Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MESSRS. KAMARHATTY CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRI USHNATH PAKRASHI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/05/1959
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 1399 1960 SCR (1) 473
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Power of Tribunal-Order of re-
instatement, when can be made-industrial Disputes Act (14 of
1947), ss. 33A, 10.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent made an application under s. 33A of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, which, inter alia, stated
that there was no reason for retrenchment on account of the
closure of a ration shop, and that at any rate he was longer
in service than others who had been retained, and,
therefore, the principle of " last come, first go " had been
violated. The Tribunal dismissed the application whereupon
the respondent appealed to the Appellate Tribunal which
allowed the appeal and refused permission to retrench.
The Appellant Company was granted special leave to appeal
only on the limited question as to whether an order of re-
instatement can be made on an application under s. 33A of
the Act.
Held, that the complaint under S. 33A of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947, is as good as a reference under s. 10 of
the Act and the Tribunal has all the powers to deal with it
as it would have in dealing with a reference under s. 10 of
the Act and it is open to the Tribunal in proper case to
order reinstatement.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 310 of
1954.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 22, 1956, of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of India,
Calcutta in Appeal No. Cal. 183 of 1955.
N.C. Chatterjee, S. N. Mukherjee and B. N. Ghosh for the
appellant.
Sukumr Ghosh, for the respondent.
1959. May 21. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
WANCHOO J.-This appeal by special leave against the decision
of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of India is limited to the
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question whether an order of reinstatement can be made on an
application under s. 33-A of
60
474
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (hereinafter called the
Act). The brief facts necessary for the decision of this
question are these. The appellant is a Jute Mill. There
was a dispute pending before an Industrial Tribunal between
a number of jute mills in West Bengal and their employees,
and the appellant was a party to that dispute. During the
pendency of that dispute, the appellant laid-off the
respondent who was an employee in the ration shop maintained
by the appellant from July 19, 1954, as rationing of food-
stuff came to an end from July 10, 1954. The reason for the
lay-off was that the ration shop was closed following the
end of rationing. This resulted in the staff in that shop
becoming surplus. Consequently, nine persons were selected
for retrenchment on the principle of " last come first go",
and the respondent was one of them. The appellant also
applied under s. 33 of the Act to the Industrial Tribunal
for permission to retrench the respondent along with others.
Shortly before the application under s. 33, the respondent
had applied under s. 33-A of the Act and. his case was that
there was no reason to make Any retrenchment on account of
the closure of the ration shop and that he was at any rate
longer in service than others who had been retained and
therefore the principle of " last come first go " had not
been followed. It was also said that the respondent had
been laid-off as he was an active worker of the union and as
such was not in the good books of the appellant. It was,
therefore, prayed that the respondent should be allowed full
wages and amenities since the so-called lay-off, which was
nothing more nor less than retrenchment and that he should
be reinstated.
The Industrial Tribunal came to the conclusion that the
lay-off was justified because of the closure of the ration
shop and gave permission to the appellant to retrench the
respondent on the principle of " last come first go ". The
respondent appealed to the Labour Appellate Tribunal. He
did not urge there that there was no necessity for
retrenchment at all. What was urged there was that the
Industrial Tribunal was wrong in holding that the principle
of " last come first
475
go" had been followed in this case. The Appellate Tribunal
came to the conclusion that the respondent had been in
service much longer than others who had been retained and
therefore the principle of " last come first go " had been
violated. In consequence, the appeal was allowed and the
permission to retrench the respondent was refused. The
Appellate Tribunal also ordered that the respondent, should
be reinstated in service without any break in the continuity
of service and the order of the appellant in laying him off
and discharging him in effect from July 19, 1954 was set
aside. Thereupon the appellant came to this Court and was
granted special leave on the limited question set out above.
In our opinion, the answer to the limited question on
which the special leave has been granted can only be one in
view of the language of s. 33-A. That section lays down
that " where an employer contravenes the provision is of s.
33 during the pendency of proceedings before a tribunal, any
employee aggrieved by such contravention, may make a
complaint in writing to the tribunal and on receipt of such
complaint the tribunal shall adjudicate upon the complaint
as if it were a dispute referred to or pending before it, in
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accordance with the provisions of the Act and shall submit
its award to the appropriate government and the provisions
of this Act shall apply accordingly." It is thus clear that
a complaint under s. 33-A of the Act is as good as a
reference under s. 10 of the Act and the tribunal has all
the powers to deal with it as it would have in dealing with
a reference under s. 10. It follows, therefore, that the
tribunal has the power to make such order as to relief as
may be appropriate in the case and as it can make if a
dispute is referred to it relating -to the dismissal or
discharge of a workman. In such a dispute it is open to the
tribunal in proper cases to order reinstatement. Therefore
a complaint under s. 33-A being in the nature of a dispute
referred to a tribunal under s. 10 of the Act, it is
certainly within its power to order reinstatement on such
complaint, if the complaint is that the employee has been
dismissed or discharged in breach of s. 33.
476
Learned counsel for the appellant wanted to argue that this
was not a case of discharge or dismissal but of lay-off. We
did not permit him to raise this argument because the
special leave was limited only to the question set out
above. The answer to that question has already been
indicated above and on that answer the appeal must fail. We
therefore dismiss the appeal, but in the circumstances we
make no order as to costs -of this Court.
Appeal dismissed.