Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. MULLER & PHIPPS (INDIA) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K. C. SUD
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/04/1960
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 1028 1960 SCR (3) 508
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Scheme for gratuity-Claim for gratuity by
workmen under the scheme in addition to retrenchment
compensation If must depend on the construction of the
scheme-Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (14 of 1947), S. 25F.
HEADNOTE:
The Labour Court, Delhi, made an award framing gratuity
scheme, one of the provisions being that on the termination
of service by the company, the workmen shall be entitled to
half a month’s basic salary or wage for each year of
completed service as gratuity. The respondent who was
retrenched had received compensation under S. 25F of the
Industrial Disputes Act made an application under s. 33C of
the Act claiming the gratuity in accordance with the scheme
in addition to the retrenchment compensation already
received. The contention of the appellant was that the
gratuity which the respondent claims was in essence the same
thing as compensation for the retrenchment and to allow
gratuity in addition to the retrenchment compensation under
s. 25F would be to give double benefit for the same event,
i. e., retrenchment :
Held, that whether retrenched workmen can claim the benefit
of a gratuity scheme in addition to the retrenchment compen-
sation would depend on the construction of the material
terms of
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the scheme considered in the light of s. 25F of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. The reasonable conclusion
from the present scheme is that the gratuity that could be
claimed under the award was intended to be in addition to
the retrenchment compensation and not in lieu thereof. The
respondent was entitled to such gratuity even though he had
already received payment of compensation for retrenchment in
accordance with the provisions of S. 25F of the Act.
Indian Hume Pipe Co. v. Its Workmen, [1960] 2 S.C.R. 32,
followed.
Bramachayi Research Institute v. Its Workmen, [1960] 2
S.C.R. 45, referred to.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 147 of 1960.
Appeal by special leave from the decision dated May 18,
1959, of the Labour Court, Delhi, in L.C.A. No. 53/1959.
Purshottam Tricumdas, S. N. Andley, J. B. Dadachanji and
Rameshwar Nath, for the appellants.
Sukumar Ghose, for the respondent.
1960. April 11. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DAS GUPTA, J.-This appeal is against an order of the Judge,
Labour Court, Delhi, in an application under s. 33C of the
Industrial Disputes Act by the respondent, K. C. Sud, by
which the Court computed the amount due to the petitioner by
way of gratuity under an award to be Rs. 80.42 np. only.
Sud, who was a workman of the appellant company, M/s.
Muller & Phipps (India) Ltd. was retrenched by the company
on January 31, 1958. At that time a reference on the
question of introduction of a gratuity scheme for the
workmen of the company was pending before the Industrial
Tribunal. An application by Sud against this order of
retrenchment under S. 33A failed. In the reference above-
mentioned the Court made an award framing a gratuity scheme
in the following terms:-
" On the death of an employee while in the service of the
company, or on his becoming physically or mentally incapable
of further service, half a month’s basic salary or wages for
each year of continuous service shall be paid to the
disabled employees, or if he has died, to his heirs or legal
representatives or assigns.
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510
On voluntary retirement or resignation of an employee, after
five years’ continuous service, half a month’s basic salary
or wages for each year of continuous service.
On termination of service by the company, half a month’s
basic salary or wages for each year of completed service. "
The scheme was also made applicable with effect from the
date on which the reference had been made, viz., June
28,1957. It was on the basis of this award that Sud has
made his application under s. 33C, his case being that as
his retrenchment amounted to termination of service within
the meaning of the award he was entitled to half a month’s
basic salary for each year of completed service. Admittedly
he had completed two years of service. It is also not
disputed that his basic wage at the time of retrenchment was
Rs. 80.42 np. If, therefore, he is entitled to have a
gratuity in accordance with the scheme of the award the
amount due to him will be Rs. 80.42 DP.
of the many contentions raised on behalf of the company in
resisting the petition, all of which were rejected by the
Court below, the only one which is pressed before us is on
the question whether the respondent is entitled to recover
gratuity under this scheme in addition to the compensation,
he bad admittedly received already in accordance with the
provisions of s. 25F of the Industrial Disputes Act. In
support of this contention it is urged that the gratuity
which the respondent claims is in essence the same thing as
compensation for his retrenchment and to allow him gratuity
in addition to retrenchment compensation -under s. 25F would
be to give double benefit for the same event i.e.,
retrenchment. This it is urged is unfair to the employer
and is against the Industrial Disputes Act.
The question whether a double benefit of a gratuity scheme
as well as retrenchment compensation can be given to
workmen, came up for consideration before this Court in
Indian Hume Pipe Co. v. Its Workers (1). This Court there
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considered in some detail the real nature and object of the
retrenchment compensation
(1) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 32.
511
provided by s. 25F of the Industrial Disputes Act and the
nature and object of a gratuity scheme as a retirement
benefit. It pointed out that while gratuity is intended to
help workmen after retirement to whatever cause the
retirement may be due to, the retrenchment compensation is
intended to give relief for the sudden and unexpected
termination of employment by giving partial protection to
the retrenched person and his family to enable them to tide
over the hard period of unemployment. The Court also traced
the history of development of the industrial law as regards
gratuity schemes and retrenchment compensations, and after a
full consideration of the question, came to the conclusion
that there was nothing in law to prevent a workman from
getting double benefit, one under a gratuity scheme and the
other as retrenchment compensation. The Court however took
care to point out that gratuity schemes may be so framed,
whether by consent or by award, that retrenchment
compensation is thereunder payable only in lieu of gratuity
and again they may be so framed as to provide for payment of
gratuity in addition to retrenchment compensation.
Accordingly, the Court laid it down that the question as to
whether retrenched workmen can claim the benefit of a
gratuity scheme in addition to the retrenchment compensation
under s. 25F or not would depend on the construction of the
material terms of the scheme considered in the light of the
provisions of s. 25F of the Act.
On the very day this pronouncement was made the Court also
delivered judgment in Brahmachari Research Institute v. lts
Workmen (1) in which the question as indicated above fell to
be considered. In Brahmachari’s case the Court after
mentioning that the general question as to double benefits
of retrenchment compensation and gratuity being available to
workmen had already been considered in the Indian Hume Pipe
Company’s case proceeded to examine the award that had been
made in a dispute between the Institute and its workmen to
ascertain whether gratuity in addition to retrenchment
compensation was provided thereby. The Court pointed out
that in that award
(1) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 45.
512
the word ’ gratuity’ had been used to cover all three cases,
viz., (i) retrenchment, (ii) termination of service by any
reason other than misconduct and (iii) resignation with the
consent of the management ; what deserved special notice was
that cases of retrenchment as such were specifically covered
by the award. It was of opinion that such payment to
workmen for retrenchment as such did not lose its character
of retrenchment compensation by reason of the mere fact that
it was described as gratuity. It was mainly on the basis of
this fact that the award had provided gratuity for
retrenchment as such in addition to gratuity for other modes
of termination of service that the Court decided in
Brahmachari’s case that the gratuity there on retrenchment
was nothing more or less than compensation on account of
retrenchment as provided under s. 25F of the Act and decided
that the workmen were entitled to only one or the other,
whichever is more advantageous to them.
If we examine the award in the case before us in the light
of the two decisions of the Court mentioned above the first
thing that strikes us is that this award did not make any
provision for gratuity for retrenchment as such. It is
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important to notice that the workmen themselves in their
statement of claim had urged for a distinct provision for
retrenchment in addition to other modes of termination of
service. The Tribunal however made no special provision for
retrenchment but provided in its scheme of gratuity for
three classes of cases, namely, (i) on the death of an
employee or on his becoming physically or mentally incapable
of further service, (ii) on voluntary retirement or
resignation and (iii) on termination of service by the
company. Retrenchment, it is true, will fall within the
termination of service. That, however, as is clear from the
above cases, cannot by itself justify a conclusion that the
gratuity that could be claimed under such a scheme in case
of retrenchment was in lieu of retrenchment compensation.
If the intention was that in cases of retrenchment the
gratuity will be in lieu of retrenchment compensation
provided under s. 25F the obvious thing would be to make
separate provisions for gratuity for retrenchment as such
and
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gratuity for other modes of termination of service. That
was the method followed in the award that fell for
consideration in Brahmachari’s case. That method has
however not been followed in the award that we have to
consider here. In this case there is no specific reference
in the award to retrenchment as such. The reasonable
conclusion from the scheme as drawn up is that the gratuity
that could be claimed under this award by retrenched workmen
because of the fact that retrenchment is also one kind of
termination of service within the meaning of the award was
intended to be in addition to the retrenchment compensation
and not in lieu thereof.
The decision in Brahmachari’s case on the special facts of
the award therein is therefore of no assistance to the
appellant. We are bound to hold on an examination. of the
award in the present case that the gratuity which the
respondent claims on the basis of the award is distinct from
and in addition to the retrenchment compensation he has
received. We are of opinion therefore that the Tribunal was
right in holding that the respondent is entitled to such
gratuity even though he has already received payment of
compensation for retrenchment in accordance with the
provisions of s. 25F of the Industrial Disputes Act.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.