Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
M/S. NORTH BROOK JUTE CO. LTD.AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THEIR WORKMEN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/03/1960
BENCH:
ACT:
Industrial Dispute--Rationalisation scheme objected to by
workmen--Scheme put into operation Pending reference to
Tribunal--Workmen’s refusal to work--Lock-out--Claim for
wages for the period of lock-out--Industrial Disputes Act,
1947 (14 of 1947), ss. 3(2), 9A, 33, 33A.
HEADNOTE:
A rationalisation scheme in the mills of the appellant com-
panies was agreed to by the Works Committee and a notice
under S. 9A of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, was given
to the
365
Union of their workmen. The workmen, however, objected to
the introduction of the scheme and the dispute was referred
by the Government to the Tribunal on December 13, 1957. On
December 16, the management of the companies put the
rationalisation scheme into operation but the workmen
refused to do the additional work placed on them by the
scheme. Later, the same day, the mills declared a lock-out.
Work was, however, resumed a few days later as a result of a
settlement, and a dispute arose as to whether the workmen
were entitled to the payment of wages for the period during
which the mills were closed:
Held, (1) that the workmen’s representatives on the Works
Committee represented the workmen only for the purpose of
the functions of the Works Committee and that the approval
of the scheme of rationalisation by the Works Committee was
not binding on the workmen or their Union.
Kemp and Company Ltd. v. Their Workmen, [1955] 1 L.L.J. 48,
approved.
(2) that the introduction of a rationalisation scheme was
an alteration of conditions of service to the prejudice of
the workmen.
(3) that the alteration of conditions of service was made
not when notice under s. 9A of the Industrial Disputes Act
was given but on December 16, when the rationalisation
scheme was put into operation, and that as it was done when
the reference was pending before the Tribunal, it was a
contravention of s. 33 of the Act.
(4) that the closure of the mills in the circumstances of
this case by the employer amounted to an illegal lock-out
and that the workmen unable to work in consequence of the
lock-out were entitled to wages for the period of absence
caused by such lock-out.
JUDGMENT:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 141 of 1959.
Appeal by special leave from the Award dated July 19, 1958,
of the Fourth Industrial Tribunal, West Bengal, in Case No.
VIII-240 (166)/57.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, Vidya Sagar
and B. N. Ghosh, for the appellants.
P. K. Sanyal and P. K. Chakravarty for R. C. Datta, for
the respondents.
1960. March 23. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DAS GUPTA, J.-On December 13, 1957, the Government of West
Bengal referred under s. 10 of the Industrial Disputes, Act
the following dispute between M/S. Northbrook Jute Co.,
Ltd., and Dalhousie Jute Mills Who are appellants before us
and their workmen:-
47
366
" Do the proposals of rationalisation in the above two mills
involve any increase in workload ? If so, what relief the
workmen are entitled to ?"
Almost a month before this the proposal of introducing a
rationalisation scheme in time mills of these companies had
been considered at an extraordinary meeting of the Works
Committee and the Committee had agreed to the proposal. A
notice tinder s. 9A of the Industrial Disputes Act was then
given by the companies to the Unions of their workmen and it
was because the workmen objected to the introduction of the
rationalisation scheme that the dispute arose and was refer-
red by the Government to the Tribunal. On December 16 when
the above reference was pending before the Tribunal the
management. of these mills put the rationalisation scheme
into operation but the workmen refused to do the additional
work placed on them by the scheme. Later the same day the
mills declared a lock-out. Work was however resumed again
in all departments excepting the weaving and finishing
departments on December 20, and in these two departments on
December 21, as a result of a settlement arrived at between
the workmen represented by their Unions and the Mills as
regards the introduction of the rationalisation scheme. But
a dispute arose as regards the payment of wages to workmen
for their dues during the period when the mills were closed,
viz., 16th December to 20th December in the weaving and
finishing departments and 16th December to 19th December in
all other departments. This dispute was also referred to
the Tribunal by an order of the Government dated February 1,
1958. The earlier issue as regards the proposed
introduction of the rationalisation scheme was also amended
in view of what had happened in the meantime by substituting
therefore :--" Have the rationalisation effected in the
above two mills since 16th December, 1957, involved any
increase in the workload ? To what relief the workers are
entitled to ?" We are no longer concerned with this issue as
the decision of the Tribunal thereon which is against the
workmen is no longer disputed. As regards the other two
disputes the Tribunal has made an award in favour of the
367
workmen that they are entitled to wages for the period of
absence above-mentioned.
On this question the workmen’s case before the Tribunal was
that the reason that workmen could no do any work on the
days in question was the illegal look-out by the employers;
the employer’s case was that the workmen had struck work
illegally, and so the closure of the mills on the 16th of
December after such strike was not illegal or unjustified.
The Tribunal was of opinion that the eimloyer’s attempt to
put the rationalisation scheme into effect on the 16th
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
December was a contravention of s. 33 of the Industrial
Disputes Act, and so, the workmen’s refusal to works in
accordance with that scheme was not an illegal strike and
the employer’s closure of the mills was illegal.
Learned counsel for the employer-mills has tried to convince
us that they had acted in accordance with law, in
introducing the rationalisation scheme on the 16th December.
He pointed out that the Works Committee duly constituted
under the Act had considered the scheme and approved of it,
and argued that as the workmen’s representatives on the
Works Committee bad agreed to the scheme, the workmen
themselves should be taken to have agreed to it. That the
workmen’s representatives on the Works Committee agreed to
the introduction of the scheme by the companies " whenever
they desired " is established by a copy of the resolution of
the Works Committee. It has to be noticed however that the
workmen’s representatives on the Works Committee do not
represent the workmen for all purposes, but only for the
purpose of the functions of the Works Committee. Section
3(2) of the Act sets out the functions of the Works
Committee in these words:
" It shall be the duty of the Works Committee to promote
measures for securing and preserving amity and good
relations between the employer and workmen and, to that end
to comment upon matters of their common interest or concern
and endeavor to compose any material difference of opinion
in respect of such matters."
368
The language used by the Legislature makes it clear that the
Works Committee was not intended to supplant or supersede
the Unions for the purpose of collective bargaining ; they
are not authorised to consider real or substantial changes
in the conditions of service; heir task is only to smooth
away frictions that might rise between the workmen and the
management in day-to-day work. By no stretch of imagination
can it be said that the duties and functions of the Works
Committee included the decision on such an important matter
as the alteration in the conditions of service by
rationalisation. " To promote measures for securing and
preserving amity and good relations between the employer and
workmen " is their real function and to that end they are
authorised to " comment upon matters of their common concern
or interest and endeavour to compose any material difference
of opinion in respect of such matters," The question of
introduction of rationalisation scheme may be said to be a
matter of common interest between the employers and workmen;
but the duty and authority of the Works Committee could not
extend to anything more than making comments thereupon and
to endeavour to compose any material difference of opinion
in respect of such matters. Neither " comments" nor the "
endeavour " could be held to extend to decide the question
on which differences have arisen or are likely one way or
the other. It was rightly pointed out by the Labour
Appellate Tribunal in Kemp and Company Ltd. v. Their
Workmen(’) that:
" the Works Committees are normally concerned with problems
arising in the day to day working of the concern and the
functions of the Works Committee are to ascertain the
grievances of the employees and when occasion arises to
arrive at some agreement also. But the function and the
responsibility of the works committee as their very
nomenclature indicates cannot go beyond recommendation and
as such they are more or less bodies who in the first
instance endeavour to compose the differences and the final
decision rests with the union as a whole. "
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
The fact that the ’workmen’s representatives on the Works
Committee agreed to the introduction of the
(1) [1955] 1 L.L.J. 48.
369
rationalisation scheme is therefore in no way binding on the
workmen or their Union.
The next argument was that whatever alteration was effected
in the conditions of service, was made, on the date when
notice under s. 9A was given and that being before the 13th
December there was no contravention of s. 33. There is in
our opinion no substance in this contention, Section 9A in
accordance with which the notice was given provides that "
No employer who proposes to effect any change in the
conditions of service applicable to any workmen in respect
of any matter specified in the Fourth Schedule, shall effect
such change-
(a) without giving to the workmen likely to be affected by
such a notice in the prescribed manner of the nature of the
change proposed to be effected; or
(b) within twenty-one days of giving such notice;". With
the proviso to the section we are not concerned. What is
important to notice is that in making this provision for
notice the Legislature was clearly contemplating three
stages. The first stage is the proposal by the employer to
effect a change; the next stage is when he gives a notice
and the last stage is when he effects the change in the
conditions of service on the expiry of 21 days from the date
of the notice. The conditions of service do not stand
changed, either when the proposal is made or the notice is
given but only when the change is actually effected. That
actual change takes place when the new conditions of service
are actually introduced.
It necessarily follows that in deciding for the purpose of
s. 33 of the Act, at what point of time the employer "
alters " any conditions of service, we have to ascertain the
time when the change of which notice under s. 9A is given is
actually effected. If at the time the change is effected, a
proceeding is pending before a Tribunal, s. 33 is attracted
and not otherwise. The point of time when the employer
proposes to change the conditions of service and the point
of time when the notice is given are,equally irrelevant.
It was further contended that in any case, the alteration
was not to the prejudice of the workmen. How such a
contention can be seriously made is difficult to
370
understand. The whole basis of the scheme was so to
allocate the machines to workmen, as to enable fewer workmen
to work the machines than the number previously required so
that surplus workmen could be discharged. The object was to
decrease the cost of production. The method adopted for
attaining the object was to obtain more work from the
workmen for approximately the same wages. However laudable
the object be, it cannot be doubted for a moment that the
scheme prejudiced the workmen seriously. Mr. Fraser, the
company’s witness, stated in his evidence that while
previously for every machine in the batching department,
there were two hands, now there are two hands for two
machines. In giving the reasons for the introduction of the
scheme, he said " we had surplus labour in both the mills.
The company was losing heavily. Till then we depended on
natural wastage and did not think of rationalisation; in
November last year, the decision was taken to take action on
rationalisation. "
Rationalisation which was introduced had therefore two
effects-first that some workers would become surplus and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
would face discharge; and secondly, the other workmen would
have to carry more workload. The introduction of the
rationalisation scheme was therefore clearly an alteration
of conditions of service to the prejudice of the workmen.
The alteration was made on the 16th December, when reference
as regards the scheme had already been made and was pending
before the Industrial Tribunal. The Tribunal has therefore
rightly held that this introduction was a contravention of
s. 33.
Lastly it was contended that even if the introduction of the
rationalisation scheme was a contravention of s. 33 the
workmen’s remedy lay in applying under s. 33A, and that they
were not entitled to strike work. Section 33A no doubt
gives the workmen aggrieved by the contravention by the
employer of s. 33 to apply to the Tribunal for relief; but
the existence of this remedy does not mean that the workmen
were bound to work under the altered conditions of service,
even though these were in clear contravention of law. When
they refused to do the additional work which the
371
rationalisation scheme required them to do, they refused to
do work, which the employer had no right in law to ask them
to do. It is difficult to say that this amounted to a "
strike" by the workmen; but even if it could be said to be a
" strike " such strike was certainly not illegal or
unjustified.
Our conclusion therefore is that the Tribunal was right in
its opinion that the closure of the mills by the employer
amounted to an illegal lock-out, and the workmen, unable to"
work in consequence of the lockout, are entitled to wages
for the period of absence, used by such lock-out.
The appeal is therefore dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.