Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
B. SHAH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PRESIDING OFFICER, LABOUR COURT, COIMBATORE & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/10/1977
BENCH:
SINGH, JASWANT
BENCH:
SINGH, JASWANT
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION:
1978 AIR 12 1978 SCR (1) 701
1977 SCC (4) 334
ACT:
Interpretation of social security legislation for women-Duty
of the court.
Right to payment of maternity benefits-Connotation of the
term "week" in sub. ss. (1) and (3) of s. 5 read with ss. 2
(1), 3 (n) and 4 of the Maternity Benefits Act (Act LIII of
1961). Whether computation of the maternity benefits
prescribed by the Act has to be made taking a week as
signifying a cycle of seven days including a Sunday or a
cycle of seven days minus a Sunday which is a wageless day-
Paragraphs 1 and 2 of Art. 4 of Convention 103 of Maternity
Protection Convention (Revised) 1952 adopted by the General
Conference of the International Labour Organisation.
HEADNOTE:
Respondent No. 2 working in "Mount Stuart Estate" belonging
to the appellant was allowed leave of absence on maternity
leave. After her delivery, the appellant paid her on
account of maternity benefit an amount equivalent to what
she would have earned on the basis of her average daily
wages in 72 working days falling within 12 weeks of the
maternity period excluding 12 Sundays being wageless
holidays which fell during the period of the respondent’s
actual absence immediately preceding and including the day
of her delivery and the 6 weeks immediately following that
day. The claim for the benefit of the entire period of 12
weeks, that is, for 84 days on the plea that a week
consisted of 7 days having been refused, the respondent
moved the Labour Court, Coimbatore, which by its order dated
February 26, 1969, allowed the said claim. The appellant
moved the High Court tinder Art. 226 of the Constitution
challenging the decision of the Labour Court. The single
Judge of the High Court allowed the petition holding that 12
weeks for which maternity benefit is provided for in sub-
section (3) of s. 5 of the Act must be taken to mean 12
weeks of work and the computation of the benefit had to be
made with reference to the actual days on which the woman
would have worked but for her inability. Aggrieved by this
decision. the respondent filed an appeal under cl. 15 of the
Letters Patent and the Division Bench set aside the orders
of the single Judge.
Dismissing the appeal by special leave, the Court,
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HELD : (1) In interpreting provisions of beneficial pieces
of legislation which is intended to achieve the object of
doing social justice to woman workers employed in the
plantations and which squarely fall within the purview of
Article 42 of the Constitution, the beneficent rule of
construction which would enable the woman worker not only to
subsist but also to make up her dissipated’ energy. nurse
her child, preserve her efficiency as a worker and maintain
the level of her previous efficiency and output has to be
adopted by the Court.
[708 H, 709 A-B]
(2)The provisions of s. 5 of the Maternity Benefits Act
make it clear that a woman worker who expects a child is
entitled to maternity benefit for a maximum period of 12
weeks which is split up into two periods viz., prenatal and
post-natal. The first one is the prenatal or ante-natal
period is limited to the period of woman’s actual absence
extending upto 6 weeks immediately preceding and including
the day on which her delivery occurs and the second one
which is post-natal compulsory period consists of 6 weeks
immediately following the day of delivery. The Act does
not contain any definition of the word "week". It has to be
understood in its ordinary dictionary meaning. In the
context of sub-s. (1)and (3) of s. 5 of the Act, the
term has to be taken to signify a cycle of 7 days including
Sundays. By using the words, namely, "for the period of her
actual absence immediately preceding and including the day
of her delivery and for the 6 weeks immediately following
that day’s the Legislature intended that computation of
maternity benefit is to be made for the entire Period of the
woman worker’s actual absence, that is, for all the days
including Sundays which may be wageless holidays failing
within that
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period and not only for intermittent period of 6 days
thereby excluding Sundays failing within that period. The
word "period" occurring in s. 5(1) of the Act emphasises the
continuous running of time and recurrence of 7 days. It is
also conformity with Paragraphs 1 and 2 of Article 4 of
Convention No. 103 concerning Maternity Protection
Convention (Revised) 1952 adopted by the General Conference
of the International Labour Organisation. [707 D-E, 908 A,
E-F, H, 709 B-C]
(3)Computation of maternity benefit is to be made for all
the days including Sundays and rest days which may be
wageless holidays comprised in the actual period of absence
of the woman extending upto 6 weeks preceding and including
the day of delivery as also for all the days falling within
the 6 weeks immediately following the day of delivery
thereby ensuring that the woman workers get for the said
period not only the amount equal to hundred per cent of the
wages which who was previously earning in terms of s. 3(n)
of the Act but also the benefit of the wages for all the
Sundays and rest days falling within the aforesaid two
periods which would ultimately be conducive to the interest
of both the woman worker and her employer. [709 D-F]
Malayalam Plantations Ltd. Cochin v. Inspector of
Plantations Mundakayam & Ors. [1975] Lab. 1. C. 848--A.I.R.
1975 Kerala 86, over-ruled.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1649 of
1975.
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Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order dated
24-4-1974 of the Madras High Court in Writ Appeal No. 165 of
1972.
G.B. Bai, P. K. Kurian, D. N. Mishra and K. J. John for
the Appellant.
K. N. Bhat (A. C.) for Respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JASWANT SINGH, J. This appeal by special leave which is
directed against the judgment and order dated April 24,
1974 of the Letters Patent Bench of the High Court of
Judicature at Madras reversing the judgment and order dated
April 19, 1971 of the Single Judge of that Court passed in
writ petition No. 3822 of 1969 presented under Article 226
of the Constitution raises a complex but an interesting
question relating to the construction of the phrases
"maternity benefit........ for the period of her actual
absence immediately preceding and including the day of her
delivery and for the six weeks immediately following that
day" occurring in section 5(1) of the Maternity Benefits
Act, 1961 (Act LIII of 1961) (hereinafter referred to as
’the Act’) which in view of section 2(1) of the Act is the
law applicable even to women workers employed in
plantations.
It appears that in October, 1967, Subbammal, respondent No.
2 herein, who is a woman worker employed in Mount Stuart
Estate (hereinafter referred to as ’the establishment’),
which is carrying on plantation industry, was allowed leave
of absence by the establishment on the basis of a notice
given by her of her expected delivery which actually took
place on December 16, 1967. After her delivery, the
respondent was paid by her employers on account of maternity
benefit an amount equivalent to what she would have earned
on the basis of her average daily wage in 72 working days
falling within twelve week’s of the maternity period. While
calculating the aforesaid amount of maternity benefit, the
establishment admittedly excluded twelve Sundays being
wageless holidays, which fell during the period of the
respondent’s
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actual absence immediately preceding and including the day
of her delivery and the six weeks immediately following that
day. Dissatisfied with this computation, the respondent
made a representation to her employers claiming maternity
benefit for the entire period of twelve weeks under the Act.
i.e. for 84 days on the plea that a week consisted of seven
days. As her demand did not evoke a favourable response,
the respondent applied to the Labour Court, Coimbatore,
under section 33C(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act for
redress of her grievance. The claim preferred by the
respondent was resisted by the appellant herein who
contended that the respondent was admittedly working and was
being paid only for six days in a week and that a pregnant
woman worker is entitled to maternity benefit for 72 days
which are the normal working days in twelve weeks and not
for 84 days, as no wage is payable for the seventh day of
the week i.e. Sunday, which is a nonworking wageless
holiday. By its order dated February 26, 1969, the Labour
Court allowed the claim of the respondent. Thereupon the
establishment moved the High Court at Madras under Article-
226 of the Constitution challenging the, decision of the
Labour Court contending that the claim made by the
respondent was untenable as normally a worker works only for
six days in a week and the maternity benefit had to be
computed only for 72 days. As against this, the respondent
pleaded that the computation had to be made not with
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reference to the actual number of working days but with
reference to total number of days covered by twelve weeks
i.e. 84 days. The Single Judge of the High Court to whom
the case was assigned allowed the petition holding that
twelve weeks for which maternity benefit is provided for in
subsection (3) of section 5 of the Act must be taken to mean
twelve weeks of work and the computation of the benefit had
to be made with reference to the actual days on which the
woman would have worked but for her inability. Aggrieved by
this decision, the respondent filed an appeal under clause
15 of the Letters Patent which, as already stated, was
allowed by the Letters Patent Bench of the High Court
observing that the maternity benefit which the respondent
was entitled to receive was for the period of her absence
before delivery including the day of delivery and also six
weeks thereafter, each week consisting of seven days
including Sundays. Dissatisfied with this decision, the
establishment has, already stated, come up in appeal to this
Court by special leave.
We have heard Mr. Pai, learned counsel for the appellant as
also Mr. Bhatt, who in view of the default in appearance of
respondent No. 2 and the importance of the point involved in
the case was appointed as amicus cruaie. We place on record
our deep appreciation of the valuable assistance rendered to
us by both of them.
Assailing the judgment and order under appeal, Mr. Pai has
urged that since legislative intent, as revealed from the
scheme of section 5(1) of the Act is to compensate the woman
worker who expects delivery for the loss that her forced
absence from work on account of pregnancy and confinement
may entail, the liability which has to be imposed on her
employer cannot exceed the amount that she would have earned
if she had not been compelled to avail of the maternity
leave and since Sunday is a non-working wageless day, the
employer cannot be made to pay for that day. He has further
urged that since
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under section 5 (1) of the Act, the maternity benefit has to
be computed with reference to the period of the workers’
actual absence thereby meaning absence on days on which
there was work excluding Sundays and the term ’week" in the
context of ’sub-sections (1) and (3) of section 5 of the Act
is to be under stood as a week of work consisting of six
days and in the instant case, respondent No. 2 was working
and earning wages for six days in a week, the seventh day
being a wageless holiday, her claim cannot be sustained. In
support of his contention. Mr. Pai has referred us to the
Full Bench decision of the Kerala High Court in Malayalam
Plantations Ltd. Cochin v. Inspector of Plantation
Mundakayam & Ors.(1), and to Convention No. 103 concerning
Maternity Protection Convention (Revised), 1952 adopted by
the General Conference of the International Labour
Organisation.
Mr. Bhatt has, on the other hand, urged that the scheme of
section 5 of the Act clearly indicates that a woman worker
who expects delivery had to be paid maternity benefit for
all the seven days of the week including Sundays falling
within the ante-natal and post-natal periods specified in
the section.
For a proper determination of the question involved in the
appeal, it would, we think, be useful to refer to certain
provisions of the Act which have a bearing on the subject
matter of the controversy before US.
Section 2(1) of the Act makes the Act applicable to every
establishment being a factory, mine or plantation (including
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any such establishment belonging to Government and to every
establishment wherein persons are employed for the
exhibition of equastrain acrobatic and other performance.
Sub-section (2) of section 2 of the Act specifically
excludes the applicability of the provisions of the Act to
any factory or other establishment to which the provisions
of the Employees State Insurance Act, 1948 apply for the
time being. Section 3(n) of the Act defines "wages" as
under :-
"3(n).--Wages means all remuneration paid or
payable in cash to a woman, if the terms of
the contract of employment, express or
implied, were fulfilled and includes-
(1) such cash allowances (including dearness
allowance and house rent allowance) as a woman
is for the time being entitled to;
(2) incentive bonus; and
(3) the money value of the concessional
supply of food-grains and other articles, but
does not include-
(i)any bonus other than incentive bonus;
(ii)over-time earnings and any deduction or
payment on account of fines;
(iii)any contribution paid or payable by the
employer to any pension fund or provident fund
or for the benefit of the woman under any law
for the time being in force; and
(1) (1975) Lab. I. C. 848=A.I.R. 1975 Ker. 86.
705
(iv) any gratuity payable on the termination of service".
The above definition, it would be noted, does not restrict
the meaning of the term "wages" to contractual wages but
gives the term a composite meaning covering all
remunerations in the nature of cash allowances, incentive
bonus and the money value of the concessional supply of
foodgrains and other articles.
Section 4 of the Act which prohibits the employment of, or
work by, woman during certain period lays down :-
"4. Employment of, or work by, woman
prohibited during certain period.-(1) No
employer shall knowingly employ a woman in any
establishment during the six weeks immediately
following the day of her delivery or her mis-
carriage.
(2) No woman shall work in any establishment
during the six weeks immediately following the
day of her delivery or miscarriage.
(3) Without prejudice to the provisions of section 6,
no pregnant woman shall, on a
request being made by her in this behalf, be
required by her employer to do during the
period specified in sub-section (4) any which
is of an arduous nature or which involves long
hours of standing, or which in any way is
likely to interfere with her pregnancy or the
normal development of the foetus, or is likely
to cause her miscarriage or otherwise to
adversely affect her health.
(4) The period referred to in sub-section
(3) shall be-
(a) the period of one month immediately
preceding the period of six weeks, before the
date of her expected delivery;
(b) any period during the said period of six
weeks for which the pregnant woman does not
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avail of leave of absence under section 6".
Section 5 of the Act which confers right to
payment of maternity benefit on a woman worker
provisions:-
"5. Right to payment of maternity benefit.-
(1)Subject to the provisions of this Act,
every woman shall be entitled to, and her
employer shall be liable for, the payment of
maternity benefit at the rate of the average
daily wage for the period of her actual
absence immediately preceding and including
the day of her delivery and for the six weeks
immediately following that day.
EXPLANATION.-For the purpose of this sub-
section, the average daily wage means the
average of the woman’s wages payable to her
for the days on which she has worked during
the period of three calendar months
immediately preceding the date from which she
absents herself on account of maternity, or
one rupee a day, whichever is higher.
706
(2)No woman shall be entitled to maternity
benefit unless she has actually worked in
an establishment of the employer from whom she
claims maternity benefit, for a period of not
less than one hundred and sixty days in the
twelve months immediately preceding the date
of her expected delivery.
Provided that the qualifying period of one
hundred and sixty days aforesaid shall not
apply to a woman who has immigrated into the
State of Assam and was pregnant at the time of
the immigration.
EXPLANATION.-For the purpose of calculating
under this sub-section, the days on which a
woman has actually worked in the
establishment, the days for which she has been
laid off during the period of twelve months
immediately preceding the date of her expected
delivery shall be taken into account.
(3)The maximum period for which any woman
shall be entitled to maternity benefit shall
be twelve weeks, that is to say, six weeks up
to and including the day of her delivery and
six weeks immediately following that day
Provided that where a woman dies during this
period, the maternity benefit shall be payable
only for the days up to and including the day
of her death.
Provided further that where a woman, having
delivered of a child, dies during her delivery
or during the period of six weeks immediately
following the date of her delivery, leaving
behind in either case the child, the employer
shall be liable for the maternity benefit for
the entire period of six weeks immediately
following the day of her delivery but if the
child also dies during the said period, then,
for the days upto and including the day of the
death of the child."
Section 6 of the Act which deals with notice
of claim for maternity benefit and payment
thereof is to the following effect :-
"6. Notice of claim for maternity benefit and
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payment thereof.-(1) Any woman employed in an
establishment and entitled to maternity
benefit under the provisions of this Act may
give notice in writing in such form as may be
prescribed, to her employer, stating that her
maternity benefit and any other amount to
which she may be entitled under this Act may
be paid to her or to such person as she may
nominate in the notice and that she will not
work in any establishment during the period
for which she receives’ maternity benefit.
(2)In the case of a woman who is pregnant,
such notice shall state the date from which
she will be absent from work, not being a date
earlier than six weeks from the date of her
expected delivery.
707
(3)Any woman who has not given the notice
when she was pregnant may give such notice as
soon as possible after the delivery.
(4)On receipt of the notice, the employer
shall permit such woman to absent herself from
the establishment until the expiry of six
weeks after the day of her delivery.
(5)The amount of maternity benefit for the
period preceding the date of her expected
delivery shall be paid in advance by the
employer to the woman on production of such
proof as may be prescribed that the woman is
pregnant, and the amount due for the
subsequent period shall be paid by the
employer to. the woman within forty-eight
hours of production of such proof as may be
prescribed that the woman has been delivered
of a child.
(6)The failure to give notice under this
section s not disentitle a woman to maternity
benefit or any other amount under this Act if
she is otherwise entitled to such benefit or
amount and in any such case, an Inspector may
either of his own motion or on an application
made to him by the woman, order the payment of
such benefit of amount within such period as
may be specified in the order".
The provisions of section 5 of the Act quoted above make it
clear that a woman worker who expects a child is entitled to
maternity benefit for a maximum period of twelve weeks which
is split up into two periods viz. prenatal and post-natal.
The first one i.e. prenatal or ante-natal period is limited
to the period of woman’s actual absence extending upto six
weeks immediately preceding and including the day on which
her delivery occurs and the second one which is postnatal
compulsory period consists of six weeks immediately
following the day of delivery. The benefit has to be
calculated for the aforesaid two periods on the basis of the
average daily wage. According to the Explanation appended
to section 5(1) of the Act, the average daily wage has to be
computed taking into consideration the average of the
woman’s wager,. payable to her for the days on which she has
worked during the period of three calendar months
immediately preceding the date from which she absents
herself on account of maternity, or one rupee a day,
whichever is higher. For fixing the average daily wage, it
has therefore first to be ascertained whether the wages with
were paid or were payable to the woman was for ’time work’
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or for ’piece work’. It has next to be ascertained as to
what were the cash wages paid or payable to her in terms of
the definition contained in section 3 (n) of the Act for the
days on which she worked during the period of three-
calendar months immediately preceding the date of delivery,
reckoned according to the British calendar month. The total
wages thus worked out are to be divided by the number of
days in the aforesaid three calendar months in order to
arrive at the average daily wage. After thus finding out
the average daily wage, the liability of the employer in
respect of the maternity benefit has to be calculated in
terms of section 5 of the Act for both ore-natal and post-
natal period indicated above.
708
The real though difficult question that calls for
determination by us is as to what is the connotation of the
term "week" occurring in sub-sections (1) and (3) of section
5 of the Act and whether the computation of the maternity
benefit prescribed by the Act for the a foresaid two periods
has to be made taking a "week" as signifying a cycle of
seven days including a Sunday or a cycle of seven days minus
a Sunday which is said to be a wageless day, As the Act does
not contain any definition of the word "week", it has to be
understood in its ordinary dictionary sense.
In the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary (Third Edition),
the word "week" has been described as meaning "the cycle of
seven days, recognized in the calendar of the Jews and
thence adopted in the calendars of Christian Mohammedan and
various other peoples. A space of seven days, irrespective
of the time from which it is reckoned. Seven days as a term
for periodical payments (of wager,, rent, or the like), or
as a unit of reckoning for time of work or service."
In Webster’s New World Dictionary (1962 Edition), the
meaning of the word "week" is given as "a period of seven
days, especially one beginning with Sunday and ending with
Saturday; the hours or days of work in a seven-day period."
In Stroud’s Judicial Dictionary (Third Edition), it is
stated that (1) "though a week usually means any consecutive
seven days, it will sometimes be interpreted to mean the
ordinary notion of a week reckoning from Sunday to Sunday
and (2) probably, a week usually means seven clear days."
A "week" according to Halsbury’s Laws of England (Third Edi-
tion) Volume 37 at p. 84 is. strictly the time between
midnight on Saturday and the same hour on the next
succeeding Saturday, but the term is also applied to any
period of seven successive days.
Bearing in mind the above mentioned dictionary or popular
meaning of the term "week", we think that in the context of
sub-sections (1) and (3) of section 5 of the Act, the term
has to be taken to signify a cycle of seven days including
Sundays. The language in which the aforesaid sub-sections
are couched also shows that the Legislature intended that
computation of maternity benefit is to be made for the
entire period of the woman worker’s actual absence i.e. for
all the days including Sundays which may be wageless
holidays falling within that period and not only for
intermittent periods of six days thereby excluding Sundays
falling within that period for if it were not so, the
Legislature instead of using the words "for the period of
her actual absence immediately preceding and including the
day of her delivery and for the six weeks immediately
following that day" would have used the words "for the
working days falling within the period of her actual absence
immediately preceding and including the day of her delivery
and the six weeks immediately following that day but
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excluding the wageless days". Again the word "period"
occurring in section 5(1) of the Act is a strong word. It
seems to emphasize, in our judgment, the continuous running
of time and recurrence of the cycle of seven days. It has
also to be borne in mind in this connection that in inter-
709
preting provisions of beneficial pieces of legislation like
the one in hand which is intended to achieve the object of
doing social justice to women workers employed in the
plantations and which squarely fall within the purview of
Article 42 of the Constitution, the beneficent rule of
construction which would enable the woman worker not only to
subsist but also to make up her dissipated energy, nurse her
child, preserve her efficiency as a worker and maintain the
level of her previous efficiency and output has to be
adopted by the Court.
The interpretation placed by us on the phraseology of sub-
sections (1) and (3) of section 5 of the Act appears to us
to be in conformity not only with the legislative
intendment but also with Paragraphs 1 and 2 of Article 4
of Convention No. 103 concerning Maternity Protection
Convention (Revised), 1952 adopted by the General Conference
of the International Labour Organisation which are extracted
below for facility of reference:-
"Article 4 :
1. While absent from work on maternity
leave in accordance with the provisions of
Article 3, the woman shall be entitled to
receive cash and medical benefits.
2. The rates of cash benefit shall be fixed
by national laws or regulations so as to
ensure benefit sufficient for the full and
healthy maintenance of herself and her child
in according with a suitable standard of
living."
Thus we are of opinion that computation of maternity benefit
has to be made for all the days including Sundays and rest
days which may be wageless holidays comprised in the actual
period of absence of the woman extending upto six weeks
preceding and including the day of delivery as also for all
the days falling within the six weeks immediately following
the day of delivery thereby ensuring that the woman worker
gets for the said period not only the amount equaling 100
per cent of the wages which she was previously earning in
terms of section 3 (n) of the Act but also the benefit of
the wages for all the Sundays and rest days falling within
the aforesaid two periods which would ultimately be
conducive to the interests of both the woman worker and her
employer.
In view of what we have stated above, we cannot uphold the
view of the law expressed by the Full Bench of Kerala High
Court in Malayalam Plantations Ltd. Cochin v. Inspector of
Plantations Mundakayam & Ors. (supra).
In the result, the appeal fails and is hereby dismissed.
Although costs have to be paid by appellant to respondent
No. 2 in terms of the Court’s order dated October 30, 1975,
yet in view of the fact that the said respondent has not
chosen to appear at the hearing, of the case and Mr. K. N.
Bhat has assisted the Court as amicus curiae, we direct the
appellant to pay Rs. 1,000/- to Mr. Bhat as his fee.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
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