Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
WESTERN INDIA MATCH COMPANY LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
WORKMEN
DATE OF JUDGMENT20/08/1973
BENCH:
DWIVEDI, S.N.
BENCH:
DWIVEDI, S.N.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
CITATION:
1973 AIR 2650 1974 SCR (1) 434
1974 SCC (3) 330
CITATOR INFO :
R 1979 SC 65 (5)
R 1984 SC 505 (23)
R 1984 SC1064 (11,19)
R 1985 SC 504 (4)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Probation for a period longer than that
provided by the employer’s Standing Order-Validity.
Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946-Object and
policy
U.P. Industrial Disputes Act, s. 6B-Scope of-’May’ in sub.
s. (2) should be read as ’shall’.
Labour Court-Power to modify Standing Orders-Power to order
reinstatement.
HEADNOTE:
Under the Standing Order for the Watch and Ward staff of the
appellant, a permanent workman’ is one ’who has completed a
probationary period of two months as such and is employed on
a permanent post;’ and ’a probationer’ is a workman ’who is
provisionally employed to fill a permanent vacancy and has
not completed two months service.’
A watchman was appointed by the appellant on probation for a
period of 6 months. His period of probation was extended,
and during the extended period, his services were
terminated. ’Mere was an industrial dispute and the
questions, (1) whether the termination was legal or
justified. and (2) to what relief the workman was entitled,
were referred to the Labour Court. The Labour Court held
that. the order of discharge was neither mala fide nor an
act of victimisation; but set aside the order of discharge
and directed reinstatement of the employee on the view that
the term regarding 6 months probation in the employee’s
letter of appointment was in contravention of the Standing
Order and was invalid.
Dismissing the appeal to this Court.
HELD : (1) The Labour Court has not travelled beyond the
terms of reference, because, the validity or invalidity of
the discharge depends on the validity of the term regarding
6 months’ probation. [437D-E]
(2) Since, according to the Standing Order, a workman s all
not be kept on probation for more than 2 months, the letter
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of appointment (or special agreement) is inconsistent with
the Standing Order to the extent of the additional 4 months’
probation. [437E-G]
(3) The inconsistent part of the agreement is ineffective
and unenforceable. [439F]
(a) To uphold the special agreement Would mean giving a go-
by to the principle of three party participation. in the
settlement of the terms of employment, incorporated in the
Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946. The ’Act
gives effect to the new thinking that Society has also an
interest in the settlement of the terms of employment of
industrial labour. While formerly there were two parties at
the negotiating table-the employer and the workman it is now
thought that there should also be present a third party,
namely the State’, representing society. The Certifying
Officer tinder the Act, as the statutory representative of
society, adjudges on the fairness or reasonableness of
Standing Orders after considering and weighing the social
interest in the
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Claims of the employer and, the demands of the workmen. The
special agreement, in the instant case, in, so far as it
provides for additional 4 months of Probation, contravenes
the Standing Order. [439A-E]
(b) The terms of employment specified in the Standing Order
would prevail over the corresponding terms in the contract
of service in existence on the enforcement of the Standing
Order. If a prior agreement inconsistent with the Standing
Orders will not survive, an agreement posterior to and
inconsistent with the Standing Order should also not
prevail. [437-G; 438-D]
Agra Electric Supply Co. Ltd. v. Shri Alladin, [1970] 1
S.C. R. 808, Avery India Ltd. V. Second Industrial
Tribunal, west Bengal A.I.R. 1972 S.C. 1626. The United
Provinces Electric Supply Co. Ltd. Allahabad v. Their
Working, [1972] 2 S.C.C. 54, and Salem Erode Electricity
Distribution Co. Ltd v. Salem Erode Electricity Distribution
Co. Ltd. Employees Union, [1966] 2 S.C.R. 498, 504,
followed.
M/s J. K. Cotton Manufactures Ltd., Kanpur v. J. N. Tewari
A.I.R. 1959 All. 639 and Banaras Electric Light and Power
Co. Ltd. Behlupura v. Government of Uttar Pradesh and
Others, [1962] 1 L.L.J. 14, overruled.
(c) Section 6B(1) of the U.P. Industrial Disputes Act deals
with a settlement arrived at by agreement between the
employer and workmen otherwise than in the Course of
conciliation proceeding. Sub-section (2) provides that
after the settlement is arrived at, the parties to the
settlement or any one of them may’ apply to the Conciliation
Officer for registration of the settlement. In the context
of sub-s. (3) the word ’may’ should be read is ’shall’.
Subsection (3) provides that while considering the question
of the registration of a settlement, the conciliation
officer shall examine whether it is inexpedient to do so on
public ground affecting social justice or whether the
settlement has been brought about as result of collusion,
fraud or misrepresentation. In the present case, the
Conciliation Officer having had no say in the making of the
special agreement the consent of the employee is
meaningless.[439F440A]
(4) It is true that a Labour Court may determine terms and
conditions of employment which may be inconsistent with a
Standing Order; but in the present case, the reference did
not give any such jurisdiction to the Labour Court to
determine the terms and conditions of employment of the
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workman. [44OB-C]
(5) (a) The appellant did not plead in its written
statement before the Labour Court that the work of the
discharged employee was unsatisfactory during the
probationary period, not did it lead any evidence in proof
of the unsatisfactory work. The argument was also not
raised in the Special leave petition. Therefore, the
appellant could not be permitted to raise the contention
that since the discharge was occasioned by the
unsatisfactory work of the employee the Labour Court should
not have ordered reinstatement. [440E-F]
(b) The Labour Court may interfere with an order of
discharge not only when it was made mala fide or as a.
measure of victimisation, but also when it finds that it was
arbitrary or capricious or so unreasonable as to lead to the
inference that it was not, made bona fide. In the present
case as there was no plea and no evidence to show that the
work of the employee was unsatisfactory, the conclusion is
obvious that the order of discharge is arbitrary. [441A-B]
Tata Oil Mills Company, Ltd. v. its Workmen and another
[1963] 2 L.L.J. 78 M/s Francis Elein and Co Private Ltd.v
The Workmen and another, A I.R. 1971 S.C. 2414 and Air
India Corporation, Bombay v. V. A. Robellow, and another,
[1972] 1 L.L.J. 501, referred to.
The question whether a Standing Order is,law and. hence the
special agreement, in contravention of it, was void, not
decided. [440C-D]
436
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2375 of
1698.
Appeal by special leave from the award dated April 19, 1968
of the Labour Court II Lucknow in Adjudication Case, No. 3
of 1967 L.C. (1), Lucknow/Adjudication Case No. 184 of 1967
L.C. (11) Lucknow published in Uttar Pradesh Gazette dated
August 10, 1968.
C. K. Daphtary, P. C. Bharatri and O. S. Mathur, for the
appellant.
S. C. Aggarwal and V. J. Francis, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DWIVEDI, J.-The Wesetrn India Match Company Limited,
Bareilly (hereinafter called the Company) is governed by the
Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946
(hereinafter called the Act). It appears that it has a
separate Standing Order for the Watch and Ward Staff.
According to the Standing Order, there are five categories
of workmen : (1) Permanent, (2) Probationer, (3) Substitute,
(4) Temporary and (5) Apprentice. A permanent workmen is
one " who has completed a probationary period of two months
as such and is employed on a permanent post." A probationer
is a workman "who is provisionally employed to fill a
permanent vacancy and has not completed two months service".
(emphasis added)
The Company appointed one Prem Singh as a watchman on Sep-
tember 1, 1965. The Letter of appointment states that he
would be "on probation for a period of six months." We shall
hereafter refer to this contract of service as a "special
agreement." The period of probation expired on March 1,
1966, but he continued to serve on his post. On April 13,
1966 the Company passed an order extending the period of his
probation by two months with retrospective effect from March
1, 1966. Nine days later on April 22, 1966, the Company
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passed this order : "the above watchman has been discharged
with effect from 1-5-1966 for the reasons mentioned below :
(1) probation period not approved, services are no longer
required by the Company."
This order gave rise to an industrial dispute. The dispute
was referred for adjudication by the Government of Uttar
Pradesh to the Labour Court (II), Lucknow. The referring
order was made on April, 9, 1968. The question referred to
the Labour Court is :
"Whether the employers have terminated the
services of the workman Shri Prem Singh, son
of Shri Bhartu, Watchman T. No. 247, with
effect from 1-5-1966, legally and/or
justifiably ? If not, to what relief is the
workman concerned entitled."
Prem Singh was represented before the Labour Court by the
Matches Mazdoor Sangh, Bareilly. The case of the Sangh was
that the employment of Prem Singh on probation for six
months was in contravention of the Standing Order. It was
maintained that on the
437
expiry of two months Prem Singh automatically became a
permanent workman. It was also said that during the entire
period of his probation Prem Singh was never told by the
Company that it was not satisfied with his work. According
to the Company, the term of six months’ probation was valid.
It was said that as his work was not found satisfactory, he
was discharged.
The Labour Court has found that the discharge was neither
mala fide nor an act of victimisation for trade union
activities. However, the Labour Court has set aside the
order of discharge and has directed his reinstatement with
continuity of service and back wages. This is so, because
it has taken the view that the term regarding six months’
probation was in contravention of the Standing Order and was
invalid. It has held that on completing two months’
probation Prem Singh automatically became a permanent
employee.
Shri Daphtary, counsel for, the Company, has submitted that
the Labour Court has gone beyond the terms of reference. It
is pointed out that the Government Order of reference does
not expressly empower the Labour Court to decide whether the
term regarding six months’ probation was valid or invalid.
In our view, the Labour Court has not travelled beyond the
terms of reference. It was called upon to decide whether
the order of discharge was legal and/or justified. The
validity or invalidity of the discharge obviously depended
on the validity or invalidity of the term regarding six
months’ probation. If this term was invalid the order of
discharge also would obviously be invalid.
The next submission of Shri Daphtary is that the special
agreement is not inconsistent with the Standing Order.
According to the Standing Order, a workman shall not be kept
on probation for more than two months. If he has worked
during these two months to the- satisfaction of the
Company,’ he becomes permanent. But as a result of special
agreement, even though he has worked during these two months
to the satisfaction of the Company, he will not be a
permanent workman. While, the Standing Order says: "Confirm
him on the expiry of two months", the special agreement says
: "No, wait till the expiry of six months." There is thus a
conflict between them. They cannot coexist. SO we are of
opinion that the special agreement is inconsistent with the
Standing Order to the extent of the additional four months’
probation.
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The terms of employment specified in the Standing Order
would prevail over the corresponding terms in the contract
of service in existence on the enforcement of the Standing
Order. It was in effect so held in the Agra Electric Supply
Co. Ltd. v. Shri Alladin. (1) Avery India Ltd. v. Second
Industrial Tribunal West Bengal.(2) and the United Provides
Electric Supply Co. Ltd. Allahabad v. Their Workmen. (3).
While the Standing Orders are in force, it is not
permissible to the employer to seek statutory modification
of them so that there may be one set of Standing Orders for
some employees and another
(1) [1970] 1 S. C. R. 808
(3) [1972] 2 S. C. C 54
(2) A. I. R. 1972 S. C, 1926
438
set for the rest of the employees. In Salem Erode
Electricity Distribution Company Ltd. v. Salem Erode
Electricity Distribution Co. Ltd. Employees Union(1),
Gajendragadkar C. J. said:
" (T) here is no scope for having two separate
Standing Orders in respect to any one of them.
Take the case of classification of workmen.
It is inconceivable that there can be two
separate Standing Orders in respect of this
matter. What we have said about
classification is equally true about each one
of the other said clauses; and so, the
conclusion appears to be irresistible that the
object of the Act is to certify Standing
Orders in respect of the matters covered by he
Schedule; and having regard to these matters,
Standing Orders so certified would be uniform
and would apply to all workmen alike who are
employed in any industrial establishment."
If a prior agreement, inconsistent with the Standing Orders
will not survive, an agreement posterior to and inconsistent
with the Standing Order should also not prevail. Again, as
the employer cannot enforce two sets of Standing Orders
governing the classification of workmen, it is also not open
to him to enforce simultaneously the Standing Order
regulating the classification of workmen and a special
agreement between him an and individual workman settling his
categorisation.
In view of the decisions of this Court cited earlier, the
decisions in M/s.J. K. Cotton Manufacturers Ltd. Kanpur v.
J. N. Tewari 2 ) and the Banaras Electric Light and Power
Co. Ltd. Berhlupura v. Government of Uttar Pradesh and
others(3) no longer lay, down good law. They take the view
that notwithstanding the Standing Orders it is open to the
employer to conclude an agreement with an individual workman
which may be inconsistent with the Standing Orders. These
decisions are overruled.
In the sunny days of the market economy theory people
sincerely believed that the economic law of demand and
supply in the labour market would settle a mutually
beneficial bargain between the employer and the workman.
Such a bargain, they took it for granted, would secure fair
terms and conditions of employment to the workman. This law
they venerated as natural law. They had an abiding faith in
the verity of this law. But the experience of the working
of this law over a long period has belied their faith.
Later generations discovered that the workman did not
possess adequate bargaining strength to secure fair terms
and conditions of service. When the workmen also made this
discovery, they organised themselves in trade unions and
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insisted on collective bargaining with the employer. The
advent of trade. union and collective bargaining created new
problems of maintaining industrial peace and production for
the society. It was therefore considered that the society
has also an interest in the settlement of the terms of
employment of industrial labour. While formerly there were
two parties at the negotiating table the employer and the
workman, it is now
(1) [1966] 2 S. C. R. 498 at p. 504. (2) A. 1. R. 1959
All. 639
(3) [1962] 1 L. L. J. 14.
439
thought that there should also be present a third-party the
State as representing, the interest of the society. The Act
gives effect to this new thinking. By. s.4 the Officer
certifying the Standing Order is directed to adjudicate upon
"the fairness or reasonableness" of the provisions of the
Standing Order. The Certifying Officer is the statutory
representative of the society. It seems to us that while
adjudging the fairness or reasonableness of any Standing
Order, the Certifying Officer should consider and weigh the
social interest in the claims of the employer and the social
interest in the demands of the workmen. Section 10 provides
the mode of modifying the Standing Orders- The employer or
die workman may apply to the Certifying Officer in the
prescribed manner for the modification of the Standing
Orders. Section 13(2) provides that an employer who does
any act in contravention of the Standing Order shall be
punishable with fine which may extend to one hundred rupees.
it also provides for: the imposition of a further fine in
the case of a continuing offence. The fine may extend to
twenty five rupees for every day after the first during
which the offence continues.
The special agreement, in so far as it provides for
additional four months of probation, is an act in
contravention of the Standing Order. We have already held
that. It plainly follows from sections 4, 10 and 13(2) that
the inconsistent part of the special agreement cannot pre-
vail over the Standing Order. As long as the Standing Order
is in force, it is binding on the Company as well as the
workmen. To uphold the special agreement would mean giving
a go by to the Acts principle of three party participation
in the settlement of terms of employment. So we are of
opinion that the inconsistent part of the special agreement
is ineffective and unenforceable.
It is pointed out on behalf of the Company that s.18 of the
Industrial Disputes Act provides that any settlement between
the employer and the workman is binding on them. It is said
that accordingly the special agreement in the present case
would be binding on Prem Singh. It is not necessary to
construe s.18 in this case because it is governed by the
provisions of the Uttar Pradesh Industrial Disputes Act.
Section 6B(1) of this Act deals with a settlement arrived at
by agreement between the employer and workmen otherwise than
in the course of conciliation proceedings Sub-section (2)
thereof provides that after the settlement is arrived at,
the parties to the settlement or any one of them ’may’ apply
to the Conciliation Officer of the area concerned for the
registration of the settlement- Sub-section (3) is
important. It provides that while considering the question
of the registration of a settlement, the Conciliation
Officer shall examine whether it is inexpedient to do so on
public ground affecting social justice or whether the
settlement has been brought about as a result of colbersion,
fraud or misrepresentation. We think that the word ’may’ in
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sub-section (2) should be read as ’shall’ in the context of
sub-section (3). if social justice is to be ensured and if
collusion, fraud or misrepresentation is to be eliminated,
it is necessary that every privately negotiated settlement
should be submitted for registration to the Conciliation
Office. It may be observed that the U. p. Act also insists
on the three party
440
participation in the settlement of terms of employment. In
the result the Company cannot enforce the special agreement
on the pretext that Prem Singh had voluntarily agreed to it.
The conciliation officer ’having had no say in the making of
this agreement, the consent of Prem Singh is meaningless.
It is then said that the Standing Order can be modified in a
suitable case by the Labour Court. In this connection
reliance is placed on the Management of Bangalore Woollen,
Cotton and Silk Mills Co. Ltd. v. The Workmen(1). It is
true that the Labour Court may determine terms and
conditions of employment which may be inconsistent with the
Standing Order. But in the present case the reference did
not give jurisdiction to the Labour Court to determine terms
and conditions of employment of Prem Singh. The reference
directed the Labour Court to decide whether the discharge of
Prem Singh from service as legal justifiable.
Shri Agarwala has argued that the Standing Order is a law
and accordingly the special agreement in contravention of it
is void In support of his argument he has relied on a number
of decisions of this Court. Shri Daphtary has argued to the
contrary and has relied on some other decisions. In the
view that we have taken earlier, it is not necessary to
consider this question. Accordingly, we do not refer to the
authorities cited before us.
Another contention of Shri Daphtary is that in the
circumstances of this case the Labour Court should not have
made an order for reinstatement of Prem Singh. Stress is
laid on the assertion in the order of discharge that his
work during the entire probationary period was not
satisfactory. In support of his argument Shri Daphtary has
relied on the Hindustan Steel Ltd. Rourkela v. Roy (A.K.
and others) (2). This decision does not assist him, for in
the case before us the Company did not plead in its written
statement filed before the Labour Court that the work of
Prem Singh was unsatisfactory during the probationary
period, nor did it lead any evidence in proof of his
unsatisfactory work. The argument does not appear to have
been raised in the Special Leave Petition also.
Accordingly, it is not possible to permit this argument to
be raised now. (See Binny Ltd. v. Their Workmen, (3) and the
Management of Panitole Tea Estate v. The Workmen(4).
In the end, Shri Daphtary has urged that as the Labour Court
has found that the discharge of Prem Singh from service was
neither mala fide nor a measure of victimisation, he should
not have been reinstated to service. Reliance is placed on
the Tata Oil Mills Company Ltd. v. Its Workmen and
another(5), M/s Francis Elein and Co. Private Ltd. v. The
Workmen and another(6) and the Air-India Corporation, Bombay
v. V. A. Rebellow and another(7). It is settled law now
that the
(1) [1968] 1 S. C. R. 581 [1970] 1 L. L. J. 228
(3) [1972] 1 L. L. J. 478(4) [1971] 3 S. C. R. 7 74
(5) [1963] 2 L. L. J. 78 (6) A. I. R. 1971 S.C. 2414
(7) [1972] 1 L. L. J. 501.
441
Labour Court may interfere with the order of discharge where
it is satisfied that it was made mala fide or was a measure
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of victimisation or unfair labour practice. It has also
been held by this Court that the Labour Court may interfere
with the order of discharge if it finds that the order is
arbitrary or capricious or so unreasonable as to lead to the
inference that it is not made bona fide. As there was no
plea and no. evidence to show that the work of Prem Singh
was unsatisfactory, the conclusion is obvious that the order
of discharge is arbitrary. Accordingly, the Labour Court
could interfere and make an order of reinstatement.
There is no force in this appeal and accordingly it is
dismissed with costs.
V.P.S.
Appeal dismissed..
442