N.L Untwalia, J.— This is an appeal by special leave directed from the order dated April 1, 1969 of the Central Government Labour Court, Delhi passed under Section 33-C(2) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1974 (for brevity — “the Act”). The workman concerned was Shri R.S Bhatia who died during the pendency of the appeal in this Court. His legal representatives were substituted as respondents in his place. But hereinafter in this judgment by the respondent would be meant Shri R.S Bhatia who was the original respondent and the applicant under Section 33-C(2).
2. The claim of the respondent was that he was employed in service of the appellant in the year 1928 and was promoted as an Accountant in the year 1938 on which post he worked up to October 8, 1958. On and from October 9, 1958 he was given the additional duty as an officiating Manager on temporary basis in the Delhi branch of the appellant Bank. He was suspended on April 4, 1961 and was dismissed from service on June 22, 1961. He filed an application under Section 33-A of the Act challenging the order of his dismissal. The respondent's said application was registered as ID No. 66/1962. Shri Anand Narayan Kaul, Presiding Officer of the Labour Court, Delhi by his order dated July 23, 1966 held in that case that the respondent who was applicant under Section 33-A of the Act was a workman. The appellant's contention in that behalf was not accepted. Eventually, however, the complaint under Section 33-A was dismissed on July 24, 1969 on merits.
3. The respondent in his application under Section 33-C(2) of the Act claimed that under the Shastry Award which was published by the Government of India on March 26, 1953 he was entitled to some benefits which the appellant failed to pay. A statement of claim computed in terms of money was attached as Annexure A to the application. The claim made by the respondent was for the period 1954 to 1961 and the application under Section 33-C(2) was filed on July 10, 1968. The total claim made in the application was to the tune of Rs 10,237.64.
4. The appellant resisted the claim of the respondent on several grounds. The Labour Court rejected the pleas set up by the appellant, allowed the application in part and computed the benefits from April 1, 1954 to October 8, 1958 at Rs 5676.22, and, adding to that a sum of Rs 347.61, certain amount for the period of the respondent's suspension in accordance with para 557 of the Shastry Award, finally determined the amount payable to the respondent at Rs 6023.83 The appellant has preferred this appeal in this Court by special leave. Its learned counsel has pressed for our consideration only three points in support of the appeal. None of the points has got any substance. We shall state the points one by one and give our reasons very briefly for their rejection.
5. The first point urged on behalf of the appellant is that the respondent was not a workman within the meaning of the Act and that the Labour Court committed an error in saying that there was no evidence led on this issue and resting its judgment on the principles of res judicata on the basis of the decision of Shri Kaul in ID No. 66 of the 1962. In our opinion the Labour Court rightly applied the principles of res judicata to the issue whether the respondent was a workman or not within the meaning of the Act. The same parties in I.D No. 69 of the 1962 joined issue on the aforesaid question. A decision given by the competent Labour Court in that regard has rightly been held as a bar on the principles of res judicata in the trial of the same issue in the present proceeding. Moreover, we find that even apart from the previous order operating as res judicata, practically there was no evidence on behalf of the appellant in support of its case that the respondent was not a workman. The only evidence of MW 1 was that in his capacity as an Accountant the respondent used to sign the salary bills of the, staff including himself. But then he further stated that these bills used to be submitted to the Head Office of the bank. The Accountant is supposed to sign the salary bills of the staff even while performing the duties of a clerk. That did not make the respondent “employed mainly in a managerial or administrative capacity”, within the meaning of sub-clause (iii) of clause (s) of Section 2 of the Act. The witness further stated that during the period of his accountancy as well as the managership (meaning thereby the officiating managership) the respondent conducted himself as an officer and the bank authorities also treated him as such. There was no paper produced to show any entrustment of managerial or administrative duty to the respondent while he was working as a mere Accountant. In South Indian Bank Ltd. v. A.R Chacko . AIR 1964 SC 1522, (1964) 5 SCR 625, (1964) 1 LLJ 19 it has been pointed out at pages 631 and 632 that there are accountants in banks who are really officers and there are other types of accountants who are merely senior clerks with supervisory duties. The respondent was merely a senior clerk doing mainly clerical duties and had no duty assigned to him of a managerial or administrative nature. It may further be added that relying upon the order of Shri Kaul the Labour Court held in the present proceeding that the respondent was an officiating Manager and hence not a workman from October 9, 1958 to April 4, 1961. The claim for that period has been disallowed on that ground alone.
6. The second plea on behalf of the appellant that the claim of the respondent under Section 33-C(2) of the Act was barred by limitation or was not fit to be entertained on the ground of undue delay or laches on the part of Respondent 1 has rightly been rejected by the Labour Court following the decisions of this Court in Bombay Gas Co. Ltd. v. Gopal Bhiva AIR 1964 SC 752, (1964) 3 SCR 709, (1963) 2 LLJ 608 and East India Coal Company Ltd. (by Chief Mining Engineer), Bararee Colliery, Dhanbad v. Rameshwar (1968) 1 LLJ 6.
7. The third submission made on behalf of the appellant that the claim ought to have been entertained by the Government under Section 33-C(1) of the Act and it was not maintainable under sub-section (2) is stated merely to be rejected. It is completely devoid of substance. In the case of East India Coal Company it has been said at p. 9 column 2:
“The fact that the words of limitation used in Section 20(2) of the Industrial Disputes (Appellate Tribunal) Act, 1950, are omitted in Section 33-C(2) shows that the scope of Section 33-C(2) is wider than that of Section 33-C(1). Therefore, whereas sub-section (1) is confined to claims arising under an award or settlement or Chapter V-A, claims which can be entertained under sub-section (2) are not so confined to those under an award, settlement or Chapter V-A.”
The argument put forward on behalf of the appellant against a principle which is firmly established and beyond any doubt or dispute appeared to us an argument in desperation.
8. For the reasons stated above, we find no merit in this appeal. It is accordingly dismissed with costs.
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