Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4263 of 2006
PETITIONER:
Steel Authority of India Ltd
RESPONDENT:
Union of India & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/09/2006
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Dalveer Bhandari
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
[Arising out of SLP (Civil) No. 12621-13236 of 2004]
S.B. SINHA, J :
Leave granted.
Appellant is a Government company. In carrying out its activities of
manufacture of steel and other products it appointed several contractors.
Respondent Nos. 4 to 618 herein are said to have been employees of the
contractors. They raised a dispute before the State Government demanding
their absorption as permanent employees.
By a notification dated 19.11.1985, the State Government referred the
following industrial dispute for adjudication by the Presiding Officer,
Labour Court, in exercise of its power under Section 10(1)(c) of the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (for short, ’the 1947’ Act’) :
"Are the contract workers employed in the nature of
contract work listed as per Annexure working in the
premises of Visveswaraya Iron and Steel Ltd.,
Bhadravathi, justified in demanding absorption as regular
permanent employees of Visveswaraya Iron & Steel Ltd.
Bhadravathi?
In the said proceedings, the workmen in their statements of claim filed
on 26.02.1986 prayed for their absorption as permanent employees in the
employment of Appellant. Inter alia, a jurisdictional question was raised by
Appellant herein on the premise that the matter relating to the regulation and
abolition of contract labour being governed by the Contract Labour
(Regulation and Abolition) Act, 1970 (for short, ’the 1970 Act’), the
reference made by the State Government was impermissible in law. It was
contended that the State Government having not issued any notification
prohibiting employment of contract labour in terms of Section 10 of the
1970 Act, the workmen did not have any legal right to claim absorption.
Indisputably, during the pendency of the said dispute before the
Labour Court, Appellant herein filed a writ petition, questioning the legality
and/or validity of the said reference, which was marked as Writ Petition
No.26874 of 1995. One of the questions which was raised therein was that
the State Government had no jurisdiction to make a reference in relation
thereto. The writ petition was disposed of by the High Court observing that
Appellant may raise a preliminary issue in that behalf.
The workmen, however, on 21.11.1997 filed an additional claim
statement alleging that the contracts entered into by and between Appellant
and the contractors being sham and bogus, they were direct employees of
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the management.
By reason of an award dated 13.07.1999, the said reference was held
to be not maintainable. A writ petition came to be filed by some trade
unions alleging that the workmen were direct employees of Appellant and
were, thus, entitled to be absorbed as permanent workmen.
A learned Single Judge of the High Court, by an order dated
05.12.2001, while holding the said writ petition to be not maintainable,
directed :
"For the reasons stated supra, these writ petitions
are allowed with a direction to the Union of India \026 the
2nd respondent to accept the petition presented before this
Court as the petition submitted by the petitioner \026Union
raising an industrial dispute in terms of Section 2(k) read
with Section 12(1) of the I.D. Act and also under the
provisions of the Contract Labour (Regulation and
Abolition) Act, 1970. Further, keeping in view the law
laid down by the Supreme Court in the Steel Authority of
India Ltd. case and notwithstanding the fact that the
conciliation proceedings are conducted, the second
respondent shall in exercise of its power, make reference
to the appropriate Central Industrial Tribunal or the
Labour Court for adjudication of the existing industrial
dispute between the workmen of the petitioner/Union and
the respondent No.1 Management within eight weeks
from the date of receipt of a copy of this order. The
respondents 2 and 3 while exercising their power under
Section 10(1)(d) of the I.D. Act shall not consider the
pendency of these petitions before this Court from the
year 1999 keeping in view the law laid down by the Apex
Court in the Steel Authority’s case referred to and pass
appropriate order making reference either to Central
Industrial Tribunal or Labour Court for adjudication of
the existing Industrial dispute between the workmen and
first respondent."
Intra-court appeals were filed thereagainst on the ground that no
industrial dispute could be raised by the workmen concerned in terms of the
judgment of this Court in Steel Authority of India Ltd. and Others v.
National Union Waterfront Workers and Others [(2001) 7 SCC 1]. It was
further contended that the award of the Labour Court having been accepted
by the workmen, the matter relating to abolition of contract labour could
only be decided by the Appropriate Government in terms of Section 10 of
the 1970 Act and not otherwise. By reason of the impugned judgment, the
said appeals have been dismissed.
It is not disputed before us that the matter relating to abolition of
contract labour being governed by the provisions of the 1970 Act, the
Industrial Court will have no jurisdiction in relation thereto. It is also not in
dispute that the decision of the Constitution Bench of this Court in Steel
Authority of India Ltd. (supra) governs the field.
In the said decision, it was, inter alia, held :
"(3) Neither Section 10 of the CLRA Act nor any
other provision in the Act, whether expressly or by
necessary implication, provides for automatic absorption
of contract labour on issuing a notification by the
appropriate Government under sub-section (1) of Section
10, prohibiting employment of contract labour, in any
process, operation or other work in any establishment.
Consequently the principal employer cannot be required
to order absorption of the contract labour working in the
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establishment concerned.
xxx xxx xxx
(5) On issuance of prohibition notification under
Section 10(1) of the CLRA Act prohibiting employment
of contract labour or otherwise, in an industrial dispute
brought before it by any contract labour in regard to
conditions of service, the industrial adjudicator will have
to consider the question whether the contractor has been
interposed either on the ground of having undertaken to
produce any given result for the establishment or for
supply of contract labour for work of the establishment
under a genuine contract or is a mere ruse/camouflage to
evade compliance with various beneficial legislations so
as to deprive the workers of the benefit thereunder. If the
contract is found to be not genuine but a mere
camouflage, the so-called contract labour will have to be
treated as employees of the principal employer who shall
be directed to regularise the services of the contract
labour in the establishment concerned subject to the
conditions as may be specified by it for that purpose in
the light of para 6 hereunder.
(6) If the contract is found to be genuine and
prohibition notification under Section 10(1) of the CLRA
Act in respect of the establishment concerned has been
issued by the appropriate Government, prohibiting
employment of contract labour in any process, operation
or other work of any establishment and where in such
process, operation or other work of the establishment the
principal employer intends to employ regular workmen,
he shall give preference to the erstwhile contract labour,
if otherwise found suitable and, if necessary, by relaxing
the condition as to maximum age appropriately, taking
into consideration the age of the workers at the time of
their initial employment by the contractor and also
relaxing the condition as to academic qualifications other
than technical qualifications."
The industrial dispute was raised by two Unions, namely,
Visveswaraya Iron & Steel Ltd. Workers Association, Bhadravathi and
Visveswaraya Iron & Steel Ltd. Contract Employees’ Union, Bhadravathi.
The award dated 13.07.1999 was confined to only one issue, namely,
Issue No.6 framed by the Labour Court. The said issue was determined by
the Labour Court pursuant to or in furtherance of the order of the High Court
passed in Writ Petition No.26874 of 1995. While determining the said
question, the Labour Court framed seven issues by an order dated
31.12.1998, some of which are :
"(i) Whether the 1st party proves that they were
employed by the 2nd party Management in the job of
permanent and perennial in nature.
(ii) Whether the 2nd party Management proves
that the 1st party workmen were employed under different
contractors in the job of permanent and perennial in
nature in various departments of the Management.
(iii) Whether the 2nd party proves that system of
contract labour in respect of the nature of the workers
involved in this Reference was not abolished in the 2nd
party Industry and that this Reference is not sustainable."
The Labour Court opined :
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"\005The plain reading of the first point in dispute to be
decided by this Court is that "are the contract workers
employed in the nature of contract work, justified in
demanding absorption as regular permanent employees
of the management VISL, Bhadravathi (hereinafter called
the Management). Therefore the point in dispute pre-
supposes that the 1 party Union Employees are the
contract workers employed in the nature of contract work
under certain contractors and whether such contract
workers are to be absorbed by the Management. The fact
that the Union Employees who seek their absorption by
the Management are the contract workers is further very
much evident from the averments made in the claim
statement preferred on behalf of the 1 party Union. Para
1 of the claim statement reads that they are representing
the contract labourers of the Management against whom
the present reference is made by the Government\005"
The learned Presiding Officer of the Labour Court observed that in the
light of the judgment of the High Court between the parties, the moot
question that arose for consideration was as to whether the court could
decide the validity of the reference as it stood, holding :
"\005It was contended that the dispute under reference
since pertained to the abolition of contract labour which
contract labour was not abolished by the appropriate
Government under Sec.10 of the Contract Labour Act by
way of Notification as contemplated under the said
provision the reference is bad in law inoperative and
illegal. I find substance in his arguments. Undisputedly,
there is no abolition of Contract Act under Sec. 10 of the
said Act by the appropriate Government in this case. It
was well argued that the Industrial Disputes Act where
under the present reference is made is a general
enactment and therefore, a special central enactment
namely, the Contract Labour Act shall prevail to the
extent that it applies over the provisions of I.D. Act\005"
It was further held :
"\005This Court certainly has got no jurisdiction to pass
Award in favour of the employees holding them to be the
employees of principal employer namely the
management. The question under reference, raised
before this Court, certainly, relates to the abolition of
contract labour and that question cannot be decided by
this Court but by the competent appropriate Government
under the provisions of Sec. 10 of the Contract Labour
Act\005"
The Labour Court also took into consideration the contention raised
by the representatives of the Union that the issue as to whether the members
of the Unions were really the employees of the management and not those of
the employees of the contractors was to be tried and decided by the said
court as both the parties had led their oral and documentary evidences in
that behalf. Having regard to the nature of reference by the Appropriate
Government, which fell for consideration before the Labour Court, it
declined to go into the said question, opining that it was not within its
province to go into the question as to who the actual employer was as the
same did not fall in the category of matters, which can be said to be
incidental to the main dispute. It was opined :
"\005Therefore, it is clear that the I party Union itself
apprehended that the reference made to this Court was
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not in accordance with the law. The principle laid down
by his lordship of our Hon’ble High Court in the case
reported in ILR 1994 Karnataka page 2603, taken support
of by Learned Representative for the I Party Union
contending that jurisdiction point cannot be raised by the
management at this belated stage, in my opinion again
had no much substance the management in this case has
challenged the jurisdiction of this court at earliest point
of time at para 2 of its counter statement. Therefore, it
cannot be said that the jurisdiction point was raised by
the management at a belated state. Therefore, as
contended for the management and as observed by his
lordship of our Hon’ble High Court in the above said
unreported judgment, the proper course and remedy
available for the I party Union was not by way of
reference on hand at least with the present terms, but by
way of approaching the Hon’ble High Court invoking its
writ jurisdiction seeking directions to the Central
Government to take a decision under Section 10 of the
Contract Labour Act, as was already done in respect of
the 23 employees at Sl. No.26 Annexure to reference on
hand. Therefore, for the reasons foregoing I am
constrained to hold that reference is not valid and proper
and that this court has no jurisdiction to adjudicate upon
the same. Accordingly Issue No. 6 is answered in the
affirmative and following order is passed."
Before adverting to the questions raised before us, we may at this
juncture notice the contention of Mr. V.N. Raghupathy that whereas in the
reference only 26 workmen were made parties, more than 600 workmen
were made parties in the writ petition and, thus, only because before the
appropriate Government a demand was raised by some of the workmen
contending that they were workmen of the contractors, an industrial dispute
could be raised that the contract was a sham one and in truth and substance
the workmen were employed by the management.
Writ Petitioner No.1 was Visveswaraya Iron & Steel Limited Contract
Employees’ Union. 615 workmen were parties thereto. They were
admittedly represented by Writ Petitioner No.1 only. An industrial dispute
was also raised, as noticed hereinbefore, by Visveswaraya Iron & Steel Ltd.
Workers Association and Visveswaraya Iron & Steel Limited Contract
Employees Union. The Contract Employees’ Union was common both in
the proceedings under the Industrial Disputes Act also in the writ petition.
The 1970 Act is a complete code by itself. It not only provides for
regulation of contract labour but also abolition thereof. Relationship of
employer and employee is essentially a question of fact. Determination of
the said question would depend upon a large number of factors. Ordinarily,
a writ court would not go into such a question.
In State of Karnataka and Others v. KGSD Canteen Employees’
Welfare Association and Others [(2006) 1 SCC 567], this Court held :
"Keeping in view the facts and circumstances of
this case as also the principle of law enunciated in the
above-referred decisions of this Court, we are, thus, of
the opinion that recourse to writ remedy was not apposite
in this case."
We may reiterate that neither the Labour Court nor the writ court
could determine the question as to whether the contract labour should be
abolished or not, the same being within the exclusive domain of the
Appropriate Government.
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A decision in that behalf undoubtedly is required to be taken upon
following the procedure laid down in sub-section (1) of Section 10 of the
1947 Act. A notification can be issued by an Appropriate Government
prohibiting employment of contract labour if the factors enumerated in sub-
section (2) of Section 10 of the 1970 Act are satisfied.
When, however, a contention is raised that the contract entered into by
and between the management and the contractor is a sham one, in view of
the decision of this Court in Steel Authority of India Limited (supra), an
industrial adjudicator would be entitled to determine the said issue. The
industrial adjudicator would have jurisdiction to determine the said issue as
in the event if it be held that the contract purportedly awarded by the
management in favour of the contractor was really a camouflage or a sham
one, the employees appointed by the contractor would, in effect and
substance, be held to be direct employees of the management.
The view taken in the Steel Authority of India Limited (supra) has
been reiterated by this Court subsequently. [See e.g. Nitinkumar Nathalal
Joshi and Others v. Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. and Others (2002)
3 SCC 433] and Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai v. K.V. Shramik
Sangh and Others [(2002) 4 SCC 609].
In A.P. SRTC and Others v. G. Srinivas Reddy and Others [(2006) 3
SCC 674, this Court held :
"\005If respondents want the relief of absorption, they will
have to approach the Industrial Tribunal/Court and
establish that the contract labour system was only a
ruse/camouflage to avoid labour law benefits to them.
The High Court could not, in exercise of its jurisdiction
under Article 226, direct absorption of respondents, on
the ground that work for which respondents were
engaged as contract labour, was perennial in nature.
It was further held :
"\005The only remedy of respondents, as noticed above, is
to approach the Industrial Tribunal for declaring that the
contract labour system under which they were employed
was a camouflage and therefore, they were, in fact, direct
employees of the Corporation and for consequential
relief\005."
Similar view has been taken in KGSD Canteen Employees’ Welfare
Association (supra).
The workmen whether before the Labour Court or in writ proceedings
were represented by the same Union. A trade union registered under the
Trade Unions Act is entitled to espouse the cause of the workmen. A
definite stand was taken by the employees that they had been working under
the contractors. It would, thus, in our opinion, not lie in their mouth to take
a contradictory and inconsistent plea that they were also the workmen of the
principal employer. To raise such a mutually destructive plea is
impermissible in law. Such mutually destructive plea, in our opinion, should
not be allowed to be raised even in an industrial adjudication. Common law
principles of estoppel, waiver and acquiescence are applicable in an
industrial adjudication.
The 1947 Act was enacted, as the preamble indicates, for investigation
and settlement of industrial dispute and for certain other purposes. It
envisages collective bargaining. Settlement between Union representing the
workmen and the Management is envisaged thereunder. It provides for
settlement by mutual agreement. A settlement or an award in terms of
Section 18(3)(b) of the 1947 Act is binding on all workmen including those
who may be employed in future.
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What assumes importance is the ultimate goal wherefor the 1947 Act
was enacted, namely, industrial peace and harmony. Industrial peace and
harmony is the ultimate pursuit of the said Act, having regard to the
underlying philosophy involved therein. The issue before us is required to
be determined keeping in view the purport and object of the 1947 Act.
It is interesting to note that in Modi Spinning & Weaving Mills
Company Ltd. & Another v. Ladha Ram & Co. [(1976) 4 SCC 320], this
Court opined that when an admission has been made in the pleadings, even
an amendment thereof would not be permitted.
We are not oblivious of the decision of this Court in Panchdeo Narain
Srivastava v. Km. Jyoti Sahay and Another [AIR 1983 SC 462 = (1984)
Supp. SCC 594], wherein it has been held that an admission made by a party
can be withdrawn and/or explained away; but we may notice that
subsequently a Division Bench of this Court distinguished the said decision
in Heeralal v. Kalyan Mal and Others [(1998) 1 SCC 278].
The effect of an admission in the context of Section 58 of the Indian
Evidence Act has been considered by this Court in Sangramsinh P. Gaekwad
and Others v. Shantadevi P. Gaekwad (Dead) through Lrs. and Others
[(2005) 11 SCC 314], wherein it was categorically held that judicial
admissions by themselves can be made the foundations of the rights of the
parties and admissions in the pleadings are admissible proprio vigore against
the maker thereof. [See also Union of India v. Pramod Gupta (Dead) by Lrs.
and Others [(2005) 12 SCC 1]
Recently this Court in Baldev Singh and Others etc. v. Manohar Singh
& Another etc. [2006 (7) SCALE 517], held :
"Let us now take up the last ground on which the
application for amendment of the written statement was
rejected by the High Court as well as the Trial Court. The
rejection was made on the ground that inconsistent plea
cannot be allowed to be taken. We are unable to
appreciate the ground of rejection made by the High
Court as well as the Trial Court. After going through the
pleadings and also the statements made in the application
for amendment of the written statement, we fail to
understand how inconsistent plea could be said to have
been taken by the appellants in their application for
amendment of the written statement, excepting the plea
taken by the appellants in the application for amendment
of written statement regarding the joint ownership of the
suit property. Accordingly, on facts, we are not satisfied
that the application for amendment of the written
statement could be rejected also on this ground. That
apart, it is now well settled that an amendment of a plaint
and amendment of a written statement are not necessarily
governed by exactly the same principle. It is true that
some general principles are certainly common to both,
but the rules that the plaintiff cannot be allowed to amend
his pleadings so as to alter materially or substitute his
cause of action or the nature of his claim has necessarily
no counterpart in the law relating to amendment of the
written statement. Adding a new ground of defence or
substituting or altering a defence does not raise the same
problem as adding, altering or substituting a new cause of
action. Accordingly, in the case of amendment of written
statement, the courts are inclined to be more liberal in
allowing amendment of the written statement than of
plaint and question of prejudice is less likely to operate
with same rigour in the former than in the latter case."
While laying down the principle, this Court followed Modi Spinning
& Weaving Mills Co. (supra) and distinguished Hira Lal (supra).
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It is, thus, evident that by taking recourse to an amendment made in
the pleading, the party cannot be permitted to go beyond his admission. The
principle would be applied in an industrial adjudication having regard to the
nature of the reference made by the Appropriate Government as also in view
of the fact that an industrial adjudicator derives his jurisdiction from the
reference only.
There is another aspect of the matter which should also not be lost
sight of. For the purpose of exercising jurisdiction under Section 10 of the
1970 Act, the appropriate Government is required to apply its mind. Its
order may be an administrative one but the same would not be beyond the
pale of judicial review. It must, therefore, apply its mind before making a
reference on the basis of the materials placed before it by the workmen
and/or management, as the case may be, While doing so, it may be
inappropriate for the same authority on the basis of the materials that a
notification under Section 10(1)(d) of the 1947 Act be issued, although it
stands judicially determined that the workmen were employed by the
contractor. The State exercises administrative power both in relation to
abolition of contract labour in terms of Section 10 of the 1970 Act as also in
relation to making a reference for industrial adjudication to a Labour Court
or a Tribunal under Section 10(1)(d) of the 1947 Act. While issuing a
notification under the 1970 Act, the State would have to proceed on the
basis that the principal employer had appointed contractors and such
appointments are valid in law, but while referring a dispute for industrial
adjudication, validity of appointment of the contractor would itself be an
issue as the State must prima facie satisfy itself that there exists a dispute as
to whether the workmen are in fact not employed by the contractor but by
the management. We are, therefore, with respect, unable to agree with the
opinion of the High Court.
We would, however, hasten to add that this judgment shall not come
in the way of the appropriate Government to apply its mind for the purpose
of issuance of a notification under Section 10 of the 1970 Act.
For the reasons aforementioned, the impugned judgment cannot be
sustained, which is set aside accordingly. The appeal is allowed. In the
facts and circumstances of this case, however, there shall be no order as to
costs.