Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2992-3004 of 2003
PETITIONER:
M/s Indian Drugs & Pharmaceuticals Ltd.
RESPONDENT:
Devki Devi and Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/07/2006
BENCH:
ARIJIT PASAYAT & TARUN CHATTERJEE
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J
These appeals involve identical issues and are, therefore,
disposed of by this common judgment.
Appellant calls in question legality of the judgment
rendered by a learned Single Judge of the Uttaranchal High
Court. Several writ petitions were filed by the appellant
questioning correctness of the award dated 23.12.1999
holding that respondent No.2 in the writ petitions (respondent
No.1 in each of these appeals) were entitled to re-instatement
and compensation of Rs.5,000/- with litigation expenses of
Rs.500/- each. It was held by the Labour Court that there
was clear violation of the provisions of Section 6-N of the U.P.
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (in short the ’Act’) as cessation
of their work amounted to retrenchment which was in
violation of the aforesaid provision.
Background facts in a nutshell are as follows:
M/s Indian Drugs & Pharmaceuticals Limited (for short
IDPL), the appellant, is a public undertaking fully owned and
controlled by the Government of India. It has one of its units
at Virbhadra, Rishikesh, District Dehradun. Several workers of
the unit died in harness leaving behind the widows and
families. The IDPL Workers’ Union took up their cause and
other disputes in a meeting held on 12.8.1988. In the said
meeting as item No.3 the Union demanded that the
widows/dependants of deceased employees should be given
employment in the plant. Till such time the decision for their
employment is received from the corporate office, the
management should employ them as contract labour. The
management agreed to consider the Union’s suggestion
sympathetically.
However, appellant decided to give work to them on
contract basis by appointing them as contractor for
maintenance of office records, cleaning and mopping of floors
etc. on a consolidated amount. As contractors they were liable
to pay provident fund and other statutory liabilities for the
labourers engaged by them to carry out the contracts. The
respondents were appointed as contractors from time to time.
After the meeting which was held on 12.8.1988 the Head
Office vide letter dated 27.5.1998 took a decision that contract
labour arrangement should cease. It was also decided that in
view of financial stringencies it has been decided to dispense
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with system forthwith and existing contractual agreements
were to be reviewed.
With effect from 1.8.1998 contracts with the respondents
were terminated. Respondents raised industrial dispute which
was referred to the Labour Court U.P. Dehradun who gave the
award against the appellant-company on the ground that the
said respondents were the workmen and they were entitled to
be regularized. It applied the principle of lifting the veil of
contract to find out the correct position.
Against the said order, the appellant-company filed Writ
Petitions which were dismissed on the ground that the
minutes of the meeting dated 12.8.1988 was a settlement
between the parties in terms of Section 2(p) of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947 (in short the ’ID Act’) read with Rule 58 of
the Industrial Disputes (Central) Rules, 1957 (in short the
’Central Rules’). High Court recorded a finding that the
settlement between the employer and employees acquired a
statutory status, as a result of which the job contractors
cannot be said to be contract labourers. In fact they are
workmen in view of their engagement. Therefore, the
respondents cannot be said to be contract labourers but were
in reality workmen.
It was noted by the High Court that there was settlement
arrived at between the management of the Rishikesh Unit of
the appellant-company and the office bearers of the Union and
since the respondent in each appeal was given employment in
furtherance of the policy of the appellant-company, they were
workmen. The High Court noted that the employment was
given to the dependants/widows of the workmen who had died
in harness. Since the engagement was pursuant to a
settlement in terms of Section 2(p) of the ID Act, it was binding
on the parties to the agreement in terms of Section 18(1) of the
ID Act. It was noted that the Memorandum of Settlement was
arrived at in terms of Rule 58 of the Central Rules. What was
projected by the appellant, according to the High Court, as job
contract is nothing but employment given under dying in
harness scheme. Accordingly, the Labour Court’s award was
upheld.
In support of the appeals, learned counsel for the
appellant submitted that the Labour Court and the High Court
have clearly lost sight of various relevant factors. The
appellant is a sick company and is before Board of Industrial
and Financial Reconstruction (in short ’BIFR’) since 1992.
There is no rule or scheme for providing appointment on
compassionate ground. The appellant has never employed the
concerned respondents on compassionate ground and in any
event the company was not in a position to employ such
persons. The bleak financial position of the company has been
considered by this Court in Officers & Supervisors of IDPL v.
Chairman & M.D., IDPL and Ors. (2003(6) SCC 490).
Originally more than 6500 employees were employed and out
of them 6171 have taken retirement and only 421 employees
are working throughout the country. The appellant-company
is not functional and is trying to further reduce the number of
employees. In the absence of any rule or scheme for
compassionate employment, no direction could have been
given by the Labour Court and the High Court erroneously
held that there was a settlement arrived at. The Minutes of
the meeting dated 12.8.1988 clearly show that there was no
settlement. On the other hand, the minutes show that only
demands of the Union and the agreement of the management
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to consider the suggestions sympathetically were accorded.
This cannot by any stretch of imagination be considered a
Memorandum of Settlement in terms of Section 2(p) of the ID
Act or Rule 58 of the Central Rules. The Labour Court
erroneously held that the labour contract given was in fact not
a contract but an appointment of the respondents as
workmen. The language of the contract is clear and
unambiguous.
In response, in the counter affidavit and the notes of
submissions it has been mentioned by learned counsel for the
respondents that the orders of the Labour Court and the High
Court do not warrant interference. It is stated that though
contracts were purportedly entered into for all practical
purposes, the respondents were detained as employees by the
appellant-company.
The undisputed position is that the appellant-company
does not have any rule or scheme for compassionate
appointment.
As was observed in State of Haryana and Ors. v. Rani
Devi & Anr. (AIR 1996 SC 2445), it need not be pointed out
that the claim of person concerned for appointment on
compassionate ground is based on the premise that he was
dependant on the deceased-employee. Strictly this claim
cannot be upheld on the touchstone of Article 14 or 16 of the
Constitution of India. However, such claim is considered as
reasonable and permissible on the basis of sudden crisis
occurring in the family of such employee who has served the
State and dies while in service. That is why it is necessary for
the authorities to frame rules, regulations or to issue such
administrative orders which can stand the test of Articles 14
and 16. Appointment on compassionate ground cannot be
claimed as a matter of right. Die-in harness Scheme cannot be
made applicable to all types of posts irrespective of the nature
of service rendered by the deceased-employee. In Rani Devi’s
case (supra) it was held that scheme regarding appointment
on compassionate ground if extended to all types of casual or
ad hoc employees including those who worked as apprentices
cannot be justified on constitutional grounds. In Life
Insurance Corporation of India v. Asha Ramchandra Ambekar
(Mrs.) and Anr. (1994 (2) SCC 718), it was pointed out that
High Courts and Administrative Tribunals cannot confer
benediction impelled by sympathetic considerations to make
appointments on compassionate grounds when the regulations
framed in respect thereof do not cover and contemplate such
appointments. It was noted in Umesh Kumar Nagpal v. State
of Haryana and Ors. (1994 (4) SCC 138), that as a rule in
public service appointment should be made strictly on the
basis of open invitation of applications and merit. The
appointment on compassionate ground is not another source
of recruitment but merely an exception to the aforesaid
requirement taking into consideration the fact of the death of
employee while in service leaving his family without any
means of livelihood. In such cases the object is to enable the
family to get over sudden financial crisis. But such
appointments on compassionate ground have to be made in
accordance with the rules, regulations or administrative
instructions taking into consideration the financial condition
of the family of the deceased.
In Smt. Sushma Gosain and Ors. v. Union of India and
Ors. (1989 (4) SCC 468), it was observed that in all claims of
appointment on compassionate grounds, there should not be
any delay in appointment. The purpose of providing
appointment on compassionate ground is to mitigate the
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hardship due to death of the bread-earner in the family. Such
appointments should, therefore, be provided immediately to
redeem the family in distress. The fact that the ward was a
minor at the time of death of his father is no ground, unless
the scheme itself envisage specifically otherwise, to state that
as and when such minor becomes a major he can be
appointed without any time consciousness or limit. The above
view was reiterated in Phoolwati (Smt.) v. Union of India and
Ors. (1991 Supp (2) SCC 689), and Union of India and Ors. v.
Bhagwan Singh (1995 (6) SCC 476). In Director of Education
(Secondary) and Anr. v. Pushpendra Kumar and Ors. (1998 (5)
SCC 192), it was observed that in matter of compassionate
appointment there cannot be insistence for a particular post.
Out of purely humanitarian consideration and having regard
to the fact that unless some source of livelihood is provided
the family would not be able to make both ends meet,
provisions are made for giving appointment to one of the
dependants of the deceased who may be eligible for
appointment. Care has, however, to be taken that provision for
ground of compassionate employment which is in the nature
of an exception to the general provisions does not unduly
interfere with the right of those other persons who are eligible
for appointment to seek appointment against the post which
would have been available, but for the provision enabling
appointment being made on compassionate grounds of the
dependant of the deceased-employee. As it is in the nature of
exception to the general provisions it cannot substitute the
provision to which it is an exception and thereby nullify the
main provision by taking away completely the right conferred
by the main provision.
In State of U.P. and Ors. v. Paras Nath (1998 (2) SCC
412), it was held that the purpose of providing employment to
the dependant of a Government servant dying-in-harness in
preference to anybody else is to mitigate hardship caused to
the family of the deceased on account of his unexpected death
while in service. To alleviate the distress of the family, such
appointments are permissible on compassionate grounds
provided there are Rules providing for such appointments.
The above position was highlighted in Commissioner of
Public Instructions and Ors. v. K.R. Vishwanath (2005 (7) SCC
206).
Additionally, in Officers and Supervisors of IDPL’s case
(supra) the financial condition of the appellant company had
been noted in detail. No production is going on in the company
since 1994. These are factors which have been completely lost
sight of by the Labour Court and the High Court. Both the
Labour Court and the High Court held that there was a
settlement arrived at in the meeting dated 12.8.1988. On bare
reading of the minutes of the meeting it is clear that there was
in fact no settlement. The relevant portion reads as follows:
"The Union demanded that the
widows/dependants of deceased employees
should be given employment in the plant as
was done earlier. They have written several
letters in this regard but no fruitful result has
come out. The widows/dependants are waiting
for employment for the last 2 years and are at
the verge of starvation. Till such time, the
decision for their employment is received from
the corporation office, the management should
employ them as contract labour so that they
may earn their bread and avoid starvation.
Further, the management should ensure
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payment of minimum wages. The number of
such needy widows/dependants of deceased
employees is about thirteen.
The management agreed to consider the
Union suggestion sympathetically. On the
request of Union the Management informed
that this will be done in a week’s time."
To provide sustenance to the family members of the
deceased workmen certain job works were given. The
agreements have been placed on record. The cost of the
contract, the nature of the work and the time allowed have
been clearly indicated in each of the contracts. It also clearly
indicates the number of persons who are to be engaged for
carrying out the job contract work. There was no material
before the Labour Court to conclude that the contract was not
a job contract and in fact employment had been given. There is
no foundation for such a conclusion.
Above being the position, the Labour Court and the High
Court were not justified in holding that the respondent in each
case was a workman and/or that there was retrenchment
involved. The award of the Labour Court and the judgment of
the High Court are therefore set aside
The appeals are allowed but with no order as to costs.