
words the management can justify and substantiate its action
on evidence duly placed before the Tribunal.
The learned Advocate for the Respondents however urges that
even where the strike is illegal in order to justify the
dismissal or the order terminating the services of workmen
on the ground of misconduct the management must prove that
they were guilty of some overt-acts such as intimidation,
incitement or violence. We do not think that in every case
the proof of such overt acts are necessary prerequisite. In
this case there is a persistent and obdurate refusal by the
workmen to join duty notwithstanding the fact that the
management has done everything possible to persuade them and
give them opportunities to come back to work but they have
without any sufficient cause refused, which in our view
would constitute misconduct and justify the termination of
their services. The workmen as spoken to by the Labour
Officers and also as, is evidenced by the documentary
evidence to which we have referred, were unwilling to join
duty till the workmen who were suspended were also taken
back. There is nothing to justify the allegation that the
management wanted to terminate their services under some
pretext with a view to recruit them afresh and deprive them
of accrued benefits. The notices clearly mention that the
workmen would be free to join duty by a certain date and
only after that date ,the management was prepared to
entertain them a, new entrants if they were to apply by the
date specified in the notices. It appears to us therefore
that management has proved misconduct and the stand taken by
it was reasonable. There was nothing that it could do
further in view of the unjustified attitude taken by the
workers by staying away from work particularly after they
were given over a month’s time within which to commence
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work. In the view we take the order terminating their
services was not improper. The Tribunal was not justified
in directing their reinstatement and payment of wages merely
on the round that no domestic enquiry was held. The appeal
is accordingly allowed except for the Award in respect of
Surat Singh, which is maintained. Having regard to the
circumstances of the case there will be no order as to
costs.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed.
502