Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MADHYA PRADESH MINERAL INDUSTRYASSOCIATION
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE REGIONAL LABOUR COMMISSIONERJABALPUR AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/04/1960
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1960 AIR 1068 1960 SCR (3) 476
CITATOR INFO :
F 1966 SC 189 (10)
R 1972 SC1177 (5,12,15,20)
ACT:
Minimum Wages, Fixation of-Notification by State Government
prescribing minimum rates for stone-breaking or stone-
crushing in mines - Validity - Minimum Wages Act, 1948 (11
of 1948), SS. 5 (2), 27, Sch., Part 1 item 8.
HEADNOTE:
The Madhya Pradesh Government issued a notification under s.
5 (2) of the Minimum Wages Act, 1948 (II of 1948),
prescribing
477
the minimum rates of wages for employment in stone breaking
and stone crushing operations carried on in mines in
exercise of the authority delegated to it by the President
by a notification under Art. 258 of the Constitution. The
appellant company, engaged in manganese mining industry,
challenged the validity of the said notification by a writ
petition filed in the High Court and its case was that the
said notification was ultra vires s. 5(2) of the Act. The
High Court found against the appellant and rejected the
petition. The question for determination in the appeal,
therefore, was whether item 8 in Part 1 of the Schedule to
the Act, properly construed, included stone breaking and
stone crushing operations in a mining industry:
Held, that item 8 in Part 1 of the Schedule to the Minimum
Wages Act, 1948, was not intended to cover the breaking or
crushing of stones incidental to mining operations and must
be limited to stone breaking and stone crushing employment
in quarries. The impugned notification was, therefore,
ultra vires s. 5(2) of the Act and could not be enforced.
It would, however, be open to the Government, if it so
desired, to achieve the object it had in view in issuing the
impugned notification by adding appropriate items to the
Schedule in exercise of its power under s. 27 of the Act :
Held, further, that it was not necessary for the appellant
to challenge the vires of the Presidential notification in
the first instance in order that he might impugn the
notification in question.
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A. Thangal Kunju Musaliar v. M. Venkitachalam Potti,
[1955] 2 S.C.R. 1196, referred to,
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 389 of 1959.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated October 25, 1957,
of the Bombay High Court at Nagpur in Misc. Petition No.
476 of 1956.
A. S. Bobde and Ganpat Rai, for the appellant.
H. J. Umrigar K. L. Hathi and R. H. Dhebar, for respondent
No. 2.
1960. April 7. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-This appeal arises -from a writ petition
filed by the appellant, Madhya Pradesh Mineral Industry
Association, in which the appellant challenged the validity
of the notification issued by the Madhya Pradesh State
Government on March 30, 1952, under S. 5(2) of the Minimum
Wages Act, 1948 (11 of 1948) (hereinafter called the Act).
The High Court of Bombay at Nagpur dismissed the appellant’s
petition but has granted the appellant
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478
a certificate of fitness under Art. 133(1)(c) of the
Constitution. It is with the said certificate that the
present appeal has been brought to this Court.
The appellant is a non-profit making company limited by
guarantee and registered under s. 26 of the Indian Companies
Act, 1913. It has been formed with the object of protecting
and promoting the interest of its members-shareholders who
are engaged in the mining industry by all legitimate and
constitutional means. It appears that under Art. 258 of the
Constitution the President of India by Notification No.
S.R.O. 2052 published on December 11, 1951, entrusted
Governments of . certain States including Madhya Pradesh
with their consent the functions of the Central Government
under the Act in so far as such functions relate to the
fixation of minimum rates of wages in respect of employees
employed in stone-breaking or in stone-crushing operations
carried on in mines situated within their respective States.
Pursuant to the said delegation the Madhya Pradesh
Government issued the impugned notification purporting to
act under s. 5(2) of the Act. This notification has
prescribed the minimum rates of wages for employment in
stone-breaking or in stone-crushing operations carried on in
mines. The rates thus prescribed were inclusive of dearness
allowance or compensatory cost of living allowance.
The Regional Labour Commissioner (Central), Nagpur,
Respondent 1, wrote to the appellant for the first time on
June 20, 1956, stating that the State of Madhya Pradesh,
Respondent 2, had considered the question whether the Act
was applicable to the manganese mining industry and had come
to the conclusion that it was so applicable; that is why the
appellant’s members were asked by respondent 1 to implement
the Act within a fortnight from the receipt of his letter.
The appellant made several representations to respondent 1
urging that the Act was inapplicable to the manganese mining
industry; nevertheless respondent 1 threatened large-scale
prosecution of the appellant’s members on the basis that the
Act applied to them, and its provisions bad been contravened
by them. The appellant was thus driven to file the
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present petition because it alleged that it had no alter-
native remedy, at any rate equally speedy and efficacious,
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and so it was urged on its behalf that the High Court should
issue a writ quashing the impugned notification as ultra
vires. In its petition the appellant had also alleged that
the notification issued by the President of India under Art.
258 cannot fasten upon the manganese mining industry the
character of employment in stone-breaking or stone-crushing
and if that was the object of the said notification it was
invalid.
The respondents disputed the correctness of the appellant’s
contention that the impugned notification is invalid. It
was urged on their behalf that any industry wherein the
workers are employed in operations involving stone-breaking
or stone-crushing is governed by the Act. In their written
statement they described the details about the mining
operations and contended that the mining of manganese ore
mainly consists of development work or the removal of over-
burden, breaking of big mineral stones like boulder ore or
bed ore to manageable sizes, dressing of ores to remove
impurities, etc. According to the respondents, having
regard to the nature of the manganese mining industry the
Act applied to the stone-breaking or stone-crushing
operations connected with it.
The High Court has accepted the respondent’s plea and has
rejected the appellant’s prayer that a writ should be issued
in its favour prohibiting the respondents from enforcing the
provisions of the Act against its members. Unfortunately,
on two important points the High Court has misdirected
itself. It appears to have assumed that the impugned
notification has added an entry in the Schedule to the Act,
and has observed that as a result of the said addition the
provisions of the Act came to be applied to the employment
in stone-breaking or in stone-crushing operations carried on
in the mines. The High Court has made this observation in
setting out the appellant’s case and it is on the basis of
this observation that the High Court has proceeded to
examine the validity of the appellant’s contention. It is,
however, clear that the impugned notification does not
purport to add any
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item in Schedule I and that was also not the case of the
appellant. Thus the assumption made by the High Court on,
both the points is, with respect, erroneous.
In its judgment the High Court has also observed that the
vires of the impugned notification, though challenged in the
petition, was not challenged before -the High Court and so
the only question that remained for its decision was one of
interpretation of the relevant provisions of the entry
introduced by the notification. This statement again does
not appear to be entirely correct. The principal, if not
the sole, ground on which the appellant sought for a writ
from the High Court was that the impugned notification was
ultra vires s. 5(2) of the Act. If the validity of the said
notification had been conceded by the appellant its writ
petition would have immediately become ineffective because
if the notification is valid then the question of
construction of the material entry can present no difficulty
whatever. In terms the stonebreaking and stone-crushing
operations carried on in mines are specified and the
appellant could not possibly urge that the relevant
activities carried on by its members did not attract the
said description. In view of the fact that the High Court
has made a clear statement to the effect that the vires of
the impugned notification had not been challenged before it
we were at first not inclined to allow Mr. Bobde, for the
appellant, to argue that point before us; however, after
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hearing him and after considering the rest of the record we
are satisfied that the statement made in the judgment is not
accurate. In the petition filed by the appellant the
validity of two notifications was challenged; the first was
the notification issued by the President of India under Art.
258 of the Constitution, and the second is the impugned
notification under which proceedings are threatened against
the appellant’s members. It is clear from the record that
the appellant did not and could not have pressed its case
against the validity of the first notification, but it did
press its objection against the validity of the second
notification ; and that would be clear from the certificate
of fitness granted by the High Court itself. The
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certificate says that the questions raised by the appellant
relate to the applicability of the provisions of the Act to
persons employed in stone-breaking or stone-crushing
operations carried on at various manganese mines. Now it is
clear that this question can arise only if the appellant
seeks to challenge the validity of the notification, not
otherwise. It is because the employees in question are,
according to the appellant, not employed under any of the
items prescribed in the Schedule to the Act that the
impugned notification is invalid; in that context the
questions posed in the certificate would arise. If the
notification itself is valid then the solution to the
question posed can hardly be regarded as fit for a
certificate under Art. 133(1)(c) of the Constitution.
Besides, the appellant’s contention against the validity of
the impugned notification has been set out in its
application for certificate before the High Court and the
same has been expressly repeated in the statement of case
filed by the appellant before us. We must, therefore, hold
that the High Court was in error in assuming that the vires
of the impugned notification had been conceded by the
appellant before it. This is another serious infirmity in
the judgment of the High Court.
As a consequence of the two infirmities in the judgment the
approach which the High Court adopted in dealing with the
matter has been considerably influenced. It has no doubt
considered the meaning of the word " employment and " stone
" in connection with the expression stone-breaking " and "
stone-crushing". Even this part of the discussion’ in the
judgment seems to assume that the impugned notification has
really added one item to the list in the Schedule. It has
apparently not been realised that if the present
notification purported to make an addition to the items in
the Schedule there would have been no controversy between
the parties. According to the High Court employment should
be given its wider sense and should be held to mean " the
action of employing or the state of being employed ". The
High Court has also held that the word " stone " should be
taken to mean " a piece of rock or hard mineral sub. stance
(other than metal) of a small and moderate
482
size". The interpretation of the two words adopted by the
High Court has been taken by it from the Shorter Oxford
Dictionary, and having assigned to the two words the two
respective meanings just stated the High Court has held that
stone-breaking and stone-crushing operations carried on in
mines would attract the provisions of the Act.
Before dealing with the vires of the impugned notification
it would be material to examine the relevant provisions of
the Act. The Act has been passed to provide for minimum
rates of wages in certain employments. Section 2(b) defines
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the appropriate government as meaning, inter alia, (1) in
relation to any scheduled employment carried on by or under
the authority of the Central Government or in relation to a
mine the Central Government, and (2) in relation to any
other scheduled employment the State Government. It would
thus appear that the Legislature intended that the
provisions of the Act may in due course be extended to mines
and so it has prescribed that in respect thereof the Central
Government would be the appropriate Government. Section
2(e) defines an employer as meaning, inter alia, any person
who employs whether directly or through another person or
whether on behalf of himself or any other person one or more
employees in any scheduled employment in respect of which
minimum rates of wages have been fixed under this Act.
Section 2(g) -defines scheduled employment as meaning an
employment specified in the Schedule or any process or
branch of work forming part of such employment. Section 3
authorises the appropriate government to fix minimum rates
of wages in regard to the employments specified in Parts I
and II of the Schedule respectively and prescribes the
procedure in that behalf. Section 5 lays down the procedure
for the fixing and revising of minimum wages. Section 5(2)
provides that after following the procedure prescribed by
the said section the appropriate government shall by
notification in the official gazette fix, or as the case may
be, revise the minimum rates of wages in respect of each
scheduled employment, and unless such notification otherwise
provides, it shall come into force on the expiry
483
of three months from the date of its issue. There is only
one more section which needs to be mentioned; that is s. 27
which empowers the appropriate government to add to either
part of the Schedule any employment in respect of which it
is of opinion that minimum rates of wages should be fixed
under this Act after following the procedure prescribed by
it, and the section adds that after the notification is thus
issued the Schedule shall, in its application to the State,
be deemed to be amended accordingly.
It is thus clear that the whole scheme of the Act is
intended to work in regard to the employments specified in
Part I and Part II of the Schedule and the Legislature has
wisely left it to the appropriate government to decide to
what employments the Act should be extended and in what
areas. Section 5(2) empowers the appropriate government to
fix or revise minimum wages in regard to any of the
employments in the Schedule to which the Act applies. This
power can be exercised only if the employment in question is
specified in the Schedule and the Act is therefore
applicable to it. Section 27 confers a wider power on the
appropriate government, and in exercise of the said power
the appropriate government may add an employment to the
Schedule. The nature and extent of the-said two powers are
thus quite separate and distinct and there can be no doubt
that what can be done by the appropriate government in
exercise of its power under s. 27 cannot be done by it in
exercise of its power under s. 5(2). It is significant that
the impugned notification has been issued by the Madhya
Pradesh Government by virtue of the powers under s. 5(2) of
the Act which have been delegated to it by the President in
exercise of his authority under Art. 258 of the Con-
stitution. The main argument urged by Mr. Bobde is that the
impugned notification is ultra vires s. 5(2) because stone-
breaking and stone-crushing operations in manganese mines do
not full under any of the items in Part I of the Schedule.
The dispute thus raised really lies within a very narrow
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compass: Does employment in stone-breaking or in stone-
crushing operations carried on in mines specified in the
impugned notification amount to employment in stone-breaking
484
Schedule to the Act? It is common ground that the
employment in question does not fall under any other item in
Part I.
It is true that the provisions of the Minimum Wages Act are
intended to achieve the object of doing social justice to
workmen employed in the scheduled employments by prescribing
minimum rates of wages for them, and so in construing the
said provisions the court should adopt what is sometimes
described as a beneficent rule of construction. If the
relevant words are capable of two constructions preference
may be given to that construction which helps to sustain the
validity of the impugned notification; but it is obvious
that an occasion for showing preference for one construction
rather than the other can legitimately arise only when two
constructions are reasonably possible, not otherwise. Now,
does employment in stone-breaking or stone-crushing as
specified in Part I of the Schedule on a reasonable
construction include stone-breaking or stone-crushing
operations in a mining industry ? In answering this question
it would be necessary to bear in mind that the scheduled em-
ployment under s. 2(g) covers the employment specified in
the Schedule or any process or branch of work forming part
of such employment. It is conceded before us by both the
parties that the provisions of the Act apply to the
scheduled employments in all branches of their work which
may be incidental to the main scheduled employments. The
impugned notification, on the other hand, applies only to
the stone-breaking or stone-crushing operations carried on
in mines and it does not cover other operations connected
with the manganese mining works. This position is
inconsistent with the scheme of the Schedule and that is a
point which prima facie is in favour of the appellant’s
contention.
It is, however, urged by Mr. Umrigar, for the respondents,
that the word " employment " as well as the word " stone "
used in item 8 should receive their widest denotation, and
that, according to him, would include stone-breaking or
stone-crushing operations
485
carried on in mines. It is conceded that stone-breaking or
stone-crushing operations have to be carried on in regard to
the work in manganese mines. Stones are beaten to small
pieces by means of a hammer and they are washed and passed
through sieves of different meshes before manganese is
obtained. When the Schedule refers to the employment of
stone-breaking or stone-crushing does it refer to the
incidental stone-breaking or stone-crushing in
connection with manganese mine operations ? In a chemical
or a geological sense stones may include manganese and that
is one of the meanings given to the word in the Shorter
Oxford Dictionary. On the other hand, the word " stone " as
popularly understood in ordinary parlance particularly when
it is coupled with the word " breaking " or " crushing "
would exclude manganese. When we speak of stone-breaking or
stone-crushing normally we refer to stone in the sense of
"piece of rock" and that would exclude manganese.
Employment in stone-breaking or stone-crushing in this sense
would refer to quarry operations. Thus whether or not the
word " stone " should be understood in the wider sense or in
a limited sense must depend upon the context in which the
word is used. The intention which is reasonably deducible
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from the context would decide whether it is the expanded
meaning or the limited meaning of the word that can be
accepted. The same consideration could apply to the
denotation of the word " employment We have carefully
considered all the items in the Schedule and have taken into
account the general beneficent policy of the Act but we are
unable to hold that when item 8 refers to stone-breaking or
stone-crushing it is intended to cover the breaking or the
crushing of stones incidental to the manganese mining
operations. The context seems to exclude the application of
the wider meaning of the word " stone " used in item 8.
Therefore, our conclusion is that the stone-breaking or
stone-crushing operations which are carried on in mines are
not included in item 8 in the Schedule; and if that be the
true position the impugned notification issued by the State
Government under s. 5(2) is ultra vires,
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486
The High Court has referred to the fact that in describing
some items in Part I the word " any " has been used whereas
the said word has not been used in item 8. For instance,
item I refers to employment in any woollen carpet making or
shawl weaving establishment, whereas item 8 merely refers to
employment in stone-breaking and stone-crushing. The
absence of the word " any " according to the High Court
indicates that the word "stone" as well as the word "
employment" had been used in their wide denotation. We are
not satisfied that this conclusion is right,. In fact it
appears to us that if the word " any" had been used in item
8 it might have helped to make its scope wider; that is to
say, if item 8 bad read as " employment in any ,stone-
breaking or any stone-crushing operations " it might have
tended to make its scope wider. As it stands the entry is,
in our opinion, confined to Stone-breaking and stone-
crushing employment in quarries and not in mines.
As we have already pointed out a notification under s. 5(2)
can be issued only in respect of employments which fall
under the Schedule. We would, however, like to add that
this conclusion merely helps to emphasise the fact that the
appropriate government may, and can, act under s. 27 of the
Act if it is desired that the employment in mines or in
connection with any operations incidental to mining should
be governed by the provisions of the Act. Section 27
empowers the appropriate government to add items to the
Schedule and it would be open to the appropriate government
to adopt such a course if it is intended to achieve the
object with which the impugned notification has been issued.
One more point still remains to be considered. Mr. Umrigar
attempted to argue that the appellant cannot challenge the
vires of the impugned notification without challenging the
vires of the delegation of authority effected by the
notification issued by the President of India under Art. 258
of the Constitution. The argument is that if the
notification of the President is valid then the State
Government has merely exercised its authority as a delegate
and its validity cannot be challenged in isolation from the
principal
487
or parent notification which conferred the authority on the
State Government. This contention has obviously not been
raised before the High Court. Besides, if the State
Government purports to take action on the strength of the
impugned notification which is invalid it would be open to
the appellant to resist the threatened action on the ground
that the notification is invalid and no action can be
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validly taken against the appellant for the contravention of
the provisions of the Act. As this Court has observed in A.
Thangal Kunju Musaliar v. M. Venkitachalam Potti (1), "
there can be no agency in the matter of a commission of a
wrong. The wrong-doer would certainly be liable to be dealt
with as a party directly responsible for his wrongful
action", and it was added that " on the analogy of a civil
wrong the tortfeasor could certainly not protect himself
against the liability on the ground of having committed the
tort under the directions of his principal, and so the agent
could in no event exculpate himself from the liability for
the wrongful act done by him and if he is amenable to the
jurisdiction of the High Court the High Court could
certainly issue an appropriate writ against -him under Art.
226". By parity of reasoning it would follow that if the
impugned notification issued by the State Government is
ultra vires it cannot fall back upon the President’s
notification in support of the plea that the action which it
proposes to take against the appellant would nevertheless be
justified. We must accordingly hold that it is open to the
appellant to claim a writ against the respondents oven
without challenging the vires of the Presidential
notification.
In the result we hold that the impugned notification issued
by respondent 2 is invalid and cannot be enforced. The
appeal is accordingly allowed, the order passed by the High
Court set aside and the application for a writ made by the
appellant allowed with costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1196,1211.
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