Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BARODA BOROUGH MUNICIPALITY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ITS WORKMEN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
13/11/1956
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
MENON, P. GOVINDA
CITATION:
1957 AIR 110 1957 SCR 33
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Bonus-One department of a municipality
having surplus earnings-Whether workers engaged in that
department can claim bonus-Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act,
1925 (Bom. Act XVIII Of 1925).
HEADNOTE:
The Baroda Electric Supply Concern was owned and managed by
the State of Baroda. Immediately before the merger of the
State in the Province of Bombay, the State made a gift of
the Concern to the Baroda Municipality to provide it with a
new source of revenue as. aid from the State might not be
continued after the merger. Later in 1951, the workmen
employed in the electricity department demanded bonus and
the dispute was referred for adjudication. The bonus was
claimed on the basis that the electric Concern was a
commerical concern, that it was making ’huge profits and
that the workmen were entitled to bonus as a share in the
profits. The municipality resisted the demand, inter alia,
on the grounds that the earnings of one department could not
be treated as profits of the municipality, and that as a
whole the muncipal budget for the relevant period was a
deficit budget.
Held, that the workers employed in the electricity
department of the municipality were not entitled to the
bonus claimed. According to the provisions of the Bombay
Municipal Boroughs Act, 1925, under which the municipality
is constituted and functions, the earnings of one department
cannot be held to be gross profits in the ordinary
commercial or trading sense. The mere fact that separate
accounts were kept of the electricity department did not
alter the position, as there was one budget for the
municipality as a whole and income from and expenses of all
departments constituted the income and expenses of the
municipality. The different activities of the municipality
constituted one integrated whole,
5
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and the activities of the different departments were not
distinct or unconnected activities so as to permit the
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isolation of one department from another or of an earning
department from a spending department. It would be unfair
to draw a distinction between the workers of the earning
department and the workers of the spending department for
the payment of bonus. Such a distinction would, instead of
promoting peace and harmony among the employees of the
municipality, create unrest and discontent.
D. N. Banerji v. P. R. Mukherjee, [19531 S.C.R. 302 and
Muir Mills Co. Ltd. v. Suti Mills Mazdoor Union, Kanpur,
[1955] 1 S.C.R. 991 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 182 of 1956.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 23, 1955, of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of
India, Bombay, in Appeal No. 224 of 1953 arising out -of an
award (Part II) dated June 4, 1953, of the Bombay Industrial
Tribunal in Reference No. (I.T.A.)No. 18 of 1951.
M. C. Setalvad,Attorney-General for India,N. C. Chatterji,
J. B. Dadachanji, S. N. Andley and Rameshwar Nath of
Rajinder Narain & Co., for the appellant.
Purshottam Tricumdas, H. R. Gokhale, K. R. Choudhury and M.
R. Rangaswamy, for the respondents.
1956. November 13. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
S.K. DAS J.-This is an appeal by special leave from a
decision of the Labour Appellate Tribunal at Bombay, dated
November 23, 1955. The Baroda Borough Municipality is the
appellant, and the respondents are the workmen employed in
the electricity department of the said Municipality
represented mostly by the Baroda State Electric Workers
Union (hereinafter called the respondent Union). The
substantial question for determination in this appeal is if
the respondents, workers in a municipal department engaged
in the generation, supply and sale of electric energy, are
entitled to the bonus claimed out of the surplus earnings of
the said department (called "profits" by the respondents)
after
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allowing for all outgoings including necessary expenditure
of the department and deductions for all prior, charges.
The question is, a short one, but has an importance and
consequences reaching beyond the limits of the particular
case in which it has arisen.
We may first state the relevant facts. Before May 1, 1949,
on which date the former State of Baroda was merged in and
integrated with the then Province of Bombay (now the Bombay
State), the Baroda Electric Supply Concern was owned and
managed by the State of Baroda. On April 19, -1949, the
State Government of Baroda decided to hand over the said
Concern as a gift to the Baroda Municipality and
communicated an order to that effect in which it was stated
inter alia:-
It is likely that the various types of assistance, financial
or otherwise, which the Baroda Municipality has been
receiving up to now from the Baroda Government may not be
continued to a similar extent after integration. It is
therefore very necessary to find out new sources of revenue
for the Municipality so that it may continue to maintain a
high standard of efficiency as far as possible......... With
this object in view the Baroda Government are pleased to
hand over to the Municipality as a -gift the Baroda Electric
Supply Concern which at present is a Government concern
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including both the generation and distribution of electric
power. With the transfer of the electric concern to the
Municipality the various funds of the, electric department
like the Reserve Fund the Depreciation Fund etc. are also to
be transferred to the Municipality with this specific
understanding that these funds should not be used for
purposes other than those for which they are
intended......... The Baroda City Municipality will have to
be issued licence for the generation and distribution of
electricity as per Barods Electricity Act and the
Municipality should immediately apply for such a licence for
the supply of electric power not only within the municipal
limits but within a twenty miles radius round Baroda. The
Municipality should continue the policy of the department.
to give
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electric energy at concessional rates for irrigation pur-
poses in the villages, although this may not be profitable
in the beginning...... The entire staff of the Baroda
Electric Supply Concern will be taken up by the Municipality
without an reservation and the Municipality is directed to
bring into operation terms and conditions of services as are
prevalent under the Bombay Government and the officers and
staff should be given emoluments which they would have got
had they joined Bombay Government."
On April 29, 1949, -a formal order of handing over was made,
subject to certain directions reserving the rights of the
employees in the matter of pension, gratuity, provident
fund, continuity of service etc. In 1951, there was an
industrial dispute between the Baroda Borough Municipality
and the workmen employed in the electric department with
reference to a number of demands made by the latter, and by
consent of the appellant Municipality and the respondent
Union, the dispute was referred to the Industrial Tribunal,
Bombay, for adjudication, by an order of the Government of
Bombay dated October22,1951. The dispute related to a large
number of items, one of which was "payment of bonus
equivalent to three months’ wages (including dearness
allowance) for the year 1940-50 to all employee,% of the
electric department including daily wage workers and
temporary workers." The dispute was settled by agreement
with regard to all other items except the item of bonus; on
that item the Industrial Tribunal heard the parties and came
to the conclusion that the respondents were not entitled to
the bonus claimed because(1) the Municipality was not a
profit-making concern;(2) the balance of earnings over
the outgoings of the electric department of the Municipality
was not ’profit’ as that word is understood in the ordinary
trading or business sense; (3) the Municipality consisted of
both earning and spending departments and it was not per-
missible to create an invidious distinction between the
different employees of the Municipality by granting bonus to
the workmen in one department only; and (4) the respondents
having been compensated by higher
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scales of salary on the municipalisation of the undertaking
and having got other benefits and amenities appertaining to
municipal service were not entitled to claim such bonus as
was granted to them during the regime of the former State-
owned company.
Against this decision of the Tribunal, there was an appeal
to the Labour Appellate Tribunal of India at Bombay. The
Appellate Tribunal came to the conclusion that the
respondents were entitled to claim bonus; it expressed the
view that on the decision of this Court in D. N. Banerji v.
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P. R. Mukherjee (1) the expression industrial dispute’ in
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, includes disputes between
municipalities and their employees in branches of work that
can be regarded as analogous to the carrying on of a trade
or business, and if the undertaking resulted in profit
during the relevant trading period, the workmen were
entitled to claim bonus as of right. On the question
whether the excess of earnings over outlay of a municipal
undertaking like the one under consideration here was profit
or not, the Appellate Tribunal relied on the circumstances
stated below for its finding that the excess was really
profit:
(a) the very nature of the gift to the Baroda Municipality
by the State Government of Baroda showed that the concern
(or undertaking) made over to the former was a profit-making
concern;
(b) the concern was run separately and as it was a trading
concern by its very nature,, the balance of earnings derived
from it after allowing for all outgoings was pecuniary gain
and it made no material difference to the actual nature of
the gain, whether it was called surplus or profit; and
(c) no distinction could be made in principle between a
municipal undertaking and an undertaking by a private or
public concern, if the conditions laid down for the grant of
bonus in Muir Mills Co. Ltd. v. Suti Mills Mdzdoor Union,
Kanpur (2) were fulfilled.
As to the payment of bonus to the employees of one
department only, the appellate Tribunal said that if
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 302.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 991.
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the profits were not sufficiently large to admit of bonus to
all employees, it was permissible to treat the profitmaking
department as a separate unit for the purpose of granting
bonus, unless there was some essential nexus or connection
between the profit-making department and other departments
or some unity of purpose or parallel or co-ordinate activity
towards a common goal.in all the departments without which
the undertaking could not be carried on to proper advantage.
The Appellate Tribunal. pointed out that the accounts of the
electricity department. of the Baroda Municipality were
separately kept and as the undertaking carried on by the
electricity department of the municipality differed. from
other normal activities of the Municipality, there being’ no
common nexus between them, it was open to the workmen of the
electricity department to claim bonus out of the profit made
by that department after making deductions for all prior
charges. The Appellate Tribunal accordingly allowed the
appeal, set aside the decision of the Industrial Tribunal
and remanded the case for decision on merits according to
law.
It is now finally settled by the decision of this Court in
D. N. Banerji v. P. R. Mukherjee (supra) that a municipal
undertaking of the nature we have under consideration here
is an ’industry’ within the meaning of the definition of
that word in s. 2(j) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947,
and that the expression ’industrial dispute’ in that Act
includes disputes between municipalities and their employees
in branches of work that can be regarded as analogous to the
carrying on of a trade or business. The learned Attorney-
General who appeared for the appellant made it clear at the
very out set that the questions which he wished us to consi-
der in this case were different from those considered and
determined by the aforesaid decision.
The first contention which he placed in the forefront of his
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argument is this: he invited attention to our decision in
Muir Mills Co. Ltd. v. Suti Mills Mazdoor Union, Kanpur
(Supra) and contended that having regard to the principles
laid down therein for the grant of bonus, the respondents
were not entitled to claim any
39
bonus in this case because even though the undertaking in
question was an ’industry’ within the meaning, of the
Industial Disputes Act, 1947, there was no profit from the
undertaking and the principles which govern the grant of
bonus out of profits, as explained in that decision, were
inapplicable to a municipal undertaking of the nature under
consideration before us.
In the Muir Mills case (supra) it was observed that two
conditions had to be satisfied before a demand for bonus
could be justified: one was that the wages of the workmen
fell short of the living standard and the other was that the
industry made profits to the earning of which the workmen
had contributed. The principle for the grant of bonus was
stated thus: ’,’It is fair that labour should derive some
benefit if there is a surplus after meeting prior or
necessary charges." The prior or necessary charges were then
explained as (1) provision for depreciation, (2) reserves
for rehabilitation, (3) a return of six per cent. on the
paid up capital and (4) a return on the working capital at a
lesser rate than the return on paid up capital. Do those
principles apply in the case of a municipal undertaking of
the kind in question here ?
There can be no doubt that the respondents founded their
claim of bonus in this case on the availability of profits
after meeting prior or necessary charges. In the statement
of their claim they said, "The electric concern was treated
as a commercial concern by the former Baroda State
Government and it used to yield huge profits to the State.
Even after merger the municipality is treating it as a
commercial concern and the concern is fielding huge profits
to the municipality too. It is submitted that all workers
of the electric department should be paid bonus equivalent
to three. months wages including D.A. The bonus should be
paid to all the employees including daily wage, temporary
and semi-permanent workmen. The workers are entitled to
bonus both as share in profits and also &a deferred wages."
It was decided in the Muir Mills case (supra) that bonus was
not deferred wage; so the alternative claim of the
respondents on the footing that bonus was deferred wage had
no real basis, and their
40
claim of bonus as share in profits was the only claim which
merited consideration. In reply to that claim, the
appellant said:
This demand is not acceptable. Under former Baroda
Government Order No. (R) 403/63 dated 19-4-49, after serious
consideration into the financial position of the
Municipality after the integration of the Baroda State with
the Bombay Province and with a view to find out new sources
of revenue for the Municipality so that it may continue to
maintain its standard of efficiency and to fulfill the
obligations incumbent upon the Municipality, the Government
was pleased to hand over to the Municipality the Baroda
Electric Supply concern.
"The Municipality is experiencing great hardships still in
meeting all its obligations and covering the lost sources of
revenue. Even including the income of the Electric Supply
Concern, the municipal budget is a deficit one. Due to want
of sufficient funds, the Municipality has to give up certain
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schemes and works or to postpone the same.
"Further, local authorities, like municipalities and local
boards, are public utility institutions and the profits
derived from the working of the Electric Supply Concern will
all go to the Municipal treasury and city’s tax-payers in
general, unlike other commercial organisations whose profits
are distributed only among the investing public."
It is clear to us that having regard to the provisions of
the Bombay Municipal Boroughs Act, 1925 (Bombay Act XVIII of
1925), hereinafter called the Municipal Act, under which the
appellant Municipality is constituted and functions, the
earnings of one department of the Municipality cannot be
held to be gross profits in the ordinary commercial or
trading sense; nor can, the principles governing the grant
of bonus out of such profits after meeting necessary or
prior charges be applied to the present case.
The relevant sections of the Municipal Act are ss. 58, 63,
65, 66, 68 and 71. We shall subsequently advert to S. 58 of
the Municipal Act in connection with another
41
contention of the learned Attorney-General; but it is
necessary to refer here to ss. 63, 65, 66, 68 and 71 of the
Act. Section 63 lays down, inter alia, that all property of
the nature specified in clauses (a) to (f) of sub-s. (2) of
the section shall be vested in and belong to the
Municipality and shall, together with all other property of
whatever nature or kind which may become vested in the
municipality, be under its direction, management and control
and shall be held and applied by it as trustee, subject to
the provisions and for the purposes of the Act. Clauses (a)
to (f) of subs. (2) of the section relate to immoveable
property and permanent fixtures or works thereon. Section
65, which is more relevant for our purpose, states inter
alia that all moneys received by or on behalf of a munici-
pality, all taxes, fines, penalties etc., all proceeds of
land or other property sold by the municipality and all
rents accruing from its land or property and all interest,
profits and other moneys accruing by gift or transfer from
the Government or private individuals or otherwise, shall
constitute the municipal fund and shall be held and dealt
with in a manner similar to the property specified in a. 63.
Section 66 lays down that the municipal fund and all
property vested in the municipality shall be applied for
purposes of the Act within the limits of the municipal
borough. Section 68 lays down the duties of municipalities,
one of which is the lighting of public streets, places and
buildings. This is an obligatory duty of the municipality.
Section 71 states the discretional functions of the
municipality and one of such functions is the construction,
maintenance, repairs, purchase of any works for the supply
of electrical energy (see el. ql). It is worthy of note
that cl. (q1) was inserted by an amending Act in 1951
(Bombay Act 44 of 1951). A similar amendment was made in
the same year in s. 66 of the Municipal Act and the effect
of the amendment was that the municipality could incur
expenditure to supply electrical energy not only for the use
of the inhabitants of the municipal borough but also for the
benefit of any person or buildings or lands in anyplace
whether such place was or was not within the limits of the
said
42
borough. A scrutiny of these provisions clearly establishes
two propoisition: one is that all municipal property,
including moneys etc. received by way of gift, is vested in
the municipality and shall be held and applied by it as
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trustee subject to the provisions and for the purposes of
the Municipal Act, and it is not open to the municipality to
treat some of its property separately from other property
and divert it for purposes other than those sanctioned by
the Municipal Act; the other proposition is that there are
some obligatory functions which a municipality must perform,
and one of these is the lighting of public streets, places
and buildings; and there are some other functions which the
municipality may at it,% discretion perform either wholly or
partly out of municipal property and fund, and one of these
discretionalfunctions is the supply of electrical energy
which is for the use of the inhabitants of the municipal
borough or for the benefit of any person, buildings or lands
in any place whether such place is or is not within the
limits of the municipal borough.
The question now is whether, having regard to the aforesaid
provisions, it was open to the Municipality to treat its
electricity department, the property thereof and the income
therefrom, separately from other departments and spend a
part of the income for the benefit of the employees of that
department only, treating it as profits of the particular
department and not as part of the entire municipal fund or
property. In our opinion, such a treatment of the income of
one department of the Municipality would be clearly against
the provisions of the Municipal Act. It is pertinent to
refer here to Chapter XI of the Municipal Act dealing with
Municipal Accounts. Under s. 209 a complete account of all
receipts and expenditure of the municipality and a complete
account of the actual and expected receipts and expenditure,
together with a budget estimate of the income and
expenditure of the municipality, have to be prepared for
each year and these have to be prepared and laid before the
municipality on or before a particular date. These budget
estimates have then to be sanctioned at a special
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general meeting of the municipality. Learned counsel for
the respondents stressed two points in this connection. He
pointed out that as a matter of fact the’ Baroda
Municipality kept separate accounts with regard to its
electrical undertaking, including a capital account showing
capital expenditure and capital receipts; separate accounts
were also kept of the reserve fund, depreciation fund,
provident fund etc. It was argued that the maintenance of
these separate accounts showed that the Baroda Municipality
did treat the income of the electricity department
separately from that of other departments, and the
maintenance of such accounts did not contravene any of the
provisions of the Municipal Act. The second point stressed
was that the distinction between the obligatory and
discretional functions of the municipality showed that in
the exercise of discretional functions the municipality
might engage in an undertaking with a profit-making motive.
Learned counsel for the respondents submitted before us that
if there was profit from the ’electricity department was
running an undertaking in exercise of the discretional
functions of the Baroda Municipality, the workmen in that
department would be entitled to bonus as of right. In our
opinion, these submissions are based on a misapprehension of
the true position in law. With regard to the first point,
it is worthy of note that the maintenance of separate
accounts of a particular department by the Municipality does
not alter the nature or quality of the property or income
therefrom. The property or income is still municipal
property within the meaning of ss. 63 and 65 of the
Municipal Act, and it can be utilised only for the purposes
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of the Act as laid down by s. 66. Maintenance of a separate
account for a particular department is in the nature of an
internal accounting arrangement; it does not really alter
the quality or nature of the property or income, and for the
purposes of s. 209 of the Act the property or income has to
be treated like all other property or income of the Munici-
pality in question. In his book on Public Finance, Mr.
Findlay Shirras has pointed out that the classification of
public revenue or income, both of the State and
44
of municipalities, has undergone considerable change in
recent years and non-tax revenue of the State may be sub-
divided into three main classes-(1) developmental revenues
from the public domain and from the public undertakings,
which include not only revenue from the State domain but
also from the municipal domain; (2) administrative and
miscellaneous revenues other than loan revenues; and (3)
loan revenues (see Science of Public Finance by Findlay
Shirras, Vol. I, Book III, Chapter XIII, pages 211-212).
At page 717 (Vol. II, Book III, Chapter XXX), the learned
author has posed the following question with regard to State
or municipal concerns: "An important point in such concerns
is the keeping of strictly commercial accounts. Interest
should be paid on capital. Provision should also be made
for depreciation of machinery and plant, for a pension fund,
rents for land, and income tax in order to arrive at the
true net profit. State concerns sometimes show a surplus,
but the point is how much of this is really profit?" The
learned author has posed the question but given no answer.
We are of opinion that the answer has been very succinctly
put in Dr. Paton’s Accountants’ Handbook (3rd edition, s. 24
dealing with Governmental Accounting, page 1277). Says Dr.
Paterson: " In private business the proprietary or residual
equity usually represents the ownership of individuals-in
the case of the corporation that of the shareholders. In
Government this residual element reflects the equity of the
continuing body of citizens as a group, and in no sense
belongs to particular members of the group ; it is not
represented by capital stock and there are no shares with
specific voting rights and dividend expectations." The legal
position under the Municipal Act is the same. The income of
one department is the income of the municipality as a whole.
and that income is not ’Profit’ in the ordinary commercial
or trading sense of being income derived from capital of
particular individuals or shareholders; it may even be that
the surplus of one department may dwindle into a deficit,
when the entire income of the municipality is taken into
consideration Vis a Vis its entire expenditure. We have
already pointed out that in the
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present case also, the claim of the Municipality was that,
even including the income of its electricity department, the
municipal budget for the relevant year was a deficit one.
With regard to the second submission of; learned counsel for
the respondents, nothing turns upon the distinction between
obligatory and discretional functions of the municipality so
far as the nature or quality of municipal property or
municipal income is concerned. The distinction referred to
above does not entitle the municipality to treat the income
from one department as though it were not part of the whole
income of the Municipality. Moreover, in its true nature or
quality, such income is not profit in the sense in which
that expression has been held to be the basis for the grant
of bonus in the Muir Mills case (supra) though the word "
profits " occurs in s. 65 of the Municipal Act and has been
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loosely used in connection with State or municipal
undertakings.
This brings us to the other question whether the principles
laid down in the Muir Mills case (supra) for the grant of
bonus can be applied in the present case. Learned counsel
for the respondents submitted before us that the gift made
by the State Government of Baroda furnished the necessary
capital for the municipal undertaking in question and as the
reserve fund, depreciation fund etc. had to be kept
separate, there was no difficulty in applying the principles
laid down in that decision to the facts of the present case.
The difficulties however arise in the following way.
Whatever was given by the State Government of Baroda to the
Baroda Municipality became municipal property or municipal
fund under ss. 63 and 65 of-’ the Act and was not capital in
the sense in which a return on paid up or working capital is
to be allowed" for in the matter of the grant of bonus in
accordance with the decision in the Muir Mills case (supra).
Learned counsel referred us to the ordinary dictionary mean-
ing of the word ’capital’ and referred to Webster’s New
International Dictionary (1937 edition, page 397) where one
of the meanings of the word is stated to be " the amount of
property owned by an individual or corporation which is used
for business purposes."
46
He submitted that what was given by the Baroda State
Government was capital within that meaning. In Palgrave’s
Dictionary of Political Economy, Vol. 1 (1925 edition) page
217, it has been stated that there is probably no term in
economics which has given rise to so much controversy as
’capital.’ The word ’capital’ is connected with caput and in
medieval Latin meant the principal sum as distinct from the
interest. Originally, the term was confined to loans of
money. In the natural course of historical development, the
term ’capital’ received a wider meaning and capital came to
be considered primarily as a source of profit and in
ordinary thought capital is considered as wealth which
yields a revenue. Later economic theories introduced many
refinements in the meaning of the Word We are not concerned
with those refinements and it is unnecessary to discuss them
here. For our purpose it is sufficient to state that what
the Baroda Municipality got from the State Government of
Baroda merged in and became municipal property or municipal
fund under the provisions of the Municipal Act and was not
-capital on which a return had to be earned in accordance
with the principles laid down in the Muir Mills case
(supra). In our opinion, it is impossible to apply these
principles in the case of a municipal undertaking of the
nature we have under consideration here. The argument of
learned counsel for the respondents that once it is found
that there was capital and actual profit in the sense of
excess of earnings over outgoings from the undertaking in
question, no distinction can be ,drawn between private
enterprise and municipal enterprise, cannot therefore be
accepted. In the -case ’before us, there was neither
’capital’ nor ’profit’ on which the principles laid down in
Muir Mills case (supra) could operate. We must make it
clear that the question is not merely one of terminology;
that is, whether the more appropriate word to use in connec-
tion with a municipal undertaking is surplus or profit; it
is the nature or quality of the municipal property or fund
which must be determinative of the question at issue, and it
is on that basis that we have,come to the conclusion that in
the present case there were no
47
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profits of one single department of the municipality out of
which the respondents could claim a bonus.
In the course of arguments before us a reference was made to
certain observations contained in a Report of the Committee
on Profit-sharing set up by the Ministry of Industry and
Supply in 1948. With regard to the question how Government
undertakings should be treated for purposes of profit-
sharing, the Committee said: " The answer to this question
is only of academic interest, as there are no Government
undertakings in the industries we have recommended for an
experiment in profit-sharing. On the general question, we
think that those business undertakings of Government, which
aim at making a profit, and which will ordinarily be
organised in the form of corporations, would automatically
come under any law which governs private undertakings of a
similar nature." We do not take those observations as
deciding any question of principle; at best they express an
opinion of the members of the Committee-an opinion which is
expressly confined to undertakings organised in the form of
corporations with the aim of making a profit in the ordinary
trading or business sense. In our opinion, those
observations have no apt application to a municipal
undertaking meant for the purpose of augmenting municipal
revenues in order to meet the municipal service demands and
improve the amenities of the inhabitants of a modern
municipal borough.
We proceed now to consider the second argument of the
learned Attorney-General. This argument depends on the
provisions of s. 58 of the Municipal Act. That section
deals with the rule-making power of the municipality and
proviso (a) lays down that no rule or alteration or
rescission of a rule made shall have effect unless and until
it has been approved by the State Government. Our attention
has been drawn to cls. (c), (f) and (1) of s. 58 which
enable the municipality to make rules relating, inter alia,
to salaries and other allowances of the staff of officers
and servants employed by the municipality; their pensions,
gratuities or compassionate allowances on retirement, and
provident
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fund etc. It was pointed out that under s. 58 the Baroda
Municipality had no power to make rules for the payment of
bonus to its employees, because the word ’ allowances’ did
not include bonus; and even if such rules could be made,
they required the sanction of the State Government under
proviso (a) referred to above. It was further submitted by
the learned Attorney-General that there were no existing
rules with regard to the payment of bonus to a municipal
employee. In view of these provisions the learned Attorney-
General argued that it was not open to a Labour Court or
Tribunal to direct the payment of bonus to a municipal
employee. We cannot accept this argument as correct. The
demand for bonus as an industrial claim is not dealt with by
the Municipal Act; it is dealt with by the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947. Therefore, it is not a relevant
consideration whether there are provisions in the Municipal
Act with regard to payment of bonus. The provisions of the
Municipal Act are relevant only for the purpose of
determining the quality or nature of the municipal property
or fund; those provisions cannot be stretched beyond that
limited purpose for defeating a claim of bonus. We do not
therefore think that the absence of provisions in the
Municipal Act for the payment of bonus to municipal
employees is a consideration which is either determinative
or conclusive of the question at issue before us. If we had
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come to a different conclusion as respects the first
contention of the learned Attorney-General and his third
contention to be referred to presently, the absence of
suitable provisions relating to payment of bonus to
municipal employees in the Municipal Act would not have
stood in the way of our allowing the claim of the
respondents for the payment of bonus.
We now proceed to consider the third and last contention of
the learned Attorney-General. This contention centres round
the question whether one department of the municipality can
be isolated and a distinction made between the employees of
that department and other departments in the matter of the
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payment of bonus. We have already pointed out that under
the Municipal Act a municipality may perform various
functions, some obligatory and some discretional. The
activities may be of a composite nature:’ some of the
departments may be mostly earning departments and some
mostly spending departments.For example, the department
which collects municipal taxes or other municipal revenue,
is essentially an earning department whereas the sanitary
department or other service department is essentially a
spending department. There may indeed be departments where
the earning and spending may almost balance each other. In
spite of these distinctions in the internal arrangement of
departments within a municipality, the property or income of
the municipality remains of the same nature or quality, and
it will be obviously unfair to draw a distinction between
the employees of one department and the employees of another
department for the payment of bonus. The result of such a
distinction will be that the staff of the spending depart-
ments will never be entitled to any bonus at all and instead
of promoting peace and harmony amongst the employees of the
municipality, a distinction like the one suggested by
learned counsel for the respondents will create unrest and
discontent. Learned counsel for the respondents submitted
before us that beyond the fact of single ownership, there
was no other connection between the electricity department
of the Municipality and its other departments. We do not
think that this submission is correct. Under the Municipal
Act the total income and expenditure of the municipality
form one integrated whole; they are both for the purposes of
the Act; and if the workmen of a service or spending
department do not work efficiently with the result that the
expenses on the obligatory functions of the municipality
increase, that inefficiency is bound to affect--even to
dwindle or wipe out-the surplus of an earning department.
For a true appreciation of the financial position of a
municipality, its total income and expenditure must be
considered; we must look at the whole picture, the part
which is in shade as well as the part
7
50
which has caught the light for a correct appraisal of
the picture.
Learned counsel for the respondents referred us to a number
of decisions of Labour Tribunals where a distinction was
made between a parent concern and subsidiary concerns, or
even between different units of the same concern, in the
matter of payment of bonus: Rohit Mills Ltd. v. Sri R. S.
Parmar(1), Mackinnon Mackenzie and Company’s Indian Staff
Organisation v. Mackinnon Mackenzie and Company Ltd. (2),
Ahmedabad Mfg. & Calico Ptg. Co. Ltd. V. Their Workmen
(a), Shaparia Dock and Steel Company v. Their Workers(,) and
Minakshi Mills Ltd. v. Their Workmen Recently, we have had
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occasion to consider this question in Messrs. Burn & Co.,
Calcutta v. Their Employees (6) where we pointed out the
harmful consequences which might arise if an invidious
distinction were made amongst employees of the same
industry. Considering the question with reference to the
facts of the present case, it is clear to us that the
different activities of the Baroda Municipality constituted
one integrated whole and the activities of the different
departments of the Municipality were not distinct or
unconnected activities so as to permit the isolation of one
department from another or of an earning department from a
spending department. From this point of view also, the
claim of bonus was not maintainable.
Some decisions were brought to our notice in which the
question of the payment of bonus to their employees by
Electric Supply Companies, not run as a State or municipal
undertaking, was considered with reference to the provisions
of the Electricity (Supply) Act, 1948, and one of the points
which fell for consideration there was the interpretation of
clause XVII (2) (b) (xi) of Schedule VI of the Electricity
(Supply) Act, 1948. It is not necessary to consider those
decisions in the
(1) [1951] 1 L.L.J 463.
(2) [1955] 1 L.L.J. 154.
(3) [1951] 2 L.L.J. 765.
(4) [1954] 2 L.L.J. 208.
(5) [1953] 2 L.L.J. 520.
(6) C.A. 325 Of 1955, decided on October 11, 1956.
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present case, because they have no bearing on the questions
which we have to consider in this case.
For the reasons given above, we hold that the Industrial
Tribunal came to the correct decision that the respondents
employed in the electricity department of the Baroda
Municipality were not entitled to the bonus claimed, and the
Labour Appellate Tribunal came to an erroneous decision on
that question in its order dated November 23, 1955. We
accordingly allow the appeal and set aside the order of the
Labour Appellate Tribunal. In the circumstances of this
case, we direct that the parties will bear their own costs
throughout.
Appeal allowed.