Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SUNNY KURIAKORE & ORS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF KERALA & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 16/08/1996
BENCH:
KIRPAL B.N. (J)
BENCH:
KIRPAL B.N. (J)
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
CITATION:
JT 1996 (7) 476 1996 SCALE (6)3
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
KIRPAL,J.
The question Which arises in this appeal is whether the
provisions of the Plantations Labour Act, 1951 are
applicable to the rubber estates owned by the three
appellants herein.
Briefly stated the facts are that there was one estate
called Nooracre Estate’ which was owned and managed by
Ponmudi Rubbers Limited, Trivandrum. Out of this estate,
22.10.1960, three parcels of land were sold. The first
appellant purchased 10.28 acres, the second appellant
purchased 24.49 acres and the third appellant purchased
27.14 acres. It is the case of the appellants that after the
said purchases, these estates are being managed separately
and have separate Rubber Board Registrations.
The Plantations Rubber Act, 1951 (hereinaftere referred to
as ’the Principal Act’) was enacted with a view to provide
for the welfare of labour and to regulate the conditions of
work in the plantations. Section 1(4) of the Principal Act
which specifies the plantations to which the Act applies, as
originally enacted, reads as under:
"It applies in the first instance
to all tea, coffee rubber and
cinchona plantations, but any State
Government may, subject to the
previous approval of the Central
Government, by notification in the
Official Gazette, apply it to any
other class of plantations within
that State."
By the Plantations Labour (Amendment) Act, 1960,
certain amendments were made in different provisions of the
Principal Act. In the present case, we are only concerned
with the amendments made in Section of the Principal Act.
The two material amendments which were made were that the
existing sub-section (4) of Section 1 was substituted by a
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new sub-section (4) and a new sub-section (5) was
introduced. Sub-section (4) of Section 1 after the amendment
reads as under:
"It applies to the following
plantations, that is to say-
(a) to any land used or intended to
be used for growing tea. coffee,
rubber or cinchona which admeasures
10.117 hectares or more and in
which thirty or more persons are
employed or were employed on any
day of the preceding twelve months;
(b) to any land used or intended to
be used for growing any other
plant, which admeasures 10.117
hectares or more and in which
thirty or more persons ’are
employed ’or were employed on any
day of the preceding twelve months,
if, after obtaining the approval of
the Central Government, the State
Government, by notification in the
Official Gazette, so directs.
Sub-section (5) which was
introduced by the Amendment Act,
reads as under:
"1 (5) The State Government may, by
notification in the Official
Gazetted declare that all or any of
the provisions of this Act shall
apply also to any land used or
intended to be used for growing any
plant referred to in clause (a) or
clause (b) of sub-section (4),
notwithstanding that -
(a) it admeasures less than 10.117
hectares,or
(b) the number of persons employed
therein is less than thirty .
Provided that no such
declaration shall be made in
respect of such land which
admeasured’; less than 10.117
hectares or in which less than
’thirty persons were employed,
immediately before the commencement
of this Act."
It appears that the Government of Kerala by
Notification dated 19.8.72, in exercise of its power
conferred by Section 1(5) of the Principal Act, declared
that all the provisions of the Principal Act shall apply to
each and every component part of any land to which the
provisions of the Act were applicable on the first day of
April, 1954, the date on which the said Act came into force
notwithstanding that such component parts admeasured less
than 10.117 hectares cf land or less than 30 persons were
employed in such a component part after such land is later
on sub-divided or fragmented by way of partition, sale or
otherwise.
After the issuance of the aforesaid Notification and
inasmuch as the lands of the appellants came within the
purview of the said Act, notices dated 24.9.74 were issued
to the appellants requiring them to comply with the
provisions of the said Act.
The validity of the amendment incorporating the new
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Section. 1(5) of the Act as well as of the Notification
dated 19.8.72 and Notices dated 24.9.74 was challenged by
the appellants by filing a Writ Petition in the High Court
of Kerala. The said Writ Petition was dismissed by the
Single Judge and the Division Bench dismissed the appeal in
limine. Thereafter, leave to appeal was granted by this
Court.
The only contention which has been raised by the
learned counsel for the appellants is that the amendment Act
came into force from 21.11.1960 and, therefore, the
provisions of the said sub-sections would not apply to the
appellants’ lands. The submission was that the words ’this
Act’ in sub-section (5) referred to the Amendment Act, 1960
and not to the Principal Act, 1951. We find no force in this
submission.
Sub-section (4) of Section 1 of the Principal Act as
originally enacted, made the said Act applicable to all tea,
offee, rubber or cinchona plantations irrespective of the
size of the estate. It was only with the amendment of the
Act in 1960 that the Act became applicable to all such
plantations if they admeasured 10.117 hectares or more or in
which 30 or more persons were employed. The effect of new
sub section (4) was that the Act would not automatically
apply to those estates which did not fall within the amended
provisions of Section 1(4) such as those which admeasured
less than 10.117 hectares or employed less than 30 workers
were exempted. Power was, however, given to State
Governments under the newly enacted sub-section (5) of
Section 1 that even those estates admeasuring less than
10.117 hectares and employing less than 30 workers, the
provisions of the Act would be made applicable provided the
State Government made such a declaration by Notification in
the official gazette.
The proviso to sub-section (5) of Section t of the
Principal Act, however, restricted the State Government from
making any such declaration in respect of estates which
admeasured less than 10.117 hectares or employed less than
30 workers immediately before the commencement of this Act".
Whereas prior to 1950 the Act applied to all types of
plantations described therein irrespective of its size or
number of workmen employed therein, by the Amendment Act,
1960, three classes of estates were created with reference
to the applicability of the Principal Act. By virtue of Sub-
section (4) of Section 1, the Act became automatically
applicable to the estates admeasuring 10.117 hectares or
employing 30 or more persons. Secondly, under Section 1(5)
it could be made applicable to smaller estates provided
notification to this effect was issued by the State
Government. The third category of estates to which the Act
was made applicable were those referred to in the proviso of
new sub-section (5) namely which admeasured less than 10.117
hectares or employed less than 30 persons immediately before
the commencement of the Principal Act.
It is quite evident that with the amendment in sub-
section (4) of Section 1 the Act became applicable not to
all the states irrespective of their size and the number of
persons employed but it automatically applied only to those
estates which admeasured 10.117 hectares or employed 30 or
more persons provision had to be made with a view to prevent
fragmentation of the big estates so as to avoid the
applicability of the said Act. This was sought to be
achieved, by enacting sub-section (5) of Section 1 This is
also evident from the statement of Objects & Reasons
accompanying the amendment, the relevant part of which is as
follows:
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OBJECTS AND REASONS
Sub-section (5)- Sub-Section
(5) is being, added in Section 1 to
empower the State Government to
apply all or any of the provisions
of the Act to any plantations less
than 10.117 hectares in area or
employing less than 30 workers,
subject to the condition that such
of these plantations as were in
existence before the commencement
of the Act will not be brought
within, its scope. This sub-section
thus seeks to check the
fragmentation of plantations by
employers into small units and to
prevent the establishment of such
small units in future with a view
to bye passing the Act."
The proviso to Section 1(5) was clearly meant to save
from the operation of the said Act only those estates which
were less than 10.117 hectares or in which less than 30
persons were employed.
We see no warrant for interpreting the words "This Act"
in the proviso to Section 1(5) as meaning the Amendment Act.
Section 2 of the Amendment Act, 1960 brought about the
amendments in Section 1 and provided that sub-section (4)
and (5) shall be substituted in the Principal Act. The
proviso is integral part of sub-section (5). With the
insertion of sub-section (5) in the principal Act the whole
of the sub-section (5) became a part of the Principal Act
and the reference to ’this Act’ can only mean the Principal
Act of 1951 and cannot, by any stretch of imagination be
regarded as meaning the Amendment Act of 1960.
Therefore, the Kerala High Court was right in not
granting any relief to the appellants as their estates did
not fall within the ambit of proviso to Section 1(5) of the
Act. The appeal is accordingly, dismissed with costs.