Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3424 of 2000
PETITIONER:
A.P.S.R.T.C. & Ors.
RESPONDENT:
G. Srinivas Reddy & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/02/2006
BENCH:
Arijit Pasayat & R. V. Raveendran
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
RAVEENDRAN, J.
The Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation,
first appellant, (for short ’the Corporation’), issued a Circular
dated 1.9.1988 containing the guidelines for absorption of
persons employed on casual basis/consolidated pay/piecemeal
rate/work charged establishment, whose services had been
ordered to be dispensed with, under an earlier Circular dated
2.7.1987. The said guidelines provided, inter alia, that such
absorption shall be only against sanctioned vacancies, and that
the benefit was to be extended only to those who had been
engaged for more than one year. The Circular made it clear that
benefit thereof will not extend to persons engaged by its
contractors at Bus Stations and certain other categories of
persons detailed therein.
2. The respondents herein filed W.P. No.14353/1991
claiming to be scavengers employed by the Corporation,
seeking a direction for regularisation. That petition was
disposed of by order 5.11.1991 with a direction to consider
their cases in terms of the Circular dated 1.9.1988 and pass
appropriate orders. The High Court did not examine the claim
on merits.
3. To give effect to the said order, the Divisional Manager
of the Adilabad Division of the Corporation sent a
communication dated 14.7.1992 instructing the Depot Manager,
Mancherial to verify the claims of the respondents (as they had
claimed that they were working in the said Depot) and to send
him the necessary information in the prescribed proforma.
Alleging inaction thereafter, the respondents herein again
approached the High Court in W.P. No.30220/1997 for a
declaration that the Corporation’s failure to take action in
pursuance of the said letter dated 14.7.1992 was illegal and
praying for a direction to the Corporation to absorb them into
its service.
4. A learned Single Judge of the High Court by order dated
17.3.1998 disposed of Writ Petition No.30220/1997 at the stage
of preliminary hearing, without examining the matter on merits,
by directing the Corporation to consider the claim for
absorption in accordance with the guidelines contained in the
Circular dated 14.7.1992. In the said order, the High Court
proceeded on the erroneous assumption that the letter dated
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14.7.1992 of the Divisional Manager was the Circular
containing the guidelines relating to absorption.
5. In pursuance of it, the claim of one of the respondents -
B. Madhuraiah (third respondent herein), was considered. He
was required to appear before a Selection Committee on
21.4.1999. He appeared before the Committee and admitted that
he had worked only under a contractor and not under the
Corporation. The Regional Manager, Adilabad Division,
therefore, passed an order dated 21.4.1999 holding that the third
respondent was not entitled to claim absorption. He held that
the provisions of the Circular dated 1.9.1988 providing for
absorption were inapplicable to the third Respondent, as he had
not directly worked under the Corporation. He recorded a
finding that third respondent was employed as a contract labour
by a contractor, receiving payment through the contractor, and
that there was no relationship of employee and employer
between him and the Corporation, either in regard to
assignment of work, or performance of work, or payment of
remuneration.
6. Feeling aggrieved, the respondents approached the High
Court for the third time, by filing W.P. No.17678 of 1999 for
quashing the said order dated 21.4.1999 and seeking a direction
to the Corporation to treat them as ex-casual employees and
absorb them under the terms of the Circular dated 1.9.1988. A
learned Single Judge by order dated 23.8.1999 disposed of the
said petition at the admission stage, quashing the said order
dated 21.4.1999 and directing the Corporation to pass a fresh
order on the representation of the respondents herein. The
learned Single Judge was of the view that the respondents
herein could not be denied relief on the ground that they were
employed as contract labour, as such a contention was not taken
by the Corporation in the earlier petition (W.P.
No.30220/1997). The learned Single Judge held that when the
direction in W.P. No.30220/1997 was to ’consider’ the case for
absorption in terms of the guidelines contained in Circular
dated 14.7.1992, the Corporation could not reject the claim by
taking a stand that respondents were employed as contract
labour and the Circular dated 1.9.1988 was inapplicable.
7. The order of the learned Single Judge was challenged by
the Corporation in Writ Appeal No.1422 of 1999. The
Corporation contended that the Learned Single Judge
committed an error in quashing the order dated 21.4.1999. It
was pointed out that the respondents were employed as contract
labour and the Circular dated 1.9.1988 did not permit
absorption of contract labour, but only permitted absorption of
those directly employed by the Corporation on casual basis or
for a contractual period, on daily wages or on consolidated
salary or piece rate basis or under work changed establishment.
The Division Bench dismissed the Corporation’s appeal vide
order dated 30.9.1999. It accepted the contention of the
Corporation that respondents were employed as "contract
labour". It also impliedly accepted the contention of the
Corporation that the respondents were not entitled to absorption
under the Circular dated 1.9.1988. It, however, held that the
work for which the respondents were employed as contract
labour, that is to clean the buses and to sweep the bus stand
premises, was perennial in nature and not seasonal. Purporting
to rely on the decisions of this Court in Air India Statutory
Corporation v. United Labour Union [1997 (9) SCC 377] and
Secretary, Haryana State Electricity Board v. Suresh [1999 (3)
SCC 601], it held that there was direct relationship of master
and servant between the principal employer (Corporation) and
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contract labour (Respondents) and, therefore, the respondents
were entitled to absorption. It did not, consider whether in the
absence of a notification under Section 10(1) of the Contract
Labour (Regulation and Abolition) Act, 1970 (for short ’the
CLRA Act’) prohibiting contract labour, there could be a
direction for absorption, even if the Respondents were contract
labour. Thus, the ground on which the Division Bench upheld
the decision of the learned Single Judge was different from the
ground on which the writ petition was disposed of by the Single
Judge. The said order of the Division Bench is challenged by
the Corporation in this appeal by special leave.
8. In Air India (supra), this Court had held that though there
is no express provision in the CLRA Act for absorption of
contract labour, when engagement of contract labour stood
prohibited on issuance of a notification under Section 10(1) of
the CLRA Act, a direct relationship was established between
the workers (contract labour) and the erstwhile principal
employer, and the principal employer is obliged to absorb the
workers. It also held that if the High Court finds that workmen
were engaged in violation of the provisions of CLRA Act or
were continued as contract labour, in spite of the prohibition
notification issued under Section 10(1) of the CLRA Act, the
High Court can, in exercise of its power of judicial review,
mould the relief properly and direct the principal employer to
absorb the contract labour, instead of leaving the workmen in
the lurch, and it was not necessary for the workmen to seek a
reference of the dispute relating to their absorption under
section 10 of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. In Haryana
State Electricity Board (supra), this Court following Air India,
had held that where the work for which contract labour is
employed, was perennial in nature (as contrasted from
seasonal), contract labour system should be abolished by
issuing a notification under section 10 of CLRA Act, so as to
render the contract labourers, the direct employees of the
principal employer. On the facts of the case, it was also held
that the contract system prevailing in the Electricity Board
(appellant herein) was not genuine, but a mere camouflage (to
deprive workers, of the benefits under various labour
enactments) and therefore, the court can pierce the veil and
visualize the direct relationship between the Board and the
contract labour. Consequently, this Court upheld the relief of
reinstatement granted to Safai Karamcharis by the High Court.
9. In Steel Authority of India Ltd. & Ors. v. National Union
Waterfront Workers & Ors. [2001 (7) SCC 1], a Constitution
Bench of this Court overruled the decision in Air India (supra)
and held that where contract labour are engaged in connection
with the work in an establishment and employment of such
contract labour is prohibited by issue of a notification under
Section 10(1) of the CLRA Act, there was no question of
automatic absorption of the contract labour working in the
establishment and the principal employer cannot be required to
absorb the contract labour. This Court also held that on a
contractor engaging contract labour in connection with the work
entrusted to him by the principal employer, it does not
culminate into a relationship of ’master and servant’ between
the principal employer and the contract labour. This Court held
that whether the contract labour system was genuine or a mere
camouflage has to be adjudicated only by the Industrial
Tribunal/court and not by the High Court in its writ jurisdiction.
We extract below the relevant portions of the principles
summed up by this Court :
"(5). On issuance of prohibition notification under
Section 10(1) of the CLRA Act prohibiting employment of
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contract labour or otherwise, in an industrial dispute
brought before it by any contract labour in regard to
conditions of service, the industrial adjudicator will have
to consider the question whether the contractor has
been interposed either on the ground of having undertaken
to produce any given result for the establishment or for
supply of contract labour for work of the establishment
under a genuine contract or is a mere ruse/camouflage
to evade compliance with various beneficial legislations
so as to deprive the workers of the benefit thereunder. If
the contract is found to be not genuine but a mere
camouflage, the so-called contract labour will have to be
treated as employees of the principal employer who shall
be directed to regularize the services of the contract labour
in the establishment concerned subject to the conditions as
may be specified by it for that purpose in the light of para 6
hereunder.
(6). If the contract is found to be genuine and
prohibition notification under Section 10(1) of the CLRA
Act in respect of the establishment concerned has been
issued by the appropriate Government, prohibiting
employment of contract labour in any process, operation or
other work of any establishment and where in such process,
operation or other work of the establishment the principal
employer intends to employ regular workmen, he shall give
preference to the erstwhile contract labour, if otherwise
found suitable and, if necessary, by relaxing the condition
as to maximum age appropriately, taking into consideration
the age of the workers at the time of their initial
employment by the contractor and also relaxing the
condition as to academic qualifications other than technical
qualifications.
We have used the expression "industrial adjudicator"
by design as determination of the questions
aforementioned requires enquiry into disputed
questions of facts which cannot conveniently be made
by High Courts in exercise of jurisdiction under Article
226 of the Constitution. Therefore, in such cases the
appropriate authority to go into those issues will be the
Industrial Tribunal/Court whose determination will be
amenable to judicial review."
[Emphasis supplied]
10. In this case, there was no notification under section 10(1)
of CLRA Act, prohibiting contract labour. There was also
neither a contention nor a finding that the contract with the
contractor was sham and nominal and the contract labour
working in the establishment were, in fact, employees of the
principal employer himself. In view of the principles laid down
in Steel Authority, the High Court could not have directed
absorption of respondents who were held to be contract labour,
by assuming that the contract labour system was only a
camouflage and that there was a direct relationship of employer
and employee between the corporation and the respondents. If
respondents want the relief of absorption, they will have to
approach the Industrial Tribunal/Court and establish that the
contract labour system was only a ruse/camouflage to avoid
labour law benefits to them. The High Court could not, in
exercise of its jurisdiction under Article 226, direct absorption
of respondents, on the ground that work for which respondents
were engaged as contract labour, was perennial in nature.
11. The respondents were not also entitled to the relief of
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absorption/regularization on the basis of the Circular dated
1.9.1988, as it specifically excluded contract labour. The order
dated 5.11.1991 in the first round (WP No.14353/1991) and the
order dated 17.3.1998 in the second round (W.P.
No.30220/1997) did not examine the status of the respondents,
nor recorded a finding that they were entitled to absorption.
They merely disposed of the writ petitions with a direction to
consider the representation/claim of the respondents for
absorption. Therefore, if the Corporation on considering the
claims of respondents found that they were not employed by the
Corporation, but were contract labour, who were not entitled to
seek absorption under the Circular dated 1.9.1988, the
Corporation was justified in rejecting their claim for absorption.
The only remedy of respondents, as noticed above, is to
approach the Industrial Tribunal for declaring that the contract
labour system under which they were employed was a
camouflage and therefore, they were, in fact, direct employees
of the Corporation and for consequential relief. The
Corporation has stated in the Special Leave Petition that such a
question was already raised by the Trade Unions and was
pending in I.D.No.1/1996 on the file of the Industrial Tribunal,
Hyderabad.
12. Learned counsel for the respondents made an alternative
submission that the relief granted to respondents, may be
sustained on the reasoning adopted by the learned Single Judge.
He submitted that having regard to the order in W.P.
No.30220/1997 which had attained finality, the Corporation had
no choice but to consider the cases of Respondents for
absorption by treating them as causal labour employed by the
Corporation. This takes us to the effect of the orders dated
5.11.1991 and 17.3.1998 made in the earlier writ petitions,
directing the Corporation to "consider" the cases of the
respondents.
13. We may, in this context, examine the significance and
meaning of a direction given by the court to "consider" a case.
When a court directs an authority to ’consider’, it requires the
authority to apply its mind to the facts and circumstances of the
case and then take a decision thereon in accordance with law.
There is a reason for a large number of writ petitions filed in
High Courts being disposed of with a direction to "consider"
the claim/case/representation of the petitioner/s in the writ
petitions.
13.1) Where an order or action of the State or an authority is
found to be illegal, or in contravention of prescribed procedure,
or in breach of the rules of natural justice, or
arbitrary/unreasonable/ irrational, or prompted by mala fides or
extraneous consideration, or the result of abuse of power, such
action is open to judicial review. When the High Court finds
that the order or action requires interference and exercises the
power of judicial review, thereby resulting in the action/order of
the State or authority being quashed, the High Court will not
proceed to substitute its own decision in the matter, as that will
amount to exercising appellate power, but require the authority
to ’consider’ and decide the matter again. The power of judicial
review under Article 226 concentrates and lays emphasis on the
decision making process, rather than the decision itself.
13.2) The High Courts also direct authorities to ’consider’, in a
different category of cases. Where an authority vested with the
power to decide a matter, fails to do so in spite of a request, the
person aggrieved approaches the High Court, which in exercise
of power of judicial review, directs the authority to ’consider’
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and decide the matter. In such cases, while exercising the
power of judicial review, the High Court directs ’consideration’
without examining the facts or the legal question(s) involved
and without recording any findings on the issues. The High
Court may also direct the authority to ’consider’ afresh, where
the authority had decided a matter without considering the
relevant facts and circumstances, or by taking extraneous or
irrelevant matters into consideration. In such cases also, High
Court may not examine the validity or tenability of the claim on
merits, but require the authority to do so.
13.3) Where the High Court finds the decision-making process
erroneous and records its findings as to the manner in which the
decision should be made, and then directs the authority to
’consider’ the matter, the authority will have to consider and
decide the matter in the light of its findings or observations of
the court. But where the High Court without recording any
findings, or without expressing any view, merely directs the
authority to ’consider’ the matter, the authority will have to
consider the matter in accordance with law, with reference to
the facts and circumstances of the case, its power not being
circumscribed by any observations or findings of the court.
13.4) We may also note that sometimes the High Courts
dispose of matter merely with a direction to the authority to
’consider’ the matter without examining the issue raised even
though the facts necessary to decide the correctness of the order
are available. Neither pressure of work nor the complexity of
the issue can be a reason for the court, to avoid deciding the
issue which requires to be decided, and disposing of the matter
with a direction to ’consider’ the matter afresh. Be that as it
may.
13.5) There are also several instances where unscrupulous
petitioners with the connivance of ’pliable’ authorities have
misused the direction ’to consider’ issued by court. We may
illustrate by an example. A claim, which is stale, time-barred or
untenable, is put forth in the form of a representation. On the
ground that the authority has not disposed of the representation
within a reasonable time, the person making the representation
approaches the High Court with an innocuous prayer to direct
the authority to ’consider’ and dispose of the representation.
When the court disposes of the petition with a direction to
’consider’, the authority grants the relief, taking shelter under
the order of the court directing him to ’consider’ the grant of
relief. Instances are also not wanting where authorities,
unfamiliar with the process and practice relating to writ
proceedings and the nuances of judicial review, have
interpreted or understood the order ’to consider’ as directing
grant of relief sought in the representation and consequently
granting reliefs which otherwise could not have been granted.
Thus, action of the authorities granting undeserving relief, in
pursuance of orders to ’consider’, may be on account of
ignorance, or on account of bona fide belief that they should
grant relief in view of court’s direction to ’consider’ the claim,
or on account of collusion/connivance between the person
making the representation and the authority deciding it.
Representations of daily wagers seeking
regularization/absorption into regular service is a species of
cases, where there has been a large scale misuse of the orders
’to consider’.
14. Therefore, while disposing of writ petitions with a
direction to ’consider’, there is a need for the High Court to
make the direction clear and specific. The order should clearly
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indicate whether the High Court is recording any finding about
the entitlement of the petitioner to the relief or whether the
petition is being disposed of without examining the claim on
merits. The court should also normally fix a time-frame for
consideration and decision. If no time-frame is fixed and if the
authority does not decide the matter, the direction of the court
becomes virtually infructuous as the aggrieved petitioner will
have to come again to court with a fresh writ petition or file an
application for fixing time for deciding the matter.
15. In this case, the respondents approached the High Court
seeking a direction for regularization/absorption in the year
1991. That petition (WP No.14353/1991) was disposed of,
apparently, at the admission stage by order dated 5.11.1991,
with a direction to ’consider’ the representations of
Respondents without examining the question whether the
petitioners in the writ petition were entitled to the relief of
regularization/absorption and without fixing any time frame for
deciding the matter. Though the Divisional Manager, Adilabad,
by letter dated 14.7.1992 sought information and verification of
claims by the concerned depots, with the intention of giving
effect to the order dated 5.11.1991, no further action was taken.
This led to filing of the second petition (W.P. No.30220/1997)
wherein the respondents herein sought a direction to the
concerned authority to take a decision on the question of
absorption. The second petition was also disposed of at the
preliminary hearing stage by order dated 17.3.1998, without
examining the claim of respondents on merits. The said order
dated 17.3.1998 proceeded on an erroneous assumption that the
letter dated 14.7.1992 (by which the Divisional Manager,
Adilabad, sought information from the concerned Depot
Managers about the respondents herein) was the Circular
containing the guidelines for absorption, and disposed of Writ
Petition No. 30220/1997 by directing the authority concerned to
consider the cases of the respondents herein for absorption in
terms of the guidelines contained in the letter dated 14.7.1992
and decide the matter within three months.
16. We find that at that stage, the authority considered the
case of the third respondent and passed a reasoned order dated
21.4.1999 rejecting the claim on the ground that the third
respondent was not a direct employee, but was a contract
labour, and was not therefore entitled to absorption under the
Circular dated 1.9.1988. This led to the third round of litigation
in W.P. No.17678/1999 wherein the prayer was for quashing
the said order or rejection dated 21.4.1999 and for direction to
absorb them into service in terms of the Circular dated 1.9.1988
Again, the High Court at the admission stage, disposed of the
matter on an erroneous conclusion that the order dated
21.4.1999 was contrary to the decision in the second round
(Order dated 17.3.1998 in W.P. No.30220/1997) and directed
the Corporation to pass fresh orders on the representations
made by the respondents. The learned Single Judge proceeded
on the assumption, without basis, that the order dated 17.3.1998
in the earlier petition (WP No. 30220/1997) had held that
Respondents were entitled to the benefit of the Circular dated
1.9.1988, when in fact there was no such finding or direction.
Therefore, the direction of the learned Single Judge, as
confirmed by the Division Bench, to consider the cases of
respondents under the Circular dated 1.9.1988 cannot be
sustained. It is unfortunate that in this process, the Respondents
have been in courts for nearly 15 years.
17. For the reasons stated above, we allow this appeal, set
aside the order dated 30.9.1999 passed by the Division Bench
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of the A.P. High Court in Writ Appeal No.1422 of 1999 and
dismiss Writ Petition No.17678/1999 filed by the respondents.
Liberty is, however, reserved to the respondents to approach the
Industrial Tribunal/Court for relief, if any, in accordance with
law. Parties to bear their respective costs.