Workmen of Orient Paper Mills Ltd. Brajrajnagar
Vs. M/S. Orient Paper Mills Ltd. [1968] INSC 189 (13 August 1968)
13/08/1968 BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA BHARGAVA,
VISHISHTHA SHELAT, J.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION: 1969 AIR 976 1969 SCR (1) 666
CITATOR INFO :
R 1984 SC 356 (16)
ACT:
Industrial Dispute-Minimum
Wages-Industry-cum-Region principle-Applicability when there were no comparable
industries in the same line of business-Linking of dearness allowance element
of minimum wages with price index-If obligatory-Industrial Tribunal-Duty to
decide dispute as referred.
HEADNOTE:
An industrial dispute regarding fixation of
wages and bonus, between the respondent-paper mills and its workmen, the
appellants, was referred to the Industrial Tribunal in October, 1962, and the
reference included a dispute about bonus payable for the years 1962-63 and
1963-64. The Tribunal held: (1 ) that there were in the region no ' other
concerns in the same line of business which could be compared with the
respondent but that there were three collieries, a steel plant, a cement
factory and an aluminum company in the region which were comparable with the
respondent, that as the minimum wage in those industries which was about Rs. 95
was above that of the respondent, a revision of the minimum wage in the
respondent-mills was justified. that such minimum wage should be fixed for the
price index prevailing at the time of the award taking 100 as the basic index
for the year 1939, and that on that basis, the basic wage and dearness allowance
should be Pa. 73, and that Pa. 11 was payable as production bonus; (2) that the
dearness allowance element need not be linked to the price index, but that wage
should be fixed at the prevailing price index leaving it to the workmen to ask
for increase in minimum wage on any further rise in price index; (3 ) that the
revised wages were payable with effect from 13th December, 1962; (4) that the
three elements of basic wage, dearness allowance, and production bonus which
make up the total minimum wage packet of Rs. 84 (Rs. 73 + Pa. 11) should be in
the proportion of 3: 3: 1, and that profit bonus was payable at three months'
basic wage. The proportion of 3:3: 1 was fixed by the Tribunal, because, under
an agreement of 1959 the management and workmen accepted that proportion by
mutual consent. On the basis of that agreement, the Tribunal also held that;
(5) casual workers should not be equated to
permanent workers for purpose of minimum wages, and that casual and radii
workers should not be allowed bonus on the same basis as the permanent workers;
(6) The appellants also claimed before the Tribunal 6 months' basic wage
instead of 3 months' basic wage, which was being paid by the respondent, on the
assumption that certain before staff were being paid as bonus 3 months'
consolidated wage consisting of basic wage and dearness allowance; but the
Tribunal rejected the claim.
In appeal to this Court.
HELD: (1) This Court laid down in French
Motor Car Co. Ltd.
v. Its Workmen, [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 16.
that where there is no concern in the same industry in the region comparable
with the concern in which wages have to be fixed, greater emphasis should be
laid on the region part of the industrycum-region principle. To give full
effect to this rule the Tribunal should have proceeded to fix the minimum wage
in the respondent-mills on the basis of the average minimum wage prevailing 667
in the other industries in that region. The respondent was not providing any
amenities which should be taken into account in fixing the minimum wage,
different from the amenities provided by those concerns in the region which
were being compared. Therefore, the Tribunal should have fixed the minimum wage
packet at Rs. 95 per mensem which was the average wage prevailing in all those
concerns and should not have fixed the wages on an entirely different basis.
[671 F-H; 672 G-H] (2) The Industrial, Tribunal has the discretion, in
appropriate cases, of making a direction linking the dearness allowance element
of a wage to the price index, or to fix the wage at the prevailing price index
leaving the labour to raise a fresh demand and, if necessary, a fresh
industrial dispute for further rise in wages, in case there is marked variation
in price index and the wage fixed becomes outdated; and therefore. the Tribunal
was not wrong in choosing the latter alternative. [674 F-G; 675 B] Hydra
(Engineers), v. The Workmen, [1969] 1 S.C.R. 156, referred (3) This direction'
was objected to by respondents, on the ground that the respondent may have to
pay arrears for 5 or 6 years which would be a heavy burden. But the previous
agreement of 1959 was binding only upto 12th December, 1962. So, the Tribunal
was right in directing that the revised wages should take effect from 13th
December, 1962, in view of the considerable rise in the price index and the
fact that the labour had not raised a fresh dispute for a further revision of
wages since the date of the award. [675 G-H] (4) No error was committed by the
Tribunal in the break-up of the wages into the 3 elements of basic wage,
dearness allowance and production bonus in the proportion of 3: 3: 1.
The contention of the workmen that the
proportion should be 3:1: 1: so as to increase the basic wage element and
consequently the profit bonus. was rightly rejected by the Tribunal, because.
the proportion of 3:3:1 was accepted by mutual consent. [674 B-C] (5) The
distinction between casual workers and permanent workers for purpose of minimum
wage, and casual and badli workers on the hand and permanent workers on the other
for purpose of bonus, was recognised by the parties themselves in the agreement
of 1959, and therefore, the Tribunal was right in keeping up the distinction in
its award. [675 D-E;
678 B-C] (6) The allegation that some
clerical staff was receiving what amounted to 6 months' basic wage as bonus was
incorrect. There was some clerical staff which did not get any dearness
allowance and the bonus in their case was worked out on the basis of their
wages which was only the basic wage. The appellants were wrong in assuming that
the wage of such clerical staff was a consolidated wage consisting of the 2
elements of basic wage and dearness allowance. Therefore, the appellants could
not claim 3 months' consolidated wages as bonus which would amount to 6 months'
basic wage. [677 G-H; 678 A-B] It could not be urged by the appellants that
calculation of available. surplus for purposes of bonus should have been on the
basis of the Full Bench formula approved by this Court in Associated Cement
Companies Ltd. v. Its Workmen, [1959] S.C.R. 925, for justifying 6 months'
basic wages as bonus, because, that was not the basis of the claim before the
Tribunal. Further, the Tribunal was expected to decide the dispute only as
referred to it, and at the time of the reference the accounts for the years
1962-63 and 1963-64 could not have been available, and therefore, 668 there
could not possibly be a claim for higher bonus on the basis of the application
of the Full Bench Formula. [676 DF; 677 C-D]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 390 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the Award, dated
January 11, 13, 1964 of the Industrial Tribunal, Orissa, Cuttack in Industrial
Dispute Case No. 8 of 1962.
D.L. Sengupta, Janardan Sharma, Anil Das
Chowdhury and S.K. Nandy, for the appellants.
H.R. Gokhale, K. Gobind Das, N.C. Shah,
Krishna Sen and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. The. workmen of Orient Paper Mills Ltd., Brajrajnagar, have come
up in this appeal by special leave against an award of the Industrial Tribunal,
Orissa. An industrial dispute between these workmen and the management of
Orient Paper Mills Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as "the Company")
was referred by the State Government under section 10(1) (d) of the Industrial
Disputes Act (hereinafter referred to as "the Act") for adjudication
by the Tribunal enumerating 30 different items of dispute. The Tribunal gave
its award on all the thirty items. The special leave in this Court was sought
and granted in respect of two matters covering some of these items. The first
matter related to fixation of wages, including minimum wages, and this was
covered by items Nos. 1, 3, 4, 22 and 26 in the Schedule attached to the Order
of Reference. The second matter in the appeal related to bonus covered by item
No. 2 of that Schedule. In the course of the hearing of the appeal, learned
counsel appearing on behalf of the workmen further gave up some of the points
which were the subjectmatter of the items mentioned above, so that in this
judgment we need deal with only those points which were argued by him in
support of the appeal.
The first and the main point argued with
regard to wages was that the Tribunal, after holding that there was no
identical industry in this region comparable with the Company, came to. the
view that there were other industries in the region in which minimum wages were
higher than the minimum wages paid by the Company, but failed to fix the
minimum wages in the award in accordance with the minimum wages being paid in
those industries. Instead, what the Tribunal did was to work out the minimum
wages, which should be paid, on an entirely different basis. It was also urged
in the alternative that, even in adopting the latter course, the Tribunal committed
an error inasmuch as, in making the calculation, the Tribunal only tried to
neutralise about 36 per cent of the cost of living 9n the basis of the rise in
Price Index instead 669 of permitting neutralisation to the extent of at least
90%, which could have been done when fixing the minimum wages for the owest,
class of workmen.
The principle for fixation of minimum wages
that should ordinarily be adopted was laid down by this Court in the case of
French Motor Car Co. Limited. v. Workmen(1) where it was held :"It is now
well-settled that the principle of industry-cum-region has to be applied by an
Industrial Court, when it proceeds to consider questions like wage structure,
dearness allowance and similar conditions of service. In applying that principle,
industrial courts have to compare wage scales prevailing in sinular concerns in
the region with which it is dealing, and generally speaking similar concerns
would be those in the same line of business as the concern with respect to
which the dispute is under consideration. Further, even in the same line of
business, it would not be proper to compare (for example) a small struggling
concern with a large flourishing concern." The Tribunal, in giving its
decision, kept this principle in view, but came to the finding of fact that
there were no other concerns in the same line of business as the Company in the
region which could be compared with the Company. The Tribunal found that there
are only two other paper mills in the region. They are Titaghur Paper Mill No.
3 situated at Chaudwar, and the J.K. Paper Mills at Rayagada. The Tribunal
found that the Company is an old established business carrying on manufacture
of paper on a very large scale. The Titaghur Paper Mill No. 3 started
production only in April, 1960, while the J.K. Paper Mills at Rayagada started
production in 1961-62. These two Paper Mills were, therefore, both of very
recent origin compared with the Company. The strength of their labour-force and
the annual production were also very much lower. Even the profits earned were
much smaller. On these facts, the Tribunal held that it would not be proper to
compare the wage structure for these Paper Mills with that of the Company.
TIffs is a finding of fact recorded by the Tribunal and nothing has been shown
by learned counsel for the Company which would induce us to interfere with this
finding of fact. In fact, learned counsel was unable to urge that this finding
of fact suffered from any error at all. On this finding, it is clear that the
region-cure-industry principle laid down in the ease of French Motor Car Co.
Ltd. (1) could not have been applied by the Tribunal when fixing the wages in
the Company.
(1) [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 16.
670 This Court in the same case of the French
Motor Car Co. (x) further indicated what principles should be adopted in such a
situation where there is no concern in the same industry in the region
comparable with the concern in which wages have to be fixed. That situation was
envisaged as occurring whenever the particular concern in question happens to
be already paying the; highest wages in its particular line of business. It was
held that such a case:
"there should be greater emphasis on the
region part of the industry-cum-region principle, though it would be the duty of
the industrial court to see that for purposes of comparison such other
industries in the region are taken into account as are as nearly similar to the
concern before it as possible.
Though, therefore, in a case where a
particular concern is already paying the highest wages in its own line of
business, the industrial courts would be justified in looking at wages paid in
that region in other lines of business, it should take care to see that the
concerns from other lines of business taken into account are such as are as
nearly similar as possible, to the line of business carried on by the concern
before it.
It should also take care to see that such
concerns are not so disproportionately large as to afford no proper basis for
comparison." In the light of these views which were brought to the notice
of the Tribunal, the Tribunal proceeded to consider the minimum wages paid by
three Collieries, Orient Colliery, Ibe Colliery and Himgiri Rampur Colliery,
the Rourkela Steel Plant, the Cement Factory at Rajgangpur and the Indian
Aluminum Company, Hirakud which the Tribunal found were situated not very far
away from the place where the Company had its factory. The Tribunal mentioned
that, according to the Coal Award, the minimum wage in the Collieries at the
then existing Price Index was Rs. 93-7-0; in the Cement Factory Rs. 96.88; in
the Steel Plant Rs. 95.00 and in the Aluminium Company Rs. 97.84 nP. The
Tribunal then also took into account the minimum wages being paid by other
Paper Mills situated outside the region and thereafter recorded its own
decision in the following words :--"The conclusion that flows from these
figures is that the lowest paid worker in the Paper Mill at Brajrajnagar gets
more than what is paid as minimum wage in the other two Paper Mills of Orissa,
but it is less than what is paid to the lowest paid worker in some of the Paper
Mills outside the State. In other industries, which are comparatively close to
the paper industry at (1) [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 16.
671 Brajrajnagar, the minimum wage is above
Rs. 90 in almost all the cases." On the basis of this finding of fact, the
Tribunal held that, if the minimum wage in the Company is to be fixed more on
the basis of the minimum wage prevailing in other industries in that region
which, in its opinion, would be appropriate under the circumstances of the
case, then, a revision was really necessary. We think that the criticism of
learned counsel for the workmen that the Tribunal committed an error at this
stage in merely holding that the facts found by it justified a revision and in
not proceeding to fix minimum wages on the basis of the other industries in the
region, is fully justified. It is to be noted that there is no mention in the
award of the Tribunal that the Company at any stage put forward the case that
the Collieries, the Steel Plant, the Cement Factory, and the Aluminjure Company
were concerns which were not comparable with the Company. In fact, in the
course of arguments before us, we asked learned counsel for the Company to
point out whether such a plea was taken at any stage by the Company and whether
evidence was led to show that these concerns were not comparable with the
Company. Learned counsel had to admit that no specific plea was taken by the
Company in this behalf and at least no evidence at all was led to show that
these concerns are not comparable with the Company. The workmen in their
written statement had relied on the wage structure in these concerns obviously
on the basis that they were comparable. Since the Company never took the plea
that they were not comparable, no occasion arose for the workmen to give
evidence of the concerns being comparable. In fact, the Tribunal also accepted
them as being comparable 'and that is why, in its conclusion, the Tribunal held
that, in its opinion, it would be appropriate under the circumstances of the
case to fix the minimum wage in the Company on the basis of the minimum wage
prevailing in other industries in that region. By the expression "other
industries in the region" the Tribunal was obviously referring to these
concerns. Having come to this view, it is clear that, to give full effect to
the principle laid down by this Court the case of French Motor Car Co.(1), the
Tribunal should have proceeded to fix the minimum wage in the Company on the
basis of the average minimum wage prevailing in these concerns. We have already
quoted the figures of the minimum wage prevailing these concerns. On their
basis, it appears to us that there will be full justification for fixing the
minimum wage in the Company at Rs. 95 per mensum which is about the average of
the wages prevailing in all those concerns. In this connection, we may take
notice of the fact that, in the written statement of the workmen, the minimum
wages prevailing in these concerns were (1) [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 16.
672 shown at figures lower than those
mentioned by the Tribunal;
but it appears that those lower figures were
given, because the, wages mentioned in the written statement were based on a
lower Price Index. The Tribunal considered the minimum wages in these concerns
on the basis of the prevailing Price-Index of 441 a' Sambalpur taking 100 as
the basic Price Index for the year 1939 Even when fixing the minimum wage ,for
the Company on the basis of the alternative calculation made by the Tribunal,
the Tribunal has proceeded on the assumption that the minimum wage is being
fixed for the Price Index No. 441 prevailing at the time of the award taking
100 as the basic index for the year 1939 In these circumstances, we think that the
minimum wage in the Company should have been fixed by the Tribunalmensera,
following the principle laid down by this Court in the case of French Motor Car
Co.(1). The Tribunal should not have proceeded to make the alternative
calculation on some other basis so as to arrive at a lower figure of Rs. 73
p.m. as the wage covering the basic wage and the dearness allowance, in
addition to Rs. 11 p.to. payable as production bonus.
Learned counsel for the Company urged before
us that the principle of fixation of wages on the basis of Comparison in the
region laid down in the French Motor Car Co.'s case(1) is not rigid and, it is
not. necessary that the minimum wage. in the Company must be fixed at the
average level of 'wages in the other comparable industries in the region.
According to him, note should be taken of the
fact that, at least ..in the paper industry in this. area, the other concerns
are paying much lower wages. This point has to be 'rejected straightaway in
view of the finding that. those concerns are very small and not comparable with
the Company. It was also urged that, in fixing the minimum wage, the wages
payable-in the-paper industry in other.
parts of the country. should also be kept in
view.We do.
not think that such a consideration should be
taken. into account. when applying the principle of fixing the minimum wage
primarily on the basis of comparison. between.
different industries. in the same region.
Finally, it was argued that other amenities being-provided by the Company
should also be taken into account when -fixing the minimum wage. In this case,
however, there is nothing to show that the Company is providing any such
amenities which are different from the amenities that are being provided by
those concerns in the region which. are being.compared with the Company for the
purpose of fixation of the minimum wage Consequently, we do not think that
there is any justification for departing from the figure of Rs.95 which is the
average minimum wage payable by those industries (1) [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 16.
673 We may, at this stage, take notice of the
fact that, in considering the question of minimum wage, the Tribunal had in
view the total wage packet to be received by each workman and, in the opinion
of the Tribunal, it consisted of three elements. These elements are basic wage,
dearness allowance and production bonus. The Tribunal, in its award, held that
the minimum wage in so far as it consists of basic wage and dearness
allowance,, should be fixed at Rs. 73 and there should be paid, in addition,
production bonus to the extent of Rs. 11 in each case. Thus, the total minimum
wage packet which a workman should be entitled to receive was fixed by the
Tribunal at Rs. 84. It is for this figure of Rs. 84 that we think the Tribunal
should have substituted the figure of Rs. 95. From the facts noted in the Award
or appearing on the record, it appears that production bonus, in addition to
the minimum wage, is payable in the case of Aluminium Company, Hirakud; but
there does not appear to be any, production bonus payable in the three
Collieties, in the Steel Plant and in the Cement Factory. In the majority of
the industries, which are being compared with the Company in the region,
consequently, the minimum wage is the total wage packet receivable by the
workman and there is no extra amount received as production bonus. There is
only an exception in the case of Indian Aluminium Company. That particular
Company, it appears, has some special features which have been brought out in
the evidence of the Management's witness, B.B. Panda. He has stated that the
Alumihium Factory at Hirakud carries on its work with the help of highly
automatic machines and is' supplied electricity by the Government at subsidised
rates. The nature of work is such that the total number of workmen employed
does not exceed 125 which is a very small number as compared' with the number
of workmen employed by the Company. It is clear that, in the Aluminium Factory,
the number of workmen, who have to be paid production bonus is very small and
almost insignificant as compared with the number in the Company 'In these
circumstances, it would be more appropriate to compare the total wage packet of
the Company with the wage packet received by the workmen of other industries in
the region, viz., the three Collieries, the Rourkela Steel Plant, and the
Cement Factory at Rajgangour. Comparing with them, there is justification for
fixing the total wage packet of the workmen in the Company 'at Rs. 95 which
would include production bonus. So far as annual profit bonus is concerned, it
is payable in the Company also as in those other concerns. Consequently, in
varying the award of the Tribunal we would direct that the 'total minimum wage
packet of a workman in the Company shall be-fixed at Rs. 95 consisting of' the
three elements of basic wage; dearness allowance and production bonus.
The break-up of this wage into the three
'elements is of some importance in this case because of the principle on which
the 674 profit bonus is paid by tiffs Company. The profit bonus that is paid is
three months' basic wage and does not take into account the dearness allowance
and the production bonus elements of the total wage. The Company has always
treated the total wage of a workman as consisting of these three elements in
the proportion of 3:3: 1. On behalf of the workmen, it was urged before the
Tribunal that the proportion should be 3: 1: 1, so that the production bonus
and the dearness allowance would both be equal and 1/3rd of the basic wage.
This plea of the workmen was rejected by the Tribunal primarily on the ground
that the other break-up urged on behalf of the Company was the break-up which
had been accepted by mutual consent between the workmen and the Company in an
earlier settlement which had been arrived at in the year 1959. We are unable to
hold that the Tribunal committed any error in arriving at this decision and,
consequently, the total minimum wage fixed by us must also be deemed to have
the same break-up. As a result, it would have to be held that the total minimum
wage of Rs. 95 will consist of Rs. 41 as basic wage, Rs. 41 as dearness
allowance and Rs. 13 as production bonus.
In connection with the fixation of minimum
wage, one point vehemently argued by learned counsel for the workmen was that
at least the dearness allowance element of the wage should have been made
variable with the Price Index, so that the labour could automatically be
compensated for further rise in the cost of living subsequent to the making of
the award. Learned counsel was, however, unable to show to us that this Court
or any other Tribunal has ever laid down the principle that, where the dearness
allowance forms a part of the consolidated wage fixed, there should be such
linking so as to bring in continuous variation of the wage, depending on the
variation in the Price Index. It appears to us that an Industrial Tribunal has
the discretion, in appropriate cases, of making a direction linking the
dearness allowance element of a wage to the Price Index;
but, at the same time, the Tribunal is
entitled to choose the alternative course of fixing the wage at the prevailing
Price Index and leaving the labour to raise a fresh demand and, if necessary, a
fresh industrial dispute for further rise in wages, in case there is marked
variation in the Price Index and the wage fixed in the award becomes outdated.
Reference in this connection may be made to the decision of this Court in Hydro
(Engineers) Pvt. Ltd. v. The Workmen,(x) were also the Court did not hold that
it was compulsory to link minimum wage with the cost of living index and only
envisaged that such linking may be permissible by holding that :"It is
thus clear that the concept of minimum wage, does take in the factor of the
prevailing cost of essen(1) [1969] 1 S.C.R. 156.
675 tial commodities whenever such minimum
wage is to be fixed. The idea of fixing such wage in the light of cost of
living at a particular juncture of time and of neutralising the rising prices
of essential commodities by linking up scales of minimum wages with the cost of
living index cannot, therefore, be said to be alien to the concept of a minimum
wage." In the present case, the Tribunal chose the course of leaving it to
the workmen to ask for increase in minimum wage on any further rise in Price
Index and did not consider it advisable to link the wages with it. In fact,
from the Award, it appears that, so far as the Tribunal was concerned, the
workmen did not press for such linking when the award was being given.
Consequently, we are unable to hold that the Tribunal has committed any error
and that, in this respect, any interference by us is called for.
The only 'other point argued before us in
respect of wages by learned counsel was that casual workers should also be paid
minimum wages on the same basis as the permanent workers for whom the minimum
wage was fixed by the Tribunal which is being varied by us by increasing it to
a total wage packet of Rs. 95. It appears that the Tribunal did not accept this
demand primarily on the ground that the distinction between casual workers and'
the permanent workers was recognised by both the parties in the agreement of
1959. It may be noticed that, by the very nature of employment being casual, it
can be presumed that a casual worker is on a lower footing and cannot expect
the same wagesas a permanent employee. Therefore, the decision by the Tribunal
not to equate the casual workers with the permanent employees. cannot be held
to be incorrect and must be upheld.
The Tribunal had directed that the increase
of Rs. 12 p.m.
in the total minimum wage packet allowed by
it will enure to the benefit of the lowest paid female, badIi and permanent
dailyrated workers also. This principle will remain effective with the
modification that these workers will be entitled to the increase of Rs. 23 p.m.
substituted by us for the increase of Rs. 12 allowed by the Tribunal.
Learned counsel appearing for the Company
drew our attention to the fact that the revised wages are payable with effect
from 13th December, 1962 and, by this time, a period of 5 to 6 years has
elapsed, so that the Company will have to pay arrears of wages for this long
period. It was urged that this would cast a very heavy burden on the Company.
We do not think that this reason advanced on behalf of the Company will justify
our making a direction that the increase in wages should be effective from some
later date. The previous agreement of 1959 was binding only up to 12th
December, 1962 and we think that the Tribunal 213 Sup.C.I./68--12 676 was right
in directing that the revised wages must take effect from 13th December, 1962.
Even though arrears will have to be paid for about 6 years, it has to be kept
in view that, since then, there has been a very considerable rise in the Price
index and the labour has not so far raised a fresh dispute for a further
revision of wages over and above the wages fixed by the Tribunal which are
being now refixed by us. In all these circumstances, we think that the revised
wages should take effect from 13th December, 1962.
The only other dispute raised in this appeal
related to the bonus for the year 1962-63. Initially, the workmen had
challenged the decision of the Tribunal with regard to, bonus for all five
years from 1959-60 to 1963-64, but, in the course. of arguments at the last stage
before us, learned counsel for the workmen confined his arguments to the bonus
for the year 1962-63 only. The main point urged by learned counsel was that, in
giving the decision with regard to bonus for this year, the Tribunal committed
the error of not making calculation of surplus available on the basis of the
Full Bench Formula approved by this Court in the case of The Associated Cement
Companies Ltd., Dwarka Cement Works, Dwarka v. Its Workmen and Another.(x) The
Company is paying profit bonus equivalent to three months' basic wage of each
workman. The demand made by the workmen was for bonus equivalent to six months'
wages, and the argument was that, if the Tribunal had worked out the surplus
available on the correct basis, that surplus would have certainly justified
grant of profit bonus at the rate of six months' wages.
This argument fails, because it appears to us
that the demand, as put forward before the Tribunal for bonus equivalent to six
months' wages, was, in fact, never made by the workmen on the basis that the
surplus calculated under the Full Bench Formula would justify bonus being
granted at that rate. The 'tribunal, in this connection, has quoted the
pleading of the workmen in their written statement before it. The pleading
makes it clear that the claim for six months' wages was not based on the Full
Bench Formula, but on the ground that certain clerical staff was being paid
bonus which, in effect, amounted to about six months' basic wages, because the
bonus was calculated ;in their case by taking into account the consolidated
wages, including dearness allowance, while in the case of the workmen, the
dearness allowance element of the wages was being ignored and bonus was
calculated only by taking into account basic wages. We agree with this
interpretation of the pleadings of the workmen. Further, there is one very
significant circumstance, viz. that this dispute was raised by the workmen
'before the expiry of the year 1962-63. Initially, there was an attempt that
the dispute be referred to the Industrial (1)[1959] S.C.R. 925.
677 Tribunal under s. 10(2) of the Act on the
basis of an agreed enumeration of subjects of dispute drawn up by the workmen
and the Company together. That reference under s. 10(2) of the Act, however,
failed due to some technical defect. The reference was ultimately made by the
Government under s.
10(1) of the Act, but it was made in the same
form in which the parties had agreed to. refer it. The reference was made by
the Government on the 4th October, 1962. At that time, the year 1962-63 was
still running and the accounts for that year could not possibly have been
closed and made available.
The balance-sheet and the profit and loss.
account of that year could only be prepared after the closure of the year on
31st March, 1963. In fact, the reference included a dispute even for the year
1963-64 which year had not even started running. On the face of it, at the time
of the reference, there could be no question of applying the Full Bench Formula
for calculation of surplus, because there were no completed accounts for the
two years 1962-63 and 1963-64.
This circumstance makes it clear that the
claim for higher bonus could not, at the time of reference, have been based on
the availability of surplus according to the Full Bench Formula. The Tribunal
was, therefore, quite correct in not trying to work out the surplus according
to the Full Bench Formula and in awarding bonus on that basis. In this
connection, learned counsel for the workmen urged that, at least by the time when
the Award was given, the completed accounts for the year 1962-63 were
available; but it seems to us that this circumstance is of no assistance. The
award had to cover the year 1963-64 also and at least for that year the
accounts could not possibly have been completed, as that year was still running
when the award was given by the Tribunal on the 11 th January, 1964. Further,
the Tribunal was expected to decide the dispute only as referred to it and, at
the time of reference at least, there was not and there could possibly not be a
claim for higher bonus on the basis of the application of the Full Bench
Formula.
The claim was, in fact, based on the
circumstances that, according to the workmen, the bonus in their case was being
calculated as equivalent to three months' basic wages, while, the case of some
clerical staff, the calculation was made on the basis of their consolidated
wages consisting of basic wages and dearness allowance. The argument is
incorrect. In the case of even the lowest paid clerical staff, to whom dearness
allowance is separately payable, the bonus is only calculated on the basis of
basic wages, and the dearness allowance is ignored. There is some clerical
staff which does not get any dearness allowance at all and it is only in those cases.
that the bonus is worked out on the basis of the total wages paid. In such
cases, the calculation is still on the basis of basic wage, because it cannot
be assumed that their wage is a consolidated wage consisting of the two 678
elements of basic wage and dearness allowance lumped together. In fact, the
principle which is being applied is the simple one of calculating the bonus
payable at the rate of three months' basic wage in each case and in no case is
the dearness allowance taken into account. There is, therefore, no
discrimination or inequality as urged on behalf of the workmen.
Finally it was urged that even the casual and
badIi workers should be allowed bonus on the same basis as the permanent
workers. The Tribunal rejected this demand on the ground that, under the
Agreement of 1959, the workmen and the Company had agreed specifically to
exclude these classes of workers in regard to payment of bonus. We are unable
to hold that the Tribunal committed any error of law, requiring interference by
us, in basing its decision on the principle contained in the earlier Agreement
of the parties and in holding that there was no justification to introduce a
new element of payment of bonus to casual and badIi workers at this stage. The
claim in this respect also fails.
As a result, the appeal is only partly
allowed inasmuch as the minimum wage fixed by the Tribunal in the Award is
carried as indicated by us above. The rest of the Award of the Tribunal is
upheld. Since, in this appeal, the principal dispute related to the fixation of
minimum wage of the workmen and we are allowing the appeal of the workmen in
that respect, we direct that the workmen will be entitled to their costs of
this appeal from the Company.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed in part.
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