Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
PETITIONER:
BALA SUBRAHMANYA RAJARAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
B.C. PATIL AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/03/1958
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 518 1958 SCR 1504
ACT:
Wages-If include bonus awarded by Industrial Court-Payment
of Wages Act (IV of 1936), S. 2(vi), 15.
HEADNOTE:
The Industrial Court, Bombay, awarded bonus equal to 4 1/2
months’ wages to the operatives of the Tata Mills Ltd. and
directed that those operatives who were no longer in the
service of the Mills should be paid the bonus in one lump
sum by a fixed date and in such cases claims in writing
should be made to the Manager of the Mills. The operatives
who made a claim before the date fixed were duly paid but
payment was refused to operatives who applied after that
date. The operatives who had been refused payment made
applications to the Authority under the Payment of Wages
Act. The Mills contended that the Authority had no
jurisdiction to entertain the application, but the
contention was rejected. The Mills filed a writ petition
before the Bombay High Court which was dismissed by a Single
judge and an appeal against that decision was also dismissed
by a Division Bench:
Held, that the bonus awarded by the Industrial Court was not
wages within the meaning of S. 2(Vi) of the Payment of Wages
Act and as such the Authority had no jurisdiction to
entertain the applications made to it under s. I5 of the
Act. Though such bonus was remuneration it was not
remuneration payable on the fulfilment of the terms of the
contract of employment, express or implied, as required by
S. 2(vi).
F. W. Heilgers & Co. v. N. C. Chakravarthi, [1949] F.C.R.
356, followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 35 & 36 of
1954.
1505
Appeals from the judgments and order dated August 28, 1952,
of the Bombay High Court in Appeals Nos. 34 and 35 of 1952,
arising out of the orders dated January 24, 1952, of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
said High Court exercising its Civil Original Jurisdiction
in Misc. Applications Nos. 302 of 1951 and 303, 304 and 305
of 1951 respectively.
R. J. Kolah, B. Narayanaswami, J. B. Dadachanji, S. N.
Andley and Rameshwar Nath, for the appellant.
H. N. Sanyal, Addl. Solicitor-General of India, N. P.
Nathwani and R. H. Dhebar, for respondent No. 3 in C. A
35 & No. 5 in C. A. 36.
D. H. Buch and Naunit Lal, for respondent No. 2 in C. A. 35
& Nos. 2-4 in C. A. 36.
1958. March 19. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BOSE J.-These appeals arise out of petitions made to the
Bombay High Court under Art. 226 for writs of certiorari.
The appellant is the manager of the Tata Mills Limited,
which carries on business in the manufacture and sale of
textile goods in Bombay and as such is responsible for the
payment of wages under the Payment of Wages Act, 1936.
The first respondent was the Authority under the Payment of
Wages Act at the times material to these appeals. The sixth
respondent is the present Authority. The Authority is
entrusted with the duty of deciding cases falling within the
purview of the Act.
The second, third, fourth and fifth respondents are
employees in the Mills.
A dispute arose about a claim made by the operatives of the
Mills for a bonus for the year 1948. This was referred to
the Industrial Court at Bombay which made an award on April
23, 1949, and awarded a bonus equivalent to four and a half
months’ wages subject to certain conditions of which only
the sixth is material here. It runs as follows:
" Persons who are eligible for bonus but who are
1506
not in the service of the Mill on the date of the payment
shall be paid in one lump sum by the 30th November 1949. In
such cases, claims in writing should be made to the Manager
of the Mill concerned."
Those operatives who made a claim before the date fixed
above were duly paid but payment was refused to the third
respondent, who applied much later, on the ground that the
condition subject to which the award was made was not
fulfilled.
The third respondent thereupon made an application before
the first respondent, the Authority under the Payment of
Wages Act.
Similar claims were made by the second, fourth and fifth
respondents for a bonus for the year 1949. The, Industrial
Court awarded a bonus equal to two months’ wages and in the
sixth condition put the date as December 31, 1950.
By this time Labour Appellate Tribunals came into existence,
so both sides filed appeals against the award to the Labour
Appellate Tribunal of Bombay. The appeals failed and the
award was upheld.
After that, the matter followed the same pattern.
Respondents 2, 4 and 5 applied for their bonus after
December 31, 1950. The Mills refused to pay and these
respondents applied to the first respondent, the Authority
under the Payment of Wages Act.
The two sets of claims, that is to say, the claim of the
third respondent for a bonus for the year 1948 and the
claims of the second, fourth and fifth respondents for
bonuses for the year 1949, were heard together.
The appellant contested these applications on two grounds.
He questioned the jurisdiction of the Authority to entertain
the petitions made to it. He also contended that, in any
event, as the condition subject to which the award was made,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
namely, an application on or before November 30, 1949, was
not fulfilled, the claim for a bonus did not lie.
The first respondent held that it had jurisdiction and,
after hearing the parties on the merits, decreed the various
claims.
1507
The appellant thereupon filed writ petitions in the High
Court. They were heard and dismissed by Coyajee J.
An appeal was then filed in the same High Court and heard by
the Chief Justice and Bhagwati J. They held that the
questions raised were covered by an earlier decision of
theirs in another case dated March 11, 1952, and, following
that decision, dismissed the appeals without hearing further
arguments, as counsel on both sides agreed that the matter
was covered by the earlier decision. The appellant then
applied for a certificate for leave to appeal here. This
was granted by Chagla C. J. and Dixit J. on February 2,
1953.
The first question that we have to decide is whether the
first respondent had jurisdiction to entertain the petitions
made to him as the Authority under the Payment of Wages Act.
This depends on whether these bonuses are " wages " within
the meaning of the definition in s. 2(vi) of the Act.
The scope of the Authority’s jurisdiction is set out in s.
15 of the Act. It is to bear and decide
(1)all claims arising out of deduction from wages, and
(2) all claims regarding delay in the payment of wages.
Therefore, unless these bonuses are " wages " within the
meaning of the Act, the Authority will have no jurisdiction.
The definition of " wages " in s. 2(vi) of the Act is long
and complicated but leaving aside the clauses in it that are
not material for our present purpose,
it runs-
" ’Wages’ means all remuneration............. which would,
if the terms of the contract of employment, express or
implied, were fulfilled, be payable, whether conditionally
upon regular attendance, good work or conduct or other
behaviour of the person employed, or otherwise, to a person
employed in respect of his employment or of work done in
such employment, and includes any bonus or other additional
remuneration 191
191
1508
of the nature aforesaid which would be so payable and any
sum payable to such person by reason of the termination of
his employment, but does not include............... and then
five matters that are not included are set out.
Now consider this clause by clause. "’ Wages’ means all
remuneration." Is bonus a remuneration ? We think it is
Remuneration is only a more formal version of " payment "
and payment is a recompense for service rendered.
Now it is true that bonus in the abstract need not be for
services rendered and in that sense need not be a
remuneration; for example, there is a shareholder’s bonus in
certain companies, and there is a life insurance bonus and
so forth. But that is not the kind of bonus contemplated
here because the kind of remuneration that the definition
contemplates is one that is payable
" in respect of his employment or of work done in such
employment."
Therefore, the kind of bonus that this definition con-
templates is one that is remuneration for services rendered
or work done. Accordingly, it is a " remuneration " and as
the definition includes all remuneration of a specified
kind, we are of opinion that bonus of the kind contemplated
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
here falls within the clause that says it must be "
remuneration ".
Next comes a clause that limits the kind of remuneration,
for, though the opening words are " all remuneration " the
words that follow limit it to all remuneration of the kind
specified in the next clause, that is, to remuneration
" which would be payable if the terms of the contract of
employment, express or -implied, were fulfilled. "
Now the question is whether the kind of bonus contemplated
by this definition must be a bonus that is payable as a
clause of the contract of employment. We think it is, and
for this reason.
If we equate " bonus " with " remuneration ", the
1509
definition says clearly enough that the bonus must be such
that it is payable "if the terms of the contract are
fulfilled", that is to say, it will not be payable if the
terms are not fulfilled.
Now, we can understand a position where a statute declares
that whenever the terms of the contract of employment are
fulfilled the bonus shall be payable; equally, we can
envisage a situation in which an employer engages to pay a
bonus should the terms of the contract of employment be
fulfilled, by a separate and independent agreement that is
riot part of the contract of employment. In either case,
the matter could be said to fall within this part of the
definition. But we can see no way in which a bonus can be
said to be payable if and when the terms of the contract of
employment are fulfilled outside these two cases (namely,
legislation, or a separate contract that is not part of the
contract of employment), except when it is payable by reason
of a term, express or implied, in the contract of employment
itself. In any event, if there are such cases, the present
is not one of them, for the bonus here is payable under an
award of an Industrial Court and has nothing to do with the
fulfilment or otherwise of the terms of the contract of
employment, except indirectly.
It was argued that as an Industrial Court can direct payment
of bonus should an industrial dispute arise in that behalf,
the matter falls within the definition. But does it ? One
of the matters that an Industrial Court might take into
consideration before awarding a bonus is whether all the
terms of the contract of employment have been duly fulfilled
and it is possible that such a Court might refuse to award a
bonus in cases where the terms were not fulfilled, but it
would not be bound by such a consideration and its right to
make an award of bonus is not conditional on the fulfilment
of the terms of the contract of employment, whereas, under
the definition, that is an essential ingredient. Therefore,
even if due fulfilment of the terms of the contract of
employment was to be one of the reasons for the award, the
bonus so awarded would not be payable because the terms of
the contract
1510
had been fulfilled but because of an industrial dispute and
because in order to settle it, the Court awarded the bonus.
It is not necessary to analyse the definition any further
(except for one clause) because, even if all the other
ingredients are present, the clause we have just considered
would exclude a bonus of the kind we have here, that is to
say, a bonus awarded by an Industrial Court.
The clause we have yet to examine is this:
" and includes any bonus or other additional remuneration of
the nature aforesaid which would be so payable."
It was contended that the words " and includes any bonus "
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
stand by themselves and that the words that follow must be
disregarded when bonus is under consideration because they
relate only to "additional remuneration " and riot to "
bonus ".
Now, it may be possible to say that the words " of the
nature aforesaid " only govern the words " additional
remuneration " and that they do not apply to "bonus", with
the result that the inclusion clause " and includes any
bonus etc." would refer to two separate things, namely,
(1) bonus and
(2)other additional remuneration of the nature aforesaid.
In our opinion, the clause means-
(1) "bonus.................. which would be so payable ",
and
(2)" other additional remuneration of the nature aforesaid
which would be so payable."
If that is correct, then the words " which would be so
payable " throw us back to the earlier part of the
definition and we reach the position that the kind of bonus
that is included by the inclusion clause is the kind that
would be payable " if the terms of the contract of
employment, express or implied, are fulfilled."
There is another reason for reaching this conclusion. The
opening words of the definition make it clear that " wages "
means remuneration that is payable when the terms of the
contract of employment are fulfilled. Therefore, that is
something certain.
1511
One knows ahead of time that if the terms of the contract
are fulfilled, then the bonus is payable. It may be that
the exact amount has yet to be determined but the fact that
bonus is payable and can be claimed as soon as the terms of
the contract are fulfilled is a matter that can be
predicated beforehand, that is to say, even before the terms
of the contract are fulfilled, or indeed, even before the
work has started if the contract is made that far ahead.
But that is not the case when bonus is awarded by an
Industrial Court, for there it is impossible to say ahead of
time whether bonus will be awarded or not; indeed, at the
time the contract is entered into, it would be impossible to
say whether such a claim could be laid at a II because a
difference of opinion between one worker and his employer
about the right to bonus would Dot necessarily lead to an
industrial dispute. When an Industrial Court awards a
bonus, independent of any contract, it does so only if there
is an available surplus for a distribution of bonus and the
amount of the award would depend on the extent of the
surplus available for that purpose. Therefore, the
fulfilment or otherwise of the terms of the contract of
employment is not an essential ingredient of an award of an
Industrial Court.
In F. W. Heilgers & Co. v. N. C. Chakravarthi the learned
Judges of the Federal Court held that a bonus not payable
under a contract of employment does not fall within the
definition of "wages" in s. 2(vi) of the Payment of Wages
Act, as it stood before the amendment in 1957. We are
concerned with the old definition here and not the amended
one, so the present case is, in our opinion, covered by that
authority.
It is true that no bonus had been awarded in Heilgers’ case
(1) and that therefore there was no ascertained sum, whereas
there is one in the present case, or rather a sum that is
ascertainable, but that was only one of the grounds on which
the learned Judges proceeded. They held that in order to
bring a particular
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
(1) [1949] F.C. R. 356, 360.
1512
payment under the definition of "wages", two things are
necessary-
" (1) a definite sum, and
(2) a contract indicating when the sum becomes payable ";
and they said-
" It is obvious that unless there is an express provision
for paying a stipulated sum, the definition will not cover
such a payment."
The bonus in the present case is not payable because of a
contract but because of the award of an Industrial Court.
Therefore, according to the Federal Court, it is not " wages
" within the meaning of the Payment of Wages Act.
In 1957 the definition was amended and the following was
added:
" wages’ means and includes
(c) any additional remuneration payable under the terms of
employment (whether called a bonus or by any other name);
but does not include----
(1) any bonus (whether under a scheme of profit sharing or
otherwise) which does not form part of remuneration payable
under the terms of employment
The change would have been unnecessary had the law been
otherwise under the old definition; nor is it possible to
say that the clause was added by way of abundant caution
because the Federal Court decided otherwise in 1949. In
view of this amendment, and in view of the Federal Court’s
decision, we do not feel justified in taking a different
view, especially as we think the decision was right.
The learned Judges of the Bombay High Court tried to
distinguish the Federal Court’s judgment on the ground that
no bonus had been declared there and ,so there was no
ascertained sum, but, as we have pointed out, the ratio of
the decision covers the present case and, in any case, that
is our view quite apart from their conclusion.
1513
On this view, it is not necessary to consider the other
points that were argued because, if the definition of wages
", as it stood before the amendment, is not wide enough to
include a bonus of the kind we have here, namely, one
payable under an award of an Industrial Court, then, the
Authority under the Payment of Wages Act had no jurisdiction
to entertain the petitions made to it under s. 15 of the
Act.
The appeals are allowed with costs. The decisions of the
learned High Court Judges are set aside and also the decrees
of the Authority under the Payment of Wages Act. There will
be only one set of costs.
Appeals allowed.