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Daljeet And Co. Private Limited, , v. The State Of Punjab And Others, S
Structured Summary of the Opinion
Factual and Procedural Background
This matter arises from two cross-appeals against an order of a learned single Judge that partially accepted a petition filed under Article 226 of the Constitution by Daljeet and Co. (Private) Ltd., Rupnagar (the company). In March 1959 the company entered into an agreement with Ambala Bus Syndicate (Private) Ltd. under which 28 workmen were transferred to the company's service as from 10 March 1959. Several of those workmen objected, alleging the transfer was intended to break up their unity and to victimize them. An industrial dispute was raised and initially referred to the industrial tribunal at Patiala; that dispute was withdrawn and an award dated 31 May 1960 was published in the Punjab Government Gazette on 24 June 1960.
A subsequent dispute reached the labour court at Rohtak and culminated in an award dated 13 August 1960. The labour court considered the dismissal of eighteen workmen notified by Daljeet & Co. with effect from 10 April 1959. It found that, except for one named Charan Singh (who had disappeared), the remaining seventeen had not been absent after specified dates and were illegally dismissed. The labour court ordered reinstatement of thirteen with continuity of service and awarded two-thirds wages for the dismissal-to-award period; for four workmen (Ram Gopal, Sadhu Singh, Baldev Singh and Ram Singh) it found reinstatement would cause disharmony because they had made and supported a false police report and awarded them full wages for the same period as compensation instead of reinstatement.
The single Judge dismissed the workmen's petition and dismissed parts of the company's petition, but accepted the company's challenge to the labour court's award of compensation to the four workmen (i.e., quashed that part of the labour court's award). Both the company and the four workmen appealed from that order.
The opinion under summary was delivered by Harbans Singh, J., with a brief note that another judge agreed.
Legal Issues Presented
- Whether the labour court's award ordering reinstatement of thirteen workmen with continuity of service and payment of wages at two-thirds of full pay for the dismissal-to-award period was sustainable, and specifically whether the company could challenge the quantum (two-thirds) on the record before this Court.
- Whether the labour court could properly refuse reinstatement to four workmen on grounds of misconduct (the making and support of a false police report) yet nonetheless award them full wages as compensation for wrongful dismissal, and whether the single Judge was correct in quashing that part of the award.
- What is the extent of this Court's interference under Article 226 with a labour court's discretionary determination of compensation for wrongful dismissal or retrenchment (as compared with the appellate powers of the Supreme Court under Article 136).
Arguments of the Parties
Company's Arguments (Appellant)
- The company attacked (in its grounds of appeal generally) much of the labour court's award but, in argument, confined its attack to the award of wages at two-thirds of full pay for the period from dismissal (10 April 1959) to publication of the award (13 August 1960).
- The company contended there was no material on the record to show how much compensation the reinstated workmen were entitled to, noting that only one of those workmen had given evidence before the labour court.
- Reliance was placed on the decision in Rohtak Delhi Transport (Private) Ltd. v. Ch. Risal Singh and Anr. (1964-I L.L.J. 89) to argue that an award of compensation must disclose the basis on which the amount was fixed and that an absence of such disclosure warrants quashing of the award.
Four Workmen's Arguments (Appellants)
- The four workmen argued that the single Judge erred in quashing the labour court's award of compensation to them: the common charge underlying the dismissals had been wilful absence from duty, and there was no separate formal charge in the enquiry about the alleged false police report.
- They contended that even if the labour court found the false police report grounds to refuse reinstatement (to avoid future disharmony), the labour court was nevertheless justified in awarding compensation for wrongful dismissal and that this Court under Article 226 should not reassess the quantum of compensation.
- They relied on Swadesamitran, Ltd. v. their workmen (1960-I L.L.J. 504) to support the proposition that compensation awarded by tribunals is a discretionary matter and not readily interfered with on appeal (noting differences in appellate jurisdiction between Article 136 and Article 226 were invoked in argument).
Table of Precedents Cited
| Precedent | Rule or Principle Cited For | Application by the Court |
|---|---|---|
| Rohtak Delhi Transport (Private) Ltd. v. Ch. Risal Singh and Anr., 1964-I L.L.J. 89 | The principle that an arbitrator (or adjudicator exercising judicial functions) should, in an award awarding compensation, disclose the reasons and indicate how a sum of compensation was arrived at; absence of such disclosure may warrant quashing. | The court distinguished this authority: it dealt with damages for dismissal and an award that failed to show basis for the quantum. The present case involved reinstatement (where the normal order is full wages from dismissal to reinstatement). The court held the Rohtak decision had little or no bearing on the specific question raised by the company's counsel and found no merit in the company's attack on the two-thirds award because the employer had not alleged or proved mitigation (that the employees had been earning wages elsewhere). |
| Swadesamitran, Ltd. v. their workmen, 1960-I L.L.J. 504 | The principle that compensation awarded by industrial tribunals for retrenchment (and, by analogy, wrongful dismissal) is a matter of discretion for the tribunal and not readily open to challenge on appeal before the Supreme Court; also referenced to distinguish the wider powers of Article 136 from the more limited scope under Article 226. | The court applied this reasoning by treating compensation awarded by a labour court for wrongful dismissal (where reinstatement is not ordered) as akin in principle to compensation for retrenchment, concluding that this Court under Article 226 should not re-examine the quantum. On this basis the court allowed the appeal of the four workmen and set aside the single Judge's order quashing their compensation. |
Court's Reasoning and Analysis
The court proceeded by separate analysis of each appeal:
- Company appeal (attack on two-thirds wages): The court observed that although the company's grounds attacked much of the labour court's findings, the learned counsel concentrated on the two-thirds wage award for the reinstated workmen. The company argued that the labour court had not shown how the compensation figure was derived and relied on the Rohtak Delhi Transport decision. The court distinguished that decision because it concerned damages awarded without explanation by an arbitrator and did not involve an order of reinstatement. The court reiterated the generally accepted rule that when a dismissal is set aside and the employee is reinstated with continuity of service, the normal order is payment of full wages from the date of dismissal to reinstatement (this applied whether the employee was in government or private service). The court reasoned that if an employer wanted departure from that normal order (for example, by showing that the dismissed employee had obtained other employment and been paid wages during the period), it was incumbent on the employer to raise and prove that matter during the inquiry. No such allegation or proof was placed before the labour court in this case; accordingly the company's attack on the two-thirds award had no force and the company appeal was dismissed on that point.
- Four workmen's appeal (award to those refused reinstatement): The court considered the contention that the single Judge was wrong to quash the labour court's award of full wages to these four. The court noted the common charge for dismissal had been wilful absence, but that in the enquiry the four were found to have made and supported a false report to the police; on that basis the labour court refused reinstatement to avoid future disharmony but nonetheless awarded full wages for the dismissal-to-award period. The court found it impossible to ignore the apparent inconsistency (awarding full wages to those refused reinstatement while giving two-thirds to those reinstated), but held that the labour court was competent to award compensation to workmen whose reinstatement it refused. Relying on Swadesamitran, the court treated compensation as a discretionary matter for the labour court and observed that it was not the function of this Court under Article 226 to reappraise the quantum of compensation. On that reasoning the court accepted the four workmen's appeal and set aside the single Judge's order that had quashed the labour court's compensation award to them.
- Remedy and costs: The court concluded by dismissing the company's appeal, allowing the four workmen's appeal, restoring the labour court's award for payment of wages to those four from the date of dismissal to the date of publication of the award, and directed that the parties bear their own costs.
Holding and Implications
Holding: The court dismissed the company's appeal and allowed the appeal of the four workmen. It set aside the order of the learned single Judge insofar as that order quashed the labour court's award of wages (full wages for the dismissal-to-award period) to Ram Gopal, Sadhu Singh, Baldev Singh and Ram Singh. The parties were directed to bear their own costs.
Implications:
- The immediate effect is restoration of the labour court's compensation award to the four workmen for the period from dismissal to publication of the award.
- The court affirmed that when dismissal is set aside and reinstatement ordered, the normal remedy is payment of full wages from the date of wrongful dismissal to reinstatement, unless the employer adduces evidence (e.g., mitigation by subsequent earnings) to justify departure from that rule.
- The court treated compensation awarded by labour courts for wrongful dismissal (where reinstatement is not ordered) as a matter of discretion not normally re-opened by this Court under Article 226; by analogy to the principle in Swadesamitran for retrenchment compensation, this Court declined to reassess the quantum of compensation in the exercise of writ jurisdiction.
- No broader legal precedent was announced beyond applying existing principles; the decision restores the labour court's awards in this case and does not purport to expand appellate or writ jurisdiction.
Opinion authored by Harbans Singh, J.; a second judge recorded agreement.
1. These are two cross-appeals against an order of a learned single Judge partially accepting a petition filed under Article 226 of the Constitution by one of the appellants, Daljeet and Co. (Private), Ltd., of Rupar.
2. The matter arose in the following way. The appellant-company is engaged in the road transport business and in March 1959 it entered into an agreement with another company, the Ambala Bus Syndicate (Private), Ltd., by which 28 workmen employed by the syndicate were to be transferred to the service of the Company. The result of this agreement was that the 28 workmen in question became the employees of the company as from 10 March 1959, but a number of them objected to being transferred in this manner on the allegation that the transfer was intended to break up their unity and was a measure of victimization. These workmen raised an industrial dispute which was referred for adjudication to the industrial tribunal at Patiala. That dispute, however, was withdrawn, the formal decision being by an award of the tribunal dated 31 May 1960 published in the Punjab Government Gazette on 24 June 1960.
3. In actual fact that dispute had been superseded by the dispute which culminated into the award of the labour court at Rohtak dated 13 August 1960 which was attacked by two petitions filed in this Court one by the company under Article 226 and one by some of the workmen under Article 227 of the Constitution.
4. The dispute referred to the labour court related to the dismissal of eighteen workmen, whose names were listed serially in the notification by Daljeet & Co. with effect from 10 April 1959. The issue framed was:
whether the dismissal of the following workmen is justified and in order; if not, to what relief each of them is entitled.
5. One of the workmen named Charan Singh whose name appeared No. 18 in the list had apparently disappeared from the scene entirely. Regarding the other seventeen the labour court held that they had never absented themselves from duty after 11 March 1959 or at any date after 23 March and that they had been illegally dismissed by the management for their alleged wilful absence from duty in spite of notices.
6. By way of relief the labour court ordered the reinstatement of thirteen of the workmen with continuity of service and ordered the payment of two-thirds of their wages from the date of their dismissal to the date of the publication of the award. These workmen were directed to report for duty within fifteen days from the publication of the award.
7. Regarding the remaining four workmen named Ram Gopal, Sadhu Singh, Baldev Singh and Ram Singh, it was found that there were grounds for not ordering their reinstatement, which would be found to cause disharmony and disturb the peace of the business, because it was found in the enquiry that they had made and supported a false report to the police against the managing director of the company. In these circumstances, they were awarded compensation equivalent to their full wages from the date of their dismissal to the date of the publication of the award.
8. The learned single Judge dismissed the petition of the workmen and also dismissed the petition of the company as regards the order of the reinstatement of thirteen of the workmen and payment of arrears at the rate of two-thirds of their wages. The petition of the company was, however, accepted to the extent that the part of the award by which compensation was awarded to the four workmen whose reinstatement was not considered to be justified was quashed. Appeals have been filed against his order by the company and by the four workmen who have thus been deprived of compensation.
9. In the appeal of the company, although in the grounds of appeal all that part of the award which has been left intact by the learned single Judge was attacked, including the findings of fact as to the rights and wrongs of the dismissal, the learned Counsel for the appellant has confined his argument to an attack on the award of wages at the rate of two-thirds for the period from the date of dismissal, 10 April 1959, to the date of the publication of the award, 13 August 1960. His argument is that there is no material whatever on the record to show to how much compensation the workmen whose reinstatement was ordered were entitled, and thus in fact only one of these workmen actually appeared as a witness before the labour court. Reliance is placed on the decision in Rohtak Delhi Transport (Private), Ltd. v. Ch. Risal Singh and Anr. 1964-I L.L.J. 89. In that case a driver had been dismissed and the resulting dispute was referred to a local lawyer as arbitrator under Section 10A of the Industrial Disputes Act. The terms of reference were:
whether Manohar Lal who has since been dismissed at the inquiry is entitled to any compensation, and if so, to what amount.
The arbitrator in his brief award found that the enquiry had not been properly conducted and was almost ex parte, and that the workman had not been given any opportunity for his defence, which was against the principles of natural justice and law, and he then proceeded to award the driver Rs. 2,700 as compensation without indicating' how this sum was arrived at. It seems that the driver had put in a detailed statement of his claim which was for Rs. 4,578. Grover, J., held that the award must be quashed because the award of the arbitrator exercising judicial functions should ex facie show the reason on which it was based and should disclose that it is the result of a quasi-judicial approach by one who is called upon to adjudicate upon important contested claims. The learned Judge was of the opinion that the arbitrator ought in his award to have given some indication of the various accounts on which he awarded compensation totalling Rs. 2,700 and given some indication of what items in the detailed statement of claim he was allowing and what items he was disallowing. Dua, J., agreed with the order, but wrote a separate judgment in which he considered that the matter was one of some difficulty, and that he had some hesitation in agreeing with the views of his learned brother.
10.In my opinion, this decision has little or no bearing on the question raised by the learned Counsel for the appellant in the present case. In the first place, it only deals with damages for dismissal and not with reinstatement and it seems to me that the normal order when a dismissal is set aside, and the dismissed employee is reinstated with continuity of service, is for the payment of full wages from the date of the dismissal held to be wrongful to the date of reinstatement. This is so whether the dismissed employee is a Government servant or employed in a private industry, and in the present case the labour court has actually only allowed wages for the period in question at the rate of two-thirds. It seems to me that if an employer in an enquiry of this kind wishes the normal order to be departed from, and the only ground I can think of which would justify such a course would be that during the period in question the dismissed employee had obtained employment and been paid wages by another employer, it is for the employer to raise this matter in the course of the enquiry and prove that the employee had been earning wages for the whole or any part of the period in question, but no such allegation appears to have been made at any stage in the present case, I am therefore of the opinion that there is no force in the appeal of the company.
11. Turning to the appeal of the four workmen who were held not to be entitled to reinstatement, but ware awarded full wages for the period in question of which they have been deprived by the decision of the learned single Judge, the learned Counsel for these appellants has argued that this part of the order could not properly be passed by the learned single Judge. It is pointed out that the ground on which the dismissal of all the seventeen workmen was ordered by the company on 10 April 1959 was the same, namely, that they had wilfully absented themselves from duty from 11 March 1959 onwards in spite of notices, and no separate charge was brought in the enquiry which led to the omnibus order of dismissal against these four workmen regarding any alleged false report made to the police about an assault by an officer of the company on any workman. It was argued that the labour court was quite justified In coming to the conclusion that although this false charge might justify the refusal of an order for reinstatement on the ground that the strained relations resulting therefrom might cause future trouble, they were nevertheless entitled to some compensation for their wrongful dismissal and it was contended that it was not for this Court in a petition under Article 226 to enter into the question of whether the quantum of compensation awarded was justified or not.
12. In this connexion reliance is placed on a decision in Swadesamitran, Ltd. v. their workmen 1960-I L.L.J. 504. This was a case relating to compensation for retrenchment and two main points of contention arose, firstly whether the retrenchment was unjustified and improper and secondly the amount of compensation found suitable by the industrial tribunal which had adjudicated on the dispute.
13. It is to be remembered that this was an appeal in the Supreme Court under Article 136 of the Constitution and I do not think it can be questioned that the powers of the appellate Court in such a matter are wider than the powers of this Court under Article 226 of the Constitution. in that case it was found that the retrenchment was unjustified and improper, and regarding compensation it was held that compensation to be awarded to retrenched workers is a matter of discretion for the labour tribunals and as such is not open to challenge in appeal before the Supreme Court.
14. I cannot see any difference in principle between compensation awarded by an industrial tribunal or labour court to a workman who has been wrongfully dismissed and to one who has been wrongfully and unlawfully retrenched, when no order is passed that the workmen should be reinstated.
15. I find it impossible not to sympathize to some extent with the view of the learned single Judge that there is something illogical in awarding wages at full rate to the four workmen whose reinstatement was considered inadvisable because of some act of misconduct on their part, while only awarding wages at the rate of two-thirds to the workmen who were being reinstated, and I would have had no hesitation at all in holding that the workmen should not be held to be entitled to any compensation at all If their dismissal had been based on the alleged false report to the police as well as on their alleged absenting themsalves from duty. Nevertheless, I am of the opinion that the labour court could award them compensation for wrongful dismissal while rejecting their claim to reinstatement, and that it is not the function of this Court under Article 226 to go into the question whether the sum awarded was excessive or justified. The result is that I would dismiss the appeal of the company and accept that of the four workmen and set aside the order quashing the award of the labour court for payment of wages to them from the date of their dismissal to the date of the publication of the award. I consider it a fit case in which the parties may be left to bear their own costs.
Harbans Singh, J.
16. I agree.
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