Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MANOHAR LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/11/1960
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
KAPUR, J.L.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1961 AIR 418 1961 SCR (2) 343
CITATOR INFO :
R 1961 SC1559 (9)
APL 1962 SC 316 (56)
ACT:
Trade Employees--Close day--Enactment, if violative of
fundamental rights--Workers’ Welfare--Protection--
Restriction, if unreasonable--Punjab Trade Employees Act,
1940, (Punj. X of 1940) s. 7 (1)
HEADNOTE:
The appellant who was a shopkeeper was convicted for the
second time by the Additional District Magistrate for
contravening the provisions of s. 7(1) of the Punjab Trade
Employees Act, 1940, under which he was required to keep his
shop closed on the day which he had himself chosen as a "
close day ". He raised the plea that the Act did not apply
to his shop as he did not employ any stranger but that
himself alone worked in it and that the application of s.
7(1) to his shop would be violative of his fundamental
rights under Arts. 14, 19(1)(f) and (g) of the Constitution
and also that the restriction imposed was not reasonable
within Art. 19(6) as it was not in the interest of the
general
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public. The High Court dismissed his application for
revision of the Magistrate’s order. On appeal on a
certificate of the High Court,
Held, that the main object of the Act was the welfare of the
employees and to protect their as well as the employers’
health by preventing them from over work. Such a
restriction being in the interest of the general public was
reasonable within the meaning of Art. 19(6) of the
Constitution.
The provisions of s. 7(1) were constitutionally valid and
were justified as for securing administrative convenience
and avoiding evasion of those provisions designed for the
protection of the workmen.
Manohar Lal v. The State, [1951] S.C.R. 671, referred to.
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No.
173/1956.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated May 23, 1956, of
the Punjab High Court in Criminal Revision No. 1058/1954.
K. L. Arora, for the appellant.
N. S. Bindra and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondent.
1960. November 11. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
AYYANGAR J.-This appeal on a certificate under Arts. 132 and
134(1) of the Constitution granted by the High Court of
Punjab raises for consideration the constitutionality of s.
7(1) of the Punjab Trade Employees Act, 1940.
The appellant-Manohar Lal--has a shop at Ferozepore Cantt.
in which business is carried on under the name and style of
I Imperial Book Depot’. Section 7 of the Punjab Trade
Employees Act, 1940 (hereinafter called the Act), enacts:
" 7. (1) Save as otherwise provided by this Act, every shop
or commercial establishment shall remain closed on a close
day.
(2)(i). The choice of a close day shall rest with the
occupier of a shop or commercial establishment and shall be
intimated to the prescribed authority within two months of
the date on which this Act comes into force."
to extract the provision relevant to this appeal. The
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appellant had chosen Friday as " the close day ", i.e., the
day of the week on which his shop would remain closed. The
Inspector of Shops and Commercial Establishments, Ferozepore
Circle, visited the appellant’s shop on Friday, the 29th of
January, 1954, and found the shop open and the appellant’s
son selling articles. Obviously, if s. 7(1) were valid, the
appellant was guilty of a contravention of its terms and he
was accordingly prosecuted in the Court of the Additional
District Magistrate, Ferozepore, for an offence under s. 16
of the Act which ran:
" Subject to the other provisions of this Act, whoever
contravenes any of the provisions of this
Act ................................................ shall
be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding twenty-five
rupees for the first offence and one hundred rupees for
every subsequent offence ".
The appellant admitted the facts but he pleaded that the Act
would not apply to his shop or establishment for the reason
that he had engaged no strangers as employees but that the
entire work in the shop was being done by himself and by the
members of his family, and that to hold that s. 7(1) of the
Act would apply to his shop would be unconstitutional as
violative of the fundamental rights guaranteed by Arts. 14,
19(1)(f) and (g) of the Constitution. The additional
District Magistrate rejected the plea raised by the
appellant regarding the constitutionality of s. 7(1) in its
application to shops where no " employees " were engaged and
sentenced him to a fine of Rs. 100 and simple imprisonment
in default of payment of the fine (since the appellant had
been convicted once before). The appellant applied to the
High Court of Punjab to revise this order, but the Revision
was dismissed. The learned Judges, however, granted a cer-
tificate of fitness which has enabled the appellant to file
the appeal to this Court.
Though the validity of s. 7(1) of the Act was challenged in
the High Court on various grounds, learned Counsel who
appeared before us rested his attack on one point. He urged
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that the provision violated the
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appellant’s right to carry on his trade or business
guaranteed by Art. 19(1)(g) and that the restriction imposed
was not reasonable within Art. 19(6) because it was not in
the interest of the general public. Learned Counsel drew
our attention to the long title of the Act reading " An Act
to limit the hours of work of Shop Assistants and Commercial
Employees and to make certain regulations concerning their
holidays, wages and terms of service " and pointed out that
the insistence on the appellant to close his shop, in which
there were no " employees ", was really outside the purview
of the legislation and could not be said to subserve the
purposes for which the Act was enacted. In short, the
submission of the learned Counsel was that the provision for
the compulsory closure of his shop for one day in the week
served no interests of the general public and that it was
unduly and unnecessarily restrictive of his freedom to carry
on a lawful trade or business, otherwise in accordance with
law, as he thought best and in a manner or mode most con-
venient or profitable.
We are clearly of the opinion that the submissions of the
learned Counsel should be repelled. The long title of the
Act extracted earlier and on which learned Counsel placed
considerable reliance as a guide for the determination of
the scope of the Act and the policy underlying the
legislation, no doubt, indicates the main purposes of the
enactment but cannot, obviously, control the express
operative provisions of the Act, such as for example the
terms of s. 7(1). Nor is the learned counsel right in his
argument that the terms of s. 7(1) are irrelevant to secure
the purposes or to subserve the underlying policy of the
Act. The ratio of the legislation is social interest in the
health of the worker who forms an essential part of the com-
munity and in whose welfare, therefore, the community is
vitally interested. It is in the light of this purpose that
the provisions of the Act have to be scrutinized. Thus,, S.
3 which lays down the restrictions subject to which alone "I
young persons ", defined as those under the age of 14, could
be employed in any shop or commercial establishment, is
obviously with a view to
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ensuring the health of the rising generation of citizens.
Section 4 is concerned with imposing restrictions regarding
the hours of work which might be extracted from workers
other than " young persons ". Section 4(1) enacts:
" Subject to the provisions of this Act, no person shall be
employed about the business of a shop or commercial
establishment for more than the normal maximum working
hours, that is to say, fifty-four hours in any one week and
ten hours in any one day.
bringing the law in India as respects maximum working hours
in line with the norms suggested by the International Labour
Convention. Sub-clauses (4) and (5) of this section are
of some relevance to the matter now under consideration:
" (4) No person who has to the knowledge of the occupier of
a shop or commercial establishment been previously employed
on any day in a factory shall be employed on that day about
the business of the shop or commercial establishment for a
longer period than will, together with the time during which
he has been previously employed on that day in the factory,
complete the number of hours permitted by this Act.
(5) No person shall work about the business of a shop or
commercial establishment or two or more shops or commercial
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establishments or a shop or commercial establishment and a
factory in excess of the period during which he may be
lawfully employed under this Act."
It will be seen that while under sub-cl. (4) employers are
injuncted from employing persons who had already worked for
the maximum number of permitted hours in another
establishment, sub-cl. (5) lays an embargo on the worker
himself from injuring his health by overwork in an endeavour
to earn more. From this it would be apparent that the Act
is concerned-and properly concerned-with the welfare of the
worker and seeks to prevent injury to it, not merely from
the action of the employer but from his own. In other
words, the worker is prevented from attempting to earn more
wages by working longer hours than is good
348
for him. If such a condition is necessary or proper in the
case of a worker, there does not seem to be anything
unreasonable in applying the same or similar principles to
the employer who works on his own business. The learned
Judges of the High Court have rested their decision on this
part of the case on the reasoning that the terms of the
impugned section might be justified on the ground that it is
designed in the interest of the owner of the shop or
establishment himself and that his health and welfare is a
matter of interest not only to himself but to the general
public The legislation is in effect the exercise of social
control over the manner in which business should be carried
on-regulated in the interests of the health and welfare not
merely of those employed in it but of all those engaged in
it. A restriction imposed with a view to secure this
purpose would, in our opinion, be clearly saved by Art.
19(6).
Apart from this, the constitutionality of the impugned
provision might be sustained on another ground also, viz.,
with a view to avoid evasion of provisions specifically
designed for the protection of workmen employed. It may be
pointed out that acts innocent in themselves may be
prohibited and the restrictions in that regard would be
reasonable, if the same were necessary to secure the
efficient enforcement of valid provisions. The inclusion of
a reasonable margin to ensure effective enforcement will not
stamp a law otherwise valid as within legislative competence
with the character of unconstitutionality as being
unreasonable. The provisions could, therefore, be justified
as for securing administrative convenience and for the
proper enforcement of it without evasion. As pointed out by
this Court in Manohar Lal v. The State (1) (when the
appellant challenged the validity of this identical
provision but on other grounds):
" The legislature may have felt it necessary, in order to
reduce the possibilities of evasion to a minimum, to
encroach upon the liberties of those who would not otherwise
have been affected............ To require a shopkeeper, who
employs one or two men,
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 671, 675.
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to close and permit his rival, who employs perhaps a dozen
members of his family, to remain open, clearly places the
former at a grave commercial disadvantage. To permit such a
distinction might well engender discontent and in the end
react upon the relations between employer and employed."
We have, therefore, no hesitation in repelling the attack on
the constitutionality of s. 7(1) of the Act. The appeal
fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
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