Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MANAGEMENT, GHAZIABAD ENGINEERING CO (P) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ITS WORKMEN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/07/1969
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 390 1970 SCR (1) 622
1969 SCC (2) 319
CITATOR INFO :
D 1972 SC 343 (25)
E&R 1977 SC 941 (21)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute--Gratuity--Scheme framed relating
gratuity to consolidated wage not to basic wage--Principles
governing framing of scheme--Dearness allowance at flat
rate--Practice--Courts jurisdiction under Art.
136--Interference with findings of Tribunal.
HEADNOTE:
The Industrial Tribunal on a reference of the disputes
between the appellant company and its workmen framed a
gratuity scheme. The gratuity payable to a workman on
termination of employment was to be computed on the total
wage packet of the workman including dearness allowance
which he had last drawn. The tribunal also awarded dearness
allowance at a flat uniform rate for every 10 point rise in
the cost of Consumer Price Index. The Tribunal found that
the financial position of the company was sound and it had
the capacity to bear the additional burden. In appeal, this
Court
HELD: (i) The usual pattern in fixing gratuity is to
relate it to the basic wage or salary and not to
consolidated wage. A departure may be made from the normal
rule, if there by some strong evidence or precedent in the
industry, or conduct of the employer or other exceptional
circumstances to justify that course. In .the absence of
such evidence, gratuity should be related to the basic wage
and not to the consolidated wage packet. [627 D]
In the present case it was found that the financial
position of the company was sound but there was no evidence
that the company was "making abnormally high profits", nor
was there any evidence that in its sister concern or in
other engineering concerns in the region there was a
practice of awarding gratuity related to consolidated wages.
M/s. British Paints (India) Ltd. v. Its Workmen,
[1966] 2 S.C.R. 523, May & Baker (India.) Ltd. v. Their
Workmen, [1961] II L.L.J. 94, British India Corporation v.
The Workmen, (1965) Vol. 10 Factory Law Reports 244,
Hindustan Antibiotics Ltd. v. Their Workmen, [1967] I.
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L.L.J 114, The Remington Rand of India Ltd. v. The Workmen,
[1968] 1 S.C.R. 164, and Delhi Cloth & General Mills Co.
Ltd. v. The Workmen & Ors. [1969] 2 S.C.R. 307, referred to.
(ii) The rise in dearness allowance was not related to
the quantum of basic wage or consolidated wage; it was a
flat uniform rate applicable to every workman. Therefore,
the. rise would not operate to give the workman, besides the
additional dearness allowance, a percentage increase in
dearness allowance already paid as part of the consolidated
wage. [625 E-F]
(iii) The Tribunal, on appreciation of evidence found
that the financial position of the company was sound.
Assuming that the Tribunal was governed by the strict rules
prescribed by the Evidence Act, Sitting in appeal with
Special Leave this Court would not be justified in
interfering
623
with the finding of the Tribunal even if it be open to the
criticism that a part of the evidence relied upon was not in
law relevant. [624 F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1408 of
1966.
Appeal by special leave from the AWard dated May 19,
1965 February 23, 1966 of the Addl. Industrial Tribunal,
Delhi in Industrial Dispute No. 109 of 1965.
H.R. Gokhale, G.L. Sanghi and K.P. Gupta for the
appellant.
Urmila Kapur and Bhajan Ramrakhiani, for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. By order February 24, 1965 the Chief
Commissioner of Delhi referred for adjudication, industrial
disputes between the appellant company and its workmen
relating to dearness allowance and introduction of a scheme
of gratuity for the benefit of the workmen. The Industrial
Tribunal, Delhi framed the following "gratuity scheme":
(1) On death or retirement on One months wages for each
superannuation or on becoming Year of service of part
mentally or physically unfit there of in excess of six
for further service. subject to a maximum of 15
months’s wages,In case
of death of Employee the
gratuity shall be payable
to his nominee or if there
is no nominee to his legal
heirs
(2)On termination after five 15 days for each year of se-
years’service for any cause rvice or part there of in
whatsoever except by way of exces of six months subject
retrenchment or resignation to a maximum of 15 months
resignation. subject wages
(3)On resignation after 10
years of service. 15 days wages for each year
of service or part thereof
in excess of six months
to a maximum of 15 months
wages
Provided that if termination is for any misconduct
causing financial loss to the company, the amount of loss
shall be deducted from the gratuity payable. The word
’wages’ in this Scheme shall mean the total pay packet of
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the workman including dearness which he was last drawing."
The Tribunal also directed that "all workmen who were
appointed in 1960 or earlier should get dearness allowance
at Rs. 3 for every ten point rise in the cost of Consumer
Price Index base 1960 over and above their existing wages
with effect from
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1st January, 1965. In case of workmen appointed after 1960,
the consumer price index base 1960 on the date of his
appointment shall be found out and he shall be given Rs. 3
as dearness for every ten point rise in cost of Consumer
Price index base 1960 above it with effect from 1st January,
1965 or such later date on which the limit of 10 point rise
in cost of Consumer Price Index base is crossed." The
Tribunal also directed that dearness allowance will not
be enhanced till the limit of ten points be "crossed", and
that dearness allowance once granted will not be reduced
till the Consumer Price Index falls by more than 10 points.
The Company has appealed to this Court with special leave.
In the view of the Tribunal, the financial position
of the company "is very sound" and that it has "financial
capacity and, stability to bear the additional burden of
dearness allowance and of the gratuity scheme." In reaching
that conclusion the Tribunal relied upon a news item
published in the newspapers that 2000 Russian Tractors were
being immediately imported by the Company even though
the agency of the Company was being terminated. In relying
upon newspaper reports the Tribunal may have erred. But the
conclusion of the Tribunal is rounded upon a review of
several other circumstances. It is true that one of the
primary lines of business of the company was of selling
tractors as agents of Russian manufacturers. That agency was
in danger of being terminated because the State Trading
Corporation had arranged to take over the agency. But the
balance sheets of the company show that the agency was only
one of the many lines of business and the closure of the
agency of the tractor manufacturers was not likely to
affect the financial structure of the Company seriously.
The Tribunal has on appreciation of evidence come to the
conclusion that the financial position of the company was
sound and assuming that the Tribunal is governed by the
strict rules prescribed by the Evidence Act, sitting in
appeal with special leave we will not be justified in
interfering with the finding of the Tribunal even if it be
open to the criticism that a part of the evidence relied
upon is not in law relevant.
The company had on its roll 244 workmen out of whom 118
entered employment after 1960. The company has been paying
to its workmen wages consisting of two components-basic
wages and 50 per cent of the basic wages as dearness
allowance. Payment of wages is made in this form to all
workmen whether their employment commenced before the year
1960 or thereafter. It is true that before 1960 the company
used to make a consolidated payment without specifying any
amount of basic salary or dearness allowance. Since 1960 in
every appointment letter it was expressly recited that the
employee v,iII get a consolidated salary consisting of 2/3rd
of the consolidated salary as basic wages and
625
the balance as dearness allowance. The company has produced
before the Tribunal 118 such letters of appointment in
respect of all employees employed after the year 1960. In
respect of the employees appointed prior to the year 1960
in the salary register basic salary and dearness allowance
was separately entered though at the time of appointment of
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employees there was no allocation as basic wages and
dearness allowance.
There is no dispute that since the year 1960 there has
been a rise in the cost of living. The Consumer Price Index
for Industrial Workers which was 100 in 1960, had risen to
more than 130 in 1965. The management of the company
granted dearness allowance to employees in other concerns
under its management even though those other concerns were
not financially very sound. No serious argument has been
advanced before us that the rise in dearness allowance is
not Justified. The only ground of complaint is that by
relating the dearness allowance to the total wage packet the
workmen are given a: rise both in the dearness allowance and
in the basic wage
The Tribunal has awarded dearness allowance at the flat
rate of Rs. 3 for every 10 point rise in the cost of
Consumer Price Index. The rise is not related to the quantum
of basic wage or consolidated wage. It is a flat uniform
rate applicable to every workman. The Tribunal was of the
view that the allocation between the basic wage and the
dearness allowance was "not fair", but for the purpose of
the present reference, the question is academic because
dearness allowance is not related to the quantum of
salary that the workmen receive. The argument that the rise
will operate to give to the workmen besides the additional
dearness allowance, a percentage increase in dearness
allowance already paid as part of the consolidated wage
cannot be accepted. We do not therefore see any reason to
interfere with the order passed by "the Tribunal with
regard to the dearness allowance at the rate of Rs. 3 for
every 10 point rise in the Consumer Price Index."
Gratuity payable to a workman on termination of
employment is to be computed on the total wage packet of
the workman including dearness allowance which he has last
drawn. This order makes a departure from the normal rule
which is adopted in industrial awards. In M/s. British
Paints (India) Ltd. v. Its Workmen(1) this Court while
introducing a gratuity scheme for the first time in the
concern directed that the amount of gratuity shall be
related to the basic wage or salary and not to the
consolidated wage including dearness allowance. A similar
order was made in May and Baker (India) Ltd. v. Their
Workmen(2). It is true
(1) [1966] 2 S.C.R. 523. (2) [1961] II L.L
626
that in British India Corporation v. The Workmen(1), an
award made by the Tribunal fixing the quantum of gratuity
on gross salary i.e., basic wage plus dearness allowance
was upheld by this Court. The Court affirmed that the usual
pattern in fixing the gratuity is to relate it to the basic
wage, but refused to interfere with the order because the.
practice in that concern was to fix gratuity on the
consolidated wage.
similarly in Hindustan Antibiotics Ltd v. their
work men(2), the Tribunal directed the employer to pay
gratuity at the rate of one half of wages for each month
including dearness allowance but excluding house rent and
all other allowances for each completed year of service
subject to a maximum of wages for ten months. In rejecting
the claim of the employers for relating gratuity to the
basic wage, this Court observed:
"If the industry is a flourishing one, we do
no see any reason why the labour shall not
have the benefit of both the schemes i.e. the
employees provident fund and the gratuity
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scheme. Gratuity is an additional form of
relief for the workmen to fall back upon. If
the industry can bear the burden, there is no
reason why he shall not be entitled to both
the retirement benefits. The Tribunal
considered all the relevant circumstances: the
stability of the concern, the profits made by
it in the past, its future prospects and its
capacity and came to the conclusion that, in
the concern in question, the labour should
be provided with a gratuity scheme in
addition to that of a provident fund
scheme.There was no justification to disturb
this conclusion."
In The Remington Rand of India Ltd. v. The Workmen(8)
this Court declined to interfere with the order of the
Tribunal awarding gratuity related to the consolidated wage
including dearness allowance "in view of the flourishing
nature of the concern, the enormous profits it was making,
the reserves it had built up as also in view of the fact
that it was paying gratuity to. executives on the basis of
consolidated wages." In The Delhi Cloth & General Mills Co.,
Ltd. v. The Workmen & Ors. (4) this Court had to consider
whether gratuity payable to workmen in the textile
industry in the Delhi region should be related to. the
consolidated wage. After referring to the decisions which
were brought to the notice of the Court, it was observed
that:
"It is not easy to extract any principle from these
cases:as precedents they are conflicting .... The
(1) (1965) Vol. 10 Factory Law Report, 244.
(2) [1967] I L.L.J. 114.
(3) [1968] 1 S.C.R.164.
(4) [1969] 2 S.C.R. 307.
627
Tribunal has failed to take into account the
prevailing pattern in the textile industry all
over the country ....It is a countrywide
industry: and in that industry, except in
one case to be presently noticed, gratuity has
never been granted on the basis of
consolidated wages."
The Court after referring to the schemes framed in
respect of the industries in Bombay and Ahmedabad and other
industries concluded that "determination of gratuity is not
based on any definite rules. In each case it must depend
upon the prosperity of the concern, needs of the workmen and
the prevailing economic conditions examined in the light of
the auxiliary benefits which the workmen may get on
determination of employment."
There is no clear evidence on the record, and no
precedents have been brought to our notice, to justify a
departure from the normal rule that the quantum of gratuity
is related not to the consolidated wage packet but to the
basic wage. A departure may be made from the normal rule, if
there be some strong evidence or precedent in the industry,
or conduct of the employer or other exceptional
circumstances to justify that course. In the absence of such
evidence, we are of the view that gratuity should be related
to the basic wage and not to the consolidated wage packet.
In the present case it is found that the financial position
of the Company is sound but there is no evidence that the
company is "making abnormally high profits" ’nor is there
any evidence that in its sister concerns or in other
engineering concerns in the region there is a practice of
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awarding gratuity related to consolidated wages.
It was urged on behalf of the company that even though the
workmen had, in the claim made by them, demanded a scheme
of . gratuity benefit at the rate of 15 days wages for each
year of service in case of death or retirement on attaining
the age of superannuation or on becoming mentally or
physically unfit for further service,. the Tribunal had
awarded gratuity at the rate of one month’s wages for each
year of service subject to a maximum of 15 months’ wages.
But the claim was made on the footing that the wages were to
include dearness allowance. When the claim is not accepted,
we cannot hold the workmen bound by the multiples.
We make no modification in clause (1 ) of the scheme.
We modify the scheme in so far as it relates to the dearness
allowance and direct that for the last sentence of the
gratuity scheme the following shall be substituted:
"The word ’wages’ in the scheme shall mean
basic salary or emoluments excluding dearness
’allowance and
628
other allowances and benefits payable to the workman which
he had last drawn."
Subject to the above modification, the appeal fails and
is dismissed. There will be no order as to costs in the
appeal.
Y.P. Scheme modified and appeal dismissed.
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