Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MESSRS. CROWN ALUMINIUM WORKS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THEIR WORKMEN.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/10/1957
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
DAS, S.K.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 30 1958 SCR 651
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Adjudication-Constitution of wage struc-
ture-Revision of such structure, if can be made to the
Prejudice of workmen-Convention-Governing Principle.
HEADNOTE:
Although there can be no rigid and inexorable convention
that a wage structure once fixed can never be changed to the
prejudice of the workmen, there are well-recognised
principles on which such revision must be founded, one
important principle, to which there can be no exception, is
that the wages of workmen cannot be allowed to fall below
the bare subsistence level. It follows, therefore, that no
industry can have the right to exist if it cannot be
maintained except by bringing the wages below that level.
The Constitution of India seeks to create a democratic
welfare state and secure social and economic justice to the
citizens. Growth of industries and the advent of collective
bargaining between organised labour and capital with
consequent industrial legislation have made absolute freedom
of contract and the doctrine of laissez faire things of the
past and they have now to yield place to principles of
social welfare and common good.
Industrial adjudication has, thus, to keep in view the ideal
of a democratic welfare state and its immediate objective in
constituting a wage structure must be to secure the genuine
and wholehearted co-operation between labour and capital in
the task of production by a just adjustment of their
conflicting interests by 83
652
the application of several principles such as for instance
the principles of comparable wages, the productivity of the
trade or industry, cost of living and ability of the
industry to pay.
In a case where the wage structure is of a higher category,
it is open to the employer to claim its revision provided he
can satisfy the Tribunal that such revision is reasonable on
the merits and fair and just to the parties.
Where, however, the employer’s financial difficulties are
sought to be made a ground for such revision, the Tribunal
has to decide whether such difficulties could or could not
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be adequately met by such retrenchment in personnel as has
already been effected by the employer and sanctioned by the
Tribunal.
Consequently, in case where the Industrial Tribunal fixed
the wage structure and the dearness allowance but gave the
employer liberty to abolish the two hours’ concessions,
facility bonus and the food concession, holding them to be
in the nature of bounty gratuitously paid to the workmen by
the employer, and the Labour Appellate Tribunal took the
view that these concessions, which had been enjoyed by the
workmen for a pretty long time as of right and as part of
their basic wages and dearness allowance, had become a term
of the conditions of their service and revised the wage
structure in respect of existing workmen by incorporating
the concessions into their basic wages and dearness
allowance and in doing so relied not merely on the
convention that the existing emoluments of workmen should
not be reduced to their prejudice but also on other
considerations which were neither invalid nor unwarranted by
the evidence, its decision was valid in law.
Held further, that this court would be normally reluctant to
entertain an objection that any consideration on which the
Appellate Tribunal bad relied was either invalid or
unwarranted by the evidence on record. Where it finds that
certain payments were in fact not gratuitous but were in
substance part of the wages and dearness allowance, its
decision is not liable to be set aside.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 235 of 1956.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 29th July, 1955, of the Labour Appellate Tribunal of
India, Calcutta, in Appeal No. Cal. 182 of 1953.
B. Sen, S. N. Mukherjee and B. N. Ghosh, for the
appellant.
N. C. Chatterjee, D. L. Sen Gupta and Dipak Datta
Chaudhury, for the respondent.
653
1957. October 15. The following Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR J.-ThiS appeal by special leave arises out of
an industrial dispute between the appellant M/s. Crown
Aluminium Works, Belur, represented by Jeewanlal (1929)
Ltd., and its Workmen represented by Bengal Aluminium
Workers’ Union. By their order dated July 31, 1952, the
Government of West Bengal referred thirteen matters for
adjudication to Shri S. K. Niyogi who was appointed to
constitute the Sixth Industrial Tribunal for adjudication
under s. 10 of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. The
learned adjudicator considered the pleas raised, and the
evidence led, by the parties before him, investigated into
the financial position of the appellant and pronounced his
award on October 9, 1953, on all matters referred to him.
Both parties were aggrieved by the award and that led to two
cross appeals. On July 11, 1955, the Labour Appellate
Tribunal disposed of these appeals by a consolidated order.
The workmen appear to be satisfied with this order but the
appellant is not and so the present appeal. The main
grievance which Mr. Sen has made before us on behalf of the
appellant is in respect of the revision made by the
Appellate Tribunal in the wage structure which was
constituted by the original tribunal. Thus, the controversy
between the parties in the present appeal lies within a very
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narrow compass; nevertheless, it would be necessary to
mention the history of the dispute in some detail in order
to appreciate properly the points at issue between them.
It appears that in 1947, the first Omnibus Engineering
Tribunal was constituted to adjudicate upon the industrial
disputes for the engineering industry in West Bengal and the
matters referred to the tribunal included inter alia
disputes in regard to basic wages, dearness allowance and
leave. This tribunal gave a comprehensive award which was
published on June 30, 1948. The appellant was a party to
these adjudication proceedings and was governed by the said
award. Soon thereafter industrial disputes again arose be-
tween the engineering industry and its employees and
654
these were referred to another tribunal which in due course
examined the disputes and pronounced its award. This award
was published on September 21, 1950. By this award the
dearness allowance fixed by the first tribunal was increased
on the ground of rise in the cost of living index and the
leave rules prescribed by the earlier award were modified in
the light of the provisions of the Indian Factories Act,
1948. After the first award had come into force the appel-
lant revised its facility bonus from time to time with the
object of keeping pace with the rise in the cost of living
index. The result was that several components which
constituted the wage structure paid by the appellant to his
workmen left no cause for grievance to the workmen. So they
did not raise any dispute for increase in their dearness
allowance and the appellant and its workmen were not parties
to the second arbitration proceedings. Meanwhile, a minor
industrial dispute arose between the appellant and its
workmen and it was referred to the arbitration of Shri G.
Palit by the Government of West Bengal by their order dated
November 24, 1950. One of the points referred to the
Tribunal was in regard to the amount of increment which
should be granted to workers in 1950 and the date from which
it should be so granted. The appellant denied its liability
to pay the increment on the ground that there was no wage
structure which permitted such a claim. The appellant also
urged before Shri Palit that its workers were on the whole
handsomely remunerated. In this connection reliance was
placed by the appellant on the payments made by the
appellant to its workmen by way of special allowance and
bonus, besides dearness allowance and standard wages. It
would thus appear that the appellant resisted the claim of
its workmen for the increment in wages on the ground that in
the wage structure of the appellant additional components
had been introduced which made ample provision for the rise
in the cost of living. Shri Palit was, however, not
impressed with this plea. He thought that by introducing
these components in the wage struture the Managing Director
"chose to hold
655
the key in his own hands so that he can manipulate the
quantum of benefit under this head and could adjust it to
the output in the factory". Shri Palit, therefore, granted
the workmen’s demands by allowing one anna per day increment
though he frankly confessed that this was not based on any
actual calculation. He accordingly, directed the appellant
to pay the arrears within one month of the award coming into
operation to all workmen who were in the roll of the
appellant at the end of 1950. Then Shri Palit addressed a
word of caution to the appellant and said that it was
necessary that the appellant should fix a wage structure as
soon as practicable to secure durable peace in the factory.
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"It will be prudent", observed Shri Palit in his award, "
for the company to have a hide bound wage structure instead
of having so many flexible component parts of the wage which
merely will create unrest". This in brief is the previous
history of the dispute. between the appellant and its
workmen.
On March 28, 1952, the appellant issued a notice to its
workmen proposing to make certain modifications. The notice
indicated that a reduction of the factory hours from 47 to
40 would be made, the facility bonus would be reduced by 3
as. per day and temporary dearness allowance for the
salaried workers would be similarly reduced by 10% of the
then current rates. The appellant pleaded in this notice
that these economy measures had become necessary owing to
the financial set-back of the appellant and would come into
effect on June 1, 1952. The Union opposed these changes. A
joint discussion was then arranged on June 2 and June 26,
1952. It appears that further economy measures were
introduced for discussion between the parties by the notice
dated May 30, 1952 These further economy measures related to
the reduction of the facility bonus by a further amount of 6
as. per day, withdrawal of two hours’ concession of special
bonus and discharge of workers of the rolling mills
department. The Union did not agree to any of these
measures except the reduction of working hours from 47 to
42-1/2 hours a week. Since joint consultations did not lead
to any agreement the appellant b its notice
656
dated June 27, 1952, intimated to the workers that the
reduction of working hours and in the facility bonus and
dearness allowance as notified on March 28, 1952, would be
brought into operation from June 1, 1952. The workers were
also told that the two hours’ concession would be withdrawn
from July 1, 1952, and the workers in the rolling mills
department would be discharged with effect from August 1,
1952. The workmen resisted these proposals and took the
industrial dispute arising therefrom to the Labour
Commissioner immediately. Thereafter a joint conference of
the appellant and its workmen was held on July 4, 1952. The
intervention of the Labour Commissioner was not effective as
the proposals made by him to resolve the dispute between the
parties amicably were not acceptable to the parties. The
appellant thereupon discharged the workmen of the rolling
mills department, 52 in number, with 14 days’ notice pay and
retrenched other 227 workers of various categories as from
July 26, 1952, with a similar notice pay. The Government of
West Bengal found that conciliation was not possible and so
the industrial dispute in question was referred to the Sixth
Industrial Tribunal for adjudication.
As we are concerned in the present appeal only with the
constitution of the wage structure and some questions
incidental thereto we will now refer to the decisions of the
lower tribunals only in respect of these matters. The Sixth
Industrial Tribunal considered the financial position of the
appellant and revised and reconstituted the wage structure
and the dearness allowance in the light of the Omnibus
Engineering Awards in West Bengal published in 1948 and
1950. The tribunal hold that the two hours concession,
facility bonus and the food concession were in the nature of
bounty gratuitously paid by the appellant and as such they
could be withdrawn by the appellant at its pleasure. The
tribunal also came to the conclusion that since the wage
structure had been revised and reconstituted properly, the
appellant should be given liberty to abolish the said three
657
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concessional payments. It may be relevant to observe that
the tribunal’s conclusion in regard to the character of the
alleged concessional payments was based principally on the
view that in his award Shri Palit had held that these
payments were purely concessional payments and that the
workmen had no right to claim them as constituents of their
wage structure.
The Labour Appellate Tribunal has not agreed with this
conclusion. The view that the Appellate Tribunal has taken
is that these so-called concessional payments have been
enjoyed by the workmen for a pretty long time as of right
and as part of their basic wages and dearness allowance and
as such they have become a term of the conditions of their
service. Besides, the appellate tribunal has observed that
it has been the convention with industrial tribunals not to
reduce the existing emoluments of the workmen to their
prejudice. In the result the wage structure constituted by
the tribunal was modified by the award of the appellate
tribunal in respect of existing workmen. The main
conditions introduced by these modifications were three:
" 1. The total basic wages of a time-rated worker together
with the two hours’ concession immediately before 1-6-’52
shall hereinafter be called his existing basic wage.
2. The total of the temporary dearness allowance and the
facility bonus as was available to a worker prior to 1-6-’52
and the food concession wherever admissible to a worker
under the rules of the company shall hereinafter be called
his existing- dearness allowance, no matter if any portion
of these benefits has been curtailed or stopped in the
meantime.
3. The two hours’ concession, the facility bonus and the
food concession shall cease to have any separate existence
distinct from the basic wages and dearness allowance of the
worker on and from the date when this decision comes into
force, hereinafter called the relevant date."
Both the original and the appellate tribunals have agreed in
providing that the existing basic wages and the existing
existing emoluments shall not be reduced.
358
For the appellant Mr. Sen has contended that the Labour
Appellate Tribunal was in error in assuming that it has been
the convention in industrial adjudications not to reduce the
existing emoluments of the workmen to their prejudice in any
case. He contends that just as the rise in the cost of
living index or similar relevant factors may justify the
revision of the wage structure in favour of the workmen, so
should the revision of the wage structure be permissible in
favour of the employer in case the financial position of the
employer has considerably deteriorated or other relevant
factors indicate such a revision. Indeed Mr. Sen made it
clear during the course of his arguments that in the present
appeal he was more concerned to challenge the validity of
the assumption made by the Labour Appellate Tribunal in that
behalf, rather than the propriety or correctness of the
actual modifications made by the Appellate Tribunal in its
award. The point thus raised by Mr. Sen is no doubt of
general importance and it must be considered in all its
aspects.
Before dealing with this point, it would be relevant to
refer to the findings made by both the tribunals in regard
to the financial position of the appellant. The present
unit of the aluminium industry which was originally started
by the Americans was taken over by the appellant from the
Americans on August 9, 1951. The main business of the
appellant is to manufacture household utensils from
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aluminum circles. These circles were imported until the
last war. During the war, import of these articles became
difficult and so a rolling mills department for manu-
facturing circles from scrap materials was started. It is
true that utensils made from such circles were inferior in
quality; but import difficulties were insurmountable and so
even these inferior utensils found a good market. As soon,
however, as better quality circles became available the
demand for these utensils rapidly decreased and the business
began to incur loss. The management was thus compelled to
close down the rolling mills permanently in February, 1952.
As we have already mentioned, the workmen employed
659
in the rolling mills were ultimately discharged on July
15,1952.
The appellant placed before the tribunals below the relevant
figures from the statements of accounts from 1947 to
September 1952. Both the tribunals have examined these
figures and have come to the conclusion that the economic
position of the appellant on the whole was none too bright.
Fall in the sale of utensils was noticeable during these
years and if the utensils were not disposed of in the market
quickly they are likely to lose their luster. and glaze and
would be even stained if they were to be stored in the
godown for any length of time. This in turn would involve
extra expenditure and would contribute to further losses.
It appears to be the concurrent finding of both the
tribunals that the manufacturing cost in 1952, as in some
preceding years, exceeded the sale price and this
undoubtedly would be a disquieting feature in any industrial
concern. The original tribunal did not see any prospect of
improvement in the appellant’s financial position; whereas
the Appellate Tribunal was disposed to take the view that as
a result of the substantial retrenchment effected by the
appellant " financial position of the relevant unit of the
aluminum industry appears to have improved ". It is in the
background of these findings that Mr. Sen has contended that
the wage structure constituted by the Appellate Tribunal
would work a hardship on the appellant and his grievance is
that in reconstituting the wage structure the Appellate
Tribunal was very much influenced by the assumption that the
wage structure can never be revised to the prejudice of
workmen.
In dealing with this question, it is essential to bear in
mind the main objectives which industrial adjudication in a
modern democratic welfare state inevitably keeps in view in
fixing wage structures. ".It is well known " observes Sir
Frank Tillyard, " that English Common Law still regards the
wage bargain as a contract between an individual employer
and an individual worker, and that the general policy of the
law has been and is to leave to the two
84
560
contracting parties a general liberty of bargaining, so long
as there are no terms against public policy " (1). In India
as well as in England and other democratic welfare states
great inroad has been made on this view of the Common Law by
labour welfare legislation such as the Minimum Wages Act and
the Industrial Disputes Act. With the emergence of the
concept of a welfare state, collective bargaining between
trade unions and capital has come into its own and has
received statutory recognition; the state is no longer
content to play the part of a passive onlooker in an
industrial dispute. The old principle of the absolute
freedom of contract and the doctrine of laissez faire have
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yielded place to new principles of social welfare and common
good. Labour naturally looks upon the constitution of wage
structures as affording "a bulwark against the dangers of a
depression, safeguard against unfair methods of competition
between employers and a guarantee of wages necessary for the
minimum requirements of employees " (2). There can be no
doubt that in fixing wage structures in different
industries, industrial adjudication attempts, gradually and
by stages though it may be, to attain the principal
objective of a welfare state, to secure "to all citizens
justice, social and economic". To the attainment of this
ideal the Indian Constitution has given a place of pride and
that is the basis of the new guiding principles of social
welfare and common good to which we have just referred.
Though social and economic justice is the ultimate ideal of
industrial adjudication, its immediate objective in an
industrial dispute as to the wage structure is to settle the
dispute by constituting such a wage structure as would do
justice to the interests of both labour and capital, would
establish harmony between them and lead to their genuine and
wholehearted co-operation in the task of production. It is
obvious that co-operation between capital and labour would
lead to more production and that naturally helps national
economy and progress. In achieving this
(1) "The Worker and the State " by Sir Frank Tillyard, 3rd
Ed, P. 37.
(2)" wage Hour Law" Coverage-- By Herman A. Wecht, p.2.
661
immediate objective, industrial adjudication takes into
account several principles such as, for instance, the
principle of comparable wages, productivity of the trade or
industry, cost of living and ability of the industry to pay.
The application of these and other relevant principles leads
to the constitution of different categories of wage
structures. These categories are’ sometimes described as
living wage, fair wage and minimum wage. These terms, or
their variants, the comfort or decency level, the
subsistence level and the poverty or the floor level, cannot
and do not mean the same thing in all countries nor even in
different industries in the same country. It is very
difficult to define or even to describe accurately the
content of these different concepts. In the case of an
expanding national economy the contents of these expressions
are also apt to expand and vary. What may be a fair wage in
a particular industry in one country may be a living wage in
the same industry in another country. Similarly, what may
be a fair wage in. a given industry today may cease to be
fair and may border on the minimum wage in future.
Industrial adjudication has naturally to apply carefully the
relevant principles of wage structure and decide every
industrial dispute so as to do justice to both labour and
capital. In deciding industrial disputes in regard to wage
structure, one of the primary objectives is and has to be
the restoration of peace and goodwill in the industry itself
on a fair and just basis to be determined in the light of
all relevant considerations. There is, however, one
principle which admits of no exceptions. No industry has a
right to exist unless it is able to pay its workmen at least
a bare minimum wage. It is quite likely that in under-
developed countries, where unemployment prevails on a very
large scale, unorganised labour may be available on
starvation wages; but the employment of labour on starvation
wages cannot be encouraged or favored in a modern democratic
welfare state. If an employer cannot maintain his
enterprise without cutting down the wages of his employees
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below even a bare subsistence or minimum wage, he would
have no right to conduct his enterprise on such terms.
662
In considering the pros and cons of the argument urged
before us by Mr. Sen, this position-must be borne in mind.
The question posed before us by Mr. Sen is: Can the wage
structure fixed in a given industry be never revised to the
prejudice of its workmen? Considered as a general question
in the abstract it must be answered in favour of Mr. Sen. We
do not think it would be correct to Bay that in no
conceivable circumstances can the wage structure be revised
to the prejudice of workmen, When we make this observation,
we must add that even theoretically no wage structure can or
should be revised to the prejudice of workmen if the
structure in question falls in the category of the bare
subsistence or the minimum wage. If the wage structure in
question falls in a higher category, then it would be open
to the employer to claim its revision even to the prejudice
of the workmen provided a case for such revision is made out
on the merits to the satisfaction of the tribunal. In
dealing with a claim for such revision, the tribunal may
have to consider., as in the present case whether the
employer’s financial difficulties could not be adequately
met by retrenchment in personnel already effected by the
employer and sanctioned by the tribunal. The tribunal may
also enquire whether the financial difficulties facing the
employer are likely to be of a short duration or are going
to face the employer for a fairly long time. It is not
necessary, and would indeed be very difficult, to state
exhaustively all considerations which may be relevant in a
given case. It would, however, be enough to observe that,
after considering all the relevant facts, if the tribunal is
satisfied that a case for reduction in the wage structure
has been established then it would be open to the tribunal
to accede to the request of the employer to make appropriate
reduction in the wage structure, subject to such conditions
as to time or otherwise that the tribunal may deem fit or
expedient to impose. The tribunal must also keep in mind
some important practical considerations. Substantial
reduction in the was structure is likely to lead to
discontent among
663
workmen and may result in disharmony between the employer
and his employees; and that would never be for the benefit
of the industry as a whole. On the other hand, in assessing
the value or importance o possible discontent amongst
workmen resulting from the reduction of wages, industrial
tribunals will also have to take into account the fact that
if any industry is burdened with a wage structure beyond its
financial capacity, its very existence may be in jeopardy
and that would ultimately lead to unemployment. It is thus
clear that in all such cases all relevant considerations
have to be carefully weighed and an attempt has to be made
in each case to reach a conclusion which would be reasonable
on the merits and would be fair and just to both the
parties. It would be interesting to notice in this
connection that all the tribunals that have dealt with the
present dispute have consistently directed that existing
wages should not be reduced to the prejudice of the workmen.
In other words, though each tribunal attempted to constitute
a wage structure in the light of materials furnished to it,
a saving clause has been added every time protecting the
interests of such workmen as were drawing higher wages
before. Even so, it would not be right to hold that there
is a rigid and inexorable convention that the wage structure
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once fixed by industrial tribunals can never be changed to
the prejudice of workmen. In our opinion, therefore, the
point raised by Mr. Sen must be answered in his favour
subject to such relevant considerations and limitations as
we have briefly indicated.
Mr. Sen is, however, not right in contending that the final
decision of the Appellate Tribunal is based solely or even
chiefly on the alleged convention to which the Appellate
Tribunal has referred. As we have already pointed out, the
tribunal has also found that substantial retrenchment which
has been sanctioned by both the tribunals would improve the
financial position of the appellant. In the opinion of the
Appellate Tribunal, the downward tendency in the cost of
living index on which the appellant partly relied could not
be considered in the present proceedings since no
664
specific issue had been referred to the tribunal in that
behalf. Besides, enough material had not been produced to
show to what extent the cost of living index had fallen and
whether this fall was temporary or had come to stay. The
Appellate Tribunal, it appears, thought that the wages paid
by the appellant to its workmen "are the irreducible minimum
or may at-best be in the region of fair wages with a small
margin over the minimum wage." If, in reaching its final
conclusions, the Appellate Tribunal has relied not only upon
the alleged convention but also upon the other circumstances
just mentioned, it would not be fair to say that its
conclusion is vitiated in law or is otherwise unsound.
Normally, this court would be slow to entertain an objection
that some of the considerations which have weighed with the
Appellate Tribunal in reaching its final decision are either
invalid or are not borne out by sufficient evidence on
record.
There is another point which Mr. Sen has raised before us in
regard to the true character of the concessional payments
made by the appellant to its work. men and which have been
incorporated by the Appellate Tribunal in the wage
structure. The Appellate Tribunal has taken the view that
these concessional payments really amounted to payments made
to the workmen as a matter of right and it is the
correctness of this conclusion that is challenged before us
by Mr. Sen. Let us then consider the genesis of these
payments. Prior to the new Factories Act, the appellant’s
workmen worked on an average for 59 hours of work made up of
the usual 54 hours of work and overtime. After the
Factories Act came into force, the working hours had to be
reduced but in order to compensate the time. rate workers
for reduction in their wages, the management added to the
daily earnings of such workers the wages for two hours. The
additional two hours’ wages thus awarded to the workers came
to be known as two hours’ concession or special bonus. This
bonus was introduced in August, 1946. In April, 1945,
facility bonus had been introduced at 3 as. per day for
workers getting basic wages equal to or less than 10 as. per
day and 4 as. per day for workers whose basic wages were
665
over 10 as. per day.. It appears that this facility bonus
was revised from time to time in the upward direction, and
it used to be paid prior to June 1952 at a graduated scale
linked to the basic wages in slabs’ varying from 6 as. to 12
as. per day. Besides, the appellant introduced food
concession to workers employed prior to 1951. Thus the
constitution of the wage structure in the appellant’s
concern included dearness allowance, facility bonus and food
concession. In dealing with the true nature of these
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payments it is necessary to take into account the
appellant’s case as deposed to by the appellant’s Labour
Officer and Assistant to the Manager, Shri Jaisuklal Shah.
According to Shri Shah, the facility bonus was an additional
allowance for the high cost of living very much on the same
footing as dearness allowance. " Two hours’ allowance",
said Shri Shah, " is referred to as special bonus or extra
bonus. It was paid because the workers demanded and it was
possible to pay it at that time ". These statements lend
considerable support to the workmen’s case that the payments
in question constituted a part of the wage structure of the
appellant. Indeed, even in the statement of the appellant
before the industrial tribunal in the present proceedings,
it is specifically averred in paragraph 2 that prior to
June, 1952, the company’s pay structure consisted of five
items, viz., (1) basic wage, (2) dearness allowance, (3)
special bonus or extra bonus, (4) facility bonus or special
allowance, and (5) food concession. The attitude adopted by
the appellant before Shri Palit is also consistent with this
pleading and with the evidence given by Shri Shah in the
present proceedings. Before Shri Palit, the appellant had
urged that there was no occasion to grant increment to its
workmen because under the categories of several allowances
the company had substantially constituted its wage structure
to the benefit of the workmen. In this connection, it would
also be material to point out that it was because these
additional payments were made by the appellant to its
workmen that the workmen did not raise any dispute and did
not join the arbitration before the Second Engineering
Tribunal. Besides,
666
that also is a relevant factor to consider in dealing with
the true character of these payments. If the Labour
Appellate Tribunal took into account all these facts and
held that the payments in question are not matters of bounty
but that, in essence and in substance, they form part of the
basic wage and dearness allowance payable to the workmen, we
see no reason to interfere with its conclusion. It is not
disputed before us that if this conclusion is right, the
Labour Appellate Tribunal has properly revised the wage
structure as constituted by the original tribunal and
included the payments in question in appropriate categories.
There is one more point which may be mentioned before we
part with this case. Mr. Sen incidentally argued that the
result of the award passed by the Labour Appellate Tribunal
is that there will be two scales of wage structure, one for
those who are already in the employment of the appellant and
the other for the new entrants. Since we have held that the
modifications made by the Appellate Tribunal in favour of
the existing workmen cannot be successfully challenged by
the appellant, we do not think it necessary to consider
whether wage structure which has been fixed by the Appellate
Tribunal in regard to new entrants into the service of the
appellant is justified or not.
The result is that both the contentions raised by Mr. Sen
substantially fail. The appeal must accordingly be
dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
667