General Penalty and Criminal Liability under Section 92 of the Factories Act, 1948: An Analytical Study

General Penalty and Criminal Liability under Section 92 of the Factories Act, 1948

1. Introduction

Section 92 of the Factories Act, 1948 (hereinafter “the Act”) constitutes the fulcrum of the statute’s penal architecture. By creating a general offence encompassing every contravention “in, or in respect of, any factory,” and by visiting the occupier and the manager with imprisonment or fine, it converts the welfare-oriented provisions of the Act into enforceable commands. The present article undertakes a doctrinal and jurisprudential examination of Section 92, drawing on leading decisions of the Supreme Court and High Courts, recent amendments, and comparative policy considerations.

2. Legislative Framework and Evolution

Originally enacted with a maximum imprisonment of three months and a fine of ₹ 500, Section 92 has been amended periodically to enhance its deterrent value. The 1987 Amendment substituted higher terms, while Act 20 of 1987 simultaneously tightened the definition of “occupier” in Section 2(n). The present text (as reflected in The State of Goa v. Namita Tripathi) prescribes imprisonment up to two years and fine up to ₹ 1,00,000, with a mandatory minimum of ₹ 25,000 for contraventions of Chapter IV that occasion death.[1]

3. Constituent Elements of the Offence

3.1 “Contravention … in, or in respect of, any factory”

The phrase is deliberately capacious. It catches breaches of (i) any provision of the Act, (ii) any rule, and (iii) any written order of an Inspector. Judicial pronouncements emphasise that the breach is complete per se; proof of consequence or mens rea is unnecessary.[2]

3.2 Statutory Persons Liable

  • Occupier. Section 2(n) deems the director to be the occupier where the factory is owned by a company (J.K. Industries).[3] Where the factory belongs to a government company and ultimate control vests in the State, the government-appointed manager is the occupier (Indian Oil Corporation).[4]
  • Manager. The individual notified under Section 7 assumes co-extensive liability; neither delegation nor ignorance avails as a defence (K.K. Modi).[5]

3.3 Nature of Liability: Strict or Fault-Based?

High Courts uniformly treat Section 92 as creating statutory or absolute liability. The Allahabad High Court rejected a “good-faith practice” argument, holding that culpability exists “whether the person made liable is aware of the violation or not.”[5] The Supreme Court has underscored that such rigour is indispensable to the Act’s protective purpose (Hemant Madhusudan Nerurkar).[6]

3.4 Multiplicity of Offences

Each affected worker constitutes a separate count. The Punjab & Haryana High Court sustained multiple convictions where ten workers were required to work during rest intervals, reasoning that Section 63 read with Section 92 criminalises the default in respect of each worker (S.K. Jaganani).[7]

3.5 Quantum of Punishment

Post-2000 amendments have increased fines to keep pace with inflation and to reflect the gravity of industrial accidents. The proviso now mandates a minimum fine of ₹ 25,000 for fatal accidents and ₹ 5,000 for serious bodily injury,[1] signalling legislative intolerance of lax safety regimes.

4. Procedural Dimensions

4.1 Cognizance and Limitation

Section 105 bars courts from taking cognizance except on complaint by, or with previous sanction of, an Inspector. In Ram Kumar Lal and Anup Kumar Gupta, the Jharkhand High Court quashed cognizance where the Inspector had not established that the accused was the occupier, reiterating that procedural safeguards are jurisdictional.[8]

4.2 Bar on Parallel Prosecutions

The Karnataka High Court held that the Act constitutes a self-contained code and “does not permit parallel prosecutions under two different Acts” for the same contravention (Arun & Others).[9] Conversely, the Jharkhand High Court sustained simultaneous proceedings under Section 304A IPC and Section 92, distinguishing the offences by their legal ingredients (Ejaj Ahmad).[10]

4.3 Standard of Proof

While the offence is one of strict liability, the prosecution must still prove the factum of contravention beyond reasonable doubt.[11] Failure to do so has led to wholesale acquittals notwithstanding obvious deficiencies in compliance (Haribhai Thakar).

5. Doctrinal and Policy Analysis

5.1 Rationale for Dual Liability

Imposing liability on both the occupier and the manager serves a two-fold purpose: (i) it prevents evasion through delegation; and (ii) it aligns with the constitutional mandate to protect labour under Articles 21 and 42. Ramanlal Chimanlal eloquently describes this as essential to “secure for workers employment in conditions conducive to their health and safety.”[2]

5.2 Adequacy of Sanctions

Despite enhanced fines, empirical data suggest that monetary penalties remain insignificant relative to corporate turnovers. Comparative statutes—e.g., the Occupational Safety and Health Act (U.S.)—authorize penalties in millions of dollars, coupled with corporate probation. Indian policymakers may therefore consider (i) turnover-based fines; (ii) sentencing guidelines; and (iii) mandatory publication orders.

5.3 Interaction with the New Labour Codes

The Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020 proposes administrative compounding of minor offences. While this may decongest courts, critics warn of diluting deterrence. A calibrated approach—retaining Section 92-style imprisonment for grave breaches while allowing compounding for technical defaults—appears prudent.

6. Conclusion

Section 92 epitomises the enforcement spine of Indian factory legislation. Judicial interpretation has progressively aligned the provision with contemporary realities—extending liability to directors, recognising government control, and upholding strict liability. Yet, challenges persist: procedural lapses, inadequate penalties, and doctrinal conflicts with general criminal law. A future-oriented reform agenda must therefore (i) reinforce investigative capacity, (ii) rationalise penalty structures, and (iii) harmonise Section 92 with the forthcoming labour codes, thereby ensuring that the promise of safe and humane industrial workplaces translates into tangible reality.

Footnotes

  1. Factories Act, 1948, s. 92 as amended by Act 20 of 1987 and further amendments (see The State of Goa v. Namita Tripathi, S.C. 2025).
  2. Ramanlal Chimanlal v. State of Gujarat, AIR 1967 Guj 148.
  3. J.K. Industries Ltd. v. Chief Inspector of Factories and Boilers, (1996) 6 SCC 665.
  4. Indian Oil Corporation Ltd. v. Chief Inspector of Factories, (1998) 5 SCC 738.
  5. State of Uttar Pradesh v. K.K. Modi, 1966 SCC OnLine All 375.
  6. Hemant Madhusudan Nerurkar v. State of Jharkhand, (2016) SC.
  7. S.K. Jaganani v. State, 1963 SCC OnLine P&H 179.
  8. Ram Kumar Lal v. State of Bihar, 2012 SCC OnLine Jhar 2087; Anup Kumar Gupta v. State of Bihar, 2012 SCC OnLine Jhar 236.
  9. Arun & Others v. State of Karnataka, 2019 SCC OnLine Kar.
  10. Ejaj Ahmad v. State of Jharkhand, 2009 SCC OnLine Jhar 1442.
  11. State of Gujarat v. Haribhai Vithalbhai Thakar, (1995) SCC OnLine Guj.