Section 106 of the Factories Act, 1948: Limitation on Prosecution

Section 106 of the Factories Act, 1948: Limitation on Prosecution and its Jurisprudential Evolution

1. Introduction

The Factories Act, 1948 (hereinafter “the Act”) is a welfare legislation seeking to secure the health, safety and well-being of workers engaged in manufacturing processes. Chapter X, comprising Sections 92 to 106-A, imposes penal sanctions for non-compliance. Within this framework, Section 106 prescribes a short limitation period for launching prosecutions. The provision, though procedural, critically shapes enforcement strategy by reconciling two competing objectives: (i) prompt institution of criminal action so that evidence remains contemporaneous, and (ii) legal certainty for occupiers and managers who face strict liability offences under the Act. This article undertakes a doctrinal and jurisprudential analysis of Section 106, drawing upon leading authorities and statutory interpretation principles in Indian law.

2. Statutory Text and Structure

Section 106 reads in substance:

“No Court shall take cognizance of any offence punishable under this Act unless complaint thereof is made within three months of the date on which the alleged commission of the offence came to the knowledge of an Inspector: Provided that where the offence consists of disobeying a written order made by an Inspector, complaint thereof may be made within six months of the date on which the offence is alleged to have been committed.”[1]

Two explanations appended by Act 20 of 1987 clarify (a) computation in continuing offences and (b) situations where time for compliance has been granted or extended. Statutorily, the provision is couched in negative form (“No Court shall take cognizance…”) thereby operating as a bar to jurisdiction and not merely a directory guideline.

3. Legislative Rationale

The penal chapter was conceived as an ancillary yet essential component of the Act’s primary objective of ensuring safe factories. As underscored by the Supreme Court in A.S. Krishna v. State of Madras (1957)[2], ancillary provisions that facilitate enforcement are within the legislative competence of the State under Entry 24 (industry) read with Entry 36 (factories) of List II. Section 106 therefore represents a conscious legislative choice to promote expedition while preserving the integrity of evidence.

4. Key Elements of Section 106

4.1 “Complaint” vis-à-vis “Cognizance”

High Courts initially differed on whether the limitation applies to filing the complaint or to the Court’s act of taking cognizance. In Gopal Das Sakseria v. State (1955)[3], the Allahabad High Court held that the phrase “complaint… made” fixes limitation only for the act of filing; cognizance may logically follow later. Similar reasoning was adopted by the Bombay High Court in State v. Rukhabsa Jinwarsa (1953)[4]. The judicial consensus now firmly supports this distinction; delay inside the court system post-filing does not vitiate proceedings.

4.2 Computation of “Three Months”

Whether “month” means 30 days or a calendar month was resolved in In re V.S. Mehta (A.P. HC 1970)[5]. Construing Section 3(35) of the General Clauses Act, 1897, the Court held that, in post-1850 statutes, “month” denotes a calendar month. Consequently, the outer period is measured by calendar reckoning. The Bombay High Court reiterated this view in Skoda Auto Volkswagen v. Commissioner (2021)[6].

4.3 “Date on which the alleged commission of the offence came to the knowledge of an Inspector”

Knowledge is ordinarily acquired on the date of inspection or when a statutory accident report is received. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court in P.D. Jambekar v. State of Gujarat (1973)[7] clarified that the critical point is when the Inspector has definite knowledge of facts constituting the offence, not merely a suspicion. Thus, where an accident is reported, the period commences upon completion of the Inspector’s inquiry—an approach followed in Sanjeev Hiremath v. Government of Tamil Nadu (Madras HC 2023)[8].

4.4 Continuing Offences and Explanations (a) & (b)

Sub-section (2)(a) treats each day’s default—e.g., failure to maintain safety fencing under Section 21—as a fresh offence, effectively resetting limitation at every point in time. The Gujarat High Court in J.B. Mangharam & Co. v. ESIC (1962)[9] adopted this rationale when considering unsafe machinery. Explanation (b) further protects the prosecution where the occupier seeks and obtains extended time to remedy defects; limitation runs from the expiry of the extended period.

4.5 Proviso: Six-Month Period for Disobedience of Written Order

Where an Inspector issues a written order (e.g., under Sections 39 or 40 relating to dangerous buildings or machinery), the maximum period doubles to six months, recognising the administrative time required to monitor compliance. Recent applications include Shivappa Madalli v. State of Karnataka (Karnataka HC 2022)[10], which nonetheless dismissed the complaint as time-barred because the written order prerequisite was absent.

5. Interface with the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973

Section 468 CrPC prescribes general limitation for certain offences. Yet Section 479 CrPC expressly saves special limitation provisions in other enactments. Consequently, Section 106 operates as a lex specialis; where it applies, Section 468 has no field. The doctrinal principle of generalia specialibus non derogant supports this construction.

6. Jurisprudential Trends

6.1 Early Strict Construction

In the 1950s courts adopted a literal approach, often quashing prosecutions on narrow technicalities (Rukhabsa, Gopal Das). This phase reflected judicial anxiety to uphold due process in the wake of newly enacted social legislation.

6.2 Functional and Purposive Shift

The Supreme Court’s decision in P.D. Jambekar marked a purposive turn, stressing that limitation should not defeat substantive justice where the Inspector’s inquiry is indispensable for crystallising the offence. Subsequent High Court decisions, including Skoda Auto and Sanjeev Hiremath, have applied this functional lens, focusing on the factual matrix rather than technical counting alone.

6.3 Contemporary Enforcement and Corporate Accountability

The robust reading of Section 2(n) (“occupier”) in J.K. Industries v. Chief Inspector of Factories (1996)[11] embeds personal liability of directors. Short limitation under Section 106 incentivises Inspectors to move expeditiously against such high-level management. Conversely, corporations cannot indefinitely postpone legal closure. This equilibrium is integral to the Act’s enforcement architecture, as elaborated by the Supreme Court in Ardeshir Bhiwandiwala v. State of Bombay (1962)[12], which reiterated that protective statutes must be “effectively supervised”.

7. Policy Evaluation

Section 106 reflects legislative confidence in swift prosecution as a deterrent. A comparison with Section 113-B of the Evidence Act (dowry death presumption) in State of Karnataka v. Manjunathegowda (2003)[13] shows a broader criminal-law trend of balancing presumptions and limitation to secure convictions without undermining fairness. Given the absolute or strict liability character of most factory offences, a prompt, well-investigated complaint is essential to constitutionally withstand Article 21 due-process scrutiny.

8. Recommendations

  • Statutory Clarity: Parliament may codify the “knowledge” trigger by defining it as the conclusion of inquiry to remove residual ambiguity.
  • Digital Reporting: Mandatory electronic timestamping of inspection reports can transparently mark the start of limitation.
  • Training of Inspectors: Capacity-building programmes should emphasise timely prosecution to avoid dismissal on technical grounds, as seen in Shivappa Madalli.
  • Harmonisation with CrPC: Express reference in Section 106 to Section 473 CrPC (extension of limitation for sufficient cause) could safeguard rare cases where delay is justifiable.

9. Conclusion

Section 106 stands at the confluence of procedural law and occupational safety policy. Its three-month window propels enforcement officers to act diligently while conferring repose upon industry actors. Judicial evolution from rigid literalism to purposive interpretation underscores the courts’ commitment to the Act’s welfare objectives. The provision, therefore, epitomises the dynamic interplay between statutory text, judicial craftsmanship, and administrative practice within India’s labour-law regime.

Footnotes

  1. The Factories Act, 1948, s. 106.
  2. A.S. Krishna v. State of Madras, 1957 AIR SC 297.
  3. Gopal Das Sakseria v. State, 1955 SCC OnLine All 99.
  4. State Govt. v. Rukhabsa Jinwarsa, 1953 AIR Nag 180.
  5. In re V.S. Mehta, 1968 SCC OnLine AP 205.
  6. Skoda Auto Volkswagen India Pvt. Ltd. v. Commissioner, 2021 SCC OnLine Bom .
  7. P.D. Jambekar v. State of Gujarat, AIR 1973 SC 309.
  8. Sanjeev Hiremath v. Government of Tamil Nadu, Madras HC Crl.OP No. (2023).
  9. J.B. Mangharam & Co. v. ESIC, Madhya Pradesh HC 1962.
  10. Shivappa S. Madalli v. State of Karnataka, Karnataka HC 2022.
  11. J.K. Industries Ltd. v. Chief Inspector of Factories, (1996) 6 SCC 665.
  12. Ardeshir H. Bhiwandiwala v. State of Bombay, 1962 AIR SC 29.
  13. State of Karnataka v. M.V. Manjunathegowda, (2003) 2 SCC 188.