Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TATA IRON AND STEEL CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
S. N. MODAK
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/03/1965
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 288 1965 SCR (3) 425
ACT:
Industrial Disputes Act 1947 (14 of 1947), s. 33-Application
pending industrial dispute-Industrial dispute finally
decided-If application survives.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant applied under s. 33(21)(b) of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947 to the Industrial Tribunal for the
Tribunal’s approval of the order passed by the appellant
discharging its employee -the respondent. This application
was made because certain industrial disputes were pending
between the appellant and its employees, but when the matter
came to be argued before the Tribunal, the pending disputes
had been disposed of. Hence, the appellant contended that
the application made by it no longer survived’. which the
Tribunal rejected. In appeal by Special Leave.
HELD:The Tribunal was right in overruling the appellant’s
contention. [419 E].
A proceeding validly commenced under s. 33(2)(b) would not
automatically come to an end merely because the main
industrial dispute had in the meanwhile been finally
determined. [417 D-E].
The application of the appellant can in a sense, be treated
as an incidental proceeding; but it is a separate proceeding
all the same, and in that sense it will be governed by the
provisions of s. 33(2)(b) as an independent proceeding. It
is not an interlocutory proceeding properly so called in its
full sense and significance; it is a proceeding between the
employer and his employee who was no doubt concerned with
the main industrial dispute along with other employees; but
it is nevertheless a proceeding between two parties in
respect of a matter not covered by the main dispute. [417 B-
D].
The order being incomplete and inchoate until the approval
is obtained, cannot effectively terminate the relationship
of the employer and the employee between the appellant and
the respondent; and so even if the main industrial dispute
was finally decided, the question about the validity of the
order would still have to be tried and if the approval is
not accorded by the Tribunal, the employer would be bound to
treat the respondent as its employee and pay him full wages
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for the period even though the appellant may subsequently
proceed to terminate the respondent’s service. [418 C-E].
Besides, if it were held that with the final determination
of the main industrial dispute such application would
automatically come to an end, it would mean that s. 33-A
under which a complaint by the employee is treated as an
independent proceeding, would be rendered nugatory. [419 A].
Alkali and Chemical Corporation of India Ltd. v. Seventh
Industrial Tribunal, West Bengal and Ors. (1964) II L.L.J.
568, Mettur Industries Ltd. v. Sundara Naidu and Anr. (1963)
II L.L.J. 303 and Shah (A.T.) v. State of Mysore and Ors
(1964) I LL.J. 237, disapproved
Kannan Devan Hill Produce Company Ltd. Munnar v. Miss
Aleyamma Varughesa and Anr. (1962) II L.L.J. 158, Om Prakash
Sharma v. Industrial Tribunal, Punjab and Anr. (1962) II
L.L.J. 272 and Amrit Bazar Patrika (Private) Ltd. v. Uttar
Pradesh State Industrial Tribunal and Ors. (1964) II L.L.J.
53, approved.
412
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 422
of 1964
Appeal by special leave from the order dated September 29,
1962 of the Central Government Industrial Tribunal at
Dhanbad in Application No. 45 of 1960 in Reference Nos. 40
and 34 of 1960.
S. V. Gupte, Solicitor-General and 1. N. Shroff, for the
appellant
Jitendra Sharma and Janardan Sharma, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Gajendragadkar C.J. The short question of law which arises
in this appeal relates to the scope and effect of the
provisions contained in s-33(2) of the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947 (No. 14 of 1947) (hereinafter called ’the Act’).
The appellant, the Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd., Jamadoba,
applied before the Chairman, Central Government Industrial
Tribunal, Dhanbad, (hereafter called "the Tribunal") under
s. 33(2)(b) of the Act for approval of the order passed by
it discharging the respondent, its employee S. N. Modak,
from its service. In its application, the appellant alleged
that the respondent had been appointed as a Grade 11 Clerk
in the Chief Mining Engineer’s Office at Jamadoba. One of
the duties assigned to the respondent was to check
arithmetical calculations according to sanctioned rate of
the bills coming from the Heads of Department. He was
required to bring to the notice of the Deputy Chief Mining
Engineer cases of discrepancies or irregularities, and also
cases where additions or alterations in the bills had been
made, but not initialed. On rechecking of the bills which
had been passed by the respondent, it was discovered that
several additions and alterations made in the bills were not
noticed by him and were not reported. This failure
constituted misconduct under the Standing Orders of the
appellant. For this misconduct, the respondent was charge-
sheeted (No. 51 dated 1/5-10-1960); that led to a
departmental enquiry, and as a result of the report made by
the Enquiry Officer, the appellant passed an order on
December 17, 1960, terminating the services of the
respondent as from December 24, 1960. The present applica-
tion was drafted on the 17th December and it reached the
Tribunal on the 23rd December 1960. It appears that this
application was made by the appellant under S. 33(2)(b),
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because four industrial disputes were pending between the
appellant and its employees at that time in References Nos.
27, 34, 40 & 49 of 1960.
After this application was filed, the respondent challenged
the propriety of the order passed by the appellant for which
approval was sought by it, and several contentions were
raised by him in support of his case that the enquiry held
against him was invalid and improper and the ’order of
dismissal passed against him was the result of mala fides.
Evidence was led by the parties in support of their
respective pleas
413
When the matter came to be argued before the Tribunal, it.
was urged by the appellant that the application made by it
no longer survived, because all the industrial disputes
which were pending between the appellant and its employees
and as as a result of the, pendency of which it had made the
application under s. 33(2)(b) of the Act, had been decided
by the Tribunal; Awards had been, made in all the said
References and they had been published in the Gazette. It
does appear that the four References which we have already
mentiond, ended in Awards made on 31-10-1960, 8-11-1960,.
14-4-1961, and 22-9-1961 respectively. The award on the
present application was made on 29-9-1962, and it is common
ground that, the time when the appellant urged its
contention that the application made by it did not survive
any longer, all the four References had, in fact, been
disposed of. The plea thus raised by the appellant
naturally raised the question as to what would be the effect
of the awards pronounced by the Tribunal on industrial
disputes pending before it at the time when the appellant
moved the Tribunal tinder s. 33(2)(b)? If, as a result of
the pendency of an industrial dispute, between an employer
and his employees, the employer is required to apply for
approval of the dismissal of his employee under s. 33
(2)(b), does such an application survive if the main
industrial dispute is meanwhile finally decided and an award
pronounced on it? That is the question which this appeal
raises for our decision, aid the answer to this question
would depend upon a fair determination of the true scope and
effect of the provisions of s. 33(2)(b) of the Act.
This question has been answered by the Tribunal against the
appellant. Having held that the application made by the
appellant survived the decision of the main industrial
disputes, the Tribunal’ has considered the merits of the
controversy between the parties. Airier examining the
evidence, the Tribunal has found that the enquiry made by
the appellant before passing the impugned order of discharge
against the respondent, was invalid. It has pointed out
that the Enquiry Officer, Mr. Watcha, did not in fact record
the statement of any witnesses who gave evidence before him,
and the only record of the enquiry is the report made by Mr.
Watcha. It has also noticed that the enquiry in question
suffered from the serious infirmity that Mr. Watcha who
acted as the Enquiry Officer himself gave evidence against
the respondent, and the evidence which was actually recorded
in the case was taken not by Mr. Watcha, but by Mr.
Paravatiyar. In the result,the conclusion of the Tribunal
on the merits was that the enquiry "was a farce, a mere eye-
wash, biased with pre-determined result, and entirely mala
fide and not at all fair". As a result of this conclusion,
the Tribunal refused to accord approval to the order of
discharge passed by the appellant against the respondent.
It is against this order that the appellant has. come to
this Court by special leave.
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Reverting then to the question of construing s. 33 of the
Act,. we may refer to some general considerations at the
outset. Broadly.
414
stated. s. 33 provides that the conditions of service, etc.
should remain unchanged under certain circumstances during
the pendency of industrial adjudication proceedings. It is
unnecessary to refer to the previous history of this
section. It has undergone many changes-, but for the
purpose of the present appeal, we need not refer to the ,aid
changes. We are concerned with S. 33 as it stands after its
final amendment in 1956. Section 33 consists of five sub-
sections. For the purpose of this appeal, it is necessary
to read subsections (1) & (2) of s. 3 3 : -
"(1) During the pendency of any conciliation
proceeding before a conciliation officer or a
Board or of any proceeding before a Labour
Court or Tribunal or National Tribunal in
respect of an industrial dispute, no employer
shall--
(a)in regard to any matter connected with the
dispute, alter, to the prejudice of the
workmen concerned in such dispute, the
conditions of service applicable to them
immediately before the commencement of such
proceedings; or
(b)for any misconduct connected with the
dispute, discharge or punish, whether by
dismissal or otherwise, any workmen concerned
in such dispute save with the express
permission in writing of the authority before
which the proceeding is pending.
(2)During the pendency of any such proceeding
in respect of an industrial dispute, the
employer may, in accordance with the standing
orders applicable to a workman concerned in
such dispute-
(a) alter, in regard to any matter not
connected with the dispute, the conditions of
service applicable to that workman immediately
before the commencement of such proceeding; or
(b)for any misconduct not connected with the
dispute, discharge or punish, whether by dis-
missal or otherwise, that workman:
Provided that no such workman shall be
discharged or dismissed, unless he has been
paid wages for one month and an application
has been made by the employer to the authority
before which the proceeding is pending for
approval of the action taken by the employer".
A reading of the above two sub-sections of S. 33 makes it
clear that its provisions are intended to be applied during
the pendency of any proceeding either in the nature of
conciliation proceeding or in the
415
nature of proceeding by way of reference made under s. 10.
The pendency of the relevant proceeding is thus one of the
conditions prescribed for the application of s. 33. Section
33(1) also shows that the provisions of the said subsection
protect workmen concerned in the main dispute which is
pending conciliation or adjudication. The effect of sub-s.
(1) is that where the conditions precedent prescribed by it
are satisfied, the employer is prohibited from taking any
action in regard to matters specified by clauses (a) & (b)
against employees concerned in such dispute without the
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previous express permission in writing of the authority
before which the proceeding is pending. In other words, in
cases falling under sub-s. (1), before any action can be
taken by the employer to which reference is made by clauses
(a) & (b), he must obtain express permission of the
specified authority. Section 33(2) pproceedes to lay down a
similar provision and the conditions precedent prescribed by
it are the same as those contained in s. 33(1.). The proviso
to s. 33(2) is important for our purpose. This proviso
shows that where is action is intended to be taken by an
employer against any of his employees which falls within the
scope of cl. (b), he can do so, subject to the requirements
of the proviso. If the employee is intended to be
discharged or dismissed an order can be passed by the
employer against him, provided he has paid such employee the
wages for one month, and he has made an application to the
authority before which the proceeding is pending for
approval of the action taken by him. The requirements of
the proviso have been frequently considered by Industrial
Tribunals and have been the subject-matter of decisions of
this Court as well. It is now well-settled that the
requirements of the proviso have to be satisfied by the
employer on the basis that they form part of the same
transaction; and stated generally, the employer must either
pay or offer the salary for one month to the employee before
passing an order of his discharge or dismissal, and must
apply to the specified authority for approval of his action
at the same time, or within such reasonably short time
thereafter as to form part of the same transaction. It is
also settled that if approval is granted, it takes effect
from the date of the order passed by the employer for which
approval as sought. If approval is not granted the order of
dismissal or discharge passed by the employer is wholly
invalid or inoperative, and the employee can legitimately
claim too continue to be in the employment of the employer
notwithstanding the order passed by him dismissing or
discharging him words, approval by the prescribed authority
makes the order of discharge or dismissal effective; in the
absence of approval such an orders is invalid and
inoperative in law.
Sub-sections (3) & (4) of s. 33 deal with cases of protected
workmen, but with the provisions contained in these two
subsections we are not concerned in the present appeal.
That leaves s. 33(3) to be considered. This sub-section
requires that where an application is made under the proviso
to sub-s. (2), the specified authority has to
416
dispose of the application without delay; and indeed, it
expressly prescribes that the said proceedings must be dealt
with as expeditiously as possible. This sub-section is
naturally limited to cases falling under sub-s. (2). In
regard to cases falling under sub-s. (1), the employer can
act only with the previous express sanction of the
prescribed authority, and, therefore, there is no need to
made any provision in regard to an application which the
employer may make under sub-s. (1) requiring that the said
application should be dealt with expeditiously. That is the
general scheme of s. 33.
it is quite clear that S. 33 imposes a ban on the employer
exercising his common-law, statutory, or contractual right
to terminate the services of his employees according to the
contract or the provisions of law governing such service.
In all cases where industrial disputes are pending between
the employers and their employees, it was thought necessary
that such disputes should be adjudicated upon by the
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Tribunal in a peaceful atmosphere undisturbed by any
subsequent cause for bitterness or unpleasantness. It was,
however, realized that if the adjudication of such disputes
takes long the employers cannot be prevented absolutely from
taking action which is the subject matter of s. 33(1) and
(2). The Legislature, therefore, devised a formula for
reconciling the need of the employer to have liberty to take
action against his employees, and the necessity for keeping
the atmosphere calm and peaceful pending adjudication of
industrial disputes. In regard to actions covered by s.
33(1), previous permission has to be obtained by the
employer, while in regard to actions falling under s. 33(2),
he has to obtain subsequent approval, subject to the
conditions which we have already considered. In that sense,
it would be correct to say that the pendency of an
industrial dispute is in the nature of a condition precedent
for the applicability of s. 33(1) & (2). It would, prima
facie, seem to follow that as soon as the said condition
precedent ceases to exist, s. 33(1) and (2) should also
cease to apply; and the learned Solicitor-General for the
appellant has naturally laid considerable emphasis on this
basic aspect of the matter.
It is also true that having regard to the conditions
precedent prescribed by s. 33(1) and (2), it may be possible
to describe the application made by the employer either
under s. 33(1) or under s. 33(2) as incidental to the main
industrial dispute pending between the parties. We have
noticed that such applications have to be made before the
specified authority which is dealing with the main indus-
trial dispute; and so, the argument is that an incidental or
an interlocutory application which arises from the pendency
of the main industrial dispute, cannot survive the decision
of the main dispute itself. That is another aspect of the
matter on which the learned Solicitor-General relies. He
urges that it is during the pendency of the main industrial
dispute that s. 33 applies; that it applies in relation to
workmen concerned with such main dispute; and that the
417
power conferred by it has to be exercised by the authority
before which the main dispute is pending. These broad
features of s. 33 impress upon the applications made under
s. 33(1) and (2) the character of interlocutory proceedings,
and thus considered, interlocutory proceedings must be
deemed to come to an end as soon as the main dispute has
been finally determined.
On the other hand, there are several considerations which do
not support the argument of the appellant that as soon as
the main industrial dispute is decided, the application made
by it for approval under s. 33(2) should automatically come
to an end. As we have already indicated, the application of
the appellant can., in a sense, be treated as an incidental
proceeding; but it is a separate proceeding all the same,
and in that sense, it will be governed by the provisions of
s. 33(2)(b) as an independent proceeding. It is not an
interlocutory proceeding properly so called in its full
sense and significance; it is a proceeding between the
employer and his employee who was no doubt concerned with
the main industrial dispute along with other employees; but
it is nevertheless a proceeding between two parties in
respect of a matter not covered by the said main dispute.
It is, therefore, difficult to accept the argument that a
proceeding which validly commences by way of an application
made by the employer under s. 33(2)(b) should automatically
come to an end because the main dispute has in the meanwhile
been decided. What is the order that should be passed in
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such a proceeding, is a question which cannot be
satisfactorily answered, unless it is held that the proceed-
ing in question must proceed according to law and dealt with
as such..
In this connection it is significant that though the
Legislature has specifically issued by s. 33(5) a directive
to the specified authorities to dispose of the applications
without delay and act as expeditiously as possible, it has
not made any provision indicating that if the decision on
the applications made under s. 33(2) is not reached before
the main dispute is decided no order should be passed on
such applications. There is little doubt that the
Legislature intends that applications made under s. 33(2)
should be disposed of well before the main dispute is
determined; but failure to provide for the automatic
termination of such applications in case the main dispute is
decided before such applications are disposed of, indicates
that the Legislature intends that the proceedings which
begin with an application properly made under s. 33(2) must
run their own course and must be dealt with in accordance
with law. The direction that the said proceeding should be
disposed of as expeditiously as possible emphasises the fact
that the legislature intended that proper orders should be
passed on such applications without delay, but according to
law and on the merits of the applications themselves.
It is, however, urged by the learned Solicitor-General that
it would be futile to allow the present application to
proceed any
418
further, because the appellant can proceed to dismiss the
respondent notwithstanding the fact that the Tribunal does
not accord its approval to its order in question. This
argument, in out opinion, is misconceived. It cannot be
denied that with final determination of the main dispute
between the parties, the employer’s right to terminate the
services of the respondent according to the terms of service
revives and the ban imposed on the exercise of the said
power is lifted. But it cannot be overlooked that for the
period between the date on which the appellant passed its
order in question against the respondent, and the date when
the ban was lifted by the final determination of the main
dispute, the order cannot be said to be valid unless it
receives the approval of the Tribunal’ In other words, the
order being incomplete and inchoate until the approval is
obtained, cannot effectively terminate the relationship of
the employer and the employee between the Appellant and the
respondent-, and so, even if the main industrial dispute is
finally decided, the question about the validity of the
order would still have to be tried and if the approval is
not accorded by the Tribunal, the employer would be bound to
treat the respondent as its employee and pay him his full
wages for the period even though the appellant may
subsequently proceed to terminate the respondent’s services.
Therefore, the argument that the proceedings if continued
beyond the date of the final decision of the main industrial
dispute would become futile and meaningless, cannot be
accepted.
There is another aspect of this matter to which reference
must be made. Section 33A makes a special provision for
adjudication as to whether any employer has contravened the
provisions of s. 33. This section has conferred on
industrial employees a very valuable right of seeking the
protection of the Industrial Tribunal in case their rights
have been violated contrary to the provisions of s. 33.
Section 33-A provides that wherever an employee has a
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grievance that he has been dismissed by his employer in
contravention of s. 33(2), he may make a complaint to the
specified authorities and such a complaint would be tried as
if it was an industrial dispute referred to the Tribunal
under s. 10 of the Act. In other words, the complaint is
treated as an independent industrial proceeding and an award
has to be pronounced on it by the Tribunal concerned.
Now, take the present case and see how the acceptance of the
appellants argument would work. As we have already pointed
out, in the present case the Tribunal has considered the
met-its of the appellant’s prayer that it should accord
approval to the proposed dismissal of the respondent and it
has come to the conclusion that having regard to the
relevant circumstances, the approval should not be accorded.
If the appellant’s argument is accepted and it is held that
as soon as the main industrial disputes were finally deter-
mined, the application made by the appellant under s. 33(2)
auto magically came to an end, the respondent would not be
able to
419
get any relief against the appellant for the wrongful
termination of his services between the date of the impugned
order and the final disposal of the main industrial
disputes; and this would mean that in a case like the
present, s. 33A would be rendered nugatory, because the
employer having duly applied under s. 33(2)(b), the employee
cannot complain that there has been a contravention of s. 33
by the employer, even though on the merits the dismissal of
the employee may not be justified. That, in our opinion,
could not have been the intention of the Legislature. This
aspect of the matter supports the conclusion that a
proceeding validly commenced under s. 33(2)(b) would not
automatically come to an end merely because the main
industrial dispute has in the meanwhile been finally
determined.
It is of course true that under s. 33 the authority to grant
permission or to accord approval in cases falling under s.
33(1) and (2) respectively is vested in the Tribunal, before
which the main industrial dispute is pending, but that is
not an unqualified or inflexible requirement, because s.
33B(2) seems to permit transfers of applications before one
Tribunal to another, and in that sense, the argument urged
by the appellant that the condition that a specified
Tribunal alone can deal with applications made to it is an
inflexible condition, cannot be accepted. We are,
therefore, satisfied that the Tribunal was right in over-
ruling the contention raised by the appellant that the
application made by it for approval under s. 33(2)(b) ceased
to constitute a valid proceeding by reason of the fact that
the main industrial disputes, the pendency of which had made
the application necessary, had been finally decided.
This question has been considered by several High Courts in
this country. The High Courts of Calcutta, Madras and
Mysore have taken the view for which the learned Solicitor-
General has contended before us, vide Alkali and Chemical
Corporation of India Ltd. v. Seventh Industrial Tribunal,
West Bengal and Ors.(1); Mettur Industries Ltd. v. Sundara
Naidu and Anr.;(2) and Shah (A.T.) v. State of Mysore and
Ors.(3) respectively. On the other hand, the Kerala, the
Punjab, and the Allahabad High Courts have taken the view
which we are inclined to adopt, vide Kannan Devan Hill Pro-
duce Company Ltd., Munnar v. Miss Aleyamma Varghese and
Anr.;(4) Om Parkash Sharma v. Industrial Tribunal, Punjab
and Anr.;(5) and Amrit Bazar Patrika (Private) Ltd. v. Uttar
Pradesh State Industrial Tribunal and Ors.(6) respectively.
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In our opinion, the former view does not, while the latter
does, correctly represent the true legal position under s.
33(2)(b).
That takes us to the merits of the findings recorded by the
Tribunal in support of its final decision not to accord
approval to the
(1) [1964] II L.L.J. 568. (2) [1963] II L.L.J. 303.
(3) [1964] I L.L.J. 237. (4) [1962] II L.L.J. 158.
(5) [1962] II L.L.J. 272, (6) [1964] II L.L.J. 53,
B(N)3SCI-14
420
action proposed to be taken by the appellant against the
respondent. We have already indicated very briefly the
nature and effect of the said findings. The learned
Solicitor-General no doubt wanted to contend that the said
findings were not justified on the evidence adduced before
the Tribunal. We did not, however, allow the learned
Solicitor-General to develop this point because, in our
opinion, the findings in question are based on the
appreciation of oral evidence, and it cannot be suggested
that there is no legal evidence on the record. to support
them. Usually, this Court does not under Art. 136 of the
Constitution entertain a plea that the findings of fact
recorded by the Industrial Tribunal are erroneous on the
ground that they are based on a misappreciation of evidence.
The propriety or the correctness of the findings of fact is
not ordinarily allowed to be challenged in such appeals.
The result is the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
421