Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF PUNJAB
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LABOUR COURT, JULLUNDUR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/10/1979
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1981 1980 SCR (1) 953
1980 SCC (4) 4
CITATOR INFO :
D 1981 SC1685 (8)
ACT:
Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972-S. 1(3)(b)-Scope of-A
Government project whether an "Industrial Establishment".
Retrenched workers-If entitled to gratuity-
"Retrenchment"-Meaning of.
Act, a self-contained Code-Application for gratuity-If
would lie under s. 33 C(2) of Industrial Disputes Act.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents, who were the employees of the Hydel
Department of the Government of Punjab, were retrenched on
the completion of the work assigned to them. Their claim for
payment of gratuity under the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972
having been rejected by the appellants, they moved the
Labour Court under s. 33-C(2) of the Industrial Disputes
Act, 1947. The Labour Court allowed their claim. The High
Court dismissed the appellant’s appeal in limine.
In appeal it was contended that (1) the view of the
Labour Court that the project was an establishment within
the meaning of the definition of "Industrial establishment"
contained in s. 2(ii) (g) of the Payment of Wages Act was
erroneous, and the Payment of Wages Act being a Central Act
is not an enactment contemplated by s. 1(3)(b) of the
Payment of Gratuity Act; (2) since retrenchment is not
superannuation or retirement or resignation or death or
disablement due to accident or disease as defined in s. 4(1)
of the Act, the retrenched employees were not entitled to
gratuity; and (3) the Payment of Gratuity Act being a self-
contained code, it excludes recourse to any other statute
for claiming relief under this Act and, therefore, the
respondents application under s. 33-C(2) of the Industrial
Disputes Act was misconceived.
Allowing the appeal in part;
^
HELD : 1(a). It is not correct to say that what is
contemplated by s. 1(3)(b) of the Payment of Gratuity Act is
a law enacted by the State Legislature and not a Central Act
like the Payment of Wages Act. There can be no doubt that
when s. 1(3)(b) speaks of "any law for the time being in
force in relation to shops and establishments in a State" it
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includes the Payment of Wages Act, which is a law in force
in the State. [956 B-C]
(b) The Payment of Wages Act is a statute which, while
it may not relate to shops. relates to a class of
establishments, i.e. industrial establishments. There is no
warrant for limiting the meaning of the expression "law" in
s. 1(3)(b) to a law which relates to both shops and
establishments such as the Punjab Shops and Commercial
Establishments Act, 1958. The expression is comprehensive in
its scope and can mean a law in relation to shops as well
as, separately, a law in relation to establishments or a law
in relation to shops
954
and commercial establishments and a law in relation to non-
commercial establishments. Had the intention of Parliament
been to refer to a law relating to commercial establishments
it would not have left the expression "establishments"
unqualified. There is no reason for giving a limited meaning
to s. 1(3) (b). This section applies to every establishment
within the meaning of any law for the time being in force in
relation to establishments in a State. Such an establishment
would include an industrial establishment within the meaning
of s. 2(ii)(g) of the Payment of Wages Act. Therefore, the
Payment of Gratuity Act applies to an establishment in which
any work relating, among others, to the generation,
transmission and distribution of electricity or any other
form of power is being carried on as defined in s. 1(3)(b)
of the Act. [956 D-H, 957 A]
2. The expression "retrenchment" which has been defined
in s. 2(q) to mean "termination of the service of an
employee otherwise than on superannuation" is framed in the
widest terms. Except for superannuation, any termination of
service would amount to "retirement" for the purposes of the
Act. Retrenchment is termination of service. It is
immaterial that the termination is occasioned by the need to
discharge surplus labour. [957 E-F]
Bersi Light Railway Company Labour v. K. M. Joglekar,
AIR 1957 SC 121, referred to.
3(a). Parliament intended that proceedings for payment
of gratuity due under the Act must be taken under that Act
and not under any other. There fore the respondents’
application did not lie under s. 33-C(2) of the Industrial
Disputes Act. and the Labor Court had no jurisdiction to
entertain it. [959-E]
(b). The Payment of Gratuity Act is a complete code
containing derailed provisions covering all the essential
features of the scheme for payment of gratuity. For the
enforcement of its provisions, the Act provides for the
appointment of a Controlling Authority for administering the
Act. He has been invested with an amplitude of power for the
full discharge of his responsibilities under the Act. Any
error committed by him can be corrected in appeal by the
appropriate Government or an appellate authority
particularly constituted under the Act. [959 B-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 8 of
1977.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 5-6-1975 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Civil
Writ No. 3166/75.
Soli J. Sorabji, Solicitor General and O. P. Sharma for
the Appellant.
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Hardev Singh for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PATHAK J.-In this appeal by special leave the State of
Punjab appeals against the judgment and order of the High
Court of Punjab & Haryana refusing to quash an order under
section 33-C(2) of the
955
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 for payment of gratuity to the
respondents under the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972.
The Hydel Department of the Government of Punjab had
undertaken a Project described as the "Hydel Upper Bari Doab
Construction Project." The respondents Nos. 2 to 8 were
employed as workcharged employees. On completion of the work
assigned to them they were retrenched, and retrenchment
compensation was paid to them. The employee respondents
claimed that they were also entitled to gratuity, bonus and
certain other allowances and benefits. The gratuity was
claimed under the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972. The claim
being disputed, the respondents applied under section 33-
C(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 to the Labour
Court, Jullundur. The Labour Court made an order dated April
30, 1975 that the employee respondents were entitled to the
gratuity claimed by them but not to bonus and the other
allowances and benefits. A writ petition filed by the
appellant has been dismissed in limine by the High Court of
Punjab and Haryana.
In this appeal, the learned Additional Solicitor-
General contends on behalf of the appellant that the Payment
of Gratuity Act, 1972 cannot be invoked by the respondents
because the Project does not fall within the scope of
Section 1(3) of that Act. Section 1(3) provides that the Act
will apply to :
"(a) every factory, mine, oilfield, plantation, port
and railway company;
(b) every shop or establishment within the meaning of
any law for the time being in force in relation to
shops and establishments in a State, in which ten
or more persons are employed, or were employed, on
any day of the preceding twelve months;
(c) such other establishments or class of
establishments, in which ten or more employees are
employed, or were employed, on any day of the
preceding twelve months, as the Central Government
may, by notification, specify in this behalf."
According to the parties, it is clause (b) alone which needs
to be considered for deciding whether the Act applies to the
Project. The Labour Court has held that the Project is an
establishment within the meaning of the Payment of Wages
Act, section 2(ii) (g) of which defines an "industrial
establishment" to mean an "establishment in which any work
relating to the construction, development or maintenance of
956
buildings, roads, bridges or canals, or relating to
operations connected with navigation, irrigation or the
supply of water, or relating to the generation, transmission
and distribution of electricity or any other form of power
is being carried on." It is urged for the appellant that
the Payment of Wages Act is not an enactment contemplated by
section 1(3)(b) of the Payment of Gratuity Act. The Payment
of Wages Act, it is pointed out, is a central enactment and
section 1(3)(b), it is said, refers to a law enacted by the
State Legislature. We are unable to accept the contention.
Section 1(3) (b) speaks of "any law for the time being in
force in relation to shops and establishments in a State."
There can be no dispute that the Payment of Wages Act is in
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force in the State of Punjab. Then, it is submitted, the
Payment of Wages Act is not a law in relation to "shops and
establishments". As to that, the Payment of Wages Act is a
statute which, while it may not relate to shops, relates to
a class of establishments, that is to say, industrial
establishments. But, it is contended, the law referred to
under section 1(3) (b) must be a law which relates to both
shops and establishments, such as the Punjab Shops &
Commercial Establishments Act, 1958. It is difficult to
accept that contention because there is no warrant for so
limiting the meaning of the expression "law" in section
1(3) (b). The expression is comprehensive in its scope, and
can mean a law in relation to shops as well as, separately,
a law in relation to establishments, or a law in relation to
shops and commercial establishments and a law in relation to
noncommercial establishments. Had section 1(3)(b) intended
to refer to a single enactment, surely the appellant would
have been able to point to such a statute, that is to say, a
statute relating to shops and establishments, both
commercial and non-commercial. The Punjab Shops &
Commercial Establishments Act does not relate to all kinds
of establishments. Besides shops, it relates to commercial
establishments alone. Had the intention of Parliament been,
when enacting section 1(3)(b), to refer to a law relating to
commercial establishments, it would not have left the
expression "establishments" unqualified. We have carefully
examined the various provisions of the Payment of Gratuity
Act, and we are unable to discern any reason for giving the
limited meaning to section 1(3) (b) urged before us on
behalf of the appellant. Section 1(3) (b) applies to every
establishment within the meaning of any law for the time
being in force in relation to establishments in a State.
Such an establishment would include an industrial
establishment within the meaning of section 2(ii) (g) of the
Payment of Wages Act. Accordingly, we are of opinion that
the Payment of Gratuity Act applies to an establishment in
which any work relating to construction, development or
maintenance of buildings,
957
roads, bridges or canals, or relating to operations
connected with navigation, irrigation or the supply of
water, or relating to the generation, transmission and
distribution of electricity or any other form of power is
being carried on. The Hydel Upper Bari Doab Construction
Project is such an establishment, and the Payment of
Gratuity Act applies to it.
The second contention on behalf of the appellant is
that retrenchment does not fall within section 4(1) of the
Payment of Gratuity Act, under which gratuity is payable to
an employee on the termination of his employment. The
termination envisaged occurs either
"(a) on his superannuation, or
(b) on his retirement or resignation, or
(c) on his death or disablement due to accident or
disease."
Having regard to the definition of "superannuation" in
section 2(r) of the Act, it is clear that the case is not
one under clause (a). Nor, admittedly, is it a case which
falls under clause (c). As regards clause (b), it is not a
case of resignation. The only question is whether it can be
regarded under clause (b) as a case of retirement. The
expression "retirement" has been defined by section 2(q) to
mean "termination of the service of an employee otherwise
than on superannuation." The definition is framed in the
widest terms. Except for superannuation, any termination of
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service would amount to "retirement" for the purposes of the
Act. Retrenchment is a termination of service. It is
immaterial that the termination is occasioned by the need to
discharge surplus labour. That retrenchment implies the
discharge of surplus labour was explained in Bersi Light
Railway Company Labour v. K. M. Joglekar. Nonetheless, it
amounts to termination of service. We are of opinion that
the retrenchment of the employee respondents falls within
the scope of section 4(1) of the Payment of Gratuity Act,
and the employee respondents are therefore entitled to
gratuity under that provision.
The third contention raised by the appellant is that
the employee respondents were not entitled to apply under
section 33-C(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 for
payment of the gratuity, and should have, if at all, applied
under the provisions of the Payment of Gratuity Act. It is
urged that the Payment of Gratuity Act is a self-contained
code incorporating all the essential provisions relating to
payment of gratuity which can be claimed under that Act, and
its provisions impliedly exclude recourse to any other
statute for that purpose. The
958
contention has force and must be accepted. A careful perusal
of the relevant provisions of the Payment of Gratuity Act
shows that Parliament has enacted a closely knit scheme
providing for payment of gratuity. A controlling authority
is appointed by the appropriate Government under section 3.
and Parliament has made him responsible for the
administration of the entire Act. In what event gratuity
will become payable and how it will be quantified are
detailed in section 4. Section 7(1) entitled a person
eligible for payment of gratuity to apply in that behalf to
the employer. Under section 7(2), the employer is obliged,
as soon as gratuity becomes payable and whether an
application has or has not been made for payment of
gratuity, to determine the amount of gratuity and inform the
person to whom the gratuity is payable specifying the amount
of gratuity so determined. He is obliged, by virtue of the
same provision, to inform the controlling authority also,
thus ensuring that the controlling authority is seized at
all times of information in regard to gratuity as it becomes
payable. If a dispute is raised in regard to the amount of
gratuity payable or as to the admissibility of any claim to
gratuity, or as to the person entitled to receive the
gratuity, section 7(4) (a) requires the employer to deposit
with the controlling authority such amount as he admits to
be payable by him as gratuity. The controlling authority is
empowered. under section 7(4)(b), to enter upon an
adjudication of the dispute, and after due inquiry, and
after giving the parties to the dispute a reasonable
opportunity of being heard, he is required to determine the
amount of gratuity payable. In this regard, the controlling
authority has all the powers as are vested in a court while
trying a suit under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 in
respect of obtaining evidentiary material and the recording
of evidence. The amount deposited by the employer with the
controlling authority as the admitted amount of gratuity
will be paid over by the controlling authority to the
employee or his nominee or heir. Section 7(7) provides an
appeal against the order of the controlling authority under
section 7(4) to the appropriate Government or such other
authority as may be specified by the appropriate Government
in that behalf. The appropriate Government or the appellate
authority is empowered under section 7(8), after giving the
parties to the appeal a reasonable opportunity of being
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heard, to confirm, modify or reverse the decision of the
controlling authority. Where the amount of gratuity payable
is not paid by the employer with in the prescribed time,
the controlling authority is required by section 8, on
application made to it by the aggrieved person, to issue a
certificate for that amount to the Collector. The Collector,
thereupon, is empowered to recover the amount of gratuity,
together with compound interest thereon at the rate of nine
per cent per annum from the date
959
of expiry of the prescribed time, as arrears of land
revenue, and pay the same to the person entitled thereto.
It is apparent that the Payment of Gratuity Act enacts
a complete code containing detailed provisions covering all
the essential features of a scheme for payment of gratuity.
It creates the right to payment of gratuity, indicates when
the right will accrue, and lays down the principles for
quantification of the gratuity. It provides further for
recovery of the amount, and contains an especial provision
that compound interest at nine per cent per annum will be
payable on delayed payment. For the enforcement of its
provisions, the Act provides for the appointment of a
controlling authority, who is entrusted with the task of
administering the Act. The fulfilment of the rights and
obligations of the parties are made his responsibility, and
he has been invested with an amplitude of power for the full
discharge of that responsibility. Any error committed by him
can be corrected in appeal by the appropriate Government or
an appellate authority particularly constituted under the
Act.
Upon all these considerations, the conclusion is
inescapable that Parliament intended that proceedings for
payment of gratuity due under the Payment of Gratuity Act
must be taken under that Act and not under any other. That
being so, it must be held that the applications filed by the
employee respondents under section 33-C(2) of the Industrial
Disputes Act did not lie, and the Labour Court had no
jurisdiction to entertain and dispose of them. On that
ground, this appeal must succeed.
In the circumstances, it is not necessary to notice the
further submission on behalf of the appellant that where a
serious dispute exists in regard to the basis of a claim for
payment of gratuity, no proceedings will lie under section
33-C(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act.
The appeal is allowed, and the order dated April 30,
1975 of the Labour Court, Jullundur is quashed. Having
regard to the terms on which special leave was granted by
this Court to the appellant, the appellant shall pay to the
employee respondents their costs of this appeal.
At this stage we put to the learned Solicitor-General,
who appeared for the State whether in the special
circumstances it was not fair that the entire amount be paid
by the appellant to the employees without
960
driving them to a separate proceeding. He has fairly stated
that the appellant is willing to do so and the sole object
of this litigation was to have the law clarified. We,
therefore, direct the appellant to pay to the employee
respondents within one month from today the amounts that may
be due to them, if they have not already been paid.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed
961