Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DHARANGADHARA CHEMICAL WORKS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF SAURASHTRA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/11/1956
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
DAS, S.K.
MENON, P. GOVINDA
CITATION:
1957 AIR 264 1957 SCR 152
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Workman-Independent contractor-Test-
Distinction-Agarias, if workmen-Finding by the Industrial
Tribunal, if a question of fact-Such finding, if and when
can be set aside--Industrial Disputes Act (XIV Of 1947), S.
2(s)-Constitution of India, Art. 226.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were lessees holding a license for the
manufacture of salt on the demised lands. The salt was
manufactured by a class of professional labourers known as
agarias from rain water that got mixed up with saline matter
in the soil. The work was seasonal in nature and commenced
in October after the rains and continued till June.
Thereafter the agarias left for their own villages for
cultivation work. The demised lands were divided into plots
called Pattas and allotted to the a-arias with a sum of Rs.
400/- for each Patta to meet the initial expenses.
Generally the same patta was allotted to the same aigaria
every year and if a patta was extensive in area, it was
allotted to two agarias working in partnership. After the
manufacture of salt the agayias were paid at the rate Of 5
as. 6 pies per maund. At the end of each season the
accounts were settled and the agarias paid the balance due
to them. The agarias who worked themselves with the members
of their families were free to engage extra labour on their
own account and the appellants had no concern therewith. No
hours of work were prescribed, no muster rolls maintained,
nor were working hours controlled by the appellants. There
were no rules as regards leave or holidays and the agarias
were free to go out of the factory after making arrangements
for the manufacture of salt. The question for decision was
whether in such circumstances the agarias could be held to
be workmen as defined by S. 2(s) Of the Industrial Disputes
Act of 1947, as found by the Industrial Tribunal and agreed
with by the High Court or they were independent contractors
and the reference for adjudication made by the Government
competent under s. 10 of the Act.
Held, that the finding of the Industrial Tribunal that the
agarias were workmen within the meaning of S. 2(S) of the
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Industrial Disputes Act of 1947 was correct and the
reference was competent.
The real test whether a person was a workman was whether he
had been employed by the employer and a relationship of
employer and employee or master and servant subsisted
between them and it was well settled that the prima facie
test of such
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relationship was the existence of the right in the employer
not merely to direct what work was to be done but also to
control the manner in which it was to be done, the nature or
extent of such control varying in different industries and
being by its nature incapable of being precisely defined.
The correct approach, therefore, was to consider whether,
having regard to the nature of the work, there was due
control and supervision of the employer.
Mersey Docks and Harbour Board v. Coggins & Griffith (Liver-
Pool) Ltd., and Another [1947] 1 A.C. 1, and Simmons v.
Heath Laundry Company [1921] 1 K.B. 543, referred to.
The question whether the relation between the parties was
one as between an employer and employee or master and
servant was a pure question of fact and where the Industrial
Tribunal having jurisdiction to decide that question came to
a finding, such finding of fact was not open to question in
a proceeding under Art. 226 of the Constitution unless it
could be shown to be wholly unwarranted by the evidence.
Ebrahim Aboobakar v. Custodian General of Evacuee Property
[1952] S.C.R. 696, referred to.
Performing Right, Society Ltd. etc. v. Mitchell and Booker
(Plaise De Danse) [1924] i K.B. 762, not followed.
A person could be a workman even though he did piece-work
and was paid not per day but by the job or employed his own
labour and paid for it.
Sadler v. Henlock (1855) 119 E.R. 209 and Blake v. Thirst
(1863) 32 L.J. (Exchequer) 188, referred to.
The broad distinction between a workman and an independent
contractor was that while the former would be bound by
agreement to work personally and would so work the latter
was to get the work done by others. A workman would not
cease to be so even though lie got other persons to work
with him and paid and controlled them.
Grainger v. Aynsley : Bromley v. Tams (1881) 6 Q.B.D. 182,
Weaver v. Floyd (1825) 21 L.H., Q.B. 151 and Whitely v.
Armitage (1864) 16 W.R. 144, referred to.
As in the instant case the agayias, who were professional
labourers and personally worked with the members of their
families in manufacturing the salt, were workmen within the
meaning of the Act, the fact that they were free to engage
others to assist them and paid for them, could not affect
their status as workmen.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: CiVil Appeal No. 85 of 1956.
20
154
Appeal from the judgment and order dated January 8, 1954, of
the High Court of Saurashtra, at Rajkot, in Civil Misc.
Application No. 70 of 1952.
R. J. Kolah and A. C. Dave, for the appellant.
Porus A. Mehta and R. H. Dhebar, for respondent No. 1.
1956. November 23. The Judgment of the Court was,
delivered by
BHAGWATI J.-This appeal with a certificate of fitness
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granted by the High Court of Saurashtra raises an
interesting question whether the agarias working in the Salt
Works at Kuda in the Rann of Cutch are workmen within the
meaning of the term as defined in the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947, hereinafter referred to as the Act.
The facts as found by the Industrial Tribunal are not in
dispute and are as follows. The appellants are lessees of
the Salt Works from the erstwhile State of Dharangadhara and
also hold a licence for the manufacture of salt on the land.
The appellants require salt -for the manufacture of certain
chemicals and part of the salt manufactured at the Salt
Works is utilised by the appellants in the manufacturing
process in the Chemical Works at Dharangadhara and the
remaining salt is sold to outsiders. The appellants employ
a Salt Superintendent who is in charge of the Salt Works and
generally supervises the Works and the manufacture of salt
carried on there. The appellants maintain a a railway line
and sidings and also have arrangements for storage of
drinking water. They also maintain a grocery shop near the
Salt Works where the agarias can purchase their requirements
on credit.
The salt is manufactured not from sea water but from rain
water which soaking down the surface becomes impregnated
with saline matter. The operations are seasonal in
character and commence sometime in October at the close of
the monsoon. Then the entire area is parceled out into
plots called pattas and they are in four parallel rows
intersected by the railway
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lines. Each agaria is allotted a patta and in general the
same patta is allotted to the same agaria year after year.
If the patta is extensive it is allotted to two agarias who
work the same in partnership. At the time of such
allotment, the appellants pay a sum of Rs. 400/- for each of
the pattas and that is to meet the initial expenses. Then
the agarias commence their work. They level the lands and
enclose and sink wells in them. Then the density of the
water in the wells is examined by the Salt Superintendent of
the appellants and then the brine is brought to the surface
and collected in the reservoirs called condensers and re-
tained therein until it acquires by natural process a
certain amount of density. Then it is flowed into the
pattas and kept there until it gets transformed ’into
crystals. The pans have got to be prepared by the agarias
according to certain standards and they are tested by the
Salt Superintendent. When salt crystals begin to form in
the pans they are again tested by the Salt Superintendent
and only when they are of a particular quality the work of
collecting salt is allowed to be commenced. After the
crystals are collected, they are loaded into the railway
wagons and transported to the depots where salt is stored.
The salt is again tested there and if it is found to be of
the right quality, the agarias are paid therefore at the
rate of Rs. 0-5-6 per maund. Salt which is rejected belongs
to the appellants and the agarias cannot either remove the
salt manufactured by them or sell it. The account is made
up at the end of the season when the advances which have
been paid to them from time to time as also the amounts due
from the agarias to the grocery shop are taken into account.
On a final settlement of the accounts, the amount due by the
appellants to the agarias is ascertained and such balance is
paid by the appellants to the agarias. The manufacturing
season comes to an end in June when the monsoon begins and
then the agarias return to their villages and take up
agricultural work.
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The agarias work themselves with their families on the
pattas allotted to them. They are free to engage extra
labour but it is they who make the payments to
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these labourers and the appellants have nothing to do with
the same. The appellants do not prescribe any hours of work
for these agarias. No muster roll is maintained by them nor
do they control how many hours in a day and for how many
days in a month the agarias should work. There are no rules
as regards leave or holidays. They are free to go out of
the works as they like provided they make satisfactory
arrangements for the manufacture of salt.
In about 1950, disputes arose between the agarias and the
appellants as to the conditions under which the agarias
should be engaged by the appellants in the manufacture of
salt. The Government of Saurashtra, by its letter of
Reference dated November 5, 1951, referred the disputes for
adjudication to the Industrial Tribunal, Saurashtra State,
Rajkot. The appellants contested the proceedings on the
ground, inter alia, that the status of the agarias was that
of independent contractors and not of workmen and that the
State was not competent to refer their disputes for
adjudication under s. 10 of the Act.
This question was tried as a preliminary issue and by its
order dated August 30, 1952, the Tribunal held that the
agarias were workmen within the meaning of the Act and that
the reference was intra vires and adjourned the matter for
hearing on the merits. Against this order the appellants
preferred an appeal being Appeal No. 302 of 1952, before the
Labour Appellate Tribunal of India, and having failed- to
obtain stay of further proceedings before the Industrial
Tribunal pending the appeal, they moved the High Court of
Saurashtra in M.P. No. 70 of 1952 under Arts. 226 and 227 of
the Constitution for an appropriate writ to quash the
reference dated November 5, 1951, on the ground that it was
without jurisdiction. Pending the disposal of this writ
petition, the appellants obtained stay of further
proceedings before the Industrial Tribunal and in view of
the same the Labour Appellate Tribunal passed an order on
September 27, 1953, dismissing the appeal leaving the
question raised therein to the decision of the High Court.
By their judgment dated January 8, 1954, the learned Judges
157
of the High Court agreed with the decision of the Industrial
Tribunal that the agarias were workmen within s. 2(.s) of
the Act and, accordingly, dismissed the application for
writ. They, however, granted a certificate under Art.
133(1) (c) of the Constitution and that is how the appeal
comes before us.
The sole point for determination in this appeal is whether
the agarias working in the Salt Works of the appellants at
Kuda are workmen within the definition of that term in s.
2(s) of the Act.
" Workman " has been thus defined in s. 2 (s) of the Act:-
"(s) -’Workman’ means any person employed (including an
apprentice) in any industry to do any skilled or unskilled
manual or clerical work for hire or’ reward and includes,
for the purposes of any proceedings under this Act in
relation to an industrial dispute, a workman discharged
during that dispute, but does not include any person
employed in the naval, military or air service of the
(Government). "
The essential condition of a person being a workman within
the terms of this definition is that he should be employed
to do the work in that industry, that there should be, in
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other words, an employment of his by the employer and that
there should be the relationship between the employer and
him as between employer and employee or master and servant.
Unless a person is thus employed there can be no question of
his being a workman within the definition of the term as
contained in the Act.
The principles according to which the relationship as
between employer and employee or master and servant has got
to be determined are well settled. The test which is
uniformly applied in order to determine the relationship is
the existence of a right of control in respect of the manner
in which the work is to be done. A distinction is also
drawn between a contract for services and a contract of
service and that distinction is put in this way: " In the
one case the master can order or require what is to be done
while in the other case he can not only order or require
what is to be done
158
but how itself it ,;hall be done." (Per Hilbery, J. in
Collins v. Hertfordshire County Council (1).)
The test is, however, not accepted as universally correct.
The following observations of Denning L.J., at pp. 110, III
in Stevenson, Jordan and Harrison Ltd. v. Macdonald and
Evans (2) are apposite in this context:
"But in Cassidy v. Ministry of Health (3) Lord Justice
Somervell, pointed out that test is not universally correct.
There are many contracts of service where the master cannot
control the manner in which the work is to be done as in the
case of a captain of a ship. Lord Justice Somervell, went
on to say: One perhaps cannot get much beyond this: ’Was the
contract a contract of service within the meaning which an
ordinary man would give under the words’?
" I respectfully agree. As my Lord has said, it is almost
impossible to give a precise definition of the distinction.
It is often easy to recognize a contract of service when you
see it, but difficult to say wherein the difference lies. A
ship’s master, a chauffeur, and a reporter on the staff of a
newspaper are all employed under a contract of service; but
a ship’s pilot, a taxi man, and a newspaper contributor are
employed under a contract for services. One feature which
seems to run through the instances is that, under a contract
of service, a man is employed as part of the business, and
his work is done as an integral part of the business;
whereas., under a contract for services, his work, although
done for the business, is not integrated into it but is only
accessory to it."
We may also refer to a pronouncement of the House of Lords
in Short v. J. & W. Henderson, Ltd. (4) where Lord
Thankerton recapitulated the four indicia of a contract of
service which had been referred to in the judgment under
appeal, viz., (a) the master’s power of selection of his
servant, (b) the payment of wages or
(1) [1947] K.B. 598, 615.
(2) [1952] T.L.R. 101, Ill.
(3) [1951] 1 T.L.R. 539, 543 s.c. [1951] 2 K.B. 343, 352-3.
(4)(1946)62T.L.R. 427,429.
159
other remuneration, (c) the master’s right to control the
method of doing the work, and (d) the master’s right of
suspension or dismissal, but observed: -
"Modern industrial conditions have so much affected the
freedom of the master in cases in which no one could
reasonably suggest that the employee was thereby converted
into an independent contractor that, if and when an
appropriate occasion arises, it will be incumbent on this
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House to reconsider and to restate these indicia. For
example, (a), (b) and (d) and probably also (c), are
affected by the statutory provisions and ,rules which
restrict the master’,% choice to men supplied by the labour
bureaux, or directed to him under the Essential Work
provisions, and his power of suspension or dismissal. is
similarly affected. These matters are also affected by
trade union rules which are atleast primarily made for the
protection of wage-earners."
Even in that case, the House of Lords considered the right
of supervision and control retained by the employers as, the
only method if occasion arose of securing the proper and
efficient discharge of the cargo as sufficiently
determinative of the relationship between the parties and
affirmed that " the principal requirement of a contract of
service is the right of master in some reasonable sense to
control the method of doing the work and this factor of
superintendence and control has frequently been treated as
critical and decisive of the legal quality of relationship.
The position in law is thus summarised in Halsburv’s Laws of
England, Hailsham edition, Vol. 22, page 112, para. 191:-
" Whether or not, in any given case, the relation of master
and servant, exists is a question of fact; but in all cases
the relation imports the existence of power in the employer
not only to direct what work the servant is to do, but also
the manner in which the work is to be done.":
and until the position is restated as contemplated in Short
v. J. & W. Henderson Ltd., (supra), we may take it as the
prima facie test for determining the relationship between
master and servant,
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The principle which emerges from these authorities is that
the prima facie test for the determination of the
relationship between master and servant is the existence of
the right in the master to supervise and control the work
done by the servant not only in the matter of directing what
work the servant is to do but also the manner in which he
shall do his work, or to borrow the words of Lord Uthwatt at
page 23 in Mersey Docks and Harbour Board v. Coggins &
Griffith (Liverpool) Ltd., and Another (1), " The proper
test is whether or not the hirer had authority to control
the manner of execution of the act in question
The nature or extent of control which is requisite to
establish the relationship of employer and employee must
necessarily vary from business to business and is by its
very nature incapable of precise definition. As has been
noted above, recent pronouncements of the Court of Appeal in
England have even expressed the view that it is not
necessary for holding that a person is an employee, that the
employer should be proved to have exercised control over his
work, that the test of control was not one of universal
application and that there were many contracts in which the
master could not control the manner in which the work was
done (Vide observations of Somervell, L.J., in Cassidy v.
Ministry of Health (supra), and Denning, L.J., in Stevenson,
Jordan and Harrison Ltd. v. MacDonald and Evans (supra).)
The correct method of approach, therefore, would be to
consider whether having regard to the nature of the work
there was due control and supervision by the employer or to
use the words of Fletcher Moulton, L.J., at page 549 in
Simmons v. Health Laundry Company (2):-
" In my’ opinion it is impossible to lay down any rule of
law distinguishing the one from the other. It is a question
of fact to be decided by all the circumstances of the case.
The greater the amount of direct control exercised over the
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person rendering the services by the person contracting for
them the stronger the
(1) [1947] 1 A.C. 1. 23. (2) [1910] 1 K.B- 543, 54 550.
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161
grounds for holding it to be a contract of service, and
similarly the greater the degree of independence of such
control the greater the probability that the services
rendered are of the nature of professional services and that
the contract is not one of service."
The Industrial Tribunal on a consideration of thes facts in
the light of the principles enunciated above, came to the
conclusion that though certain features which are usually to
be found in a contract of service were absent, that was due
to the nature of the industry and that on the whole the
status of the agarias was that of workmen and not
independent contractors. It was under the circumstances
strenuously urged before ,us by the learned counsel for the
respondents that the question as regards the relationship
between the appellants and the agarias was a pure question
of fact, that the Industrial Tribunal had jurisdiction to
decide that question and had come to its own conclusion in
regard thereto, that the High Court, exercising its
jurisdiction under Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution,
was not competent to set aside the finding of fact recorded
by the Industrial Tribunal and that we, here, entertaining
an appeal from the decision of the High Court, should also
not interfere with that finding of fact.
Reliance was placed on the observations of Mahajan, J., as
he then was, in Ebrahim Aboobakar v. Custodian General of
Evacuee Property (1)
"It is plain that such a writ cannot be granted to quash the
decision of an inferior court within its jurisdiction on the
ground that the decision is wrong. Indeed, it must be shown
before such a writ is issued that the authority which passed
the ’order acted without jurisdiction or in excess of it or
in violation of the principles of natural justice...... But
once it is held that the court has jurisdiction but while
exercising it made a mistake, the wronged. party can only
take the course prescribed by law for setting matters right
inasmuch as a court has jurisdiction to decide rightly as
well as wrongly. "
(1) [1952] S.C.R. 696,702.
21
162
There is considerable force in this contention of the
respondents. The question whether the relationship between
the parties is one as between employer and employee or
between master and servant is a pure question of fact.
Learned counsel for the appellants "relied upon a passage
from Batt’s "Law of Master and Servant", 4th edition, at
page 10:-
" The line between an independent contractor and a servant
is often a very fine one; it is a mixed question of fact and
law, and the judge has to find and select the facts which
govern the true relation between the parties as to the
control of the work, and then he or the jury has to say
whether the person employed is a servant or a contractor. "
This statement, however, rests upon a passing observation of
Mc Cardie, J. in Performing Right Society Ltd. v. Mitchell
and Booker (Palais de Danse)(1) and is contrary to the
oaten& of authorities which lays down that whether or not in
any given case the relation of master and servant exists is
purely one of fact. (Vide Halsbury’s "Laws of England",
Hailsham edition, Vol. 22, page 112, para. 191; Per Cozens-
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Hardy, M.R. at page 547 and Per Fletcher Moulton, L.J. at
page 549 in Simmons v. Heath Laundry Company (supra). It is
equally well settled that the decision of the Tribunal on a
question of fact which it has jurisdiction to determine is
not liable to be questioned in proceedings under Art. 226 of
the Constitution unless at the least it is shown to be fully
unsupported by evidence.
Now the argument of Mr. Kolah for the appellants is that
even if all the facts found by the Tribunal are accepted
they only lead to the conclusion that the agarias are
independent contractors and that the finding, therefore,
that they are workmen is liable to be set aside on the
ground that there is no evidence to support it. We shall,
therefore, proceed to determine the correctness of this
contention.
Apart from the facts narrated above in regard to which there
is no dispute, there was the evidence of the Salt
Superintendent of the appellants which was recorded before
the Tribunal:-
(1) [1924] 1 K.B. 762.
163
"The panholders are allotted work on the salt pans by oral
agreement. The Company has no control over the panholders
in regard to the hours of work or days of work. The
Company’s permission is nor sought in matter of sickness or
in matter of going out to some village. The Company has no
control over the panholders as to how many labourers they
should engage and what wages they should pay them. The
company’s supervision over the work of the panholders is
limited to the proper quality as per requirements of the
Company and as per standard determined by the Government in
matter of salt. , The company’s supervision is limited to
this extent.
The Company acts in accordance with Clause 6 of the said
agreement in order to get the proper quality of salt.
Panholders are not the workmen of the Company, but are
contractors. The men, who are entrusted with pattas, work
themselves. They can engage others to help them and so they
do. There is upto this day no instance that any penholder
who is entrusted with a patta, has not turned up to work on
it. But we do not mind whether he himself works or not.
If any penholder after registering his name (for a patta)
gets work done by others, we allow it to be done.
We own 319 pattas. Some patta8 have two partners. In some,
one man does the job. ID all the pans, mainly the
panholders work with the help of their (respective)
families. "
Clause 6 of the agreement referred to in the course of his
evidence by the Salt Superintendent provided:-
" 6. We bind ourselves to work as per advice and
instructions of the officers appointed by them in connection
with the drawing of brine or with the process of salt
production in the pattas and if there is any default,
negligence or slackness in executing it on our part or if we
do not behave well in any way, the Managing Agent of the
said Company can annul this agreement and can take
possession of the patta, brine, well etc., and as a result
we will not be entitled to claim any
164
sort of consideration or compensation for any half processed
salt lying in our patta; or in respect of any expense
incurred or labour employed in preparing kiwa patta, well
bamboo lining etc. "
There was also the evidence of Shiva Daya, an agaria, who
was examined on behalf of the respondents:-
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" There is work of making enclosures and then of sinking
wells. The company supervises this work. While the wells
are being sunk, the company measures the density of the
brine of wells. In order to bring the brine of wells to the
proper density, it is put in a condenser and then the
Company tests this and then this brine is allowed to flow in
the pattas......
The bottom of a patta is prepared after it is properly
crushed under feet and after the company inspects and okays
that it is alright, water is allowed to flow into it. When
salt begins to form at the bottom of a patta, an officer of
the company comes and inspects it. At the end of 21 months,
the water becomes saturated, i.e., useless, and so it is
drained away under the supervision of the company. Then
fresh brine is allowed to flow into the patta from the
condenser. This instruction is also given by the company’s
officer."
It was on a consideration of this evidence that the
Industrial Tribunal came to the conclusion that the
supervision and control exercised by the appellants extended
to all stages of the manufacture from beginning to end. We
are of opinion that far from there being no evidence to
support the conclusion reached by the Industrial Tribunal
there were materials on the record on the basis of which it
could come to the conclusion that the agarias are not
independent contractors but workmen within the meaning of
the Act.
Learned counsel for the appellants laid particular stress on
two features in this case which, in his submission, were
consistent only with the position that the agarias are
independent contractors. One is that they do piece-work and
the other that they employ their own labour and pay for it.
In our opinion neither of these two circumstances is
decisive of the question. As
165
regards the first, the argument of the appellants is that
as, the agaria8 are under no obligation to work for fixed
hours or days and are to be paid wages not per day or hours
but for the quantity of salt actually produced and passed,
at a certain rate,, the very basis on which the relationship
of employer and employees rests is lacking, and that they
can only be regarded as independent contractors. There is,
however, abundant authority in England that a person can be
a workman even though he is paid not per day but by the job.
The following observations of Crompton, J. in Sadler
v. Henlock (1) are pertinent in this behalf :-
" The test here is, whether the defendant retained the power
of controlling the work. No distinction can be drawn from
the circumstances of the man being employed at so much a day
or by the job. I think that here the relation was that of
master and servant, not of contractor and contractee."
(See also Blake, v. Thirst (2) and Halsbury’s " Laws of
England ", Hailsham edition, Vol. 22, page 119, para. 194,
wherein it is stated that if a person is a worker and not a
contractor, " it makes no difference that his work is piece-
work ".)
As regards the second feature relied on for the appellants
it is contended that the agaria8 are entitled to engage
other persons to do the work, that these persons are engaged
by the agaria8 and are paid by them, that the appellants
have no control over them and that these facts can be
reconciled only with the position that the agaria8 are
independent contractors. This argument, however, proceeds
on a misapprehension of the true legal position. The broad
distinction between a workman and an independent contractor
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lies in this that while the former agrees himself to work,
the latter agrees to get other persons to work. Now a
person who agrees himself to work and does so work and is,
therefore, a workman does not cease to be such by reason
merely of the fact that he gets other persons to work along
(1) (1855) 4 El. & Bl. 570, 578 ; (1855) 119 E.R. 209, 212.
(2) (1863) 32 L.J. (Exchequer) 188.
166
with him and that those persons are controlled and paid by
him. What determines whether a person is a workman or an
independent contractor is whether he has agreed to work
personally or not. If he has, then he is a workman and the
fact that he takes assistance from other persons would not
affect his status. The position is thus summarised in
Halsbury’s ’Laws of England’, Vol. 14, pages 651-652:-
" The workman must have consented to give his personal
services and not merely to get the work done, but if he is
bound under his contract to work personally, he is not
excluded from the definition, simply because he has
assistance from others, who work under him."
(See also Grainger v. Aynsley : Bromley v. Tams (1); Weaver
v. Floyd (2) and Whitely v. Armitage (a).)
In the instant case the agarias are professional labourers.
They themselves personally work along with the members of
their families in the production of salt and would,
therefore, be workmen. The fact that they are free to
engage others to assist them and pay for them would not,in
view of the above authorities, affect their status as
workmen.
There are no doubt considerable difficulties that may arise
if the agarias were held to be workmen within the meaning of
s. 2 (s) of the Act. Rules regarding hours of work etc.,
applicable to other workmen may not be conveniently applied
to them and the nature as well as the manner and method of
their work would be such as cannot be regulated by any
directions given by the Industrial Tribunal. These
difficulties, however, are no deterrent against holding the
agarias to be workmen within the meaning of the definition
if they fulfil its requirements. The Industrial Tribunal
would have to very well consider what relief, if any, may
possibly be granted to them having regard to all the
circumstances of the case and may not be able to regulate
the work to be done by the aqarias and the remuneration to
be paid to them by the employer in
(1) (1881) 6 Q.B.D. 182.
(2) (1852) 21 L.J., Q.B. 151.
(3) (1864) 16 W.R. 144.
167
the manner it is used to do in the case of other industries
here the conditions of employment and the work to be done by
the employees is of a different character. These
considerations would necessarily have to be borne in mind
while the Industrial Tribunal is adjudicating upon the
disputes which have been referred to it for adjudication.
They do not, however, militate against the conclusion which
we have come to above that the decision of the Industrial
Tribunal to the effect that the agarias are workmen within
the definition of the term contained in s. 2 (s) of the Act
was justified on the materials on the record.
We accordingly see no ground for interfering with that
decision and dismiss this appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed.