Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAM PRASAD VISHWAKARMA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE CHAIRMAN, INDUSTRIAL TRIBUNAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
12/12/1960
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 857 1961 SCR (3) 196
CITATOR INFO :
D 1985 SC 311 (20)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Dismissal of workman-Industrial Dispute
raised by union-Representation of workman before
Tribunal--Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (14 Of 1947), ss.
2(k), 36.
HEADNOTE:
On the termination of the appellant’s services by his
employer an industrial dispute was raised by his union and
the question of his dismissal along with a number of other
disputes was referred to the Industrial Tribunal. After
several adjournments of the case the management and the
union filed a joint petition of compromise settling all the
points in dispute out of Court. Prior to this the appellant
filed an application praying that he might be allowed to be
represented by two of his co-workers instead of the
Secretary of the Union in whom he had no faith and who had
no authority to enter into the compromise on his behalf.
This prayer was not allowed by the Tribunal which made an
award in terms of the compromise. The appellant, thereupon,
made an application to the High Court praying for a writ
quashing the order of the Tribunal disallowing him to be
represented by a person of his own choice and
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also for a direction to the Tribunal not to record the
compromise. The High Court summarily dismissed the Writ
Petition., On appeal by special leave,
Held, that the appellant was Dot entitled to separate repre-
sentation when already being represented by the Secretary of
the union which espoused his cause. A dispute between an
individual workman and an employer cannot be an industrial
dispute as defined in s. 2(k) of the Industrial Disputes Act
unless it is taken up by a Union of workmen or by a
considerable number of workmen. When an individual workman
becomes a party to a dispute under the Industrial Disputes
Act be is a party, not independently of the Union which has
espoused his cause.
Central Provinces Transport Service Ltd. v. Raghunath Gopal
Palwardhan, [1954] S.C.R. 956, followed.
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Although no general rule can be laid down in the matter, the
ordinary rule should be that representation by an officer of
the trade union should continue throughout the proceedings
in the absence of exceptional circumstances justifying other
representation of the workman concerned.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 31 of 1960.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 14, 1957, of the Patna High Court in Miscellaneous
Judicial Case No. 165 of 1957.
P. K. Chatterjee, for the appellant.
S. P. Varma, for respondents Nos. 1 and 4.
Nooni Coomar Chakravarti and B. P. Maheshwari, for
respondent No. 2.
1960. December 12. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
DAS GUPTA, J.-This appeal by special leave is against an
order of the High Court of Judicature at Patna dismissing
summarily an application of the present appellant under Art.
226 and Art. 227 of the Constitution. The appellant was a
workman employed in the Digha factory of Bata Shoo Company
(Private) Limited, since October, 1943. On January 13,
1954, the management of the company served him with a
charge-sheet alleging that he had been doing anti-union
activities inside the factory during the working hours and
so was guilty under section 12B(1) of the Standing Orders
and Rules of the company. On
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January 14, he submitted a written reply denying the charge
and asking to be excused. On January 15, the management
made an order terminating his services with effect from
January 18, 1954. An industrial dispute was raised on this
question of dismissal by the Union and was referred along
with a number of other disputes to the Industrial Tribunal,
Bihar, by a notification dated April 29, 1955. After
written statements were filed by the Union and the
management, February 20, 1956, was fixed for hearing at
Patna. Thereafter numerous adjournments were given by the
Tribunal on the joint petition for time filed by both the
parties stating that all the disputes were going to be
compromised. On November 16, 1956, the Tribunal made an
order fixing December 20, 1956, "for filing compromise or
hearing". On December 20, 1956, however a fresh application
for time was filed but it was stated that agreement had
already been reached on some of the matters and opportunity
was asked for to settle the other matters. The case was
however adjourned to January 21, 1957, for filing a
compromise or hearing. On that date a further petition was
again filed and a further extension of time was allowed till
February 1, 1957. On January 31, the parties, that is, the
management and the Union filed a joint petition of
compromise settling all points of disputes out of court.
Prior to this, on January 12, 1957, the present appellant
had made an application praying that D. N. Ganguli and M. P.
Gupta, two of his co-workers might be allowed to represent
his case before the Tribunal instead of Fateh Singh, the
Secretary of the Union and that he did not want his case to
be represented by Fateh Singh as he had no faith in him.
This application was dismissed by the Tribunal by an order
dated February 26, 1957. On March 7, 1957, the appellant
filed a fresh petition stating that he had not authorised
Fateh Singh to enter into any agreement in his case and
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praying that the agreement filed in respect of his case
should not be accepted and that he and his agents should be
heard before the disposal
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of the case. This prayer was not allowed by the. Tribunal
and by an order dated March 11, 1957, an award in terms of
the petition of compromise was made.
The appellant filed his application to the Patna High Court
on March 13, 1957, praying for an issue of an appropriate
writ or direction quashing the Tribunal’s order of February
26, 1957, by which the Tribunal had rejected his prayer for
representation by a person of his own choice in place of
Fateh Singh, the Secretary of the Union. Prayer was made in
this petition also for a direction on the Tribunal not to
record the compromise in so far as it related to the
appellant’s case and to give its award without reference to
the settlement and on proper adjudication of the matter.
The High Court dismissed this application summarily. It is
against that order of dismissal that the present appeal by
special leave has been preferred.
On behalf of the appellant it is argued that the Tribunal
committed a serious error in rejecting his application to be
represented by a person of his own choice instead of Fateh
Singh, the Secretary of the Union and thereafter in making
an award on the basis of the reference. It has to be
noticed that on the date the application *as made before the
High Court the award had already been made and so there
could be no direction as prayed for on the Tribunal not to
make the award. If however the appellant’s contention that
the Tribunal erred in rejecting his application for separate
representation was sound he would have been entitled to an
order giving him proper relief on the question of
representation as well as regarding the award that had been
made.
The sole question that arises for our determination
therefore is whether the appellant was entitled to separate
representation in spite of the fact that the Union which had
espoused his cause was being repre. sented by its Secretary,
Fateh Singh. The appellant’s contention is that he was a
party to the dispute in his own right and so was entitled to
representation according to his own liking. The question
whether when a dispute concerning an individual workman is
taken up by the Union, of which the workman is a member, as
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a matter affecting workmen in general and on that basis a
reference is made under the Industrial Disputes Act the
individual workman can claim to be heard independently of
the Union is undoubtedly of some importance. The question
of representation of a workman who is a party to a dispute
is dealt with by section 36 of the Industrial Disputes Act.
That section provides that such a workman is entitled to be
represented in any proceeding under the Act, by (a) an
officer of a registered trade union of which he is a member,
(b) an officer of a federation of trade unions to which the
trade union of which he is a member is affiliated and (c)
where the workman concerned is not a member of any trade
union by an officer of any trade union concerned with the
industry, or by any other workman employed in that industry.
The appellant was the member of a trade union; and he was
actually represented in the proceedings before the Tribunal
by an officer of that Union, its Secretary, Fateh Singh.
The Union through this officer, filed a written statement on
his behalf. Upto January 12, 1957, when the appellant filed
his application for separate representation, this officer,
was in charge of the conduct of the proceedings on behalf of
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the appellant. Never before that date, the appellant
appears to have raised any objection to this representation.
The question is, whether, when thereafter he thought his
interests were being sacrificed by his representative, he
could claim to cancel that representation, and claim to be
represen. ted by somebody else. In deciding this question,
we have on the one hand to remember the importance of
collective bargaining in the settlement of industrial dis-
putes, and on the other hand, the principle that the party
to a dispute should have a fair hearing. In assessing the
requirements of this principle, it is necessary and proper
to take note also of the fact that when an individual
workman becomes a party to a dispute under the Industrial
Disputes Act he is a party, not independently of the Union
which has espoused his cause.
It is now well-settled that a dispute between an individual
workman and an employer cannot be an
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industrial dispute as defined in section 2(k) of the
Industrial Disputes Act unless it is taken up by a Union of
the workmen or by a considerable number of workmen. In
Central Provinces Transport Service Ltd. v. Raghunath Gopal
Patwardhan (1) Mr. Justice Venkatarama Ayyar speaking for
the Court pointed out after considering numerous decisions
in this matter that the preponderance of judicial opinion
was clearly in favour of the view that a dispute between an
employer and a single employee cannot per se be an
industrial dispute but it may become one if it is taken up
by an Union or a number of workmen. "Notwithstanding that
the language of section 2(k) is wide enough to cover
disputes, between an employer and a single employee",
observed the learned Judge, "the scheme of the Industrial
Disputes Act does appear to contemplate that the machinery
provided therein should be set in motion to settle only
disputes which involve the rights of workmen as a class and
that a dispute touching the individual rights of a workman
was not intended to be the subject of adjudication under the
Act, when the same had not been taken up by the Union or a
number of workmen".
This view which has been re-affirmed by the Court in several
later decisions recognises the great importance in modern
industrial life of collective bargaining between the workman
and the employers. It is well known how before the days of
collective bargaining labour was at a great disadvantage in
obtaining reasonable terms for contracts of service from his
employer. As trade unions developed in the country and
collective bargaining became the rule the employers found it
necessary and convenient to deal with the representatives of
workmen, instead of individual workmen, not only for the
making or modification of contracts but in the matter of
taking disciplinary action against one or more workmen and
as regards all other disputes.
The necessary corollary to this is that the individual
workman is at no stage a party to the industrial dispute
independently of the Union. The Union or those
(1)[1954] S.C.R. 956.
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workmen who have by their sponsoring turned the individual
dispute into an industrial dispute, can therefore claim to
have a say in the conduct of the proceedings before the
Tribunal.
It is not unreasonable to think that s. 36 of the Industrial
Disputes Act recognises this position, by providing that the
workman who is a party to a dispute shall be entitled to be
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represented by an officer of a registered trade union of
which he is a member. While it will be unwise and indeed
impossible to try to lay down a general rule in the matter,
the ordinary rule should in our opinion be that such
representation by an officer of the trade union should
continue throughout the proceedings in the absence of excep-
tional circumstances which may justify the Tribunal to
permit other representation of the workman concerned. We
are not satisfied that in the present case, there were any
such exceptional circumstances. It has been suggested that
the Union’s Secretary Fateh Singh himself had made the
complaint against the appellant which resulted in the order
of dismissal. it has to be observed however that in spite of
everything, the Union did take up this appellant’s case
against his dismissal as its own. At that time also, Fateh
Singh was the Secretary of the Union. If are Union had not
taken up his cause, there would not have been any reference.
In view of all the circumstances, we are of opinion, that it
cannot be said that the Tribunal committed any error in
refusing the appellant’s prayer for representation through
representatives of his own choice in preference to Fateh
Singh, the Secretary of the Union.
As a last resort, learned counsel for the appellant wanted
to urge that the Secretary of the Union had no authority to
enter into any compromise on behalf of the Union. We find
that no such plea was taken either in the appellants
application before the Tribunal or in his application under
Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution to the High Court.
Whether in fact the Secretary had any authority to
compromise is a question of fact which cannot be allowed to
be raised at this stage.
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In the application before the High Court a statement was
also made that the compromise was collusive and mala fide.
The terms of the compromise of the dispute regarding the
appellant’s dismissal were that he would not get
reemployment, but by way of "humanitarian considerations the
company agreed without prejudice to pay an ex-gratia amount
of Rs. 1,000/- (Rupees one thousand) only" to him. There is
no material on the record to justify a conclusion that this
compromise was not entered in what was considered to be the
best interests of the workman himself
In our opinion, there is nothing that would justify us in
interfering with the order of the High Court rejecting the
appellant’s application for a writ. The appeal is
accordingly dismissed. There will be no order as to costs.
During the hearing Mr. Chakravarty, learned counsel for the
company, made a statement on behalf of the company that in
addition to the sum of Rs. 1,000 which the company had
agreed to pay to the appellant as a term of settlement the
company will pay a further sum of Rs. 500 (Rupees five
hundred) only ex-gratia and without prejudice. We trust
that this statement by the counsel will be honoured by the
company.
Appeal dismissed
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