Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE SOUTH ARCOT ELEC-TRICITY DISTRIBUT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
N.K. MOHAMMAD KHAN, ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/11/1968
BENCH:
ACT:
The Madras Electricity Supply Undertakings (Acquisition) Act
29 of 1954, and Rules thereunder; s. 15 and r. 17-The
Industrial Disputes Act 14 of 1947 ss. 25F, 25FF, 33C(2)-
Electricity company taken over by State Government of
Madras-Employees continued in employment under s. 15 and r.
17 under Madras Act-Retrenchment compensation to employees,
whether payable-Applicability of proviso to s. 25FF of
Industrial Disputes Act-Jurisdiction of labour Court under
s. 33C(2).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant Company was taken over by the Government of
Madras in exercise of the powers conferred on it by the
Madras Electricity Supply Undertakings (Acquisition) Act
1954. All the property and assets of the company became
vested in the Madras Government. Under r. 17 of the Madras.
Government Undertakings (Acquisition) Rules, 1954 all the
staff of the Company employed immediately before the vesting
date were retained by the Government and were continued
provisionally for a period of 12 months from the date of
vesting on the same terms and conditions of service as were
applicable W them under the Company immediately before
the date of vesting. In respect of the future, employment
of the workmen by the Madras Government, their conditions of
service were to be regulated by s. 15 of the Madras Act and’
the various conditions laid down in r. 17 of the Rules.
Subsequently the workmen claimed that they had become
entitled to retrenchment compensation under s. 25F read
with s. 25FF of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 and filed
application for computation of the compensation payable to
them under s. 33C of the Act, before the Labour Court.
Initially the Company was the only opposite party to the
applications but later the State of Madras and the
Electricity Board of Madras to which the State had
transferred the undertaking, were also made parties. The
Company and the Electricity Board raised certain preliminary
objections to the jurisdiction of the Labour Court which
did not find favour with that Court. On merits the Labour
Court held that the workmen were entitled to retrenchment
compensation under s. 25FF and directed the Company to pay
the amount. The High Court upheld the Tribunals orders on
merits as well as on the question of jurisdiction. The
Company appealed to this Court. The submissions on behalf
of the appellant were: (i) That the Labour Court as well as
the High Court were not right in holding that the conditions
laid down in the. proviso to s. 25FF were not satisfied;
(ii) that the applications under s. 33C(2) of the Act were
not maintainable because the question whether the workmen
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were entitled to retrenchment compensation was outside the
jurisdiction of the Labour Court which was not competent to
decide such a disputed question; (iii) That the High Court
was wrong in holding that the question whether the liability
to pay the retrenchment compensation fell on the Company or
the State of Madras or the Electricity Board could not be
decided by the Labour Court under s. 33C(2) of the Act and
had to be decided in other appropriate proceedings.
903
HELD: (i) The conditions of service of the workmen under
s. 15 of the Madras Act and under r. 17 were less favourable
than their conditions of service had been under the company.
In the circumstances the requirements of el. (b) of the
proviso to s. 25FF were obviously not satisfied and
that proviso could not be invoked by the Company for the
purpose of defeating the claim made by the workmen under the
principal clause of that section. Under the principal
clause the workmen became entitled to receive retrenchment
compensation in accordance with s. 25F of the Act on She
basis of the legal fiction envisaged that those rights would
accrue to them as if the workmen had been retrenched. The
Labour Court and the High Court were therefore right in
holding that the workmen were entitled to claim retrenchment
compensation in accordance with the provisions of s. 25F of
the Act because of the right accruing to them under s. 25FF
of the Act. [910 A-C]
The employment under the new employer could only
commence from the time when the ownership or the management
of the undertaking vested in the State Government; but
simultaneously with that vesting, the workmen had to be
deemed to be retrenched from service. The retrenchment
could, therefore, be deemed to have been made only by the
previous employer. Further, it would be the previous
employer who would be competent to give the notice in
accordance with the provisions of s. 25F of the Act. In
these circumstances the conclusion was irresistible that the
claim under s. 25FF of the Act to compensation accrues to
the workmen against the previous employer under whom he was
employed until the date of the transfer. In the present
case therefore the right to receive compensation clearly
accrued under s. 25FF of the Act against the Company and
there was, therefore, no difficulty in the Labour Court
exercising jurisdiction on that basis. [910 H--911 C]
(ii) The right which had been claimed by the various
workmen in their applications under s. 33C(2) of the Act,
was a right which accrued to them under s. 25FF of the Act
and was an existing right at the time. when these
applications were made. The Labour Court clearly had
jurisdiction to decide whether such a right did or did not
exist when dealing with the application under that
provision. The mere denial of that right by the company
cold not take away its jurisdiction, so that the order made
by the Labour Court was competent. [911 H--912 A]
Chief Mining Engineer, East India Coal Co. Ltd. v.
Ratneswar & Ors. [1968] 1 S.C.R. 140, applied.
State of Bikaner and Jaipur v.R.L. Khandelwal, [1968] 1
L.L.J. 589, Punjab National Bank Ltd. v.K.L. Kharbanda,
[1962] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 977, Central Bank of India v.P.S.
Rajagopalan & Ors., [1964] 3 S.C.R. 140 and Bombay Gas
Company Ltd. v. Gopal Bhiva and Ors. [1964] 3 S.C.R. 709,
referred to.
(iii) The Labour Court was concerned with the right
claimed under the Act. Whether by virtue of the provisions
or the terms of transfer of the undertaking from the company
to the Government or by virtue of the provisions of the
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Madras Act, the company was entitled to claim that this
liability should be ultimately met by the State Government
was a point which did not affect the right of the workmen to
claim their compensation from the Company and the Labour
Court was therefore: not required to go into the question
when dealing with application under s. 33C(2) of the Act:
[912’C--E]
904
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 2455 and
2540 of 1966.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order
dated June 28, 1962 of the Madras High Court in Writ Appeal
No. 113 of 1959 and Writ Petition No. 254 of 1960.
S.V. Gupte, M. Ranganatha Sastri, M.S.K. Sastri and M.S.
Narasimhan, for the appellant (in both the appeals).
M.K. Ramamurthi, Shyamala Pappu and Vineet Kumar, for
respondent No. 1 (in both the appeals).
K.N. Mudaliyar, Advocate-General for the State of Madras
and A.V. Rangam, for respondents Nos. 2 and 3 (in both the
appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. The appellant, the South Arcot
Electricity Distribution Company Ltd. (hereinafter referred
to as "the Company"), was carrying on the business of
distribution of electricity as a Licensee under the
Government in South Arcot District in the State of Madras.
The Government of Madras, in exercise of the powers
conferred on it by the Madras Electricity Supply
Undertakings (Acquisition) Act. No. 29 of 1954 (hereinafter
referred to as "the Madras Act"), took over the appellant’s
undertaking with effect from 1st of June, 1957. The Company
chose to be paid compensation on Basis A laid down in
section 5 (1 ) of the Madras Act, with the result that all
the property belonging to the Company, including the fixed
assets, cash, security investments, and the like and all
rights, liabilities and obligations as on the date of
vesting vested or must be deemed to have vested in the
Madras Government. Under Rule 17 of the Madras Electricity
Undertakings (Acquisition) Rules, 1954 (hereinafter referred
to as "the Rules") framed by the Governor of Madras under
the provisions of the Madras Act, all the staff of the
Company employed immediately before the vesting date were
retained by the Government and were continued provisionally
for a period of 12 months from the date of vesting on the
same terms and conditions of service as were applicable to
them under the Company immediately before the date of
vesting. In respect of future employment of the workmen by
the Madras Government, their conditions of service came to
be regulated by s. 15 of the Madras Act and the various
conditions laid down in r. 17 of the Rules. Subsequently,
the employees of the Company numbering 352 claimed that they
had become entitled to retrenchment compensation under
section 25F read with s. 25FF of the Industrial Disputes Act
No. 14 of 1947 (hereinafter referred to as "the Act") and
filed applications for computation of the cora-
905
pensation payable to them under section 33C(2) of the Act
before the Labour Court. All these 352 applications were
based on an identical claim and were heard by the Labour
Court together. Initially, the Company was the sole opposite
party in these applications, but, later on, the State of
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Madras was impleaded as another opposite party. In
addition, the Electricity Board of Madras, to which the
State of Madras had transferred the undertaking, was also
impleaded as an opposite party. The Company contested these
applications on various grounds, inter alia pleading that
there had been no break in the service of the employees. or
any change in the conditions of their service to their
detriment, so that the employees were not entitled to claim
any compensation.’ Another plea taken was that the
applications were not maintainable under s. 33C(2) of the
Act, because the Labour Court was not competent to decide
the question whether the workmen were entitled to
retrenchment compensation when this claim of theirs was. not
accepted by the Company. It was, in addition, pleaded that,
even if the workmen were entitled to any compensation, the
liability to pay that compensation Was not that of the.
Company, but of the State of Madras or the Electricity Board
in view of the provisions of the Madras Act, under which all
the liabilities of the Company had vested first in the State
of Madras and subsequently in the Electricity Board. The
Electricity Board also contended that no liability for
payment of retrenchment compensation had arisen and that, in
any case, there was no obligation on the part of the Board
to pay retrenchment compensation. The Board supported the
Company in the plea that the services of the employees had
not been interrupted and that the terms and conditions of
service were in no way less favourable after the vesting of
the undertaking. in the State of Madras or the Electricity
Board. It was further pleaded that a dispute had arisen
between the Company and the GOvernment under s. 13(1)(b) of
the’ Madras Act as to which of the two was liable to pay
retrenchment compensation if at all, and no relief could be
given to the employees by the Labour Court until the said
dispute was decided in accordance with the provisions of the
Madras Act by arbitration. On these pleadings, three
preliminary objections were raised, viz., (1) that the
notice wages and retrenchment compensation claimed in the
applications were not benefits due to the employees within
the meaning of s. 33C(2) of the Act; (2) that, as
retrenchment came under Chapter VA of the Act, it could only
be decided by an Industrial Tribunal and not by the Labour
Court; and (3) that, having regard to the fact that
complicated questions of law and fact as to the liability of
the Company or the Government or the Board had to be
decided, it was not competent for the Labour Court to decide
the matter summarily in proceedings under s. 33C(2) of the
Act and that the dispute must be decided by a civil court.
The Labour Court, by an order dated 3rd October, 1958,
906
over-ruled these preliminary objections and directed that
the applications be listed for being tried on merits. The
Company, thereupon, filed writ petitions under Article 226
of the Constitution in the High Court of Madras numbered as
820 and 842 to 1847 of 1958 seeking directions of the Court
restraining the Labour Court from inquiring into these
applications on merits on the ground that the Labour Court
had no jurisdiction to entertain the applications from the
employees. A learned single Judge of the Court dismissed
the writ petitions holding that the Labour Court had
jurisdiction to decide the applications and that the
controversy between the Company on the one side, and the
Government of Madras and the Electricity Board on the other
side, as to the party which had to bear the liability will
have to be disposed of in proceedings taken separately from
these proceedings under the Act. Aggrieved by this decision,
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the Company preferred Writ Appeal No. 113 of 1959 in the
Appellate Side of the High Court.
In the meantime, the Labour Court took up the
applications for decision on merits and, since common
questions were involved in all the applications, one of
these applications C.P. No. 81 of 1957 was taken up as a
test case for disposal by the Labour Court by consent of all
parties concerned. The Labour Court, by its order dated 4th
February, 1960, held that the workmen concerned were
entitled to retrenchment compensation in accordance with s.
25FF of the Act, computed the amount due, and passed an
order directing the Company to pay the amount.
The Company, thereupon, filed Writ Petition No. 254 of
1960 in the High Court of Madras for quashing this order of
the Labour Court. Writ Appeal No. 113 of 1959 and this Writ
Petition No. 254 of 1960 were heard together by a Division
Bench of the High Court which decided them by a common
judgment and dismissed the Writ Appeal as well as the Writ
Petition. The Company then sought leave to appeal to this
Court under Art. 133 of the Constitution. The High Court
granted a certificate in respect of its judgment in Writ
Petition No. 254 of 1960, while rejecting the application
for grant of certificate in respect of the same judgment
insofar as it had disposed of Writ Appeal No. 1134 1959.
Civil Appeal No. 2540 of 1966 now before us has been filed
by the Company in pursuance of that certificate granted by
the High Court. The Company further obtained from this
Court special leave to appeal against the same judgment
insofar as it governed Writ Appeal No. 113 of 1959 and in
pursuance of that special leave granted by this Court, Civil
Appeal No. 2455 of 1966 has been filed. These appeals have
been heard by us together and are now to be disposed of by
this common judgment.
907
Mr. S.V. Gupte, learned counsel appearing for the
Company raised the following three points in his arguments
in these two appeals :--
(1) That the Labour Court as well as the High Court were
not right in holding that the conditions laid down in the
proviso to s. 25FF of the Act were not satisfied and in thus
accepting the claim of the workmen to compensation under the
principal clause of that section.
(2) That the applications under s. 33C(2) of the Act were
not maintainable, because the question whether the workmen
were entitled to retrenchment compensation was outside the
jurisdiction of the Labour Court which was not competent to
decide such a disputed question.
(3) That the High Court was wrong in holding that the
question whether the liability to pay the retrenchment
compensation
fell on the Company or the State of Madras or the
Electricity Board could not be decided by the Labour Court
under s. 33C(2) of the Act and had to be determined in other
appropriate proceedings.
Section 25FF of the Act is as. follows :-
"Where the ownership or management of an
undertaking is transferred, whether by
agreement or by operation of law, from the
employer in relation to that undertaking to a
new employer, every workman who has been in
continuous service for not less than one year
in that undertaking immediately before such
transfer shall be entitled to notice and
compensation in accordance with the provisions
of section 25Fi as if the workman had been
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retrenched:
Provided that nothing in this section
shall apply to a workman in any case where
there has.been a change of employers by reason
of the transfer, if-
(a) the service of the workman has not
been interrupted by such transfer;
(b) the terms and conditions of service
applicable to the workman after such transfer
are not in any way less favourable to the
workman than those applicable to him
immediately before the transfer; and
(c) the new employer is, under the terms
of such transfer or’ otherwise, legally liable
to pay to the workman, in the event of his
retrenchment, compensation on the basis that
his service has been continuous and has not
been interrupted by the transfer."
908
The principal clause of this section clearly confers a
right on every workman, who has been employed continuously
for not less than one year in any undertaking, to receive
retrenchment compensation in accordance with the provisions
of s. 25F of the Act as if the workman had been retrenched
whenever the ownership or management of the undertaking is
transferred, whether by agreement or by operation of law.
Consequently, in the present case, the employees, who
presented the applications under s. 33C(2) of the Act,
clearly became entitled to receive retrenchment compensation
in accordance with s. 25F of the Act when, under the Madras
Act, this undertaking stood transferred to the State
Government from the Company. This would be the legal right
vesting in the workmen if the proviso does not apply to
their cases, and it accrues irrespective of the fact that
the workmen had not actually been retrenched. The right
under this principal clause is conferred on the basis of the
legal fiction that the workmen are to be deemed to have been
retrenched unless their services are continued in accordance
with the conditions laid down in the proviso. The only
question that falls for determination in respect of the
first point raised by Mr. Gupte thus, is whether the right
which accrued to the workmen under the principal clause was
defeated because of the compliance of the conditions laid
down in the proviso. The proviso lays down three conditions
in clauses (a); Co) and (c) each one of which has to be
satisfied before it can be held that the right conferred by
the principal clause does not accrue to the workman. In the
present case, there is no doubt that the services of the
workmen had not been interrupted by the transfer, so that
condition (a) was clearly satisfied. It has, however, been
found by the High Court that conditions (b) and (c) of the
proviso had not been satisfied. In our opinion, it is
unnecessary to go into the question whether condition (c)
has or has not been satisfied, because it is very clear that
condition Co) of the proviso is certainly not satisfied.
Under clause Co), the requirement is that the terms and
conditions of service applicable to the workman after the
transfer must not in any way be less favourable than those
applicable to him immediately before the transfer. On
examination of the Madras Act and the Rules, it is manifest
that the terms and conditions of service of the workmen have
not remained as favourable under the State Government or the
Electricity Board as they were when the workmen were
employed by the Company. Under clause (1) of section 15 of
the Madras Act, the State Government is given the power to
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terminate the services of any workman after giving him three
calendar months’ notice in writing or paying him three
months’ pay in lieu of such notice. It has not been shown
to us on behalf of the Company that there was any such
liability to termination of services of these workmen while
they were employ-
909
ed by the Company. In the absence of any special conditions
of service, the rights of the workmen were to be governed by
the provisions of the Act under which the only right of the
Company to terminate the services of these workmen was by
retrenchment after complying with the requirements of s. 25F
of the Act. On such termination, each workman was entitled
not only to one month’s notice or wages for one month in
lieu of notice, but was also entitled to receive, at the
time of retrenchment, compensation which was to be
equivalent to 15 days’ average pay for every completed year
of continuous service or any part thereof in excess of six
months. It does not appear that, if the Government were to
terminate the service of the same workman under s. 15(1) of
the Madras Act, the workman would be entitled to the same
compensation which he would have received from the Company
if he had been retrenched in accordance with the provisions
of s. 25F of the Act. Thus, clause (1 ) of section 15 of
the Madras Act itself introduces a condition of service
which was less favourable to the workmen than the conditions
applicable when they were employed by the Company.
Similarly,, clause (2) of s. 15 of the Madras Act lays down
the Workmen, whose services are retained by the Government,
shall be governed by such rules as the Government may, from
time to time, make in regard to them. It is clear that, in
exercise of high power, the Government can make rules
altering the terms and conditions of service of the workmen
retained by the Government, and this power can be exercised
from time to time. There was no such liability of change of
conditions of service of the workmen while they were
employed under the Company. If the Company had desired to
alter their conditions of service, the Company would have
been required to comply with the provisions of either s. 9A
of the Act, or s. 10 of the Industrial Employment (Standing
Orders) Act No. 20 of 1946. Obviously, the right of the
Government of Madras as the new employer under s. 15(2) of
the Madras Act to change the conditions of service of the
workmen from time to time, in its very nature, alters the
conditions of service of the workmen to theft disadvantage.
Rule 17 of the Rules further shows that, immediately on the
vesting of the undertaking in the State Government, the
services of the workmen retained by the Government becomes
provisional and the subsequent permanent employment of those
workmen in the undertaking is dependent on the conditions
laid down in that Rule. This liability imposed on the
workmen is clearly disadvantageous to those workmen who were
in the permanent employ of the Company. The same Rule also
shows that the employees would not be entitled to bonus or
other concessions not allowed to the servants of the
Government, even if the workmen were entitled to bonus and
the concessions from the Company. The workmen also became
liable to transfer to any
910
other place or post in the Government Electricity Department
depending on exigencies of service. These are instances of
a number of conditions of service which became less
favourable to the workmen on their becoming employees of the
State Government when the undertaking vested in that
Government by transfer from the Company. In these
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circumstances, the requirements of the proviso to s. 25FF of
the Act are obviously not satisfied and that proviso cannot
be invoked by the Company for the purpose of defeating the
claim made by the workmen under the principal clause of that
section. Under that principal clause, the workmen became
entitled to receive retrenchment compensation in accordance
with the provisions of s. 25F of the Act on the basis of the
legal fiction envisaged that those rights would accrue to
them as if the workmen had been retrenched. The. Labour
Court and the High Court were, therefore, right in holding
that the workmen were entitled to claim retrenchment
compensation in accordance with the provisions of s. 25F of
the Act because of the right accruing to them under s. 25FF
of the Act.
In this connection, an additional point urged by Mr.
Gupte was that the principal clause of s. 25FF of the Act
does not lay down which of the two employers mentioned
therein is liable to pay the retrenchment compensation and,
consequently, where there is a dispute between the two
employers, an application for computation of the benefit
under s. 25FF of the Act cannot be competently entertained
and decided by a Labour Court. It appears to us that the
language of that principal clause makes it perfectly clear
that, if the right to retrenchment compensation accrues
under it, it must be a right to receive that compensation
from the-previous employer who was the owner up to the date
of transfer. It is implicit in the language of that clause.
The clause lays down that every workman mentioned therein
shall be entitled to notice and compensation in accordance
with the provisions of s. 25F as if the workman had been
retrenched. Obviously, in such a case, the date of the
deemed retrenchment would be the date when the ownership or
management of the undertaking stands transfered to the new
employer. In the present case, that date would be the 1st
of June, 1957, when the undertaking of the Company was taken
over by the Government of Madras under the Madras Act. If
the workmen’s services are to be deemed to be retrenched on
that very date, it is clear that, for purposes of
determining who has retrenched the workmen and who is liable
to pay the retrenchment compensation, the workmen could not
become the employees of the new employer. The employment
under the new employer could only commence from the time
when the ownership or the management of the undertaking
vested in the State Government; but, simultaneously with
this vesting, the workmen had to be deemed to be retrenched
from service. That
911
retrenchment could, therefore, be deemed to have been made
only by the previous employer. Further, it would be that
previous employer who would be competent to give the notice
in accordance with the provisions of s. 25F of the Act. The
notice of retrenchment, which has to be deemed to have
become effective on the date of vesting of the undertaking
in the State Government, could not possibly be given by the
State Government. In these circumstances, the conclusion is
irresistible that the claim under s. 25FF of the Act to
compensation accrues to the workman against the previous
employer under whom he was employed until the date of
transfer. In the present case, therefore, the right to
receive compensation clearly accrued under s. 25FF of the
Act against the Company and there was, therefore, no
difficulty in the Labour Court exercising jurisdiction on
that basis.
So far as the second point is concerned, it is fully
answered by our decision in Chief Mining Engineer, East
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India Coal Co. Ltd. v. Rameswar and Ors.(1) where it was
held :--
"It is clear that the right to the
benefit which is sought to be computed must be
an existing one, that is to say, already
adjudicated upon or provided for and must
arise in the course of and in relation to the
relationship between an industrial workman and
his employer.’’
The view was further clarified and affirmed by this Court in
State Bikaner and Jaipur v.R.L. Khandelwal(2) where the
Court took notice of the decisions of this Court in the case
cited above and in Punjab National Bank Ltd. v.K.L.
Kharbanda,(a) Central Bank of India v. P.S. Rajagopalan
and Others,(4) and Bombay Gas Company Ltd. v. Gopal Bhiva
and Others, (5) and held :--
"These decisions make it clear that a
workman cannot put forward a claim in an
application under s. 33C(2) in respect of a
matter which is not based on an existing right
and which can be appropriately the subject-
matter of an industrial dispute only requiring
reference under s. 10 of the Act."
In the present case, we have already indicated, when dealing
with the first point, that the right, which has been claimed
by the various workmen in their applications under s. 33C(2)
of the Act, is a right which accrued to them under s. 25FF
of the Act and was an existing right at the time when these
applications were
(1) [1968] 1 S.C.R. 140. (2) [1968]
1 L.L.J. 589.
(3) [1962] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 977. (4) [1964]
3 S.C.R. 140.
(5) (1964] 3 S.C.R. 709.
S.Sup. C.I./69-7
912
made. The Labour Court clearly had jurisdiction to decide
whether such a right did or did not exist when dealing with
the application under that provision. The mere denial of
that right by the Company could not take away its
jurisdiction, so that the order made by the Labour Court was
competent.
The third and the last point raised by Mr. Gupte fails
and could not be pressed in view of our decision that the
right of ’the workmen, which has been adjudicated upon by
the Labour Court in the applications under s. 33C(2) of the
Act, was a right accruing to them against the Company under
s. 25FF of the Act. The right having initially accrued under
this provision of the law against the Company, the Labour
Court was clearly justified in computing the benefit under
that right and laying it down that the liability was
enforceable against the Company. The Labour Court was
concerned with the right claimed under the Act. Whether, by
virtue of the provisions or the terms of transfer of the
undertaking from the Company to the Government, or by virtue
of the provisions of the Madras Act, the Company is entitled
to claim that this liability should be ultimately met by the
State Government was a point which did not affect the right
of the workmen to claim their compensation from the Company
and the Labour Court was, therefore, not required to go into
this question when dealing with applications under s. 33C(2)
of the Act.
The appeals, consequently, fail and are dismissed with
costs payable to workmen only. One heating fee. The amount
of interest which has accrued on the amount deposited in the
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Bank will be proportionately payable with the principal to
the employees concerned.
G.C. Appeals dismissed.