Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 14
PETITIONER:
MACKINNON MACKENZIE & CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
AUDREY D’COSTA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT26/03/1987
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
DUTT, M.M. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 1281 1987 SCR (2) 659
1987 SCC (2) 469 JT 1987 (2) 34
1987 SCALE (1)627
CITATOR INFO :
D 1988 SC1291 (10)
RF 1990 SC1480 (52)
R 1992 SC 1 (76)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950--Articles 14 and
39(d)--Equal remuneration--Liability to pay irrespective of
sex--Necessity for.
Equal Remuneration Act, 1976--Ss. 2(h), 4(1) and
7--Equal work--’Same work or work of similar nature’--Con-
siderations for determination of--Men and women
workers--Performing same or similar nature of work--Whether
lower remuneration to women workers discriminatory on ground
of sex and violative of s. 4(1).
Equal Remuneration Act, 1976--Ss. 2(g), 3 and
4(1)--Equal Pay--Settlement between management and employ-
ees--Whether a valid ground for discriminating in payment of
remuneration between men and women workers performing same
or similar nature of work.
Equal Remuneration Act, 1976---Proviso to s. 4(3)--Ap-
plicability of--Settlement before commencement of
Act--Provides common pay scale for men as well as women
workers--After implementation of Act--Women workers given
lessor remuneration--Whether s. 4(1) or proviso to s. 4(3)
would apply.
Equal Remuneration Act, 1976--Ss. 3 and 4--Applicability
of the Act--Whether depends upon the financial ability of
the management to pay equal remuneration.
Statute Law--Proviso--Scope of--Cannot travel beyond the
section.
HEADNOTE:
After the services of the respondent No. 1, who was
working as a Confidential Lady Stenographer with the peti-
tioner-company, were terminated on June 13, 1977, she insti-
tuted a petition before the Authority appointed under sub-s.
(1) of s. 7 of the Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 complaining
that during the period of her employment, after the Act came
into force, she was being paid remuneration at the rates
less favourable than those paid to the Stenographers of the
male sex in the petitioner’s establishment for performing
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 14
the same or similar work
660
and claimed that she was entitled to recover the difference
between remuneration paid to her and the male Stenographers.
The petitioner opposed the petition contending, inter
alia, that the business carried on by it was not one of
those businesses notified under sub-s. (3) of s. 1 of the
Act; that there was no difference in the scales or grades or
pay between lady Stenographers and male Stenographers; that
the respondent No. 1 and other lady Stenographers who had
been doing the duty as Confidential Stenographers attached
to the Senior Executives were not doing the same or similar
work which the male Stenographers were discharging; and that
since there was no discrimination in salary on account of
sex s.4 of the Act had not been violated.
The Authority found that the male Stenographers and the
lady Stenographers were doing the same kind of work, but
rejected the complaint holding that in view of a settlement
arrived at between the employee’s Union and the management
the respondent No. 1 was not entitled to any relief and that
the petitioner had not committed the breach of s. 4 as no
discrimination on the ground of sex has been made.
The Appellate Authority allowed the appeal of Respondent
No. I holding that there was clear discrimination between
the .male Stenographers and the female Stenographers and the
petitioner had committed the breach of the provisions of the
Act and directed the petitioner to make the payment of the
difference between the basic salary and dearness allowances
paid to respondent No. 1 and her male counter parts from
26.9.1975 to 30.6.1977 and to contribute to the Employees
Provident Fund.
In the petition under Article 226 the Learned Single
Judge affirmed the order of the Appellate Authority but
remanded the case for computing the amount due to the re-
spondent No. 1 afresh. The Division Bench dismissed the
further appeal.
Dismissing the Petition,
HELD: 1. To implement Art. 39(d) of the Constitution of
India and Equal Remuneration Convention, 1951 (adopted by
International Labour Organisation), the Equal Remuneration
Act, 1976 came to be enacted providing for the payment of
equal remuneration to men and women workers and for the
prevention of discrimination on the ground of sex against
women in the matter of employment and for matters connected
therewith or incidental thereto. In so far as the establish-
ment
661
of the petitioner was concerned, the Act came into force
with effect from October 8, 1976. [668B-F]
2. In order to grant relief under s. 4 of the Act the
employees should establish that the remuneration paid by the
employer, whether payable in cash or kind, 1s being paid at
rates less favourable than those at which remuneration is
paid by him to the employees of the opposite sex in his
establishment for performing the same work or work of a
similar nature. [670D-E]
3. In deciding whether the work is the same or broadly
similar and whether any differences are of practical impor-
tance, the Authority should take an equally broad approach,
for, the very concept of similar work implies differences in
details, but these should not defeat a claim for equality on
trivial grounds. It should look at the duties actually and
generally performed not those theoretically possible by men
and women. Where, however, both men and women work at incon-
venient times, there is no requirement that all those who
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 14
work e.g. at night shall be paid the same basic rate as all
those who work normal day shifts. Thus a woman who works
days cannot claim equality with a man on higher basic rate
for working nights if in fact there are women working nights
on that rate too, and the applicant herself would be enti-
tled to that rate if she changed shifts. [670E-H]
I.T. Smith and J.C. Wood; Industrial Law, 2nd Edition
(Butterworths) page 308, referred to.
4. It cannot be suggested that there can be no discrimi-
nation at all between men and women in the matter of remu-
neration on the basis of nature of work which women may not
be able to undertake but in such cases there cannot be any
discrimination on the ground of sex. Discrimination arises
only where men and women doing the same or similar kind of
work are paid differently. Wherever sex discrimination is
alleged, there should be a proper job evaluation before any
further enquiry is made. If the two jobs in an establishment
are accorded an equal value by the application of those
criteria which are themselves non-discriminatory (i.e. those
criteria which look directly to the nature and extent of the
demands made by the job) as distinct from criteria which set
out different values for men and women on the same demand
and it is found that a man and a woman employed on these two
jobs are paid differently, then sex discrimination clearly
arises. [671A-C]
Paul Davis and Mark Freedland: Labour Law, Text and
Material (1979) page 297, referred to.
662
5. In the instant case, the Authority, the Appellate
Authority and the Single Judge have found that the Confiden-
tial Lady Stenographers were doing the same work or work of
a similar nature as defined in s. 2(h) of the Act which the
male Stenographers in the establishment of the petitioner
were performing. The respondent No. 1 was working as a lady
Stenographer. The lady Stenographers working in the estab-
lishment of the petitioner were called "Confidential Lady
Stenographers" since they were attached to the senior Execu-
tive working in the petitioner-company. In addition to the
work of the Stenographers they were also attending to the
persons who came to interview the senior Executives and to
the work of filing, correspondence. etc. There was practi-
cally no difference between the work which the Confidential
Lady Stenographers were doing and the work of their male
counter-parts. If the Lady Stenographers were found by the
management to he proper persons to he Confidential Stenogra-
phers it does not mean that they should suffer for their
loyalty, integrity, sincerity and punctuality and receive
less pay for possessing those qualities when they are doing
the same kind of work as men. Applying the true tests to the
facts of the instant case there is no ground to take a
different view from the view taken by the Authorities and
the Single Judge. [671D-H]
6. Though a settlement was arrived at between the em-
ployee’s Union and the management in the year 1975 after
negotiations, but after the settlement the respondent No. 1
was getting every month Rs.730.20 paise less than the remu-
neration which her male counterpart was getting. In view of
the provisions of s. 3 the management cannot rely upon the
settlement arrived at between the parties. The settlement
has to yield in favour of the provisions of the Act. The
fact that the management was not employing any male as a
Confidential Stenographer attached to the senior Executives
in the establishment and that there was no transfer of
Confidential Lady Stenographer to the general pool of Ste-
nographers where males were working ought not to make any
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 14
difference for purposes of the application of the Act. Once
It is established that the lady Stenographers were doing
practically the same kind of work which the male Stenogra-
phers were discharging the employer is hound to pay the same
remuneration to both of them irrespective of the place where
they were working unless it is shown that the women are not
fit to do the work of the male Stenographers. Nor can the
management deliberately create such conditions of work only
with the object of driving away women from a particular type
of work which they can otherwise perform with the object of
paying them less remuneration elsewhere in its establish-
ment. [672B-H; 673A-B]
663
7. The meaning of sub-s. (3) to s. 4 of the Act is that
if for doing the same or similar work there are more than
two or three rates of remuneration, the higher or the high-
est of such rates shall be the rate at which the remunera-
tion shall be payable from the date of the commencement of
the Act to men and women workers doing the same or similar
kind of work in the establishment. The proviso provides that
nothing in the sub-section shall be deemed to entitle a
worker to the revision of the rate of remuneration payable
to him or her with reference to the service rendered by him
or her before the commencement of the Act. [673E-F]
8. Under the settlement of 1975 the male Stenographers
came under the category of "Clerical and Subordinate Staff".
Undisputedly the terms regarding the fitment to lady Stenog-
raphers either In the ’A’ Grade or ’B’ grade, referred to In
the settlement is less favourable to them and the same
conditions were allowed to remain in force even after the
Act came into force. The very fact that the lady Stenogra-
phers are treated differently and as a class different from
the clerical and subordinate staff by paying less remunera-
tion even though they have put in the same length of service
and they are placed in the same scale of pay smacks of
discrimination. The discrimination thus brought about by the
terms of settlement only on account of the sex of the em-
ployees cannot be allowed to persist in view of s. 4 of the
Act. The work of the Confidential Lady Stenographer cannot
be said to be sex based one like the work of air hostesses.
There is no custom or rule that only ladies can be Confiden-
tial Stenographers. If only women are working as Confiden-
tial Stenographers it is because the management wants them
there. Women are neither specially qualified to be Confiden-
tial Stenographers nor disqualified on account of sex to do
the work assigned to the male Stenographers. Even if there
is a practice in the establishment to appoint women as
Confidential Stenographers such practice cannot be relied on
to deny them equal remuneration due to them under the Act.
[675B-E]
9. The management is liable to pay the same remuneration
to all the Stenographers on the same basis irrespective of
their sex. The salary and remuneration payable to the lady
Stenographers should be computed in accordance with the
terms applicable to all the male Stenographers. When so
computed, undisputedly the Respondent No. 1 would be enti-
tled to higher remuneration as observed by the Appellate
Authority and the Single Judge. The management cannot derive
any benefit from sub-s. (3) of s. 4 of the Act and the
proviso thereto because sub-s. (3) would be attracted only
where in an establishment or an employment rates of remuner-
ation payable before the commencement
664
of the Act for the men workers and for the women workers for
the same work or work of similar nature are different. In
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 14
the instant case, after the settlement was arrived at there
was a common pay scale both for men and women as can be seen
from the settlement. The discrimination was, however,
brought about while carrying out the fitment of the lady
Stenographers in the said scale of pay. [675E-H; 676A]
10. The proviso to sub-s. (3) to s. 4 comes into opera-
tion only where sub-s. (3) is applicable. Since there are no
different scales of pay in the instant case sub-s. (3) of s.
4 of the Act would not be attracted and consequently, the
proviso would not be applicable at all. The proviso cannot
travel beyond the provision to which it is a proviso. This
is a case to which sub-s. (1) to s. 4 of the Act applied
because the impugned remuneration payable to lady Stenogra-
phers has been reduced on account of the inequitable provi-
sion regarding fitment in the common scale of pay which is
applicable to both men and women Stenographers. [676A-C]
11. The Act does not permit the management to pay to a
section of its employees doing the same work or a work of a
similar nature lesser pay contrary to s. 4(1) of the Act
only because it is not able to pay equal remuneration at
all. The applicability of the Act does not depend upon the
financial ability of the management to pay equal remunera-
tion as provided by it. [676E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
(Civil) No. 1265 of 1987.
From the Judgment and Order dated 24.11.1986 of the
Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 1042 of 1986.
J.P. Cama and Raju Ramachandran for the Petitioner.
Miss Indira Jaisingh and Ravi P. Wadhwani for the Respond-
ents.
The Order of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J. In this Special Leave Petition filed
under Article 136 of the Constitution of India, which is
filed against the decision dated November 24, 1986 of the
High Court of Bombay in Appeal No. 1042 of 1986, the ques-
tion whether the petitioner had violated the provisions of
section 4 of the Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 (No. 25 of
1976) (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) arises for
consideration.
665
The petitioner is a company carrying on the business of
rendering supporting services to water transport, like
operation and maintenance of piers, docks, pilotage, light-
houses, loading and discharging of vessels etc. referred to
as Item No. 12 under the heading ’Water Transport’ in the
list of establishments and employments to which the Act has
been made applicable under sub-section (3) of section 1 of
the Act. Respondent No. 1 Audrey D’Costa was one of the
employees working under the petitioner till June 13, 1977 on
which date her services were terminated. During the period
of her employment under the petitioner she was working as a
Confidential Lady Stenographer. After her services were
terminated, she instituted a petition before the Authority
appointed under sub-section (1) of section 7 of the Act
complaining that during the period of her employment, after
the Act came into force, she was being paid remuneration at
the rates less favourable than those at which remuneration
was being paid by the petitioner to the Stenographers of the
male sex in its establishment for performing the same or
similar work. She claimed that she was entitled to recover
from the petitioner the amount equivalent to the difference
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 14
between the remuneration which she was being paid and the
remuneration which was being paid to the male Stenographer
who had put in the same length of service during the period
of operation of the Act. The petitioner opposed the said
petition. The petitioner contended inter alia that the
business which was being carried on by it was not one of
those businesses notified under sub-section (3) of section 1
of the Act; that there was no difference in the scales or
grades of pay between lady Stenographers and other male
Stenographers at the time when the case was pending before
the Authority referred to above; that the Respondent No. 1
and other lady Stenographers who had been doing the duty as
Confidential Stenographers attached to the senior Executives
of the petitioner-company were not doing the same or similar
work which the male Stenographers were discharging; and that
there was no discrimination in salary on account of sex. The
petitioner contended that section 4 of the Act had not been
violated by it.
After hearing both the parties, the Authority which
heard the complaint of the Respondent No. 1, found that the
male Stenographers and the lady Stenographers were doing the
same kind of work, but it, however, rejected the complaint
holding that in view of a settlement which had been arrived
at in 1975 between the employees’ Union and the management,
the Respondent No. 1 was not entitled to any relief. The
Authority held that the petitioner had not committed the
breach of section 4 of the Act as no discrimination on the
ground of sex had been made. It accordingly rejected the
complaint of the
666
Respondent No. 1 by its order dated March 30, 1982. Ag-
grieved by the order of the Authority appointed under sub-
section (1) of section 7 of the Act, the Respondent No. 1
filed an appeal before the Deputy Commissioner of Labour
(ENF), Bombay, who was the Appellate Authority appointed
under sub-seCtion (6) of section 7 of the Act. The Appellate
Authority came to the conclusion that there was clear dis-
crimination between the male Stenographers and the female
Stenographers working in the establishment of the petitioner
and ,the petitioner had committed the breach of the provi-
sions of the Act. Accordingly, the appeal was allowed by the
Appellate Authority on May 31, 1982. It directed the peti-
tioner to make payment of Rs.7,196.67 paise which was the
difference between the basic salary of the Respondent No. 1
and the basic salary of her male counter-parts from 26.9.
1975 to 30.6.1977 on which date her services came to be
terminated. The petitioner was also directed to make payment
of the difference in the amount of dearness allowance paid
to the Respondent No. 1 and the dearness allowance paid to
her male counter-parts during the said period. The petition-
er was also directed to contribute to the Employees’ Provi-
dent Fund account on the basis of the above directions.
Aggrieved by the decision of the Appellate Authority, the
petitioner filed a writ petition in the High Court under
Article 226 of the Constitution of India in Writ Petition
No. 1624 of 1982. The learned Single Judge who heard the
writ petition found that there was no doubt that the work
performed by the female Stenographers and work performed by
the male Stenographers were indentical and that the Respond-
ent No. 1 and other female Stenographers were being paid
less than their male counter-parts who were in service for
an equal number of years and the Respondent No. 1 was enti-
tled to the difference between the pay and allowances which
had been paid to a male Stenographer who had put in service
for the same number of years as the Respondent No. 1 and the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 14
amount of pay and allowances actually paid to her for the
period between October 8, 1976 and June 13, 1977. Since the
Appellate Authority had committed an error as regards the
period in respect of which Respondent No. 1 was entitled to
relief the case was remanded to the Appellate Authority for
computing the amount due to the Respondent No. 1 afresh. The
order of the Appellate Authority was affirmed in other
respects. Aggrieved by the decision of the learned Single
Judge, the petitioner filed an appeal in Appeal No. 1042 of
1986 before the Division Bench of the High Court which came
to be dismissed on November 24, 1986. Aggrieved by the
decision of the Division Bench, the petitioner has filed
this petition under Article 136 of the Constitution of
India.
667
Before dealing with the contentions of the parties, it
is necessary to set out the relevant legal provisions gov-
erning the case. Article 39 (d) of the Constitution of India
provides that the State shall, in particular, direct its
policy towards securing that there is equal pay for equal
work for both men and women. The Convention Concering Equal
Remuneration for Men and Women Workers for Work of Equal
Value (for short, Equal Remuneration Convention, 1951) was
adopted by the General Conference of the International
Labour Organisation on June 29, 195 1. India is one of the
parties to the said Convention. Article 2 of that Convention
provides that each Member shall, by means appropriate to the
methods in operation for determining rates of remuneration,
promote and, in so far as is consistent with such methods,
ensure the application to all workers of the principle of
equal remuneration for men and women workers for work of
equal value and that this principle may be applied by means
of (a) national laws or regulations, (b) legally established
or recognized machinery for wage determination, (c) collec-
tive agreements between employers and workers, and (d) a
combination of these various means. Article 3 of the Conven-
tion provides that where such action will assist in giving
effect to the provisions of the Convention, measures shall
be taken to promote appraisal of jobs on the basis of the
work to be performed. The methods to be followed in this
appraisal may be decided upon by the authorities responsible
for the determination of rates of remuneration, or where
such rates are determined by collective agreements, by the
parties thereto. In England the above Convention is given
effect to by the enactment of Equal Pay Act, 1970. Almost
all other European community States have also signed the
convention. The European Economic Community Treaty also
provided that during the first stage that is before 31st
December, 1961 each. member State should ensure and subse-
quently maintain the application of the principle that men
and women should receive equal pay for equal work. (See
E.E.C. Treaty Art. 119, 1st Para). Many cases have been
since decided by the national courts in those States and
also in the European Court of Justice on the basis of the
several laws enacted by the said States in implementation of
the Equal Remuneration Convention, 1951. The E.E.C. States
are obliged to observe this Convention faithfully. A short
account of this branch of law is to be found in Halsbury’s
Laws of England 4th Edn. Vol. 52, paras 20.11. to 20.18.
Many interesting cases are referred to in those paragraphs.
In one case it is held that (i) where a job classification
system is used for determining pay, it must be based on the
same criteria for both men and women and so drawn up as to
exclude any discrimination on the ground of sex. In another
case concerning the pay of a woman who claimed equal pay
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 14
with her
668
predecessor, a man, the European Court held that the concept
of equal pay in the E.E.C. Treaty was not restricted to
cases where men and women were employed contemporaneously
but also applied where a woman, received less pay than a man
employed prior to her by the employer on equal work (See
Macarthy’s Ltd. v. Smith, 1981 Q.B.180.).
In order to implement Article 39 (d) of the Constitution
of India and the Equal Remuneration Convention, 1951, re-
ferred to above, the President promulgated on the 26th
September, 1975 the Equal Remuneration Ordinance, 1975 so
that the provisions of Article 39(d) of the Constitution of
India might be implemented in the year which was being
celebrated as the International Women’s Year. The said
Ordinance provided for payment of equal remuneration to men
and women workers for the same work or the work of a similar
nature and for the prevention of discrimination on account
of sex. The Ordinance also ensured that there was no dis-
crimination against recruitment of women and provided for
the setting up of Advisory Committees to promote employment
opportunities for women. The above Ordinance was replaced by
the Act Which received the assent of the President on Febru-
ary 11, 1976. The long title of the Act states that it is
intended to provide for the payment of equal remuneration to
men and women workers and for the prevention of discrimina-
tion on the ground of sex against women in the matter of
employment and for matters connected therewith or incidental
thereto. Sub-section (3) of section 1 of the Act provides
that the Act shah come into force on such date, not being
later than three years from the passing of the Act, as the
Central Government may, by notification, appoint and differ-
ent dates may be appointed for different establishments or
employments. Insofar as the establishment of the petitioner
was concerned, the Act came into force with effect from
October 8, 1976. The expressions ’commencement of this Act’,
’remuneration’ and ’same work or work of a similar nature’
are defined in section 2(b), (g) and (h) respectively of the
Act. Commencement of this Act’ means in relation to an
establishment or employment, the date on which the Act comes
into force in respect of that establishment or employment by
the issue of the necessary notification under section 1(3)
of the Act. ’Remuneration’ means the basic wage or salary
and any additional emoluments whatsoever payable, either in
cash or in kind, to a person employed in respect of employ-
ment or work done in such employment, if the terms of the
contract of employment, express or implied, were fulfilled.
’Same work or work of a similar nature’ means work in re-
spect of which the skill, effort and responsibility required
are the same when performed under similar
669
working conditions, by a man or a woman and the differences,
if any, between the skill, effort and responsibility re-
quired of a man and those required of a women are not of
practical importance in relation to the terms of conditions
of employment. Section 3 of the Act has given overriding
effect to the provisions of the Act. It provides that the
provisions of the Act shall have effect notwithstanding
anything inconsistent therewith contained in any other law
or in the terms of any award, agreement or contract of
service, whether made before or after the commencement of
the Act, or in any instrument having effect under any law
for the time being in force. The crucial section which
arises for consideration in this case is section 4 of the
Act. It reads thus:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 14
"4. Duty of employer to pay equal remuneration
to men and women workers for same work or work
of a similar nature--(1) No employer shall pay
to any worker, employed by him in an estab-
lishment or employment, remuneration, whether
payable in cash or in kind, at rates less
favourable than those at which remuneration is
paid by him to the workers of the opposite sex
in such establishment or employment for per-
forming the same work or work of a
similar nature.
(2) No employer shall, for the
purpose of complying with the provisions of
sub-section (1), reduce the rate of remunera-
tion of any worker.
(3) Where, in an establishment or
employment, the rates of remuneration payable
before the commencement of this Act for men
and women workers for the same work or work of
a similar nature are different only on the
ground of sex, then the higher (in cases where
there are only two rates), or as the case may
be, the highest (in cases where there are more
than two rates), of such rates shall be the
rate at which remuneration shall be payable,
on and from such commencement, to such men and
women workers:
Provided that nothing in this sub-
section ’shall be deemed to entitle a worker
to the revision of the rate of remuneration
payable to him or her with reference to the
service rendered by him or her before the
commencement of this Act."
670
Section 5 of the Act prohibits any kind of discrimina-
tion being made while recruiting men and women workers.
Section 6 of the Act provides for the appointment of an
Advisory Committee to advise the appropriate Government with
regard to the extent to which women may be employed in such
establishments or the employments as the Central Government
may, by notification, specify in that behalf. Section 7 of
the Act provides for the appointment of the adjudicating
Authority whenever a dispute arises between the management
and the employees as also an Appellate Authority which can
hear an appeal against the decision of the Authority. Sec-
tion 16 of the Act provides that where the appropriate
Government is, on a consideration of all the circumstances
of the case satisfied that the differences in regard to the
remuneration or a particular species of remuneration of men
and women workers in any establishment or employment is
based on a factor other than sex, it may, by notification
make a declaration to that effect and any act of the employ-
er attributable to such a difference shall not be deemed to
be a contravention of any provision of the Act.
The point which arises for consideration in this peti-
tion is whether the Respondent No. 1 is entitled to any
relief within the scope of section 4 of the Act. In order to
grant such relief under section 4 of the Act the employee
should establish that the remuneration paid by the employer,
whether payable in cash or kind, is being paid at rates less
favourable than those at which remuneration is paid by him
to the employees of the opposite sex in such establishment
for performing the same work or work of a similar nature.
Whether a particular work is same or similar in nature as
another work can be determined on three considerations. In
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 14
deciding whether the work is the same or broadly similar,
the Authority should take a broad view; next, in ascertain-
ing whether any differences are of practical importance, the
Authority should take an equally broad approach for the very
concept of similar work implies differences in details, but
these should not defeat a claim for equality on trivial
grounds. It should look at the duties actually performed not
those theoretically possible. In making comparison the
Authority should look at the duties generally performed by
men and women. Where however both men and women work at
inconvenient times, there is no requirement that all those
who work e.g. at night shall be paid the same basic rate as
all those who work normal day shifts. Thus a woman who works
days cannot claim equality with a man on higher basic rate
for working nights if in fact there are women working nights
on that rate too, and the applicant herself would be enti-
tled to that rate if she changed shifts. (See I.T. Smith and
J.C. Wood: Industrial Law, 2nd Edition, (Butterworths)
671
page 308). We do not suggest that there can be no discrimi-
nation at all between men and women in the matter of remu-
neration. There are some kinds of work which women may not
be able to undertake. Men do work like loading, unloading,
carrying and lifting heavier things which women cannot do.
In such cases there cannot be any discrimination on the
ground of sex. Discrimination arises only where men and
women doing the same or similar kind of work are paid difer-
ently. Wherever sex discrimination is allegeo, there should
be a proper job evaluation before any further enquiry is
made. If the two jobs in an establishment are accorded an
equal value by the application of those criteria which are
themselves non-discriminatory (i.e. those criteria which
Iook directly to the nature and extent of the demands made
by the job) as distinct from criteria which set out differ-
ent values for men and women on the same demand and it is
found that a man and a woman employed on these two jobs are
paid differently, then sex discrimination clearly arises.
(See Paul Davis and Mark Freedland: Labour Law, Text and
Material 1979 page 297).
It has been found by the Authority, the Appellate Au-
thority and by the learned Single Judge that the Confiden-
tial Lady Stenographers were doing the same work or work of
a similar nature as defined by section 2(h) of the Act which
the male Stenographers in the establishment of the petition-
er were performing. The Respondent No. 1 was working as a
lady Stenographer. The lady Stenographers working in the
establishment of the petitioner were called ’Confidential
Lady Stenographers’ since they were attached to the senior
Executives working in the petitioner-company. In addition to
the work of Stenographers they were also attending to the
persons who came to interview the senior Executives and to
the work of filing, correspondence etc. There was practical-
ly no difference between the work which the Confidential
Lady Stenographers were doing and the work of their male
counter-parts. It was suggested that the lady Stenographers
were found by the management to be proper persons to be
Confidential Stenographers. It may be so. It, however, does
not mean that they should suffer for their loyalty, integri-
ty, sincerity and punctuality and receive less pay for
possessing those qualities when they are doing the same kind
of work as men. In the circumstances of the case, applying
the true tests which are discussed above to the facts of
this case, we do not find any ground to take a view differ-
ent from the view taken by the learned Single judge, the
Appellate Authority and the Authority who have dealt with
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 14
this case.
The next question is whether the lady Stenographers were
being
672
paid the remuneration, which included basic pay, and any
additional emoluments whatsoever payable either in cash or
in kind, less than what was being paid to their male coun-
ter-parts who had put in service for the same number of
years. It is true that there was a settlement arrived at
between the employees’ Union and the management in the year
1975 and it had been arrived at after negotiations between
the parties to the settlement. Prior to the settlement the
Respondent No. 1 was getting as basic salary of Rs. 560 in
the pay scale of Rs.150-15-180-20-340-25-440-28-496-32-560
in addition to a fixed D.A. of Rs.525 per month. Thus the
Respondent No. 1 was getting a remuneration to the tune of
Rs.1085 per month. Under the settlement her basic salary was
reduced to Rs.245 from Rs.560 and the D.A. was increased to
Rs.935.25 paise. In all she was getting a remuneration of
Rs.1180.25 paise per month under the settlement, thus in-
creasing her gross salary by Rs.95.25 paise. On the other
hand, her male counter-part who had put in service for an
equal number of years was being paid Rs.585 by way of basic
pay and Rs.1325.45 paise by way of dearness allowance under
the settlement. In all he was being paid Rs.1910.45 paise.
Thus it is seen that the Respondent No. 1 was getting every
month Rs.730.20 paise less than the remuneration which her
male counter-part was getting. The question for considera-
tion is whether the management was justified in paying such
remuneration to her. It was urged on behalf of the manage-
ment that the difference between the remuneration of the
male Stenographers and the remuneration of the Confidential
Lady Stenographers was on account of the settlement which
was arrived at after proper negotiation and that the Court
must have regard to it. Section 3 of the Act clearly pro-
vides that the provisions of the Act shall have effect
notwithstanding anything inconsistent therewith contained in
any other law or in the terms of any award, agreement or
contract of service, whether made before or after the com-
mencement of the Act, or in any instrument having effect
under any law for the time being in force. The petitioner
cannot, therefore, rely upon the settlement arrived at
between the parties. The settlement has to yield in favour
of the provisions of the Act. It was next contended on
behalf of the petitioner that the discrimination between the
male Stenographers and the Confidential Lady Stenographers
had not been brought about only on the ground of sex. We
find it difficult to agree with this contention. It may be
that the management was not employing any male as a Confi-
dential Stenographers attached to the senior Executives in
its establishment and that there was no transfer of Confi-
dential Lady Stenographers to the general pool of Stenogra-
phers where males were working. It, however, ought not to
make any difference for purposes of the application of the
Act when once it is es-
673
tablished that the lady Stenographers were doing practically
the same kind of work which the male Stenographers were
discharging. The employer is bound to pay the same remunera-
tion to both of them irrespective of the place where they
were working unless it is shown that the women are not fit
to do the work of the male Stenographers. Nor can the man-
agement deliberately create such conditions of work only
with the object of driving away women from a particular type
of work which they can otherwise perform with the object of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 14
paying them less remuneration elsewhere in its establish-
ment. In the present case the place where the employees
worked is irrelevant for purposes of section 4 of the Act.
We shall now proceed to consider the effect of sub-
section (3) of section 4 of the Act on which much emphasis
was placed by the management. It provides that where in an
establishment or an employment the rates of remuneration
payable before the commencement of the Act for men and women
workers for the same work or work of a similar nature are
different only on the ground of sex, then the higher (in
cases where there are only two rates), or, as the case may
be, the highest (in cases where there are more than two
rates), of such rates shall be the rate at which remunera-
tion shall be payable, on and from such commencement, to
such men and women workers. The meaning of sub-section (3)
to section 4 of the Act is that if for doing the same or
similar work there are more than two or three rates of
remuneration, the higher or the highest of such rates shall
be the rate at which the remuneration shall be payable from
the date of the commencement of the Act to men and women
workers doing the same or similar kind of work in the estab-
lishment. The proviso provides that nothing in the sub-
section shall be deemed to entitle a worker to the revision
of the rate of remuneration payable to him or her with
reference to the service rendered by him or her before the
commencement of the Act. The salient features of the settle-
ment of 1975 are as follows:-
"I. Clerical & Subordinate Staff:
Pay scales remain unaltered. However
they will be granted increments as under:-
(a) All staff who have completed one or more
than one year’s service as on 1.5.75 will get
one increment in their respective scales with
effect from 1.5.75.
(b) All staff who have reached the maximum of
their
674
respective pay scales including those in ’E’
grade who have completed 35 years of service
will receive one increment as per the last
increment of the scale, with effect from
1.5.75.
(c) In addition to this, those who
retire during the course of the Agreement,
i.e., during the period 1.5.75 to 30.4.78 will
receive one increment in the year of their
retirement.
II. Lady Stenographers:
Their pay scales will be brought on
par with their male counterparts in the fol-
lowing manner:
(a) All those who have completed 7 years of
service or less on 1.5.75 will be fitted to
the starting figures of ’B’ grade clerical
scale.
(b) All those with more than 7 years of serv-
ice but less than 10 years of service as on
1.5.75 will be fitted to that stage of ’B’
grade which is one step higher than the start-
ing figure.
(c) All those with more than 10 years of
service as on 1.5.75 will be first fitted to
the starting salary of grade ’A’ and then
given one increment in the scale for every 5
years of service or a fraction thereof, over
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 14
and above 10 years of service.
(d) The revisions will come into effect with
effect from 1.5.75.
(e) While effecting fitments as explained in
(a), (b) and (c) above, if the revised gross
emoluments happen to be less than the existing
gross salary, or, if the enhancement of gross
emoluments as a result of the revision works
out to less than Rs.50, then, in such individ-
ual cases, the basic salaries in the respec-
tive scales will be stepped up in such a way,
as to ensure a minimum of Rs.50 increase in
gross salary.
(f) The figures for comparison will be the
gross salaries for the month of May 1975.
765
(g) All other terms and conditions as applica-
ble to clerical and subordinate staff will
also apply to lady stenographers with effect
from 1.5.75 ................................
It is not disputed that the male Stenographers came
under the category of ’Clerical & Subordinate Staff’. It is
also not disputed that the terms regarding the fitment of
lady Stenographers either in the ’A’ grade or ’B’ grade,
referred to in the settlement is less favourable to them and
the same conditions were allowed to remain in force even
after the Act came into force. The very fact that the lady
Stenographers are treated diferently and as a class differ-
ent from the clerical and subordinate staff by paying less
remuneration even though they have put in the same length of
service and they are placed in the same scale of pay smacks
of discrimination. The discrimination thus brought about by
the terms of settlement only on account of the sex of the
employees cannot be allowed to persist in view of section 4
of the Act. We do not agree that the work of the Confiden-
tial lady Stenographers is a sex based one like the work of
air hostesses. There is no custom or rule that only ladies
can be Confidential Stenographers. If only women are working
as Confidential Stenographers it is because the management
wants them there. Women are neither specially qualified to
be Confidential Stenographers nor disqalified on account of
sex to do the work assigned to the male Stenographers. Even
if there is a practice in the establishment to appoint women
as Confidential Stenographers such practice cannot be relied
on to deny them equal remuneration due to them under the
Act. The management is liable to pay the same remuneration
to all the Stenographers on the same basis irrespective of
their sex. The salary and remuneration payable to the lady
Stenographers should be computed in accordance with the
terms applicable to all the male Stenographers. When so
computed, it is not disputed, that the Respondent No. 1
would be entitled to higher remuneration as observed by the
Appellate Authority and the learned Single Judge of the High
Court. We are of the view that the petitioner cannot derive
any benefit from sub-section (3) of section 4 of the Act and
the proviso thereto because sub-section (3) would be at-
tracted only where in an establishment or an employment
rates of remuneration payable before the commencement of the
Act for the men workers and for the women workers for the
same work or work of similar nature are different. In the
instant case after the settlement was arrived at there was a
common pay scale both for men and women as can be seen from
the settlement, referred to above. The discrimination was,
however, brought about while carrying out the fitment of the
lady
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 14
676
Stenographers in the said scale of pay. The proviso to sub-
section (3) to section 4 comes into operation only where
sub-section (3) is applicable. Since there are no different
scales of pay in the instant case sub-section (3) of section
4 of the Act would not be attracted and consequently, the
proviso would not be applicable at all. The proviso cannot
travel beyond the provision to which it is a proviso. This
is a case to which sub-section (1) to section 4 of the Act
applies because the impugned remuneration payable to lady
Stenographers has been reduced on account of the inequitable
provision regarding fitment in the common scale of pay which
is applicable to both men and women Stenographers. Having
stated that there was a common pay scale for both male
Stenographers and female Stenographers it is not open to the
petitioner to contend that the order of the High Court was
contrary to the proviso to sub-section (3) to section 4 of
the Act. We, therefore, reject the contention that the order
passed by the High Court is contrary to the proviso to sub-
section (3) of section 4 of the Act.
It is lastly urged on behalf of the petitioner that the
enforcement of the Act will be highly prejudicial to the
management, since its financial position is not satisfactory
and the management is not able to pay equal remuneration to
both male Stenographers and female Stenographers. The Act
does not permit the management to pay to a section of its
employees doing the same work or a work of similar nature
lesser pay contrary. to section 4(1) of the Act only because
it is not able to pay equal remuneration to all. The ap-
plicability of the Act does not depend upon the financial
ability of the management to pay equal remuneration as
provided by it.
We do not find any ground to interfere with the judgment
of the High Court. The petition, therefore, fails and it is
dismissed. There shall, however, be no order as to costs.
A.P.J. Petition
dismissed.
677