Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Special Leave Petition (civil) 16456-16460 of 2005
PETITIONER:
M/S. SRIRAM INDUSTRIAL ENTERPRISES LTD
RESPONDENT:
MAHAK SINGH & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/03/2007
BENCH:
Dr.AR. Lakshmanan & Altamas Kabir
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
ALTAMAS KABIR, J.
Five different writ petitions were filed by the different
respondents in these special leave petitions before the High
Court of Judicature at Allahabad against the awards made by
the Industrial Tribunal on 20th June, 1998. The said writ
petitions having been allowed by a common judgment dated
15th April, 2005, the petitioner herein, which was the common
respondent in all the writ petitions, has filed these special
leave petitions questioning the judgment and order of the
Allahabad High Court.
The writ petitioners/respondents herein claimed to have
been appointed by the petitioner between the years 1987-1991
and it is their case that they worked continuously from the
date of their appointment till they were retrenched in the
years 1994 and 1995 respectively. The specific case made out
by the respondents is that although they have worked
continuously from the date of their appointment for more
than 240 days in a calendar year, they have been illegally
retrenched from service in violation of the provisions of Section
6 N of the U.P. Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 ( for short ’the
U.P. Act’).
The respondents raised a dispute relating to their
retrenchment which was ultimately referred by the State
Government to the Tribunal under Section 4 K of the aforesaid
Act to determine as to whether the termination of the services
of the workmen by the employer was just and/or illegal.
Pursuant to the said References, five separate Adjudication
Cases, being Nos. 134,139,132, 129 and 127 of 1995 were
registered by the Presiding Officer, Industrial Tribunal (V),
U.P.
In support of their contention that they had been illegally
retrenched, the respondents submitted that not only had they
worked continuously from the date of their appointment till
their services were terminated, but that they had been
allowed grade number and provident fund number and other
service benefits. It is also the case of the respondents that as
they had demanded other benefits to which they were entitled,
their services were terminated without any notice and
compensation being given to them. They accordingly claimed
reinstatement in service with all back wages.
The case of the petitioner herein is that since the sugar
industry is a seasonal industry, most of the work force are
engaged as casual and temporary hands during the
operational season and that this state of affairs is common to
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the entire sugar industry. It was also the case of the petitioner
that the real dispute was not with regard to the termination of
the services of the workmen, but with regard to their claim for
regularisation of their services. It was also the case of the
petitioner that the services of the workmen had never been
terminated since none of them had worked for 240 days in the
last 12 calendar months immediately preceding their alleged
date of termination.
As recorded by the Tribunal, the respondents had
produced bonus slips, wage slips, deduction of provident
fund slips and attendance cards for various months and other
documents available to them. They had also requested the
petitioner herein to produce certain documents which were in
its custody and included the Attendance Register, payment of
bonus record and various other documents relating to the
engagement of the respondents as workmen under it.
Admittedly, on behalf of the petitioner herein, only the extract
of the attendance record of the last 12 calendar months of the
workmen immediately preceding the date of their
retrenchment had been produced from which it was evident
that none of the workmen had worked for more than 240 days
during the said period. The Tribunal also noted that the
petitioner had failed to assign any cogent reason for not
producing the Attendance Registers of the previous years
and allowed the workmen to lead secondary evidence in
support of their case.
The Tribunal did not lay any importance to the non-
production of the documents asked for on the ground that
the petitioner did not keep such record relating to the
temporary hands and relied on the documents that had been
produced to come to a finding that the workmen had not put
in 240 days of service in a calendar year preceding the
termination of their services.
Being aggrieved by the awards passed by the Tribunal,
the workmen filed separate writ petitions praying for quashing
of the impugned awards and declaring their retrenchment to
be illegal, together with a prayer to reinstate them in service
with full back wages and continuity of service.
Drawing an adverse inference against the petitioner
herein for non-production of the documents in its possession
and holding that the petitioner had failed to discharge the
onus and disprove the workmens’ claim, the High Court held
that under the circumstances the Tribunal should have
drawn an adverse presumption under Section 114 Illustration
(g) of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 against the petitioner.
Taking further note of the expression "continuous service"
under Section 2 (g) of the U.P. Act, the High Court found that
the termination of service of the workmen was in violation of
Section 6 N of the aforesaid Act. Basing its decision on its
aforesaid findings, the High Court quashed the awards passed
in the adjudication cases referred to above and directed the
petitioner herein to reinstate the workmen/respondents
herein with continuity of service and half back wages with
effect from 1995, being the date of their illegal retrenchment.
These special leave petitions have been filed against the
common judgment of the High Court by which the five writ
petitions were disposed of with the above-mentioned
directions.
The case made out by the petitioner herein before the
Tribunal and the High Court was reiterated by Mr. Ashok
Desai, learned senior advocate, appearing for the petitioner.
The main thrust of his submission was that since the
respondents had not completed 240 days of service in the
year preceding the date of alleged termination, the High
Court had erroneously reversed the findings of the Tribunal
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on such score. Mr. Desai reiterated the contention of the
petitioner that work in the sugar industry was of a seasonal
nature and most of the work force was engaged as casual
labour on a temporary basis, which was generally confined to
six to seven months in a year. Mr. Desai submitted that the
Tribunal had correctly assessed the situation and the High
Court by drawing an adverse presumption for non-production
of the Attendance Register of prior years, had erroneously
arrived at the conclusion that the respondents-workmen had,
in fact, worked for more than 240 days in a calendar year prior
to termination of their services.
Mr.Desai submitted that it is settled law that the onus of
proof of having worked for 240 days within a calendar year
is on the employee. According to Mr. Desai, the employee was
required to discharge the burden of proving that he had
actually worked for 240 days in a calendar year, but the High
Court had wrongly shifted the onus on the employer in
contravention of the law as laid down by this Court in Range
Forest Officer vs. S.T. Hadimani, reported in (2002) 3 SCC
25. In the said case, this Court while considering a similar
issue observed as follows:-
"In our opinion, the Tribunal was not right
in placing the onus on the Management
without first determining on the basis of
cogent evidence that the respondent had
worked for more than 240 days in the year
preceding his termination. It was the case
of the claimant that he had so worked but
this claim was denied by the appellant. It
was then for the claimant to lead evidence
to show that he had, in fact, worked for 240
days in the year preceding his termination."
Mr. Desai also referred to the decision of this Court in the
case of Municipal Corporation, Faridabad vs. Siri Niwas,
reported in (2004) 8 SCC 195. In the said case, the
respondent’s case relating to his termination from service had
been referred to the Labour Court. His case before the
Tribunal was that he had completed working for 240 days in a
year and the order of retrenchment was, therefore, illegal as
conditions precedent for passing such an order as contained
in Section 25F of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, (for short
’the Central Act’) had not been complied with. Section 25F of
the Central Act is reproduced hereinbelow:-
Conditions precedent to retrenchment
of workmen.
"25F. No workman employed in any
industry who has been in continuous
service for not less than one year under
an employer shall be retrenched by that
employer until \026
(a) the workman has been given one
month’s notice in writing indicating
the reasons for retrenchment and
the period of notice has expired, or
the workman has been paid in lieu of
such notice, wages for the period of
the notice;
(b) the workman has been paid, at the
time of retrenchment, compensation
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which shall be equivalent to fifteen
days’ average pay for every
completed year of continuous service
or any part thereof in excess of six
months; and
(c) notice in the prescribed manner is
served on the appropriate
Government or such authority as
may be specified by the appropriate
Government by notification in the
Official Gazette."
The contention of the appellant in the said case however
was that the respondent had worked only for 136 days during
the preceding 12 months on daily wages and had no lien
over the said job. In that background, this Court held that
the burden of proof was on the respondent-workman to show
that he had worked for 240 days in the preceding 12 months
prior to his retrenchment.
The same view was expressed by this Court in
Surendranagar District Panchayat vs. Dahyabhai
Amarsinh, reported in (2005) 8 SCC 750, wherein this Court
while referring to the decisions of this Court in the case of
Range Forest Officer (supra) and Municipal Corporation,
Faridabad (supra) and two other decisions in the case of
Rajasthan State Ganganagar S. Mills Ltd. vs. State of
Rajasthan and Anr., reported in (2004) 8 SCC 161 and M.P.
Electricity Board vs. Hariram, reported in (2004) 8 SCC
246, reiterated that the burden of proof lies on the workman to
show that he had worked continuously for 240 days in the
preceding one year prior to his retrenchment and it is for the
workman to adduce evidence apart from examining himself
to prove the fact that he had been employed for the said
period by the employer.
Various other decisions were also referred to by Mr.
Desai on the aforesaid point which are in consonance with
the decision of this Court in Range Forest Officer (supra).
Mr. Desai also contended that drawing an adverse
presumption for non-production of evidence is not applicable
in all cases where other circumstances may exist on the basis
whereof such intentional non-production may even be found
to be justifiable on reasonable grounds. In the instant case,
Mr. Desai submitted that since in paragraph 11 of the
respondent’s written statement before the Industrial Tribunal
the pleading was restricted to the fact that he had worked for
more than 240 days in the year preceding the date of
termination, the appellant had thought it fit to produce the
Attendance Register for the said period only, namely, for the
period comprising the year preceding the date of termination
of the services of the respondents. In fact, it was the case of
the appellant before the Tribunal, as also the High Court,
that the Appellant-company did not maintain the records in
respect of temporary posts. He urged that since the workmen
had produced various documents in support of their claim
that they had worked continuously for more than 240 days
they should also have proof of their having worked for 240
days in any preceding year which could have been produced
before the Tribunal in order to prove that they had actually
worked for 240 days continuously during 12 calendar
months in any year prior to termination of their services. Mr.
Desai submitted that the respondents had failed to discharge
their onus of proving the aforesaid fact and the Tribunal had
rightly rejected their contention.
Mr. Desai reiterated the fact that in one case, the
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respondent had worked for only 162.5 days in the 12 months
preceding the date of termination of his services. Mr. Desai
also stated that the respondent had not worked at all in the
months of April, May, July, September and December, 1994
which fact had not been denied on behalf of the respondents.
Mr. Desai contended that most of the documents asked
to be produced on behalf of the respondents were irrelevant
to the fact at issue since even the Tribunal had framed an
issue as to whether the concerned workman had worked for
more than 240 days during the last one year of service. It is
on such basis that the Attendance Register for the preceding
year had been produced on the basis whereof the Tribunal
came to the finding that the respondent had not put in more
than 240 days of service on 1st February, 1995.
Mr. Desai urged further that the mere statement on
affidavit of a workman that he had worked for 240 days
continuously does not constitute sufficient proof in the
absence of other evidence. The said principle was referred to
in the Range Forest Officer (supra) case wherein it was held
that filing of an affidavit is only the statement made by the
workman in his own favour which could not be regarded as
sufficient evidence for any Court or Tribunal to arrive at a
conclusion that the workman had, in fact, worked for 240
days in a year. It was submitted that the same principle was
reiterated by this Court in the case of RBI vs. S. Mani,
reported in (2005) 5 SCC 100.
Mr. Desai submitted that while the Tribunal had
correctly assessed the legal position, the High Court had
wrongly shifted the burden of proving that the workman had
worked for 240 days or more in a calendar year on the
employer. It was submitted that having proceeded on such
erroneous basis, the High Court had arrived at a wrong
conclusion, in the absence of any other material evidence, that
the respondents had, in fact, worked for more than 240 days
in a calendar year preceding the date of termination of their
services and such finding was, therefore, liable to be set
aside.
Mr. Viswanathan, learned advocate, who appeared for
the workmen submitted that while the High Court had not
disturbed the findings of fact, it had only corrected the
jurisdictional error of the Labour Court which failed to
consider the difference in the definition of "continuous
service" mentioned in Section 25B 2(a) of the Central Act
and in Section 2 (g) of the U.P. Act. He pointed out that in the
definition given in the U.P. Act, the word "preceding" has not
been used. Consequently, it was urged that Section 2 (g) of
the U.P. Act does not require a workman to prove that he had
worked for 240 days continuously only during the preceding
period of 12 months prior to termination of his services. The
workman was, therefore, entitled to show that he had worked
for 240 days continuously in a calendar year for any year prior
to termination of his services. Mr. Viswanathan submitted
that the said period was not confined under the U.P. Act
only to the year preceding the date of termination.
In support of his submissions Mr. Viswanathan relied on
the decision of this Court in U.P. Drugs and
Pharmaceuticals Company Ltd. vs. Ramanuj Yadav and
Ors. reported in (2003) 8 SCC 334, where the said position
has been examined and explained.
Regarding Mr. Desai’s submissions that this Court had
consistently laid down that it is for the workmen to prove that
they had worked for 240 days in a calendar year, Mr.
Viswanathan submitted that this Court had in the case of
R.M. Yellatty vs. Assistant Executive Engineer, reported in
(2006) 1 SCC 106, observed as under:-
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"Analysing the above decisions of this
Court, it is clear that the provisions of the
Evidence Act in terms do not apply to the
proceedings under Section 10 of the
Industrial Disputes Act. However,
applying general principles and on
reading the aforesaid judgments, we find
that this Court, has repeatedly taken the
view that the burden of proof is on the
claimant to show that he had worked for
240 days in a given year. This burden is
discharged only upon the workman
stepping up in the witness box. This
burden is discharged upon the workman
adducing cogent evidence, both oral and
documentary. In cases of termination of
services of daily-waged earners, there will
be no letter of appointment of
termination. There will also be no
receipt of proof of payment. Thus in
most cases, the workman (the claimant)
can only call upon the employer to
produce before the court the nominal
muster roll for the given period, the letter
of appointment of termination, if any, the
wage register, the attendance register,
etc. Drawing of adverse inference
ultimately would depend thereafter on the
facts of each case. The above decisions
however make it clear that mere
affidavits or self-serving statements
made by the claimant workman will not
suffice in the matter of discharge of the
burden placed by law on the workman to
prove that he had worked for 240 days in
a given year. The above judgments
further laid down that mere non-
production of muster rolls per se
without any plea of suppression by the
claimant workman will not be the ground
for the Tribunal to draw an adverse
inference against the management.
Lastly, the above judgments lay down
the basic principle, namely, that the High
Court under Article 226 of the
Constitution will not interfere with
concurrent findings of fact recorded by
the Labour Court unless they are
perverse. This exercise will depend upon
the facts of each case."
Mr. Viswanathan submitted that in these cases, the
workmen had discharged their initial onus by producing
whatever documents were in their custody. The onus had
thereafter shifted to the petitioner when the workmen asked
for production of Attendance Registers and the Muster Rolls
from 1991 onwards. On the failure of the petitioner to
produce the said documents, the High Court had rightly
drawn an adverse presumption.
Mr. Viswanathan then urged that in appropriate cases,
the High Court in Writ Jurisdiction could interfere with the
findings of fact of the courts below as had been held by this
Court in the case of Trambak Rubber Industries Ltd. vs.
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Nashik Workers Union And Ors., reported in (2003) 6 SCC
416. In any event, the powers of judicial review of the High
Court under Article 227 are very wide and it empowered the
High Court to ensure that the courts and tribunals, inferior
to the High Court, discharged their duties and obligations.
Mr. Viswanathan urged that the workmen had produced
whatever documents were in their possession, such as,
attendance cards, wage slips, bonus slips, provident fund
deduction slips from 1991 onwards and since other relevant
documents such as attendance registers and muster rolls were
with the petitioners, the workmen filed an application for
summoning the said documents which were, not however,
produced by the petitioner on account whereof the High Court
was compelled to draw an adverse presumption in terms of
Section 114, Illustration (g) of the Evidence Act.
Mr. Viswanathan submitted that while the Tribunal had
failed to notice the difference in the definition of the
expression "continuous service" in Section 6 N of the U.P. Act
as against its definition in Section 25 B in the Central Act, the
High Court had correctly interpreted the same in the
judgment impugned in these proceedings.
Mr. Viswanathan submitted that no case had been made
out on behalf of the petitioner to interfere with the findings of
the High Court and the directions ultimately given therein to
reinstate the respondents-workmen and to pay them half
their back wages with effect from 1995 when their services
were illegally terminated.
Having carefully considered the submissions made on
behalf of the respective parties and the statutory provisions,
we are of the view that a decision in this matter will depend
on the understanding of the expression "continuous service"
as used in Section 6 N read with Section 2 (g) of the U.P. Act
as against its usage in Section 25 B (2) (a) (ii) of the Central
Act. In order to appreciate the difference between the two
provisions, Sections 6N and 2(g) of the U.P. Act and Section
25 B 2 (a) (ii ) of the Central Act are reproduced hereinbelow:-
"6-N. Conditions precedent to
retrenchment of workmen.-- No workman
employed in any industry who has been in
continuous service for not less than one
year under an employer shall be retrenched
by that employer until\027
(a) the workman has been given one
month’s notice in writing
indicating the reasons for
retrenchment and the period of
notice has expired or the workman
has been paid in lieu of such
notice wages for the period of
notice:
Provided that no such notice shall be
necessary if the retrenchment is under an
agreement which specifies a date for the
termination of service;
(b) the workman has been paid, at the
time of retrenchment,
compensation which shall be
equivalent to fifteen days’ average
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pay for every completed year of
service or any part thereof in
excess of six months, and
(c) notice in the prescribed manner is
served on the State Government.
2g. ’Continuous service’ means
uninterrupted services, and
includes service which may be
interrupted merely on account of
sickness or authorized leave or an
accident or a strike which is not
illegal, or a lock-out or a cessation
of work which is not due to any
fault on the part of the workman,
and a workman, who during a
period of twelve calendar months
has actually worked in an
industry for not less than two
hundred and forty days shall be
deemed to have completed one
year of continuous service in the
industry.
Explanation.\027In computing the number
of days on which a workman has
actually worked in an industry, the
days on which \026
(i) he has been laid off under the
agreement or as permitted by
standing order made under the
Industrial Employment (Standing
Orders) Act, 1946, or under this
Act or under any other law
applicable to the industrial
establishment, the largest
number of days during which he
has been so laid off being taken
into account for the purposes of
this clause,
(ii) he has been on leave with full
wages, earned in the previous
year, and
(iii) in the case of a female, she has
been on maternity leave; so
however that the total period of
such maternity leave shall not
exceed twelve weeks, shall be
included;
Definition of continuous service.
25B. For the purposes of this
Chapter,-
(2) Where a workman is not in
continuous service within the
meaning of clause (1) for a period
of one year or six months, he
shall be deemed to be in
continuous service under an
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employer\027
(a) for a period of one year, if
the workman, during a
period of twelve calendar
months preceding the date
with reference to which
calculation is to be made,
has actually worked under
the employer for not less
than\027
(ii) two hundred and forty days,
in any other case;"
As pointed out by Mr. Viswanthan, the exclusion of the
word "preceding" from Section 2 (g) of the U.P. Act indicates
that a workman in order to be in continuous service may have
worked continuously for a period of 240 days in any calendar
year during his period of service. In fact, such an
interpretation has already been given by this Court in the
case of U.P. Drugs and Pharmaceuticals Company Ltd.
(supra). The case made out by the respondents before the
Tribunal was also on the same lines in the Adjudication cases
filed before the labour court, where the respondents had
made out a case that they had never worked as temporary
hands but had worked continuously from 26th February, 1991
to 31st January, 1995 without break.
In the light of the aforesaid case made out by the
respondents, the Tribunal was persuaded on behalf of the
petitioner herein to decide the case of the workmen on the
basis of the materials produced by the petitioner for the year
preceding the date of termination of their services from which
it was shown that the workmen had not completed 240 days
of continuous service in the said year.
The said approach, in our view, was erroneous in view
of the decision of this Court in the case of U.P. Drugs and
Pharmaceuticals Company Ltd. (supra). The petitioner
had wrongly described the documents relating to attendance
for the years 1991 onwards as far as the respondents are
concerned, as being irrelevant and the Tribunal has also
accepted the said reasoning. Consequently, instead of
drawing an adverse presumption for non-production of the
said records, the Tribunal accepted the contention of the
petitioner that the workmen had not worked for more than
240 days in the year preceding the date of their termination
nor had the workmen filed any proof to show otherwise.
In our view, the High Court adopted the correct approach
while deciding the controversy between the parties upon a
correct understanding of the law as contained in Section 6 N
read with Section 2 (g) of the U.P. Act which is applicable to
these petitions.
Having correctly interpreted the provisions of Section 6 N
of the U.P. Act, the High Court rightly drew an adverse
presumption for non-production of the Attendance Registers
and the Muster Rolls for the years 1991 onwards. The best
evidence having been withheld, the High Court was entitled to
draw such adverse inference. The views expressed by this
Court on the question of burden of proof in Range Forest
Officer’s case (supra) were watered down by the subsequent
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decision in R.M. Yellatty’s case (supra) and in our view the
workmen had discharged their initial onus by production of
the documents in their possession.
On the question of judicial review, the submissions made
by Mr. Viswanathan has force and we are inclined to accept
the same.
In view of what has been indicated hereinabove, we are
satisfied that no interference is called for with the judgment
and directions given by the High Court which had been
impugned in these petitions and the special leave petitions
are accordingly dismissed. Interim order dated 16th August,
2005, stands vacated.
There will be no order as to costs.