Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 897 of 2002
PETITIONER:
State of U.P.
RESPONDENT:
Jai Bir Singh
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/05/2005
BENCH:
N. Santosh Hegde & K.G. Balakrishnan & D.M. Dharmadhikari & Arun Kumar &
B.N. Srikrishna
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
Dharmadhikari, J.
This present Appeal along with other connected cases has been listed before
this Constitution Bench of five judges on a reference made by a Bench of
three Honourable judges of this Court finding an apparent conflict between
the decisions of two Benches of this Court in the cases of Chief
Conservator of Forests v. Jagannath Maruti Kondhare, [1996] 2 SCC 293 of
three judges and State of Gujarat v. Pratamsingh Narsinh Parmar, [2001] 9
SCC 713 of two judges.
On the question of whether ‘social forestry’ department of State, which is
a welfare scheme undertaken for improvement of the environment, would be
covered by the definition of ‘‘Industry’’ under S. 2(j) of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947, the aforesaid Benches (supra) of this Court culled out
differently the ratio of the seven judges’ Bench decision of this Court in
the case of Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board v. A. Rajappa, [1978]
2 SCC 213 (shortly hereinafter referred to as the Bangalore Water case).
The Bench of three judges in the case of Chief Conservator of Forests v.
Jagannath Maruti Kondhare, (supra) based on the decision of Bangalore Water
case came to the conclusion that ‘Social Forestry Department’ is covered by
the definition of ‘industry’ whereas the two judges Bench decision in State
of Gujarat v. Pratamsingh Narsinh Parmar, (supra) took a different view.
As the cleavage of opinion between the two Benches of this Court seems to
have been on the basis of seven judges’ Bench decision of this Court in the
case of Bangalore Water, the present case along with the other connected
cases, in which correctness of the decision in the case of Bangalore Water
is doubted, has been placed before this Bench.
Various decisions rendered by this Court prior to and after the decision in
Bangalore Water, (supra) on interpretation of the definition of the word
‘industry’ under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 have been cited before
us. It has been strenuously urged on behalf of the employers that the
expansive meaning given to the word ‘industry’ with certain specified
exceptions carved out in the judgment of Bangalore Water, (supra) is not
warranted by the language used in the definition clause. It is urged that
the Government and its Departments while exercising its ‘sovereign
functions’ have been excluded from the definition of ‘industry’. On the
question of ‘what is sovereign function’, there is no unanimity in the
different opinions expressed by the judges in the Bangalore Water case. It
is submitted that in a constitutional democracy where sovereignty vests in
the people, all welfare activities undertaken by the State in discharge of
its obligation under the Directive Principles of State Policy contained in
Part IV of the Constitution are ‘sovereign functions’. To restrict the
meaning of ‘sovereign functions’ to only specified categories of so called
‘inalienable functions’ like Law and Order, Legislation, Judiciary,
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Administration and the like is uncalled for. It is submitted that the
definition of ‘industry’ given in the Act is, no doubt, wide but not so
wide as to hold it to include in it all kinds of ‘systematic organized
activities’ undertaken by the State and even individuals engaged in
professions and philanthropic activities.
On behalf of the employers, it is also pointed out that there is no
unanimity in the opinions expressed by the judges in the Bangalore Water
case on the ambit of the definition of ‘industry’ given in the Act.
Pursuant to the observations made by the judges in their different opinions
in the judgment of Bangalore Water, (supra), the legislature responded and
amended the Act by Industrial Disputes (Amendment) Act 1982. In the amended
definition, certain specified types of activities have been taken out of
the purview of the word ‘industry’. The Act stands amended but the amended
provision redefining the word ‘industry’ has not been brought into force
because notification to bring those provisions into effect has not been
issued in accordance with sub-section (2) of Section 1 of the Amendment
Act. The amended definition thus remains on the statute unenforced for a
period now of more than 23 years.
On behalf of the employers, it is pointed out that all other provisions of
the Amendment Act of 1982, which introduced amendments in various other
provisions of the Industrial Disputes Act have been brought into force by
issuance of a Notification, but the Amendment Act to the extent of its
substituted definition of ‘industry’ with specified categories of
industries taken out of its purview, has not been brought into force. Such
a piecemeal implementation to the Amendment Act, it is submitted, is not
contemplated by sub-section (2) of Section 1 of the Amendment Act. The
submission made is that if in response to the opinions expressed by the
seven judges in Bangalore Water, case (supra), the legislature intervened
and provided a new definition of the word ‘industry’ with exclusion of
certain public utility services and welfare activities, the unamended
definition should be construed and understood with the aid of the amended
definition, which although not brought into force is nonetheless part of
the statute.
On behalf of the employees, learned counsel vehemently urged that the
decision in the case of Bangalore Water, (supra) being in the field as
binding precedent for more than 23 years and having been worked to the
complete satisfaction of all in the industrial field, on the principle of
stare decisis, this Court should refrain from making a reference to a
larger Bench for its reconsideration. It is strenuously urged that
upsetting the law settled by Bangalore Water is neither expedient nor
desirable.
It is pointed out that earlier an attempt was made to seek enforcement of
the amended Act through this Court [see: Aeltemesh Rein v. Union of India,
[1988] 4 SCC 54]. The Union came forward with an explanation that for
employees of the categories of industries excluded under the amended
definition, no alternative machinery for redressal of their service
disputes, has been provided by law and therefore, the amended definition
was not brought into force.
We have heard the learned counsel appearing on behalf of the employers and
on the other side on behalf of the employees at great length. With their
assistance, we have surveyed critically all the decisions rendered so far
by this Court on the interpretation of the definition of ‘industry’
contained in Section 2(j) of the Act. We begin with a close examination of
the decision in the case of Bangalore Water for considering whether a
reference to a larger Bench for reconsideration of that decision is
required.
Justice Krishna Iyer who delivered the main opinion on his own behalf and
on behalf of Bhagwati and Desai JJ in his inimitable style has construed
the various expressions used in the definition of ‘industry’. After
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critically examining the previous decisions, he has recorded his
conclusions thus:
‘‘So we proceed to formulate the principles, deducible from our discussion,
which are decisive, positively and negatively, of the identity of
‘industry’ under the Act. We speak, not exhaustively, but to the extent,
covered by the debate at the bar and, to that extent, authoritatively,
until overruled by a larger Bench or superseded by the legislative branch.
140. ‘Industry’, as defined in Section 2(j) and explained in Banerji,
(supra), has a wide import.
(a) Where (i) systematic activity, (ii) organized by co-operation between
employer and employee (the direct and substantial element is chimerical)
(iii) for the production and/or distribution of goods and services
calculated to satisfy human wants and wishes (not spiritual or religious
but inclusive of material things or services geared to celestial bliss i.e.
making, on a large scale or prasad or food), prima facie, there is an
‘industry’ in that enterprise.
(b) Absence of profit motive or gainful objective is irrelevant, be the
venture in the public, joint, private or other sector.
(c) The true focus is functional and the decisive test is the nature of the
activity with special emphasis on employer-employee relations.
(d) If the organization is a trade or business it does not cease to be one
because of philanthropy animating the undertaking.
II
141. Although Section 2(j) uses words of the widest amplitude in its two
limbs, their meaning cannot be magnified to over reach itself.
(a) ‘Undertaking’ must suffer a contextual and associational shrinkage as
explained in Banerji (supra) and in this judgment; so also, service,
calling and the like. This yields the inference that all organized activity
possessing the triple elements in I (supra), although not trade or
business, may still be ‘industry’ provided the nature of the activity, viz.
the employer-employee basis, bears resemblance to what we find in trade or
business. This takes into the fold of ‘industry’ undertakings, callings and
services, adventures ‘analogous to the carrying on of trade or business’.
All features, other than the methodology of carrying on the activity viz.
in organizing the co-operation between employer and employee may be
dissimilar. It does not matter, if on the employment terms there is
analogy.
III
142. Application of these guidelines should not stop short of their logical
reach by invocation of creeds, cults or inner sense of incongruity or outer
sense of motivation for or resultant of the economic operations. The
ideology of the Act being industrial peace, regulation and resolution of
industrial disputes between employer and workman, the range of this
statutory ideology must inform the reach or the statutory definition.
Nothing less, nothing more.
(a) The consequences are (i) professions, (ii) clubs, (iii) educational
institutions, (iv) co-operative, (v) research institutes (vi) charitable
projects and (vii) other kindred adventure, if they fulfil the triple tests
listed in I (supra), cannot be exempted from the scope of Section 2(j).
(b) A restricted category of professions, clubs, co-operative and even
gurukulas and title research labs, may qualify for exemption if, in imple
ventures, substantially and, going by the dominant nature criterion,
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substantively, no employees are entertained but in minimal matters,
marginal employees are hired without destroying the non-employee character
of the unit.
(c) If, in a pious or altruistic mission many employ themselves, free or
for small honoraria or like return, mainly drawn by sharing in the purpose
or cause, such as lawyers volunteering to run a free legal services clinic
or doctors serving in their spare hours in a free medical centre or
ashramites working at the bidding of the holiness, divinity or like central
personality, and the services are supplied free or at nominal cost and
those who serve are not engaged for remuneration or on the basis of master
and servant relationship, then, the institution is not an industry even if
stray servants, manual or technical, are hired. Such eleemosynary or like
undertaking alone are exempt - not other generosity, compassion,
developmental passion or project.
IV
143. The dominant nature test:
(a) Where a complex of activities, some of which qualify for exemption,
others not, involves employees on the total undertaking, some of whom are
not ‘workmen’ as in the University of Delhi case (supra) or some
departments are not productive of goods and services if isolated, even
then, the predominant nature of the services and the integrated nature of
the departments as explained in the Corporation of Nagpur (supra), will be
the true test. The whole undertaking will be ‘industry’ although those who
are not ‘workmen’ by definition may not benefit by the status.
(b) Notwithstanding the previous clauses, sovereign functions, strictly
understood, (alone) qualify for exemption, not the welfare activities or
economic adventures undertaken by government or statutory bodies.
(c) Even in departments discharging sovereign functions, if there are units
which are industries and they are substantially severable, then they can be
considered to come within Section 2(j).
(d) Constitutional and competently enacted legislative provisions may well
remove from the scope of the Act categories which otherwise may be covered
thereby.
V
144. We overrule Safdarjung, (supra), Solicitors’, case (supra), Gymkhana,
(supra), Delhi University, (supra), Dhanrajgirji Hospital, (supra) and
other ruling whose ratio runs counter to the principles enunciated above,
and Hospital Mazdoor Sabha, (supra) is hereby rehabilitated.’’
[Underlining for emphasis]
What is to be noted is that the opinion of Krishna Iyer J on his own behalf
and on behalf of Bhagwati and Desai JJ was only generally agreed to by Beg
CJ who delivered a separate opinion with his own approach on interpretation
of the definition of the word ‘industry’. He agreed with the conclusion
that Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board is an ‘industry’ and its
appeal should be dismissed but he made it clear that since the judgment was
being delivered on his last working day which was a day before the day he
was to retire, he did not have enough time to go into a discussion of the
various judgments cited, particularly on the nature of sovereign functions
of the State and whether the activities in discharge of those functions
would be covered in the definition of ‘industry’. What he stated reads
thus:
‘‘165. I have contended myself with a very brief and hurried outline of my
line of thinking partly because I am in agreement with the conclusions of
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my learned brother Krishna Iyer and I also endorse his reasoning almost
wholly, but even more because the opinion I have dictated just now must be
given today if I have to deliver it at all. From tomorrow I cease to have
any authority as a Judge to deliver it. Therefore, I have really no time to
discuss the large number of cases cited before us, including those an what
are known as ‘‘sovereign’’ functions’.
Beg CJ clearly seems to have dissented from the opinion of his other three
brethren on excluding only certain State - run industries from the purview
of the Act. According to him, that is a matter purely of legislation and
not of interpretation. See his observations contained in paragraph 163:
‘‘163. I would also like to make a few observations about the so-called
‘‘sovereign’’ functions which have been placed outside the field of
industry. I do not feel happy about the use of the term ‘‘sovereign’’ here.
I think that the term ‘sovereign’ should be reserved, technically and more
correctly, for the sphere of ultimate decisions. Sovereignty operates on a
sovereign plane of its own as I suggested in Keshavananda Bharati’s case
supported by a quotation from Earnest Barker’s Social and Political Theory.
Again, the term ‘‘Regal’’, from which the term ‘‘sovereign’’ functions
appears to be derived, seems to be a misfit in a Republic where the citizen
shares the political sovereignty in which he has even a legal share,
however small, inasmuch as he exercises the right to vote. What is meant by
the use of the term ‘‘sovereign’’, in relation to the activities of the
State, is more accurately brought out by using the term ‘‘governmental’’
functions although there are difficulties here also inasmuch as the
Government has entered largely new fields of industry. Therefore, only
those services which are governed by separate rules and constitutional
provisions, such as Articles 310 and 311 should, strictly speaking, be
excluded from the sphere of industry by necessary implication.’’
[Emphasis supplied]
Since Beg CJ was to retire on 22.2.1978, the Bench delivered the judgment
on 21.2.1978 with its conclusion that the appeal should be dismissed. The
above conclusion was unanimous but the three Hon. Judges namely Chandrachud
J on behalf of himself and Jaswant Singh J. speaking for himself and
Tulzapurkar JJ., on the day the judgment was delivered i.e. as on
21.2.1978, had not prepared their separate opinions. They only declared
that they would deliver their separate opinions later. This is clear from
paragraph 170 of the judgment which reads thus:
‘‘We are in respectful agreement with the view expressed by Krishna Iyer,
J. In his critical judgment that the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage
Board appeal should be dismissed. We will give our reasons later indicating
the area of concurrence and divergence, if any, on the various points in
controversy on which our learned Brother has dwelt’’.
On the retirement of Beg CJ, Chandrachud J., took over as the CJ and he
delivered his separate opinion on 7.4.1978 which was obviously neither seen
by Beg CJ nor dealt with by the other three judges: Krishna Iyer, Bhagwati
and Desai JJ. As can be seen from the contents of the separate opinion
subsequently delivered by Chandrachud CJ, (as he then was), he did not
fully agree with the opinion of Krishna Iyer J. that the definition of
‘industry’ although of wide amplitude can be restricted to take out of its
purview certain sovereign functions of the State limited to its
‘inalienable functions’ and other activities which are essentially for self
and spiritual attainments. Chandrachud J. seems to have projected a view
that all kinds of organized activities giving rise to employer and employee
relationship are covered by the wide definition of ‘industry’ and its scope
cannot be restricted by identifying and including certain types of
industries and leaving some other types impliedly outside its purview.
A separate opinion was delivered much later by Jaswant Singh J. for himself
and Tulzapurkar J., after they had gone through the separate opinion given
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by Chandrachud CJ (as he then was). The opinion of Jaswant Singh for
himself and Tulzapurkar J. is clearly a dissenting opinion in which it is
said that they are not agreeable with categories 2 and 3 of the Charities
excluded by Brother Krishna Iyer J.
In the dissenting opinion of the two judges, the definition covers only
such activities ‘systematically and habitually carried on commercial lines
for production of goods or for rendering material services to the
community.’ The dissenting opinion is on the lines of the opinion of
Gajendragadkar J. in the case of State of Bombay v. Hospital Mazdoor Sabha,
AIR (1960) SC 866 where it was observed that although the definition in the
Act is very wide, ‘a line has to be drawn in a fair and just manner’ to
exclude some callings of services or undertakings which do not fit in with
the provisions of the Act. We may quote from the dissenting opinion of
Jaswant Singh J. (for himself and for Tulzapurkar J.):
‘‘However, bearing in mind the collocation of the terms in which the
definition is couched and applying the doctrine of noscitur-a-sociis (which
as pointed out by this Court in State of Bombay v. The Hospital Mazdoor
Sabha, means that, when two or more words which are susceptible of
analogous meaning are coupled together they are understood to be used in
their cognate sense. They take as it were their colour from each other,
that is, the more general is restricted to a sense analogous to a less
general. Expressed differently, it means that the meaning of a doubtful
word may be ascertained by reference to the meaning of words associated
with it), we are of the view that despite the width of the definition it
could not be the intention of the Legislature that categories 2 and 3 of
the charities alluded to by our learned brother Krishna Iyer in his
judgment, hospitals run on charitable basis or as a part of the functions
of the Government or local bodies like municipalities and educational and
research institutions whether run by private entities or by Government and
liberal and learned professions like that of doctors, lawyers and teachers,
the pursuit of which is dependent upon an individual’s own education,
intellectual attainments and special expertise should fall within the pale
of the definition. We are inclined to think that the definition is limited
to those activities systematically or habitually undertaken on commercial
lines by private enterpreneurs with the cooperation of employees for the
production or distribution of goods or for the rendering of material
services to the community at large or a part of such community. It is
needless to emphasize that in the case of liberal professions, the
contribution of the usual type of employees employed by the professions to
be value of the end product (viz. advice and services rendered to the
client) is so marginal that the end product cannot be regarded, as the
fruit of the cooperation between the professional and his employees.’’
The judges delivered different opinions in the case of Bangalore Water,
(supra) at different points of time and in some cases without going through
or having an opportunity of going through the opinions of other judges.
They have themselves recorded that the definition clause in the Act is so
wide and vague that it is not susceptible to a very definite and precise
meaning. In the opinions of all of them it is suggested that to avoid
reference of the vexed question of interpretation to larger Benches of the
Supreme Court it would be better that the legislative intervenes and
clarifies the legal position by simply amending the definition of
‘industry’. The legislature did respond by amending the definition of
‘industry’ but unfortunately 23 years were not enough for the legislature
to provide Alternative Disputes Resolution Forums to the employees of
specifies categories of industries excluded from the amended definition.
The legal position thus continues to be unclear and to a large extent
uncovered by the decision of Bangalore Water case as well.
Krishna Iyer J. himself, who delivered the main judgment in the Bangalore
Water case, at various places in his opinion expressed that the attempt
made by the Court to impart definite meaning to the words in the wide
definition of ‘industry’ is only a workable solution until a more precise
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definition is provided by the legislature. See the following observations:
‘‘Our judgment here has no pontifical flavour but seeks to serve the future
hour till changes in the law or in industrial culture occur.
3. Law, especially industrial law, which regulates the rights and remedies
of the working class, unfamiliar with the sophistications of definitions
and shower of decisions, unable to secure expert legal opinion, what with
poverty pricing them out to the justice market and denying them the staying
power to withstand the multi-decked litigative process, de facto denies
social justice if legal drafting is vagarious, definitions indefinite and
Court rulings contradictory. Is it possible, that the legislative chambers
are too pre-occupied with other pressing business to listen to Court
signals calling for clarification ambiguous clauses? A careful, prompt
amendment of Section 2(j) would have pre-empted this docket explosion
before tribunals and Courts. This Court, perhaps more than the legislative
and Executive branches, is deeply concerned with law’s delays and to devise
a prompt delivery system of social justice.’’
[Emphasis added]
It is to be noted further that in the order of reference made to the seven
judges’ Bench in the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board Case, the
judges referring the case had stated thus:
‘‘... the chance to confusion from the crop of case in an area where the
common man has to understand and apply the law makes it desirable that
there should be a comprehensive, clear and conclusive declaration as to
what is an industry under the Industrial Disputes Act as it now stands.
Therefore, we think it necessary to place this case before the learned
Chief Justice for consideration by a larger Bench. If in the meantime the
Parliament does not act, this Court may have to illumine the twilight area
of law and help the industrial community carry on smoothly.’’
[Emphasis supplied]
In the separate opinion of other Hon. Judges in Bangalore Water case,
similar observations have been made by this Court to give some precision to
the very wide definition of ‘industry’. It was an exercise done with the
hope of a suitable legislative change on the subject which all the judges
felt was most imminent and highly desirable. See the following concluding
remarks:-
‘‘ We conclude with diffidence because Parliament, which has the commitment
to the political nation to legislate promptly in vital areas like Industry
and Trade and articulate the welfare expectations in the ‘conscience’
portion of the Constitution, has hardly intervened to re-structure the
rather clumsy, vaporous and tall-and-dwarf definition or tidy up the scheme
although judicial thesis and anti-thesis, disclosed in the two-decades-long
decisions, should have produced a legislative synthesis becoming of a
welfare state and socialistic society, in a world setting where I.L.O.
norms are advancing and India needs updating.’’
The separate opinion of Beg J. has the same refrain and he also observes
that the question can be solved only by more satisfactory legislation.
Chandrachud CJ (as he then was) in his separate opinion delivered on
7.4.1978 concurred partly but went a step further in expanding the
definition of ‘industry’. He has felt the necessity for legislative
intervention at the earliest and has observed thus:-
‘‘But having thus expressed its opinion in a language which left no doubt
as to its meaning, the Court went on to observe that though Section 2(j)
used words of a very wide denotation, ‘‘it is clear’’ that a line would
have to be drawn in a fair and just manner so as to exclude some callings,
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services or undertakings from the scope of the definition. This was
considered necessary because if all the words used in the definition were
given their widest meaning, all services and all callings would come within
the purview of the definition including services rendered by a person in a
purely personal or domestic capacity or in a casual manner. The Court then
undertook for examination what it euphemistically called ‘‘a somewhat
difficult’’ problem to decide and it proceeded to draw a line in order to
ascertain what limitations could and should be reasonably implied in
interpreting the wide words used in Section 2(j). I consider, with great
respect, that the problem is far too policy-oriented to be satisfactorily
settled by judicial decisions. The Parliament must step in and legislate in
a manner which will leave no doubt as to its intention. That alone can
afford a satisfactory solution to the question which has agitated and
perplexed the judiciary at all levels.’’
[Emphasis added]
The dissenting opinion of Justice Jaswant Singh for himself and Tulzapurkar
J. concludes with the following observations:
‘‘In view of the difficulty experienced by all of us in defining the true
denotation of the term ‘industry’ and divergence of opinion in regard
thereto - as has been the case with this Bench also - we think, it is high
time that the Legislature steps in with a comprehensive bill to clear up
the fog and remove the doubts and set at rest once for all the controversy
which crops up from time to time in relation to the meaning of the
aforesaid constituted which are driven to the necessity of evolving a
working formula to cover particular cases.’’
[Emphasis added]
The above observations contained in the dissenting view of Jaswant Singh J.
have proved prophetic. The legislature has intervened and amended the
definition of ‘industry’ in 1982 but for more than 23 years the amended
provision not having been brought into force, the unamended definition with
the same vagueness and lack of precision continues to confuse the courts
and the parties. The inaction of the legislative and executive branches has
made it necessary for the judiciary to reconsider the subject over and over
again in the light of the experience of the working of the provisions on
the basis of the interpretation in the Judgment of Bangalore Water case
rendered as far back as in the year 1978.
In the case of Coir Board v. Indira Devi, [1988] 3 SCC 259, a two judges’
Bench of this Court speaking through Sujata V. Manohar J. surveyed all
previous decisions of this Court including the seven judges Bench decision
in Bangalore Water, (supra) and passed an order of reference to the Chief
Justice for constituting a larger Bench of more than seven judges if
necessary. See the following part of that order:-
‘‘Since the difficulty has arisen because of the judicial interpretation
given to the definition of ‘industry’ in the Industrial Disputes Act, there
is no reason why the matter should not be judicially re-examined. In the
present case, the function of the Coir Board is to promote coir industry,
open markets for it and provide facilities to make the coir industry’s
products more marketable. It is not set up to run any industry itself.
Looking to the predominant purpose for which it is set up we would not call
it an industry. However, if one were to apply the tests laid down by
Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board case it is an organization where
there are employers and employees. The organization does some useful work
for the benefit of others. Therefore, it will have to be called an industry
under the Industrial Disputes Act.
We do no think that such a sweeping tests was contemplated by the
Industrial Disputes Act, nor do we think that every organization which does
useful service and employs people can be labelled as industry. We,
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therefore, direct that the matter be placed before the Hon. Chief Justice
of India to consider whether a larger Bench should be constituted to
reconsider the decision of this Court in Bangalore Water Supply and
Sewerage Board.’’
When the matter was listed before a three judge Bench, in the case of Coir
Board v. Indira Devi, [2000] 1 SCC 224 the request for constituting a
larger Bench for reconsideration of the judgment in the Bangalore Water
case was refused both on the ground that the Industrial Disputes Act has
undergone an amendment and that the matter does not deserve to be referred
to a larger Bench as the decision of seven judges in Bangalore Water case
is binding on Benches of this Court of less than seven judges. The order
refusing reference of the seven judges Bench decision by the three judge
Bench in Coir Board, Ernakulam v. Indira Devi P.S., [2000] 1 SCC 224 reads
thus:
‘‘1. We have considered the order made in Civil Appeal Nos. 1720-21 of
1990. The Judgment in Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board v. A.
Rajappa and Ors., delivered almost two decades ago and the law has since
been amended pursuant to that judgment though the date of enforcement of
the amendment has not been notified.
2. The judgment delivered by seven learned Judges of this Court in
Bangalore Water Supply case does not, in our opinion, require any
reconsideration on a reference being made by a two Judge Bench of this
Court, which is bound by the judgment of the larger Bench.
3. The appeals, shall, therefore, be listed before the appropriate Bench
for further proceedings.’’
Thus, the reference sought by the two judges to a larger Bench of more than
seven judges was declined by the three judge Bench. As has been held by
this Court subsequently in the case of Central Board of Dawoodi Bohra
Community v. State of Maharashtra, [2005] 2 SCC 673, it was open to the
Chief Justice on a reference made by two Hon. Judges of this Court, to
constitute a Bench of more than seven judges for reconsideration of the
decision in the Bangalore Water case (supra).
In any case, no such inhibition limits the power of this Bench of five
judges which has been constituted on a reference made due to apparent
conflict between judgments of two benches of this Court. As has been stated
by us above, the decision of Bangalore Water is not a unanimous decision.
Of the five Judges who constituted majority, three have given a common
opinion but tow others have given separate opinions projecting a view
partly different from the views expressed in the opinion to see the
opinions delivered by the other judges subsequent to his retirement.
Krishna Iyer J., and the two judges who spoke through him did not have the
benefit of the dissenting opinion of the other two judges and the esparto,
partly dissenting opinion of Chandrachud J. as those opinions were prepared
and delivered subsequent to the delivery of the judgment in the Bangalore
Water case.
In such a situation, it is difficult to ascertain whether the opinion of
Krishna Iyer J. given on his own behalf and on behalf of Bhagwati and Desai
JJ., can be held to be an authoritative precedent which would require no
reconsideration even though the judges themselves expressed the view that
the exercise of interpretation done by each one of them was tentative and
was only a temporary exercise till the legislature stepped in. The
legislature subsequently amended the definition of the word ‘industry’ but
due to the lack of will both on the part of the Legislature and the
Executive, the amended definition, for a long period of 23 years, has
remained dormant.
Sri Andhyarujina, learned Senior Counsel appearing for M/s National Remote
Sensing Agency, which is an agency constructed by the Government in
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discharge of it sovereign functions dealing with Defence, Research, Atomic
Energy and Space falling in the excluded category in Clause (6) of the
amended definition of ‘industry’ in Section 2(j), relies on the following
decisions in support of his submission that where the unamended definition
in the Act is ambigious and has been interpreted by the court not
exhaustively but tentatively until the law is amended, the amendment
actually brought into the statute can be looked at for construction of the
unamended provisions. K. Brandy v. England Revenue Commissioner, (1921) 2
Kings Bench 403 followed in Yogender Nath Naskar v. CIT, [1969] 3 SCR 742
referred to and relied in Kajri Lal Agarwal v. UOI, AIR (1966) SC 1538-41;
State of Bihar v. SK Roy, AIR (1966) SC 1995 at 1998 (para 6) and Thiru
Manickam and Co. v. State of Tamilnadu, AIR (1977) SC 518 at para 10.
Shri Andhiyarujina further argues that by the Industrial Disputes Amendment
Act of 1982, not only was the definition of ‘industry’ as provided in the
clause amended but various other provisions of the principal Act were also
amended. Sub-section (2) of Section 1 of the Amendment Act states that the
Act ‘‘shall come into force on such date as the Central Government may, by
notification in the Gazette appoints.’’ It is submitted that either the
whole of the Act should have been notified for enforcement or not at all.
The Amendment Act does not contemplate a situation where the Central
Government may notify only some of the provisions of the Amendment Act for
enforcement and withhold from enforcement other provisions of the Amendment
Act. It is argued that such piecemeal enforcement of the Act is not
permissible by sub-section (2) of Section 1 of the Amendment Act. Statutory
Interpretation, 3rd Edition of FAB Bennian is relied on in support of the
submission that when the Amendment Act mandates the Central Government to
issue a notification specifying the date on which the provisions of the Act
should be brought into force, such enabling provision implies that the
enforcement of the Act has to be done within a reasonable time. Failure to
enforce the Act for a period of more than 23 years is an unconstitutional
attempt by the Executive Branch of the State to frustrate the clear
intention of the legislature. Reliance has been placed by Senior Advocate,
Shri Andhiyarujina, on the Court of Appeal decision in Regina v. Secretary
of State for the Home Department, (1995) 2 weekly Law Reports page 2 which
was upheld by the House of Lords in the decision reported in the same
volume at page 464. It was held in that case thus:
‘‘Having regard to the overriding legislative role of Parliament, the
enacted provisions represented a detailed scheme approved by the
legislature which until repealed stood as an enduring statement of its
will; that while the provisions remained unrepealed it was not open to the
Secretary of State to introduce a radically different scheme under his
prerogative powers; and that, accordingly, in purporting to implement the
tariff scheme, he had acted unlawfully and in abuse of those powers.’’
The House of Lords in approving the decision of Court of Appeal held:
‘‘That section 171(1) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 imposed a continuing
obligation on the Secretory of Sate to consider whether to bring the
statutory scheme in sections 108 to 117 into force; that he could not
lawfully bind himself not to exercise the discretion conferred on him; that
the tariff scheme was inconsistent with the statutory scheme; and that,
accordingly, the Secretary of State’s decision not to bring sections 108 to
117 into force and to introduce the tariff scheme in their place had been
unlawful.’’
Senior Advocates Ms. Indira Jaising and Mr. Colin Gonsalves, Counsel
appearing for the employees, very vehemently oppose the prayer made on
behalf of the employers for referring the matter to a larger Bench for
reconsideration of the decision in the Bangalore Water case. It is
submitted that even though the definition in the Industrial Disputes Act
has been amended in 1982, it has not been brought into force for more than
23 years and the reasons disclosed to the Court, when the enforcement of
the Amendment Act was sought in the case of Altemesh Rein v. Union of
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India, [1988] 4 SCC 54, is a sound justification. The stand of the union of
India was that for the category of industries excluded in the amended
definition no alternative Industrial Disputes Resolution forums could be
created. For the aforesaid reason, the Central Government did not enforce
the provisions of the Amendment Act which provided a new and restrictive
definition of ‘industry’. Learned counsel on behalf of the employees relied
on A.K. Roy v. Union of India, [1982] 1 SCC 271 in support of their
submissions that it is not open to the Court to issue a mandamus to the
Government to bring into force the provisions of an Act. It is submitted
that it is the prerogative of the Government in accordance with the
provisions of Sections (1) and (2) of the Amendment Act to enforce the
provisions of the Act when it finds that there are conditions suitable to
take out of the purview of the definition of ‘industry’ certain categories
of ‘industries’ in which the employees have been provided separate forums
for redressal of their industrial disputes.
For the purpose of these cases, we need not go into the aforesaid side-
issue because neither is there any substantive petition nor has a prayer
been made in any of the cases before us seeking issuance of mandamus to the
Government to publish notification in the Official Gazette for enforcement
of the amended definition of ‘industry’ as provided in the Amendment Act of
1982. The only question before us is as to whether the amended definition,
which is now undoubtedly a part of the statute, although not enforced, is a
relevant piece of subsequent legislation which can be taken aid of to
amplify or restrict the ambit of the definition of ‘industry’ in Section
2(j) of the act as it stands in its original form.
On behalf of the employees, it is submitted that pursuant to the decision
in Bangalore Water case, although the legislature responded by amending the
definition of ‘industry’ to exclude certain specified categories of
industries from the purview of the Act, employees of the excluded
categories of industries could not be provided with alternative forums for
redressal of their grievances. The unamended definition of industry, as
interpreted by the Bangalore Water case, has been the settled law of the
land in the industrial field. The settled legal position, it is urged, has
operated well and no better enunciation of scope and effect of the
‘definition’ could be made either by the legislature or by the Indian
Labour Organization in its report.
After hearing learned counsel for the contesting parties, we find there are
compelling reasons more than on before us for making a reference on the
interpretation of definition of ‘industry’ in section 2(j) of the Act, to a
larger Bench and for reconsideration by it, if necessary, the decision
rendered in the case of Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board. The
larger Bench will have to necessarily go into all legal questions in all
dimensions and depth. We briefly indicate why we find justification for a
reference although it is stiffly opposed on behalf of the employees.
In the judgement of Bangalore Water, Krishna Iyer J. speaking for himself
and on behalf of the other two Hon’ble judges agreeing with him proceeded
to deal with the interpretation of the definition of ‘Industry’ on a legal
premise stating thus:- ‘a worker-oriented statute must receive a
construction where conceptual keynote thought must be the worker and the
community, as the Constitution has shown concern for them inter alia in
Articles 38, 39 and 43’.
With utmost respect, the statute under consideration cannot be looked at
only as a worker-oriented statute. The main aim of the statute as is
evident from its preamble and various provisions contained therein, is to
regulate and harmonize relationships between employers and employees for
maintaining industrial peace and social harmony. The definition clause read
with other provisions of the Act under consideration deserves
interpretation keeping in view interests of the employers, who has put his
capital and expertise into the industry and the workers who by their labour
equally contribute to the growth of the industry. The Act under
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consideration has a historical background of industrial revolution inspired
by the philosophy of Karl Marx. It is a piece of social legislation.
Opposed to the traditional industrial culture of open competition or
laissez faire, the present structure of industrial law is an outcome of
long term agitation and struggle of the working class for participation on
equal footing with the employers in industries for its growth and profits.
In interpreting, therefore, the industrial law, which aims at promoting
social justice, interests both of employers and in a democratic society,
people, who are the ultimate beneficiaries of the industrial activities,
have to be kept in view.
Ms. Indira Jaising fervently appealed that in interpreting industrial law,
in India which is obliged by the Constitution to uphold democratic values,
as has been said in some other judgement by Krishna Iyer J., ‘the Court
should be guided not by ‘Maxwell’ but ‘Gandhi’ who advocated protection of
the interest of the weaker sections of the society as the prime concern in
democratic society. In the legal field, the Court has always derived
guidance from the immortal saying of the great judge Oliver W. Holmes that
‘the life of law has never been logic, it has been experience.’ The spirit
of law is not to be searched in any ideology or philosophy which might have
inspired it but it may be found in the experience of the people who made
and put it into practice.
In the case of Coir Board Ernakulam Kerala State and Anr. (Supra) Sujata V.
Manohar J., speaking for the Bench while passing an order of reference to
the larger Bench for reconsideration of the judgment of Bangalore Water
Supply and Sewerage Board, (supra) has observed thus:-
‘‘Looking to the uncertainty prevailing in this area and in the light of
the experience of the last two decades in applying the test laid down in
the case of Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board (supra), it is
necessary that the decision in Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board
case is re-examined. The experience of the last two decades does not appear
to be entirely happy. Instead of leading to industrial peace and welfare of
the community (which was the avowed purpose of artificially extending the
definition of industry), the application of the Industrial Disputes Act to
organizations which were, quite possibly, not intended to be so covered by
the machinery set up under the Industrial Disputes Act, might have done
more damage than good, not merely to the organizations but also to
employees by the curtailment of employment opportunities.’’
The above quoted observations were criticized on behalf of the employees
stating that for making them, there was no material before the Court. We
think that the observations of the learned Judges are not without
foundation. The experience of judges in the Apex Court is not derived from
the case in which the observations were made. The experience was from the
cases regularly coming to this Court through the labour courts. It is
experienced by all dealing in industrial law that over-emphasis on the
rights of the workers and undue curtailment of the rights of the employers
to organize their business, through employment and non-employment, have
given rise to large number of industrial and labour claims resulting in
awards granting huge amounts of back wages for past years, allegedly as
legitimate dues of the workers, who are found to have been illegally
terminated or retrenched. Industrial awards granting heavy packages of back
wages, sometimes result in taking away the very substratum of the industry.
Such burdensome awards in many cases compel the employer having moderate
assets to close down industrial causing harm to interests of not only the
employer and the workers but also the general public who is the ultimate
beneficiary of material goods and services from the industry. The awards of
reinstatement and arrears of wages for past years by labour courts by
treating even small undertakings of employers and entrepreneurs as
industrial is experienced as a serious industrial hazard particularly by
those engaged in private enterprises. The experience is that many times
idle wages are required to be paid to the worker because the employer has
no means to find out whether and where the workman was gainfully employed
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pending adjudication of industrial dispute raised by him. Exploitation of
workers and the employers has to be equally checked. Law and particularly
industrial law needs to be so interpreted as to ensure that neither the
employers nor the employees are in a position to dominate the other. Both
should be able to cooperate for their mutual benefit in the growth of
industry and thereby serve public good. An over expansive interpretation of
the definition of ‘industry’ might be a deterrent to private enterprise in
India where public employment opportunities are scarce. The people should,
therefore, be encouraged towards self-employment. To embrace within the
definition of ‘industry’ even liberal professions like lawyers, architects,
doctors, chartered accountants and the like, which are occupations based on
talent, skill and intellectual attainment, is experienced as a hurdle by
professionals in their self pursuits. In carrying on their professions, if
necessarily, some employment is generated, that should not expose them to
the rigours of the Act. No doubt even liberal professions are required to
be regulate and reasonable restrictions in favour of those employed for
them can, by law, be imposed, but that should be subject of a separate
suitable legislation.
If we adopt an ideological or philosophical approach, we would be treading
on the wrong path against which learned Shri Justice Krishna Iyer himself
recorded a caution in his inimitable style thus:-
‘‘Here we have to be cautious not to fall into the trap of definitional
expansionism bordering on reduction and absurdum nor to truncate the
obvious amplitude of the provision to fit it into our mental mould of
beliefs and prejudices or social philosophy conditioned by class interests.
Subjective wish shall not be father to the forensic thought, if credibility
with a pluralist community is a value to be cherished. Courts do not
substitute their social and economic beliefs for the judgment of
legislative bodies.’’
A worker oriented approach in construing the definition of industry,
unmindful of the interest of the employer or the owner of the industry and
the public who are ultimate beneficiaries, would be a one sided approach
and not in accordance with the provisions of the Act.
We also wish to enter a caveat on confining ‘sovereign functions’ to the
traditional so described as ‘inalienable functions’ comparable to those
performed by a monarch, a ruler or a non-democratic government. The learned
judges in the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board case seem to have
confined only such sovereign functions outside the purview of ‘industry’
which can be termed strictly as constitutional functions of the three wings
of the State i.e. executive, legislature and judiciary. The concept of
sovereignty in a constitutional democracy is different from the traditional
concept of sovereignty which is confined to ‘law and order’, ‘defence’,
‘law making’ and ‘justice dispensation’. In a democracy governed by the
Constitution the sovereignty vests in the people and the State is obliged
to discharge its constitutional obligations contained in the Directive
Principles of the State Policy in Part -IV of the Constitution of India.
From that point of view, wherever the government undertakes public welfare
activities in discharge of its constitutional obligations, as provided in
part-IV of the Constitution, such activities should be treated as
activities in discharge of sovereign functions falling outside the purview
of ‘industry’. Whether employees employed in such welfare activities of the
government require protection, apart from the constitutional rights
conferred on them, may be a subject of separate legislation but for that
reason, such governmental activities cannot be brought within the fold of
industrial law by giving an undue expansive and wide meaning to the words
used in the definition of industry.
In response to the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board case, the
Parliament intervened and substituted the definition of ‘industry’ by
including within its meaning some activities of the government and
excluding some other specified governmental activities and ‘public utility
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services’ involving sovereign functions. For the past 23 years, the amended
definition has remained unenforced on the statute book. The government has
been experiencing difficulty in bringing into effect the new definition.
Issuance of notification as required by sub-section 2 of sub-section 1 of
Amendment Act, 1982 has been withheld so far. It is, therefore, high time
for the court to reexamine the judicial interpretation given by it to the
definition of ‘industry’. The Legislature should be allowed greater freedom
to come forward with a more comprehensive legislation to meet the demands
of employers and employees in the public and private sectors. The
inhibition and the difficulties which are being exercised by the
legislature and the executive in bringing into force the amended Industrial
Law, more due to judicial interpretation of the definition of ‘industry’ in
the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewerage Board case, need to be removed. The
experience of the working of the provisions of the Act would serve as a
guide for a better and more comprehensive law on the subject to be brought
into force without inhibition.
The word industry seems to have been redefined under the Amendment Act
keeping in view the judicial interpretation of the word industry in the
case of Bangalore water . Had there been no such expansive definition of
industry given in Bangalore Water case, it would have been open to the
parliament to bring in either a more expansive or a more restructive
definition of industry by confining it or not confining it to industrial
activities other than sovereign functions and public welfare activities of
the State and its departments. Similarly, employment generated in carrying
on of liberal professions could be clearly included or excluded depending
on social conditions and demands of social justice. Comprehensive change in
law and/or enactment of new law had not been possible because of the
interpretation given to the definition of industry in Bangalore Water case.
The judicial interpretation seems to have been the one of the inhabiting
factors in the enforcement of the amended definition of the Act for the
last 23 years.
In the Bangalore Water case not all the judges in interpreting the
definition clause invoked the doctrine of noscitur-a-sociis. We are
inclined to accept the view expressed by the six judges’ Bench in the case
of the Management of Safdarjung Hospital, (supra) that keeping in view the
other provisions of the Act and words used in the definition clause,
although profit motive is irrelevant, in other to encompass the activity
within the word industry the activity must be ‘analogous to trade or
business in a commercial sense’. We also agree that the mere enumeration of
‘public utility services’ in section 2(n) read with the First Schedule
should not be held decisive. Unless the public utility service answers the
test of it being an ‘industry’ as defined in clause (j) of section 2, the
enumeration of such public utility service in the First Schedule to the Act
would not make it an ‘industry’. The six judges also considered the
inclusion of services such as hospitals and dispensaries as public utility
services in the definition under section 2(n) of the Act and rightly
observed thus:-
‘‘When Parliament added the sixth clause under which other services could
be brought within the protection afforded by the Act to public utility
services, it did not intend that the entire concept of industry in the Act,
could be ignored and anything brought in. Therefore, it said that on
industry could be declared to be a public utility service. But what could
be so declared had to be an industry in the first place.’’
The decision in the case of Management of Safdarjung Hospital (supra) was a
unanimous decision of all the six judges and we are inclined to agree with
the following observations in the interpretation of the definition clause:-
‘‘But in the collocation of the terms and their definitions these terms
have a definite economic content of a particular type and on the
authorities of this Court have been uniformly accepted as excluding
professions and are only concerned with the production, distribution and
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consumption of wealth and the production and availability of material
services. Industry has thus been accepted to mean only trade and business,
manufacture, or undertaking analogous to trade or business for the
production of material goods or wealth and material services.’’
The six judges unanimously upheld the observations in Gymkhana Club case
(supra):-
‘‘... before the work engaged in can be described as an industry, it must
bear the definite character of ‘trade’ or ‘business’ or ‘manufacture’ or
‘calling’ or must be capable of being described as an undertaking resulting
in material goods or material services’’.
In construing the definition clause and determining its ambit, one has not
to lose sight of the fact that in activities like hospitals like hospitals
and education, concepts like right of the workers to go on ‘strike’ or the
employer’s right to ‘close down’ and ‘lay off’ are not contemplated because
they are services in which the motto is ‘service to the community’. If the
patients or students are to be left to the mercy of the employer and
employees exercising their rights at will, the very purpose of the service
activity would be frustrated.
We are respectfully inclined to agree with the observation of Shri Justice
P.B. Gajendragadkar [AIR 1964 SC 903 at pg. 906] in the case of Harinagar
Cane Farm (supra):-
‘‘As we have repeatedly emphasized, in dealing with industrial matters,
industrial adjudication should refrain from enunciating any general
principles or adopting any doctrinaire considerations. It is desirable that
industrial adjudication should deal with problems as and when they arise
and confine its decisions to the points which strictly arise on the
pleadings between the parties. .....’’
We conclude agreeing with the conclusion of the hon’ble judges in the case
of Hospital Mazdoor Sabha and Ors. (supra):-
‘‘Though section 2(j) used words of very wide denotation, a line would have
to be drawn in a fair and just manner so as to exclude some calling service
or undertakings. ...’’
[Emphasis supplied]
This Court must, therefore, reconsider where the line should be drawn and
what limitations can and should be reasonably implied in interpreting the
wide words used in section 2(j). That no doubt is rather a difficult
problem to resolve more so when both the legislature and executive are
silent and have kept an important amended provision of law dormant on the
statute book.
We do not consider it necessary to say anything more and leave it to the
larger Bench to give such meaning and effect to the definition clause in
the present context with the experience of all these years and keeping in
view the amended definition of ‘industry’ kept dormant for long 23 years.
Pressing demands of the competing sectors of employers and employees and
the helplessness of legislature and executive in bringing into force the
Amendment Act compel us to make this reference.
Let the cases be now placed before Hon’ble Chief Justice of India for
constituting a suitable larger Bench for reconsideration of the judgment of
this Court in the case of Bangalore Water, (supra).