Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE BIJAY COTTON MILLS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THEIR WORKMEN & ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
12/02/1960
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1960 AIR 692 1960 SCR (2) 982
CITATOR INFO :
R 1960 SC 812 (5)
APL 1962 SC1263 (9)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Minimum basic wage fixed by Tribunal-
Modification by Labour Appellate Tribunal according to
statutory notification issued two years after the award-If
valid--Appropriate Government-Industrial Disputes Act, 1947,
(14 of 1947), lndustrial (Development and Regulations) Act.
1951 (65 of 1951). S. 2(a)(i).
HEADNOTE:
On the refusal of the appellant-employer to fix the minimum
wages and rates for contract work of the workmen-respondents
who alleged that they were paid below the level of bare
subsistance wage, the dispute was referred to the Industrial
Tribunal for adjudication. The first Tribunal could not fix
any minimum basic wage and the award of the second Tribunal
which fixed a scale was set aside on the ground that the
appointment of the Tribunal was not published according to
law. The third Tribunal ultimately fixed the basic minimum
wage on the industry-cum-region basis after considering the
rates prevalent in various parts of the country and a place
nearest to the appellant company. The minimum awarded by
the Tribunal was slightly increased by the Labour Appellate
Tribunal in accordance with a statutory notification issued
under ,the Minimum Wages Act, 1948 (XI of 1948), which had
come into force after two years of the award of the Tribunal
and by which a scale of minimum wage and dearness allowance
was fixed. On appeal by the appellant company by special
leave.
Held, that the Labour Appellate Tribunal committed no error
of law in awarding the same minimum basic wage which was
statutorily fixed and which came into force only two years
after the award of the Tribunal.
In determining the minimum basic wage the fact that a large
amount of dearness allowance was paid to the employees in
other comparable occupations in the same region should not
be ignored.
In order that the Central Government might itself become the
appropriate Government within the meaning Of S. 2(a)(i) of
the Industrial (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951, (65
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of I 95 1) it must specify in that behalf that the industry
in question was a controlled industry.
If the services of one Tribunal were not available to the
appropriate Government it was perfectly competent to that
Government to appoint another Tribunal to take up the work
of adjudication.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 355 of 1958.
Appeal by special leave from the decision dated December 12,
1956, of the Labour Appellate Tribunal
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of India, Bombay in Appeal (Bom.) Nos. 77and 103 of 1956.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, S. N. Andley, J. B. Dadachanji and
Rameshwar Nath for the appellant. B. D. Sharma, for
respondent No. 1.
1960. February, 12. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-The industrial dispute between the Bijay
Cotton Mills Ltd., (hereinafter called the appellant) and
their workmen (hereinafter called the respondents) which
has given rise to this appeal by special leave has gone
through a protracted and tortuous course. The respondents
claimed that the scale of minimum wages and rates for
contract works should be fixed for them because it was
alleged that the payments made by the appellant were below
the level of the bare subsistence wage. The appellant did
not accede to the demand thus made by the respondents, and
so on December 1, 1950, the-present dispute was referred
for adjudication to the Industrial Tribunal consisting of
Mr. D. N. Roy, under s. 10(1) read with s. 12(5) of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (Act XIV of 1947) (hereinafter
called the Act). Amongst the items thus referred for
adjudication, the first two were (1) that the mill employees
be paid minimum wages and rates for contract works as shown
in the two statements enclosed, and (2) that dearness
allowance be paid to all workers at the rate of. Rs. 35
permensem each and it may be increased or decreased
according to rise or fall in prices. In the present appeal
we are concerned with the minimum wages.
It appears that Mr. Roy found himself unable to fix any
basic minimum wage, and to support his view, that it would
be inexpedient to fix any minimum basic wage in the
proceedings pending before him, he referred to the fact that
the question of fixation of the basic wage had been
rendered enormously difficult by the state of industrial
development in the State of Ajmer and by the unsteady and
frequent fluctuations in prices. Even so be considered
several items of dispute referred to him and announced his
award on October 5, 1951.
125
984
This award was challenged by the respondents before the
Labour Appellate Tribunal. The appellate tribunal there
upon remanded the matter to Mr. Roy with a direction that
the issues as to the basic wage and as to dearness allowance
should be specifically determined and appropriate directions
issued on those two items. This remand order was passed on
October 20, 1952.
By the time the proceedings were taken up before the
tribunal on remand, Mr. Roy was not available because he had
ceased to be a District Judge in Ajmer. In his place Mr.
Sharma was appointed. Mr. Sharma then made his award on
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September 8, 1953. He fixed Rs. 25 as basic wage and Rs. 10
as minimum dearness allowance. It appears that the award
thus made by Mr. Sharma was subsequently quashed on the
ground that his appointment had not been duly published as
required by the Act. This order was passed on May 25, 1955.
Mr. C. Jacob was then appointed Industrial Tribunal. He made
his award on January 25, 1956. By this award Mr. Jacob in
substance agreed with the view taken by Mr. Sharma and fixed
the basic wage at Rs. 25 per mensem and the minimum dearness
allowance at Rs. 10 per mensem. This award was directed to
come into operation as from December 1, 1950. This award was
again challenged before the Labour Appellate Tribunal and
the appellate tribunal has partly allowed the appeal
preferred by the respondents and increased the basic wage
from Rs. 25 per mensem to Rs. 30 per mensem. The amount of
the minimum dearness allowance has been affirmed at Rs. 10
permensem. This decision was announced by the appellate
tribunal on December 12, 1956. It is this decision that has
given rise to the present appeal by special leave.
It is common ground that a Statutory Committee was appointed
under Minimum Wages Act, 1948 (Act XI of 1948) in respect of
Ajmer on January 17, 1952. Its report was submitted on
October 4, 1952, and a notification was issued in pursuance
of the said report on’ October 7, 1952. This notification
has come into force as from January 8, 1953, and in
985
consequence the basic minimum wage is now statutorily fixed
at Rs. 30 per mensem and dearness allowance at Rs. 26 per
mensem. Thus it would be clear that there is no dispute
between the parties as to what would be the basic wage and
the minimum dearness allowance subsequent to January 8,
1953.
It appears that Mr. Jacob who fixed the basic minimum wage
at Rs. 25 per mensem relied upon the fact that the said rate
represented the basic minimum wage on the industry-cum-
region basis. He has observed that the basic minimum wage
of an unskilled worker in the textile mills in Bombay was
Rs. 30 per mensem, while at other places it varies from Rs.
22 to Rs. 30 per mensem. Then he has also referred to the
two charts, Exhibits 4-A and 4-B, produced by the
respondents where the minimum basic wages were shown to
range between Rs. 21 to Rs. 30 in Rajasthan. According to
him, in Rajasthan minimum basic wages were Rs. 26 per mensem
and in Beawar which is the nearest centre from Bijaynagar
the minimum wages for an unskilled textile worker in 1950
were Rs. 25 per mensem. That is one fact on which the
tribunal relied. The other fact on which reliance was
placed was that there was an agreement between the parties
in December 1949, under which the respondents were willing
to work on the minimum wage of Rs. 27. In fact it appears
that both the appellant and the respondents had moved this
Court for striking down the notification issued by the Ajmer
Government by which the basic wage had been fixed at Rs. 30
from January 8, 1953. In Bijay Cotton Mills Ltd. v. The
State of Ajmer (1) it was urged on their behalf jointly that
the relevant provisions of the Minimum Wages Act were ultra
vires and that it would be in the interests of the employer
and the employees as well to strike down the impugned
notification. This Court rejected the said contention and
upheld the validity of’ the Act as well as of the
notification. That, however, is another matter. The
agreement on which the respondents were prepared to work for
the appellant was pressed into service by the appellant
before the tribunal. The tribunal was
(1) [1955]1 S.C.R. 752.
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986
influenced by that fact in finally determining the
amount of basic wage. Two other facts may also have weighed.
The appellant started its textile business in 940 and had to
face a serious calamity in 1943, as a result of which it
suffered great loss and incurred liability to the tune of
nearly rupees thirty lakhs. Besides, it was urged before
the tribunal that a large section of the respondents
belonged to the agricultural class and they can supplement
their income from agricultural sources. It is presumably on
these grounds that Mr. Jacob fixed the basic wage at Rs. 25
per mensem.
The Labour Appellate Tribunal, on the other hand, has held
that, in the absence of satisfactory evidence on the record,
the statutory notification issued under the Minimum Wages
Act affords " the best and safest guide in the matter of
fixation of minimum wage ". It has observed that even though
the notification can have no application prior to January 8,
1953, still " they were of opinion that the scales of wages
fixed thereunder should not be departed from even for the
period now in question. That was all the more so because
not much useful material was available on the record to
fix . the said wage ". It is on this ground that the
appellate tribunal has increased the basic wage from Rs. 25
to Rs. 30 as prescribed by the notification. It is this
modification that is challenged before us by Mr. A. V.
Viswanatha Sastri on behalf of the appellant.
Mr. Sastri contends that the method adopted by the tribunal
was a scientific method; it took into account a basic wage
deducible on the industry-cum-region basis and this should
not have been reversed by the appellate tribunal. It,
however, appears that in ascertaining the wages which labour
in comparable trades was getting in the relevant region, the
tribunal has completely lost sight of the fact that in
addition to the basic wages of Rs. 26/- Rs. 43/- was the
average minimum dearness allowance paid to the workers and
that made a very large difference in the total earnings of
the workmen. In determining the minimum basic wage the fact
that a large amount of dearness allowance was being paid to
employees in
987
other comparable occupations in the same region should not
have been ignored by the tribunal, and that is one infirmity
on which the appellate tribunal was entitled to comment.
Besides, if the appellate tribunal thought that more useful
assistance can be derived from the statutory fixation of
the minimum wage in Ajmer under the Minimum Wages Act, we do
not see how we can interfere with the said view in the
present appeal. It would not be wrong to assume, as the
appellate tribunal did, that in fixing the minimum wage in
the area, the Statutory Committee took into consideration
all the relevant factors and came to the conclusion that
that would be a fair minimum to prescribe. On the other
hand, before the tribunal much relevant or useful evidence
was not adduced, and so the appellate tribunal could not be
said to have committed any error of law in preferring to
rely on the statutory notification rather than on the other
-unsatisfactory evidence produced in the case. After all,
from January 8, 1953, the minimum basic wage was statutorily
fixed, and so, if for a couple of years before that date the
same basic wage was awarded by the appellate tribunal it
cannot be said that any error of law has been committed,
which should be corrected by us in our jurisdiction under
Art. 136 of the Constitution. Therefore, we are not
satisfied that any case for interference has been made out
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by the appellant on this point.
The next contention raised by Mr. Sastri is that the
appointment of Mr. Jacob who made his award on January 25,
1956, was invalid, and Mr. Sastri suggests that the said
award as well as the decision of the appellate tribunal
should be set aside and the matter should be sent back to
Mr. Sharma for disposal in accordance with law. The
argument is that Mr. Sharma’s appointment as Industrial
Tribunal made on December 31, 1954, was subsisting at the
time when Mr. Jacob was appointed on June 17, 1955, and it
is urged that when the same industrial dispute had already
been referred to Mr. Sharma, it was not competent to the
appropriate authority to refer the same dispute to Mr.
Jacob. In support of this argument reliance is placed on
the decision of this Court in The
988
State of Bihar v. D. N. Ganguly & Ors (1). In our
opinion there is no substance in this argument. The
notification on which the whole of the argument is based
was issued on December 31, 1954, for the sole purpose of
correcting the error which had crept into the appointment
of Mr. Sharma by reason of the fact that his earlier
appointment made on May 4, 1953, had not been duly published
and notified as required by the Act. Indeed, it was because
of this infirmity that the award made by Mr. Sharma on
September 8, 1953, had been quashed on May 25, 1955. In
reading the later notification this fact must be borne in
mind. No doubt the notification’ purports to refer to Mr.
Sharma for his adjudication the matter referred to him by
the Labour Appellate Tribunal on remand; it, however,
appears as pointed out by the appellate tribunal that at the
time when the proceedings after the remand commenced Mr.
Sharma’s services were not available, as he was apparently
not in the service of the State, and it was impossible to
refer the matter to him for his adjudication. That is the
finding made by the appellate tribunal and this finding is
fully justified. Therefore, since Mr. Sharma’s services
were not available to the appropriate Government it was
perfectly competent to the said Government to fill in the
vacancy and appoint Mr. Jacob in his place to take up the
work of adjudication. Therefore, there is no substance in
the contention that the decision of Mr. Jacob is invalid in
law.
The last contention urged is that the reference is invalid
inasmuch as the Chief Commissioner of Ajmer was not
competent to refer the present dispute for adjudication
under s. 10(1) read with s. 12(5) of the Act. The argument
is that the Textile Industry has been included at serial No.
23 in the First Schedule to the Industrial (Development and
Regulation) Act, 1951 (Act 65 of 1951) and as such the Chief
Commissioner of Ajmer was not the appropriate Government
under s. 2(a)(i) of the Act. It is urged that the present
dispute could have been validly referred for adjudication to
the industrial tribunal only by the Central Government.
Section 2(a)(i) inter alia defines the
(1) [1939] S.C.R. 1191.
989
appropriate Government as meaning, in relation to any
industrial dispute concerning any industry carried on by or
under the authority of the Central Government or by a
railway company or concerning any such controlled industry
as may be specified in this behalf by the Central
Government, the Central Government. The question which
arises is: has the textile industry been specified as
controlled industry in this behalf by the Central Government
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? It is true that the textile industry is controlled by the
provision,,,, of Act 65 of 1951 and in that sense it is
controlled industry; but that would not be enough to attract
the application of s. 2(a)(i) of the Act. What this latter
provision requires is that the Central Government must
specify " in this behalf " that the industry in question is
a controlled industry ; in other words the specification
must be made by the Central Government by reference to, and
for the purpose of, the provisions of the Act in order that
the Central Government may itself become the appropriate
Government qua such industry under s, 2(a)(i) of the Act.
It is conceded by Mr. Sastri that no such specification has
been made by the Central Government. Indeed, we ought to
add in fairness to Mr. Sastri that he did not very seriously
press this point.
The result is the appeal fails and is dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.