Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE BHARAT BANK LTD., DELHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
EMPLOYEES OF THE BHARAT BANK LTD.,DELHIv.THE BHARAT BANK EM
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/05/1950
BENCH:
KANIA, HIRALAL J. (CJ)
BENCH:
KANIA, HIRALAL J. (CJ)
FAZAL ALI, SAIYID
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
CITATION:
1950 AIR 188 1950 SCR 459
CITATOR INFO :
F 1953 SC 325 (13)
F 1954 SC 520 (4)
R 1955 SC 170 (20)
F 1956 SC 66 (16)
R 1956 SC 153 (6)
R 1956 SC 231 (22,23)
D 1956 SC 319 (13)
R 1959 SC1035 (14)
R 1961 SC1669 (13)
RF 1962 SC 486 (15)
R 1962 SC1621 (60)
F 1963 SC 630 (6)
RF 1963 SC 677 (18,20)
R 1963 SC 874 (8,9,17)
R 1965 SC1595 (18,19,40,41,42)
R 1967 SC1494 (13)
RF 1972 SC1967 (5)
RF 1977 SC2155 (23)
R 1979 SC1652 (29)
E 1980 SC 856 (21)
C 1980 SC 962 (77)
R 1982 SC 78 (8)
RF 1992 SC2219 (53,135)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 136--Supreme Court--Appel-
late Jurisdiction--Award of Industrial Tribunal--Whether
appealable--
460
Applicationt for special leave--Maintainability -- Nature of
functions of Industrial Tribunal-Industrial Disputes Act,
1947, es. 8, Case heard by Bench of three members.
HEADNOTE:
Held per KANIA (C.J. FAZL ALl, and MAHAJAN JJ. (MUKH-
ERJEA and PATANJALI SASTRI JJ. dissenting).--The functions
and duties of the Industrial Tribunal constituted under
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, are very much like those of a
body discharging judicial functions although it is not a
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Court, and under Art. 136 of the Constitution of India the
Supreme Court jurisdiction to entertain an application for
leave to appeal from decision of the Tribunal, even
though it will be very to entertain such an application.
Per MUKERJEA J. (PATANJALI SASTRI J.
concurring).--An Industrial Tribunal functioning under the
Industrial Disputes Act is not a judicial tribunal. The
nature of the determinations made and the materials and
considerations on which it has to decide a dispute are also
such that the powers of an appellate court cannot be exer-
cised fully and effectively in respect of them and such
determinations are therefore outside the purview of Art. 136
of the Constitution. Even assuming that the Court had
jurisdiction appeal, the present case was not a
fit one for entertaining an appeal from the determination of
the Tribunal.
[On the merits KANlA C..J., FAZL ALl, PATANJALI SASTRI
and MUKHERJEA, JJ. were of opinion that there was no ground
for admitting the appeal. MAHAJAN J. was of opinion that
the award was bad and must be set aside.]
JUDGMENT:
APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.
XXXIV of 1950.
Appeal by special leave from an Award of the All-India
Industrial Tribunal (Bank Disputes) Bombay, dated 1st Janu-
ary, 1950. The facts of the case are set out in the judg-
ment.
Dr. Bakshi Tek Chand (Veda Vyas and S.K. Kapur, with
him) for the appellant.
B. Sen for the respondents.
Alladi Krishnaswami Aiyar (Jindra Lal, with him) for the
Union of India.
1950. May 26. The Court delivered judgment as follows
:--
KANIA C.J-- I have read the judgments prepared by
Messrs. Fazl Ali, Mahajan and Mukherjea JJ.
461
in this case. As the views in those judgments in respect
of the nature of the duties and functions of the Industrial
Tribunal do not show agreement I consider it necessary to
add a few words of my own.
In my opinion, the functions and duties of the Indus-
trial Tribunal are very much like those of a body discharg-
ing judicial functions, although it is not a Court. The
rules framed by the Tribunal require evidence to be taken
and witnesses to be examined, cross-examined and re-exam-
ined. The Act constituting the Tribunal imposes penalties
for incorrect statements made before the Tribunal. While
the powers of the Industrial Tribunal in some respects
are different from those of an ordinary civil Court and it
has jurisdiction and powers to give reliefs which a civil
Court administering the law of the land (for instance,
’ordering the reinstatement of a workman) does not possess
in the discharge of its duties it is essentially working as
a judicial body. The fact that its determination has to be
followed by an order of the Government which makes the award
binding, or that in cases where Government is a party the
legislature is permitted to revise the decision, or that
the Government is empowered to fix the period. of the opera-
tion of the award do not, to my mind, alter the nature and
character of the functions of the Tribunal. Having consid-
ered all the provisions of the Act it seems to me clear that
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the Tribunal is discharging functions very near those of a
Court, although it is not a Court in the technical sense of
the word.
The next question is whether under article 136 the Court
has jurisdiction to entertain an application for leave to
appeal against the decision of such a body. It is not dis-
puted that the Court has power to issue writs of certiorari
and prohibition in respect of the work of the Tribunal.
The only question is whether there is a right of appeal
also. In my opinion the wording of article 136 is wide
enough to give jurisdiction to the Court to entertain an
application for leave to appeal, although it is obvious that
having regard to the nature of the functions of the Tribu-
nal, this Court will be very reluctant to entertain such an
application.
462
As regards the merits, I do not think this is a case in
which I would admit the appeal. The aggrieved parties may
apply for redress by adopting other appropriate proceedings.
The appeal therefore should be dismissed with costs.
FAZL ALl J.--The important question to be decided in this
case is whether the present appeal lies at all to this
Court. The question is not free from difficulty, but on the
whole I am inclined to think that ’the appeal does lie. It
is fully recognized that the scope article 136 of the
Constitution is very wide, but the significance of the
language used in the section can be appreciated only by
comparing it with the articles which precede it. Article
132 deals with the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme
Court in cases involving a substantial question of law as to
the interpretation of the Constitution, and the words used
in that article are: "appeal...... from any judgment,
decree or finalorder." Article 133 deals with appeals in
civil matters and the same words are used here also. Arti-
cle 134 deals with appeals in criminal matters, and the
words used in it are: "appeal...... from any judgment,
final order or sentence." In article 136, the words "judg-
ment" and "decree," which are used in articles 132 and 133
are retained. Similarly, the words "judgment" and "sen-
tence" occurring in article 134 are also retained. But
the expression "final order" becomes "order," and, instead
of the High Court, reference is made to "any court." Cer-
tain other words are also used in the article which seem to
me to have a special significance, these being "determina-
tion," "cause or matter" and "tribunal." It is obvious that
these words greatly widen the scope of article 136. They
show that an appeal will lie also from a determination or
order of "any tribunal" in any cause or matter.
Can we then say that an Industrial Tribunal does not
fall within the scope of article 136 ? If we go by a mere
label, the answer must be in the affirmative. But we have to
look further and see what are the main functions of the
Tribunal and how it proceeds to discharge those functions.
This is necessary because
463
I take it to be implied that before an appeal can. lie to
this Court from a tribunal it must perform some kind of
judicial function and partake to some extent of the charac-
ter of a Court.
Now there can be no doubt that the Industrial Tribunal
has, to use a well-known expression, "all the trappings of a
Court" and performs functions which cannot but be regarded
as judicial. This is evident from the rules by which the
proceedings before the Tribunal are regulated. It appears
that the proceeding before it commences on an application
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which in many respects is in the nature of a plaint. It has
the same powers as are vested in a civil Court under the
Code of Civil Procedure when trying a suit, in respect of
discovery, inspection, granting adjournment, reception of
evidence taken on affidavit, enforcing the attendance
witnesses, compelling the production of documents, issuing
commissions, etc. It is to be deemed to be a civil Court
within the meaning of sections 480 and 482 of the Criminal
Procedure Code, 1898. It may admit and call for evidence at
any stage of the proceeding and has the power to administer
oaths. The parties appearing before it have the right of
examination, cross-examination and re-examination and of
addressing it after all evidence has been called. A party
may also be represented by a. legal practitioner with its
permission.
The matter does not rest there. The main function of
this Tribunal is to adjudicate on industrial disputes which
implies that there must be two or more parties before it
with conflicting cases, and that it has also to arrive at a
conclusion as to how the dispute is to be ended. Prima
facie, therefore, a Tribunal like this cannot be excluded
from the scope of article 136, but before any final conclu-
sion can be expressed on the subject certain contentions
which have been put forward on behalf of the respondents
have to be disposed of.
The first contention is that the Industrial Tribunal
cannot be said to perform a judicial or quasi-judicial
function. since it is not required to be guided by any
recognized substantive law in deciding disputes
464
which come before it. On the other hand, in deciding
industrial disputes, it has to override contracts and create
rights which are opposed to contractual rights. In these
circumstances, it is said that the very questions which
arose before the Privy Council in Moses v.Parker Ex-parte
Mose (1) arise in this case, these questions being :
(1) How can the propriety of the Tribunal’s decision be
tested on appeal, and
(2) What are the canons by which the appellate Court is
to be guided in deciding the appeal ?
Their Lordships of the Privy Council undoubtedly felt that
these were serious questions, but they had no hesitation in
saying that "if it were clear that appeals ought to be
allowed. such difficulties would doubtless be met somehow."
This, in my opinion, is a sufficient answer to the difficul-
ty raised. The Tribunal has to adjudicate in accordance with
the provisions of the Industrial Disputes Act. It may
sometimes override contracts, but so can a Court which has
to administer law according to the Bengal or Bihar Money-
lenders Act, Encumbered Estates Act and other similar Acts.
The Tribunal has to observe the provisions of the special
law which it has to administer though that law may be dif-
ferent from the law which an ordinary Court of justice
administers. The appellate Court, therefore, can at least
see that the rules according to which it has to act and the
provisions which are binding upon it are observed, and its
powers are not.exercised in an arbitrary or capricious
manner.
The second contention, which is a more serious one, is
that the adjudication of the Tribunal has not all the at-
tributes of a judicial decision, because the adjudication
cannot bind the parties until it is declared to be binding
by the Government under section 15 of the Industrial Dis-
putes Act. It is said that the adjudication is really in
the nature of an advice or report which is not effective
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until made so by the Government. It appears that a similar
objection was raised in Rex v. Electricity Commissioner’s,
London Electricily’
(1) [1896] A.C. 245.
Joint Committee Co. (1920) Ex-Parte (1) for the purpose of
deciding whether a writ of certiorari should be Issued in
the circumstances of the case but was dis. posed of in these
words :--
"It is necessary, however, to deal with what i think
was the main objection of the Attorney-General. In this case
he said the Commissioners come to no decision at all. They
act merely as advisers. They recommend an order embodying a
scheme to the Minister of Transport, who may confirm it with
or without nodifications. Similarly the Minister of Trans-
port comes to no decision. He submits the order to the
Houses of Parliament, who may approve it with or without
modifications. The Houses of Parliament may put anything
into the order they please, whether consistent with the Act
of 1919, or not. Until they have approved, nothing is
decided, and in truth the whole procedure, draft scheme,
inquiry, order, confirmation, approval, is only part of a
process by which Parliament is expressing its will, and at
no stage is subject to any control by the Courts. It is
unnecessary to emphasize the constitutional importance of
this contention......... In the provision that the final
decision of the Commissioners is not to be operative until
it has been approved by the two Houses of Parliament I find
nothing inconsistent with the view that in arriving at that
decision the Commissioners themselves are to act judicially
and within the limits prescribed by Act of Parliament, and
that the Courts have power to keep them within those limits.
It is to be noted that it is the order of the Commissioners
that eventually takes effect; neither the Minister of Trans-
port who confirms, nor the Houses of Parliament who approve,
can under the statute make an order which in respect. of the
matters in question has any operation. I know of no author-
ity which compels me to hold that a proceeding cannot be a
judicial proceeding subject to prohibition or certiorari
because it is subject to confirmation or approval, even
where the approval has to be that of the Houses of Parlia-
ment. The authorities are to the contrary.’ ’
(1) [1924] 1 K.B. 171.
466
It is well known that a writ of certiorari can issue
only against an order of a judicial or quasi-judicial tribu-
nal and if it is permissible for the High Court to. issue a
writ of certiorari against an Industrial Tribunal, which
fact was not seriously disputed before us, I find it diffi-
cult to hold that the tribunal does not come with-
in the purview of article 136. If a subordinate Court
acts in excess of its jurisdiction or assumes a jurisdiction
which it does not possess, the appellate Court can always
interfere and do what is contemplated to be done by a writ
of certiorari.
It is to be noted that under section 15 of the Industrial
Disputes Act, 1947, in cases where the appropriate Govern-
ment is not a party to the dispute, all that the Government
has to do on receiving the award of the Tribunal is to
declare it to be binding and to state from what date and for
what period it will be binding. Section 15.(2) is mandatory
and it provides:
"On receipt of such award, the appropriate Government
shall by order in writing declare the award to be
binding....... "
Thus the Government cannot alter, or cancel, or add
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to the award, but the award must be declared to be binding
as it is. In substance, therefore, the adjudication of the
Tribunal amounts to a final determination of the dispute
which binds the parties as well as the Government.
Our attention was however drawn to the proviso to
section 15 (2), which runs as follows:--
"Provided that where the appropriate Government is a.
party to the dispute and in its opinion it would be inexpe-
dient on public grounds to give effect to the whole or any
part of the award, it shall on the first available opportu-
nity lay the award together with the statement of its rea-
sons for not making a declaration as aforesaid before the
Legislative Assembly of the Province, or where the appropri-
ate Government is the Central Government, before the Central
Legislative Assembly, and shall, as soon as may be, cause to
be moved therein a resolution for the consideration of the
467
award, and the Legislative Assembly may, by its resolution,
confirm, modify, or reject the award."
This proviso was relied upon by the respondents to show
that the right to appeal from the award could not have been
contemplated in any case. But the Act itself makes a dis-
tinction between cases in which the Government is a party
and those in which the Government is not a party. The
proviso relates to a very special type of case and as at
present advised I do not wish to express any opinion as to
whether an appeal lies to this Court or not in such a case,
but, in my judgment, where the Government has only to de-
clare the award to be binding, an appeal shall lie.
It is necessary here to say a few words as to the scope
of the appeal. As was pointed out by this Court in Pritam
Singh v. The State(1), the power under article 136 of the
Constitution being a special power is to be exercised only
in special cases. The rule so laid down is bound to re-
strict the scope of the appeal in practice in almost all the
cases which fall under article 136. But in some cases a
limitation will be imposed on the scope of the appeal by the
very nature of the case and of the tribunal from which an
appeal is sought to be brought, and a case under the Indus-
trial Disputes Act seems to be an example of such a case.
Dealing now with the merits of the appeal, I am not
prepared to hold that this is a proper case for interference
with the adjudication of the Tribunal. The power of this
Court was invoked by the appellants on four grounds. These
grounds have been elaborately examined by Mahajan J. and two
of them have been pronounced to be wholly inadequate for
justifying our interference. My view with regard to these
two grounds is identical with that of Mahajan J. and I do
not wish to add to what he has already said on the subject.
The remaining two grounds also are, in my opinion, wholly
insufficient to justify the exercise of our special power
under article 136. One of these grounds is that the award
of the Tribunal is based on no evidence whatsoever. I do
not, however, find that this ground
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 453.
60
468
was urged in this form in the application for special leave
to appeal to this Court. All that was intended to be urged
was that the appellants wanted to adduce evidence but were
not allowed to do so. From the decision of the Tribunal
however, it appears that the evidence that was shut out
related to one isolated point only and the Tribunal might
well have been justified in not allowing evidence to be
admitted on a point which in its opinion had no direct
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bearing on the issue before them. After hearing the re-
spondents on this particular point, I am not disposed to
hold that the Tribunal has committed such an error as would
justify the interference of this Court.
The last ground urged is that the award has been signed
by only two members of the Tribunal though it originally
consisted of three persons and though the entire hearing of
the dispute had taken place before all the three persons.
This objection does not appear to me to be fatal to the
jurisdiction of the Tribunal, because under section 8 of the
Act it is not obligatory on the Government to appoint a new
member to fill a vacancy if one of the members ceases to be
available at any time during the proceedings. Under that
section, if the Chairman ceases to be available, the Govern-
ment must appoint his successor, whereas if a member ceases
to be available the Government may or may not appoint any
one to fill his place. In the present case, our attention
was drawn to some correspondence which shows that one of the
members was called upon to act as a member of another Tribu-
nal and the award in question was pronounced after informing
the Government of the procedure which the Chairman and the
remaining members intended to adopt.
In the view I have taken, this appeal must fail, and I
would accordingly dismiss it with costs.
MAHAJAN J.--This is an appeal by special leave
from the determination of an industrial dispute by the
Industrial Tribunal appointed under Ordinance VI
of 1949.
Bharat Bank Limited, Delhi, the appellant, is a
company registered under the Indian Companies
Act.
Act.
469
Its employees made certain demands and as a result of an
unfavourable response from the bank it appears that they
struck work on the 9th March, 1949. The bank in its turn
served notices on them to resume work and proceeded to
discharge a number of them between the 19th March and 24th
March as they failed to do so. The Central Government
constitued a Tribunal consisting of three persons for the
adjudication of industrial disputes in banking companies
under section 7 of the Industrial Disputes Act (XIV of
1947), The disputes mentioned in schedule II of the notifi-
cation were referred under section 10 of the Act to this
Tribunal. Item 18 of this schedule reads as follows :--
"Retrenchment and victimization (Specific cases to be cited
by employees)."
The dispute under this item between the Bharat Bank and
its employees was heard by the Tribunal at Delhi and its
award was made on the 19th January, 1950. It was published
in the Government of India Gazette dated 4th February, 1950,
and was declared to be binding for a period of one year.
The award of the Tribunal was signed by two out of its three
members.
A preliminary objection was raised on behalf of the
Central Government as well as on behalf of the respondents
that this Court had no jurisdiction to grant special leave
to appeal against the determination of an Industrial Tribu-
nal inasmuch as it did not exercise the judicial powers of
the State and that its determination was not in the nature
of a judgment, decree or order of a Court so as to be ap-
pealable. This being the first case in which special leave
was granted from the determination of an Industrial Tribu-
nal, it is necessary to examine the provisions of the Con-
stitution dealing with this matter and if possible, to
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define the limits of the jurisdiction of this Court under
article 136. This article is in these terms :--
"(1) Notwithstanding anything in this Chapter, the
Supreme Court may, in its discretion, grant special leave to
appeal from any judgment, decree, determination, sentence or
order m any cause or matter passed
470
or made by any court or tribunal in the territory of India.
(2) Nothing in clause (1) shall apply to any judgment,
determination, sentence or order passed or made by any
court or tribunal constituted by or under any law relating
to the Armed Forces."
The article occurs in Chapter IV of Part V of the Consti-
tution: "The Union Judiciary." Article deals with the
establishment and constitution of the Supreme Court. Article
131 confers original jurisdiction on this Court in certain
disputes arising between the Government of India and the
States etc. Articles and 133 deal with the appellate juris-
diction of the Court in appeals from High Courts within the
territory of India in civil matters. By article 134 limited
right of appeal in criminal cases has been allowed. The
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council which was the high-
est Court of appeal for India prior to 10th October, 1949,
was not a Court of criminal appeal in the sense in which
this Court has been made a Court of criminal appeal under
article 134. It could only entertain appeals on the crimi-
nal side in exercise of the prerogative of the King.
Article 135 empowers this Court to hear all appeals which
under existing laws could be heard by the Federal Court of
India. By the Abolition of Privy Council Jurisdiction Act,
1949,which came into force on the 10th October, 1949, all
the powers that were possessed by the Judicial Committee of
the Privy Council in regard to cases or matters arising in
India became exercisable by the Federal Court of India
whether those powers were exercisable by reason of statutory
authority or under the prerogative of the King. The powers
of the Judicial Committee were conferred upon it by the
Judicial Committee Act, 1844 (7 & 8 Vict., C. 69). Appeals
lay to His Majesty in Council from judgments, sentences,
decreesor orders of any Court of justice within any British
colony or possession abroad. Closely following article 135
which confers all the powers of the Judicial Committee on
the Supreme Court comes article 136. The language employed
in this article is very wide and is of a comprehensive
character. Powers given
471
are of an overriding nature. The article commences with the
words "Notwithstanding anything in this Chapter." These
words indicate that the intention of the Constitution was to
disregard in extraordinary cases the limitations contained
in the previous articles on this Court’s power to entertain
appeals. These articles dealt with the right of appeal
against final decisions of High Courts within the territory
of India. Article 136, however, overrides that qualification
and empowers this Court to grant special leave even in cases
where the judgment has not been given by a High Court but
has been given by any Court in the territory of India; in
other words, it contemplates grant of special leave in cases
where a Court subordinate to a High Court has passed or made
any order and the situation demands that the order should be
quashed or reversed even without having recourse to the
usual procedure provided by law in the nature of an appeal,
etc. The word "order" in article 136 has not been qualified
by the word "final." It is clear, therefore, that the power
to grant special leave under this article against an order
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of a Court could be exercised with respect to interlocutory
orders also. Another new feature introduced in article 136
is the power given to grant special leave against orders,
and determinations etc. of any tribunal in the territory of
India. This word did not find place in the Judicial
Committee Act, where the phrase used was "a Court of jus-
tice." It is the introduction of this new expression in
article 136 that has led to considerable argument as to its
scope. Another expression that did not find place in the
Judicial Committee Act but has been introduced in article
136 is the word "determination." A question has been raised
as to the meaning to be given to these words in the article.
On the one hand, it was contended that the words "determina-
tion" and "tribunal" were introduced in the article in order
to bring within the scope of the applellate jurisdiction of
this Court all orders of tribunals of different varieties
and descriptions. On the other hand, it was said that the
words "determination" and "tribunal" were added in the
article by way of abundant caution and
472
the intention was that if a tribunal exercised the judicial
powers of the State and the decision was passed in the
exercise of that power, this Court as the highest judicial
Court in the Republic would have power, if it considered,
necessary in the ends of justice, to grant special leave.
Clause (2) of article 136 excludes the jurisdiction of this
Court in respect of military Courts. or Tribunal. It is
interesting to observe that in articles 138, 139 and 140 the
Constitution has conferred powers on Parliament for further
enlargement of the powers of this Court.
Two points arise for determination in this case: (1)
whether the word "tribunal" in this article has been used in
the same sense as "Court," or whether it has been used in a
wider sense, and (2) whether the word "determination" in the
article includes within its scope the determinations made by
Industrial Tribunals or other similarly constituted bodies
or whether it has reference only to determinations of a
Court or a tribunal of a purely judicial character. It
was conceded by the learned counsel appearing for the Cen-
tral Government, Mr. Alladi Krishnaswami Aiyar, that if any
tribunal, whether administrative, domestic or quasi-judi-
cial, acts in excess of its jurisdiction, then it can be
controlled by the High Courts under the powers conferred on
them by article 226 by the issue of a writ of certiorari.
It was said that if the Industrial Tribunal in this case
could be proved to have trespassed beyond the limits 0 its
statutory jurisdiction, then the remedy lies elsewhere and
not by a petition of special leave under article 136. Mr.
Alladi’s contentions may be briefly summarized as follows:
(1) The expression "tribunal -" means seat of a judge, or a
court of justice. Its necessary attribute is that it can
give a final judgment between two parties which carries
legal sanction by its own force. That the word "tribunal"
in juxtaposition to the word "court" could only mean a
tribunal ’which exercised judicial functions of the State
and did not include within its ambit a tribunal which had
quasi-judicial or administrative powers. (2) The kinds of
orders against which special leave to appeal could be given
under article 136
473
have to be of the same nature as passed by a Court ,’ in
other words, it was said that unless there was a judicial
determination of a controversy between two parties, the
order would not be appealable. That in the case of an
Industrial Tribunal what gives binding force to the award is
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the declaration of the government, that the spark of life to
it is given by that declaration and without that, the award
of the Tribunal is lifeless and has no enforceability and
hence cannot be held to be of an appealable nature. It was
further said that in cases between the Government and its
employees, by the procedure prescribed in the Act the award
could also be rejected, and that being so, by its own deter-
mination a tribunal could not impose a liability or affect
rights. Dr. Bakshi Tek Chand, appearing for the bank, on the
other hand argued that whenever a tribunal, whether exercis-
ing judicial or quasi-judicial functions, determined a
matter in a judicial manner, then such a determination is
within article 136. It was said that an Industrial Tribunal
has no administrative or executive functions, that its duty
is to adjudicate on an industrial dispute, i.e., to act as a
Judge, on certain kinds of disputes between employers and
employees and that its functions are of a judicial nature,
though the ambit of the powers conferred is larger than that
of an ordinary Court of law inasmuch as it can grant reliefs
which no Court of law could give, but that is because of the
powers conferred on it by law. It was argued that the plain
words of the article should not be given a narrow meaning
when the intention of the Constitution was to confer the
widest power on this Court. It was further contended that
as between private employers and employees and even in
certain cases between Government and its employees the
decision of the Tribunal was binding on the Government and
Government had no power either to affirm, modify or reject
it. All that it was authorised to do was to announce it and
by its declaration give it enforceability; that fact, howev-
er, could not affect the question of appealability of the
determination under article 136. It was finally argued that
powers should be exercised by this Court wherever there is a
miscarriage
474
of justice by a determination of any tribunal and that
if the intention of the Constitution by use of the word
"tribunal"was in the same sense as "court," then it was not
necessary to import it in article 136, because all tribunals
that exercise judicial functions fall within the definition
of the word "court" though they may not have been so de-
scribed.
After considerable thought I have reached the conclusion
that the preliminary objection should be overruled. I see no
cogent reasons to limit the plain words of the statute and
to place a narrow interpretation on words of widest ampli-
tude used therein. In construing the articles of the Con-
stitution it has always to be remembered that India has been
constituted into a sovereign democratic republic in order to
ensure justice to all its citizens. In other words, the
foundations of this republic have been laid on the bedrock
of justice. To safeguard these foundations so that they may
not be undermined by injustice occurring anywhere this
Court has been constituted. By article S2 of the Constitu-
tion the Court is empowered to see that the fundamental
rights conferred on the citizens by the Constitution are not
in any way affected. By article 136 it has been given
overriding power to grant special leave to appeal against
orders of courts and tribunals which go against the princi-
ple of natural justice and lead to grave miscarriage of
justice. The exercise of these, powers could only have been
contemplated in cases which affect the rights of people
living within the territory of India in respect of their
person, property or status. The question, therefore, for
consideration is whether the jurisdiction conferred by use
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of unambiguous phraseology and by words which have a plain
grammatical meaning and are of the widest amplitudeshould be
limited and restricted on considerations suggested by Mr.
Alladi. The construction suggested by the learned counsel,
if accepted, would in the first instance make the use of
certain words in the article unnecessary and redundant and
would run counter to the spirit of the Constitution. It
must be presumed that the draftsmen of the Constitution knew
well the fact that there were a number of tribunals consti-
tuted in this country
475
previous to the coming into force of the Constitution which
were performing certain administrative, quasi judicial or
domestic functions, that some of them had even the trap-
pings of a Court but in spite of those trappings could not
be given that description. It must also be presumed that the
Constitution-makers were aware of the fact that the highest
Courts in this country had held that all tribunals that
discharged judicial functions fell within the definition of
the expression "Court." If by the use of the word "tribu-
nal" in article 136 the intention was to give it the same
meaning as "Court," then it was redundant and unnecessary to
import it in the article because, by whatever name de-
scribed, such a tribunal would fall within the definition of
the word "Court." The word "Court" has a well-known meaning
in legislative history and practice.
As pointed out in Halsbury’s Laws of England, the word
"Court" originally meant the King’s Palace but subsequently
acquired the meaning of (1) a place where justice was admin-
istered, and (2) the person or persons who administer it. In
the Indian Evidence Act it is defined as including all
judges and magistrates and all persons except arbitrators
legally authorized to take evidence. This definition is by
no means exhaustive and has been framed only for the pur-
poses of the Act. There can be no doubt that to be a Court,
the person or persons who constitute it must be entrusted
with judicial functions, that is, of deciding litigated
questions according to law. However, by agreement between
parties arbitrators may be called upon to exercise judicial
powers and to decide a dispute according to law but that
would not make the arbitrators a Court. It appears to me
that before a person or persons can be said to constitute a
Court it must be held that they derive their powers from the
State and are exercising the judicial powers of the State.
In R.v. London County Council (1), Saville L.J. gave the
following meaning to the word "Court" or "judicial authori-
ty" :--
(1) [1931]2K.B. 215. 61
476
"It is not necessary that it should be a Court in the
sense that this Court is a Court, it is enough if it is
exercising, after hearing evidence, judicial functions in
the sense that it has to decide on evidence between a
proposal and an opposition; and it is not necessary to be
strictly a Court if it is a tribuna which has to decide
rightly after hearing evidence and opposition."
As pointed out in picturesque language by Lord Sankey
L.C. in Shell Co. of Australia v. Federal Commissioner of
Taxation(1), there are tribunals with many of the trappings
of a Court which, nevertheless, are not Courts in the strict
sense of exercising judicial power. It seems to me that
such tribunals though they are not full-fledged Courts, yet
exercise quasi-judicial functions and are within the ambit
of the word "tribunal" in article 136 of the Constitution.
It was pointed out in the above case that a tribunal is not
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necessarily a Court in this strict sense because it gives a
final decision, nor because it hears witnesses oath nor
because two or more contending parties appear before it
between whom it has to decide, nor because it gives deci-
sions which affect the rights of subjects nor because there
is an appeal to a Court, nor because it is a body to which
a matter is referred by another body. The intention of the
Constitution by use of the word "tribunal" in the article
seems to have been to include within the scope of article
136 tribunals adorned with similar trappings as Court but
strictly not coming within that definition. Various defi-
nitions of the phrase "judicial power" have been given from
time to time. The best definition of it on high authority
is the one given by Griffith C.J. in Huddart, Parker & Co.
v. Moorehead(2), wherein it is defined as follows :-
"The words ’judicial power’ as used in section 71 the
Constitution mean the power which every sovereign author-
ity must of necessity have to decide controversies between
its subjects, or between itself and its subjects, whether
the rights relate to life, liberty or property. The exer-
cise of this power does not begin
[19311 A..C. 275. (2) 8 C.L.R. 330, 357.
477
until some tribunal which has power to give a binding and
authoritative decision (whether subject to appeal or not) is
called upon to take action."
It was conceded that a tribunal constituted under the
Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, exercises quasi judicial
powers. That phrase implies that a certain content of the
judicial power of the State is vestedit and it is called
upon to exercise it. An attempt was made to define the
words "judicial" and "quasi judicial" in the case of Cooper
v. Wilson (1). The relevant quotation reads thus :--
"A true judicial decision presupposes an existing dis-
pute between two or more parties, and then involves four
requisites :- (1) The presentation necessarily orally) of
their case by the parties to the dispute; (2) if the dispute
between them is a question of fact, the ascertainment of the
fact by means of evidence adduced by the parties to the
dispute and often with the assistance of argument by or on
behalf of the parties on the evidence; (3) if the dispute
between them is a question of law, the submission of legal
argument by the parties, and (4) a decision which disposes
of the whole matter by a finding upon the facts in dispute
and application of the law of the land to the facts so
found, including where required a ruling upon any disputed
question of law. A quasi-judicial decision equally presup-
poses an existing’ dispute between two or more parties and
involves (1) and (2), but does not necessarily involve (3)
and never involves (4). The place of (4)is in fact taken by
administrative action, the character of which is determined
by the Minister’s free choice."
The extent of judicial power exercised by an ]industrial
Tribunal will be considered hereinafter in the light of the
observations cited above.
Reference was made to certain passages from Professor
Allen’s book on Law and Order, Chapter IV, page 69, where
mention is made of the kinds of administrative tribunals
functioning in various countries today. Porter on Adminis-
trative Law, 1929 Edn.,
(1) [1937] 2 K.B. 309, at p. 340.
478
page 194, was also relied upon. There can be no doubt that
varieties of administrative tribunals and domestic tribunals
are known to exist in this country as well as in other
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countries of the world but the real question to decide in
each case is as to the extent of judicial power of the State
exercised by them. Tribunals which do not derive authority
from the sovereign power cannot fall within the ambit of
article 136. The condition precedent for bringing a tribu-
nal within the ambit of article 136 is that it should be
constituted by the State. Again a tribunal would be outside
the ambit of article 136 if it is not invested with any part
of the judicial functions of the State but discharges purely
administrative or executive duties. 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 article 136 and would be subject to the
appellate control of this Court whenever it is found neces-
sary to exercise that control in the interests of justice.
It is now convenient to consider whether a tribunal
constituted under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, exer-
cises all or any one of the functions of a Court of justice
and whether it discharges them according to law or whether
it can act as it likes in its deliberations and is guided by
its own notions of right and wrong. The phrase "industrial
dispute" has been defined in section 2 clause (k) of the Act
as follows :--
"any dispute or difference between employers and em-
ployees, or between employers and workmen, or between work-
men and workmen, which is connected with the employment or
non-employment or the terms of employment or with the condi-
tions of labour, of any person."
Such a dispute concerns the rights of employers and
employees. Its decision affects the terms of a contract of
service or the conditions of employment. Not only may the
pecuniary liability of an employer be considerably affect-
ed by the adjudication of such dispute but it may even
result in the imposition of punishments on him. It may
adversely
479
affect the employees as well. Adjudication of such a dis-
pute affects valuable rights. The dispute and its result
can always be translated in terms of money. The point for
decision in the dispute usually is how much money has to
pass out of the pocket of the employer to the pocket of the
employee in one form or another and to what extent the right
of freedom of contract stands modified to bring about indus-
trial peace. Power to adjudicate on such a dispute is given
by section 7 of the statute to an Industrial Tribunal and a
duty is cast on it to adjudicate it in accordance with the
provisions o Act. The words underlined clearly imply that
the dispute has to be adjudicated according to law and not
in any other manner. When the dispute has to be adjudicated
in accordance with the provisions of the Act, it follows
that the tribunal has to adhere to law, though that law may
be different from the law that an ordinary Court of justice
administers. It is noteworthy that the tribunal is to
consist of experienced judicial officers and its award is
defined as a determination of the dispute. The expression
"adjudication" implies that the tribunal is to act as a
judge of the dispute; in other words, it sits as a Court of
justice and does not occupy the chair of an administrator.
It is pertinent to point out that the tribunal is not given
any executive or administrative powers. In section 38 of the
Act power is given to make rules for the purpose of giving
effect to the provisions of the Act. Such rules can provide
in respect of matters which concern the powers and procedure
of tribunals including rules as to the summoning of witness-
es, the production of documents relevant to the subject-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 38
matter and as to appearance of legal practitioners in pro-
ceedings under this Act. Rule 3 of these rules provides
that any application for the reference of an industrial
dispute to a tribunal shall be made in form (A) and shall be
accompanied by a statement setting forth, inter alia, the
names of the parties to the dispute and the specific matters
of dispute. It is in a sense in the nature of a plaint in a
suit. In rule 13 power is given to administer oaths. Rule
14 provides as follows :-
"A tribunal may accept, admit or call for
480
evidence at any stage of the proceedings before it and in
such manner as it may think fit."
Rule 17 provides that at its first sitting the tribunal
is. to call upon the parties to state their case. In rule
19 provision has been made for proceedings ex-parte. Rule 21
provides that in addition to the powers conferred by sub-
section (3) of section 11 of the Act, a tribunal shall have
the same powers as are vested in a civil Court under the
Code of Civil Procedure when trying a suit, in respect of
the following matters, namely, (a) discovery and inspection;
(b) granting of adjournment; (c) reception of evidence taken
on affidavit; and that the tribunal may summon and examine
suo motu any person whose evidence appears to it to be
material. It further says that the tribunal shall be deemed
to be a civil Court within the meaning of sections 480 and
482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 189S. Rule 21 says
that the representatives of the parties, appearing before a
tribunal, shall have the right of examination, cross-exami-
nation and re-examination and. of addressing the Court or
Tribunal when all evidence has been called. In rule 30 it is
provided that a, party to a reference may be represented by
a legal practitioner with the permission of the tribunal and
subject to such conditions as the tribunal may impose. In
section 11 (3) it is laid down that a tribunal shall have
the same powers as are vested in a civil Court under the
Code of Civil Procedure when trying a suit, in respect of
the following matters, namely, (a) enforcing the attendance
of any person and examining him on oath; (b) compelling the
production of documents and material objects; (c) issuing
commissions for the examination of witnesses; (d) in respect
of such other matters as may be prescribed; and every in-
quiry or investigation by a tribunal shall be deemed to be a
judicial proceeding within the meaning of sections 193 and
228 of the Indian Penal Code. It is difficult to conceive in
view of these provisions that the Industrial Tribunal per-
forms any funCtions other than that of a judicial nature.
The tribunal has certainly the first three requisites and
characteristics of a Court as defined above. It has cer-
tainly a considerable element of the fourth also inasmuch
as.
481
the tribunal cannot take any administrative action, the
character of which is determined by its own choice. It has
to make the adjudication in accordance with the provisions
of the Act as laid down in section 7. It consists of persons
who are qualified to be or have been judges. It is its duty
to adjudicate on a serious dispute between employers and
employees as affecting their right of freedom of contract
and it can impose liabilities of a pecuniary nature and
disobedience of its award is made punishable. The powers
exercisable by a tribunal of this nature were considered in
a judgment’ of the Federal Court of India in Western India
Automobile Association v. Industrial Tribunal, Bombay
(x), and it was observed that such a tribunal can do what
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no Court can, namely, add to or alter the terms or condi-
tions of the contract of service. The tribunal having
been entrusted with the duty of adjudicating a dispute of a
peculiar character, it is for this reason that it is armed
with extraordinary powers. These powers, however, are
derived from the statute. These are the rules of the game
and it has to decide according to these rules. The
powers conferred have the sanction of law behind it and are
not exercisable by reason of any discretion vested in the
members of the tribunal. The adjudication of the dispute
has to be in accordance with evidence legally adduced and
the parties have a right to be heard and being represented
by a legal practitioner. Right to examine and cross-examine
witnesses has been given to the parties and finally they can
address the tribunal when evidence is closed. The whole
procedure adopted by the Act and the rules is modelled on
the Code of Civil Procedure. In my opinion, therefore, the
Industrial Tribunal has all the necessary attributes of a
Court of justice. It has no other function except that of
adjudicating on a dispute. It is no doubt true that by
reason of the nature of the dispute that they have to adju-
dicate the law gives them wider powers than are possessed by
ordinary Courts of law, but powers of such a nature do not
affect
(1) [1949]] F.C.R. 321.
482
the question that they are exercising judicial power. Stat-
utes like the Relief of Indebtedness Act, or the Encumbered
Estates Act have conferred powers on Courts which are not
ordinarily known to law and which affect contractual rights.
That circumstance does not make them anything else but
tribunals exercising judicial power of the State, though in
a degree. different from the ordinary Courts and. to an
extent which is also different from that enjoyed by an
ordinary Court of law. They may rightly be described as
quasi-judicial bodies because they are out of the hierarchy
of the ordinary judicial system but that circumstance cannot
affect the question of their being within the ambit of
article 136.
It may also be observed that the tribunal is deemed to be
a civil Court for certain purposes as laid down in rule 21
of the rules above cited and in section 11(3) of the Act.
As a civil Court if it exercises any of the powers contem-
plated by this section its decisions would become subject to
appeal to a District Judge and a fortiori this Court’s
power under article 136. would at once be attracted in
any case in respect of these matters. Again, in Chapter VI
of the Act breach of the terms of an award has been made
punishable by section 29 of the Act. The result therefore,
is that disobedience of the terms of an award is punishable
under the Act. That being so, a determination of the tribu-
nal not only affects the freedom of contract and imposes
pecuniary liability on the employer or confers pecuniary
benefits on the employees, but it also involves serious
consequences as failure to observe those terms makes a
person liable to the penalties laid down in Chapter VI. An
award which has these serious consequences can hardly be
said to have been given by a tribunal which does not exer-
cise some of the most important judicial functions of the
State.
Considerable stress was laid by Mr. Alladi on the provi-
sions of sections 15 and 19 of the Act. Section 15 enacts as
follows :---
"(1) Where an industrial dispute has been referred to a
Tribunal for adjudication, it shall hold its
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 38
483
proceedings expeditiously and shall, as soon as practicable
on the conclusion thereof, submit its award to the appropri-
ate Government.
(2) On receipt of such award, the appropriate Govern-
ment shall by order in writing declare the award to be
binding.
Provided that where the appropriate Government is a
party to the dispute and in its opinion it would be inexpe-
dient on public grounds to give effect to the whole or any
part of the award, it shall on the first available opportu-
nity lay the award together with the statement of its rea-
sons for not making a declaration as aforesaid before the
Legislative Assembly of the province, or where the appropri-
ate Government, is the Central Government, before the Cen-
tral Legislature, an d shall, as soon as may be, cause to be
moved therein a resolution for the consideration of the
award; and the Legislative Assembly or as the case may be,
the Central Legislature, may by its resolution confirm,
modify or reject the award.
(3) On the passing of a resolution under the proviso to
sub-section (2), unless the award is rejected thereby, the
appropriate Government shall11 by order in writing declare
the award as confirmed or modified by the resolution, as the
case may be, to be binding.
(4) Save as provided in the proviso to subsection (3) of
section 19, an award declared to be binding under this
section shall not be called in question in any manner."
As regards clause (4), it was conceded rightly that a
law dealing with industrial disputes and enacted in the year
1947 could not in any way,affect the provisions of the
Constitution laid down in article 136. It was however,
strenuously urged that the award of the tribunal had no
binding force by itself and unless the appropriate Govern-
ment made a declaration in writing under clause (2) of
section 15, this award was a lifeless document and had no
sanction behind it and therefore it could not have been
contemplated that if would be appealable even by special
leave. In my opinion, this contention is unsound. The
provisions of clause (2) of
484
section 15 leave no discretion in the Government either to
affirm, modify or reject the award. It is bound to declare
it binding. It has no option in the matter. In such a
situation it is the determination by the tribunal that
matters. Without that determination Government cannot
function. It does not possess the power either to adjudi-
cate the dispute or to alter it in any manner whatsoever.
That power vests in the tribunal alone. The rights of the
parties are really affected by the adjudication contained
in the award, not by the Government’s declaration which is
automatic. It is no doubt true that announcement of the
award by the Government gives it binding force but that
does not affect the question of the appealability of the
determination under article 136 of the Constitution. The
apposite answer to this contention may be given in the
language of the decision in Rex v. Electricity Commissioners
(1). The relevant passage runs thus :--
"It is necessary, however, to deal with what I think was
the main objection of the Attorney-General. In this case he
said the Commissioners come to no decision at all. They act
merely as advisers. They recommend an order embodying a
scheme to the Minister of Transport, who may confirm it with
or without modifications. Similarly the Minister of Trans-
port comes to no decision. He submits the order to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 38
Houses of parliament, who may approve it with or without
modifications. The Houses of Parliament may put anything
into the order they please, whether consistent with the Act
of 1919, or not. Until they have approved, nothing is
decided, and in truth the whole procedure, draft scheme,
inquiry, order, confirmation, approval, is only part of a
process by which Parliament is expressing its will, and at
no stage is subject to, any control by the Courts.. It is
unnecessary to emphasize the constitutional importance of
this contention. Given its full effect, it means that the
checks and safeguards which have been imposed by Act of
Parliament, including the freedom from compulsory taking,
can be removed, and new and onerous and
(1) [1924] 1 K.B. 171, at 207.
485
inconsistent obligations imposed without an Act of Parlia-
ment, and by simple resolution of both Houses of Parliament.
I do not find it necessary to determine whether, on the
proper construction of the statute, resolutions of the two
Houses of Parliament could have the effect claimed. In the
provision that the final decision of the Commissioners is
not to be operative until it has been approved by the two
Houses of Parliament I find nothing inconsistent with the
view that they act judicially and within the limits pre-
scribed by Act of Parliament, and that the Courts have power
to keep them within those limits. It is to be noted that it
is the order of the Commissioners that eventually takes
effect, neither the Minister of Transport who confirms, nor
the Houses of Parliament who approve. can under the statute
make an order which in respect of the matters in question
has any operation. I know of no authority which compels me
to hold that a proceeding cannot be a judicial proceeding
subject to confirmation or approval, even where the approval
has to be that of the Houses of Parliament. The authorities
are to the contrary
The observations, though they relate to a case which
concerns the issue of a writ of prohibition and certiorari,
have application to the present case. Here no discretion
whatsoever has been left in the Government in ordinary cases
to either modify or t0 reject the determination of the
tribunal. The fact that the Government has to make a decla-
ration after the final decision of the tribunal is not in
any way inconsistent with the view that the tribunal acts
judicially. It may also be pointed out that within the
statute itself a clue has been provided which shows that the
circumstance that the award has to be declared by an order
of Government to be binding does not affect the question of
its appealability. In article 136 clause (2) express provi-
sion has been made for excepting from the ambit of article
136 the decisions of military courts and tribunals. It
follows that but for the exception it was considered that
these would be within article 136 clause (1). It is quite
clear from the various provisions of the Army Act that the
decisions of military tribunals or courts are subject to
confirmation either by
486
the Commander-in-Chief or various other military authori-
ties. It is only after such confirmation that ’that can
operate. It has never been considered that fact in any way
affects the question of their appealability.
Rex v. Minister of Health (1) also supports this view.
There by the Housing Act, 1925, by section 40, a local
authority which had prepared an improvement scheme was
required to present a petition to the Minister praying that
an order should be made confirming such scheme. Sub-section
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(3) provided that the Minister after considering the peti-
tion may cause a local inquiry to be made and may by order
confirm the scheme with or without conditions or modifica-
tions. In sub-section (5) it was stated that the order of
the Minister when made shall have effect as if enacted in
this Act. It was held be the Court of Appeal that as the
order made by the Minister was made without the statutory
conditions having been complied with it was ultra vires and
therefore a writ of certiorari should issue for the purpose
of quashing it. Reliance was placed by Scrutton L.J. on Rex
v. Electricity Commissioners (2). The same.view was ex-
pressed in Minister of Health v. The King (3). It was
observed that judicial review by prohibition or a writ of
certiorari was permissible if the Minister of Health in
confirming the order exceeded his statutory powers. It is
clear therefore that simply because an order has to be
confirmed by a Minister or by the Government it in any way
affects the power of judicial review. Reference may also be
made to the observations in Smith v. The Queen (4). At page
623 it was observed that it is a common principle in every
case which has in itself the character of a judicial pro-
ceeding that the party against whom a judgment is to operate
shall have an opportunity of being heard. In this sense it
can hardly be disputed that the proceeding before an indus-
trial Tribunal is a judicial proceeding. In my judgment,
therefore, the contention raised by Mr. Alladi that this
(1) [1939] 2 K.B. 98. (3) [1931] A.C.
494;
(2) [1924] 1 K.B. 171. (4) 3 A.C. 245.
487
Court cannot exercise its powers under article because the
decision of the tribunal has no force till a declaration is
made by the Government cannot be sustained.
As regards section 19, it was contended that an award
declared by the appropriate Government under section 15 to
be binding can only come into operation on such date as may
be specified by the appropriate Government and can only
remain in operation for such period not exceeding one year,
as may be fixed by that Government and it was said that
herein the Government had the power to state the period from
which the award was to commence and the time for which it
was to remain in force. This section does not, in my opin-
ion, affect the question of the appealability of the deter-
mination of the tribunal. Government has certain functions
to perform in its own sphere after the award is made. In
certain cases it is bound to declare that award binding. In
other cases, when it is itself a party to the dispute, it
has certain overriding powers and these overriding powers
are that if it considers that the award is not in public
interests it may refer it to the legislature. The legisla-
ture, however, has the power to modify, accept or reject
the award. These overriding powers presuppose the existence
of a valid determination by a tribunal. If that determina-
tion is in excess of jurisdiction or otherwise proceeds in a
manner that offends against the rules of natural justice and
is set aside by exercise of power under article 136, then no
occasion arises for exercise of governmental power under the
Act. Given a valid award, it could not be denied that the
Government could exercise its powers in any manner it con-
sidered best and the exercise of that power is outside the
constitution of this Court. In this connection reference
was made to Moses v. Parker (1). The passage on which
emphasis was laid reads as follows :--
"The Court has been substituted for the commissioners
to report to the governor. The difference is that their
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 38
report is to be binding on him. Probably it was
(1) [1896] A.C.
488
thought that the status and training of the judges made them
the most proper depositaries of that power. But that does
not make their action a judicial action in the sense that it
can be tested and altered by appeal. It is no more judicial
than was the action of the commissioners and the governor.
The Court is to be guided by equity and good conscience and
the best evidence. So were the commissioners. So every
public officer ought to be. But they are expressly exoner-
ated from all rules of law and equity, and all legal forms.
How then can the propriety of their decision be tested on
appeal ? What are the canons by ’which this Board is to be
guided in advising Her Majesty whether the Supreme Court is
right or wrong ? It seems almost impossible that decisions
can be varied except by reference to some rule, whereas the
Court making them is free from rules. If appeals were
allowed, the certain result would be to establish some
system of rules, and that is the very thing from which the
Tasmanian Legislature has desired to leave the Supreme Court
free and unfettered in each case. If it were clear that
appeals ought to be allowed such difficulties would doubt-
less be met somehow. But there are strong arguments to show
that the matter is not of an appreciable nature."
One would have expected that after this opinion the
decision would have been that the Judicial Committee had no
jurisdiction to entertain the appeal but their Lordships
proceeded to base their decision not on this ground but on
the ground that this was not a fit case for the exercise of
the prerogative of the King. In my opinion, the observations
made in that case have no apposite application to the provi-
sions of the statute with which we are concerned. I do not
see any difficulty in this case in testing the propriety of
the determination of the tribunal. This Court is not to
substitute its decision for the determination of the tribu-
nal when granting relief under article 136. When it chooses
to interfere in the exercise of these extraordinary powers,
it does so because the tribunal has either exceeded its
jurisdiction or has approached the questions referred to it
in a manner which is likely to
489
result in injustice or has adopted a procedure which runs
counter to the well established rules of natural justice.
In other words, if it ,has denied a hearing to a party or
has refused to record his evidence or has acted in any other
manner, in an arbitrary or despotic fashion. In such cir-
cumstances no question arises of this Court constituting
itself into a tribunal and assuming powers of settling a
dispute. All that the Court when it entertains an appeal
would do is to quash the award and direct the tribunal to
proceed within the powers conferred on it and approach the
adjudication of the dispute according to principles of
natural justice. This Court under article 136 would not
constitute itself into a mere court of error. Extraordinary
powers have to be exercised in rare and exceptional cases
and on well known principles. Considered in the light of
these principles, there is no insuperable difficulty in the
present case of the nature pointed out in the passage cited
above. It was conceded that the High Court could exercise
powers under section 226 and could quash an award but it was
said that under article 136 this power should not be exer-
cised in an appeal. I do not see why ? Particularly when
after the High Court has passed any decision on an applica-
tion made to it in exercise of the powers under section 226,
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that decision could be brought to this Court in appeal. In
the matter of an industrial dispute where expedition is the
crux of the matter, it is essential that any abuse of powers
by such tribunals is corrected as soon as possible and with
expedition.
It may be mentioned that it is no novel practice for a
court empowered to grant special leave to exercise its
powers even though there may be intermediate rights of
appeal or other remedies available, if it is considered
essential to do so in extraordinary situations. Vide Bent-
wick’s Privy Council Practice, 3rd Edn., page 125. Therein
it is stated as follows :--
"In several cases from Jamaica, the Privy Council grant-
ed leave to appeal to the Queen in Council directly from the
Supreme Court, without an intermediate appeal (which would
have been attended with much
490
expense and delay) to the Court of Error in the island,
there being in each of those cases manifestly some point of
law raised which deserved discussion."
The cases were In Re Barnett(1), Harrison v. Scott (2),
and Attorney-General of Jamacia v. Manderson (s). The
phraseology employed in article 136 itself justifies this
course. The article empowers this Court to grant special
leave against sentences or orders made by any court. In all
other articles of the Constitution right of appeal is con-
ferred against final decisions of the highest court of
appeal in the country but under this article power is
given to this Court to circumvent that procedure if it is
considered necessary to do so. I am, therefore, of the
opinion that the mere circumstance that a remedy in the
nature of a writ of certiorari is open to the petitioners
does not necessarily lead to the conclusion that the power
of this Court under article 136 is circumscribed by that
circumstance. Whenever judicial review is permissible in one
form or another, this Court as the highest Court in the land
can exercise its special powers and circumvent ordinary
procedure by granting special leave. What it has to ulti-
mately decide it can decide earlier.
I now proceed to examine some of the cases to which
reference was made by Mr. Alladi.
Three Australian cases were cited which concern the
construction of sections 51, 71 and 72 of the Australian
Constitution (63 and 64 Vict., c. 12). Section 72 requires
that every Justice of the High Court and every Justice of
any other Court created by the Parliament of the Common-
wealth shall subject to the power of removal contained in
the section be appointed for life. Section 71 confers the
whole judicial power of the Commonwealth upon the Courts
therein mentioned and no other tribunal or body can exercise
that power. Every Court referred to in section 71 has to be
constituted in the manner provided by section 72. The ques-
tion in these cases was as to the meaning of the phrase
"judicial power of the Commonwealth." Similar
(1) 4 Moo. 453. (2) 5 Moo. 357. (3) 6 Moo.
239.
491
phraseology has not been used in any part of the Constitu-
tion of India and in these circumstances it is difficult to
derive any assistance from these decisions in solving the
problem before us. The Constitution of India is not mo-
delled on the Constitution of Australia and that being so,
any observations made in decisions given under that Consti-
tution cannot be held to be a safe guide in the interpreta-
tion of language employed in a Constitution differently
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drafted.
The first of these cases is Waterside Workers’ Federa-
tion of Australia v.J.W. Alexander Ltd. (1). Therein it was
held that the power conferred by the Commonwealth Concilia-
tion and Arbitration Act 1904-1915 upon the Commonwealth
Court of Conciliation and Arbitration to enforce awards made
by it is part of "the judicial power of the Commonwealth
"within the meaning of section 71 of the Constitution, and
can only be vested in the courts mentioned in that section.
Mr. Alladi placed reliance on a passage at page 467 in the
judgment of Isaacs and Rich JJ., which reads as follows :--
"The arbitral part of the Act, therefore, is quite
within the power of pl. xxxv, and is not intended by the Act
to be exercised by an ordinary Court of Justice, which, it
is suggested, Parliament by some strange perversity proceed-
ed to destroy at birth. It is true that enforcement provi-
sions are found....... But all this was in imitation of the
State Acts of Arbitration, and not in reliance on the Judi-
cature Chapter of the Federal Constitution. The arbitral
portion of the Act is, in our opinion, perfectly good,
subject to its severability from any other portion which may
be bad."
It was argued that the Industrial Tribunal here was an
arbitration tribunal of the same kind as in Australia and
exercises similar functions. It is however pertinent to
observe that the phraseology employed in section 15 of the
Indian Act is different from that used in the Australian
statute. The Indian statute has constituted different
bodies for different purposes. An Industrial Tribunal has
been constituted
(1) 25 C.L.R.
63
492
only to discharge one function of adjudication. It is not
described as an arbitral tribunal. The Act has avoided the
use of the word "arbitration" either in preamble or in
any of its relevant provisions though the determination has
been named as an award. In these circumstances it is unsafe
to seek any guidance from observations made in this case.
The next case to which reference was made is Rola Co.
(Australia) Proprietary Ltd. v. The Commonwealth (1). The
question here was whether the Women’s Employment Board
constituted under the Women’s Employment Act, 1942, did not
exercise the judicial power of the Commonwealth. It was
held that the Board exercised functions which were arbitral
in character. Emphasis was laid on a passage occurring in
page 198 of the report which reads as follows :--
"An industrial award lays down rules of conduct for the
future. It does not purport to ascertain and enforce exist-
ing rights; it is directed to the creation of new rights. It
is urged on behalf of the plaintiff that a determination of
the Committee does not create a rule of conduct binding the
parties for the future, but that it authoritatively deter-
mines a possibly controverted question of fact and that the
making of such an authoritative determination is necessarily
an exercise of judicial power. Reference is made to the
frequently quoted statement of Griffith C.J. in Huddart
Parker & Co. Pty. Ltd. v. Moorehead (2), approved by the
Privy Council in Shell Co. of Australia Ltd. v. Federal
Commissioner of Taxation (8):__
"I am of opinion that the words ’judicial power’ as
used in section 71 of the Constitution mean the power which
every sovereign authority must of necessity have to decide
controverises between its subjects or between itself and its
subjects, whether the rights relate to life, liberty or
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property. The exercise of this power does not begin until
some tribunal which has power to give a binding and authori-
tative decision (whether subject to appeal or not) is called
upon to take action."
(1) 69 C.L.R. 185. (2) a C.L.R. 330 at 357.
(3) [1931] A.C. 275.
493
Reg. 5C gives Committees power. to decide controversies
between subjects relating to their rights and the regulation
purports to make those decisions binding and authoritative.
I am not satisfied that the words of Griffith C.J. are
properly interpreted when it is said that they mean that a
power to make binding and authoritative decisions as to
facts is necessarily judicial power. I direct attention to
the concluding words--" is called upon to take action." In
my opinion these words are directed to action to be taken by
a tribunal which has power to give a binding and authorita-
tive decision. The mere giving of the decision is not the
action to which the learned Chief Justice referred. If a
body which has power to give a binding and authoritative
decision is able to take action so as to enforce that deci-
sion, then, but only then, according to the definition
quoted, all the attributes of judicial power are plainly
present. I refer to what I say more in detail hereafter,
that the Privy Council, in the Shell case (1), in which
approval was given to the definition quoted, expressly held
that a tribunal was not necessarily a Court because it gave
decisions (even final decisions) between contending parties
which affected their rights.
In Huddart Parker’s case (2), Isaacs 1. referred to the
statement of Palles C.B. in R.v. Local Government Board for
Ireland (3) "to erect a tribunal into a ’Court’ or ’juris-
diction’, so as to make its determinations judicial, the
essential element is that it should have power, by its
determination within jurisdiction, to impose liability or
affect rights." "By this," said the learned Chief Baron, "I
mean that the liability is imposed, or the right affected by
the determination only, and not by the fact determined, and
so that the liability will exist, or the right will be
affected, although the determination be wrong in law or in
fact. It is otherwise of a ministerial power. If the
existence of such a power depends upon a contingency, al-
though it may be necessary for the officer to determine
whether
(1) [1931] A.C. 275. (2) 8 C.L.R. 330 at
383.
(3) [1902] 2 I.R. 349 at p. 373.
494
the contingency has happened, in order to know whether he
shall exercise the power, his determination does not bind.
The happening of the contingency may be questioned in an
action brought to try the the act done under the
alleged exercise of the power. But where the determination
binds, although it is based on an erroneous view of facts or
law, then the power authorizing it is judicial. There we
get a modern use of the term ’judicial power’." This state-
ment of the characteristics of judicial power looks to what,
in Waterside Workers’ Federation of Australia v. Gilchrist,
Watt & Sanderson Ltd.(1), Isaacs and Rich JJ. referred to as
the creation of instant liability in specified persons as
distinct from laying down a rule or standard of conduct for
the future.
The decision of an ordinary Court that B is bound to pay
money to A applies a pre-existing standard of rights and
duties not created by the Court itself, with the result that
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there is an immediately enforceable liability of B to pay to
A the sum of money in question. The decision of the Wom-
en’s Employment Board does not create any such liability,
nor does the determination of a Committee of Reference
create any such liability. In order to impose an immediale-
ly enforceable liability upon any employer, for example, to
pay wages to a particular female, it would be necessary for
the female or some person on her behalf (see reg. 9A) to sue
in a court of competent jurisdiction. If such a proceeding
succeeded there would then be a liability created by the
determination of the court. such a proceeding the determina-
tion of the Committee of Reference would be evidence of the
facts to which it related, but that determination would not
in itself create "liability." The concluding words of the
passage quoted above at once distinguish the present case
from the Australian case. The award given by an Industrial
Tribunal in respect either of bonus or higher wages, etc. is
enforceable by its own force and by the coercive
machienary of the Act and it is not merely a declaration
of a character that furnishes a cause of action to the
employee to bring a suit on its foot to recover the
C.L.R. 482, 512.
495
wages. An arbitral tribunal’s decision cannot be enforced
unless it has the sanction of a Court of justice behind it
but the award of the Tribunal is enforceable under the Act
itself by the coercive machinery provided therein. It is
the terms of the award that are enforceable and not the
terms of the order made by the Government. It is the breach
of the terms of the award that is punishable and not any
breach of Government’s order. The Government itself is
bound to declare the award binding and it has no option
whatsoever in the matter. It is no doubt true that the
tribunal has not only to decide the existing rights and
liabilities of the parties and it can lay down rules of
conduct for the future but it does so because by law it is
authorised to do so. Its decision carries the sanction with
it. The Government is bound to give effect to it and the
statute enforces it by coercive machinery. In my view,
therefore, this decision again has no relevancy to the
present case.
The third case to which reference was made is Shell Co.
of Australia v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1). That
was an income-tax matter and the decision has been consid-
ered in an earlier part of this judgment. Reference was
also made to Mohammad Ahmad v. Governor-General in Council
("), in which it was held that an improvement trust was not
a civil Court subordinate to the High Court under section
115 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That has no bearing to
the matter in issue here. Similar point was discussed in
Hari v. Secretary of State for India (3). Labour Relations
Board v. John East Iron Works Ltd. (4) is a Canadian case
and the decision proceeded on the same lines as in the
Australian cases.
Mr. Sen appearing for the respondents placed reliance on
O’Connor v. Waldron (5). The relevant passage occurs at
page 81 which runs thus :-
The law as to judicial privilege has in process of time
developed. Originally it was intended for the protection of
judges sitting in recognised Courts of
(1) [1931] A.C. 275. (3) I.L.R. 27 Bom. 424.
(2) I.L.R. 1946 Lah. 16. (4) A.I.R. 1949 P.C. 129.
(5) [1935] A.C. 75,
496
Justice established as such. The object no doubt was that
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judges might exercise their functions free from any danger
that they might be called to account for any words spoken as
judges. The doctrine has been extended to tribunals exer-
cising functions equivalent to those of an established Court
of Justice. In their Lordships’ opinion the law on the
subject was accurately stated by Lord Esher in Royal Aquari-
um etc. Ltd. v. Parkinson (1), where he says that the privi-
lege applies wherever there is an authorized inquiry which,
though not before a Court of Justice, is before a tribunal
which has similar attributes...This doctrine has never been
extended further than to Courts of Justice and tribunals
acting in a manner similar to that in which such Courts
act’"
The learned counsel contended that the. word "tribunal"
in article 136 could only have reference to those tribunals
which exercise functions equivalent to that of a Court of
Justice. I have no hesitation in holding that the Industrial
Tribunal has similar attributes as that of a Court of Jus-
tice in view of the various provisions to which I have made
reference. Reference was also made to certain passages
occuring in pages 422 and 428 of Toronto Corporation v. York
Corporation (2). That was a case of the Municipal Board of
Ontario. It was held there that the Board was merely an
administrative tribunal. Next reliance was placed on R.v.
National Arbitration Tribunal, Ex-parte Horatio Crowther &
Co. Ltd.(3). That dealt with the powers of tile National
Arbitration Tribunal. In my opinion this citation also is
not of much assistance.
It was again urged by Mr. Alladi that the word "tribu-
nal" was introduced in the article to provide for cases of
tribunals like the Board of Revenue. The suggestion does
not appear to be sound, because a Revenue Board has all the
attributes of a Court of justice and falls within the defi-
nition of the word "Court" in matters where it adjudicates
on rights of parties.
(6) [1892] 1. Q.B. 431. (7) [1938] A.C. &15. (8)
[1947] A.E.R. 693.
497
The word "tribunal" has been used in previous legisla-
tion in a number of statutes and it is difficult to think
that the Constitution when it introduced this word in arti-
cle 136 intended to limit its meaning to only those tribu-
nals which though not described as Courts strictly speaking,
were discharging the same or analogous functions as were
being discharged by Courts.
For the reasons given above I am of the opinion that
the word "tribunal" in article 136 has to be construed
liberally and not in any narrow sense and an Industrial
Tribunal inasmuch as it discharges functions of a judicial
nature in accordance with law comes within the ambit of the
article and from its determination an application for spe-
cial leave is competent.
The question now to determine is whether the exercise
of overriding powers of this Court can be justified on any
ground whatsoever in the present case. As I have already
said, exceptional and extraordinary powers of this character
can only be justifiably used where there has been a grave
miscarriage of justice or where the procedure adopted by the
Tribunal is such that it offends against all notions of
legal procedure.
Dr. Bakshi Tek Chand for the petitioner-bank urged four
grounds justifying exercise of the special jurisdiction of
this Court. Firstly, he contended that the word "victimiza-
tion" used in clause 18 of the reference had been interpret-
ed in such a manner by the Tribunal that it had usurped
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jurisdiction to decide disputes which were never referred to
it. In my view this is not a matter which can justify the
exercise of the powers under article 136. This Court is not
a mere Court of error. The word "victimization" has not
been defined in the statute and is not in any sense a term
of law or a term of art. It is an ordinary English word
which means that a certain person has become a victim, in
other words, that he has been unjustly dealt with. It was
argued that the word has acquired a special meaning in
regard to industrial disputes and connotes a person who
becomes a victim of the employer’s wrath by reason of his
trade union activities and that the word cannot relate to a
person who has been merely unjustly dismissed. Be that as
it may.
498
The determination of the Tribunal has not been materially
affected by this interpretation of the word to any large
extent and that being so, it does not call for the exercise
of the special power.
The second ground urged was that the Tribunal has erred
in ordering reinstatement of persons who were guilty of an
illegal strike. It was contended that section 23 (b) of the
Act has been wrongly construed by it and as a result of this
misconstruction persons who were guilty of a wrong and who
could not have been reinstated have been reinstated. In
brief, the argument was that under section 23(b) when a
matter has been referred to a tribunal in respect of an
earlier strike, any strike during the pendency of that
dispute is an illegal strike and that was the situation
here. The employees of the bank had struck work in December,
1948. That dispute had been referred to an Industrial
Tribunal. It was during the pendency of that dispute that
another strike took place which led to the dismissal of the
employees who have now been reinstated by the present award.
The Calcutta High Court has held that a strike during the
pendency of the period of truce and during the pendency of
an earlier dispute before a tribunal is illegal even if it
is brought about as a result of fresh and new demands which
are not covered by the earlier dispute. One of the members
of the Tribunal thought that the decision laid down the law
correctly on the point, but the other member thought that
the decision was erroneous. Both of them, however, agreed
that whether the strike was legal or illegal that point did
not in any way affect the question that they had to decide
under issue 18. The consequences of an illegal strike are
laid down in the Act and certain penalties are provided
therein. The Act nowhere states that persons guilty of
illegal strike cannot be reinstated. Be that as it may.
The reference to the Tribunal was made by the Government in
respect of an illegal. strike and the Tribunal was bound to
give its decision on the reference. Item 18 of schedule II
clearly empowers the tribunal to deal with cases of victimi-
zation as a result of the third strike which the petitioner
described as illegal. The Tribunal may be
499
wrong in the view they have taken but it seems to me this is
again not a question of that vital character which would
justify the grant of special leave under article 136.
The next question raised by the learned counsel that the
award of the Tribunal is based on no evidence whatsoever.
This contention requires serious consideration. I have
examined the proceedings of the Tribunal and it appears that
all’ it did was that as required by rule 17 at the first
sitting it called upon the parties to state their cases.
Mr. Parwana on behalf of the employees stated their respec-
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tive cases and Mr. Ved Vyas who represented the bank stated
the bank’s case and after the cases had been stated the
proceedings terminated and both parties addressed arguments
and the Tribunal proceeded to give its award. Whether the
charge of victimization in individual cases was proved or
not depended on proof of certain facts which had to be
established by evidence. The onus of proving victimization
clearly rested on the-employees. No evidence whatsoever was
led on their behalf. The statement of the case by Mr.
Parwana was not on oath. There was no examination or cross-
examination of Mr. Parwana. No affidavit supporting the
facts stated by Mr. Parwana was filed by him or by any
employee. Mr. Parwana produced an abstract of the corre-
spondence but the original correspondence was not produced.
The bank disputed the facts stated by Mr. Parwana by means
of a lengthy affidavit. It seems no reference was made even
to this affidavit by the Tribunal. No counter affidavit was
filed in reply to the facts stated in this ’affidavit. The
bank wanted to call some evidence. Particular reference was
made in respect of a scurrilous letter issued by one Bhatta-
charya on behalf of the employees and distributed by them,
which it is alleged considerably shook the credit of the
bank. This opportunity was denied to it. It was contended
before us that the bank wanted to lead evidence on certain
matters and that the opportunity to lead it was denied.
There is nothing on the record to support this contention.
The result therefore is that the facts on the basis of which
allegations of victimization have been
64
500
made are neither supported by an affidavit nor by any evi-
dence and the award is based on no evidence whatsoever. The
Act as well as the rules framed under it contemplate a
proper hearing, discovery and inspection of documents and
production of evidence, etc. None of this procedure was
followed by the Tribunal. It is difficult to see on what
material the Tribunal has given its award as there is none
existing on the present record and the respondents’ counsel
could not point out to any such material. At one time
during the argument I was inclined to think that possibly
both parties by agreement consented to treat the statement
of case as evidence in the case and did not wish to produce
any other evidence, but the affidavit filed on behalf of the
bank disputes all the facts stated by Mr. Parwana. The only
evidence on the record is the bank’s affidavit and if the
facts contained in the affidavit are accepted, then the
determination made by the Tribunal cannot stand. It seems
to me therefore that the procedure adopted by the Tribunal
was against all principles of natural justice and the award
is thereby vitiated and should be set aside. It happens
that when the safeguard of an appeal is not provided by law
the tendency sometimes is to act in an arbitrary manner like
a benevolent despot. Benevolent despotism, however, is
foreign to a democratic Constitution. The members of the
Tribunal seem to have thought that having heard the state-
ment of the cases of the parties they could proceed to a
judgment on their own view of its right or wrong unaided by
any material. That kind of procedure to my mind is unwar-
ranted by the statute and is foreign to a democratic Consti-
tution. In these circumstances it is the compelling duty of
this Court to exercise its extraordinary powers and to quash
such an award.
The last contention raised by Bakshi Tek Chand was that
though a Tribunal consisting of three persons was appointed
to adjudicate on the dispute, the award has only been signed
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by two of them. Reference in this connection was made to
section 16 of the Act which says that the award of a Tribu-
nal shall be in writing and shall be signed by all the
members of the
501
Tribunal and that nothing in the section shall be deemed to
prevent any member of the Tribunal from recording a minute
of dissent. The provisions of the section are mandatory and
have not been complied with. It is common ground that the
case was stated by the parties at a sitting when all the
members of the Tribunal were present and the arguments were
heard by all of them. No sitting took place subsequent to
this which would have necessitated the carrying on of pro-
ceedings by two members of the Tribunal by a quorum. When
the matter has been heard by all the three members, the
award should have been given by all of-them. Therefore the
award given by two of them is not the award of the Tribunal
constituted by the Government. It is therefore vitiated and
has to be quashed. Reference in this connection was made to
section 8 of the Act which reads as follows :--
"If the services of the chairman of a Board or of the
chairman or other member of a Court or Tribunal cease to be
available at any time the appropriate Government shall, in
the case of a chairman, and may in the case of any other
member, appoint another independent person to fill the
vacancy, and the proceedings shall be continued before the
Board, Court or Tribunal so reconstituted."
The Tribunal was never reconstituted by the Government
by any notification. Under section 7 a Tribunal has to be
constituted in accordance with the provisions of the Act by
the Government. The Government having constituted a Tribunal
of three persons it had power under section 8 to reconsti-
tute it but did not exercise that power. The result there-
fore is that the Tribunal as originally constituted was not
the Tribunal which gave the award in this reference. Only
two members have given the award. It was said that one of
the members ceased to be available and the Government was
not bound to fill up that vacancy. There is no material on
the record to prove whether any member became unavailable
and if so, when. But even if a member becomes unavailable
and the Government does not choose to fill up the vacancy,
still the Government has to reconstitute the Tribunal by
saying that
502
two members will now constitute the Tribunal. An affidavit
with two telegrams annexed was filed before "us on behalf
of the respondents which disclosed that Mr. Chandrasekhara
Aiyar who was one of the members of the Tribunal, in Novem-
ber, 1949, was appointed a member of the Boundary Commission
in Bengal and that the other two members sent a telegram to
the Labour Ministry asking it to fill up the vacancy or to
reconstitute the Tribunal. The advice given by the Ministry
was that they could proceed as they were and that the Gov-
ernment would later on, if necessary, fill up the vacancy.
We are not concerned whether the advice given was right or
wrong. But the fact remains that the Tribunal was never
reconstituted and it was not denied that Mr. Chandrasekhara
Aiyar is now sitting in the same Tribunal without being
again nominated to it and the Tribunal is hearing the same
reference under the other issues referred to it. Moreover,
I do not see why after having heard the reference he could
not give the award even if he was in Calcutta or sign the
award given by the other two members. The idea of three
persons hearing a case and two of them deciding it is repug-
nant to all notions of fairness. It may well have been that
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the opinion of the third may have influenced the other two
or the decision arrived at may have been quite different.
It so happened in this case that two members of the Tribunal
differed on an important question of law but somehow adjust-
ed their differences and gave a unanimous award. The
presence of the third in such a situation may have very
vitally affected the result. After a good deal of thought I
feel that it would be most dangerous for this Court to
condone proceedings of this character. If exceptional
powers are not exercised even when a body legally constitut-
ed under the statute does not function according to the
statute, then they defeat the very purpose of the Constitu-
tion.
Reference in this connection may be made to the deci-
sion of their Lordships of the Privy Council in Fakira v.
King Emperor (1). In that case section 377
(1) A.I.R. 1937 P.O. 119.
503
of the Code of Criminal Procedure as modified and as ap-
plicable to Hyderabad stood as follows :--
"In every case so submitted, the confirmation of the
sentence or order passed by the Court of the Resident at
Hyderabad shall, when such Court consists of two or more
Judges, be made, passed and signed by at least two of them."
In Fakira’s case the order of confirmation was only
made, passed and signed by one of them, though the Court of
the Resident consisted of two Judges. Their Lordships held
that the peremptory provisions of section 377 had not been
complied with and that the sentence passed had not been
validly confirmed. The appeal was allowed and the case was
remitted to the Court of the Resident. The provisions of
section 18 of the Industrial Disputes Act are also of a
peremptory nature. Reference may also be made to a case
arising under the Bar Councils Act reported in In re An
Advocate, Madras(1), where one member of the tribunal under
that Act had died and had not signed the report. It was held
that the tribunal ceased to be properly constituted and
that the report could not be considered.
For the reasons given above I would quash this award and
direct that the Tribunal which is still functioning should
readjudge item 18 of the reference and then submit its award
on this point to Government. The employees cannot be held
responsible for the method of procedure adopted by two
members of the Tribunal. Each party will have to bear their
own costs in this Court. The appeal is allowed to the extent
indicated above.
MUKHERJEA J.--This appeal, which has come up before us
on special leave, is directed against an award made by the
All India Industrial Tribunal, dated the 19th of January,
1950. The Tribunal was constituted by the Central Govern-
ment under section 7 of the Industrial Disputes Act and a
large number of disputes
(1) A.I.R. 1942 Mad. 267.
504
between several Banking companies and their emiployees were
referred to it for adjudication. Amongst these Banking
companies were the Bharat Bank Limited, the appellants
before us, and the disputes between them and their employ-
ees, who are respondents in this appeal, related inter alia
to a number of cases of retrenchment and victimization which
the latter alleged against the former. The Tribunal held
its enquiry in Delhi in respect to the cases which were
connected with the Delhi Branch of the appellants and as a
result of the same, made their award on 19th January, 1950,
holding that 26 persons, who were employees under the appel-
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lants, were improperly dismissed by the latter and should be
reinstated. Further directions were given in the award
regarding the salaries and allowances that were to be paid
to the dismissed employees. This award was declared to be
binding in terms of the provisions of sections 15 and 19 of
the Industrial Disputes Act by the Central Government on
30th of January, 1950, and it was directed to remain in
operation for a period of one year. It is against this
award that the present appeal has been preferred.
On behalf of the Indian Union which appeared as an
intervener in this appeal, as also on behalf of the respond-
ents, a preliminary objection was taken challenging the
competency of the appeal. The contention put forward by
Sir Alladi Krishnaswami Aiyar, who appeared for the inter-
vener, in substance, is that article 136 of the Indian
Constitution, under which special leave was prayed for and
obtained by the appellants in this case, does not contem-
plate or include within its scope an appeal against an award
of an Industrial Tribunal which is not vested with, and
cannot exercise, judicial powers, and the decision of which
cannot, therefore, rank as a judicial determination. The
Industrial Tribunal, it is said, is an administrative
body exercising quasi-judicial functions and this Court
cannot be called upon to exercise the powers of an appellate
Court in respect to the decision of a tribunal which is
really a part of the administrative machinery of the Govern-
ment.
505
In reply to this objection, it has been urged by Sir
Tek Chand that the Tribunal constitutedunder the Industrial
Disputes Act is really and in substance, a Court or judicial
tribunal which is invested with the power and authority to
exercise judicial functions; and in any event, the language
of article 136 of the Constitution is wide enough to include
an appeal from the award or determination of any tribunal,
be it judicial or not.
There are two questions which require consideration on
this preliminary point. The first is, whether the award or
decision of an Industrial Tribunal constituted under the
Industrial Disputes Act is a judicial decision in the proper
sense of the expression or is it the pronouncement of an
administrative or quasi-judicial body which may exercise
some of the functions of a Court of law but is really not so
? The other question turns upon the construction to be put
upon article 136 of the Constitution particularly on the
meaning to be given to the words ’tribunal’ and ’determina-
tion’ occurring therein; and the question is whether the
language is wide enough to include an adjudication or award
of an Industrial Tribunal.
As regards the first question, it is to be noticed that
owing to the intricate and complex system of Government that
exists in a modern State and the vast expansion of social
legislation of all sorts that have taken place in England
and in other countries including our own, within the last
few decades, the so-called administrative and quasi-judicial
tribunals have come to be a permanent feature of our social
and political system. They function as adjudicating bodies
in disputes concerning a large number of economic and.
social affairs. In a sense they are governmental bodies
appertaining to the executive and not to the judicial branch
of the State, though in various matters they are armed with
judicial powers analogous to those normally carried out by
Courts of law. The question is, what are the tests or
distinguishing features, if any, which distinguish an admin-
istrative tribunal from a Court of law. Once we are able to
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formulate these tests, we would be
506
in a position to determine whether a Tribunal functioning
under the Industrial Disputes Act is or is not a judicial
tribunal properly so called.
Whether a particular function or activity is judicial or
not is often a difficult question to decide. The point was
elaborately dealt with by Lord Sankey who delivered the
judgment of the Privy Council in Shell Co. of Australia v.
Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1). The question raised in
that case was whether the Board of Review, which was set up
in 1925 under the Commonwealth Income Tax legislation, was a
Court exercising judicial powers of the Commonwealth ? The
High Court of Australia decided by a majority that it was an
administrative and not a judicial tribunal and this majority
judgment was affirmed in appeal by the Privy Council. Lord
Sankey remarked in course of his judgment that "the decided
cases show that there are Tribunals which possess many of
the trappings of a Court but which, nevertheless, are not
Courts in the strict sense of exercising judicial power.
Mere externals do not make a direction by an ad hoc tribunal
to an administrative officer, an exercise by a Court of
judicial power."
The actual decision in the case rested on the ground
that the Board of Review could not be a judicial tribunal,
as its orders were not conclusive for any purpose whatsoev-
er. The decision, it seems, has only a negative value. The
Lord Chancellor enumerated a series of negative propositions
which stated inter alia that a tribunal is not necessarily a
Court because two or more contending parties appear before
it, nor because it hears witnesses, or gives a final deci-
sion which affects the right of the parties. What the real
or positive test is, the Privy Council did not care to
formulate, though the judgment quoted, with approval, cer-
tain observations of Griffith C.J. given in another Austra-
lian case, namely, Huddart Parker & Co. v. Moorehead("’),
which to some extent neutralised the effect of the negative
tests enumerated in the judgment. The observations of Grif-
fith C.J. are as follows :--
(1) [1931] A.C. 276. (2) 8 C.L.R. 330,
at p. 357.
507
"I am of opinion that the words ’judicial power’......
mean the power which every sovereign authority must have of
necessity to decide controversies between its subjects, or
between itself and its subjcets, whether the rights relate
to life, liberty or property. The exercise of this power
does not begin until some tribunal which has power to give a
binding and authoritative decision (whether subject to
appeal or not) is called upon to take action."
It may be stated that the authority to hear and decide
on evidence between a proposal and an opposition though it
is one of the most essential of judicial powers, may be
present is an administrative tribunal also. In the majority
of cases, administrative bodies are also armed with the
powers of a Court of Justice in summoning witnesses, admin-
istering oaths and punishing disobedience to its order made
for the purpose of effecting its enquiries (1). As a matter
of fact, it is usual to find that those features which were
at one time attached exclusively to activities carried on in
a Court of law are being extended to committees, commissions
or boards conducting enquiries under directions or supervi-
sion of the Government. The presence or absence of these
features, therefore, does not furnish any conclusive test to
determine whether a particular body is a judicial body or
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not. In the observations of Griffith C.J. quoted above, the
learned Chief Justice laid stress on the power to make a
binding and authoritative decision as the essential element
in the exercise of judicial power. The exact meaning and
implication of these expressions were the subject matter of
discussion in later Australian cases and it was held by the
majority of the Judges in Rola Co. (Australia) Pty. Limited
v. The Commonwealth (2), that t. hey do not simply mean that
if an authority is given power to decide controverted ques-
tions of fact and its determination is made binding on the
parties to the controversy, it would be sufficient to show
that judicial power was entrusted to such authority. A
determination, it was pointed out, may be binding on the
parties
(1) Vide W F. O’Connor v. Waldron [1935] A,C. 67 at p, 82.
69 C.L.R. 185.
508
in the same sense as a contract is binding on them. What is
necessary is that the determination by its own force and
without the aid or instrumentality of any other authority or
power must affect the rights and obligations of the parties;
or in other words, the decision itself irrespective of the
facts decided, must create rights and impose obligations;
and it should be enforceable as such under the ordinary law
of the land. This undoubtedly is one of the fundamental
tests which distinguishes a judicial body from one which
exercises administrative or quasi-judicial functions. Some-
times the decision or report of the administrative tribunal
becomes operative after it is accepted by the head of the
department under which the tribunal conducted its enquiries
and it is then enforced by some sort of administrative
process; or it might create rights between the parties which
have to be sued upon in the ordinary way in a Court of law
and it is only on the basis of a judgment or decree that is
obtained in such action that relief could be had by the
party. The essence of judicial determination is that nothing
further remains to be done except the enforcement of the
judgment, a step which is compelled automatically by the law
of the land.
The other fundamental test which distinguishes a judicial
from a quasi-judicial or administrative body is that the
former decides controversies according to law, while the
latter is not bound strictly to follow the law for its
decision. The investigation of facts on evidence adduced by
the parties may be a common feature in both judicial and
quasi-judicial tribunals, but the difference between the two
lies in the fact that in a judicial proceeding the Judge has
got to apply to the facts found, the law of the land which
is fixed and uniform. The quasi-judicial tribunal on
the other hand gives its decision on the differences between
the parties not in accordance with fixed rules of law but on
principles of administrative policy or convenience or what
appears to be just and proper in the circumstances of a
particular case. In other words, the process employed by an
administrative tribunal in coming to its decision is not
what is known as ’judicial
509
process’ (x). Sir Maurice Gwyer in his deposition before
the Committee on Minister’s Powers appointed by the English
Parliament in 1929 stated that "a clear distinction is to be
drawn between judicial and quasijudicial powers." The
’judicial power’ was defined by the witness as a power to
decide a question of legal right in a dispute between par-
ties involving either a finding of fact or the application
of a fixed rule or principle of law or involving both. "The
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quasi-judicial power," he defined as meaning "the power of
giving decisions on questions of differences of an adminis-
trative and not justiciable character which cannot be deter-
mined by reference to any fixed law or principle of law but
are matters of administrative discretion and judgment "(2).
In Cooper v. Wilson (3), Scott L.J. quoted with approval and
adopted as the basis of his judgment the following passage
from the report of the above committee:
"A true judicial decision presupposes an existing dis-
pute between two or more parties, and then involves four
requisites :--(1) The presentation (not necessarily orally)
of their case by the parties to the dispute; (2) if the
dispute between them is a question of fact, the ascertain-
ment of the fact by means of evidence adduced by the parties
to the dispute and often with the assistance of argument by
or on behalf of the parties on the evidence; (3) if the
dispute between them is a question of law, the submission of
legal argument by the parties; and (4) a decision which
disposes of the whole matter by a finding upon the facts in
dispute and an application of the law of the land to the
facts so found, including where required a ruling upon any
disputed question of law. A quasi-judicial decision equally
presupposes an existing dispute between two or more parties
and involves (1) and (2) but does not necessarily involve
(3) and never involves (4). The place of (4) is in fact
taken by administrative action, the character of which is
determined by the Minister’s free choice."
(1) See Robson’s Justice and Administrative Law, p. 74.
(2) Vide Committee of Minister’s Powers, Minutes of Evd.,
Vol. II, pages 15-16 and also Robson’s Justice and Adminis-
trative Law, p. 319.
(3) [1937] 2 K.B. 309.
510
In our opinion these statements correctly bring out the
distinction between a judicial tribunal and an administra-
tive body which exercises quasi-judicial functions. These
being the essential features which distinguish the two
classes of tribunals, we would have to ascertain with refer-
ence to the provisions of the Industrial Disputes Act, which
class or category of tribunals an Industrial Tribunal comes
under.
The object of the Industrial Disputes Act, as set out in
the preamble, is "to make provisions for investigation and
settlement of industrial disputes and for certain other
purposes hereinafter appearing." The word "settlement"
suggests the idea of establishing compromise between the
interests of disputing parties.
There are three classes ’of authorities provided for by
the Act who are entrusted with the powers and duties of
investigation and settlement of industrial disputes. First
of all, there are conciliation officers or Boards of Concil-
iation, whose duties mainly are to induce parties to come to
a fair and amicable settlement amongst themselves. Second-
ly, there are Courts of Enquiry and though they are’ de-
scribed as Courts, their duties end with investigation into
the matters referred to them and submitting reports there-
upon to the appropriate Government. Lastly, there are
Industrial Tribunals composed of independent persons who
either are or had been Judges of a High Court or District
Judges or are qualified for appointment as High Court
Judges.
It will be seen from the descriptions given above that
the Board of Conciliation or Court of Enquiry constituted
under the Industrial Disputes Act could, on no account, be
regarded as judicial tribunals. To enable them to investi-
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gate facts they are however armed with certain powers of
compelling attendance of witnesses and production of docu-
ments etc. These provisions are to be found in section 11
of the Act. The significant thing to note is, that there is
no distinction made in this respect between Conciliation
Boards and Courts of Enquiry on the One hand and Industrial
Tribunals on the other. The same powers are conferred
511
the three classes of authorities without any distinction
whatsoever and sub-section (3) of section 11 further lays
down that any enquiry or investigation by a Board, Court of
Enquiry or Tribunal shall be deemed to be a judicial pro-
ceeding within the meaning of sections 193 and 228 of the
Indian Penal Code. This means that proceedings before an
Industrial Tribunal or for the matter of that before the
other two bodies also could be deemed to ’be judicial pro-
ceedings only for certain specified purposes. The express
provision making the proceedings judicial proceedings for
those purposes only emphasises that they are not judicial
proceedings otherwise.
Under section 15 (1), the Industrial Tribunal has got to
submit its award to the appropriate Government and sub-
section (2) lays down that on receipt of such an award, the
appropriate Government shall by order in writing declare the
award to be binding. A different provision has been made in
regard to cases where the Government itself figures as a
party to the dispute. In such cases, if the Government
considers it inexpedient on public grounds to give effect to
the award either in whole or in part, it may, at the earli-
est opportunity, lay the award for consideration before the
Provincial or Central Legislative Assembly as the case may
be and the Legislative Assembly may. by its resolution
confirm, modify or reject the award. After the resolution
is passed, the Government is to declare the award so con-
firmed or modified to be binding [see sub-section (3)].
Sub-section (4) of section 15 expressly lays down that an
award declared to be binding under any two of the previous
sub-sections shall not be called into question in any manner
whatsoever. The Government is not merely to declare the
award binding but under section 19 (3), it has got to speci-
fy the date when the award would come into force and also to
fix the period during which it would remain binding, and
this period shall not exceed one year.
It will be seen, therefore, that there is nothing in the
Industrial Disputes Act from which it could be inferred that
the Industrial Tribunal really functions as a Court exercis-
ing judicial functions. Regarding
512
the trappings or the external indicia of a Court, its
i position is almost the same as that of the Board of Con-
ciliation or Court of Enquiry and Bakshi Sir Tek Chand
concedes that the latter are not judicial tribunals at all.
The powers of an Industrial Tribunal are certainly wider
than those of the other bodies, but it has no power to make
a final pronouncement which would proprio vigore be binding
on, and create rights and obligations between the parties.
It is for the appropriate Government to declare the award to
be binding and the part which the Government plays in such
matters is not a mechanical part merely, for the award can
really become operative only when the date of its commence-
ment and the period of its duration are fixed, and it is for
the Government and Government alone to. fix the same. With
regard to the other class of cases, where the Government
itself is one of the parties to the dispute, the position is
still worse. An award in such cases is always subject to
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the contingency of being rejected or modified by the legis-
lature before whom it could be placed for consideration
at the option of the Government. Where a contingency like
this is attached to an award, it can never be regarded as a
final or binding decision which is of the essence of a
judicial proceeding. The fact that in cases of disputes
between private employers and their workmen, the Government
has to accept the award as it is, makes no difference in
principle. Possibly, this rule was made in consideration of
the status and training of the people who constitute the
Tribunal, but nevertheless the determination cannot acquire
any authority or force, so long as the appropriate
Government does not make the declaration and fix the time of
its operation as mentioned above. In regard to the other
class of awards, where the Government is one of the disput-
ing parties, the award on the face of it is neither the
final nor the authoritative pronouncement on the matter in
dispute, and it is always in the powers. of one of the
disputing parties to subject it to further scrutiny at the
hands of the legislature who can reject the whole award or
effect such changes in it as it considers proper. This
shows the real nature of the Tribunal and it is not and
513
could not be suggested that the Industrial Tribunal is a
Tribunal which exercises judicial functions when the dispute
is only between private employers and their workmen, and it
ceases to be such when the employer is the Government it-
self.
We would now examine the process by which an Industrial
Tribunal comes to its decisions and I have no hesitation in
holding that the process employed is not judicial process at
all. In settling the disputes between the employers and the
workmen, the function of the Tribunal is not confined to
administration of justice in accordance with law. It can
confer rights and privileges on either party which it con-
siders reasonable and proper, though they may not be within
the terms of any existing agreement. It has not merely to
interpret or give effect to the contractual rights and
obligations of the parties. It can create new rights and
obligations between them which it considers essential for
keeping industrial peace. An industrial dispate as has been
said on many occasions is nothing but a trial of strength
between the employers on the one hand and the workmen’s
organization on the other and the Industrial Tribunal has
got to arrive at some equitable arrangement for averting
strikes and lock-outs which impede production of goods and
the industrial development of the country. The Tribunal is
not bound by the rigid rules of law. The process it employs
is rather an extended form of the process of collective
bargaining and is more akin to administrative than to judi-
cial function.
In describing the true position of an Industrial Tribu-
nal in dealing with labour disputes, this Court in Western
India Automobile Association v. Industrial Tribunal, Bom-
bay, and others(1) quoted with approval a passage from
Ludwig Teller’s well known work on the subject, where the
learned author observes that "industrial arbitration may
involve the extension of ,existing agreement or the making
of a new one or in general the creation of new obligations
or modification of old ones, while commercial arbitration
generally
(1) [1949] F.C.R. 32] at p. 345.
514
concerns itself with interpretation of existing obligations
and disputes relating to existing agreements." The views
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expressed in these observations were adopted in its entire-
ty by this Court. Our conclusion, therefore, is that an
Industrial Tribunal formed under the Industrial Disputes Act
is not a judicial tribunal and its determination is not a
judicial determination in the proper sense of these expres-
sions.
We now come to the other question as to whether an
appeal could be taken to this Court against an award of an
Industrial Tribunal by special leave under article 136 of
the Constitution. Article 136 is a part of Chapter IV of
the Constitution which deals with the Union Judiciary. The
different jurisdictions of the Supreme Court have been
prescribed in a series of articles commencing from article
131. Article 131 defines the original jurisdiction of the
Supreme Court. Article 132 deals with its appellate powers
in cases where substantial questions of law as to the inter-
pretation of the Constitution are involved. Article 133
contains the provision relating to appeals in civil cases
from judgments, decrees and orders of the High Courts;and
article 134 makes provisions relating to criminal appeals.
Article 135 lays down that the Supreme Court shall have
jurisdiction and powers with respect to any matter not
covered by articles 133 and 134, if such jurisdiction and
power could have been exercised by the Federal Court prior
to the coming into force of the present Constitution. Then
comes article 136 which runs as follows:
"(1) Notwithstanding anything in this Chapter, the
Supreme Court may, in its discretion, grant special leave 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."
The article is worded in the widest terms possible. It
vests in the Supreme Court a plenary jurisdiction in the
matter of entertaining and hearing appeals by granting of
special leave against any kind of judgment, decree or order
made by any Court or tribunal in any
515
cause or matter and the powers could be exercised in spite
of and overriding the specific provisions for appeal con-
tained in the previous articles. The controversy so far as
the present case is concerned mainly centers round the
interpretation to be put upon two words, namely, "determi-
nation" and "tribunal" used in the article. Does the word
"tribunal" mean a judicial tribunal only and is the expres-
sion "determination" restricted to what is known as "judi-
cial determination"?
Sir Alladi’s contention is that in interpreting these
words we should follow the principle of ejusdent generis.
"Determination," he says, must be taken to be judicial
determination which is of the same nature as decree, judg-
ment, order or sentence; and "tribunal" associated with the
word" Court" could not but mean "judicial tribunal."
Bakshi Sir Tek Chand on the other hand lays stress on
the fact that the word "determination" was not in the origi-
nal draft Constitution, and it was subsequently added,
presumably with a view to widen the scope of article 136 and
include within it, the decisions of administrative and
quasi-judicial tribunals also. He points out that according
to the definition given in section 2 (b) of the Industrial
Disputes Act, "award" means a determination either interim
or final of an industrial dispute by an Industrial Tribunal.
There is undoubtedly something to be said in favour of
both these views. The difficulty, in our opinion, arises
from the fact that neither of these terms "determination" or
"tribunal" has a fixed or definite connotation in ordinary
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language. The word "determination" means and signifies the
ending of a controversy or litigation by the decision of a
Judge or Arbitrator. It cannot be said that it is restrict-
ed exclusively to proceedings in court. Likewise, the
dictionary meaning of the word "tribunal" is ’court of
justice’ or ’seat of a Judge.’ By ’Judge’ we mean some
authority by which contested matters are decided between
rival parties. Here again, it is not possible to say that
the expression is applicable only to a
66
516
regular court of law. If the tribunal is a full-fledged
judicial tribunal, it is not disputed that its decisions
would be proper subject-matter of appeal under article
,136 of the Constitution. The question is whether this
article includes within its scope the determinations of
quasi-judicial tribunals as well.
Our view is that ordinarily we should not put any re-
stricted interpretation upon the plain words of an article
in the Constitution and thereby limit our powers of granting
special leave for appeals, which the Constitution for best
of reasons did not choose to fetter or circumscribe in any
way. At the same time, we must admit that some sort of
restricted interpretation may be unavoidable in view of the
context in which particular words appear; and certain re-
strictions may be implicit in the very purpose for which
article 136 has been framed. Article 136 empowers us in our
discretion to hear appeals from pronouncements of all infe-
rior courts and tribunals. With regard to law courts, no
difficulty arises. As regards tribunals which are not courts
in the proper sense of the expression, it may not be proper,
in our opinion, to lay down a hard and fast rule that no
appeals could, on any account, be allowed against determina-
tions of such tribunals. There are numerous varieties of
these adjudicating bodies, whose structures vary greatly in
character and composition and so do the powers and functions
which they exercise. The best thing to do would be to
examine each type of cases as it arises and if we find that
with regard to determinations emanating from certain tribu-
nals it is not possible for us to exercise fully and effec-
tively the powers of an appellate Court, such determinations
must be held to lie outside the purview of article 136 of
the Constitution.
This disability in the matter of exercising our powers
as an appellate Court might arise from the fact that the
rules and principles by which we ordinarily judge the sound-
ness or otherwise of judicial decisions are not capable of
being applied to the determinations of certain administra-
tive tribunals. It might also arise from the fact that the
law under which the
517
tribunal functions prevents us from making any effective
order which would be binding and operative of its own force
without the intervention of some other power or authority;
or there may be some kind of contingency attached to it.
In our opinion, these difficulties do confront us in the
entertaining or hearing of an appeal against the decision of
an Industrial Tribunal. In the first place, as we have said
above, the determination of an Industrial Tribunal does not
become complete and binding unless and until it is declared
to be so by the appropriate Government. Till the Government
makes such declaration, neither of the parties to the dis-
pute can have any real reason for filing an appeal. An
appeal, if it lies, could be filed after the determination
has been declared binding. But in such cases, is it the
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determination of the Tribunal merely which is challenged by
way of appeal or is it’ the determination by the Tribunal to
which has been super-added a declaration by the Government ?
The decision in the appeal would undoubtedly affect not
merely the decision of the Tribunal but that of the Govern-
ment as well which is certainly not a tribunal within the
meaning of article 136. Assuming again that the award is set
aside and we substitute our own determination in place of
the award given by the Tribunal, will our award be enforce-
able by itself or will it require a declaration by the
Government to make it binding ? If Government is itself a
party to the dispute, will it be open to Government to place
our decision for consideration by the Legislative Assembly?
And will the Legislative Assembly be competent to reject or
modify our award ? These problems arise because under sec-
tion 15 the award under the Act becomes binding only when
the Government declares it to be so and if our judgment
takes the place of the award of the Tribunal, all the in-
firmities that attach to the award must necessarily attach
to our judgment also.
The other difficulty is no less formidable. As said
above, the Tribunal is not bound to decide the disputes by
application of the ordinary law of the land. A good deal
depends upon questions of policy
518
and public convenience. It is not possible for us to.judge
the propriety of the decision by a reference to some stand-
ard or fixed rules and we think that the very policy of the
law prevents us from interfering with the discretion exer-
cised by the Tribunal.
Where the direction is committed to any body or a tribunal
exercising quasi-judicial functions which are not lettered
by ordinary rules of law, the tribunal should in the absense
of any provision to the contrary be deemed to have the final
authority in the exercise of that discretion. We cannot sit
in appeal over their decision and substitute our own discre-
tion for theirs. ,Questions, however, may and do arise where
such quasi-judicial body attempts to usurp jurisdiction
which it does not possess. It may assume jurisdiction under
a mistaken view of law or refuse to exercise jurisdiction
properly by adoption of extraneous or irrelevant considera-
tions;or there may be cases where in its proceedings the
tribunal violates the principles of natural justice. In all
such cases the most proper and adequate remedy would be by
writs of certiorari or prohibition and the Court having
authority may direct that the decision of the body or tribu-
nal might be brought up to be quashed for lack of jurisdic-
tion or for mistake apparent on the face of it; and if the
proceedings had not terminated at that time, a writ of
prohibition may also be issued for preventing the tribunal
from exceeding its jurisdiction. The issuing of such writs
would not be an exercise of appellate powers which means the
rehearing of the case and passing of such judgment which in
the opinion of the appellate Court the original tribunal
should have made. The object of these writs is simply to
keep the exercise of powers by these quasi-judicial tribu-
nals within the limits of jurisdiction assigned to them by
law and torestrain them from acting in excess of their
authority. These principles are well settled and require no
elucidation(1). Our conclusion, therefore, is that article
136 of the Constitution does not contemplate a determination
given by the Industrial Tribunal.
(1) Rex v. Electricity Commissioners [1924] 1 K.B. 171;
Board of Education v. Rice [1911] A.C. 179.
519
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Even assuming for argument’s sake that we have got
jurisdiction under article 136, the exercise of which would
depend upon the circumstances of each case, in view of the
reasons which we have set out above, this is not an appeal
which, in our opinion, should be admitted even if we have
the power to do so.
The result is that the preliminary objection succeeds
and the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
PATANJALI SASTRI’ J.--I entirely agree with the
judgment just now delivered by Mukherjea J. and I have
nothing to add.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellant: Ganpat Rai for Tanubhai C.
Desai.
Agent for the respondents: R.R. Biswas.
Agent for the Union of India: P.A. Mehta.
519