Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE 0F BOMBAY & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE HOSPITAL MAZDOOR SABHA & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/01/1960
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SUBBARAO, K.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1960 AIR 610 1960 SCR (2) 866
CITATOR INFO :
E&R 1960 SC 675 (8,9)
F 1960 SC1261 (3)
R 1961 SC 484 (2,6)
E 1962 SC1080 (3,5,6,8,11)
R 1963 SC1681 (12)
E 1963 SC1873 (3,10,12,13)
R 1964 SC 903 (11)
R 1964 SC1617 (9)
E 1968 SC 554 (12)
RF 1969 SC 63 (7)
O 1970 SC1407 (3,4,5,6,8,17,21,22,23)
R 1971 SC1259 (2)
RF 1971 SC2422 (17)
R 1972 SC 763 (11,12,17,19)
RF 1975 SC2032 (4)
F 1976 SC 145 (5,6,7,9,10,29)
R 1976 SC1111 (9)
APL 1978 SC 548 (4,11,66,67,157,84,92,159,161)
R 1979 SC 170 (16)
RF 1981 SC1253 (9)
D 1981 SC2101 (5)
D 1988 SC1182 (5)
RF 1990 SC2047 (7)
RF 1991 SC 754 (12)
R 1992 SC 129 (7)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Retrenchment of workmen by hospital
without compensation- Validity-Hospital, if an industry-
’Industry’ Meaning- industrial Disputes Act. 1947 (14 Of
1947). SS. 2(j). 25F". 251.
HEADNOTE:
The services of respondents 2 and 3, engaged as ward
servants in the J. J. Group Of Hospital, Bombay, under State
control and management were retrenched without payment of
compensation as required by S. 25F(b) of the Industrial
Disputes
867
Act, 1947. The respondents applied to the High Court for a
writ of mandamus under Art. 226 of the Constitution. The
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single judge who heard the matter held that non-payment of
retrenchment compensation did not render the retrenchment
orders invalid as S. 25I of the Act provided a specific
remedy for its recovery and dismissed the application. The
Division Bench on appeal reversed the decision of the single
judge upholding the respondents’ contention that the said
hospitals were an industry as defined by S. 2(i) of the Act
and non-payment of retrenchment compensation rendered the
retrenchment bad in law. On appeal by the State of Bombay.
Held, that the decision of the Division Bench was right and
must be affirmed.
The mandatory language of S. 25F(b) of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947, plain and unambiguous in effect, leaves
no manner of doubt that the payment of compensation as
required by it is a condition precedent to retrenchment and
that S. 25I Of the Act is intended to provide for the
recovery of other monies that became due to the employees
under Ch. V of the Act.
The object and the scope of the Act, as apparent from its
various provisions, made it amply clear that the Legislature
in defining the word ’industry’ in s. 2(j) of the Act was
deliberately using term of wide import in its first clause
and referring to several other industries in the second in
an inclusive way obviously denoting extention. In
construing the definition, therefore, it is inappropriate to
apply the maxim noscitur a sociis so as to restrict its
meaning. The maxim is a rule of construction and can apply
only where the intention of the Legislature in associating
terms of wider import with those or narrower import or the
meaning of the wider terms used is in doubt.
The corporation of Glasgow v. Glasgow Tramway and Omnibus
Co. Ltd., 1898 A. C. 631, referred to.
Nor can undue importance be attached to the conventional
meaning attributed to trade or business in construing the
wide words of the definition since it has lost some of its
force and can no longer be wholly valid for the purpose of
industrial adjudication in a modern welfare state. It is
clear that the presence of a profit motive or the investment
of capital, traditionally associated with notion of trade
and business, can be no indispensable requisite for an
industry under S. 2(j) of the Act.
Such activities of the Government as can properly be
decribed as regal or sovereign activities easily fall
outside the scope of the definition. But the field of such
activities cannot be extended to cover other activities
which are undertaken by the State in implementation of the
Directive Principles of State Policy and the ideal of a
welfare State.
Coomber v. Justices of Berks, 9 A. C. 61, referred to.
Although it ’may not be possible to enumerate all possible
attributes that can make an activity an undertaking under S.
2(j) as being analogous to trade or business, the working
principle should be that any activity systematically and
habitually under-
868
taken for the production or distribution of goods or
for the rendering of material services to the community or a
part of it with the help of employees organised or arranged
in the manner of a trade or business in such an
undertaking.
No question of the application of the doctrine of quid pro
quo can arise in deciding such a matter, for that would
only be raising the question of profit motive in another
form.
So judged there could be no doubt that the State in running
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the hospitals in question was carrying on an industry within
the meaning of the Act.
D. N. Banerji v. P. R. Mukherjee, (1953) S. C. R. 302,
Baroda Borough Municipality v. Its Workmen, (1957) S. C. R.
33, Sri Vishuddhananda Saraswathi Marwari Hospital v. Their
Workmen (1952) II L. L. J. 327 and The Federated State
School Teachers’ Association of Australia v. The State of
Victoria & Ors., (1929) 41 C. L. R. 569, referred to.
Brij Mohan Bagaria v. Chatterjec (N. C.) (1958) L. L. J.
190, disapproved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE J-URISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 712 of 1957.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 18, 1956, of
the Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 65 of 1955, arising out
of the judgment and order dated July 28, 1955, of the said
High Court is Misc. Petition No. 113 of 1955.
C. K Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, and R. H.
Dhebar, for the appellants.
K. R. Chaudhuri, T. S. Venkataraman and K. R. Sharma, for
the respondents.
1960. January 29. The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-This is an appeal by the State of Bombay
(hereinafter called the appellant) and two others and it
arises from a writ petition filed against it by the Hospital
Mazdoor Sabha, a trade union registered under the Industrial
Trade Unions Act XIV of 1926 and two of its members Mrs.
Vatsala Narayan and Mrs. Ruth Isaac (hereinafter called
respondents I to 3). Respondents IQ and 3 were employed as
Ward servants in the J. J. group of Hospitals. The
superintendent of this said group of Hospitals informed the
said respondents by notices issued respectively against them
that their services would be terminated with effect from the
dates mentioned in the said notices and in accordance with
the said notices their services were in fact terminated;
869
subsequently in their place two State servants who were
discharged from the Civil Supplies Department were
appointed. The writ petition filed by the respondents
alleged that the retrenchment of respondents 2 and 3 was
void as it did not comply with the mandatory provisions of
ss. 25F and 25H of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (14 of
1947) (hereinafter called the Act) and it claimed a writ of
mandamus directing the appellant to reinstate them in their
posts. This petition was resisted by the appellant on
several grounds. It was urged that the orders terminating
the services of respondents 2 and 3 were not void and so the
respondents’ claim for a writ was unjustified on the merits
and it was argued that the writ application was wholly
misconceived inasmuch as the J. J group of Hospitals did not
constitute an industry and so the relevant provisions of the
Act were inapplicable to the respondent’s case.
This writ petition was heard by Tendolkar J. The learned
judge did not think it necessary to consider what he called
the somewhat ticklish question as to whether the group of
Hospitals constitutes an industry because he held that even
assuming that the relevant provisions of the Act were
applicable and could be invoked by the respondents it was
not shown that the impugned orders were void. In his
opinion non-compliance with the provisions of s. 251’ did
not invalidate the said orders, and it was open to the
respondents to seek for an appropriate remedy under s. 251
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of the Act. He also held that the question about the
application of s. 25H did not arise. On these findings the
writ petition filed by the respondents was dismissed.
The matter was then taken before the Court of Appeal. The
Court of Appeal held that the impugned orders had not
complied with the mandatory provisions of s. 25F and so they
were invalid and inoperative. That is why the question as
to whether s. 25H applied was not considered by it. The
finding that the impugned orders were invalid for
contravention of the mandatory provisions of s. 25F made it
necessary to decide the larger issue as to whether the Act
870
applied to the Hospitals. The Court of Appeal has
observed that it was first inclined to send the matter back
to Tendolkar J. but it was requested by the learned counsel
appearing for both the parties that it Would be better if
the said question was decided by it as it was a question of
law and the decision of the said issue by the Court of
Appeal would avoid a remand and a further appeal. That is
how the issue was considered by the Court of Appeal and
answered in favour of the respondents. In the result the
decision of Tendolkar J. was reversed, the writ petition was
allowed and a writ in the nature of mandamus was issued
against the appellant.
The appellant then applied for and obtained a certificate of
fitness from the Bombay High Court and with the said
certificate it has brought the present appeal before us. On
behalf of the appellant two points have been raised for our
decision in the present appeal: Was the Appellate Court
justified.in holding that the contravention of the material
provisions of s. 25F of the Act rendered the impugned orders
invalid; and do the relevant provisions of the Act apply to
the group of Hospitals run by the appellant; are they an
industry within the meaning of the Act ?
Before dealing with these points it would be relevant to
state the material facts in regard to the group of Hospitals
themselves which are not in dispute. This group consists of
five Hospitals. It appears that in 1835 Sir Robert Grant,
the then Governor of Bombay, desired to start an institution
for the purposes of imparting medical education in the
Presidency of Bombay. His proposal in that behalf was
sanctioned by the Board of Directors of the East India
Company and funds amounting to Rs. 44,000 were collected for
the purpose and an equal amount was contributed by the
Directors to defray the cost of construction of the College
building. ’In 1843 the foundation of the Medical College
building was laid and the same was completed in 1845. About
that time an idea of building a hospital for the sick people
of all classes and castes was mooted and Sir Jamsetjee
Jeejibboy offered donation and some contribution was made by
the Government
871
with which the J. J. Hospital was constructed and it was
formally opened on May 15, 1845. Similarly the other four
Hospitals in the group were built in course of time from
donations. Except for a small amount of Rs. 10,000 the
rest of the expenditure which is in the neighbourhood of Rs.
27 lakhs is entirely met by the appellant out of the grant
sanctioned in the budget under the bead " 38-Medical ". The
group is under the administrative control of the Surgeon-
General of the appellant and its day-to-day affairs are
conducted and controlled by the Superintendent who is a full
time employee of the appellant; the residential staff
including the Resident Medical Officers, Assistant Medical
Officers, Housemen, Nurses and others are all full-time
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employees of the -appellant and their salaries are drawn on
the establishment pay bills every month and paid entirely by
the appellant. This group serves as a clinical training
ground for students of the Grant Medical College which is a
Government Medical College run and . managed by the
appellant for imparting medical sciences leading to the
Degrees of Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery of
the Bombay University as well as various Post-Graduate
qualifications of the said University and the College of
Physicians and Surgeons, Bombay; the group is thus run and
managed by the appellant to provide medical relief and to
promote the health of the people of Bombay.
Now, turning to the first point, it may be stated that the
facts on which the respondents’ plea is based are not in
dispute. It is conceded that the services of respondents 2
and 3 have been retrenched though it may be for the purpose
of making room for other Government servants with a longer
record of service who had to be retrenched owing to the
closure of the appellant’,-, Civil Supplies Department,. It
is also not disputed that the said respondents had not been
paid at the time of retrenchment compensation as prescribed
by s. 25F(b). The respondents’ contention is that the
failure to comply with the said requirement makes the order
of retrenchment invalid. This plea has been upheld by the
Court of Appeal. Section 25F (b) provides that no workman
employed
III
872
in any industry who has been in continuous service for
not less than one year under an employer shall beretrenched
by that employer until he has been paid at the time of
retrenchment compensation which shall be equivalent to
fifteen days’ average pay for every completed year of
service or any part thereof in excess of six months.
Clauses (a) and (c) of the said section prescribe similar
conditions but we are not concerned with them. On a plain
reading of s. 25F (b) it is clear that the requirement
prescribed by it is a condition precedent for the
retrenchment of the workman. The section provides that no
workman shall be retrenched until the condition in question
has been satisfied. It is difficult to accede to the
argument that where the section imposes in mandatory terms a
condition precedent, non-compliance with the said condition
would not render the impugned retrenchment invalid.
The argument which appealed to Tendolkar, J., however, was
that the consequence of non-compliance with the requirement
of s. 25F (b) was not to render the impugned retrenchment
invalid, because be thought that by s. 251 a specific
provision has been made for the recovery of the amount
prescribed by s. 25F (b). Section 251 provides for the
recovery of monies due from employers under Ch. V, and
according to Tendolkor J. this provision covers the amount
due to the workman by way of compensation under s. 25F (b).
In our opinion, this view is untenable. Having regard to
the fact that the words used in s. 25F (b) are mandatory and
their effect is plain and unambiguous it seems to us that
the Court of Appeal was right in holding that s. 251 covered
cases of recover of ninnies other than those specified in s.
25F (b), an it is obvious that there are several other cases
i which monies become due from the employers to th employees
under Ch. V; it is for the recovery of the monies that s.
251 had been enacted. Therefore, we see no substance in the
argument that the Court of Appeal has misconstrued s. 25F
(b). That being so failure to comply with the said
provision renders the impugned orders invalid and
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inoperative,
873
Does the said provision apply to the present proceedings ?
In other words, is the Act itself applicable to the group of
Hospitals with which are concerned ? That is the next
question which calls for an answer in the present appeal.
Indeed it is this general question which has been
strenuously argued before us by the learned Solicitor-
General on behalf of the appellant. The decision of this
question depends upon the interpretation of the definition
of industry " prescribed by s. 2(j) of the Act.
Let us first read the definition. Section 2(j) providies
that ’,industry" means any business, trade, undertaking,
manufacture of calling of employers and includes any
calling, service, employment, handicraft, or industrial
occupation or avocation of workmen. It would be noticed
that the words used in the definition are very wide in their
import and even so its latter part purports to provide an
inclusive definition. The word "undertaking" according to
Webster means" anything undertaken ; any business, work or
project which one engages in or attempts, an enterprise ".
Similarly, " trade " according to Halsbury, in its primary
meaning, is " exchange of goods for goods or goods for money
", and in its secondary meaning it is " any business carried
on with a view to profit whether manual or mercantile, as
distinguished from the liberal arts or learned professions
and from agriculture "; whereas " business " is a wider term
not synonymous with trade and means practically " anything
which is an occupation as distinguished from a pleasure The
word SC calling " again is very wide; it means‘one’s usual
occupation, vocation, business or trade"; so is the word
"service" very wide in its import. Prima facie, if the
definition has deliberately used words of such wide import,
it would be necessary to read those words in their wide
denotation; and so read, Hospitals cannot be excluded from
the definition.
It is, however, contended that, in construing the
definition, we must adopt the rule of construction noscuntur
a sociis. This rule, according to Maxwell, means that, when
two or more words which are susceptible of analogous meaning
are coupled toge-
874
ther they are understood to be used in their cognate
sense. They take is it were their colour from each other,
that is, the more general is restricted to a sense analogous
to a less general. The same rule is thus interpreted in
" Words and Phrases " (Vol. XIV, P. 207): " Associated
words take their meaning from one another under the doctrine
of noscuntur a sociis, the philosophy of which is that the
meaning of a doubtful word may be ascertained by reference
to the meaning of words associated with it; such doctrine is
broader than the maxim Ejusdem Generis." In fact the latter
I maxim "is only an illustration or specific application of
the broader maxim noscuntur a sociis ". The argument is that
certain essential features or attributes are invariably
associated with the words " business and trade " as
understood in the popular and conventional sense, and it is
the colour of these attributes which is taken by the other
words used in the definition though their normal import may
be much wider. We are not impressed by this argument. It
must be borne in mind that noscuntur a sociis is merely a
rule of construction and it cannot prevail in cases where it
is clear that the wider words have been deliberately used in
order to make the scope of the defined word correspondingly
wider. 1 is only where the intention of the Legislature i
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associating wider words with words of narrow significance is
doubtful, or otherwise not clear that the present rule of
construction can be useful applied. It can also be applied
where the meaning of the words of wider import is doubtful;
but, where the object of the Legislature in using wider
words i clear and free of ambiguity, the rule of
construction in question cannot be pressed into service. As
ha been observed by Earl of Halsbury, L. C., in The
Corporation of Glasgow v. Glasgow Tramway an Omnibus Co.
Ltd. (1), in dealing with the wider word used in s. 6 of
Valuation of Lands (Scotland) Act, 1854 " the words ’free
from all expenses whatever i connection with the said
tramways’ appear to me to be so wide in their application
that I should have thought it impossible to qualify or cut
them down by their being associated with other words on the
(1) (1898) A.C 63, at p. 634.
875
principle of their being ejusdem generis with the previous
words enumerated ". If the object and scope -of the statute
are considered there would be no difficulty in holding that
the relevant words of wide import have been deliberately
used by the Legislature in defining " industry" in s. 2(j).
The object of the Act was to make provision for the
investigation and settlement of industrial disputes, and
the extent and scope of its provisions would be realised if
we bear in mind the definition of " industrial dispute "
given by s. 2(k), of " wagesby s. 2(rr), " workman " by s.
2(s), and of " employer by s. 2(g). Besides, the
definition of public utility service prescribed by s. 2(m)
is very significant. One has merely to glance at the six
categories of public utility service mentioned by s. 2(m) to
realise that the rule of construction on which the appellant
relies is inapplicable in interpreting the definition
prescribed by s. 2(j).
There is another point which cannot be ignored. Section
2(j) does not define " industry " in the usual manner by
prescribing what it means: the first clause of the
definition gives the statutory meaning of " industry " and
the second clause deliberately refers to several other items
of industry and brings them in the definition in an
inclusive way. It is obvious that the words used in an
inclusive definition denote extension and cannot be treated
as restricted in any sense. (Vide: Stroud’s " Judicial
Dictionary ", Vol. 2, p. 1415). Where we are dealing with
an inclusive definition it would be inappropriate to put a
restrictive interpretation upon terms of wider denotation.
Besides, it would be relevant to point out that too much
reliance cannot be placed on what are described as the
essential attributes or features of trade or business as
conventionally understood. The conventional meaning
attributed to the words "trade and business" has lost some
of it validity for the purpose of industrial adjudication.
Industrial adjudication has necessarily to be aware of the
current of socioeconomic thought around; it must recogiiise
that in the modern welfare State healthy industrial
relations are a matter of paramount import-
876
ance and its essential function is to assist the State
by helping a solution of industrial disputes which
constitute a distinct and persistent phenomenon of modern
˜industrialised States. ˜In attempting to solve industrial
disputes industrial adjudication does not and should not
adopt a ˜doctrinnaire approach. It must evolve some working
principles and should generally avoid formulating or
adopting abstract generalisations. Nevertheless it cannot
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harp back to old-age notions about the relations between
employer and employee or to the doctrine of laissez faire
which then governed the regulation of the said relations.
That is why, we think, in construing the wide words used in
s. 2(j) it would be erroneous to attach undue importance to
attributes associated with business or trade in the popular
mind in days gone by.
It is clear, however, that though s. 2(j) uses words of very
wide denotation, a line would have to be drawn in a fair and
just manner so as to exclude some callings, services or
undertakings. If all the words used are given their widest
meaning, all services and all callings would come within the
purview of the definition; even service rendered by a
servant purely in a personal or domestic matter or even in a
casual way would fall within the definition. It is not and
cannot be suggested that in its wide sweep the word
"service" is intended to include service howsoever rendered
in whatsoever capacity and for whatsoever reason. We must,
therefore, consider where the line should be drawn and what
limitations can and should be reasonably implied in
interpreting the wide words used in s. 2(j); and that no
doubt is a somewhat difficult problem to decide.
It is true that under the old-world notion prevailing under
the capitalist form of society industry generally means an
economic activity involving investment of capital
systematically carried on for profit for the production or
sale of goods by the employment of labour. When it is urged
by the appellant that an undertaking should be analogous to
trade or business what is really intended is that unless the
undertaking in question shares the aforesaid essential
features associated with the conventional notion of trade or
877
business it should not be treated as falling under s. 2(j).
There are two serious difficulties in accepting such a
suggestion, and indeed the appellant concedes the presence
of these two difficulties. It is not disputed that under
s. 2(j) an activity can and must be regarded as an industry
even though in carrying it out profit motive may be absent.
It is also common ground that the absence of investment of
any capital would not make a material difference to the
applicability of s. 2(j). Thus, two of the important
attributes conventionally associated with trade or business
are not necessarily predicated in interpreting s. 2(j).
What then can be said to be the attributes or features which
should be common between trade and business on the one hand
and an undertaking and other items mentioned in s. 2(j) on
the other ?
It would be possible to exclude some activities from s. 2(j)
without any difficulty. Negatively stated the activities of
the Government which can be properly described as regal or
sovereign activities are outsidly the scope of s. 2(j).
These are functions which a constitutional Government can
and must undertake for governance and which no private
citizen can undertake. This position is not in dispute. An
attempt is, however, made by the appellant to suggest that
in view of the Directive Principles enunciated in Part IV of
the Constitution and in view of the ideal of a welfare State
which has been placed before the country, Governments, both
at the level of the States as well as at the Centre,
undertake several welfare activities; and the argument is
that the field of governmental or regal activities which are
excluded from the operation of s. 2(j) should be extended to
cover other activities undertaken by the Governments in
pursuit of their welfare policies. In our opinion, this
contention cannot be accepted . The activities which do not
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fall within s. 2(j) and which are described as governmental
or regal or sovereign have been pithily described by Lord
Watson as "the primary and inalienable functions of a
constitutional Government" (Vide: Coomber v. Justices of
Berks(1) ); and it is only these activities that are outside
the scope of s. 2(j). It sounds incongruous and self-
contradictory (1) (1883) App. cas. 61.
878
to suggest that activities undertaken by the Government
in the interests of socioeconomic progress of the country as
beneficial measures should be exempted from the operation of
the Act which in substance is a very important beneficial
measure itself
In this connection it would be relevant to point out that
the definition of the word "employer" given by s. 2(g) is
not without significance: an "employer" means under s.
2(g)(i) "in relation to an industry carried on by or under
the authority of any department of the Central Government or
State Government authority prescribed in this behalf, or
where no authority is prescribed the head of the
department." This definition clearly indicates that the
Legislature intended the application of the Act to
activities of the Government which fall within s. 2(j).
In considering the question as to whether the group of
Hospitals run by the appellant undoubtedly for the purpose
of giving medical relief to the citizens and for helping to
impart medical education are an undertaking or not, it would
be pertinent to enquire whether an activity of a like nature
would be an undertaking if it is carried on by a private
citizen or a group of private citizens. There is no doubt
that if a hospital is run by private citizens for profit it
would be an undertaking very much like the trade or business
in their conventional sense. We have already stated that
the presence of profit motive is not essential for bringing
an undertaking within s. 2 (j). If that be so, if a private
citizen runs a hospital without charging any fees from the
patients treated in it would nevertheless be an undertaking
under s. 2(j). Thus the character of the activity involved
in running a hospital brings the institution of the hospital
within s. 2(j). Does it make any difference that the
hospital is run by the Government in the interpretation of
the word "undertaking" in s. 2(j) ? In our opinion, the
answer to this question must be in the negative. It is the
character of the activity which decides the question as to
whether the activity in question attracts the provision of
s. 2(j); who conducts the activity and whether it is
conducted for profit or not do not make a material
difference.
879
We have yet to decide which are the attributes the presence
of which makes in activity an under taking within s. 2(j),
on the ground that it is analogous to trade or business. It
is difficult to state these possible, attributes definitely
or exhaustively; as a working principle it may be stated
that an activity systematically or habitually undertaken for
the production or distribution of goods or for the rendering
of material services to the community at large or a part of
such community with the help of employees -is an.
undertaking. Such an activity generally involves the co-
operation of the employer and the employees; and its object
is the satisfaction of material human needs. It must be
organised or arranged in a manner in which trade or business
is generally organised or arranged. It must not be casual
nor must it be for oneself nor for pleasure. Thus the
manner in which the activity in question is organised or
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arranged, the condition of the co-operation between employer
and the employee necessary for its success and its object to
render material service to the community can be regarded as
some of the features which are distinctive of activities to
which s. 2(j) applies. Judged by this test there would be
no difficulty in holding that the State is carrying on an
undertaking when it runs the group of Hospitals in question.
Is quid pro quo necessary for bringing an activity under s.
2(j) ? It has been urged before us that though profit motive
may not be essential, it is nevertheless necessary that the
person who carries on the activity should receive some
consideration in return ; and it is only if the test of quid
pro quo is satisfied that an activity should be treated as
an undertaking. Though this argument is put in a slightly
different form, in substance it is really based on the idea
that profit motive is necessary to make any activity an
undertaking analogous to trade or, business. If the absence
of profit motive is immaterial why should an activity be
excluded from s. 2(j) merely because the person responsible
for the conduct of the activity expects no consideration,
does not want any quid pro quo and is actuated by
philanthropic or charitable motive ? In our opinion, in
deciding the question as
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880
to whether any activity in question is an undertaking under
s. 2(j) the doctrine of quid pro quo can have no
application. Therefore, we are satisfied that the High
Court was right in coming to the conclusion that
the conduct and running of the group of Hospitals by the
appellant amounted to an undertaking under s. 2 (j) and the
relevant provisions of the Act were applicable.
In this connection it would be relevant to refer to the fact
that in the First Schedule to the Act which enumerates
industries which may be declared as public utility service
under s. 2(n)(vi), three entries have been added by Act 36
of 1956. They are Defence Establishment, services in
hospitals and dispensaries, and Fire, Brigade service. In
other words, by the addition of these three entries the Leo-
islature has clearly indicated its intention that service in
hospitals and dispensaries can be declared to be a public
utility service under s. 2(n)(vi); and there is no doubt
that unless the service in hospitals falls under s. 2(j) and
is treated as an industry it cannot be declared to be a
public utility service. It is true that this particular
entry had not been included in the First Schedule at the
time when the present reference wag made, but its subsequent
inclusion can be reasonably taken as evidence of legislative
intention, and, if on a construction of s. 2(j) we have
independently reached the conclusion that service in
hospitals is service or the conduct of hospitals is an
undertaking, we may reasonably seek to derive corroboration
to our conclusion by this subsequent legislative enactment,.
After the addition of the relevant entry in the First
Schedule it would not be open to anybody to suggest that
service in hospitals does not fall under s. 2(j).
It now remains to consider some of the decisions to which
our attention was invited. In D. N. Banerji v. P. R.
Mukherjee & Ors. (1), this Court was dealing with a a
industrial dispute raised by the Municipal Workers’ Union of
the Budge Budge Municipality, on behalf of the Sanitary
Inspector and Head Clerk of the said Municipality on the
ground that the dismissal of the said two Municipal
employees was unjustified and
(1)[1953] S.C.R. 302.
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881
illegal, and that they were entitled to an order of
reinstatement. The dispute thus referred to the Industrial
Tribunal was decided in favour of the Union and an award was
made directing the Municipality to reinstate the said two
employees. The Municipality then took the matter to the
High Court at Calcutta by means of a petition for a writ of
certiorari under Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution. It
was urged in support of the petition that the Act was
inapplicable to the dispute in question and that there was
really no industrial dispute which could be validly referred
to the Industrial Tribunal. Other contentions were also
raised but it is unnecessary to refer to them. The High
Court rejected all the pleas raised by the Municipality and
dismissed the application for a writ. The Municipality then
brought the dispute to this Court under Art. 132(1) of the
Constitution. This Court dismissed the appeal preferred by
the Municipality and confirmed the order of the High Court.
In dealing with the appeal this Court laid down certain
propositions which are relevant for our purpose in the
present appeal. It was observed that " in determining the
meaning of the word " industry " and " industrial dispute "
it was necessary to leave aside the original meaning
attributed to the words in a simpler state of society; then
the contention of the Municipality that its activities in
question did not amount to an industry were dealt with in
these words: " The only ground on which one could say that
what would amount to the carrying on of an industry if it is
done by a private person ceases to be so if the same work is
carried on by a local body like the Municipality is that in
the latter there is nothing like the investment of any
capital or the existence of a profit earning notice as there
generally is in a business. But neither the one nor the
other seems a sine qua non or necessary element in the
modern conception of industry ". It is because of this
positive decision that the appellant has fairly conceded in
the course of the argument before us that the absence of the
profit motive or of investment of capital would not make a
material difference in determinig the character of an
activity this court has also examined the other relevant
factors pertaining
882
to the construction of the word " industry " and
industry dispute" and has declared its decision thus; Having
regard to the definitions found In our Act the aim or
objective that the Legislature had in view and the nature,
variety and range of disputes that occur between
employers and employees, were forced to the conclusion that
the definitions in our Act include also disputes that right
arise between municipalities and their employees in branches
of work that can be said to be analogy to the carrying out
of a trade or business ". In the present appeal we have to
decide the question as to ",hat attributes or features can
be said to make an activity in question analogous to trade
or business. Incidentally we may add that quite apart from
the relevant considerations which we have already discussed
it would be difficult to suggest that though the sanitary
department of a local body is an undertaking under s. 2(j) a
hospital run by a Government is not.
This decision has been referred to by this, Court in Baroda
Borough Municipality v. Its Workmen (1), and it has been
observed that it is now finally settled that a municipal
undertaking of the nature with which the court was then
concerned is an industry within the meaning of the
definition of that word in s. 2(j) of the Act and that the
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expression" industrial dispute " in that Act includes
disputes between municipalities and their employees in
branches of work that can be regarded as analogous to the
carrying on of a trade or business. In that case this Court
was concerned with the claim for bonus made by the workmen
of the Baroda Borough Municipality and it was rejected;
comment has been made by learned counsel on some of the
grounds accepted by this Court in support of its final
decision, but in the present appeal we are not concerned
with the claim for bonus and it is not necessary for us to
refer to the said comment or to deal with it.
So far as the decisions of the Industrial Tribunals are
concerned it appears that the Labour Appellate Tribunal has
held as early as 1952 that a hospital is an undertaking
within the meaning of s. 2(j). In
(1)[1957] S.C.R. 33.
883
Sri Vishuddhananda Saraswathi Marwari Hospital v. Their
Workmen (1) the, Labour Appellate Tribunal considered at
length the policy and object of the Act, several judgments
cited before it and came to the conclusion that the
definition of industry in s. 2(j) was of wide amplitude and
that there was no good reason for cutting down its natural
meaning so as to limit its operation to profit-making
enterprises only. It has not been suggested before us that
this view has ever been doubted or dissented from in any
subsequent industrial adjudication.
In judicial discussions about the scope and character of the
concept of industry as it has developed in a modern
democratic State the decision of the High Court of Australia
in The Federated State School Teachers’ Association of
Australia And The State of Victoria& Ors (2), is generally
cited. In that case, according to the majority decision it
was held that the educational activities of the State
carried on under the appropriate statutes and statutory
regulations of each State relating to education did not
constitute an industry with the meaning of s. 4 of the
Commonwealth Conciliation and Arbitration Act, 1904-1928 ;
that the occupation of teachers so employed was riot an
industrial occupation; and that the dispute which existed
between the State and the teachers employed by them was
therefore, not an industrial dispute within s. 51 (xxxv) of
the Constitution. Isaacs J., however, struck an emphatic
note of dissent, and the principles enunciated in this note
of dissent have received approval from industrial tribunals
in this country, and they have been rightly accepted by the
Bombay High Court as affording valuable assistance in
deciding the question in the present proceedings. Isaacs J.
has uttered a note of caution that in dealing with
industrial disputes industrial adjudicators must be
conversant with the current knowledge on the subject and
they should not ignore the constant currents of life, around
them for otherwise it would introduce a serious infirmity in
their approach. Dealing with the general characteristics of
industrial enterprises the learned judge observed
(1) [1952] II L.L.J. 327.
(2) [1929] 4 C.L.R. 569.
884
that they contribute more or less to the general
welfare of the community; and he has reiterated his earlier
observations on the point in these words: "Industrial
disputes occur when in relation to operations in which
capital and labour are contributed in co-operation for the
satisfaction of human wants or desires, those engaged in
co-operation dispute as to basis to be observed by the
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parties engaged, respecting either a share of the product or
any other terms or conditions of their co-operation ".
According to the learned judge, the question must always be
decided by determing the true character of the activity in
question. It is these tests which the High Court has
applied in deciding the present dispute and we are in
general agreement with the decision of the High Court. We
ought to make it clear that in the present appeal we are not
expressing any opinion on the question as to whether running
an educational institution would be an industry under the
Act; that question does not arise in the present
proceedings.
There are two more decisions to which reference may be made
before we part with this appeal. In Brij Mohan Bagaria And
Chatterjee (N.C.) & Ors. (1), the Calcutta High Court was
dealing with a dispute between an attorney of the court and
some of his employees who bad been dismissed by him; and it
was held that the said dispute was outside the purview of
the Act. Sinha J., who heard the petition filed by the
attorney, observed that " however extended the meaning be
given to the word industry or to industrial dispute or to
undertaking or calling we cannot include within their
concept the case of an individual who carries on a
profession dependent upon its own intellectual skill ". The
learned judge has then added that " every case must be
decided upon its own facts ". It appears that, according to
the learned judge, if an attorney or a doctor or a lawyer
who follows a liberal profession, the pursuit of which
depends upon his own education, intellectual attainments and
special equipment, engages employees, that would not mean
that the employer is engaging in an industry under s. 2(j);
but with the question of the attorney or doctor
(1) (1958) 11 L.L.J. 190.
885
or the lawyer we are not directly concerned in the present
appeal. We have, however, referred to this decision
because, in the course of discussion, the learned judge has
expressed his dissent from the view taken by the Bombay High
Court in regard to hospitals, and we wish to make it clear
that, in our opinion, the criticism made by the learned
judge against the inclusion of hospitals within s. 2(j) is
not well-founded. Dealing with a similar case of an
attorney, the Bombay High Court has taken the same view in
National Union of Commercial Employees & Anr. And Meher
(M.R.) & Ors. (Pereira Fazalbhoy & Co.) (1).
We would accordingly bold that the High Court was right in
holding that the dispute between the appellant and the
respondents was an industrial dispute to which s. 251’ of
the Act applied. The order passed by the High Court on the
writ petition filed by the respondents is confirmed and the
appeal is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.