Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SECRETARY, H.S.E.B.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SURESH & ORS ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/04/1999
BENCH:
M.Jagannadha Rao, Umesh C. Banerjee
JUDGMENT:
BANERJEE, J
The doctrine of equality as enshrined in the
Constitution promised an egalitarian society and the
Contract Labour (Regulation & Abolition) Act, 1970 is the
resultant effect of such a constitutional mandate having its
due focus in that perspective. This Court in Minerva Mills’
case ( AIR 1980 SC 1789) in no uncertain terms laid down
that the equality clause in the Constitution does not speak
of mere formal equality before the law but embodies the
concept of real and substantive equality which strikes at
the inequalities arising on account of vast social and
economic differentiation and is thus consequently an
essential ingredient of social and economic justice. In
short, this Court has equated the security clause in the
Constitution so as to mean that the people of the country
ought to be secured of socio-economic justice by way of a
fusion of Fundamental Right and Directive Principles of
State Policy. As a matter of fact this Court has been
candid enough on more occasions than one and rather,
frequently to note that socialism ought not to be treated as
a mere concept or an ideal, but the same ought to be
practised in every sphere of life and be treated by the law
courts as a constitutional mandate since the law courts
exists for the society and required to act as a
guardian-angel of the society. As a matter of fact the
socialistic concept of society is very well laid in Part III
and Part IV of the Constitution and the Constitution being
supreme, it is a bounden duty of the law courts to give
shape and offer reality to such a concept. In this context
reference to the Constitution Bench decision of this Court
in Nakara’s case (D.S. Nakara & Ors Vs. Union of India)
(AIR 1983 SC 130) seems to be rather apposite. This Court
stated that democratic socialism aims to end poverty,
ignorance, disease and inequality of opportunity. The
primary impact of socialism as a matter of fact is to offer
and provide security of life so that the citizens of the
country may have two square meals a day, and maintenance of
a minimum standard of life, it is expected, would lead to
the abridgment of the gap between the have-s and have not-s.
The feudal exploitation and draconian concept of law ought
not to outweigh the basic structure of the Constitution, or
its socialistic status. Ours is a socialist State as the
Preamble depicts and the aim of socialism, therefore, ought
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to be to distribute the common richness and the wealth of
the country in such a way so as to sub-serve the need and
the requirement of the common man. Article 39 is a pointer
in that direction. Each clause under the Article
specifically fixes certain social and economic goal so as to
expand the horizon of benefits to be accrued to the general
public at large. In particular reference to Article 39 (a)
it is seen that the State ought to direct its policies in
such a manner so that the citizens - men and women equally,
have the right of an adequate means of livelihood and it is
in this perspective again that the enactment in the statute
book as noticed above (The Contract Labour (Regulation &
Abolition) Act 1970) ought to be read and interpreted so
that social and economic justice may be achieved and the
constitutional directive be given a full play. Having
noticed the broad features, as above, be it noted these
appeals by Special Leave arise from the order of the
Division Bench of the High court of Punjab & Haryana at
Chandigarh. The contextual facts depict that the Haryana
State Electricity Board (hereinafter referred to as
‘Appellant Board’) is a statutory Board with one of its
primary functions being the supply of power to urban and
rural areas in the State of HaryanOa through its
various
plants and stations. In order to keep the said plants and
stations clean and hygienic, the Appellant Board, upon
tenders being floated, awards contracts to contractors who
undertake the work of keeping the same clean and hygienic.
One such contract was awarded to one Kashmir Singh, for
"proper, complete and hygienic cleaning, sweeping and
removal of garbage from the Main Plant Building" at Panipat,
at the rate of Rs.33,000 per month with a stipulation to
engage minimum 42 safai karamcharis with effect from 15th
May, 1987 for a period of one year and in terms therewith
the Contractor took over the work and performed the said
work through the above-stated Safai Karamcharis.
Subsequently by reason however of a dispute raised by the
Safai Karamcharis, as regards their entitlement to be
absorbed permanently on completion of 240 days in the year
with the Board, the matters were referred to the
Conciliation Officer, Panipat culminating however in an
order of reference by the State Government on 27.12.1988 to
the Labour Court, Ambala which was suObsequently
transferred
to Panipat. On the further factual score, it appears that
the Labour Court upon consideration of the facts and the
evidence taken on record passed the impugned award inter
alia recording therein that the workmen are otherwise
entitled to reinstatement with continuity of service
alongwith 10% back wages. We shall revert to the order of
the Labour Court for further consideration shortly
hereafter, but to complete the basic factual backdrop in the
matter it ought to be noted that as against the order of the
Labour Court, the appellant moved 37 Writ Petitions in the
High Court of Punjab and Haryana, which were however,
disposed of by a common judgment and order dated 24th
January, 1995, inter alia, recording that there existed a
relationship of employer and workmen between the Appellant
Board and the respondents and by reason wherefor, the High
Court directed reinstatement of the respondents with
continuity of service though however, without back wages.
While dealing with these matters the High Court did place
strong reliance on the observation of this Court in the case
of Hussainbhai Vs. Alath Factory Tezhilali Union (1978 LIC
1264) wherein this Court observed: "Who is employee, in
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Labour Law? That is the short, die-hard question raised
here but covered by this Court’s earlier decisions. Like
the High Court, we give short shrift to the contention that
the petitioner had entered into agreements with intermediate
contractors who had hired the respondent-Union’s worken and
so no direct employer-employee vinculum juris existed
between the petitioner and the workmen.
This argument is impeccable in laissez faire economics
‘red in tooth and claw’ and under the Contract Act rooted in
English Common Law. But the human gap of a century yawans
between this strict doctrine and industrial jurisprudence.
The source and strength of the industrial branch of Third
World Jurisprudence is social justice proclaimed in the
Preamble of the Constitution. This Court in Ganesh Beedi’s
case (1974) 1 Lab LJ 367 (AIR 1974 SC 1832) has raised on
British and American ruligs hold that mere contracts are not
decisive and the complex of considerations relevant to the
relationship is different. Indian Justice, beyond Atlantic
liberalism, has a rule of life. And life, in conditions of
poverty aplenty, is livelihood, and livelihood is work with
wages. Raw Societal realities, not fine-spun legal
niceties, not competitive market economics but complex
protective principles, shape the law when the weaker,
working class sector needs succour for livelihood through
labour. The conceptual confusion between the classical law
of contracts and the special branch of law sensitive to
exploitative situations accounts for the submission that the
High Court is in error in its holding against the
petitioners.
The true test may, with brevity, be indicated once
again. Where a worker or group of workers labours to prodce
goods or services and these goods or services are for the
business of another, that other is, inOB fact, the
employer.
He has economic control over the workers’ subsistence,
skill, and continued employment. If he, for any reason,
chokes off, the worker is, virtually, laid off. The
presence of intermediate contractors with whom alone the
workers have immediate or direct relationship ex contractors
of no consequences when, on lifting the veil or looking at
the conspectus of factors governing employment, we discern
the naked truth, though draped in different perfect paper
arrangement, that the real employer is the Management, not
the immediate contract. Myried devices, half-hidden in fold
after fold of legal form depending on the degree of
concealment needed, the type of industry, the local
conditions and the like, may be resorted to when labour
legislation casts welfare obligations on the real employer,
based on Arts.38, 39, 42, 43 and 43-A of the Constitution.
The Court must be astute to avoid the mischief and achieve
the purpose of the law and not be misled by the maya of
legal appearances."
Incidentally, the claim of the workmen arises by
reason of discontinuation of the service at the units
belonging to the appellant herein. The Labour Court while
adjudicating the issue, as to the justification of the
termination of services of the workmen in terms of the order
of reference under Section 10 of the Industrial Disputes
Act, came to a definite conclusion on the basis of evidence
tendered that the work force did in fact work for more than
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240 days in the year and as a matter of fact, there was no
dispute raised on that score by the Board and it is on this
factual score that the Labour Court did record that the
presence of an intermediary would not, however, alter the
situation as regards the existence of relationship of
employer and the workmen and thus between the Board and the
claimants and as such answered the reference in the
affirmative, resulting in a finding that the workmen are
entitled to be reinstated with continuity of service along
with 10% back-wages. It is this finding of the Labour Court
which stands accepted by the High Court in writ petitions
under Article 226 of the Constitution, challenging the
validity of the award of the Labour Court and the High
Court, as noted above rejected the writ petitions stating
therein:
"on the admitted facts of the case it is to be
ascertained as to whether after complying the principle of
lifting of the veil, the existence of the relationship of
workman and employer is surfaced or not. After critically
examining the evidence lead in the case, the court below has
come to the conclusion that there existed a relationship of
employer and workman between the contestiOOng parties and
that the intermediatary contract was just an eye wash.".
The High Court did in fact note with care and caution
the doctrine of ‘lifting of veil’ in industrial
jurisprudence and recorded that in the contextual facts and
upon lifting of the veil, question of having any contra
opinion as regards the exact relationship between the
contesting parties would not arise and as such directed
reinstatement though, however, without any back wages.
While it is true that the doctrine enunciated in Soloman vs.
Soloman (1897 Appeal Cases page 22) came to be recognised in
the corporate jurisprudence but its applicability in the
present context cannot be doubted, since the law court
invariably has to rise up to the occasion to do justice
between the parties in a manner as it deems fit. Rescopound
stated that the greatest virtue of the law court is
flexibility and as and when the situation so demands, the
law court
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ought to administer justice in accordance therewith
and as per the need of the situation. Turning attention,
however, on to the legislative intent in the matter of
enactment of the Act of 1970, at the first blush itself, it
appears that in expression of its intent, the legislature
very aptly coined the enactment, as such, for regulation and
abolition of contract labour. Conceptually, engagement of
contract labour by itself lends to various abuses and in
accordance with devout objective as enshrined in the
Constitution and as noticed herein before, this enactment
has been introduced in the statute book in the year 1970, to
regulate contract labour and to provide for its abolition in
certain circumstances since prior to such, the factum of
engagement of contract labour stood beset with exploiting
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tendencies and resulted in unwholesome labour practice.
Incidentally, however, be it noted that the legislature did
not feel it expedient to do away with the contract labour
altogether, since there are several fields of employment
where it is not otherwise possible to have continuous
employment and as such, regard being had to the necessities
of the situation, the Act of 1970 provides for
continuation of contract labour. As a matter of fact
the legislature in the enactment, has itself provided
various provisions pertaining to the working conditions of
contract labour, provided however engagement of contract
labour becoming invariable or necessary in the interest of
the concerned industry. The legislation therefore subserves
twin purpose, to wit: (i) to abolish the contract labour;
and (ii) to regulate the working conditions of contract
labour wherever such employment is required in the interest
of the industry. There is however, a total unanimity of
judicial pronouncements to the effect that in the event, the
contract labour is employed in an establishment for seasonal
workings, question of abolition would not arise but in the
event of the same being of perennial in nature, that is to
say, in the event of the engagement of labour force through
intermediary which is otherwise in the ordinary course of
events and involves continuity in the work, the legislature
is candid enough to record its abolition since, involvement
of contractor may have its social evil of labour
exploitation and thus the contractor ought to go out of
scene bringing together the principal
employer and the contract labourers rendering the
employment as direct, and resultantly a direct employee.
This aspect of the matter has been dealt with great
lucidity, by one of us (Majmudar,J.) in Air India Statutory
Corporation etc. vs. United Labour Union & Ors. etc. [JT
1996 (11) SC 170]. While recording concurrence with
Ramaswamy, J. and but observed: presenting his own reasons
therefor Majmudar, J. "It has to be kept in view that
contract labour system in an establishment is a tripartite
system. In between contract workers and the principal
employer is the intermediary contractor and because of this
intermediary the employer is treated as principal employer
with various statutory obligations flowing from the Act in
connection with regulation of the working conditions of the
contract labourers who are brought by the intermediary
contractor on the principal’s establishment for the benefit
and for the purpose of the principal employer and who do his
work on his establishment through the agency of the
contractor. When these contract workers carry out the work
of the principal employer which is of a perennial nature and
if provisions of Section 10 get attracted and such contract
labour system in the establishment gets abolished on
fulfilment of the conditions requisite for that purpose, it
is obvious that the intermediary contractor vanishes and
along with him vanishes the term ‘principal employer’.
Unless there is a contractor agent there is no principal.
Once the contractor intermediary
goes the term ‘principal’ also goes with it. Then
remains out of this tripartite contractual scenario only two
parties - the beneficiaries of the abolition of the
erstwhile contract labour system i.e. the workmen on the
one hand and the employer on the other who is no longer
their principal employer but necessarily becomes a direct
employer for these erstwhile contract labourers. It was
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urged that Section 10 nowhere provides for such a
contingency in express term. It is obvious that no such
express provision was required to be made as the very
concept of abolition of a contract labour system wherein the
work of the contract labour is of perennial nature for the
establishment and which otherwise would have been done by
regular workmen, would posit improvement of the lot of such
workmen and not its worsening. Implicit in the provision of
Section 10 is the legislature intent that on abolition of
contract labour system, the erstwhile contract-workmen would
become direct employees of the employer on whose
establishment they were earlier working and were enjoying
all the regulatory facilities on that very establishment
under Chapter V prior to the abolition of such contract
labour system. Though the legislature has expressly not
mentioned the consequences of such abolition, but the very
scheme and ambit of Section 10 of the Act clearly indicates
the inherent legislative intent of making the erstwhile
contract labourers direct employees of the employer on
abolition of the intermediary contractor. It was contended
that contractor might have employed a number of workmen who
may be in excess of the requirement and, therefore, the
principal employer on abolition of the contract labour may
be burdened with excess workmen. It is difficult to
appreciate this contention. The very condition engrafted in
section 10(2)(d) shows that while abolishing contract labour
from the given
establishment, one of the relevant considerations for
the appreciate Government is to ascertain whether it is
sufficient to appoint considerable number of whole time
workmen. Even otherwise there is an inbuilt safety valve in
Section 21 of the Act which enjoins the principal employer
to make payment of wages to the given number of contract
workmen who he has permitted to be brought for the work of
the establishment if the contractor fails to make payment to
them. It is, therefore, obvious that the principal employer
as a wordly businessman in his practical commercial wisdom
would not allow contractor to bring larger number of
contract labour which may be in excess of the requirement of
the principal employer. On the contrary, the principal
employer would see to it that the contractor brings only
those number of workmen who are required to discharge their
duties to carry out the work of the principal employer on
his establishment through, of course the agency of the
contractor. In fact the scheme of the Act and regulations
framed thereunder clearly indicate that even the number of
the workmen required for the given contract work is to be
specified in the licence given to the contractor."
Incidentally, the Haryana State Electricity Board in
the usual course of business has had to maintain the plant
and stations as a licencee within the meaning of Indian
Electricity Act, 1910 and Electricity Supply Act, 1948.
This maintenance work cannot by any stretch be ascribed to
be of seasonal nature but a continued effort to achieve the
purpose of its existence in terms of the statute. The
number of employees required for such purpose had been
specified in the contract itself and as a matter of fact
supervision of the Board as regards the attendance has also
not been disputed before the Labour Court: Maintenance of
records pertaining to other statutory duties and liabilities
has also not been disputed. Documents, as disclosed before
the Labour Court, (to wit Exb. M.5) depict the overall
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control of the workings of the contract labour including
administrative control being with the Board. We
deliberately refrain ourselves from going into the same,
since that would be beyond the purview of writ jurisdiction
and may amount to an appraisal of evidence but the factum of
overall supervision and administration being with the Board
and as dealt with by the Labour Court cannot in any way be
doubted. It is on this perspective that the High Court also
thought it fit to rely on the judgment and record its
affirmation to what had been passed by the Labour Court,
since no reasonable person could come to a conclusion
different upon lifting the veil. In the contextual facts,
we also record our concurrence to the observations of the
High Court that finding of fact arrived at by the Labour
Court cannot otherwise be interfered with while exercising
powers under Article 226 of the
Constitution, unless the same is otherwise perverse or
there is existing an error apparent on the face of the
record. It would in this context, however, be convenient to
note the observations of the High Court as below:- "The
learned counsel for the petitioner has tried to argue that
the findings of fact arrived at by the Labour Court was not
based upon proper appreciation of evidence. This plea
cannot be accepted in as much as the Labour Court has
referred to the whole of the evidence lead in the case
before coming to such a conclusion. Otherwise, also in view
of the law laid down by the Supreme Court in R.K. Panda’s
case (supra) the findings of fact arrived at by the Labour
Court cannot be set aside in writ jurisdiction particularly
when it is neither perverse nor contrary to the record but
based only on appreciation of evidence. Keeping in view the
nature of the work being carried on by the petitioner, the
nature of duties which were performed by the respondents-
workmen, the continuity of the work for which the labour was
employed and the fact that the wages were paid by the
petitioner-employer who supervised and controlled not only
the attendance but also discipline of the workmen in the
discharge of their duties and keeping in view the conditions
of contract of the employer with Kashmira Singh, Contractor,
there is no other conclusion which can be arrived at except
the one that there existing a relationship of employer and
workmen between the contesting parties and the Labour Court
had rightly passed the award which is impugned in this
petition."
Needless to note at this juncture that the Contract
Labour Regulation Act being a beneficial piece of
legislation as engrafted in the statute book, ought to
receive the widest possible interpretation in regard to the
words used and unless words are taken to their maximum
amplitude, it would be a violent injustice to the framers of
the law. As a matter of fact law is well settled by this
court and we need not dilate much by reason, therefor to the
effect that the law courts exist for the society and in the
event of there being a question posed in the matter of
interpretation of a beneficial piece of legislation,
question of interpreting the same with a narrow pedantic
approach would not be justified. On the contrary, the
widest possible meaning and amplitude ought to be offered to
the expressions used as otherwise the entire legislation
would loose its efficacy and contract labour would be left
on the mercy of the intermediary. As noticed above
Draconian concept of law is no longer available for the
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purpose of interpreting a social and beneficial piece of
legislation specially on the wake of the new millennium.
The democratic polity ought to survive with full vigour:
socialist status as enshrined in the Constitution ought to
be given its full play and it is in this perspective the
question arises - is it permissible in the new
millennium to decry the cry of the labour force
desirous of absorption after working for more than 240 days
in an establishment and having their workings supervised and
administered by an agency within the meaning of Article 12
of the Constitution - the answer cannot possibly be in the
affirmative - the law courts exist for the society and in
the event law courts feel the requirement in accordance with
principles of justice, equity and good conscience, the law
courts ought rise up to the occasion to meet and redress the
expectation of the people. The expression ‘regulation’
cannot possibly be read as contra public interest but in the
interest of public. Reliance on the decision in the case of
Denanath & Ors. v. National Fertilisers Ltd. & Ors. (JT
(1991) 4 SC 413) in support of the Boards contention,
however, stands diluted by reason of the decisions of this
Court in Gujarat Electricity Board v. Hind Mazdoor Sabha &
Ors. (JT 1995 (4) SC 264 and Air India Statutory
Corporation etc. v. U.L.U. & Ors. etc. (JT 1996 (11) SC
109). The ratio as has been decided in Air India’s case
appears to have softened the edges of Dinanath’s ratio.
While dealing with this issue in Air India’s case (supra),
this court has, as a matter of fact taken note of
more or less the entire catena of cases pertaining to
contract labour and we do thus feel it wholly unnecessary to
deal with the same in extenso excepting however recording
some observations of this Court in Air India’s case (supra)
as below:-
"In this behalf, it is necessary to recapitulate that
on abolition of the contract labour system, by necessary
implication, the principal employer is under statutory
obligation to absorb the contract labour. The linkage
between the contractor and the employee stood snapped and
direct relationship stood restored between principal
employer and the contract labour as its employees.
Considered from this perspective, all the workmen in the
respective services working on contract labour are required
to be absorbed in the establishment of the appellant."
It has to be kept in view that this is not a case in
which it is found that there was any genuine contract labour
system prevailing with the Board. If it was a genuine
contract system, then obviously, it had to be abolished as
per Section 10 of the Contract Labour Regulation and
Abolition Act after following the procedure laid down
therein. However, on the facts of the present case, it was
found by the Labour Court and as confirmed by the High Court
that the so called contractor Kashmir Singh was a mere name
lender and had procured
labour for the Board from the open market. He was
almost a broker or an agent of the Board for that purpose.
The Labour Court also noted that the Management witness Shri
A.K. Chaudhary also could not tell whether Shri Kahsmir
Singh was a licensed contractor or not. That workmen had
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made a statement that Shri Kashmir Singh was not a licensed
contractor. Under these circumstances, it has to be held
that factually there was no genuine contract system
prevailing at the relevant time wherein the Board could have
acted as only the principal employer and Kashmir Singh as a
licensed contractor employing labour on his own account. It
is also pertinent to note that nothing was brought on record
to indicate that even the Board at the relevant time, was
registered as principal employer under the Contract Labour
Regulation and Abolition Act. Once the Board was not a
principal employer and the so called contractor Kashmir
Singh was not a licensed contractor under the Act, the
inevitable conclusion that had to be reached was to the
effect that the so called contract system was a mere
camouflage, smoke and a screen and disguised in almost a
transparent veil which could easily be pierced and the real
contractual
relationship between the Board, on the one hand, and
the employees, on the other, could be clearly visualised.
Before we conclude, the other aspect of the matter as has
been contended by the learned Advocate, appearing in support
of the appeals ought to be noticed, to the effect that as a
matter of fact the principal employer, namely, the Board has
in fact applied for registration of establishment and there
are documentary evidence available in support thereof.
Though, however, no such case has been made out nor the
issue raised either before the Labour Court or before the
High Court, this Court, however, to subserve the ends of
justice permitted the appellant to file documentary evidence
in support of the same and as such three weeks’ time was
granted at the conclusion of the hearing on 13th January,
1999 so that the same may be produced before the Court. We
however wish to place on record that in the normal
circumstances, no such opportunities are granted, especially
at this stage of the proceeding, but by reason of special
facts, which are singularly singular, this Court granted
such an opportunity so as to meet the ends of justice.. The
appellant, however, has failed to obtain such an opportunity
and as a matter of fact no such
documentary evidence has seen the light of the day
even after such an opportunity to the appellant. In that
view of the matter we do not see any merit in these appeals
and the appeals therefore fail and are thus dismissed. No
order however as to costs. In view of the order as above,
we do not deem it fit to pass any order in the pending
Interlocutory Applications including the Application for
Contempt and the same thus stand disposed of, without any
order as to costs.
..........J (S.B. Majmudar)
...........J (Umesh C. Banerjee) New Delhi, March 30,
1999
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA CIVIL APPELLATE
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JURISDICTION CIVIL APPEAL NO190 OF 1991
Mishri Lal (dead) by Lrs. ..Appellant Versus
Dhirendra Nath (dead) by Lrs. & Ors. ...Respondents
Dear Brother Rao, Draft Judgment in the above
mentioned matter is being sent herewith for your kind
consideration.