Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. OM OIL & OILSEEDS EXCHANGE LTD., DELHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THEIR WORKMEN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/03/1966
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
WANCHOO, K.N.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1657 1966 SCR 74
CITATOR INFO :
R 1980 SC1454 (6)
ACT:
Industrial Law-Retrenchment-Rule of "first come last go".
When can be departed from-Employees properly retrenched-Com-
pensation payable.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents (workmen of the appellant) raised on indus-
trial dispute and pleaded before the Labour Court that the
appellant’s action in retrenching some of its employees was
mala fide, as the appellant did not follow the "first come.
last go" rule. The appellant justified its action on the
ground that the appellant had recorded valid reasons for
departing from the rule. The reasons were that, one of the
employees retained was the only person capable of looking
after the appellant’s share work and court work, another was
the only typist with the appellant, a third was the record
keeper who alone knew where the different types of records
were kept, and the other two were peons who were retained as
chowkidars because, there was no other person who could do
that work. The Labour Court accepted the respondents’
contention, ordered the reinstatement of those employees who
were affected by the departure from the rule, and directed
that those employees who were properly retrenched should be
paid in addition to the retrenchment compensation under s.
25F of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, which had been
paid by the appellant 50 % of their wages as compensation
till the date when the award, became enforceable.
In appeal to this Court.
HELD:(i) The Labour Court was in error in inferring mala
)ides merely because the management departed from the rule
of "first come, last go."
Where other things are equal, the ordinary industrial rule
has to be followed by the employer, but the rule is not
immutable. It is for the management to ascertain who, on
retrenchment, should be retained in the interests of the
business, and the industrial tribunal will not interfere
with the decision of the management, unless preferential
treatment is actuated by mala fides. Preference given to
the retained employees on the ground of mere experience may
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justify an inference of mala fides; but in the present case,
the employees retained had, beside experience, special
skill, or aptitude in the Particular branch of the business
of the appellant they were attending to, and the management
had retained them because of that skill, or aptitude. [76 E-
F 79B-E].
Swadesamitran Ltd. V. Their Workmen, [1960] 3 S.C.R. 144
and J.K. Iron and Steel Company Ltd. v. its Workmen. [1960]
2 L.L.J. 64, referred to.
(ii) Where retrenchment has been properly made and that
order has not been set aside, there is no justification for
directing payment of compensation to employees Properly
retrenched in addition to the retrenchment
compensation statutorily payable. [8O E].
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 131 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the Award dated, the September
10, 1965 of the Labour Court, Delhi, in I.D. No. 23 of 1965.
M. C. Setavad, B. P. Maheshwari and M. S. Narasimhan, for
the appellant.,
Madan Mohan, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered-by
Shah, J. The appellant is engaged in carrying on the
business of regulating forward trade in groundnut oil and
mustard-seed, and is recognised as an Exchange under the
provisions of the Forward Contract Act, 1952. On June 1,
1964 the Government of India issued an order prohibiting
trading in diverse commodities including groundnut oil and
mustard-seed, and in consequence thereof no further business
could, be carried on through. the appellant Exchange. On
July 17, 1965 the appellant served notices of retrenchment
upon 30 out of its 37 employees and paid them salary for the
period of notice and retrenchment compensation under s. 25F
of the Industrial Disputes Act 14 of 1947. The workmen then
raised an industrial dispute. Conciliation proceedings to
solve the dispute having failed, the Delhi Administration
referred to the Labour Court the dispute whether
retrenchment of the workmen by the appellant was unjustified
and illegal. The workmen pleaded that retrenchment "on the
ground of the ban imposed on forward trading in groundnut
oil and mustard-seed was mala fide" and that in retaining
seven workmen the appellant did not follow, without any
adequate ground, "the first come last go" rule, and on that
account all the workmen were entitled to be reinstated with
full wages from the date of determination of employment and
with continuity of service. The appellant denied that in
retrenching the workmen the management had acted mala fide,
or that retrenchment amounted to an unfair labour practice.
The appellant further submitted that retrenchment of the
workmen was not liable to be challenged, because some junior
members of the staff were retained, since the Company had
recorded in the resolution its reasons for departing from
the rule "first come, last go", and had "adhered to the
principles contained in s. 25F of the Industrial, Disputes
Act as far as possible".
At the hearing of the reference before the Labour Court,
Delhi, counsel for the workmen conceded that the appellant
was justified in retrenching its employees and that the
number of employees required to carry on the work after the
imposition of a ban against the business of the appellant
could not exceed the number retained by the appellant.
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Counsel however contended that since the appellant failed in
effecting retrenchment of the workmen
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to observe the principle of "first come, last go", the order
in its entirety was illegal. The Labour Court accepted the
contention of the workmen and held that departure from a
principle which was part of the law relating to industrial
employment rendered the retrenchment of all workmen
unjustified and improper and on that account retrenchment of
clerks and peons who were affected by the departure from the
rule was "illegal and mala fide". In the view of the Labour
Court, workmen Nos. 1 to 14 and 16 to 23 in Ext. W-1-the
List of Seniority-were so affected. The Labour Court
ordered that as the appellant required only four clerks in-
cluding the Accountant R. N. Seth, the Accountant and three
senior clerks Shiv Das Sharma, Kishan Lal Grover and
Surinder Singh be retained, and that the senior clerks named
be reinstated with full "back wages", subject to adjustment
of compensation money paid to them against their salary.
The Court also directed that clerks Nos. 4 to 14 be paid, in
addition to the retrenchment compensation received by them
"50 per cent of the wages as compensation for the period
they remained in unemployment up till the date when the
award became enforceable", but they may not be reinstated,
and that peons Tara Shanker and Om Prakash be reinstated
with full wages and peons Nos. 18 to 23 in Ext. W-1 be paid
in addition to the retrenchment compensation, "50 per cent
of the wages they would have been entitled to." With special
leave, the Company has appealed to this Court.
It is an accepted principle of industrial law that in
ordering retrenchment ordinarily the management should
commence with the latest recruit, and progressively retrench
employees higher up in the list of seniority. But the rule
is not immutable, and for valid reasons may be departed
from. It was observed by this Court in Swadesamitran Ltd.
v. Their Workmen(1) that if a case for retrenchment is made
out, it would normally be for the employer to decide which
of the employees should be retrenched; but there can. be no
doubt that the ordinary industrial rule of retrenchment is
"first come, last go", and where other things are equal,
this rule has to be followed by the employer in effecting
retrenchment.
The question then is whether in departing from the rule, the
management had acted mala fide, or that its action amounted
to an unfair labour practice. The Tribunal has to determine
in each case whether the management has in ordering
retrenchment acted fairly and properly and not with any
ulterior motive: it cannot assume from mere departure from
the rule that the management was actuated by improper
motives or that the management had acted in a manner
amounting to an unfair labour practice. Nor has the
Tribunal authority to sit in appeal over the decision of the
management if for valid and justifiable reasons the
management has departed from the rule that the senior
employees may be retrenched before his junior in employment
(1) [1960] 1 L.L.J. 504.
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The management of the appellant has recorded a resolution
which sets out the reasons for retention of the employees
Ram Lal Sethi, Jagdish Pershad, Kidar Nath Thukral, Om
Prakash Juneja, Jai Narain, Budhpal Singh and Laljimal.
About Ram Lal Sethi the Company has stated that he was
looking "after the accounts" and income-tax cases of the
Company and he was the only Accountant in the service of the
Company and the senior-most employee in the Accounts
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Section. The Labour Court has upheld his retention, and
nothing more need be said about him. Jagdish Pershad was,
it was stated, looking "after the share work, collection of
building rent and court work and the realisation of rents"
and that he was "in charge of the share work for the last
many years". The Labour Court was of the view that a clerk
employed in general office duties may be styled as a general
assistant, and that the posts of clerks are interchangeable
and since clerks are not trained to handle any Particular
kind of work, the reasons given by the management for
retaining this and other clerks cannot be accepted. However
there was not in the employment of the Company any other
clerk who could competently handle "share work" and attend
to "court work". Clerical work ordinarily does not require
specialisation and clerks may be transferred from one
department to another without detriment to the business.
But if a clerk has been working in a branch of the business
and he is shown to possess special aptitude for a particular
duty, performance of which requires application and
experience, the management may in the interests of the
business while retrenching others retain him even if he is
junior to others. The rule of "first come, last go" is
intended to secure an equitable treatment to the employees
when, having regard to the exigencies of the business, it is
necessary to retrench some employees. But in the
application of the rule the interests of the business cannot
be overlooked. The rule has to be applied where other
things are equal. The management of the business must act
fairly to the employees, where however the management bona
fide retains staff possessing special aptitude in the
interests of the business, it cannot be assumed to have
acted unfairly merely because the rule "first come, last go"
is not observed. If retention of a clerical employee is
regarded as necessary by the management in the interests of
the business, that opinion cannot be discarded merely on the
ground that the clerk concerned is not the seniormost.
There is nothing on the record to show that there was, among
the senior employees, a clerk possessing the aptitude which
Jagdish Pershad possessed. Kidar Nath Thakural was doing
"typing work" and he was retained because he was the only
typist with the Company. Our attention has not been invited
to any evidence that there were other typists who were
senior to him and they had been retrenched. A typist is
undoubtedly a clerk in a business concern but that does not
mean that every clerk, unless specially trained, can become
a competent typist. Om Prakash Juneja was
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retained because he was looking after the records of the
Company and was "fully conversant as to where different type
of records" were "lying", and that this employee was doing
the work satisfactorily. A record-keeper’s work in a
business cannot be performed efficiently without special
training or long experience. It would be difficult to hold
that in retrenching employees, if the management retains an
efficient record-keeper in preference to a senior clerk who
has no training or experience in record-keeping, the
management acts mala fide or improperly, or perpetrates an
unfair labour practice.
The Labour Court was of the view that retention of junior
clerks in service could not be sustained on the ground that
they had gained experience in a particular branch of
clerical work. To accept that ground of preference,
observed the Labour Court, was to destroy the rule "first
come, last go" itself, since clerks are not specially
trained to handle only a particular kind of work, and their
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work is easily convertible and one can replace another
without dislocation in the department. For ordinary
clerical work this is undoubtedly true, but even among the
clerical staff if a degree of specialisation is necessary
for discharging clerical duties efficiently retention of a
junior clerk on the ground that the duty performed by him
requires experience, and aptitude, will not expose the
management to a charge of mala fide, or perpetration of an
unfair labour practice.
It was submitted than in J. K. Iran and Steel Company Ltd.
v. Its workmen(1) this Court has hold that in the matter of
retrenchment of clerical staff, departure from the rule
"first come, last go" may not be recognised when it is
sought to be justified on the ground that the workman
retained has experience of a particular branch of the
clerical work, and reliance was placed upon the following
observations of Subba Rao, J.
"But if the preferential treatment given to
juniors ignores the well recognized principle
in the industrial law that the "first come,
last go" without any acceptable " or sound
reasoning, a tribunal or an adjudicator will
be well justified to hold that the action of
the management is not bona fide.... In regard
to the clerks, what is the ground of
preference given by the management? It is
said that junior clerks, who were retained,
have experience in a particular branch of
clerical work. To accept this ground of
preference without more is to destroy the
principle itself. It may be that the clerks
entrusted with such works may continue to do
the same work till a readjustment of the work
is made. There is no particular or scientific
skill required in one class of work rather
than in another. Clerks are not specially
trained to handle
(1) (1960) 2 L.L.J. 64.
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only a particular kind of work. Their work is
easily convertible and one can replace another
without any dislocation in the department."
But the judgment does not enunciate a different principle.
Ordinarily it is for the management to ascertain who on
retrenchment should be retained in the interests of the
business and the Industrial Tribunal will not interfere with
the decision of the management, unless preferential
treatment is actuated by mala fides. Where those retrenched
and those retained are doing substantially the same kind of
work and no special skill or aptitude is required for doing
the work which the retained clerk is doing, preference given
to the retained clerk on the ground that he has some ex-
perience in the branch may justifiably raise an inference of
mala fides. Apparently in J.K. Iron and Steel Company’s
case,(1) the work required to be done by the clerks retained
needed no special aptitude, and the clerks retrenched could
as well do the work which was done by the clerk retained.
It was in those circumstances that the Court held that mere
experience in a particular branch requiring no special
aptitude was not sufficient to justify departure from the
rule "first come, last go".
In the present case the four clerks retained had, beside ex-
perience, special skill and aptitude in the particular
branch of the business of the appellant they were attending
to, and the management had retained them because of that
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skill or aptitude. The Labour Court inferred mala fides
merely because the management departed from the rule "first
come, last go". Whether the management in departing from
the rule has acted mala fide, must depend upon the
circumstances of the case : it cannot be inferred merely
from departure from the rule.
We may turn to the cases of the three peons, Jai Narain,
Budhpal Singh Laljimal. Retention of Jai Narain has been
upheld by the Labour Court and, nothing more need be said
about him. The other two peons are Budhpal Singh and
Laljimal who were working as chowkidars. They are said to
be "the senior-most chowkidars", and there is no evidence to
show that there were in the employment of the Company other
persons who could have worked as chowkidars. Peons Budhpal
Singh and Laljimal were retained because they were the
"senior-most chowkidars". Retention of the "senior-most
chowkidars" would not be interfered with by the Tribunal in
the absence of clear proof of mala fides. It cannot be
assumed without more that every peon can do the work of a
chowkidar. The management may ordinarily require the
chowkidar to possess good physique and ability to maintain
watch over the building and its assets. There is no
evidence that the two peons Tara Shanker and Om Prakash had
ever worked as chowkidars or were suitable for work as
chowkidars. The order
(1) [1960] 2 L.L.J. 64.
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of reinstatement of Tara Shanker and Om Prakash will stand
vacated.
The second part of the order directing that clerks from Nos.
4 to 14 and peons from Nos. 18 to 23 in the seniority list,
shall be entitled in addition to the retrenchment
compensation already paid to them 50 per cent of the wages
as compensation for the period they remained unemployed is
wholly indefensible. These employees had been properly
retrenched: that was conceded before the Labour Court. It
was also conceded that for carrying on the business of the
appellant after imposition of the ban by the Central
Government, not more than seven employees were required. If
the management was entitled to retrench 30 workmen and did
so after paying wages for the period of notice and retrench-
ment compensation, we fail to appreciate the grounds on
which an order for payment of 50 per cent of the wages in
addition to retrenchment compensation may be made.
Retrenchment compensation is paid as solatium for
termination of service resulting in unemployment and if that
compensation be paid there can be no ground for awarding
compensation in addition to statutory retrenchment
compensation. If the Industrial Tribunal comes to the
conclusion that an order of retrenchment was not properly
made and the Tribunal directs reinstatement, an order for
payment of remuneration for the period during which the
employee remained unemployed, or a part thereof may
appropriately be made. That is because the employee who had
been retrenched for no fault of his had been improperly kept
out of employment, and was prevented from earning his wages.
But where retrenchment has been properly made and that order
has not been set aside, we are not aware of any principle
which may justify an order directing payment of compensation
to employees properly retrenched in addition to the
retrenchment compensation statutorily payable.
The appeal is therefore allowed and the award made by the
Labour Court is substituted by the following award:
"That retrenchment of the workmen was not
unjustified or illegal and the workmen are not
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entitled to any relief".
In the circumstances of the case, there will
be no order as to costs.
Appeal allowed.
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