Sanctioned Overtime Bills Constitute a “Pre-Existing Right” – Bombay High Court Re-defines the Reach of Section 33(C)(2) ID Act

Sanctioned Overtime Bills Constitute a “Pre-Existing Right” – Bombay High Court Clarifies the Executory Scope of Section 33(C)(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947

Introduction

In The Superintending Engineer, MSEDCL & Anr. v. Pundlik Kondiba Pachpinde & Ors. (W.P. No. 4812/2018), the Aurangabad Bench of the Bombay High Court examined whether retired “Artisan-A” employees of the Maharashtra State Electricity Distribution Company Limited (MSEDCL) could recover unpaid overtime wages through proceedings under Section 33(C)(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (ID Act).

Three workmen, having already received partial overtime payments until February 2010, invoked Section 33(C)(2) to claim arrears for the period March 2010 to their respective dates of retirement (Aug 2011 / Jun 2012). The Labour Court awarded the claimed amounts with 12 % interest. MSEDCL assailed the order, contending that:

  • There was no “pre-existing right”—the post of Artisan-A was not covered by the governing circular dated 26 June 2000.
  • Section 33(C)(2) is purely executory; entitlement had never been adjudicated.
  • Overtime could not exceed 75 hours per quarter per the circular.

Justice Prafulla S. Khubalkar dismissed the writ petition, holding that sanctioned overtime bills unmistakably created a pre-existing, enforceable right; therefore the Labour Court acted within jurisdiction.

Summary of the Judgment

  • The Court affirmed the Labour Court’s award of Rs 1,89,000/-, Rs 2,60,000/- and Rs 1,63,080/- to the three respondents, along with 12 % interest.
  • Internal sanction letters (Exhs. U-21 to U-23) issued by the Executive Engineer conclusively established entitlement; a fresh adjudication was unnecessary.
  • Circular dated 26 June 2000 could not retrospectively curtail overtime already performed and sanctioned; nor did it exclude Artisan-A.
  • Section 59 of the Factories Act embeds a statutory right to overtime wages; management instructions cannot override statutory protection.
  • Precedents such as Bombay Chemical Industries v. Deputy Labour Commissioner (2022) 5 SCC 629 were distinguished: where entitlement documents are undisputed, Section 33(C)(2) remains available.
  • Consequently, the writ petition was dismissed and rule discharged; no cost order was made.

Analysis

Precedents Cited & Their Influence

  1. Bombay Chemical Industries v. Deputy Labour Commissioner, (2022) 5 SCC 629
    • Held that Section 33(C)(2) cannot be used for first-time determination of entitlement.
    • The High Court distinguished it: in Bombay Chemical genuineness of employment and documents was disputed; here, sanction letters and prior payments stood admitted.
  2. Vaibhav Laxman Suravkar v. Ultra Drytech Engineering Ltd. (2004) 2 Bom C R 185
    • Reiterated the need for a pre-existing right. The petitioners relied on it, but the Court found the factual matrix incomparable because the Suravkar employees lacked any documentary sanction.
  3. MSETCL v. Shivaji Tukaram Kumawat (W.P. 11248/2022)
    • The High Court had earlier allowed similar overtime claims of “Artisan-A” employees; the Supreme Court dismissed the SLP against that decision (Order dated 12 Aug 2024).
    • This precedent offered persuasive guidance that sanctioned overtime bills suffice to trigger Section 33(C)(2).
  4. Foundational Supreme Court dicta in Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Ganesh Razak (1995) and Kankuben v. Sardarbhai (2007) were reiterated for the proposition that Section 33(C)(2) mirrors the powers of an executing court.

Legal Reasoning

The Court’s reasoning may be distilled into four interconnected steps:

  1. Documentary Sanction = Pre-Existing Right – Sanction letters issued by a competent officer (Executive Engineer) were never withdrawn or nullified by the Superintending Engineer. Consequently, entitlement accrued the moment sanction issued.
  2. Computation vs. Adjudication – Where the right exists, the Labour Court’s role is confined to calculation. Overtime hours and statutory rate (2× ordinary wages per Section 59, Factories Act) are purely arithmetical.
  3. Statutory Supremacy Over Administrative Circulars – Even if a circular sought to cap overtime at 75 hours per quarter, it cannot override Section 59 nor invalidate already-accrued claims, especially when the organisation itself sanctioned those claims.
  4. Distinguishing Adverse Precedents – In Bombay Chemical, the employee’s very status and the authenticity of documents were disputed. In the present case, MSEDCL admitted the overtime performance, the hours, and the sanction letters; the only quibble was managerial disinclination to pay. That factual certainty anchors jurisdiction under Section 33(C)(2).

Impact of the Judgment

  • Expansion of Section 33(C)(2) – Internal sanction orders, even if pending final approval, now have judicial recognition as enforceable “benefits” under Section 33(C)(2).
  • Operational Implications for PSUs – State utilities and other public-sector employers can no longer rely on managerial non-approval or generic circulars to defeat sanctioned monetary benefits.
  • Influence on Overtime Litigation – Artisans, drivers, and support staff in essential services often accumulate unpaid overtime. The decision signals that once an officer in the approval chain signs off, employees may move Labour Courts directly for computation.
  • Administrative Discipline – Organisations are likely to tighten internal approval workflow; issuing a sanction will now be treated as a binding obligation.

Complex Concepts Simplified

Section 33(C)(2), ID Act
An employee’s “execution” remedy. Think of it as using the Labour Court as a collection agent once payment is due, rather than a forum for first-time decision on entitlement.
Pre-Existing Right
A benefit already acknowledged—by statute, settlement, award, or undisputed documents—before litigation starts.
Sanction vs. Approval
“Sanction” is the administrative nod given by a responsible officer; “approval” is the higher-level confirmation. The Court held that once sanction issues and is not withdrawn, the right crystallises.
Overtime under Section 59, Factories Act
Work beyond 9 hours a day or 48 hours a week attracts wages at double the ordinary rate, a statutory (mandatory) entitlement.
Executory Proceedings
Legal processes that implement or enforce an already-determined right, akin to execution of a money decree.

Conclusion

The Bombay High Court’s decision sets an authoritative precedent: sanctioned overtime bills, even if stranded at an intermediate bureaucratic level, are sufficient proof of a pre-existing right. Labour Courts can therefore entertain Section 33(C)(2) applications to compute and enforce such dues without sending workmen through a protracted adjudicatory maze.

By harmonising statutory rights under the Factories Act with the executory design of Section 33(C)(2), the Court protects both the letter and spirit of labour welfare legislation, discouraging employers—public and private alike—from withholding payments on technical or procedural grounds. Future overtime and wage-arrears claims will inevitably cite this ruling, reinforcing prompt payment and administrative accountability across industries.

Commentary prepared by: Legal Analysis & Research Division | Date: 2025-06-14

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Bombay High Court

Judge(s)

HONBLE JUSTICE PRAFULLA S. KHUBALKAR

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