Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INDERJIT C. PAREKH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
V. K. BHATT & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT08/01/1974
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1183 1974 SCR (3) 50
1974 SCC (4) 313
ACT:
Bombay Relief Undertakings (Special Provisions) Act 1958--S.
4 (1) (a) (iv)--Whether personal liability of directors
falls within the scope of section.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants, five of whom were directors and one an
officer of a company, were prosecuted under the Employees
Provident Funds Act, 1952 on the ground that they had failed
to pay the contribution to the Provident Fund and thereby
committed an offence punishable under paragraph 76(a) of the
Employees Provident Fund Scheme, 1952. Later, an
investigation was made into the affairs of the company under
s. 15. of the Industries (Development and Regulation) Act,
1951 and an order was issued authorising the Gujarat State
Textile Corporation to take over the management of the
company. By a notification the State Government declared
the company to be a "relief undertaking" under s. 4 (1) (a)
(iv) of the Bombay Relief Undertakings (Special Provisions)
Act, 1958 and directed that "all rights, privileges,
obligations and liabilities accrued or incurred before the
undertaking was declared a relief undertaking and any remedy
for the enforcement thereto shall be suspended and all the
proceedings relevant thereto pending before any court,
tribunal, officer or authority shall be stayed" with effect
from a certain date. An application filed by the appellants
for stay of the prosecution in view of the notification
issued by the Government was rejected by the lower court on
the view that .the operation of s. 4 of the 1958 Act was
restricted to the statutes mentioned in the Schedule to that
Act and that clause (iv) of s. 4 (1) (a) did not contemplate
stay of criminal proceedings. On appeal the High Court
summarily rejected the revision application. The appellants
came in appeal to this Court by special leave.
On the question whether the prosecution pending against the
appellants under paragraph 76 (a) of the Employees Provident
Funds Scheme 1952 is liable to be stayed by virtue of the
notification issued by the State Government.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD : The personal liability of the directors and officers
does not fall within the scope of s. 4 (1) (a) (iv) of the
Act. The responsibility to pay the contribution to the Fund
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was of the appellants and if they had defaulted in paying
the amount they were liable to be prosecuted under paragraph
76 (a) of the Scheme. The phrase "all proceedings relative
thereto" patently means all proceedings relating to "any
right, privilege, obligation or liability accrued or
incurred before the undertaking was declared a relief
undertaking". Sub-clause (iv) concerns itself with the pre-
existing obligations and liabilities of the undertaking and
not of its directors. managers or other officers. Neither
the language of the statute nor its object would justify the
extension of the immunity so as to cover the individual
obligations and liabilities of the directors and other
officers of the undertaking. If they had incurred such
obligation or liabilities as distinct from the obligations
or liabilities of the undertaking they were liable to be
proceeded against for their personal acts of commission and
commission. The remedy in that behalf cannot be suspended
nor can a proceeding already commenced against them in their
individual capacity be stayed.[52E; 53E]
The occasion for declaring an industry as a "relief
undertaking" would arise out of causes connected with the
defaults on the part of its directors and other officers.
To declare a moratorium on legal actions against persons
whose activities have necessitated the issuance of a
notification in the interest of unemployment relief is to
give such persons the benefit of their own wrong. Section 4
(1) (a) (iv) advisedly limits the power of the State
Government to direct suspension of all remedies and stay of
proceedings involving the obligations and liabilities in
relation to a relief undertaking and which were incurred
before the undertaking was declared a relief undertaking.
[53F]
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JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal, No. 57 of
1973.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 9th February 1973 of the Gujarat High Court at Ahmedabad
in Criminal Revision Application No. 86 of 1973.
Y. S. Chitaley and S. K. Dholakia, for the appellants.
G. Das, S. N. Anand and M. N. Shroff, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, J.-Appellants 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6 are the
directors of Rajnagar Spinning and Weaving Manufacturing Co.
Ltd., Ahmedabad, and appellant No. 3 is an officer of the
said company. On March 19, 1969 a complaint was lodged
against them by respondent 1, an Inspector appointed under
the Employees’ Provident Funds Act, 1952 that they bad
failed to pay a sum of Rs. 1,39,419 .50 being the
contribution to the Provident Fund for the months of June,
July and August. 1968 and that thereby they had contravened
the provisions of Paragraph 38(1) of the Employees’
Provident Funds Scheme. 1952, an act punishable under
Paragraph 76(a) of the Scheme.
An investigation was made into the affairs of the company
under section 15 of the Industries (Development and
Regulation) Act, 1951 and on being satisfied that the
company was managed in a manner highly detrimental to public
interest, the Government of India issued an order dated
January 7, 1972 authorising the Gujarat State Textile
Corporation to take over the management of the company. On
May 69 1972 the Gujarat Government issued a notification
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declaring the company to be a "relief undertaking" under
section 4(1)(a)(iv) of the Bombay Relief Undertakings
(Special Provisions) Act, 1958 (’the Act’), and directing
that "all rights, privileges, obligations and liabilities
accrued or incurred before the undertaking was declared a
relief undertaking and any remedy for the enforcement
thereof shall be suspended and all the proceedings relative
thereto pending before any Court, tribunal, officer or
authority shall be stayed with effect from 6th May
1972........
The appellants filed one application after another asking
the court which was seized of the matter to stay the
prosecution in view of the notification issued by the
Government of Gujarat. Two of such applications were
rejected by the learned City Magistrate, III Court, Ahmeda-
bad. Appellants acquiesced in one of the orders, carried
the other in revision to the High Court but withdrew that
proceeding. on October 27, 1972 they made yet another
application for the same relief which also was rejected by
the learned Magistrate. He took the view, as in the two
earlier applications, that the operation of section 4 of the
Act is restricted to the statutes mentioned in the Schedule
to that Act and that clause (iv) of section 4(1) did not
contemplate stay of criminal proceedings. The High Court of
Gujarat rejected summarily the revision application filed by
the appellants against the judgment of the learned
Magistrate. This appeal by special leave is directed
against the judgment of the High Court.
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We are concerned in this appeal with the narrow question
whether the prosecution pending against the appellants under
Paragraph 76(a) of the Employees’ Provident Funds Scheme,
1952 is liable to be stayed by virtue of the notification
issued by the Government of Gujarat on May 6, 1972. That
notification was issued in exercise of the power conferred
by section 4(1)(a)(iv) of the Act, which reads thus :
"4. (1) Notwithstanding any law, usage,
custom, contract, instrument, decree, order,
award, submission, settlement, standing order
or other provision whatsoever, the State
Government may, by notification in the
official Gazette, direct that-
(a) in relation to any relief undertaking
and in respect of the period for which the
relief undertaking continues as such under
sub-section (2) of section 3-
(iv) any right, privilege, obligation or
liability accrued or incurred before the
undertaking was declared a relief undertaking
and any remedy for the enforcement thereof
shall be suspended and all proceedings
relative thereto pending before any court,
tribunal, officer or authority shall be
stayed;"
all proceedings relative thereto" patently means all
proceedings relating to "any right, privilege, obligation or
liability accrued or incurred before the undertaking was
declared a relief undertaking". The obligation or liability
which sub-clause (iv) speaks of is an obligation or
liability incurred by the undertaking before it was declared
a relief undertaking. In other words sub-clause (iv)
concerns itself with the pre-existing obligations and
liabilities of the undertaking and not of its directors
managers or other officers,
The obligation or liability of these persons is not
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comprehended within the words of’ sub-clause (iv). Clause
(a) of section 4(1) shows that the power of the State
Government is itself restricted to giving directions
referred to in sub-clause (iv), "in relation to any relief
undertaking". Obligations and liabilities of the directors
or other officers of the undertaking are not in a true sense
obligations and liabilities in relation to the relief
undertaking. In plain and simple language they ark, the
obligations and liabilities of such persons themselves.
Their obligations and liabilities have to be viewed from a
different angle than the, obligations and liabilities of the
company itself which only acts impersonally.
The object of section 4(1)(a)(iv) is to declare, so to say,
a moratorium on actions against the undertaking during the
currency of the. notification declaring it to be a relief
undertaking. By sub-clause (iv), any remedy for the
enforcement of an obligation or liability against the relief
undertaking is suspended and proceedings which are already
commenced are to be stayed during the operation of the
notification. Under section 4(b), on the notification
ceasing to have force, such obligations and liabilities
revive and become enforceable and the proceedings which are
stayed can be continued. These provisions are
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aimed at resurrecting and rehabilitating industrial
undertakings brought by inefficiency or mismanagement to the
brink of dissolution, posing thereby the grave threat of
unemployment of industrial workers. ’Relief undertaking’
means under section 2(2) an industrial undertaking in
respect of which a declaration under section 3 is in force.
By section 3, power is conferred on the State Government to
declare an industrial undertaking as a relief undertaking,
"as a measure of preventing unemployment or of unemployment
relief". ’Relief undertakings, so long as they continue as
such, are given immunity from legal actions so as to render
their working smooth and effective. Such undertakings can
be run more effectively as a measure of unemployment relief,
if the conduct of their affairs is unhampered by legal
proceedings or the threat of such proceedings. That is the
genesis and justification of section 4(1)(a)(iv) of the Act.
Thus neither the language of the statute nor its object
would justify the extension of the immunity so as to cover
the individual obligations and liabilities of the director
and other officers of the undertaking. If they have
incurred such obligations or liabilities, as distinct from
the obligations or liabilities of the undertaking, they are
liable to be proceeded against for their personal acts of
commission and omission. The remedy in that behalf cannot
be suspended nor can a proceeding already commenced against
them in their individual capacity be stayed. Indeed, it
would be strange if any such thing was within the contempla-
tion of law. Normally, the occasion for declaring an
industry as a relief undertaking would arise out of causes
connected with defaults on the part of its directors and
other officers. To declare a moratorium on legal actions
against persons whose activities have necessitated the
issuance of a notification in the interest of unemployment
relief is to give to such persons the benefit of their own
wrong. Section 4(i)(a)(iv) therefore advisedly limits the
power of the State Government to direct suspension of
remedies and stay of proceedings involving the obligations
and liabilities in relation to a relief undertaking and
which were incurred before the undertaking was declared a
relief undertaking.
Paragraph 38(1) of the Employees’ Provident Funds Scheme,
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1952 imposes an obligation on ’The employer’ to pay the
Provident Fund contribution to the Fund within 15 days of
the close of every month. The Scheme does not define
’Employer’ but Paragraph 2(m) says that words and
expressions which are not defined by the Scheme shall have
the meaning assigned to them in the Employees’ Provident
Funds Act. Section 2(e)(ii) of that Act defines an
’Employer’, to the extent material, as the person who, or
the authority which, has the ultimate control
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over the affairs of an establishment and where the said
affairs are entrusted to a manager, managing director Or
managing agent, such manager, managing director or managing
agent. Thus the responsibility to pay the contributions to
the Fund was of the appellants and if they have defaulted in
paying the amount, they are liable to be prosecuted under
Paragraph 76(a) of the Scheme which says that if any person
fails to pay any contribution which he is liable to pay
under the Scheme, he shall be punishable with six months’
imprisonment or with fine which may extend to one thousand
rupees or with both. Such a personal liability does not
fall within the scope of section 4(1)(a)(iv) of the Act.
We therefore dismiss the appeal and direct that the
prosecution shall proceed expeditiously.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
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