Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
J. C. JAIN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
R. A. PATHAK AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
12/01/1960
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SUBBARAO, K.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1960 AIR 619 1960 SCR (2) 701
ACT:
Payment of Wages-Employer’s right of appeal--When accrues
-Payment of Wages Act, 1936 (4 of 1936), ss. 15(3), 16,
17(1) (a).
HEADNOTE:
The expression " the total sum directed to be paid " used in
s. 17(1) (a) of the Payment of Wages Act, 1936, properly
construed, does not mean the total sum directed to be paid
to each individual applicant. Consequently, an employer
against whom a direction for payment is made under s. 15(3)
of the Act has a right of appeal under S. 17(1) (a) not only
when a single applicant is awarded a sum exceeding Rs. 300
but also when an award of a like amount is made on a single
application made under s. 16(2) of the Act on behalf of
several employees belonging to the same unpaid group or on
several applications consolidated into one under s. 16(3)
thereof. Section 17(1) (a) does not contemplate that before
the right to appeal can accrue to the employer in the latter
case each individual applicant must be awarded Rs. 300 or
more.
Since the language of the statute is clear and unambiguous
no consideration of any possible hypothetical anomaly can be
allowed to affect its plain meaning.
Laxman Pandu and Others v. Chief Mechanical Engineer, West-
ern Railway (B. B. and C. I. Railway), Lower Parel, Bombay.
(1957) 57 B.L.R. 399, overruled.
Union of India, Owning the South Indian Railway by General
Manager v. S. P. Nataraja Sastrigal & Ors. A.I.K. 1952
Mad. 808; A. C. Arumugam & Ors. v. Manager, Jawahar Mills
Ltd., Salem junction, A.I.R. 1956 Mad. 79; Promod Ranjan
Sarkar v. R. N. Mullick, A.I.R. 1959 Cal. 318 and Cachar Cha
Sramik Union v. Manager, Martycherra Tea Estate & Anr.
A.I.R. 1959 Assam 13, approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal’. No.75 of 1956.
Appeal by special leave from judgment and order dated March
17, 1955, of the Small Causes Court, Bombay, in Appeal No. 1
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of 1955.
M.C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, S. N. Andley, J.
B. Dadachanji and Rameshwar Nath, for the appellant.
K. B. Choudhuri, for the respondents.
702
1960. January 12. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
GAJENDRAGADKAR J.-When does an employer get a right to
prefer an appeal against a direction made under sub-s. (3)
of s. 15 of the Payment of Wages Act, 1936 (4 of 1936)
(hereinafter called the Act)? That is the short question
which arises for our decision in the present group of four
appeals. The decision of this question depends on the
construction of s. 17 (1)(a) of the Act. In dealing with
the question thus posed by the present group of appeals we
will refer to the facts in Civil Appeal No. 75 of 1956, and
our decision in it would govern the three remaining appeals.
Civil Appeal No.75 of 1956 which has been brought to this
Court by special leave arises from a dispute between the
General Manager of the Times of India Press., Bombay, owned
by Benett Coleman & Co, Ltd., (hereinafter called the
appellant) and some of the employees in his service
(hereinafter called the respondents). In November 1953,
1,066 applications were made by the Vice-President of the
Times of India Indian Employees Union on behalf of some of
the respondents before Mr. C. P. Fernandes, the authority
appointed under the Act in which a claim was made for
arrears of increments alleged to have been withheld by the
appellant from July 1, 1951, to September 30, 1953, as also
for increased dearness allowance from January 1, 1953, to
August 31, 1953. The authority dealt with the whole group
of the said applications as a single application under s.
16(3) of the Act, and held that the claim made by the
respondents for increased dearness allowance was not
justified.- In regard to the claim of arrears of increments
alleged to have been withheld the authority rejected the
claim made by 761 employees and allowed the same in respect
of 305 employees. In the result the order passed by the
authority on 31-12-1954 directed the appellant to deposit
Rs. 22,698 for payment to the said 305 employees.
The direction thus issued by the authority gave rise to two
appeals before the Small Causes Court at Bombay, which is
the appellate authority appointed
703
under the Act. Appeal No. 11 of 1955 was filed by the
appellant while Appeal No. 187 of 1954 was filed by the
respondents. Meanwhile the question about the extent of the
right conferred on the employer to prefer an appeal by s.
17(1)(a) of the Act had been considered by the Bombay High
Court in Laxman Pandu & Ors. v. Chief Mechanical Engineer,
Western Railway (B.B. & C.I. Railway), Lower Parel, Bombay
(1); and it had been held that under the said section the
employer gets a right of appeal only if the order of the
authority under the Act awards payment of an amount of Rs.
300 or more in respect of a single individual worker; the
right does not exist if the order awards a sum exceeding Rs.
300 collectively to an unpaid group of workers every one of
whom gets an amount under Rs. 300. Following this decision
the appellate authority held that the appeal preferred by
the appellant was incompetent and so dismissed it. The
appellant then applied for and obtained special leave from
this Court to prefer an appeal against the said appellate
decision; and so the main point raised by the appeal is
about the construction of s. 17(1)(a) of the Act.
The Act has been passed in 1936 with a view to regulate the
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payment of wages to certain classes of persons employed in
industry. Section 15(1) of the Act authorises the State
Government by notification in the official Gazette to
appoint any Commissioner for Workmen’s Compensation or other
officer with experience as a Judge of a Civil Court or as a
stipendiary Magistrate to be the authority to hear and
decide for any specified area all claims arising out of
deductions from the wages, or delay in payment of wages of
persons employed or paid in that area. Section 7 has
provided for deductions which may be made from wages. Any
deductions made not in accordance with the said section and
contrary to the provisions of the Act as well as wages the
payment of which has been delayed can be brought before the
authority under sub-s- (2) of s. 15. Sub-section (3) of s.
15 empowers the authority to deal with the applications made
under sub-s. (2) and to direct a refund to
(1) (1953) 57 B.L.R. 399,
704
the employed person of the amount deducted or the payment of
delayed wages together with the payment of such compensation
as the authority may think fit, not exceeding ten times the
amount deducted in the former case and not exceeding Rs. 10
in the latter. Sub-section (4) provides that in cases where
the authority is satisfied that the application made by the
employee was either malicious or vexatious it may direct
that a penalty not exceeding Rs. 50 be paid to the employer
or other persons responsible for the payment of wages by the
applicant. It would thus be seen that s. 15 provides for
the making of applications by the employees and for their
decision in accordance with the provisions of the Act. It
is necessary to refer to s. 16 as well before dealing with
the question of the construction of s. 17(1)(a). Section 16
provides for the making of a single application in respect
of claims from unpaid group. Section 16(1) provides that
employed persons are said to belong to the same unpaid group
if they are borne on the same establishment and if their
wages for the same period or periods have remained unpaid
after the day fixed by s. 5. Sub-section (2) provides for
the making of a single application under s. 15 on behalf of
or in respect of any number of employed persons belonging to
the same unpaid group, and prescribes that in such a case
the maximum compensation that may be awarded under sub-s.
(3) of s. 15 shall be Rs. 10 per head. Subsection (3) then
provides that the authority may deal with any number of
separate pending applications presented under s. 15 in
respect of persons belonging to the same unpaid group as a
single application presented under sub-s. (2) of the said
section, and the provisions of that sub-section shall apply
accordingly. Thus the effect of s. 16 is that a single
application may be made on behalf of any number of employed
persons belonging to the same unpaid group, or if separate
applications are made by employed persons belonging to the
same unpaid group they may be consolidated and tried as a
single application.
Let us now read s. 17 which provides for appeals. Section
17(1) provides that an appeal against a
705
direction made under sub-s. (3) or sub-s. (4) of s 15 may be
preferred within thirty days of the date on which the
direction was made, in a Presidency-town before the Court of
Small Causes and elsewhere before the District Court-(a) by
the employer or other person responsible for the payment of
wages under s. 3, if the total sum directed to be paid by
way of wages and compensation exceeds Rs. 300, or (b) by an
employed person, if the total amount of wages claimed to
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have been withheld from him or from the unpaid group to
which he belonged exceeds Rs. 50, or (c) by any person
directed to pay a penalty under sub.s. (4) of s. 15. Sub-
section (2) of s. 17 makes the directions made under sub-s.
(3) -and sub-s. (4) of s. 15 final save as provided in sub-
s. (1).
On a plain reading of s. 17(1)(a) it seems fairly clear that
the only test which has to be satisfied by the appellant
before preferring an appeal against a direction issued under
s. 15(3) is that the total sum directed to be paid by him
should exceed Rs. 300. Where a single application has been
made on behalf of a number of employed persons belonging to
the same unpaid group under s. 16, sub-s. (2), and a
direction has been issued for the payment of the specified
amount, it is the said specified amount that must be
considered in deciding whether the test prescribed by s.
17(1)(a) is satisfied or not. The view taken by the Bombay
High Court, however, is that s. 17(1)(a) is applicable only
where the amount directed to be paid to each single
applicant exceeds Rs. 300. In other words, on this view the
expression " the total sum directed to be paid " used in s.
17(1)(a) is construed to mean the total sum directed to be
paid to each individual applicant, and that clearly involves
the addition of certain words in the section. If the
application is made by a single employee an appeal can be
preferred by the employer against the direction issued in
such an application if the total sum directed to be paid to
the applicant exceeds Rs. 300; but if a single application
is made on behalf of several employees belonging to the same
unpaid group the test to be applied is not whether a
direction has been issued that the employer
99
706
should pay Rs. 300 or more to each one of the applicants;
the test clearly is whether a direction has been issued on
the said single application calling upon the employer to pay
to the applicants Rs. 300 or more. Reading s. 17(1)(a)
by itself we feel no difficulty in reaching this conclusion.
It is, however, urged that in construing s. 17(1)(a) it
would be relevant and material to compare and contrast its
provisions with those of cl. (b) of s. 17, sub-s. (1).
Providing for the right of an employee to make an appeal
this clause requires that the total amount of wages claimed
to have been withheld from him or from the unpaid group to
which he belonged should exceed Rs. 50. It is emphasised
that this clause refers expressly to the case of an
individual employee as well as the cases of employees
belonging to an unpaid group; and the argument is that since
cl. (a) does not use the words " unpaid group " it indicates
that the direction about the payment of the amount
prescribed by the said clause has reference to each
individual employee. We are not impressed by this argument.
Since the Act has provided for the making of a single
application on behalf of a number of employed persons
belonging to the same unpaid group as well as separate
applications made by individual workmen it was unnecessary
to refer to the persons employed in the unpaid group while
providing for appeals against directions made under s.
15(3). On the other hand, if the Legislature had intended
that the right to prefer an appeal should accrue to the
employer only if Rs. 300 or more are directed to be paid to
each individual employee it would have used appropriate
additional words in cl. (a). Therefore the argument based
upon the use of the words " unpaid group " in cl. (b) is not
of any assistance in construing cl. (a).
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We are also inclined to think that it could not have been
the intention of the Legislature to confer on the employer
the right to prefer an appeal only if Rs. 300 or more are
ordered to be paid to each one of the applicants. It is
true that the policy of the Act is to provide for speedy
remedy to the employees in respect of unauthorised
deductions made by the employer or
707
in respect of delayed wages; and with that object the Act
provides for the appointment of the authority and prescribes
the summary procedure for the decision
of the claims;butitseemsveryunlikelythatwhereas an appeal
by the employee has been permitted by cl. (b) whenever the
amount in dispute happens to be Rs. 50 or more in respect of
an individual applicant or in respect of the unpaid group
the Legislature could have intended that the employer should
have no right of appeal against a direction made on a;
single consolidated application, even though the total
liability flowing from the said direction may exceed the
specified amount of Rs. 300 by several thousands. In the
present case the amount directed to be paid is more than Rs.
22,000 but it has been held that since each one of the
employees is not ordered to be paid Rs. 300 or more there is
no right of appeal. On general considerations, therefore,
the conclusion which we have reached on a fair and
reasonable construction of cl. (a) appears to be well-
founded.
There is another point to which reference must be made.
Section 16(3) empowers the authority to consolidate several
applications made by individual employees and bear them as a
single application as though it was presented under- s. 16,
sub-s. (2); and it is urged that this procedural provision
cannot and should not have a decisive effect on the
employer’s right to prefer an appeal under s. 17(1)(a). If
several applications made by individual employees are not
consolidated and heard as a single application under s.
16(3) and separate directions are issued, then the employer
would have the right to prefer an appeal only where the
total amount directed to be paid exceeds Rs. 300. On the
other hand, if the authority consolidates the said
applications and makes a direction in respect of the total
amount to be paid to the employees belonging to the unpaid
group the employer may be entitled to make an appeal even
though each one of the employees receives less than Rs. 300.
It would be anomalous, it is said, that the right to appeal
should depend upon the exercise of discretion vested in the
authority under s. 16(3). We are unable to see the force of
this argument. We apprehend that
708
ordinarily when several applications are made by the
employees belonging to the same unpaid group the authority
would prefer to treat the said applications as a single
application under s. 16(3); but apart from this practical
aspect of the matter, if s. 16(3) permits the consolidation
of the several applications and in consequence of
consolidation they are assimilated to the position of a
single application contemplated by s. 16(2), the only
question which has to be considered in dealing with the
competence of the appeal is to see whether the direction
appealed against satisfies the test of s. 17(1)(a), and on
that point we feel no hesitation in holding that the test
prescribed by s. 17(1)(a) is that the direction should be
for the payment of an amount exceeding Rs. 300.
Besides, we think it would not be right to assume that it is
anomalous if different consequences follow from the adoption
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of different procedures in trying employees’ claims and an
appeal does not lie where several applications are tried
separately while it lies where similar applications are
heard as a single application under s. 16(3). This
difference is clearly intended by the Legislature. A
similar different consequence is prescribed in the matter of
the award of compensation by s. 15, sub-s. (3) and s.
16,sub-s. (2) respectively. Therefore, the argument based
on the alleged anomaly cannot have any validity inconstruing
s. 17(1)(a).
Incidentally, if one or more employees in the same unpaid
group are paid an amount exceeding Rs. 300 and the rest are
paid less than Rs. 300, on the alternative construction, the
employer would be entitled to make an appeal only in respect
of a workman to whom more than Rs. 300 is ordered to be paid
and not against the others though the total amount directed
to be paid to them may exceed by far the amount of Rs. 300.
In such a case, if the appeal preferred by the employer in
respect of the amount ordered to be paid to some of the
workmen succeeds that would leave outstanding two
conflicting decisions, with the result that a large number
of employees in the same unpaid group may get the amount
under the direction of the authority while those who were
awarded more
709
than Rs. 300 by the authority would get a smaller amount
under the decision of the appellate authority. We are
referring to this anomalous aspect of the matter only for
the purpose of showing that where the words used in the
relevant clause are clear and unambiguous considerations of
a possible hypothetical anomaly cannot affect its plain
meaning. That is why we prefer to leave anomalies on both
sides out of account and confine ourselves to the
construction of the words used in s. 17(1)(a). If the said
words had been reasonably capable of two constructions it
would have been relevant to consider which of the two
constructions would avoid any possible anomalies. We would,
therefore, hold that the appellate authority was in error in
dismissing the appeal preferred before it by the appellant
on the ground that it was incompetent under s. 17(1)(a). We
would like to add that the question about the construction
of s. 17(1)(a) has been considered by the Madras High Court
(Union of India, owning the South Indian Railway by the
General Manager v. S. P. Nataraja Sastrigal & Ors. (1) and
A. C. Arumugam & Ors. v. Manager, Jawahar Mills Ltd., Salem
Junction (2), the Calcutta High Court (Promod Ranjan Sarkar
v. R.N. Munllick (3) and Assam High Court (Cachar Cha Sramik
Union v. Manager, Martycherra Tea Estate & Anr. (4) and they
have all differed from the view taken by the Bombay High
Court and have construed s. 17(1)(a) in the same manner as
we have done.
The result is the appeal is allowed, the order of dismissal
passed by the appellate authority is set aside and the
appeal sent back to it for disposal in accordance with law.
Since the hearing of the appeal has been thus delayed we
would direct that the appellate authority should dispose of
the appeal as expeditiously as possible. Under the
circumstances of this case we would direct that the parties
should bear their own costs.
Appeal allowed.
(1) A.I.R. 1952 Mad. 808. (3) A.I.R. 1959 Cal. 318 S.C.; 63
C.W.N. 6.
(2) A.I.R. 1956 Mad. 79. (4) A.I.R. 1959 Assam 13.
710
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