Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 12845 of 1996
PETITIONER:
CIPLA LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MAHARASHTRA GENERAL KAMGAR UNION & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/02/2001
BENCH:
S. Rajendra Babu & S.N. Phukan.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N TL...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :
The first respondent, which is a Union of the workmen,
filed a complaint against the appellant for unfair labour
practices under Section 28 of the Maharashtra Recognition of
Trade Unions & Prevention of Unfair Labour Practices Act,
1971 (for short the Act) under Item 1(a) by way of
victimisation; (b) not in good faith, but in the colourable
exercise of the employers right; (d) for patently false
reasons; and (f) in utter disregard of the principles of
natural justice in the conduct of domestic enquiry or with
undue haste of Scheduled IV of the Act. Before the Seventh
Labour Court at Bombay it was claimed by the respondent
herein that the statutory duty of the appellant is not only
to keep the factory premises clean, hygienic and dust free
but also the surroundings thereof in terms of Schedule M
of Drugs & Cosmetics Act, 1940 and the employees engaged for
such process are, therefore, employees of the company
itself; that, in fact, the appellant had been directly
employing the workmen to attend such work and the appellant
used to appoint such persons on casual or temporary basis
and terminate their services from time to time with a view
to depriving them of the permanent status and wages and
other benefits as applicable to permanent workmen of the
appellant; that this situation continued till the year
1990-91 when such casual or temporary workmen engaged in
cleaning process joined the respondent-Union in order to
protect their rights for permanency in the
appellant-company; that since about 1991 the appellant has
been engaging persons but on paper they are shown as
contract workmen working for contractor, respondent No. 2
herein; that the second respondent is only a name lender
whereas the appellant is the real employer of the workmen;
that the appellant through the second respondent terminated
the services of such workmen employed through second
respondent the moment the persons completed 11 months of
services thereby depriving them of the status of permanent
workmen; that the entire effort being made to avoid giving
permanency to the workmen concerned with sanitation,
sweeping and in keeping the factory premises and surrounding
thereof in a hygienic condition. It is further alleged that
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there are about 30 such workmen who were engaged in such
activities; that in keeping with the past practice, the
respondent had reasons to apprehend that the moment any of
the workmen completes 11 months of service, the services of
such employee would be terminated. It is submitted on
behalf of the respondent that the recruitment of such
workmen is done by the appellant and upon selection such
workmen are sent to appellants doctor for medical check up.
However, they are not given any appointment letters but are
given attendance cards by the second respondent only to show
that they are the employees of the second respondent and not
that of the appellant. They claimed that they are the
workmen working under the direct supervision, control and
direction of the officers of the appellant who assign work
to them and they are granted leave by the officers of the
appellant and are also paid by the appellant; that the
company is the real employer apart from being the employees
because of statutory obligation of the company to employ
such workmen; that, however, the appellant denied the
relationship of employer-employee from various stages; that
such denial of relationship is only to deprive the workmen
of permanency in the company and payment of wages as are
applicable to the permanent workmen of the company; that
the company has denied this relationship as employer and
thus this cause of action has arisen in this complaint;
that the appellant has engaged in unfair labour practices in
terms of Act and it be directed to cease and desist from
continuing to do so.
The appellant, apart from denying that it is guilty of
unfair labour practices under Items 1(a), (b), (d) and (f)
of Scheduled IV of the Act, contended that the persons
listed in Exhibit A and referred to in the complaint are
not the employees of the company nor are they employed
ostensibly through the second respondent. The appellant
categorically denied that they are the employees of the
company and there has never been any employer-employee
relationship between them and, therefore, the question of
terminating the services of the employees employed by the
second respondent would not arise. The appellant contended
that since it is engaged in the manufacture of
pharmaceutical products for which a high degree of
cleanliness and hygiene is required to be maintained and,
therefore, it is necessary for the company to seek the
services of the specialised agencies and this practice has
been in vogue for several years and in the last eight year
such services have been obtained from three different agency
and they are (i) M/s Estate Services, (ii) M/s Advent Clean
& Care Corporation and (iii) M/s Deluxe Estate Services.
The second respondent had been engaged as an agency for
rendering house- keeping and hygiene services and the terms
of the engagement were set out in a letter dated 28.2.1992.
Pursuant to such rendering of services the second respondent
had engaged services of the persons named in Exhibit A.
The appellant contended that the named persons in the
Exhibit A to the complaint are those who have joined the
second respondent only during the last 3 to 8 months. The
appellant denied that it interviewed and selected the
persons to be employed by the second respondent, but it was
expected that persons employed by the second respondent were
subjected to periodical medical examination in order to
comply with the statutory requirements for maintaining
proper hygiene integrity of the manufacturing processes of
the company. It is also denied by the appellant that the
workmen are working under the direct control and supervision
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of the officers of the company and there is any
employer-employee relationship between them. It was
submitted that the second respondent pays wages to those
employees in accordance with or more than the minimum wages.
It is also contended that the appellant has obtained
registration as required under the earlier Act and the copy
of which was produced in the proceedings. The second
respondent supported the contentions made by the appellant.
The Labour Court on the basis of these pleadings framed
the following issues: ISSUES@@
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1. Does the complainant prove that the company indulged
in unfair labour practices as alleged ?
2. ---------deleted---------
3. Does he prove that he is entitled the relief as
prayed for?
4. What order ?
ADDITIONAL ISSUES
3A. Whether the complaint is maintainable? 3B.
Whether the complainant prove that the names in Annexure
A are the workmen of the Respondent No.1? 3C. Whether
this Court has jurisdiction to entertain the complaint?
The Labour Court, after elaborate consideration of the
pleadings and evidence on record, came to the following@@
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conclusion:@@
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It can be seen from the evidence on record and the
documents filed by the parties that different contractors
engaged by the first respondent company and these workmen
had never worked in the first respondent company but they
had worked through second respondent. Hence, the
arrangement between the respondent No. 1 & 2 can be said to
be legal and bonafide. The second respondent has also
obtained licence No. 2796 under the provisions of Contract
Labour (Regulation & Abolition) Act, 1971 which is at
Exh.C-14 at page 5. The respondent No. 2 has its own
separate and independent establishment which has been
registered under the provisions of Bombay Shops and
Establishment Act, 1948. It is also independently and
separately registered under the provisions of Employees
Provident Fund and Miscellaneous Provisions Act. These
documents are produced At Sr.No.10 of Exh.C-14. From these
documents, it is crystal clear that it is a separate entity
and there is a contract between the first respondent and
second respondent in respect of sweeping and cleaning in the
company premises.
After further examination, it was held that the
arrangement between the appellant and the second respondent
can only be termed as legal and bona fide and hence the
matter of abolition of contract labour in the process of
house-keeping and maintenance of the premises of the factory
can be agitated only under the provisions of Contract Labour
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(Regulation and Abolition) Act, 1970. Therefore, the Labour
Court dismissed the complaint filed by the first
respondent-Union. When the matter was carried by revision
under the Act the Industrial Court dismissed the revision
application by reiterating the views of the Labour Court.
In the writ petition the Division Bench of the High
Court took a different view of the matter and allowed the
complaint. Before the High Court several decisions were
referred to including the decision of this Court in General
Labour Union (Red Flag), Bombay v. Ahmedabad Mfg. & Calico
Printing Co. Ltd & Ors., 1995 Supp. (1) SCC 175. In that
case the complaint of the Union was that 21 workmen who were
working in one of the canteens of the respondent-company
were not given the service conditions as were available to
the other workmen of the company and there was also a threat
of termination of their services. This Court proceeded to
consider the case on the basis that their complaint was that
the workmen were the employees of the company and,
therefore, the breach committed and the threats of
retrenchment were cognizable by the Industrial Court or the
Labour Court under the Act. Even in the complaint no case
was made out that the workmen had ever been accepted by the
company as its employees. On the other hand, the complaint
proceeded on the basis as if the workmen were a part of the
work force of the company. This Court noticed that the
workmen were never recognised by the company as its workmen
and it was the consistent contention of the company that
they were not its employees. In those circumstances, the
Industrial Court having dismissed the complaint and the High
Court having upheld the same, this Court stated that it was
not established that the workmen in question were the
workmen of the company and in those circumstances, no
complaint could lie under the Act as was held by the two
courts. In that case it was the admitted position that the
workmen were employed by a contractor, who was given a
contract to run the canteen in question. Thereafter, the
High Court adverted to the decision of this Court in Gujarat
Electricity Board, Thermal Power Station, Ukai, Gujarat v.
Hind Mazdoor Sabha & Ors., 1995 (5) SCC 27, wherein it was
noticed that the first question to be decided would be
whether an industrial dispute could be raised for abolition
of the contract labour system in view of the provisions of
the Act and, if so, who can do so. The High Court was of
the view that the decision in General Labour Union (Red
Flag), Bombay v. Ahmedabad Mfg. & Calico Printing Co. Ltd
& Ors. (supra) would make it clear that such a question can
be gone into and that the observations would not mean that
the workmen had to establish by some other proceedings
before the complaint is filed or that if the complaint is
filed, the moment the employer repudiates or denies the
relationship of employer and employees the court will not
have any jurisdiction. The observation of this Court that
it is open to the workmen to raise an appropriate industrial
dispute in that behalf if they are entitled to do so has to
be understood in the light of the observations of this Court
made earlier. The High Court further held that the judgment
in General Labour Union (Red Flag), Bombay v. Ahmedabad
Mfg. & Calico Printing Co. Ltd & Ors. (supra) was
confined to the facts of that case. On that basis the High
Court proceeded to further consider the matter and reversed
the findings recorded by the two courts and gave a finding
that the workmen in question are the workmen of the
appellant-company.
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In this Court it was submitted that the High Court had
proceeded entirely on wrong lines. In Gujarat Electricity
Board, Thermal Power Station, Gujarat v. Hind Mazdoor Sabha
(supra) the question raised was whether the workers whose
services were engaged by the contractors but who were
working in the thermal power station of the Gujarat
Electricity Board at Ukai can legally claim to be the
employees of the Gujarat Electricity Board. The industrial
tribunal had adjudicated the matter and held that the
workmen concerned in the reference could not be the workmen
of the contractors and, therefore, all the workmen employed
by the contractor should be deemed to be the workmen of the
Board. The industrial tribunal also gave consequential
directions to the Board for payment of wages, etc. The
award of the industrial tribunal was upheld by the High
Court in appeal. The contention put forth before this Court
was that after coming into force of the Act it is only the
appropriate Government, which can abolish the contact labour
system after consulting the Central Board or the State
Board, as the case may be, and no other authority including
the industrial tribunal has jurisdiction either to entertain
such dispute or to direct abolition of the contract labour
system and neither the appropriate Government nor the
industrial tribunal has the power to direct that the workmen
of the erstwhile contractor should be deemed to be the
workmen of the Board. The Central Government or the
industrial tribunal, as the case may be, can only direct the
abolition of the contract labour system as per the
provisions of the Act but it does not permit either of them
to declare the erstwhile workmen of the contract to be the
employees of the principal employer. As to what would
happen to an employee engaged by the contractor if contract
employment is abolished is another moot question yet to be
decided by this Court. But that is not a point on which we
are called upon to decide in this matter.
contract covered by But one thing is clear - if the
employees are working under a the Contract Labour
(Regulation & Abolition) Act then it is clear that the
labour court or the industrial adjudicating authorities
cannot have any jurisdiction to deal with the matter as it
falls within the province of an appropriate Government to
abolish the same. If the case put forth by the workmen is
that they have been directly employed by the appellant-
company but the contract itself is a camouflage and,
therefore, needs to be adjudicated is a matter which can be
gone into by appropriate industrial tribunal or labour
court. Such question cannot be examined by the labour court
or the industrial court constituted under the Act. The
object of the enactment is, amongst other aspects, enforcing
provisions relating to unfair labour practices. If that is
so, unless it is undisputed or indisputable that there is
employer-employee relationship between the parties, the
question of unfair practice cannot be inquired into at all.
The respondent union came to the Labour Court with a
complaint that the workmen are engaged by the appellant
through the contractor and though that is ostensible
relationship the true relationship is one of master and
servant between the appellant and the workmen in question.
By this process, workmen repudiate their relationship with
the contractor under whom they are employed but claim
relationship of an employee under the appellant. That
exercise of repudiation of the contract with one and
establishment of a legal relationship with another can be
done only in a regular industrial tribunal/court under the
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I.D.Act.
Shri K.K. Singhvi, the learned senior Advocate
appearing for the respondent, submitted that under Section
32 of the Act the labour court has the power to decide all
matters arising out of any application or complaint referred
to it for the decision under any of the provisions of the
Act. Section 32 would not enlarge the jurisdiction of the
court beyond what is conferred upon it by other provisions
of the Act. If under other provisions of the Act the
industrial tribunal or the labour court has no jurisdiction
to deal with a particular aspect of the matter, Section 32
does not give such power to it. In the cases at hand before
us, whether a workmen can be stated to be the workman of the
appellant establishment or not, it must be held that the
contract between the appellant and the second respondent is
a camouflage or bogus and upon such a decision it can be
held that the workman in question is an employee of the
appellant establishment. That exercise, we are afraid,
would not fall within the scope of either Section 28 or
Section 7 of the Act. In cases of this nature where the
provisions of the Act are summary in nature and give drastic
remedies to the parties concerned elaborate consideration of
the question as to relationship of employer-employee cannot
be gone into. If at any time the employee concerned was
indisputably an employee of the establishment and
subsequently it is so disputed, such a question is an
incidental question arising under Section 32 of the Act.
Even the case pleaded by the respondent-Union itself is that
the appellant establishment had never recognised the workmen
mentioned in Exhibit A as its employees and throughout
treated these persons as the employees of the second
respondent. If that dispute existed throughout, we think,
the labour court or the industrial court under the Act is
not the appropriate court to decide such question, as held
by this Court in General Labour Union (Red Flag), Bombay v.
Ahmedabad Mfg. & Calico Printing Co. Ltd & Ors. (supra),
which view was reiterated by us in Vividh Kamgar Sabha v.
Kalyani Steels Ltd. & Anr., 2001 (1) SCALE 82.
However, Shri Singhvi very strenuously contended, by
adverting to the scope of the Payment of Wages Act, 1936 and
the scope of Section 32C(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act,
that these questions can be gone into by the courts and, in
this context, he relied upon the decision of the High Court
of Bombay in Vishwanath Tukaram v. The General Manager,
Central Railway, V.T., Bombay, 59 BLR 892. In determining
whether the wages had been appropriately paid or not, the
authority under the Payment of Wages Act was held to have
jurisdiction to decide the incidental question of whether
the applicant was in the employment of the railway
administration during the relevant period. It means that at
one time or the other the concerned employee was
indisputably in employment and later on he was found to be
not so employed and in those circumstances, the court stated
that it was an incidental question to be considered.
India Ltd. v. Next decision relied upon by Shri
Singhvi is the Central Bank of P.S. Rajagopalan etc., 1964
(3) SCR 140, to contend that even in cases arising under
Section 33C(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act the scope,
though very limited, certain incidental questions can be
gone into like a claim for special allowance for operating
adding machine which may not be based on the Sastry Award
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made under the provisions of Chapter V-A. The learned
counsel pointed out that in the event we were to hold that
it is only in clear cases or undisputed cases the labour
court or the industrial tribunal under the Act can examine
the complaints made thereunder, the whole provision would be
rendered otiose and in each of those cases provisions of the
Bombay Industrial Relations Act, 1946 or the Industrial
Disputes Act will have to be invoked. We are afraid that
this argument cannot be sustained for the fact that even in
respect of claims arising under Section 33C(2) appropriate
dispute can be raised in terms of Section 10 of the
Industrial Disputes Act and that has not been the position
in the present case. Nor can we say that even in cases
where employer-employee relationship is undisputed or
indisputably referring to the history of relationship
between the parties, dispute can be settled and not in a
case of the present nature where it is clear that the
workmen are working under a contract. But it is only a veil
and that will have to be lifted to establish the
relationship between the parties. That exercise, we are
afraid, can also be done by the industrial tribunal under
the Bombay Industrial Relations Act, 1946 or under the
Industrial Disputes Act. Therefore, we are afraid that the
contention advanced very ably by Shri Singhvi on behalf of
the respondents cannot be accepted. Therefore, we hold that
the High Court went far beyond the scope of the provisions
of the Act and did not correctly understand the decisions of
this Court in Gujarat Electricity Board, Thermal Power
Station, Gujarat v. Hind Mazdoor Sabha (supra) and General
Labour Union (Red Flag), Bombay v. Ahmedabad Mfg. & Calico
Printing Co. Ltd & Ors. (supra). The correct
interpretation of these decisions will lead to the result,
which we have stated in the course of this order
In the view we have taken on the question of
jurisdiction of the Labour Court under the Act, the decision
given by the High Court on other questions need not be
considered.
In the circumstances, we allow this appeal, set aside
the order of the High Court and restore that of the
industrial court affirming the order of the labour court.
No costs.
[ S. RAJENDRA BABU ]
[S.N. Phukan]@@
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FEBRUARY 21, 2001.