Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ASSOCIATED CEMENT COMPANIES LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
P. N. SHARMA AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/12/1964
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1595 1965 SCR (2) 366
CITATOR INFO :
R 1965 SC1767 (5)
RF 1966 SC 282 (10)
R 1968 SC 384 (4)
RF 1977 SC2155 (24)
R 1978 SC 597 (50,60)
R 1979 SC1725 (47)
D 1987 SC1629 (15,16)
RF 1992 SC2219 (135)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950, Art. 136(1)-Tribunal-What is-
Factories Act (63 of 1948), s. 49(1) and (2) and Punjab
Welfare Officers Recruitment and Conditions of Service
Rules, 1952, rr. 6(3), Proviso 2(5) and (6)-Scope of-R. 6(3)
Proviso 2, if invalid.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant appointed the 1st respondent as a Welfare
Officer as required by the Factories Act, 1948 and the
Punjab Welfare Officers Recruitment and Conditions of
Service Rules, 1952. The letter of appointment stated that
the 1st respondent was liable to be transferred from one
unit of the appellant to another and that his services could
be terminated by the appellant by one month’s notice or with
one month’s pay in lieu ;thereof. On the 1st respondent
being unprepared to go to a place to which he was
transferred, tile appellant terminated his services with one
month’s salary. The 1st respondent appealed to the 2nd
respondent, the State of Punjab, the appellate authority
under r. 6(6) and the 2nd respondent ordered his
reinstatement as the previous concurrence of the Labour
Commissioner as required by r. 6(3), proviso 2, was not
obtained. In appeal to the Supreme Court it was contended
that : (i) the rule requiring the concurrence of the Labour
Commissioner was invalid as it was outside the scope of the
rule-making authority conferred on the State Government by
s. 49(2) of the Act, and (ii) the order of reinstatement
passed by the 2nd respondent was invalid as the appeal by
the 1st respondent to the 2nd respondent was incompetent.
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The 1st respondent also raised a preliminary objection that
the appeal to the Supreme Court was incompetent because the
2nd respondent was not a tribunal within the meaning of Art.
136(1) of the Constitution.
HELD : (i) The 2nd respondent is a tribunal within the
meaning of Art. 136(1) having regard to the distinctive
features of the power concerted on it by r. 6(5) and (6).
[387 B]
(Per Gajendragadkar, C. J., M. Hidayatullah, J. C. Shah and
S. M. Sikri, JJ.) : In considering the question about the
status of any body or authority as a tribunal under the
article, the consideration about the presence of all or some
of the trappings of a court is really not decisive. The
presence of some of the trappings may assist the
determination of the question as to whether the power
exercised by the authority which possessed the said
trappings, is the judicial power of the State or not. The
main and basic test however, is whether the adjudicating
power which a particular authority is empowered to exercise,
has been conferred on it by a statute -and can be described
as a part of the State’s inherent power exercised in
discharging its judicial function. Applying the test, there
can be no doubt that the power which the 2nd respondent
exercised under rr. 6(5) and (6) of the Rules is a part of
the State’s judicial power. It has been conferred on the
2nd respondent by a statutory rule and it can be exercised
in respect of disputes between the management and its
welfare officers. There is a lis an affirmation by one
party and denial by another,
367
and the dispute necessarily involves the rights and
obligations of the par-ties to it. The order which the 2nd
respondent ultimately passes is described as its decision
and it is made final and binding. Besides, it is an order
passed on appeal. In reaching a fair and objective decision
in the dispute brought before it in its appellate
jurisdiction, the State Government has the power to devise
its own procedure and to exercise such other incidental and
subsidiary powers as may be necessary to deal effectively
with the dispute. [386 F-H; 387 A-B, E]
Per Bachawat, J. The basic test of a tribunal within the
meaning of Art. 136, is that it is an adjudicating authority
(other than a court) vested with the judicial power of the
State. In India, the State has inherent judicial powers or
functions and the courts and other authorities vested by the
State with judicial functions are regarded as delegates of
the State judicial power. The courts alone have no monopoly
of the judicial power. An authority other than a court
vested with the judicial power of the State in this sense is
regarded as a tribunal under the article. The investiture
of the trappings of a court is not an essential attribute of
a tribunal. The plentitude of the residuary appellate power
under Art. 136 embraces within its scope all adjudicating
authorities vested with the judicial power of the State,
whether or not such authorities have the trappings of a
court. In order to be a tribunal, it is essential that the
power of adjudication must be derived from a statute or a
statutory rule. The appellate function and the power of
conclusive determination of the civil rights of the parties
with regard to the matters in controversy between them
indicate that the 2nd respondent is under a duty to act
judicially and to decide the dispute solely by ascertaining
the facts on the materials before it and by the application
of the relevant law on the point. As the rule does not
prescribe any procedure for the hearing of the appeal the
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2nd respondent may devise its own procedure consistently
with its judicial duty. [392 D-F; 393 E, H; 394 A-C, D-E;
396 C-E]
Case law reviewed.
(ii)(Per Gajendragadkar, C.J., M. Hidayatullah, J. C. Shah
and S. M. Sikri, JJ.) : The words "conditions of service"
used in s. 49(2) are wide enough to cover the proviso (2) to
r. 6(3). Conditions of service would take in the
termination of services and incidentally, the conditions
subject to which such termination could be brought about. A
statutory rule imposing the obligation on the management,
prescribed by the 2nd proviso to r. 6(3) would fall within
s. 49(2) of the Act and therefore, the rule is not invalid.
[388 C-E, G]
(iii)(By Full Court) : The appeal preferred by the 1st
respondent to 2nd respondent is incompetent. [389 H; 397 B-
C]
The scheme of the relevant rules is that if the management
applies for the concurrence of the Labour Commissioner and
the concurrence is not given by him, the management can
appeal under r. 6(5). If the concurrence is given, or if a
welfare officer’s services are terminated without applying
for concurrence, he may appeal under r. 6(6); but before
such an appeal can be competent it must appear that the
termination of service was in the nature of a punitive
action. The termination in the instant case was no more
than a discharge in terms of the conditions of service. It
is not a punishment and so is outside r. 6(3) altogether.
It is true that the form in which the order has been passed
will not necessarily determine the character of the
termination. The order of discharge in the instant case was
a bonafide order of discharge, and the employer passed the
order, because it was not its intention to cast any slur
upon the employee, even though it thought it necessary to
terminate his services, [388 H; 389 A-B, H; 390 C, F]
368
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 44 of 1964.
Appeal by special leave from the order dated July 4, 1962,
of the Government of Punjab (Labour Department) in exercise
of the powers conferred by sub-rule 6 of the Punjab Welfare
Officers (Recruitment and Service Conditions) Rules, 1952.
M.C. Setalvad, J. B. DadachanJi, 0. C. Mathur and Ravinder
Narain, for the appellants.
J. P. Goyal, for respondent No. 1.
Gopal Singh and R. N. Sachthey, for respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of GAJENDRAGADKAR C.J., M. HIDAYATULLAH, SHAH
and SIKRI JJ. was delivered by GAJENDRAGADKAR C. J. BACHAWAT
J. delivered a separate Opinion.
Gajendragadkar, C. J. The principal point of law which
arises in this appeal by special leave is whether respondent
No. 2, the State of Punjab, exercising its appellate
jurisdiction under Rule 6(6) of the Punjab Welfare Officers
Recruitment and Conditions of Service Rules, 1952
(hereinafter called ’the Rules’) is a Tribunal within the
meaning of Art. 136(1) of the Constitution. The appellant,
the Associated Cement Companies Ltd., Bhupendra Cement
Works, Surajpur, challenges the validity of the appellate
order passed by respondent No. 2 on July 4, 1962 under the
provision of the said Rule, directing the appellant to
reinstate its Welfare Officer, P. N. Sharma-respondent No.
1. At the hearing of this appeal, a preliminary objection
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has been raised by Mr. Goyal on behalf of respondent No. 1
that special leave should not have been granted to the
appellant, because the appeal is incompetent inasmuch as
respondent No. 2 against whose appellate decision the
appellant purports to have preferred the present appeal is
not a tribunal under Art. 136(1). If the preliminary
objection fails, then it would become necessary to consider
the appellant’s contention that the impugned appellate order
is invalid and erroneous and must be set aside.
The appellant is a company with its Head Office in Bombay
and it runs 14 cement factories, 2 collieries and one fire-
brick works in 8 States of the Union of India. One such
Cement Works is the Bhupendra Cement Works, Surajpur within
the territorial limits of respondent No. 2. Under the
provisions of the Factories Act, 1948 (No. 63 of 1948)
(hereinafter called the Act) read with the provisions of the
Rules, the appellant was required to appoint one Welfare
Officer and to notify his appointment and
369
qualification to the Chief Inspector of Factories.
Respondent No. 1 was appointed such a Welfare Officer. The
letter of appointment issued to him on March 2, 1956, stated
that he would be liable to be transferred from one unit of
the appellant to another and that his services could be
terminated by the appellant by one month’s notice or with
one month’s pay in lieu thereof. Respondent No. 1 was first
posted at Lakheri Cement Works, Lakheri in Rajasthan, where
he joined duty on March 14, 1956. Thereafter, he was
transferred from one place to another according to the
requirements of service and the working of the appellant’s
factories. On June 26, 1960, he was posted at the Bhupendra
Cement Works. He was working at these Works until September
26, 1961, when his services were terminated. It appears
that the appellant transferred respondent No. 1 from
Bhupendra Cement Works to Kymore Works which is near Katni
in Madhya Pradesh, but apparently, respondent No. 1 was not
prepared to go to Kymore Works, and after long and
protracted correspondence between the parties, the appellant
wrote to him on September 26, 1961, that since he had not
proceeded to Kymore on transfer as directed, he had ceased
to be in the employment of the appellant, and his name had
been struck off from the Company’s roll.
Respondent No. 1 then filed an appeal before respondent No.
2 as the appellate authority under R. 6(6) of the Rules. On
receiving notice of the said appeal, the appellant filed its
written statement and disputed the validity of the grievance
made by respondent No. 1 in respect of the termination of
his services. Respondent No. 2 then passed the impugned
order on July 4, 1962. This order was issued in the name of
the Governor of Punjab in exercise of the powers conferred
by R. 6(6) of the Rules, and it directed that the Governor
of Punjab was pleased to reinstate respondent No. 1 as
Labour Welfare Officer in the service of the appellant.
"However", says the order, "nothing in this order shall be
construed to prevent the management from taking action
against Mr. P. N. Sharma in accordance with the provisions
of the Rules for such acts and commissions on his part as
may have come to their notice". It is the validity of this
order which is challenged before us by the appellant.
Before proceeding to deal with the preliminary objection, we
may conveniently refer to the relevant provisions of the Act
and the Rules. The Act has been passed in 1948 with the
object of consolidating and amending the law regulating
labour in factories. Consistently with this object and
policy, the Act has made several beneficient provisions in
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the interests of industrial labour employed
370
in factories to which the Act applies. Section 49 deals
with the appointment of Welfare Officers. S.49(1) provides
that in every ,factory wherein five hundred or more workers
are ordinarily employed, the occupier shall employ in the
factory such number of welfare officers as may be
prescribed. It is common ground that the appellant falls
within the, scope of s.49(1), and so, it has been appointing
welfare officers in its factories; in fact, respondent No. 1
was one of such Welfare Officers appointed by the appellant.
Section 49(2) provides that the State Government may
prescribe the duties, qualifications and conditions of
service of officers employed under sub-section (1). It is
by virtue of the powers conferred on the State Government
that respondent No. 2 has framed the Rules.
The Rules were framed by respondent No. 2 in 1952 and have
,been published in the Punjab Government Gazette on March
26, 1952, and they came into force from September 30, 1952.
Rule 4 prescribes the qualifications for the appointment of
a Welfare -Officer. R. 5 provides for the procedure which
has to be followed ,in appointing Welfare Officers. R.6
prescribes conditions of service of Welfare Officers and R.7
prescribes their duties. R.8 confers power on the State
Government to exempt any factory or class or description of
factories from the operation of all or -any of these Rules,
subject to compliance with such alternative arrangement as
may be approved. In the present appeal, we are ,concerned
with R.6. Rule 6 reads thus
"(1) A Welfare Officer shall be given
appropriate status corresponding to the status
of the other executive heads of the factory.
(2) The conditions of service of a Welfare
Officer shall be the same as of other members
of the Staff of corresponding status in the
factory.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-rule
(2) the management may impose any one or
more of
the following punishments on Welfare
Officers
(i) Censure;
(ii) Withholding of increments including
stoppage at an efficiency bar;
(iii) reduction to a lower stage in a time
scale;
(iv) suspension; and
371
(v) dismissal or termination of service in
any other manner;
Provided that no order of punishment shall be passed against
the Welfare Officer unless he has been informed of the
grounds on which it is proposed to take action and given a
reasonable opportunity of defending himself against the
action proposed to, be taken in regard to him;
Provided further that the management shall not impose any
punishment other than censure except with the previous con-
currence of the Labour Commissioner, Punjab.
(4) The Labour Commissioner, Punjab, before
passing orders on a reference made under
second proviso to, sub-rule (3), shall give
the Welfare Officer an opportunity of showing
cause against the action proposed to be taken,
against him and if necessary, may hear the
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parties in person.
(5) If the Labour Commissioner, on a
reference made to him under the second proviso
to sub-rule (3) of rule 6, refuses to give his
concurrence, the management may appeal to the
State Government within thirty days from the
date of the receipt of such refusal. The
decision of the State Government shall be
final and binding.
(6) A Welfare Officer upon whom the
punishment mentioned in clause (v) of sub-rule
(3) is imposed may appeal to the State
Government against the order of punishment
within thirty days from the date of receipt of
the order by him. The decision of the State
Government shall be final and binding.
(7) The State Government may pass such
interim order as may be necessary pending the
decision of appeal filed under sub-rule (5) or
sub-rule (6).
It would be noticed that it is under rule 6(6) that the
impugned order has been passed by respondent No. 2, and the
question which has first to be considered in dealing with
the present appeal is whether respondent No. 2 can be said
to be a tribunal within the meaning of Art. 136(1) so as to
justify the appellant to bring the appellate decision of
respondent No. 2 before this Court by special leave under
the said Article.
Art. 136(1) reads thus :-
" Notwithstanding anything in this Chapter,
the
Supreme Court may, in its discretion, grant
special leave
372
.lm15
to appeal from any judgment, decree, determination, sentence
or order in any cause or matter passed or made by any court
or tribunal in the territory of India."
Mr. Goyal contends that respondent No. 2, is not a tribunal
under Art. 1 3 6(1) and so, the impugned appellate order
passed by it cannot be challenged by appeal under the said
article. It would be noticed that Art.136(1) refers to a
tribunal as distinguished from a court. The expression
"court" in the context denotes a tribunal .constituted by
the State as a part of the ordinary hierarchy of ,courts
which are invested with the State’s inherent judicial
powers. A sovereign State discharges legislative, executive
and judicial functions and can legitimately claim
corresponding powers which are described as legislative,
executive and judicial powers. Under our Constitution, the
judicial functions and powers of the State are primarily
conferred on the ordinary courts which have been constituted
under its relevant provisions. The Constitution recognised
a hierarchy of courts and to their adjudication are
normally .,entrusted all disputes between citizens and
citizens as well as between the citizens and the State.
These courts can be described as ordinary courts of civil
judicature. They are governed by their prescribed rules of
procedure and they deal with questions of fact and law
raised before them by adopting a process which is described
as judicial process. The powers which these courts
exercise, are judicial powers, the functions they discharge
are judicial functions and the decisions they reach and
pronounce are judicial decisions.
In every State there are administrative bodies or
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authorities which are required to deal with matters within
their jurisdiction in an administrative manner and their
decisions are described as administrative decisions. In
reaching their administrative decisions, administrative
bodies can and often to take into consideration ,questions
of policy. It is not unlikely that even in this process of
reaching administrative decisions, the administrative bodies
or authorities are required to act fairly and objectively
and would in many cases have to follow the principles of
natural justice; but the authority to reach decisions
conferred on such administrative bodies is clearly distinct
and separate from the judicial power conferred on courts,
and the decisions pronounced by administrative bodies are
similarly distinct and separate in character from judicial
decisions pronounced by courts.
Tribunals which fall within the purview of Art.136(1) occupy
a special of their own under the scheme of our Consti-
373
tution. Special matters and questions are entrusted to them
for their decision and in that sense, they share with the
courts one common characteristic: both the courts and the
tribunals are " constituted by the State and are invested
with judicial as distinguished from purely administrative or
executive functions." (vide Durga Shankar Mehta v. Thakur
Raghuraj Singh and Others) (1). They are both adjudicating
bodies and they deal with and finally determine disputes
between parties which are entrusted to their jurisdiction.
The procedure followed by the courts is regularly prescribed
and in discharging their functions and exercising their
powers, the courts have to conform to that procedure. The
procedure which the tribunals have to follow may not always
be so strictly prescribed, but the approach adopted by both
the courts and the tribunals is substantially the same, and
there is no essential difference between the functions that
they discharge. As in the case of courts, so in the case of
tribunals, it is the State’s inherent judicial power which
has been transferred and by virtue of the said power, it is
the State’s inherent judicial function which they discharge.
Judicial functions and judicial powers are one of the
essential attributes of a sovereign State, and on
considerations of policy, the State transfers its judicial
functions and powers mainly to the courts established by the
Constitution; -but that does not affect the competence of
the State, by appropriate measures, to transfer a part of
its judicial powers and functions to tribunals by entrusting
to them the task of adjudicating upon special matters and
disputes between parties. It is really not possible or even
expedient to attempt to describe exhaustively the features
which are common to the tribunals and the courts, and
features which are distinct and separate. The basic and the
fundamental feature which is common to both the courts and
the tribunals is that they discharge judicial functions and
exercise judicial powers which inherently vest in a
sovereign State.
This problem has been considered by this Court on several
occasions and judicial decisions show that it arises in two
different forms. Sometimes, the question which is posed for
the decision of this Court is whether a particular decision
reached by an authority or a body can be corrected by the
issue of a writ of certiorari by the High Courts in exercise
of their jurisdiction under Art.226; and in dealing with
this question, it becomes necessary to enquire whether the
impugned decision is a judicial or quasi-judicial decision
and whether in reaching it, the authority concerned was re-
quired to adopt a judicial approach and follow the
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principles of
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 267 at P. 272.
34
natural justice. We will very briefly indicate how this
question has been considered by this Court by referring to
some important decisions in that behalf. In the Province of
Bombay v. Kusaldas S. Advani and Others,(1) this Court had
to consider whether the powers given to the Provincial
Government under sections 10 and 12 of the Bombay Land
Requisition Ordinance (V of 1947) required that in
exercising them, the Government had to act judicially in the
matter of making an order of requisition under s.3.
According to the majority decision, the relevant powers and
the scheme of the Ordinance did not make it incumbent on the
State Government to act judicially in exercising its powers
under s.3. Dealing with this question, Das J., as he then
was, deduced two principles from an elaborate examination of
the relevant decisions cited before the Court. He held that
if a statute empowers in authority not being a court in the
ordinary sense to decide disputes arising out of a claim
made by one party under the statute which claim is opposed
by another party and to determine the respective rights of
the contesting parties who are opposed to each other, there
is a lis and prima facie, and in the absence of anything in
the statute to the contrary, it is the duty of the authority
to act judicially and the decision of the authority is a
quasi-judicial act. The second principle which he deduced
was that if a statutory body has power to do any act which
will prejudicially affect the subject, then although there
are not two parties apart from the authority, and the
contest is between the authority proposing to do the act and
the subject opposing it, the final determination of the
authority will yet be a quasi-judicial act provided the
authority is required by the statute to act judicially (p.
725). Kania, C. J., on the other hand, observed that the
true position was that "when the law under which the
authority is making a decision itself requires a judicial
approach, the decision would be a quasi-judicial decision.
Prescribed forms are not necessary to make an inquiry
judicial, provided in coming to the decision, well-
recognised principles of approach are required to be
followed." (p. 633).
Before we proceed to the next decision of this Court bearing
on this point, we would like to refer to the recent decision
of the House of Lords in Ridge v. Baldwin and Others ( 2 ) .
In that case, the House of Lords had to consider the
question as to whether the watch committee in exercising its
authority under s. 191 of the Municipal Corporations Act,
1882, was required to act judicially or not. The case
itself arose out of the dismissal of the appellant Ridge who
had been appointed chief constable of a borough police
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 621.
(2) L.R. [1964] A.C. 40.
375
force in 1956. On October 28, 1957, he was suspended from
duty by the borough watch committee. On February 28, 1958,
he was acquitted by the jury on the criminal charges against
him. On March 6, 1958, on a charge alleging corruption
against the appellant Donovan, J. who tried the case,
referred to the boroughs police force and remarked on its
need for a leader "who will be a new influence and who will
set a different example from that which has lately
obtained." After his acquittal, the appellant applied to be
reinstated, but on March 7, 1958, the watch committee at a
meeting decided that he had been negligent in the discharge
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of his duties as chief constable, and, in purported exercise
of the powers conferred on them by s. 191(4) of the Act of
1882, dismissed him from that office. Before doing so, no
specific charge had been formulated against him, but the
watch committee acted. inter alia, on the appellant’s own
statements in evidence and the observations made by Donovan
J. during the course of the trial. The appellant appealed
to the Home Secretary, but his appeal was dismissed on the
ground that there was sufficient material on which the watch
committee could properly exercise their power of dismissal
under s. 191(4). It is this dismissal which led to the
action by the appellant against the watch committee for a
declaration that his dismissal was illegal, ultra vires and
void, and payment of salary from March 7, 1958, or,
alternatively, payment of pension from that date and
damages. That is how the question which arose for decision
was whether the watch committee acting under s.191(4) had to
act judicially.
The majority decision was that it had to act judicially, and
since the order of dismissal was passed without furnishing
the appellant with a specific charge, it was a nullity. In
dealing with the appellant’s contention that the watch
committee had to act judicially, Lord Reid has exhaustively
considered the judicial decisions bearing on this point. He
referred in particular to the following observation made by
Atkin L. J. in Rex v. Electricity Commissioners, Exparte
London Electricity, Joint Committee Co. (1920) Ltd. &
Others(-’) : "Wherever any body of persons having legal
authority to determine questions affecting the rights of
subjects, and having the duty to act judicially, act in
excess of their legal authority, they are subject to the
controlling jurisdiction of the King’s Bench Division
exercised in these writs." This observation was later read
by Lord Hewart, C.J. in Rex v. Legislative Committee of the
Church Assembly, Exparte Havnes Smith(2), as meaning that
before the decision of any authority could be sub-
(1) [1924] 1 K.B.D. 171, 205.
3Sup./65-8
(2) [1928] 1 K.B.D. 411.
376
jected to the writ jurisdiction, it must appear that the
said body should have legal authority to determine questions
affecting the rights of subjects and should further be
required to act judicially. The duty to act judicially,
observed Lord Hewart, C. J., is an ingredient which, if the
test is to be satisfied, must be present.
The Privy Council in Nakkuda Ali v. Jayaratne(1), had taken
the same view. Dealing with the order passed by the
Controller of Textiles in Ceylon under a Defence Regulation
which empowered him to cancel a licence "where the
controller has reasonable grounds to believe that any dealer
is unfit to be allowed to continue as a dealer." the Privy
Council held that it did not follow from the words of the
relevant Defence Regulation that the controller must be
acting judicially in exercising the power. It is a long
step, said the Privy Council, in the argument to say that
because a man is enjoined that he must not take action
unless he has reasonable ground for believing something he
can only arrive ,at that belief by a course of conduct
analogous to the judicial process. And yet, unless that
proposition is valid, there is really no ground for holding
that the controller is acting judicially or quasijudicially
when he acts under this regulation. If he is not under a
duty so to act, then it would not be according to law that
his decision should be amenable to review and, if necessary,
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to avoidance by the procedure of certiorari.
Having set out these decisions, Lord Reid expressed his dis-
sent from the gloss which has been put by Lord Hewart C. J.
in Rex v. Legislative Committee of the Church Assembly 2 )
on the observations of Atkin, L. J. in Rex v. Electricity
Commissioners("), and the view taken by the Privy Council in
Nakkuda Ali(1); and he held that "the power of dismissal
conferred on the watch committee by s. 191(4) could not have
been exercised and cannot now be exercised until the watch
committee have informed the constable of the grounds on
which they propose to proceed and have given him a proper
opportunity to present his case in defence." (p. 79). In
other words, according to Lord Reid’s judgment, the
necessity to follow judicial procedure and observe the
principles of natural justice, flows from the nature of the
decision which the watch committee had been authorised to
reach under s. 191(4). It would thus be seen that the area
where the principles of natural justice have to be followed
and judicial approach has to be adopted, has become wider
and consequently,
(2) (1928] 1 K.B.D. 411
(1) [1951] A.C. 66, 77.
(3) [1924] 1 K. B.D. 411.
377
the horizon of the writ jurisdiction has been extended in a
corresponding measure. In dealing with questions as to
whether any impugned orders could be revised under Art. 226
of our Constitution, the test prescribed by Lord Reid in
this judgment may afford considerable assistance.
In Nagendra Nath Bora & Another v. The Commissioner of Hills
Division and Appeals, Assam, & Ors.(1) this Court had to
consider whether the jurisdiction of the High Court under
Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution could be invoked
against the decision of the appellate authority constituted
under the Eastern Bengal and Assam Excise Act, 1910 (E. B.
& Assam Act 1 of 1910). The scheme of the Act was examined
and it was noticed that the Act had laid down a regular
hierarchy of authorities, one above the other, with the
right of hearing appeals or revisions. It is true that
there was no provision in the Act which required, in express
terms, that reasoned orders should be recorded; but in the
context of the subject-matter of the rules, it was held that
it was the duty of the appellate authority to hear
judicially, that is to say, in an objective manner,
impartially and after giving reasonable opportunity to the
parties concerned in the dispute, to place their respective
cases before it. (p. 1254). On that view of the matter, the
decision of the appellate authority was theoretically held
to be subject to the jurisdiction of the High Court under
Art. 226 to issue a writ of certiorari.
In Shivji Nathubhai v. The Union of India & Others(2), this
Court held that in exercising its power of review under rule
54 of the Mineral Concessions Rules, 1949, the Central
Government acted judicially and not administratively. In
consequence, the decision of the Central Government was
liable to be questioned on proper grounds under Art. 226 of
the Constitution. The question as to whether the State
Government in granting the mining lease acted merely
administratively or not, was not considered in this case,
because it was enough for the purpose of deciding the appeal
that the powers of review were not administrative powers and
exercise of the said powers would be subject to examination
by the High Courts under Art. 226.
It will be noticed that in these cases, this Court was not
called upon to consider whether the authorities whose
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decisions were challenged under Art. 226 were tribunals or
not, because the requirement that the impugned decision
should be that of a tribunal which has been prescribed by
AA. 136(1) is not to be found
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1240.
(2) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 775.
378
in Art. 226; and so, the only point which fell for decision
was whether the impugned orders amounted to judicial or
quasi-judicial decisions liable to be corrected by the issue
of a writ of certiorari under Art. 226, or not. That
problem is different from the one which we have to decide in
the present case.
Let us now refer to some of the decisions which deal with
the problem with which we are concerned. The first decision
where this question was elaborately considered was
pronounced in the case of The Bharat Bank Ltd., Delhi, v.
Employees of the Bharat Bank Ltd., and the Bharat Bank
Employees’ Union, Delhi(1). In that case, an award
pronounced by an Industrial Tribunal under the provisions of
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, was brought to this Court
in appeal by special leave under Art. 136(1), and the
respondents’ preliminary objection that the appeal was in-
competent, raised the problem as to whether the Industrial
Tribunal was a tribunal under Art. 136(1) or not. The
majority decision was in favour of the view that the
Industrial Tribunal is a tribunal within the meaning of
-Art. 136(1). Mahajan J., who delivered the principal
judgment in support of the majority view on this point, held
that "industrial tribunals though they are not full-fledged
Courts, yet exercise quasi-judicial functions and are within
the ambit of the word ’tribunal’ in Art. 136 of the Con-
stitution." (p. 476). "The condition precedent," said
Mahajan J., "for bringing a tribunal within the ambit of
Art. 136 is that it should be constituted by the State.
Again, a tribunal would be outside the ambit of Art. 136 if
it is not invested with any part of the judicial functions
of the State but discharges purely administrative or
executive duties (p. 478)." It is in this connection that
the learned Judge added that tribunals, however, which are
found invested with certain functions of a court of justice
and have some of its trappings also would fall within the
ambit of Art. 136, because, according to the learned Judge,
the intention of the Constitution by the use of the word
"tribunal" in the article seems to have been to include
within the scope of Art. 136 tribunals adomed with similar
trappings as Court but strictly not coming within that
definition (p. 474). The fact that awards pronounced by
Industrial Tribunals become enforceable under s. 17A subject
to the conditions therein prescribed, did not make any
difference to the legal position that the Industrial
Tribunals were tribunals within the meaning of Art. 136(1).
The majority decision in the case of the Bharat Bank(1), to
which we have just referred was adopted unanimously by this
Court
(1) [19501 S.C.R. 459.
379
in the case of Durga Skankar Mehta(1). Speaking for the
Court, Mukherjea, J., observed that it was now well-settled
by the majority decision of the Court in the case of Bharat
Bank (2 ) that the expression "Tribunal" as used in Art. 136
does not mean the same thing as "Court" but includes, within
its ambit, all adjudicating bodies, provided they are
constituted by the State and are invested with judicial as
distinguished from purely administrative or executive
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functions, subject, of course, to the exception specifically
provided for by Art. 136(2).
In M/s. Harinagar Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Shyam Sundar Jhunj-
hunwala and Others(3), the question which arose for decision
of this Court was whether the Central Government, while it
exercises its appellate power Under s. 111(3) of the
Companies Act, 1956 (No. 1 of 1956), was a tribunal within
the meaning of Art. 136(1). In considering this question,
the scheme of the relevant provisions of the Act was
examined, the earlier decisions bearing on the point were
taken into account and it was held that s. 1 1 1(3) required
that the Central Government, while acting as an appellate
authority, had to act judicially and was entrusted with the
judicial powers of the State to adjudicate upon rights of
the parties in civil matters when there is a lis between the
contesting parties, and so, the conclusion was inevitable
that it acts as a tribunal and not as an executive body. In
that connection, Shah J., who spoke for the majority of the
Court, observed that the proceedings before the Central
Government have all the trappings of a judicial tribunal;
and by way of illustration, he referred to the fact that
pleadings had to be filed, evidence had to be led, and the
disputes had to be decided according to law after
considering the representations made by the parties.
Hidayatullah J., differed from the majority decision on the
question as to the final order which should be passed in the
said appeals. He held that there was no reason for the
Central Government to have passed the impugned order, and
so, he wanted the appeals to be allowed. Accordingly, he
directed that the impugned order should be set aside and
appeals should be allowed with costs. On the preliminary
question as to whether the appeals were competent, the
learned Judge agreed with the majority decision that the
Central Government was a tribunal within the meaning of Art.
136(1). Construing Art. 136(1), the learned Judge observed
that courts and tribunals act judicially in both senses
which he had earlier discussed, and in the term "Court" are
included the ordinary and
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 257.
(3) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 339, 352.
(2) (1950] S.C.R. 459.
380
permanent tribunals and in the term "tribunal" are included
all others, which are not so included. Among the powers of
the State, said Hidayatullah J., is included the power to
decide controversies between parties. This is undoubtedly
one of the attributes of the State, and is aptly called the
judicial power of the State. Broadly speaking, certain
special matters go before tribunals, and the residue goes
before the ordinary Courts of Civil Judicature. Their
procedures may differ, but the functions are not essentially
different (pp. 362-63). Thus, it would be noticed that all
the learned Judges who heard this case, were agreed in
taking the view that the essential power which was exercised
by the courts and tribunals alike was the judicial power of
the State.
In Jaswant Sugar Mills Ltd., Meerut v. Lakshmichand and
Others(1), this Court has held that the Conciliation Officer
acting under clause 29 of the Order promulgated in 1954
under the U.P. Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, has to act
judicially in granting or refusing permission to alter the
terms of employment of workmen at the instance of the
employer, but even so, he was not a tribunal, because he was
not invested with the judicial power of the State, as he was
empowered merely to lift the ban statutorily imposed on the
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employer’s rights, and was not authorised to pronounce a
final and binding decision in any dispute. That is why an
appeal preferred against the order of the said Conciliation
Officer was held to be incompetent under Art. 136(1). "The
condition precedent for bringing a tribunal within the ambit
of Art. 136," observed Shah J., who spoke for the Court, "is
that it should be constituted by the State;" and he added
that a tribunal would be outside the ambit of Art. 136 if it
is not invested with any part of the judicial functions of
the State but discharges purely administrative or executive
duties. After examining the scheme of the relevant
provision, it was observed that "in deciding whether an
authority required to act judicially when dealing with
matters affecting rights of citizens may be regarded as a
tribunal, though not a Court, the principal incident is the
investiture of the ’trappings of a court’-such as authority
to determine matters in cases initiated by parties, sitting
in public, power to compel attendance of witnesses and to
examine them on oath, and others .... Some, though not
necessarily all such trappings will ordinarily make the
authority which is under a duty to act judicially, a
’tribunal’."
In the Engineering Mazdoor Sabha representing Workmen em-
ployed under the Hind Cycles Ltd. & Anr. v. The Hind Cycles
Ltd., Bombay(2), the question which arose for decision of
this
(1) [1963] Supp. I S.C.R. 242, 259-60.
(2) [1963] Supp. I S.CR. 625.
381
Court was whether an arbitrator appointed under s. 10A of
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (No. 14 of 1947) can be
said to be a tribunal under Art. 136(1), and in rendering
the answer to this question in the negative, this Court
observed that apart from the importance of the trappings of
a Court, the basic and essential condition which makes an
authority or a body a tribunal under Art. 136, is that it
should be constituted by the State and should be invested
with the State’s inherent judicial power. Even so, the
judgment has referred to the trappings of a Court and it has
been observed that sometimes a rough and ready test is
applied in determining the status of an adjudicating body by
enquiring whether the said body or authority is clothed with
the trappings of a court. In that connection, it was added
that the presence of the said trappings does not necessarily
make the Tribunal a Court. The Arbitrator appointed under
s. 10 A was, however, held to be not a tribunal, because his
appointment was essentially based on the agreement of the
parties concerned and as such, his position was somewhat
analogous to that of the arbitrator appointed by the
parties.
In Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. Ltd. v. Jasjit Singh
Addl. Collector of Customs, Calcutta and Ors.,(1) the status
of the Central Board of Revenue exercising its appellate
power under s. 190 of the Sea Customs Act, 1878 and that of
the Central Government exercising its power under s. 191
came to be examined. It was common ground that the Customs
Officer exercising his authority under s. 167 of the said
Act was not a ’Court’ or a ’Tribunal’; nevertheless, it as
held that the Central Board of Revenue and the Central
Government exercising their respective powers under ss. 190
and 191 were ’tribunals’ under Art. 136(1). This conclusion
proceeded on the main ground that both the appellate and the
revisional authorities in question are invested with the
judicial power of the State and are required to act
judicially. On this occasion, again, this Court referred to
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the trappings of a Court and observed that the presence of
some of the trappings of a Court may assist to determine
whether the proceedings before the authority in question are
judicial or not, though it was emphasised that apart from
the said test of trappings, the basic test was whether the
authority in question had been constituted by the State and
had been given a part of the State’s inherent judicial
powers.
It would thus be seen that in dealing with the question as
to whether respondent No. 2, while it exercises its
appellate power under Rule 6(6), is a tribunal under Art.
136(1), we must enquire
(1) [1964] 6 S.CR. 594.
382
whether respondent No. 2 has been clothed with the State’s
inherent judicial power to deal with disputes between
parties and determine them on the merits fairly and
objectively. That is the test which has been consistently
applied by this Court in considering the question about the
status of any body or authority as a tribunal under Art.
136(1). Before we proceed to apply this test to respondent
No. 2’s status under R. 6(6), we think it is necessary to
advert to one aspect of the matter which sometimes creates
some confusion.
We have referred to the three essential attributes of a
sovereign State and indicated that one of these attributes
is the legislative power and legislative function of the
State, and we have also seen that in determining the status
of an authority dealing with disputes, we have to enquire
whether the power conferred on the said authority or body
can be said to be judicial power conferred on it by the
State by means of a statute or statutory rule. The use of
the expression "judicial power" in this context proceeds on
the well-recognised concept of political science that along
with legislative and executive powers, judicial power vests
in a sovereign State. In countries where rigid separation
of powers has been effected by written Constitutions, the
position is very different. Take, for instance, the
Australian Constitution. Section 71 of the Commonwealth of
Australia Constitution Act (63 & 64 Viet. Chapter 12)
provides that the judicial power of the Commonwealth shall
be vested in a Federal Supreme Court, to be called the High
Court of Australia, and in such other federal courts as the
Parliament creates, and in such other courts as it invests
with federal jurisdiction. The High Court shall consist of
a Chief Justice, and so many other Justices, not less than
two, as the Parliament prescribes. It is clear that the
scheme of sections 71 to 80 which form part of Chapter III
of the said Constitution, is that the judicial power of the
State can be conferred only on courts recognised by the
provisions of the said Chapter. In other words, it is not
competent to the Legislature in Australia to confer judicial
power properly so-called on any body or authority other than
or apart from the courts recognised by Ch. 111; and so, the
use of the expression "judicial power" or its conferment in
regard to tribunals which are not courts properly so-called,
would under the Australian Constitution be wholly
inappropriate. If any tribunals other than courts are
established and power is given to them to <teal with and
decide special disputes between the parties, the power which
such tribunals would exercise cannot be described as judi-
cial power, but would have to be called quasi-judicial
power.
383
This technical aspect of the matter which is present under
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the Constitutions based on rigid separation of powers,
should not be ignored when we are dealing with the question
posed under Art. 136(1) of our Constitution. Under our
Constitution, there is no rigid separation of powers as
under the Australian Constitution; and so, it would not be
constitutionally inappropriate or improper to say that
judicial power of the State can be conferred on the
hierarchy of courts established under the Constitution as
well as on tribunals which are not courts strictly so-
called. Indeed, the fact that Art. 136(1) refers to courts
and tribunals and makes the determination, sentence or order
passed by them subject to appeal to this Court by special
leave, shows that our Constitution assumes that judicial
power of the State can be vested in and exercised by both
courts and tribunals alike. We have already seen that the
function discharged by courts and tribunals mentioned in
Art. 136(1) is essentially the same, though the nature of
the questions entrusted to their jurisdiction, the procedure
required to be followed by them, and the extent and
character of their powers may be different.
As a result of the rigid separation of powers on which the
Australian Constitution is based, questions which arise for
decision of courts in Australia take a very different form.
Let us refer to the decision of the Privy Council in Shell
Company of Australia, Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of
Taxation(1), by way of illustration. In that case, the
Privy Council had to consider whether the Board of Review
created by s. 41 of the Federal Income-tax Assessment Act,
1922-1925, to review the decisions of the Commissioner of
Taxation, and whose members are to hold off˜ice for seven
years, in a Court exercising the judicial power of the Com-
monwealth within the meaning of s. 71 of the Constitution of
Australia. If the answer had been in the affirmative, the
amending section by which the Board of Review was
constituted, would have been invalid because of the
provisions of s. 71 of the Australian Constitution. The
Privy Council however, examined the functions of the Board
and its powers and considered the scheme of the relevant
provisions of the Taxation Act and came to the conclusion
that the Board of Review was not a Court and stood in the
same position as the Commissioner. It was observed that the
orders of the Board of Review were not made conclusive for
any purpose whatsoever, and that the decisions of the Board
were made the equivalent of the decision of the
Commissioner. In dealing with the status of the Board in
the context of the require-
(1) [19311 A.C. 275.
384
ments of S. 71 of the Australian Constitution, Lord Sankey
L. C. observed that "the authorities are clear to show that
there are tribunals with many of the trappings of a Court
which, nevertheless, are not Courts in the strict sense of
exercising judicial power" (p. 296). It is in this
connection that Lord Sankey referred to certain attributes
of Courts which he characterised as trappings. The negative
propositions which he enunciated by reference to these
trappings, indicate that the presence of the trappings would
not make the Board a Court and would not lead to the
inference that the judicatory power exercised by tribunals
was judicial power which courts alone can exercise. It
would thus be noticed that the reference to the trappings
was intended to show that the presence of the trappings does
not alter the character of the tribunal, the decisive test
being that judicial power under the Australian Constitution
can be conferred only on courts and not on tribunals. When
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we refer to tribunals in dealing with the problem posed by
Art. 13 6 ( 1 ), it is necessary to bear in mind the context
in which Lord Sankey referred to these trappings.
There is another point to which we would like to refer
before we part with this topic. In the Attorney-General for
Australia v. The Queen and the Boilermakers’ Society of
Australia and Others(1) an interesting question arose for
the decision of the Court under ss. 29(1) (b) & (c) and 29-A
of the Commonwealth Conciliation and Arbitration Act, 1904-
1952. These provisions purported to vest judicial
power---even to the extent of fining a citizen or depriving
him of his liberty-in the Court of Conciliation and
Arbitration established under the Act with powers of an
administrative, arbitral and executive character. It was
held that the said provisions were invalid, because the
function of an industrial arbitrator is completely outside
the realms of judicial power and is of a different
character. This decision also is based on the doctrine of
rigid and strict separation of powers on which the
Australian Constitution is based. Viscount Simonds, who
delivered the judgment of their Lordships, has referred to
the structure of the Australian Constitution and observed
that in the matter of conferring judicial powers, it was not
open to the Parliament to turn from Chapter III to some
other source of power (p. 313). Indeed, he cited with
approval the observations made by Griffith, C. J. in
Waterside Workers’ Federation of Australia v. Alexander
(J.W.) Ltd.,(2) that it is impossible under the Constitution
to confer such functions (i.e., judicial functions) upon any
body other than a court, nor can the difficulty be avoided
by designating a body, which is not in its
(1) [1957] A.C. 288.
(2) [1918] 25 C.L.R. 434, 442.
385
essential character a court, by that name, or by calling the
functions by another name. In short, any attempt to vest
any part of the judicial power of the Commonwealth in any
body other than a court is entirely ineffective.
We have referred to these two decisions only for the purpose
of emphasising the fact that the technical considerations
which flow from the strict and rigid separation of powers,
would not be applicable in dealing with the question about
the status of respondent No. 2 by reference to Art. 136(1)
of our Constitution. The use of the expression "judicial
power" in the context, cannot be characterised as
constitutionally impermissible or inappropriate, because our
Constitution does not provide, as does Chapter HI of the
Australian Constitution, that judicial power can be con-
ferred only on courts properly so-called. If such a
consideration was relevant and material, then it would no
doubt, be inappropriate to say that certain authorities or
bodies which are given the power to deal with disputes
between parties and finally determine them, are tribunals
because the judicial power of the State has been statutorily
transferred to them. In that case, the more appropriate
expression to use would be that the powers which they exer-
cise are quasi-judicial in character, and tribunals
appointed under such a scheme of rigid separation of powers
cannot be held to discharge the same judicial function as
the courts. However, these considerations are, strictly
speaking, inapplicable to the Indian Constitution, because
though it is based on a broad separation of powers, there is
no rigidity or exclusiveness involved in it as under s. 71
as well as other provisions of Ch. III of the Australian
Constitution; and so, it would not be inappropriate to say
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that the main test in determining the status of any
authority in the context of Art. 136(1) is whether or not
inherent judicial power of the State has been transferred to
it.
Let us then examine the scheme of the Rules. R. 6 as we
have already seen, prescribes the conditions of service of
Welfare Officers. Reading the second proviso to R. 6(3) and
R. 6(4) together, it appears that if the management wants to
impose any punishment other than censure, it is required to
secure the previous concurrence of the Labour Commissioner;
and when an application is made to the Labour Commissioner
for obtaining his concurrence, he has to give the Welfare
Officer an opportunity of showing cause against the action
proposed to be taken against him and if necessary, he has to
hear the parties in person. This provision imposes a
limitation on the power of the management to subject the
Welfare Officer to the punishments to which it applies.
386 .
In the present case, we are not called upon to consider
whether the Labour Commissioner exercising his power under
R. 6(4) is a tribunal or not; for the purpose of the present
appeal, we will assume that he is not a tribunal under Art.
136(1).
Rule 6(5) deals with a case where the Labour Commissioner
refuses to give his concurrence, and in that case, it
confers on the management the right to make an appeal to the
State Government within the time prescribed by it. It
provides that the appellate decision of the State Government
would be final and binding. Similarly, R. 6(6) enables the
Welfare Officer upon whom the punishment mentioned in cl.
(v) of sub-rule 3 is imposed without obtaining the
concurrence of the Labour Commissioner to appeal to the
State Government, and it provides that the appellate
decision of the State Government in such a case would also
be final and binding.
The question which we have to decide in the present appeal
is whether the State Government is a tribunal when it
exercises its authority under R. 6(5) or R. 6(6), No rules
have been made prescribing the procedure which the State
Government should follow in dealing with appeals under these
two sub-rules, and there is no statutory provision
conferring on the State Government any specific powers which
are usually associated with the trial in courts and which
are intended to help the court in reaching its decisions.
The requirements of procedure which is followed in courts
and the possession of subsidiary powers which are given to
courts to try the cases before them, are described as
trappings of the courts, and so, it may be conceded that
these trappings are not shown to exist in the case of the
State Government which hears appeals under R. 6(5) and R.
6(6). But as we already stated, the consideration about the
presence of all or some of the trappings of a court is
really not decisive. The presence of some of the trappings
may assist the determination of the question as to whether
the power exercised by the authority which possesses the
said trappings, is the judicial power of the State or not.
The main and the basic test however, is whether the
adjudicating power which a particular authority is empowered
to exercise, has been conferred on it by a statute and can
be described as a part of the State’s inherent power
exercised in discharging its judicial function. Applying
this test, there can be no doubt that the power which the
State Government exercises under R. 6(5) and R. 6(6) is a
part of the State’s judicial power. It has been conferred
on the State ;Government by a statutory Rule and it can be
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exercised in respect ,of disputes between the management and
its Welfare Officers. There
387
is, in that sense, a lis; there is affirmation by one party
and denial by another, and the dispute necessarily involves
the rights and obligations of the parties to it. The order
which the State Government ultimately passes is described as
its decision and it is made final and binding. Besides, it
is an order passed on appeal. Having regard to these
distinctive features of the power conferred on the State
Government by R. 6(5) and R. 6(6), we feel no hesitation in
holding that it is a Tribunal within the meaning of Art.
136(1).
In this connection, we may usefully recall the observation
made by Lord Haldane in Local Government Board v.
Arlidge(1). Said Lord Haldane "My Lords, when the duty of
deciding an appeal is imposed, those whose duty it is to
decide it must act judicially. They must deal with the
question referred to them without bias, and they must give
to each of the parties the opportunity of adequately
presenting the case made. The decision must be come to in
the spirit and with the sense of responsibility of a tri-
bunal whose duty it is to mete out justice. But it does not
follow that the procedure of every such tribunal must be the
same." Having regard to the nature of the power conferred on
the State Government, it seems to us clear that for reaching
a fair and objective decision in the dispute brought before
it in its appellate jurisdiction, the State Government has
the power to devise its own procedure and to exercise such
other incidental and subsidiary powers as may be necessary
to deal effectively with the dispute. We are, therefore,
satisfied that the State Government which exercises its
appellate jurisdiction under R. 6(5) and R. 6(6) of the
Rules is a Tribunal within the meaning of Art. 136(1); and
so, the present appeal brought before this Court against the
impugned appellate order passed by respondent No. 2, is
competent. In the result, the preliminary objection raised
by Mr. Goyal fails and must be rejected.
That takes us to the merits of the impugned appellate order.
Mr. Setalvad for the appellant contends that the impugned
order is bad for two reasons. He argues that the relevant
Rule which requires the concurrence of the Labour
Commissioner before the management can dismiss or terminate
the services of a Welfare Officer, is invalid inasmuch as it
is outside the scope of the authority conferred on the State
Government by s. 49(2) of the Act. He also argues that the
impugned order is invalid for the reason that in the
circumstances of this case, the appeal preferred by res-
(1) [1915] A.C. 120, 132.
388
pondent No. 1 before respondent No. 2 was incompetent under
r. 6(6).
Let us first examine the contention about the invalidity of
the Rule itself. We have noticed that S. 49(2) of the Act
confers on the State Government authority to prescribe the
duties, qualifications and conditions of service of officers
employed under subsection (1); so that there can be no doubt
that the State Government would be competent to make Rules
which prescribe the conditions of service of Welfare
Officers. The question is whether R. 6 which purports to
prescribe such conditions of service is ultra vires S. 49(2)
of the Act inasmuch as it imposes on the management the
obligation to secure the concurrence of the Labour Com-
missioner before inflicting on the Welfare Officer the
punishments to which the second proviso to R. 6(3) refers.
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In our opinion, the words "conditions of service" used in s.
49(2) are wide enough to cover the proviso in question and
sub-rules (4), (5) and (6) of Rule 6. Under what
circumstances an employee’s services can be terminated and
subject to what conditions, can well be the subjectmatter of
a contract of employment, because conditions of service
would take in the termination of services and incidentally,
the conditions subject to which such termination could be
brought about. If that be so, we see no reason why a
statutory rule imposing the obligation on the management as
prescribed by the second proviso in question should be said
to fall outside S. 49(2) of the Act. The object of
conferring on the State Government the power to frame Rules
in that behalf obviously is to afford special protection to
Welfare Officers appointed under s. 49(1), and if respondent
No. 2 thought that the best way to assure security of tenure
to ,such officers was to require that they should not be
dismissed or otherwise punished without obtaining the
consent of the Labour Commissioner as required by the second
proviso to R. 6(3), it would be difficult to hold that a
Rule made by respondent No. 2 in that behalf is not
justified by the power conferred on it by s. 49(2).
Therefore, we are not impressed by Mr. Setalvad’s argument
that the Rule in question is ultra vires or invalid.
Mr. Setalvad, however, is right in contending that the
appeal preferred by respondent No. 1 before respondent No. 2
was incompetent. Rule 6(6) no doubt enables a Welfare
Officer to make an appeal to the State Government if
punishment has been imposed upon him contrary to the
requirements of the proviso to R. 6(3), without obtaining
the concurrence of the Labour Commissioner. The scheme of
the relevant Rules appears to be that if the manage-
389
ment applies for concurrence, and the concurrence is not
given by the Labour Commissioner, the management can appeal
under r. 6(5). If the concurrence is given, or if a welfare
officer is dismissed without applying for concurrence, he
may make an appeal under r. 6(6); but before such an appeal
can be competent, it must appear that the punishment
mentioned in clause (v) of subrule 3 of R. 6 has been
imposed, upon him. In the present case, it is difficult to
hold that any such punishment has been imposed upon
respondent No. 1. All that the appellant has done in the
present case is to terminate the services of respondent No.
1 by virtue of clause 4 of his terms of appointment. When
respondent No. 1 was appointed a Welfare Officer by the
appellant, the terms of his employment were communicated to
him by a letter dated March 2, 1956. Clause 4 of this
communication expressly provided that during the period of
probation, the appellant could terminate respondent No. 1’s
services without notice, and after confirmation, with one
month’s notice or one month’s salary in lieu of notice. The
order terminating his services specifically refers to an
earlier letter addressed to him on September 23, 1961. In
this letter, the appellant expressly informed respondent No.
1 that if he did not proceed to Kymore Cement Works within
the time allowed to him, his services would stand terminated
from September 26, 1961, and he would be paid his salary up
to the 25th September, 1961, as well as one month’s salary
in lieu of notice and other dues as per Company’s rules. It
is thus clear that in terminating the services of respondent
No. 1 the appellant was merely exercising its right to put
an end to respondent No. 1’s services with one month’s
salary in lieu of notice; and such an order cannot be said
to amount to any punishment at all; it is an order of
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discharge served by the employer on his employee strictly
within the terms of the employee’s conditions of service.
There is no doubt that when r. 6(3) (v) refers to
dismissal or termination of service in any other manner,
it takes in dismissal or termination of service which is in
the nature of a punitive termination of service. r. 6(3)
makes it clear that clauses (i) to (v) refer to punishments
which could be imposed on Welfare Officers by the
management; and so, before r. 6 (3) (v) can be invoked by
respondent No. 1, it must be shown that the termination of
his services was in the nature of a punishment. The
termination of respondent No. 1’s services in terms of
clause 4 of his conditions of service is no more than a
discharge, and as such is not a punishment; and so, it is
outside r. 6(3) altogether. Therefore, we are satisfied
that the appeal preferred by respondent No. 1 before
respondent No. 2 was not competent under rule 6(6).
390
My. Goyal no doubt attempted to argue that though in form
the order terminating respondent No. 1’s services purported
to be an order of discharge under clause 4 of his conditions
of service, in substance it is an order of dismissal; and in
support of this argument, he referred us to the fact that
before the impugned order was passed, considerable
correspondence passed between the parties, and it appears
that the appellant had transferred respondent No. 1 to
Kymore, and respondent No. 1 apparently did not obey the
said order of transfer. We have not thought it necessary to
refer to this correspondence, because, in our opinion, it is
not possible to entertain Mr. Goyal’s contention that the
order of discharge in the present case in substance amounts
to an order of dismissal. It is true that the form in which
the impugned order has been passed will not necessarily
determine the character of the termination of respondent No.
1’s services. If respondent No. 1 had proved that the
impugned order amounts to his punishment, that no doubt
would have been a legitimate plea on which the competence of
the appeal to respondent No. 2 could have been sustained;
but beyond making a vague allegation that the impugned order
had been passed not bona fide, but for ulterior purpose, no
attempt has been made to suggest, much less to prove, that
the appellant was actuated by any improper motive in
terminating his services. It does appear that when the
appellant found that respondent No. 1 was not willing to go
to Kymore Cement Works where he had been transferred, it
deliberately chose not to punish him, but to pass a simple
order of discharge. In such cases, it is no doubt open to
the Court to consider the substance of the matter and not to
treat the form in which the order terminating the services
of an employee has been passed, conclusive. But cases may
occur in which it would be safe to conclude that the order
of discharge is a bona fide order of discharge and that the
employer passed such an order, because it was not its
intention to cast any slur on its employee, even though it
thought it necessary to terminate his services. In our
opinion, the present case falls under this category.
Therefore, we are not impressed by the argument that the
impugned order amounts to a termination of service in any
other manner contemplated by Rule 6(3) (v).
The result is, the appeal is allowed, and the impugned order
passed by respondent No. 2 is set aside on the that it has
been passed without Jurisdiction. Parties to bear their own
costs.
Bachawat, J.-I agree with the conclusions of the learned
Chief Justice and the order proposed by him, and will add a
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few words of my own. The preliminary objection as to the
maintainability
391
of the appeal raises important questions of interpretation
of Art. 136 of the Constitution. In what sense did the
Constitution makers use the word "tribunal" in that Article
? By what sign or distinctive attribute are we to recognise
a tribunal ? In Royal Acquarium & Summer & Winter-Garden
Society Ltd. v. Parkinson (1), Fry, L. J. said that this
word has not, like the word ’ court’ an ascertainable
meaning in English law. The word cannot have the popular
meaning of a Court of justice, for obviously a tribunal
contemplated by Art. 136 is an authority other than a
regular Court of justice. I think that the context of Art.
136 supplies the proper meaning of this word. Article 136
concerns the regulation of the judicial power of the State
vested in the Courts and other authorities. The great
purpose of Art. 136 is the recognition of the basic
principle that one Court having supreme judicial power in
the Republic will have appellate power over all Courts and
adjudicating authorities vested with the judicial powers of
the State throughout the territory of India barring those
constituted by or under any law relating to the Armed
Forces. In this background, the basic test of a tribunal
within the meaning of Art. 136 is that it is an adjudicating
authority (other than a Court) vested with the judicial
powers of the State. I think that an the decided cases
substantially lay down this test. Speaking on behalf of a
unanimous Court in Durga Shankar Mehta v. Thakur Raghurai
Singh and others (2) , B. K. Mukherjea, J. said :
" It is now well settled by the majority
decision of this Court in the case of Bharat
Bank Ltd. v. Employees of the Bharat Bank
Ltd.(") that the expression ’Tribunal’ as used
in article 136 does not mean the same thing as
’Court’ but includes, within its ambit, all
adjudicating bodies, provided they are
constituted by the State and are invested with
judicial as distinguished from purely
administrative or executive functions."
According to this test, the adjudicating body must be
constituted by the State and be vested with judicial
functions. In other decided cases, other learned Judges
conveyed the same idea in a somewhat different form; they
have said that in order to be a tribunal, the body must be
"invested with .... part of the judicial functions of the
State", "delegates of the judicial power of the State",
"invested with the State’s inherent judicial powers", "
exercise judicial powers of the State."
(1) [1892] 1 C.B. 431,446. (2) [1955]
S.C.R. 267, 272.
(3) [1950] S.C.R. 459.
˜3Sup./65-9
392
Now, the expression "judicial power of the State" is not to
be found in our Constitution. We have borrowed this
expression from the Australian law. By Art. 71 of the
Australian Constitution, "the judicial power of the
Commonwealth" is vested in the Courts therein mentioned, and
no other body or tribunal can exercise that power. The
Australian cases try to soften the rigour of this
prohibition by giving a somewhat narrow construction to the
expression "judicial power of the Commonwealth". Thus, they
hold that an arbitral power in relation to industrial
disputes to ascertain and declare what in the opinion of the
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arbitrator are to be the respective rights and liabilities
of the parties in relation to each other is not to be
regarded as a judicial power of the Commonwealth within Art.
71 of the Australian Constitution. See Waterside Workers
Federation v. Alexander(), Attorney-General of Australia v.
Reginam (2) . But our case law does not use the expression
"judicial power of the State" in the same narrow sense while
giving the test of a tribunal under Art. 136 of the Consti-
tution. Thus, the case of Bharat Bank Ltd. v. Employees of
the Bharat Bank Ltd.(") decided that an industrial tribunal
is vested with the judicial functions of the State and is
thus a tribunal within Art. 136. In our Country, the State
(using that expression in the comprehensive sense of the
Union and its component States) has inherent judicial powers
or functions and the Courts and other authorities vested by
State with judicial functions are regarded as delegates of
the State judicial powers. Unlike Australia, in our country
the judicial power of the State may be vested not only in
Courts but also in other authorities. The Courts alone have
no monopoly of this judicial power. An authority other than
a Court vested with the judicial power of the State in this
sense is regarded as a tribunal within Art. 136.
In Shell Co. of Australia v. Federal Commissioner of Taxa-
tion (4) (a case coming from Australia), Lord Sankey, L. C.
said that "there are tribunals with many of the trappings of
a court which, nevertheless, are not courts in the strict
sense of exercising judicial power." The Lord Chancellor was
obviously pointing out that a tribunal possessing one or
more of the trappings of a Court was not necessarily a Court
exercising the judicial power of the Commonwealth a.-,
contemplated by Art. 71 of the Australian Constitution. But
it does not follow that the investiture of some or many of
the trappings of a Court is an essential attribute of a
tribunal contemplated by Art. 136. Nevertheless, our
concept
(1) [1918] 25 C.L.R. 434, 463. (2) (1957] 2
All. 13.R. 45,50 P.C.
(3) [1950] S.C.R. 459. (4) [1931] A.C.
275, 296.
393
of a tribunal has been somehow coloured by Lord Sankey’s
idea of a tribunal with the trappings of a Court. In Bharat
Bank Ltdl. v. Employees of Bharat Bank Ltd(1), Mahajan, J.
said that Art. 136 includes within its scope "tribunals
adorned with similar trappings as Court but strictly not
coming within that definition." In Jaswant Sugar Mills Ltd.,
Meerut v. Lakshmichand(2), Shah, J. said that in deciding
whether an authority may be regarded as a tribunal, though
not a Court, "the principal incident is the investiture of
the ’trappings of a court’." In Engineering Mazdoor Sabha v.
Hind Cycles Ltd., Bombay(), Gajendragadkar, J. (as he then
was) said that in determining "whether a particular body or
authority is a tribunal or not, sometimes a rough and ready
test is applied by enquiring whether the said body or
authority is clothed with the trappings of a court", but he
added that "apart from the trappings of a Court, the basic
and essential condition which makes an authority or a body a
tribunal under Art. 136, is that it should be constituted by
the State and should be invested with the State’s inherent
judicial power." Similar observations were made by the same
learned Judge in Indo-China Steam Navigation Co. v. Jasjit
Singh(4). In trying to find out whether a body is a
tribunal within the meaning -of Art. 136, it is natural to
consider whether the body has some of the trappings of the
Court. If it has one or more of such trappings, it may be
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easier to pronounce the body to be a tribunal. But we must
not forget that the investiture of the trappings of a Court
is not an essential attribute of a tribunal. The basic test
of a tribunal is that it is a body vested with the judicial
power of the State. Unless this basic concept is borne in
mind, the trappings of a Court may well become a trap and a
snare for the unwary.
The limitations as also the full amplitude of the meaning of
the word "tribunal" are thus to be found on a consideration
of Art. 1 3 6 in all its parts, with such aid as may be
derived from other Articles of the Constitution. The
context of Art. 136 and the constitutional background impose
the limitation that the tribunal must be an adjudicating
authority vested with the judicial power of the State.
Barring this limitation, the word must receive a wide and
liberal construction. The basic principle of Art. 136 is
that if a litigant feels that injustice has been done by a
Court or any other body charged with the administration of
justice, there is one superior Court he may always approach
and which, in its discretion, may give him special leave to
appeal so that justice may be done. The plenitude of the
residuary appellate power under
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 459. (2) [19631 Supp. 1
S.C.R. 242,260.
(3) [19631 Supp. I S.C.R. 625 at 631,633,641. (4) [1964] 6
S.C.R. 594.
394
Art. 136 embraces within its scope all adjudicating
authorities vested with the judicial power of the State,
whether or not such authorities have the trappings of a
Court.
An authority other than a Court may be vested by statute
with judicial power in widely different circumstances, which
it would be impossible and indeed inadvisable to attempt to
define exhaustively. The proper thing is to examine each
case as it arises, and to ascertain whether the powers
vested in the authority can be truly described as judicial
functions or judicial powers of the State. For the purpose
of this case, it is sufficient to say that any outside
authority empowered by the State to determine conclusively
the rights of two or more contending parties with regard to
any matter in controversy between them satisfies the test of
an authority vested with the judicial powers of the State
and may be regarded as a tribunal within the meaning of Art.
136. Such a power of adjudication implies that the
authority must act judicially and must determine the dispute
by ascertainment of the relevant facts on the materials
before it and by application of the relevant law to those
facts. This test of a tribunal is not meant to be
exhaustive, and it may be that other bodies not satisfying
this test are also tribunals. In order to be a tribunal, it
is essential that the power of adjudication must be derived
from a statute or a statutory rule. An authority or body
deriving its power of adjudication from an agreement of the
parties, such as a private arbitrator or a tribunal acting
under s. 10-A of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, does not
satisfy the test of a tribunal within Art. 136. It matters
little that such a body or authority is vested with the
trappings of a Court. The Arbitration Act, 1940 vests an
arbitrator with some of the trappings of a Court, so also
the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 vests an authority acting
under s. 10-A of the Act with many of such trappings, and
yet, such bodies and authorities are not tribunals.
The word "tribunal" finds place in Art. 227 of the Constitu-
tion also, and I think that there also the word has the same
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meaning as in Art. 136.
Now, the question is whether the State Government deciding
an appeal under R. 6(6) of the Punjab Welfare Officers
Recruitment and Conditions of Service Rules, 1952 (hereafter
referred to as the Service Rules) is a tribunal within the
meaning of Art. 136 of the Constitution. The State
Government made the Service Rules in exercise of its rule-
making power under s. 112 read with s. 49(2) of the
Factories Act, 1947. The Service Rules relate to
395
the qualifications and conditions of service of a Welfare
Officer in a factory and are well within the rule-making
power. Rule 6 of the Service Rules prescribes the
conditions of service of a Welfare Officer. Sub-rules (1)
and (2) of R. 6 provide that the Welfare Officer must have
the appropriate status corresponding to the status of other
executive heads of the factory, and his conditions of
service shall be the same as of other members of the staff
of corresponding status in the factory. Sub-rule (3)
,empowers the management to impose on the Welfare Officer
one or more of the following punishments, viz., (i) Censure;
(ii) Withholding of increments including stoppage at an
efficiency bar; (iii) reduction to a lower stage in a time
scale; (iv) suspension; and (v) dismissal or termination of
service in any other manner. The first proviso to sub-rule
(3) provides that no order of punishment shall be passed
against the Welfare Officer unless he has been informed of
the grounds on which it is proposed to take action and given
a reasonable opportunity of defending himself against the
action proposed to be taken in regard to him. The second
proviso to sub-r. (3) imposes the further safeguard that the
management cannot impose any punishment on him other than
censure except with the previous concurrence of the Labour
Commissioner, Punjab. Sub-rule (4) provides that before
passing orders on a reference under the last proviso, the
Labour Commissioner shall give the Welfare Officer an
opportunity of showing cause against the proposed action,
and, if necessary, may hear the parties in per-on. Sub-rule
(5)provides that if the Labour Commissioner refuses to
givehis concurrence, the management may appeal to the
StateGovernment within thirty days from the date of the
receipt of such refusal Sub-rule (6) provides that the Wel-
fare Officer upon whom the punishment of dismissal or
termination of service is imposed may appeal to the State
Government against the order of punishment within thirty
days from the date of the receipt of the order by him. The
decision of the State Government under both sub-rr. (5) and
(6) is made final and binding. Sub-rule (7) empowers the
State Government to pass such interim orders as may be
necessary pending the decision of the appeal filed under
sub-r. (5) or sub-r. (6). If the management imposes a
punishment without making a reference to the Labour
Commissioner and without obtaining his concurrence, the
order of the management is a nullity and is liable to be set
aside on this ground alone on an appeal by the Welfare
Officer under sub-r. (6). On the other hand, if the action
of the management does not amount to a punishment, an appeal
under sub-r. (6) is incompetent and is liable to be
dismissed on that ground.
396
On an appeal under sub-r. (6), the dispute is whether the
action of the management amounts to a punishment and if so,
whether the punishment should be imposed. The dispute
concerns the civil rights of the management and the Welfare
Officer. The State Government is empowered to decide this
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dispute between the two contending parties. Since the State
Government is empowered to give a decision, it may either
confirm the punishment or set it aside and pass
consequential orders such as an order of reinstatement. As
a matter of fact, in the instant case the State Government
passed an order of reinstatement. By the express words of
sub-r. (6) of R. 6, the decision of the State Government is
made final and binding. The appellate decision conclusively
determines the rights of the contending parties with regard
to the matter in controversy between them. The appellate
function and the power of conclusive determination of the
civil rights of the parties with regard to matters in
controversy between them indicate that the State Government
is under a duty to act judicially and to decide the dispute
solely by ascertaining the facts on the materials before it
and by the application of the relevant law on the point. As
the rule does not prescribe any procedure for the hearing of
the appeal, the State Government may devise its own
procedure consistently with its judicial duty. Normally,
the State Government has the advantage of enquiries with
regard to the subject-matter of the dispute at two previous
stages, viz., once by the management under sub-r. (3) and
again by the Labour Commissioner under sub-r. (4). The
State Government may also call upon the parties to make
their representations in writing, at the appellate stage.
As a matter of fact, in this case the parties were asked to
make representations, and they did so. On ascertaining the
relevant facts, the State Government may decide whether
having regard to the relevant law, viz., the ordinary law of
master and servant as modified by the industrial law, the
action of the management amounts to a punishment, and if so,
whether such punishment should be imposed. A consideration
of all these matters shows that the State Government
deciding an appeal under R. 6(6) of the Service Rules is
vested with the judicial powers of the State, and satisfies
the test of a tribunal as contemplated by Art. 136 of the
Constitution. It follows that the preliminary objection
that the appeal under Art. 136 does not lie, must be
rejected.
On the merits, the respondent has very little to say. The
management did not seek to impose any punishment on the
Welfare Officer. It did not hold any enquiry with regard to
any charge against the respondent. Under the conditions of
service, the
397
management was entitled to terminate the services of the
respondent on payment of one month’s salary in lieu of
notice. In accordance with the conditions of service, the
management terminated his employment. In no sense was this
order of termination of employment a punishment within the
meaning of sub-r. (3) of R. 6 of the Service Rules. The
order of the management did not entail any evil consequences
to the respondent; it did not deprive him of any right to
which he was entitled. As the action of the management was
not an order of punishment, the respondent was not entitled
to appeal from this order to the State Government, nor was
the State Government entitled to order his reinstatement.
The appeal as also the order of the State Government passed
on the appeal are both misconceived. The appellate order is
not only erroneous but also without jurisdiction, and is
liable to be set aside.
Appeal allowed.
398
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