Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SOM PRAKASH REKHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/11/1980
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1981 AIR 212 1981 SCR (2) 111
1981 SCC (1) 449
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC1499 (16)
R 1986 SC1571 (55)
R 1987 SC 51 (3)
R 1987 SC1086 (18)
APL 1988 SC 469 (9,10)
F 1989 SC1642 (24)
RF 1990 SC1167 (10,14)
RF 1992 SC 76 (2)
ACT:
Constitution of India-Burmah Shell (Acquisition of
Undertakings in India) Act, 1976-Company acquired by the
Government and vested in a statutory corporation-Corporation
if State-Test for determining whether a body is State within
the meaning of article 12.
HEADNOTE:
Under a voluntary retirement scheme in force in the
company the petitioner, a clerk in Burmah Shell Oil Storage
Ltd., retired voluntarily after qualifying for pension. The
pension payable to him was regulated by the terms of a trust
deed of 1950 under which a pension fund was set up and
regulations were made for its administration. The petitioner
was also covered by a scheme under the Employees Provident
Fund and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952 and to gratuity
under the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972.
The annual pension to which he was entitled under the
trust deed, without making the authorised deductions as
provided under regulation 16 of the trust deed, worked out
to a sum of Rs. 165.99 per mensem. He was also paid
supplementary retirement benefit of Rs. 86/- per month for a
period of 13 months after his retirement which was stopped
thereafter.
The employer informed the petitioner that from out of
his pension of Rs. 165.99 two deductions were made, one of
which was on account of employees provident fund payment
made to the pensioner and the other on account of payment of
gratuity with the result the pension payable to him was
shown as Rs. 40.05. The company also cut off the monthly
payment of Rs. 86/- which was paid as supplementary
retirement benefit on the score that it was ex gratia,
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discretionary and liable to be stopped at any time by the
employer.
In the meantime the company was statutorily taken over
by force of the Burmah Shell (Acquisition of Undertakings in
India) Act, 1976. Thereafter the Central Government took
steps to vest the undertaking in the second respondent, the
Bharat Petroleum, which then became the statutory successor
of the petitioner’s employer. His pensionary rights such as
he had, therefore, became claimable from the second
respondent.
A preliminary objection was raised on behalf of the
corporation that no writ would lie against the second
respondent since it is neither a government department nor a
statutory corporation but just a company.
^
HELD : By the Court :
The petitioner is entitled to the payment of full
pension.
(per majority Krishna Iyer and Chinnappa Reddy, JJ Pathak, J
dissenting).
1. The Bharat Petroleum is State within the meaning of
Article 12 of the Constitution and a writ will lie against
it under Article 32. [128A]
112
(a) The settled position in law is that any authority
under the control of Government of India comes within the
definition of State. On the appointed day the right title
and interest in Burmah Shell did vest in the Central
Government and by virtue of section 3 the Central Government
was the transferee of the undertaking. While the formal
ownership was cast in the corporate mould, the reality
reaches down to State control. The core fact is that the
Central Government, through section 7 chose to make over its
own property to its own offspring. Therefore, the Burmah
Shell though a government company is but the alter ego of
the Central Government and must, therefore, be treated as
definitionally caught in the net of State since a juristic
veil worn for certain legal purposes cannot obliterate the
true character of the entity for purposes of constitutional
law. [121A; G; 124 D-E]
(b) Corporate personality is a reality and not an
illusion or fictitious construction of the law. It is a
legal person. Merely because a company or other legal person
has functional and jural individuality for certain purposes
and in certain areas of law, it does not necessarily follow
that for the effective enforcement of fundamental rights
under the constitutional scheme, the Court should not scan
the real character of that entity. In the instant case
section 7 gives a statutory recognition and a status above a
mere government company. If the entity is no more than a
company under the Company Law or society under the law
relating to registered societies or cooperative societies
one cannot call it an authority. [124F; 125B, E]
(c) An authority in administrative law is a body having
jurisdiction in certain matters of a public nature.
Therefore, the ability conferred upon a person by the law to
alter, by his own will directed to that end, the rights,
duties, liabilities or other legal relations, either of
himself or of other persons must be present ab extra to make
a person an "authority". When the person is an ‘agent or
instrument of the functions of the State’ the power is
public. [125F-H]
Sometimes the test is formulated, by asking whether the
corporation is formed by a statute or under a statute. The
true test is not how legal person is born but why it is
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created. Apart from discharging functions or doing business
as the proxy of the State there must be an element of
ability to affect legal relations by virtue of power vested
in it by law. [126A-B]
(d) In the instant case sections 3 and 7 clothe the
company with State functions. Section 7 contemplates that
the company should step into the shoes of the executive
power of the State. The legislative history of the
corporation shows that it is more than a mere company
registered under the Companies Act. Matters like conditions
of service of employees, adjudication of disputes relating
to employees, superannuation and welfare funds and so on are
regulated statutorily unlike in the case of ordinary
companies. Sections 9 and 10 create rights and duties vis a
vis the government company itself apart from the Companies
Act. Section 11 specifically gives the Act primacy vis a vis
other laws. Section 12 clothes the Government company with
power to take delivery of the property of Burmah Shell from
every person in whose possession, custody or control such
property may be. Whatever its character antecedent to the
Act all the relevant provisions have transformed it into an
instrumentality of the Central Government with a strong
indicia of power to make it an "authority". It is a limb of
the Government, an agency of the State, a vicarious creature
of statute. [126C-H, 127B-C]
113
2. Some of the tests laid down by this Court for
deciding whether a body is State within the meaning of
Article 12 are :
(i) If the entire share capital of the corporation is
held by Government, it would go a long way towards
indicating that the corporation is an instrumentality or
agency of the Government;
(ii) A finding of State financial support plus an
unusual degree of control over the management and policies
might lead, one to characterise an operation as State
action.
(iii) The existence of deep and pervasive State control
may afford an indication that the Corporation is a State
agency or instrumentality.
(iv) Whether the corporation enjoys monopoly status
which is State conferred or State protected is a relevant
factor.
(v) If the functions of the corporation are important
public functions and related to governmental functions it
would be a relevant factor in classifying the corporation as
instrumentality or agency of the Government.
(vi) If a department of Government is transferred to a
corporation, it would be a strong factor supportive of the
inference that it is an instrumentality of the State. [137E-
H]
(vii) Where the chemistry of the corporate body answers
the test of State it comes within the definition of Article
12. [136D]
(viii) Whether the legal person is a corporation
created by a statute, as distinguished from under a statute
is not an important criterion although it may be an
indicium. [144H]
Airport Authority [1979] 3 S.C.C. 489, UP Warehousing
Corporation case (Managing Director, U.P. Warehousing Corpn.
v. V. N. Vajpayee) [1980] 3 S.C.C. 459 & Sukhdev Singh v.
Bhagatram [1975] 3 S.C.R. 619 referred to.
Rajasthan Electricity Board v. Mohan Lal [1967] 3
S.C.R. 377, Sukhdev v. Bhagatram [1975] 3 S.C.R. 619, Praga
Tool Corporation v. C. A. Immanuel [1969] 3 S.C.R. 773;
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Heavy Engineering Mazdoor Union v. State of Bihar [1969] 3
S.C.R. 995, S. L. Aggarwal v. General Manager, Hindustan
Steel Ltd. [1970] 3 S.C.R. 363 & Sabhajit Tewari v. Union of
India [1975] 3 S.C.R. 616 distinguished.
3(a) Having regard to the directive in Article 38 and
the amplitude of the other articles in part IV Government
may appropriately embark upon almost any activity which in a
non-socialist republic may fall within the private sector.
Any person’s employment, entertainment, travel, rest and
leisure, hospital facility and funeral service may be
controlled by the State and if all these enterprises are
executed through government companies, bureaus, societies,
councils, institutes and homes, the citizen may forfeit his
fundamental freedoms vis a vis these strange beings which
are government in fact but corporate in form. If only
fundamental rights were forbidden access to corporations,
companies, bureaus, institutes, councils and kindred bodies
which act as agencies of the administration there may be a
breakdown of the rule of law and the constitutional order in
a large sector of governmental activity carried on under the
guise of ‘jural persons’. It may
114
pave the way for a new tyranny by arbitrary administrators
operated from behind by Government but unaccountable to part
III of the Constitution. The Court cannot assent to an
interpretation which leads to such a disastrous conclusion
unless the language of Article 12 offers no other
alternative. [147C-F]
(b) It is dangerous to exonerate corporations from the
need to have constitutional conscience; and so that
interpretation, language permitting, which makes
governmental agencies, whatever their mein, amenable to
constitutional limitations must be adopted by the court as
against the alternative of permitting them to flourish as an
imperium in imperio. [148A-B]
(c) The common-sense signification of the expression
"other authorities under the control of the Government of
India" is plain and there is no reason to make exclusions on
sophisticated grounds such as that the legal person must be
a statutory corporation, must have power to make laws, must
be created by and not under a statute and so on. [148C]
4(a) It is clear from section 10 which relates to the
provident fund, pension, welfare fund and the like that the
second respondent has made provision for the rights and
interests of the beneficiaries of the trust established by
Burmah Shell for the benefit of persons employed by it. Sub-
section (1) puts this matter beyond doubt. This obligation
of the second respondent is a statutory one and having
regard to the provisions of section 11, it cannot be
affected by any instrument or decree or order. The stautory
continuation of a pre-existing liability to pay pension,
provident fund or gratuity, cannot be avoided having regard
to section 10. [150D-E]
(b) Assuming that regulation 16 authorities deduction
and that discretionary payments, although enjoyed by the
employees are liable to be stopped section 12 of the
Provident Fund Act forbids any such reduction or deduction
out of the benefits in the nature of old age pension on the
score of the payment of contribution to the provident fund.
The benignant provision contained in section 12 must receive
a benignant construction and even if two interpretations are
permissible, that which furthers the beneficial object
should be preferred. From that perspective the inference is
reasonable that the total quantum of benefits in the nature
of old age pension, gratuity or provident fund, shall not be
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reduced by reason only of the liability of the employer for
payment of contribution to the fund. The section prevails
over the trust deed. The provident fund accrues by statutory
force and section 12 overrides any agreement authorising
deductions. The expression ‘instrument’ contained in section
15 covers a trust deed and notwithstanding the deduction
that may be sanctioned by the trust deed, the overriding
effect of section 14 preserves the pension and immunises it
against any deduction attributable to the statutory payment
of the provident fund. The deduction made by the second
respondent is in that event illegal. [151A-H]
(c) If regulation 16 is a provision which imposes a cut
in certain eventualities it is possible to hold that the
employee has a certain pensionary right. But if he draws
provident fund or gratuity that pension will be pared down
by a separate rule of deduction from the pension. It follows
that there is no straining of the language of the
regulations to mean, firstly, a right to pension quantified
in certain manner and, secondly, a right in the Management
to make deduction from out of that pension if other retiral
benefits are drawn by the employee. That appears to be the
pension scheme.
115
If this be correct, there is no substance in the argument
that the pension itself is automatically reduced into a
smaller scale of pension on the drawl of provident fund or
gratuity. Pension is one thing, deduction is another. The
latter is independent of pension and operates on the pension
to amputate it, as it were. If a law forbids such cut or
amputation the pension remains intact. [152B-D]
(d) The payment of gratuity or provident fund should
not occasion any deduction from the pension as a "set-off".
Otherwise, the solemn statutory provisions ensuring
provident fund and gratuity become illusory. Pensions are
paid out of regard for past meritorious services. The root
of gratuity and the foundation of provident fund are
different. Each one is a salutary benefaction statutorily
guaranteed independently of the other. Even assuming that by
private treaty parties had otherwise agreed to deductions
before the coming into force of these beneficial enactments
they cannot now be deprivatory. It is precisely to guard
against such mischief that the non-obstante and overriding
provisions are engrafted on these statutes. [152F-G]
(e) It is not open to the second respondent to deduct
from the full pension any sum based upon regulation 16 read
with regulation 13. If regulation 16 which now has acquired
statutory flavour, having been adapted and continued by
statutory rules, operates contrary to the provisions of the
P.F. Act and the Gratuity Act, it must fail as invalid.
[153C]
(f) What is discretionary depends on the discretion of
the employer. But that power when exercised by an agency of
government like the second respondent, must be based upon
good faith and due care. If as a measure of reprisal or
provoked by the drawl of gratuity, or by resort to legal
authorities, such supplementary benefit is struck off, it
will cease to be bona fide or valid. [153D-E]
Pathak, J. (dissenting)
On the merits the petitioner should be granted relief
as proposed by the majority. [154 G]
It is difficult to accept the proposition that the
Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited is a "State" within the
meaning of Article 12 of the Constitution, but the matter
appears to be concluded because of the direction taken by
the law since Ramana Dayaram Shetty v. International Airport
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Authority [1979] 3 S.C.R. 489 a wider range of debate on the
fundamental principles involved in the issue would have been
welcomed in view of the implications flowing from the
definition of a "government company" in the Companies Act,
1956. [154 D]
The provisions of the Burmah Shell (Acquisition of
Undertakings in India) Act, 1976 do not alter the basic
nature of a "government company". They are provisions which
could well have been applied to a private corporation, if
the Act had selected one for vesting the undertaking in it.
Had that been done, they would not have made the private
corporation a State. [154F]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 1212 of 1977.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution).
Petitioner in Person.
S. Markendeya and Miss A. Subhashini for Respondent No.
1.
G. B. Pai, O. C. Mathur and K. J. John for Respondent
No. 2.
116
P. R. Mridul, M. K. Ramamurthi and Jitendra Sharma for
the Intervener (The Petroleum Workers’ Union)
P. N. Tiwari (Secretary of Union) for the Intervener
(Petroleum Employees’ Union).
B. B. Sawhney and B. P. Ghosh for the Intervener (C. H.
Kewalramani).
The Judgment of V. R. Krishna Iyer and O. C. Reddy, JJ.
was delivered by Krishna Iyer, J. Pathak, J. gave a
dissenting Opinion.
KRISHNA IYER, J.-Three seminal issues arise in this
little lis harbouring larger principles. We may state them,
each with a quote to drive home the social stakes, and then
proceed to the pedestrian factual-legal narrative and
discussion.
"They (corporations) cannot commit treason, nor be
out-lawed, nor excommunicated, for they have no souls."
(Edward Coke, Sutton’s Hospital Case)
A legal power, which projects an awesome portent has
been sprung upon the court by the defending respondent-. The
Bharat Petroleum Corporation Ltd (the Corporation, for
short)-as to whether a writ will issue under Art. 32 of the
Constitution against a government company, belonging, as it
does, to an increasing tribe of soulless ubiquity and
claiming, as it does, to constitutional immunity. This is
the first issue to which he will address ourselves.
Jawaharlal Nehru warned the Constituent Assembly about
the problem of poverty and social change :
The service of India means the service of the
millions who suffer. It means the ending of poverty and
ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.
The ambition of the greatest man of our generation has
been to wipe every tear from every eye. That may be
beyond us, but as long as there are tears and
sufferings, so long our work will not be over.
The second question which claims our attention turns on
the petitioner’s plea of alleged stultification of Art. 41
by the State itself reincarnating as a government company,
by defending the paring down the pension of the petitioner
to a pathetic pittance thus sterilising a directive
principle to a decorative paper.
117
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Law cannot stand aside from the social changes
around it.
(Justice Brennan in Roth v. United States 354 U.S. 476)
The third problem, not humdrum but heuristic, turns on
the construction of the relevant legislations and
regulations covered by the writ petition, remembering the
social dynamics of the law of statutory interpretation.
This writ petition under Art. 32 relates to a poor
employee’s small pension on retirement and the legality of
the deductions effected by the employer which make the net
sum payable traumatically trivial (Rs. 40/-). A principle of
wider application is involved beyond the individual’s
pensionary fate.
The petitioner was employed as a clerk in the Burmah
Shell Oil Storage Ltd., (Burmah Shell, for short) and
retired betimes (at 50) after qualifying for a pension, on
April 1, 1973. He was also covered by a scheme under the
Employees Provident Funds and Family Pension Fund Act, 1952
(for short, the PF Act). The employer undertaking was
statutorily taken over by force of The Burmah Shell
(Acquisition of Undertakings in India) Act, 1976
(hereinafter called the Act). Thereafter, the Central
Government, acting under the statute, took necessary steps
for the vesting of the Undertaking in the second respondent,
the Corporation and became the statutory successor of the
petitioner’s employer. His pensionary rights, such as he
had, therefore, became claimable from the second respondent.
What was the quantum ? Was any cut illegally effected by
Burmah Shell and continued by respondent 2 ? Could a writ be
issued against the second respondent in respect of the cut ?
These are the questions argued before us. The petitioner-
pensioner, being too poor, Shri Parekh, assigned by the
Legal Aid Society, appeared promptly and argued
passionately. At a re-hearing, the petitioner preferred to
make a few brief supplementary submissions on his own.
The pensionary provision for the Burmah Shell employees
depended on the terms of a Trust Deed of 1950 under which a
Pension Fund was set up and regulations were made for its
administration. Regulations 13 and 15 entitled the
petitioner to pension and contained the formula for
quantification. Regulation 13 has a significant clause :
"less the authorised deductions specified in reg. 16, namely
......". The bone of contention between the parties is about
these
118
deductions and we may set out this Regulation (relevant
part) even here :
16. The authorised deductions to be made in
calculating the amount of a non-contributing member’s
pension shall be as follows :
(1) A sum equal to four per cent of such amount
standing to the credit of the member at the relevant
date in any Provident Fund as represents any Company’s
contributions to that fund in respect of the period of
the member’s Accredited Service (including bonuses and
interest on such contributions upto that date).
(2) A sum equal to four per cent of any amount
which before the relevant date the member has withdrawn
from a Provident Fund in so far as such withdrawal is
under the Rules of the Provident Fund charged against
the period of the member’s Accredited Service
(including bonuses and interest thereon) or has been
paid out to him during his Accredited Service under the
Rules of Provident Fund, together with interest thereon
from the date of such withdrawal or receipt to the
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relevant date.
(3) If the Company so elects, a sum not exceeding
six per cent of the amount of any payments which any
company has made or may make or which any company shall
be or have been required by law to make to the member
in connection with the termination of his service with
that company together with interest thereon from the
date of payments down to the relevant date.
The Pension Fund, on the vesting of Burmah Shell in
Respondent 2, came to be administered by the latter under
the Burmah Shell (Acquisition of Undertakings in India)
(Administration of Fund) Rules, 1976. The Rules provided for
the Government company, viz. Respondent 2 acting in
accordance with the provisions of the rules and regulations
applicable to or of any law governing the respective
Provident Fund, Welfare Fund or other fund and in force
immediately before the 24th day of January, 1976.
If any legal provision overrode the regulation
authorising deductions the 2nd respondent could and should
act according to the legislation. Thus, the statutory rules
for administering pensionary matters direct Respondent 2 to
conform to ‘any law’ governing provident fund and like
items. And if, as is contended before us by the petitioner,
119
such law exists, the regulation based deduction ceases to be
an ‘authorised deduction’.
By virtue of reg. 13, the petitioner was entitled to a
pension of Rs. 165.99 subject to certain deductions which
form the controversy in this case. He was also being paid
Supplementary Retirement Benefit of Rs. 86/- per month for a
period of 13 months after his retirement which was stopped
thereafter. This stoppage is also assailed before us.
By letter dated September 25, 1974, the employer
(Burmah Shell) explained that from out of the pension of Rs.
165.99 two deductions were authorised by reg. 16. One such
deduction was based on reg. 16(1) because of Employees
Provident Fund payment to the pensioner and the other rested
on reg. 16(3) on account of payment of gratuity.
Resultantly, the ‘pension payable’ was shown as Rs. 40.05.
The case becomes clear if one more fact is mentioned.
The petitioner claimed and received his Provident Fund
amount under the PF Act and recovered a gratuity amount due
under the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972 (for short, the
Gratuity Act). It is necessary to mention that Burmah Shell
was refused exemption, under s. 5, from the operation of
this Act (vide Annexure F to the Writ Petition). In short,
two sums, one under the PF Act and the other under the
Gratuity Act, were drawn by the pensioner. Consequent on
this, Burmah Shell made 2 deductions from the petitioner’s
pension, taking its stand on reg. 16 read with reg. 13
already referred to. Indeed, the company went even beyond
this, in its letter of May 8, 1974, by cutting off the
monthly payment of Rs. 86/- paid as Supplementary Retirement
Benefit on the score that it was ex gratia, discretionary
and liable to be stopped any time by the employer.
The petitioner was intimated by the Burmah Shell that
consequent on his drawal of provident fund and gratuity
benefits, the quantum of his pension would suffer a pro
tanto shrinkage, leaving a monthly puny pension of Rs. 40/-.
Since no superannuated soul can survive, in Indian indigence
and inflationary spiral, on Rs. 40/- per month, the
petitioner has come to this court challenging the deductions
from his original pension as illegal and inhuman and
demanding restoration of the full sum which he was
originally drawing. His right to property under Art. 19 has
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been violated, he claims.
It may well be, as urged by the Corporation, that if
reg. 16 does govern, the deductions are warranted. Likewise,
if the Supplementary Retiral Benefit is purely a mercy
gesture, savouring of no manner of right nor subject to
restrictions on discretionary exercise, the sudden
120
stoppage of that sum perhaps not illegal. It may be
heartless, but not necessarily lawless, for a prosperous
undertaking, now in the public sector, which pays over-
generous salaries to higher officials and liberal scales
even to its lesser employees, to destroy the pensionary
survival of an erstwhile employee who had served 28 long and
fruitful years of his limited span of life for the profit of
his employer.
Justice according to law being the rule, let us examine
the validity of the rival contentions. The employer relies
on reg. 16 and the pensioner rests his claim on its
invalidity. The mantle of ‘Burmah Shell’ has statutorily
fallen on ‘Bharat Petroleum’ and it cannot be controverted
that if reg. 16, read with reg. 13, be valid the second
respondent can insist on its ‘pound of flesh’ and claim
lawfully that the deductions made are ‘authorised’ and the
discretion to stop supplementary pension is charity which
can be choked off at pleasure or anger.
A preliminary objection has been raised by Shri G. B.
Pai that no writ will lie against the second respondent
since it is neither a government department nor a statutory
corporation but just a company and so the court should
reject out of hand this proceeding under Art. 32. We do see
the force of this contention, notwithstanding the
observations in the Airport Authority Case, that the status
of ‘State’ will attach to the government companies like the
second respondent.
Let us first look at the facts emerging from the Act
and the superimpose the law in Art. 12 which conceptualises
‘State’ for the purposes of Part III. After all, cynicism
apart, Mark Twain is good chewing gum for lawyers :(3)
Get your facts first, and then you can distort
them as much as you please.
It is common ground that the present writ petition, invoking
Art. 32, is limited to issuing directions or orders or writs
for the enforcement of fundamental rights and the question
is whether the addressee is the ‘State’ within the meaning
of Art. 12 of the Constitution. We will examine this
position more closely a little later, but granting that Art.
19 is aimed at State action the contours of ‘State’,
conceptually speaking, are largely confined to Art. 12. We
have to study the anatomy of the Corporation in the setting
of the Act and decide whether it comes within the scope of
that Article. We have only an inclusive definition, not a
conclusive definition. One thing is clear. Any authority
under
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the control of the Government of India comes within the
definition. Before expanding on this theme, we may scan the
statutory scheme, the purpose of the legislative project and
the nature of the juristic instrument it has created for
fulfillment of that purpose. Where constitutional
fundamentals, vital to the survival of human rights, are at
stake functional realism, not facial cosmetics, must be the
diagnostic tool. Law, constitutional law, seeks the
substance, not merely the form. For, one may look like the
innocent flower but be the serpent under it. The preamble,
which ordinarily illumines the object of the statute, makes
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it plain that what is intended and achieved is
nationalisation of an undertaking of strategic importance :
AND WHEREAS it is expedient in the public interest
that the undertakings in India, of Burmah Shell Oil
Storage and Distributing Company of India Limited,
should be acquired in order to ensure that the
ownership and control of the petroleum products
distributed and marketed in India by the said company
are vested in the State and thereby so distributed as
best to subserve the common good;
It is true that what is nationalised is a private enterprise
motivated, undoubtedly, by the need for transferring the
ownership and control of the company and its petroleum
products distributed and marketed in India. Section 3 is
important from this angle :
3. On the appointed day, the right, title and
interest of Burmah Shell, in relation to its
undertakings in India, shall stand transferred to, and
shall vest in the Central Government.
This provision lays bare the central object of making
the Central Government the proprietor of the undertaking. It
hardly needs argument to convince a court that by virtue of
s. 3, the Central Government is the transferee of the
Undertaking. Had a writ proceeding been commenced during the
period of vesting in the Central Government, it could not
have been resisted on the score that the employer is not
"the State". The appointed day did arrive and the right,
title and interest in Burmah Shell did vest in the Central
Government.
A commercial undertaking although permitted to be run
under our constitutional scheme by Government, may be better
managed with professional skills and on business principles,
guided, of course, by social goals, if it were administered
with commercial fexibility and celerity free from
departmental rigidity, slow motion procedures and
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hierarchy of officers. That is why a considerable part of
the public undertakings is in the corporate sector.
It is interesting that with the industrial expansion,
economics was assisted by jurisprudence and law invented or
at least expanded the corporate concept to facilitate
economic development consistently with the rule of law. Said
Woodrow Wilson, several decades back :
There was a time when corporations played a minor
part in our business affairs, but now they play the
chief part, and most men are the servants of
corporations.
And Franklin D. Roosevelt mourned :
Concentration of economic power in all embracing
corporations.....represents private enterprise become a
kind of private government which is a power unto
itself-a regimentation of other people’s money and
other people’s lives.
This legal facility of corporate instrument came to be used
by the State in many countries as a measure of immense
convenience especially in its commercial ventures. The
trappings of personality, liberation from governmental
stiffness and capacity for mammoth growth, together with
administrative elasticity, are the attributes and advantages
of corporations.
A corporation is an artificial being, invisible,
intangible, and existing only in the contemplation of
the law. Being the mere creature of the law, it
possesses only those properties which the charter of
its creation confers on it, either expressly, or as
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incidental to its very existence. Those are such as are
supposed best calculated to effect the object for which
it was created. Among the most important are
immortality, and, if the expression be allowed,
individuality; properties by which a perpetual
succession of many persons are considered the same, and
may act as a single individual.
Although corporate personality is not a modern invention,
its adaptation to embrace the wide range of industry and
commerce has a modern favour. Welfare States like ours
called upon to execute many economic projects readily resort
to this resourceful legal contrivance because of its
practical advantages without a wee-bit of diminution in
ownership and control of the Undertaking. The true owner is
the
123
State, the real operator is the State and the effective
controllerate is the State and accountability for its
actions to the community and to Parliament is of the State.
Nevertheless, a distinct juristic person with a corporate
structure conducts the business, with the added facilities
enjoyed by companies and keeping the quasi-autonomy which
comes in handy from the point of view of business
management. Be it remembered though that while the formal
ownership is cast in the corporate mould, the reality
reaches down to State control. With this background we have
to read s. 7 of the Act which runs thus :
7. (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sections 3, 4 and 5, the Central Government may, if
satisfied that a Government company is willing to
comply, or has complied with such terms and conditions
as that Government may think fit to impose, direct by
notification that the right, title and interest and the
liabilities of Burmah Shell in relation to any of its
undertakings in India, shall instead of continuing to
vest in the Central Government, vest in the Government
company....
(emphasis added)
The core fact is that the Central Government, through this
provision, chooses to make over, for better management, its
own property to its own offspring. A government company is a
mini-incarnation of Government itself, made up of its blood
and bones and given corporate shape and status for defined
objectives, not beyond.
Nor is this any isolated experiment in government
formally transferring ownership to a company. There are a
number of statutory take-overs in India as in other
countries, where the initial vesting is in government,
followed by a later transfer to another instrumentality-may
be an existing government company or a corporation created
by statute or even a society or other legal person. In the
present case, a government company was created anteriorly
and by virtue of a notification under s. 7 it became the
transferee of the right, title and interest as well as the
liabilities of Burmah Shell.
The device is too obvious for deception that what is
done is a formal transfer from government to a government-
company as the notification clearly spells out :
In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section
(1) of Section 7 of the Burmah Shell (Acquisition of
Under takings in India) Act, 1976 (2 of 1976), the
Central Government, being satisfied that Burmah-Shell
Refineries Ltd., a Government company is willing to
comply with such terms and conditions as may be imposed
by the Central Government
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hereby directs that the right, title and interest and
the liabilities of Burmah-Shell Oil Storage and
Distributing Co. of India Ltd. in relation to its
undertakings in India, shall, instead of continuing to
vest in the Central Government vest with effect from
the twenty fourth day of January, 1976, in Burmah-Shell
Refineries Ltd.
This is the well-worn legal strategy for government to run
economic and like enterprises. We live in an era of public
sector corporations, the State being the reality behind, Law
does not hoodwink itself and what is but a strategy cannot
be used as a stratagem :
These are the facts when we come to brass tacks. Facts
form the raw material out of which the finished product of
judicial finding is fabricated after processing through
established legal principles. Indeed, in life as in law "it
is as fatal as it is cowardly to blink facts because they
are not to our taste". What, then, are the basic facts
available from the Act ? Constitutional law is not a game of
hide and seek but practical real-life conclusions. So
viewed, we are constrained to hold that Burmah-Shell, a
government company though, is but the alter ego of the
Central Government and must, therefore, be treated as
definitionally caught in the net of ’State’ since a juristic
veil worn for certain legal purposes cannot obliterate the
true character of the entity for the purposes of
constitutional law.
If we distil the essence of Art. 12 textually and
apprehend the expanded meaning of "State" as interpreted
precedentially, we may solve the dilemma as to whether the
Bharat Petroleum is but a double of Bharat Sarkar. Let us be
clear that the jurisprudence bearing on corporations is not
myth but reality. What we mean is that corporate personality
is a reality and not an illusion or fictitious construction
of the law. It is a legal person. Indeed, ’a legal person’
is any subject matter other than a human being to which the
law attributes personality. "This extension, for good and
sufficient reasons, of the conception of personality....is
one of the most noteworthy feats of the legal imagination."
Corporations are one species of legal persons invented by
the law and invested with a variety of attributes so as to
achieve certain purposes sanctioned by the law. For those
purposes, a corporation or company has a legal existence all
its own. The characteristics of corporations, their rights
and liabilities, functional autonomy and juristic status,
are jurisprudentially recognised as of a distinct entity
even where such corporations are but State agencies or
instrumentalities. For purposes of the Companies Act, 1956,
a government company has a distinct personality which cannot
be con-
125
fused with the State. Likewise, a statutory corporation
constituted to carry on a commercial or other activity is
for many purposes a distinct juristic entity not drowned in
the sea of State, although, in substance, its existence may
be but a projection of the State. What we wish to emphasise
is that merely because a company or other legal person has
functional and jural individuality for certain purposes and
in certain areas of law, it does not necessarily follow that
for the effective enforcement of fundamental rights under
our constitutional scheme, we should not scan the real
character of that entity; and if it is found to be a mere
agent or surrogate of the State, in fact owned by the State,
in truth controlled by the State and in effect an
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incarnation of the State, constitutional lawyers must not
blink at these facts and frustrate the enforcement of
fundamental rights despite the inclusive definition of Art.
12 that any authority controlled by the Government of India
is itself State. Law has many dimensions and fundamental
facts must govern the applicability of fundamental rights in
a given situation.
Control by Government of the corporation is writ large
in the Act and in the factum of being a government company.
Moreover, here, s. 7 gives to the government company
mentioned in it a statutory recognition, a legislative
sanction and a status above a mere government company. If
the entity is no more than a company under the Company Law
or society under the law relating to registered societies or
co-operative societies you cannot call it an authority. A
ration shop run by a cooperative store financed by
Government is not an authority being a mere merchant, not a
sharer of State power. ’Authority’ in law belongs to the
province of power:
Authority (in Administrative Law) is a body having
jurisdiction in certain matters of a public nature.
Therefore, the "ability conferred upon a person by the
law to alter, by his own will directed to that end, the
rights, duties, liabilities or other legal relations, either
of himself or of other persons" must be present ab extra to
make a person an ’authority’. When the person is an ’agent
or instrument of the functions of the State’ the power is
public. So the search here must be to see whether the Act
vests authority, as agent or instrument of the State, to
affect the legal relations of oneself or others.
126
Sometimes the test is formulated, over-simplified
fashion, by asking whether the corporation is formed by a
statute or under a statute. The true test is functional. Not
how the legal person is born but why it is created. Nay
more. Apart from discharging functions or doing business as
the proxy of the State, wearing the corporate mask there
must be an element of ability to affect legal relations by
virtue of power vested in it by law.
In the present instance, the source of both, read in
the light of ss. 3 and 7, is saturated with State functions.
Avowedly, the statutory contemplation, as disclosed by s. 7,
is that the company should step into the shoes of the
executive power of the State. The legislative milieu in
which the second respondent came to be the successor of
Burmah Shell suggests that the former is more than a mere
company registered under the Companies Act. It has a
statutory flavour acquired under s. 7. Moreover, everything
about the second respondent in the matter of employees,
their provident, superannuation and welfare funds, is
regulated statutorily unlike in the case of ordinary
companies. Sections 9 and 10 deal with these aspects. These
two provisions which regulate the conditions of service and
even provide for adjudication of disputes relating to
employees indicate that some of the features of a statutory
corporation attach to this government company. Sections 9
and 10, in terms, create rights and duties vis a vis the
government company itself apart from the Companies Act. An
ordinary company, even a government company simpliciter has
not the obligation cast on the second respondent by ss. 9
and 10. And s.11 specifically gives the Act primacy vis a
vis other laws. Section 12, although it has no bearing on
the specific dispute we are concerned in this case, is a
clear pointer to the statutory character of the government
company and the vesting of an authority therein. This
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provision clothes the government company with power to take
delivery of the property of Burmah Shell from every person
in whose possession, custody or control such property may
be. There are other powers akin to this one in s. 12. The
provision for penalties if any person meddles with the
property of the second respondent emphasises the special
character of this government company. Equally unique is the
protection conferred by s. 16 on the government company and
its officers and employees "for anything which is, in good
faith, done or untended to be done under this Act". Such an
immunity does not attach to employees of companies
simpliciter, even if they happen to be government companies.
In the same strain is the indemnity conferred by s. 18. This
review, though skeletal, is sufficient strikingly to bring
home the point that the Corporation we are concerned with is
more than a mere government company. Whatever its character
127
antecedent to the Act, the provisions we have adverted to
have transformed it into an instrumentality of the Central
Government with a strong statutory flavour super-added and
clear indicia of power to make it an "authority". Although
registered as a company under the Indian Companies Act, the
second respondent is clearly a creature of the statute, the
Undertaking having vested in it by force of s. 7 of the Act.
The various provisions to which our attention was drawn, an
elaboration of which is not called for, emphasise the fact
that the second respondent is not a mere company but much
more than that and has a statutory flavour in its operations
and functions, in its powers and duties, and in its
personality itself, apart from being functionally and
administratively under the thumb of government. It is a limb
of government, an agency of the State, a vicarious creature
of statute working on the wheels of the Acquisition Act. We
do not mean to say that for purposes of Art. 309 or
otherwise this government company is State but limit our
holding to Art. 12 and Part III.
We may now proceed to examine the authorities cited
before us by both sides on this point with special reference
to Art. 12 of the Constitution vis a vis government
companies and like bodies. Shri G. B. Pai concedes that the
recent trend of rulings of this Court has broadened the
concept of "authorities.... under the control of the
Government of India." For instance, the Airport Authority
Case and the U.P. Warehousing Corporation case. His
submission is that the core question which called for
decision in those cases did not demand pronouncement on the
larger issue of what is "State" under Art. 12 and also ran
counter to the earlier rulings by larger benches. True, a
tour of the case-law runs zigzag, but guided by principle
and jurisprudential discernment, it is possible to reach the
same destination to which the two rulings referred to above
take us. Shri G. B. Pai pressed us to reconsider the latest
decisions in view of their error when read in the
perspective of prior rulings by referring the issue to a
larger bench. We will presently explain by examining the
earlier cases why we hold the recent decisions to be right
and reconcilable with the broad approach in the older
authorities. Moreover, rulings of this court are calculated
to settle the law and not to unsettle it by reconsideration
in season and out merely because it hurts one party or the
other or tastes sour for one judge or the other. If
incompatibility between the ratios stares us in the face we
must clear the confusion by the process suggested by Shri
Pai. But we are satisfied that the Airport Authority
128
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(supra) has been consistently and correctly decided and,
being bound by it, hold that a writ will lie against the
second respondent under Art. 32. An explanatory journey is
necessary to make good this assertion.
The UP Warehousing Corporation case (supra)-the latest
on the point-related to a statutory corporation and the
litigation was by an employee for wrongful dismissal. One of
the questions considered there was the maintainability of a
writ petition against a statutory corporation at the
instance of an employee. The court reviewed many decisions,
Indian and English, and upheld the employee’s contention
that the writ could and should issue to such a body if
illegality were established. It is significant that pointed
reference has been made to Sukhdev Singh, Airport Authority
(supra), and the judgment of the House of Lords in Malloch
v. Aberdeen Corpn., Sarkaria, J. adverted to the
observations of Lord Wilberforce that in cases where there
is an element of public employment or service, or support by
statute or something in the nature of public office or
status, the court would correct illegal acts. Of course, the
specific question as to whether such a body could be
regarded as ’State’ did not and could not arise in the
English case. But it did arise in the Airport Authority
(supra) where Bhagwati, J. launched on an international
survey of this branch of jurisprudence and highlighted the
factors which made a legal person-a statutory corporation, a
government company or even a registered society-"an agency
or instrumentality of government" and therefore an
’authority’ for purposes of Art. 12. The forensic focus was
turned sharply by one of us (Chinnappa Reddy, J. who was
party to that decision) on the target issue of what it "the
State" for purposes of Part III. The crucial observations
which have pertinence to the point argued before us deserve
excerption and enjoy our affirmation:
I find it very hard indeed to discover any
distinction on principle between a person directly
under the employment of the government and a person
under the employment of an agency or instrumentality of
the government or a corporation, set up under a statute
or incorporated but wholly owned by the government. It
is self-evident and trite to say that the function of
the State has long since ceased to be confined to the
preservation of the public peace, the exaction of taxes
and the defence of its frontiers. It is now the
function of the
129
State to secure ’social, economic and political
justice’, to preserve ’liberty of thought, expression,
belief, faith and worship’, and to ensure ’equality of
status and of opportunity’. That is the proclamation of
the people in the preamble to the Constitution. The
desire to attain these objectives has necessarily
resulted in intense governmental activity in manifold
ways. Legislative and executive activity have reached
very far and have touched very many aspects of a
citizen’s life. The government, directly or through the
corporations, set up by it or owned by it, now owns or
manages, a large number of industries and institutions.
It is the biggest builder in the country. Mammoth and
minor irrigation projects, heavy and light engineering
projects, projects of various kinds are undertaken by
the government. The government is also the biggest
trader in the country. The State and the multitudinous
agencies and corporations set up by it are the
principal purchasers of the produce and the products of
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our country and they control a vast and complex
machinery of distribution. The government, its agencies
and instrumentalities, corporations set up by the
government under the statutes and corporations
incorporated under the Companies Act but owned by the
Government have thus become the biggest employers in
the country. There is no good reason why, if government
is bound to observe the equality clauses of the
Constitution in the matter of employment and in its
dealings with the employees, the corporations set up or
owned by the government should not be equally bound and
why, instead, such corporations could become citadels
of patronage and arbitrary action. In a country like
ours which teems with population, where the State, its
agencies, its instrumentalities and its corporations
are the biggest employers and where millions seek
employment and security, to confine the applicability
of the equality clauses of the Constitution, in
relation to matters of employment, strictly to direct
employment under the government is perhaps to mock at
the Constitution and the people. Some the employee
beyond the reach of the rule which denies him access to
a court to enforce a contract of employment and denies
him the protection of Articles 14 and 16 of the
Constitution. After all employment in the public sector
has grown to vast dimensions and employees in the
public sector often discharge as onerous duties as
civil servants and parti-
130
cipate in activities vital to our country’s economy. In
growing realisation of the importance of employment in
the public sector, Parliament and the Legislatures of
the States have declared persons in the service of
local authorities, government companies and statutory
corporations as public servants and, extended to them
by express enactment the protection usually extended to
civil servants from suits and prosecution. It is,
therefore, but right that the independence and
integrity of those employed in the public sector should
be secured as much as the independence and integrity of
servants.
The compelling force of this reasoning in the Indian setting
and constitutional matrix cannot be missed.
Let us dilate a little on the living essence of
constitutional fundamentals if we are not to reduce
fundamental rights to paper hopes and people’s dupes ! The
judicial branch shall not commit breach of faith with the
bill of rights by interpretative exoneration of the State
from observance of these founding faiths. The higher values
enacted into Part III of the Constitution certainly bind the
State in its executive and legislative branches. They are
constitutional guarantees to the Indian people, not fleeting
promises in common enactments. So long as they last in the
National Charter they should not be truncated in their
application unless a contra-indication is clearly written
into the prescription, a la Arts. 31A, 31B and 31C. Art. 12
is a special definition with a broader goal. Far from
restricting the concept of State it enlarges the scope to
embrace all authorities under the control of Government. The
constitutional philosophy of a democratic, socialist
Republic mandated to undertake a multitude of socioeconomic
operations inspires Part IV and so we must envision the
State entering the vast territory of industrial and
commercial activity, competitively or monopolistically, for
ensuring the welfare of the people. This expansive role of
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the State under Part IV is not played at the expense of the
cherished rights of the people entrenched in Part III since
both the sets of imperatives are complementary and co-exist
harmoniously. Wherever the Constitution has felt the need to
subordinate Part III to Part IV it has specificated it and,
absent such expression provision, both the Parts must and
can flourish happily together given benign judicial
comprehension a Kerala v. Thomas. There is no inherent
conflict between the two parts if orchestrated humanely. We
are at pains to emphasise this perspective because the
substance of Part III, save where the Constitution says so,
shall not be sacrificed at the altar of Part IV by the
stratagem of incorporation. It is well known, and
131
surely within the erudite and experienced ken of our
’founding fathers’, that Government embarks on myriad modern
commercial activities by resort to the jurisprudential gift
of personification through incorporation. This contrivance
of carrying on business activities by the State through
statutory corporations, government companies and other
bodies with legal personality, simplifies and facilitates
transactions and operations beyond the traditional and tardy
processes of governmental desks and cells noted for their
red tape exercise and drowsy dharma. But to use the
corporate methodology is not to liberate the State from its
basic obligation to obey Part III. To don the mantle of
company is to free the State from the inevitable constraints
of governmental slow-motion, not to play truant with the
great rights. Otherwise, a cunning plurality of corporations
taking over almost every State business-the post and the
rail-road, the T.V. and the radio, every economic ministry’s
activity, why, even social welfare work-will cheat the
people of Part III rights by the easy plea: "No admission
for the bill of rights; no State here." From Indian Posts
and Telegraphs Limited to Indian Defence Manufacturers
Limited, from Social Welfare Board to Backward Classes
Corporation the nation will be told that ’the State has
ceased to be, save for the non-negotiable sovereign
functions; and fundamental rights may suffer eclipse only to
be viewed in museum glass cases. Such a situation will be a
treachery on the founding fathers, a mockery of the
Constitution and a government by puppetry because the crowd
of corporations which have carved out all functions will
still be controlled completely by the switch boards of
bureaucrats and political bosses from remote control rooms
in Government Secretariats. The extended definition of "the
State" in Art. 12 is not to be deadened but quickened by
judicial construction. Before our eyes the corporate
phenomenon is becoming ubiquitous. What was archaically done
yesterday by government departments is alertly executed to-
day by government companies, statutory corporations and like
bodies and this tribe may legitimately increase tomorrow.
This efficiency is not to be purchased at the price of
fundamental rights. As Mathew J. stated in V. Punnan Thomas
v. State of Kerala:
The Government, is not and should not be as free
as an individual in selecting the recipients for its
largesse. Whatever its activity, the Government is
still the Government and will be subject to restraints
inherent in its position in a democratic society. A
democratic Government cannot lay down arbitrary and
capricious standards for the choice of persons with
whom alone it will deal.
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What’s in a name that which we call a rose By any other
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name would smell as sweet.
And the State is fragrant with fundamental rights whatever
the legal hue or jural cloak of its surrogate. And, to alter
the imagery, Maricha is Ravana, the misleading golden deer
mask notwithstanding!
This court in Airport Authority (supra) pointed its
unanimous finger on these events and portents:
Today with tremendous expansion of welfare and
social service functions, increasing control of
material and economic resources and large scale
assumption of industrial and commercial activities by
the State, the power of the executive Government to
affect the lives of the people is steadily growing. The
attainment of socioeconomic justice being a conscious
end of State policy, there is a vast and inevitable
increase in the frequency with which ordinary citizens
came into relationship of direct encounter with State
power-holders. This renders it necessary to structure
and restrict the power of the executive Government so
as to prevent its arbitrary application or
exercise.....................
Today the Government in a welfare State, is the
regulator and dispenser of special services and
provider of a large number of benefits, including jobs,
contracts, licences, quotas, mineral rights, etc. The
Government pours forth wealth, money, benefits,
services, contracts, quotas and licences. The valuables
dispensed by Government take many forms, but they all
share one characteristic. They are steadily taking the
place of traditional forms of wealth. These valuables
which derive from relationships of Government are of
many kinds. They comprise social security benefits,
cash grants for political sufferers and the whole
scheme of State and local welfare. Then again,
thousands of people are employed in the State and the
Central Governments and local authorities. Licences are
required before one can engage in many kinds of
businesses or work. The power of giving licences means
power to withhold them and this gives control to the
Government or to the agents of Government on the lives
of many people. Many individuals and many more business
enjoy largesse in the form of Government contracts
........All these mean growth in the Government
largesse and with the increasing magnitude and range of
governmental
133
functions as we move closer to a welfare State, more
and more of our wealth consists of these new forms.
We do not suggest that there is any vice at all in
government undertaking commercial or other activities
through the facile device of companies or other bodies. But
to scuttle Part III through the alibi of ’company, not
State’-’ay, there’s the rub !’ The rationale of this
proposition is well brought by Bhagwati, J :
So far as India is concerned, the genesis of the
emergence of corporations as instrumentalities or
agencies of Government is to be found in the Government
of India Resolution on Industrial Policy dated April 6,
1948 where it was stated inter alia that "management of
State enterprise will as a rule be through the medium
of public corporation under the statutory control of
the Central Government who will assume such powers as
may be necessary to ensure this". It was in pursuance
of the policy envisaged in this and subsequent
resolutions on industrial policy that corporations were
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created by Government for setting up and management of
public enterprises and carrying out other public
functions. Ordinarily these functions could have been
carried out by Government departmentally through its
service personnel, but the instrumentally or agency of
the corporations was resorted to in these cases having
regard to the nature of the task to be performed. The
corporations acting as instrumentality or agency of
Government would obviously be subject to the same
limitations in the field of constitutional and
administrative law as Government itself, though in the
eye of the law, they would be distinct and independent
legal entities. If Government acting through its
officers is subject to certain constitutional and
public law limitations, it must follow a fortiori that
Government acting through the instrumentality or agency
of corporations should equally be subject to the same
limitations.
(emphasis added)
Article 12 gives the cue to forbid this plea. "Other
authorities .......... under the control of the Government
of India" are comprehensive enough to take care of Part III
without unduly stretching the meaning of "the State" to rope
in whatever any autonomous body which has some nexus with
government. A wide expansion coupled
134
with a wise limitation may and must readily and rightly be
read into the last words of Art. 12.
Addressing itself to the question of identifying those
bodies which are agencies or instrumentalities of
Government, the court, in Airport Authority, observed:
A corporation may be created in one of two ways.
It may be either established by statute or incorporated
under a law such as the Companies Act, 1956 or the
Societies Registration Act, 1860. Where a corporation
is wholly controlled by Government not only in its
policy-making but also in carrying out the functions
entrusted to it by the law establishing it or by the
charter of its incorporation, there can be no doubt
that it would be an instrumentality or agency of
Government........ When does such a corporation become
an instrumentality or agency of Government ? Is the
holding of the entire share capital of the corporation
by Government enough or is it necessary that in
addition, there should be a certain amount of direct
control exercised by Government and, if so, what should
be the nature of such control ? Should the functions
which the corporation is charged to carry out possess
any particular characteristic or feature, or is the
nature of the functions immaterial ? Now, one thing is
clear that if the entire share capital of the
corporation is held by Government, it would go a long
way towards indicating that the corporation is an
instrumentality or agency of Government........What
then are the tests to determine whether a corporation
established by statute or incorporated under law is
instrumentality or agency of Government ? It is not
possible to formulate an all-inclusive or exhaustive
test which would adequately answer this question. There
is no cut and dried formula which would provide the
correct division of corporations into those which are
instrumentalities or agencies of Government and those
which are not.
(emphasis added)
The court proceeded to crystallise the tests to
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determine the ’State’ completion of corporate bodies, beyond
furnishing the full share capital:
But "a finding of State financial support plus an
unusual degree of control over the management and
policies might
135
lead one to characterise an operation as State action".
Vide Sukhdev v. Bhagatram. So also the existence of
deep and pervasive State control may afford an
indication that the Corporation is a State agency or
instrumentality. It may also be a relevant factor to
consider whether the corporation enjoys monopoly status
which is State conferred or State protected. There can
be little doubt that State conferred or State protected
monopoly status would be highly relevant in assessing
the aggregate weight of the corporations’ ties to the
State.
There is also another factor which may be regarded
as having a bearing on this issue and it is whether the
operation of the corporation is an important public
function. It has been held in the United States in a
number of cases that the concept of private action must
yield to a conception of State action where public
functions are being performed. Vide Arthur S. Millers:
The Constitutional Law of the ’Security State.
If the functions of the corporation are of public
importance and closely related to governmental
functions, it would be a relevant factor in classifying
the corporation as an instrumentality or agency of
Government. This is precisely what was pointed out by
Mathew, J. in Sukhdev v. Bhagatram (supra) where the
learned Judge said that "institutions engaged in
matters of high public interest or performing public
functions are by virtue of the nature of the functions
performed government agencies. Activities which are too
fundamental to the society are by definition too
important not to be considered government functions."
Bhagwati, J. dwelt on the functional formula and reasoned:
But the decisions show that even this test of
public or governmental character of the function is not
easy of application and does not invariably lead to the
correct inference because the range of governmental
activity is broad and varied and merely because an
activity may be such as may legitimately be carried on
by Government, it does not mean that a corporation,
which is otherwise a private entity, would be an
instrumentality or agency of Government by reason of
carrying on such activity. In fact it is difficult to
disting-
136
uish between governmental functions and non-
governmental functions. Perhaps the distinction between
governmental and non-governmental functions is not
valid any more in a social welfare State where the
laissez faire is an outmoded concept and Herbert
Spencer’s social statics has no place....... But the
public nature of the function, if impregnated with
governmental character or "tied or entwined with
Government" or fortified by some other additional
factor, may render the corporation an instrumentality
or agency of Government. Specifically, if a department
of Government is transferred to a corporation, it would
be a strong factor supportive of this inference.
The conclusion is impeccable that if the corporate body
is but an ’instrumentality or agency’ of Government, then
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Part III will trammel its operations. It is a case of quasi-
governmental beings, not of non-State entities. We have no
hesitation to hold that where the chemistry of the corporate
body answers the test of ’State’ above outlined it comes
within the definition in Art. 12. In our constitutional
scheme where the commanding heights belong to the public
sector of the national economy, to grant absolution to
government companies and their ilk from Part III may be
perilous. The court cannot connive at a process which
eventually makes fundamental rights as rare as "roses in
December, ice in June". Article 12 uses the expression
"other authorities" and its connotation has to be clarified.
On this facet also, the Airport Authority case supplies a
solution:
If a statutory corporation, body or other
authority is an instrumentality or agency of the
Government, it would be an ’authority’ and therefore
’State’ within the meaning of that expression in
Article 12.
The decisions are not uniform as to whether being an
instrumentality or agency of Government ipso jure renders
the company or other similar body ’State’. This again
involves a navigation through precedents and Bhagwati, J. In
Airport Authority (supra) has spoken for the Court, after
referring to Rajasthan Electricity Board v. Mohan Lal
Sukhdev v. Bhagatram, Praga Tool Corporation v. C. A.
Immanuel, Heavy Engineering Mazdoor Union v. State of Bihar,
137
S. L. Aggarwal v. General Manager, Hindustan Steel Ltd., and
Sabhajit Tewari v. Union of India :
We may point out here that when we speak of a
Corporation being an instrumentality or agency of
Government, we do not mean to suggest that the
Corporation should be an agent of the Government in the
sense that whatever it does should be binding on the
Government. It is not the relationship of principal and
agent which is relevant and material but whether the
corporation is an instrumentality of the Government in
the sense that a part of the governing power of the
State is located in the Corporation and though the
Corporation is acting on its own behalf and not on
behalf of the Government, its action is really in the
nature of State action.
Let us cull out from Airport Authority (supra) the
indicia of "other authorities.........under the control of
the Government of India" bringing a corporation within the
definition of "the State". The following factors have been
emphasised in that ruling as telling, though not clinching.
These characteristics convert a statutory corporation, a
government company, a cooperative society and other
registered society or body into a State and they are not
confined to statutory corporations alone. We may decoct the
tests for ready reference:
1. "One thing is clear that if the entire share capital
of the corporation is held by Government, it would go a long
way towards indicating that the corporation is an
instrumentality or agency of Government."
2. Existence of "deep and pervasive State control may
afford an indication that the Corporation is a State agency
or instrumentality."
3. "It may also be a relevant factor........ whether
the corporation enjoys monopoly status which is the State
conferred or State protected."
4. "If the functions of the corporation are of public
importance and closely related to governmental functions, it
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would be a relevant factor in classifying the corporation as
an instrumentality or agency of Government."
5. "Specifically, if a department of Government is
transferred to a corporation, it would be a strong factor
supportive of this inference"
138
of the corporation being an instrumentality or agency of
Government."
The finale is reached when the cumulative effect of all
the relevant factors above set out is assessed and once the
body is found to be an instrument or agency of Government,
the further conclusion emerges that it is ’State’ and is
subject to the same constitutional limitations as
Government.
This divagation explains the ratio of the Airport
Authority (supra) in its full spectrum. There the main
contention was that the said authority, a statutory
corporation, was not State and enforcement of fundamental
rights against such a body was impermissible. As is apparent
from the extensive discussion above, the identical issue
confronting us as to what are the "other authorities"
contemplated by Art. 12 fell for consideration there. Most
of the rulings relied on by either side received critical
attention there and the guidelines and parameters spelt out
there must ordinarily govern our decision. A careful study
of the features of the Airport Authority and a government
company covered by ss. 7, 9, 10 and 12 of the Act before us
discloses a close parallel except that the Airport Authority
is created by a statute while Bharat Petroleum (notified
under s. 7 of the Act) is recognised by and clothed with
rights and duties by the statute.
There is no doubt that Bhagwati, J. broadened the scope
of State under Art. 12 and according to Shri G. B. Pai the
observations spill over beyond the requirements of the case
and must be dismissed as obiter. His submission is that
having regard to the fact that the International Airport
Authority is a corporation created by statute there was no
occasion to go beyond the narrow needs of the situation and
expand upon the theme of State in Art. 12 vis a vis
Government companies, registered societies and what not. He
assails the decision also on another ground, namely, the
contradiction between Sukhdev and Airport Authority. We will
examine both these contentions and, incidentally, consider
what the law laid down in the other rulings is. We are free
to confess that the propositions have not been neatly
chiselled and presented in any of the rulings and further,
some measure of incongruity may be noticed if we search for
the same; but our approach is not to detect contradictions
but to discover a broad consensus if there be any and distil
the law in accordance therewith.
139
We may first deal with Tewary’s case where the question
mooted was as to whether the C.S.I.R. (Council of Scientific
and Industrial Research) was ’State’ under Art. 12. The
C.S.I.R. is a registered society with official and non-
official members appointed by Government and subject to some
measure of control by Government in the Ministry of Science
and Technology. The court held it was not ’State’ as defined
in Art. 12. It is significant that the court implicitly
assented to the proposition that if the society were really
an agency of the Government it would be ’State’. But on the
facts and features present there the character of agency of
Government was negatived. The rulings relied on are,
unfortunately, in the province of Art. 311 and it is clear
that a body may be ’State’ under Part III but not under Part
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XIV. Ray, C. J., rejected the argument that merely because
the Prime Minister was the President or that the other
members were appointed and removed by Government did not
make the Society a ’State’. With great respect, we agree
that in the absence of the other features elaborated in
Airport Authority case the composition of the Governing Body
alone may not be decisive. The laconic discussion and the
limited ratio in Tewary hardly help either side here.
Shri G. B. Pai hopefully took us through Sukhdev’s case
at length to demolish the ratio in Airport Authority. A
majority of three judges spoke through Ray, C. J. while
Mathew, J. ratiocinated differently to reach the same
conclusion. Alagiriswamy, J. struck a dissenting note.
Whether certain statutory corporations were ’State’ under
Art. 12 was the question mooted there at the instance of the
employees who invoked Arts. 14 and 16. The judgment of the
learned Chief Justice sufficiently clinches the issue in
favour of the petitioner here. The problem was posed thus :
In short the question is whether these statutory
corporations are authorities within the meaning of
Article 12.
The answer was phrased thus :
The employees of these statutory bodies have a
statutory status and they are entitled to declaration
of being in employment when their dismissal or removal
is in contravention of statutory provisions. By was of
abundant caution we state that these employees are not
servants of
140
the Union or the State. These statutory bodies are
"authorities" within the meaning of Article 12 of the
Constitution.
Thus, the holding was that the legal persons involved there
(three corporations, viz. The Oil and Natural Gas
Commission, the Industrial Finance Corporation and the Life
Insurance Corporation) were ’State’ under Art. 12. The
reasoning adopted by Ray, C. J. fortifies the argumentation
in Airport Authority.
Repelling the State’s plea that these bodies were not
’other authorities’ under Art. 12. Ray, C. J. observed :
The State undertakes commercial functions in
combination with Governmental functions in a welfare
State. Governmental function must authoritative. It
must be able to impose decision by or under law with
authority. The element of authority is of a binding
character. The rules and regulations are authoritative
because these rules and regulations direct and control
not only the exercise of powers by the Corporations but
also all persons who deal with these corporations.....
The expression "other authorities" in Article 12
has been held by this Court in the Rajasthan
Electricity Board to be wide enough to include within
it every authority created by a statute and functioning
within the territory of India, or under the control of
the Government of India. This Court further said
referring to earlier decisions that the expression
"other authorities" in Article 12 include all
constitutional or statutory authorities on whom powers
are conferred by law. The State itself is envisaged
under Article 298 as having the right to carry on trade
and business. The State as defined in Article 12 is
comprehended to include bodies created for the purpose
of promoting economic interests of the people. The
circumstance that the statutory body is required to
carry on some activities of the nature of trade or
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commerce does not indicate that the Board must be
excluded from the scope of the word ’State’. The
Electricity Supply Act showed that the Board had power
to give directions, the disobedience of which is
punishable as a criminal offence. The power to issue
directions and to enforce compliance is an important
aspect
(emphasis added)
141
Dealing with governmental purposes and public authorities,
the court clarified:
In the British Broadcasting Corporation v. Johns
(Inspector of Taxes) (1965) (1 Ch. 32), it was said
that persons who are created to carry out governmental
purposes enjoy immunity like Crown servants. Government
purposes include the traditional provinces of
Government as well as non-traditional provinces of
Government if the Crown has constitutionally asserted
that they are to be within the province of
Government.....
A public authority is a body which has public or
statutory duties to perform and which performs those
duties and carries out its transactions for the benefit
of the public and not for private profit.
(emphasis added)
Taking up each statute and analysing its provisions the
learned Chief Justice concluded:
The structure of the Life Insurance Corporation
indicates that the Corporation is an agency of the
Government carrying on the exclusive business of life
insurance. Each and every provision shows in no uncertain
terms that the voice is of the Central Government and the
hands are also of the Central Government.
xx xx xx
These provisions of the Industrial Finance Corporation
Act show that the Corporation is in effect managed and
controlled by the Central Government.
(emphasis added)
The italicised portion pithily sums up the meat of the
matter. If the voice is of the Government and so also the
hands, the face will not hide the soul. There is nothing in
this judgment which goes against a government company being
regarded as ’State’. On the contrary, the thrust of the
logic and the generality of the law are far from restrictive
and apply to all bodies which fill the bill.
Mathew, J. is more positive in his conception of
’State’ under Art. 12:
142
The concept of State has undergone drastic changes
in recent years. Today State cannot be conceived of
simply as a coercive machinery wielding the thunderbolt
of authority. It has to be viewed mainly as a service
corporation.
"If we clearly grasp the character of the state as
a social agent, understanding it rationally as a form
of service and not mystically as an ultimate power, we
shall differ only in respect of the limits of its
ability to render service." (see Mac Iver, "The Modern
State" 183).
xx xx xx
A state is an abstruct entity. It can only act
through the instrumentality or agency of natural or
judicial persons. Therefore, there is nothing strange
in the notion of the state acting through a corporation
and making it an agency or instrumentality of the
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State........
The tasks of government multiplied with the advent
of the welfare state and consequently, the framework of
civil service administration became increasingly
insufficient for handling the new tasks which were
often of a specialised and highly technical character.
At the same time, ’bureaucracy’ came under a cloud. The
district of government by civil service, justified or
not, was a powerful factor in the development of a
policy of public administration through separate
corporation which would operate largely according to
business principles and be separately accountable.
The public corporation, therefore, became a third
arm of the Government. In Great Britain, the conduct of
basic industries through giant corporation is now a
permanent feature of public life.
The Indian situation is an a fortiori case, what with Part
IV of the Constitution and the Government of India
Resolution on Industrial policy of 1956 ?
Accordingly, the State will progressively assume a
pre-dominant and direct responsibility for setting up
new industrial undertakings and for developing
transport facilities. It will also undertake State
trading on an increasing scale.
Of course, mere State aid to a company will not make
its actions State actions. Mathew, J. leaned to the view
that:
143
....... State financial support plus an unusual
degree of control over the management and policies
might lead one to characterise an operation as state
action.
Indeed, the learned Judge went much farther:
Another factor which might be considered is
whether the operation is an important public function.
The combination of state aid and the furnishing of an
important public service may result in a conclusion
that the operation should be classified as a state
agency. If a given function is of such public
importance and so closely related to governmental
functions as to be classified as a governmental agency,
then even the presence or absence of state financial
aid might be irrelevant in making a finding of state
action. If the function does not fall within such a
description, then mere addition of state money would
not influence the conclusion.
It must be noticed that the emphasis is on
functionality plus State control rather on the statutory
character of the Corporation:
Institutions engaged in matters of high public
interest or performing Public functions are by virtue
of the nature of the function performed government
agencies. Activities which are too fundamental to the
society are by definition too important not to be
considered government functions.
We may read the ratio from the judgment of Mathew, J.
where he says:
It is clear from the provisions that the Central
Government has contributed the original capital of the
Corporation, that part of the profit of the Corporation
goes to that Government, that the Central Government
exercises control over the policy of the Corporation,
that the Corporation carries on a business having great
public importance and that it enjoys a monopoly in the
business. I would draw the same conclusions from the
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relevant provisions of the Industrial Finance
Corporation Act which have also been referred to in the
aforesaid judgment. In these circumstances, I think,
these corporations are agencies or instrumentalities of
the ’State’ and are, therefore, ’State’ within the
meaning of Article 12. The fact that these corporations
have independent personalities in the eye of
144
law does not mean that they are not subject to the
control of government or that they are not
instrumentalities of the government. These corporations
are instrumentalities or agencies of the State for
carrying on businesses which otherwise would have been
run by the State departmentally. If the state had
chosen to carry on these businesses through the medium
of government departments, there would have been no
question that actions of these departments would be
’state actions’. Why then should the actions be not
state actions ?
xx xx xx
....... merely because a corporation has legal
personality of its own, it does not follow that the
corporation cannot be an agent or instrumentality of
the state, if it is subject to control of government in
all important matters of policy. No doubt, there might
be some distinction between the nature of control
exercised by principal over agent and the control
exercised by government over public corporation. That,
I think is only a distinction in degree. The crux of
the matter is that public corporation is a new type or
institution which has sprung from the new social and
economic functions of government and that it therefore
does not neatly fit into old legal categories. Instead
of forcing it into them, the later should be adapted to
the needs of changing times and conditions.
There is nothing in these observations to confine the
concept of State to statutory corporations. Nay, the tests
are common to any agency or instrumentality, the key factor
being the brooding presence of the State behind the
operation of the body, statutory or other.
A study of Sukhdev’s case (a Constitution Bench
decision of this Court) yields the clear result that the
preponderant considerations for pronouncing an entity as
State agency or instrumentality are financial resources of
the State being the chief funding source, functional
character being governmental in essence, plenary control
residing in Government, prior history of the same activity
having been carried on by Government and made over to the
new body and some element of authority or command. Whether
the legal person is a corporation created by a statute, as
distinguished from under a statute, is not an important
criterion although it may be an indicium. Applying
145
the constellation of criteria collected by us from Airport
Authority, on a cumulative basis, to the given case, there
is enough material to hold that the Bharat Petroleum
Corporation is ’State’ within the enlarged meaning of Art.
12.
The Rajasthan Electricity Board case (the majority
judgment of Bhargava, J.) is perfectly compatible with the
view we take of Art. 12 or has been expressed in Sukhdev and
the Airport Authority. The short question that fell for
decision was as o whether the Electricity Board was ’State’.
There was no debate, no discussion and no decision on the
issue of excluding from the area of ’State’, under Art. 12,
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units incorporated under a statute as against those created
by a statute. On the other hand, the controversy was over
the exclusion from the definition of State in Art. 12
corporations engaged in commercial activities. This plea for
a narrow meaning was negatived by Bhargava, J. and in that
context the learned Judge explained the signification of
"other authorities" in Art. 12:(1)
The meaning of the word "authority" given in
Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, which can
be applicable, is "a public administrative agency or
corporation having quasi-governmental powers and
authorised to administer a revenue-producing public
enterprise." This dictionary meaning of the word
"authority" is clearly wide enough to include all
bodies created by a statute on which powers are
conferred to carry out governmental or quasi-
governmental functions. The expression "other
authorities" is wide enough to include within it every
authority created by a statute and functioning within
the territory of India, or under the control of the
Government of India; and we do not see any reason to
narrow down this meaning in the context in which the
words "other authorities" are used in Art. 12 of the
Constitution.
xx xx xx
These decisions of the Court support our view that
the expression "other authorities" in Art. 12 will
include all constitutional on statutory authorities on
whom powers conferred may be for the purpose of
carrying on commercial activities. Under the
Constitution, the State is itself envisaged as having
the right to carry on trade or business as
146
mentioned in Art. 19(1)(g). In Part IV, the State has
been given the same meaning as in Art. 12 and one of
the Directive Principles laid down in Art. 46 is that
the State shall promote with special care the
educational and economic interests of the weaker
sections of the people. The State, as defined in Art.
12, is thus comprehended to include bodies created for
the purpose of promoting the educational and economic
interests of the people. The State, as constituted by
our Constitution, is further specifically empowered
under Art. 298 to carry on any trade or business. The
circumstance that the Board under the Electricity
Supply Act is required to carry on some activities of
the nature of trade or commerce does not, therefore,
give any indication that the Board must be excluded
from the scope of the word "State as used in Art. 12.
The meaning of the learned judge is unmistakable that "the
State" in Art. 12 comprehends bodies created for the purpose
of promoting economic activities. These bodies may be
statutory corporations, registered societies, government
companies or other like entities. The court was not called
upon to consider this latter aspect, but to the extent to
which the holding goes, it supports the stand of the
petitioners.
We are not disposed to discuss more cases because two
constitution benches and two smaller benches have already
pronounced on the amplitude of "other authorities" in Art.
12. Even so, a passing reference may be made to a few more
cases. In Praga Tools Corporation v. Immanuel this court was
called upon to consider the enforceability of two industrial
settlements against the management which was a company with
substantial share-holding for the Union Government and the
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Government of Andhra Pradesh. There was no specific
reference to Art. 12 as such although it was mentioned early
in the judgment that the company was a separate legal entity
and could not be said to be "either a government corporation
or an industry run by or under the authority of the Union
Government." It must be noticed that 12% shares in the
company were held by private individuals and nothing more is
known about the plenary control by Government and other
features we have referred to earlier in this judgment. On
the other hand, the short passage, part of which we have
extracted, almost suggests that a government corporation may
stand on a different footing from Praga Tools Corporation
(supra). If so, it supports the view we have taken. The
Hindustan
147
Steel case which was cited at the bar, considered the
question as to whether an employee of that company was
holding a post under the Union or a State so as to claim the
protection of Art. 311. This claim was negatived, if we may
say so, rightly. In the present case, Art. 12 is in issue
and not Art. 311 and, therefore, that citation is an act of
supererogation. The Vaish College case which too was
referred, related to the status of the managing committee of
a college and the enforceability of the contractual rights
of a teacher by a writ under Art. 226. That problem is
extraneous to our case and need not detain us.
Imagine the possible result of holding that a
government company, being just an entity created under a
statute, not by a statute, it is not ’State’. Having regard
to the directive in Art. 38 and the amplitude of the other
Articles in Part IV Government may appropriately embark upon
almost any activity which in a non-socialist republic may
fall within the private sector. Any person’s employment,
entertainment, travel, rest and leisure, hospital facility
and funeral service may be controlled by the State. And if
all these enterprises are executed through government
companies, bureaus, societies, councils, institutes and
homes, the citizen may forfeit his fundamental freedoms vis-
a-vis these strange beings which are government in fact but
corporate in form. If only fundamental rights were forbidden
access to corporations, companies, bureaus, institutes,
councils and kindred bodies which act as agencies of the
Administration, there may be a breakdown of the rule of law
and the constitutional order in a large sector of
governmental activity carried on under the guise of ’jural
persons’. It may pave the way for a new tyranny by arbitrary
administrators operated from behind by Government but
unaccountable to Part III of the Constitution. We cannot
assent to an interpretation which leads to such a disastrous
conclusion unless the language of Art. 12 offers no other
alternative.
It is well known that "corporations have neither bodies
to be kicked, nor souls to be damned" and Government
corporations are mammoth organisations. If Part III of the
Constitution is halted at the gates of corporations Justice
Louis D. Brandeis’s observation will be proved true:
The main objection to the very large corporation
is that it makes possible-and in many cases makes
inevitable-the-exercise of industrial absolutism.
148
It is dangerous to exonerate corporations from the need to
have constitutional conscience; and so, that interpretation,
language permitting, which makes governmental agencies,
whatever their mein, amenable to constitutional limitations
must be adopted by the court as against the alternative of
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permitting them to flourish as an imperium in imperio.
The common-sense signification of the expression "other
authorities under the control of the Government of India" is
plain and there is no reason to make exclusions on
sophisticated grounds such as that the legal person must be
a statutory corporation, must have power to make laws, must
be created by and not under a statute and so on. The
jurisprudence of Third World countries cannot afford the
luxury against which Salmond cavilled :
Partly through the methods of its historical
development, and partly through the influence of that
love of subtlety which has always been the besetting
sin of the legal mind our law is filled with needless
distinctions, which add enormously to its bulk and
nothing to its value, while they render a great part of
it unintelligible to any but the expert.
Having concluded the discussion on the amenability of
the respondent-company to Part III we proceed to consider
the merits of the case on the footing that a writ will issue
to correct the illegality if there be violation of Arts. 14
and 19 in the order deducting from the pension of the
petitioner two sums of money mentioned right at the
beginning.
We may now proceed to consider the substantial
questions raised by the petitioner to invalidate the
deductions from his original pension on the ground of his
drawal of provident fund and gratuity. The justification for
such deduction is claimed to be regulation 16 and its
antidote is urged to be a provision in the two respective
enactments relating to provident fund and payment of
gratuity, namely, ss. 12 and 14.
The petitioner retired voluntarily under an extant
voluntary retirement scheme. The quantum of pension was
regulated by that scheme. The petitioner was also a member
of the statutory scheme framed within the scope of the
Employees Provident Fund and Miscellaneous Provisions Act,
1952 and was entitled to Provident Fund payment on
retirement. Likewise, he was entitled to payment under the
Gratuity Act, 1972. These were the statutory rights which he
enjoyed. Being a non-contributory member of the Pension Fund
of
149
Burmah Shell under the Trust Deed set up by it, he earned
his pension. But the Trust Deed contained many regulations.
The normal annual pension under the regulations worked out
to a sum of Rs. 165.99 per month for the petitioner.
Regulation 16 provided for certain "authorised deductions"
from the amount of pension of non-contributing members. The
quantification of these deductions was provided for in the
said regulation. If these deductions were not to be made,
the petitioner would be eligible for his pension of Rs.
165.99 and Rs. 86 per month by way of Supplementary
Retirement Benefits which, he asserted was a part of the
pensionary benefits. This was being paid by the Burmah Shell
to its employees and naturally this obligation devolved on
the successor second respondent under the statutory rules
framed in this behalf [Burmah Shell (Acquisition of
Undertakings of India) (Administration of Fund) Rules,
1976]. But, by letter dated August 10, 1973, the petitioner
was informed that a sum of Rs. 56.12 would be deducted as an
’authorised deduction’ pursuant to reg. 16 mentioned above.
The cause for this was the drawal of the provident fund
amount. Likewise, when the gratuity was drawn by the
petitioner, another letter dated October 24, 1973 was issued
to him that there would be a further reduction of the
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pension. When the petitioner complained to the appropriate
authority that Burmah shell was declining to pay the
gratuity, a direction was issued the management to pay the
sum of gratuity due. Thereupon, a further deduction of Rs.
68.81 from the monthly pension of the petitioner was
effected as an ’authorised deduction’ under reg. 16(3). The
discretionary payment by way of retirement benefits, namely,
Rs. 86/- per month was also stopped, maybe because the
petitioner litigatively withdrew gratuity and provident
fund. The pitiable position was that the petitioner found
himself with a miserable amount of Rs. 40.06 per month, a
consequence directly attributable to his receiving provident
fund and gratuity amounts. Of course, legality cannot be
tested on the size of the sum and the court must examine the
merits de hors any sympathy.
The petitioner’s attempt to recover his full pension
under s. 33C(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act failed since
that jurisdiction was more than that of an executing court
and there should be a substantive order creating the
obligation before enforcement could follow.
The liability for the payment of full pension was that
of Burmah Shell, but, by virtue of ss. 3 and 4 of the Act,
all the assets and liabilities vested in the Central
Government and thereafter, in the second respondent. Section
10 of the Act relates to provident fund,
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superannuation, welfare fund and the like. Section 10(3) is
important:
10(3). The Government company in which the under
taking of Burmah Shell in India are directed to be
vested shall, as soon as may be after the date of
vesting, constitute, in respect of the moneys and other
assets which are transferred to, and vested in, it
under this section, one or more trusts having objects
as similar to the objects of the existing trusts as in
the circumstances may be practicable, so, however, that
the rights and interests of the beneficiaries of the
trust referred to in sub-section (1) are not, in any
way, prejudiced or diminished.
(emphasis added)
Follow-up steps were accordingly taken and there is no
quarrel over it. It is clear, therefore, that the second
respondent has made provision for the rights and interests
of the beneficiaries of the Trust established by Burmah
Shell for the benefit of the persons employed by it. Section
10(1) puts this matter beyond doubt. This obligation of the
second respondent is a statutory one and having regard to
the provisions of s. 11, it cannot be affected by any
instrument or decree or order. The statutory continuation of
a pre-existing liability to pay pension, provident fund or
gratuity, cannot be avoided having regard to s. 10.
Shri Pai contends that the very root of the claim to
pension is the Trust Deed which is to be read integrally.
Regulation 16 is part and parcel of the right to pension and
cannot be divorced from reg. 13. Indeed, these regulations
are so intertwined that the "authorised deductions" are an
inextricable part of the right to pension. If this approach
be correct and if there be no other legal prohibition in
making the deductions, the conclusion is convincing that the
quantum of pension must sustain the authorised deduction
immediately provident fund and gratuity are drawn. The
counter argument of Shri Parekh is that there is a statutory
prohibition against any deduction from the pension if the
ground is drawal of provident fund or gratuity amount. In
view of the statutory taboo he contends, that the deduction
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is unauthorised even if the contract or trust may provide
so. So, the crucial question is whether there is a statutory
ban on any diminution in the pension because of provident
fund and gratuity benefits having been availed of. The PF
Act and the Gratuity Act contain certain protective
provisions whose true import falls for construction and is
decisive of the point in dispute.
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Let us assume for a moment that reg. 16 authorises
deductions and that discretionary payments, although enjoyed
by the employees, is liable to be stopped. The question is
whether s. 12 of the PF Act forbids any such reduction or
deduction out of the benefits in the nature of old age
pension on the score of the payment of contribution to the
provident fund. We may extract s. 12 here for, according to
Shri Parekh, the language speaks for itself.
12. No employer in relation to an establishment to
which any scheme or the insurance scheme applies shall,
by reason only of his liability for the payment of any
contribution to the Fund or the Insurance Fund or any
charges under this Act or the scheme, reduce whether
directly or indirectly the wages of any employee to
whom the scheme of the Insurance Scheme applies or the
total quantum of benefit in the nature of old age
pension gratuity provident fund or Life Insurance to
which the employee is entitled under the terms of his
employment, express or implied. (emphasis added)
We take the view that this benignant provision must receive
a benignant construction and, even if two interpretations
are permissible, that which furthers the beneficial object
should be preferred From that perspective, the inference is
reasonable that the total quantum of benefits in the nature
of old age pension, gratuity or provident fund, shall not be
reduced by reason only of the liability of the employer for
payment of contribution to the fund. The Section prevails
over the Trust Deed. The provident fund accrues by statutory
force and s. 12 overrides any agreement authorising
deductions, argues Shri Parekh.
A similar result holds good even under the Gratuity
Act. Section 14 of that Act reads thus:
14. The provisions of this Act or any rule made
there under shall have effect notwithstanding anything
inconsistent therewith contained in any enactment other
than this Act or in any instrument or contract having
effect by virtue of any enactment other than this Act.
The expression "instrument" certainly covers a Trust Deed
and, notwithstanding the deduction that may be sanctioned by
the Trust Deed, the overriding effect of s. 14 preserves the
pension and immunises it against any deduction attributable
to the statutory payment of the provident fund. The
deduction made by the second respondent is, in that event,
illegal.
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Shri Pai argues that no reduction of retiral benefit is
effected because the entitlement to pension under reg. 13 is
itself conditioned by the clause for deduction and has no
separate amplitude de hors the ‘authorised deduction’ spelt
out in reg. 16 Let us examine these rival contentions. If
reg. 16 is a provision which imposes a cut in certain
eventualities it is possible to hold that the employee has a
certain pensionary right. But if he draws P.F. or gratuity
that pension will be pared down by a separate rule of
deduction from the pension. It follows that there is no
straining of the language of the regulations to mean,
firstly, a right to pension quantified in certain manner
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and, secondly, a right in the Management to make deduction
from out of that pension if other retiral benefits are drawn
by the employee. That appears to be the pension scheme. If
this be correct, there is no substance in the argument that
the pension itself is automatically reduced into a smaller
scale of pension on the drawal of provident fund or
gratuity. Pension is one thing, deduction is another. The
latter is independent of pension and operates on the pension
to amputate it, as it were. If a law forbids such cut or
amputation the pension remains intact.
The public policy behind the provisions of ss.10, 12
and 14 of the respective statutes is clear. We live in a
welfare State, in a ‘socialist’ republic, under a
Constitution with profound concern for the weaker classes
including workers (Part IV) welfare benefits such as
pensions, payment of provident fund and gratuity are in
fulfillment of the Directive Principles. The payment of
gratuity or provident fund should not occasion any deduction
from the pension as a "set off". Otherwise, the solemn
statutory provisions ensuring provident fund and gratuity
become illusory. Pensions are paid out of regard for past
meritorious services. The root of gratuity and the
foundation of provident fund are different Each one is a
salutary benefaction statutorily guaranteed independently of
the other. Even assuming that by private treaty parties had
otherwise agreed to deductions before the coming into force
of these beneficial enactments they cannot now be
deprivatory. It is precisely to guard against such mischief
that the non-obstante and overriding provisions are
engrafted on these statutes.
We must realise that the pension scheme came into
existence prior to the two beneficial statutes and
Parliament when enacting these legislations must have
clearly intended extra benefits being conferred on
employees. Such a consequence will follow only if over and
above the normal pension, the benefits of provident fund and
gratuity are enjoyed. On the other hand, if consequent on
the receipt of
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these benefits there is a proportionate reduction in the
pension, there is no real benefit to the employee because
the Management takes away by the left hand what it seems to
confer by the right, making the legislation itself left-
handed. To hold that on receipt of gratuity and provident
fund the pension of the employee may be reduced pro tanto is
to frustrate the supplementary character of the benefits.
Indeed, that is why by ss. 12 and 14 overriding effect is
imparted and reduction in the retiral benefits on account of
provident fund and gratuity derived by the employee is
frowned upon. We, accordingly, hold that it is not open to
the second respondent to deduct from the full pension any
sum based upon reg. 16 read with reg. 13. If reg. 16 which
now has acquired statutory flavour, having been adapted and
continued by statutory rules, operates contrary to the
provisions of the P.F. Act and the Gratuity Act, it must
fail as invalid. We uphold the contention of the petitioner.
The only point that survives turns on the stoppage of
the discretionary supplementary pensionary benefit. What is
discretionary depends on the discretion of the employer. But
that power when exercised by an agency of government like
the second respondent, must be based upon good faith and due
care. If as a measure of reprisal or provoked by the drawal
of gratuity, or by resort to legal authorities, such
supplementary benefit is struck off, it will cease to be
bona fide or valid. We have no material to hold that the
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second respondent has independently considered this matter
and so we direct that if the petitioner moves the second
respondent stating his case for the continuance of the
supplementary benefit, it will be considered on its merits
uninfluences by extraneous factors. We do not think it right
or necessary to issue any further direction.
We hold that the petitioner is entitled to his full
pension of Rs. 165.99. We further hold that, on appropriate
representation by him, the second respondent shall consider
the grant or stoppage of the supplementary pensionary
benefit on its merits. The petition is allowed with costs
which we quantify at Rs. 2,000/- Shri Parekh represents that
this sum may be directed to be paid to the Legal Aid Society
in the Supreme Court. We appreciate this gesture of counsel
and direct the Registry to act accordingly.
Social justice is the conscience of our Constitution,
the State is the promoter of economic justice, the founding
faith which sustains the Constitution and the country is
Indian humanity. The public sector is a model employer with
a social conscience not an artificial person without soul to
be damned or body to be burnt. The stance that, by
deductions and discretionary withholding of payment, a
public sector
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company may reduce an old man’s pension to Rs. 40/-from Rs.
250/- is unjust, even if it be assumed to be legal. Law and
justice must be on talking terms and what matters under our
constitutional scheme is not merciless law but humane
legality. The true strength and stability of our polity is
society’s credibility in social justice, not perfect
legalise; and this case does disclose indifference to this
fundamental value. We are aware that, Shri G.B. Pai, for the
Management, did urge that ‘principle’ was involved and that
settlements had been reached between Labour and Management
on many issues. We do appreciate the successful exercises of
the Management in reaching just settlements with its
employees but wonder whether the highest principle of our
constitutional culture is not empathy with every little
individual.
PATHAK, J.-I must confess to some hesitation in
accepting the proposition that the Bharat Petroleum
Corporation Limited is a "State" within the meaning of Art.
12 of the Constitution. But in view of the direction taken
by the law in this Court since Ramana Dayaram Shetty v.
International Airport Authority. I find I must lean in
favour of that conclusion. I would have welcomed a wider
range of debate before us on the fundamental principles
involved in the issue and on the implications flowing from
the definition in the Companies Act, 1956 of a "Government
Company", but perhaps a future case may provide that.
As regards the Burmah Shell (Acquisition of
Undertakings in India) Act, 1976 I am unable to see any
support for the proposition in the provisions of that Act.
The provisions will apply to any Government Company, and
they do not alter the basic nature of that company. They are
provisions which could well have been applied to a private
corporation, if the Act had selected one for vesting the
undertaking in it. Would that have made the private
corporation a "State"?
On the merits of the petitioner’s claim I need say no
more than that I agree with my learned brothers that the
petitioner should be granted the relief proposed by them.
P.B.R. Petition allowed.
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