Oil & Natural Gas Commission Vs.
The Workmen [1972] INSC 237 (28 September 1972)
DUA, I.D.
DUA, I.D.
SIKRI, S.M. (CJ) RAY, A.N.
CITATION: 1973 AIR 968 1973 SCR (2) 482 1973
SCC (3) 535
CITATOR INFO :
D 1975 SC1856 (8)
ACT:
Industrial Law---Industrial Tribunal--Working
Hours of Administrative staff--Management's competence to fix--Reduction of
working hours by tribunal--Circumstances justifying interference.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant has several projects and
workshops in the country. At Baroda it has a central workshop which controls
all the workshops in the western region. The workmen are liable to be
transferred for exigencies of service from one workshop to another as also from
one region to another. At Baroda, when the workshop was under construction and there
was insufficient accommodation at the site of the workshop, the
office/administrative staff used to work in a shed at a distance of about 2
k.m. from the workshop. At that time the working hours of the administrative
staff were from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. with an interval of half an hour. These
working hours lasted from December, 1964 to June, 1965, when on completion of
the construction at the site of the workshop the administrative staff shifted
there. With the shifting of the office to the site of the factory the working
hours of the administrative staff were fixed from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. with an
interval of one hour. Theworkmen claimed that working hours of the
administrative staff should have continued to be 6 1/2 hours per day and
complained that fixation of 8 hours per day with effect from June, 1965 was
violative of s. 9A of the Industrial Disputes Act. It was further complained
that the fixation of 8 hours per day was not justified from the point of view
of convenience and was also at variance with the practice uniformly prevailing
in other administrative offices of the workshops of the Oil and Natural Gas
Commission.
The tribunal came to the conclusion that
there was nothing to show that it was a condition of service of the employees
in the administrative office to work only for 61 hours per day and that there
was no uniform practice of working either for 6 1/2 hour-, only or for 8 hours,
for office staff, at all places. In the opinion of the Tribunal, therefore,
there was no presumption of there being any condition of service either way. on
this reasoning Section 9A of the Act was held inapplicable to the case of the
workmen at Boroda.
The tribunal also observed that it was not
correct that the factory would suffer if the working hours of the clerical
staff in the Baroda workshop were reduced from 8 hours to 6 1/2 hours a day.
But the Tribunal accepted the submission of the workmen that Industrial law
recognises the distinction between workers in factories and workers in office
and hence though under the Factories Act the workmen may be asked to work for
48 hours or 8 hours a day, it does not necessarily follow that the clerical
staff should also be made to work 8 hours a day when they had been working for
only 6 1/2 hours a day from December 1964 to June 1965.
'The Tribunal also directed payment of
overtime compensation at 10% of pay to the office administrative staff for the
extra work taken from thorn.
483 Allowing the appeal,
HELD: (i) On the facts and circumstances of
the case it cannot be said that 6 1/2 working hours a day was a term of
service, for the simple reason that it was only during a period of the first
six months, when the factory was being constructed that the administrative
office-staff was, as an interim arrangement, temporarily located at a place 2
k.m.
away, that the staff in this office was not
required to work for more than 6 1/2 hours per day. There is no evidence that 6
1/2 hours per day was a condition of service; neither is there any such term of
service in their letters of appointment, nor is such a term of service
otherwise discernible from other material on record. [487 H] (ii) The Tribunal
has wrongly interfered with the appellant's decision in fixing the hours of
work which was fully within its competence and was not open to any valid
objection. The Tribunal has not only made some contradictory observations about
the practice prevailing in the other projects of the Appellant but has also
misread the statement on record. The conclusions of the Tribunal are,
therefore, tainted with serious infirmity justifying reappraisal of the
evidence by this Court for coming to its own independent conclusion on such
appraisal.
(a) The management must have full power and
discretion in fixing the working hours of the administrative staff within the
limits prescribed by the statute. When the change in the working hours is
covered by s. 9A read with the First Schedule of the Act, compliance with the
section would undoubtedly be necessary for its sustenance. In the present case
s. 9A is not attracted. It was only when the factory was completed and the
administrative staff attached to it shifted to its own building at the factory
site, that the management, apparently on an overall assessment of its
requirements, fixed 8 working hours per day. This was within the competence of
the management. [491 H] (b) The view of the tribunal that reduction in the
hours of work of the office staff from 8 to 6 1/2 hours would not adversely
affect the working is not supported by evidence on the record. [493 F] (c) The
Tribunal was also not right in saying that in other projects the working hours
of administrative office are 6 1/2 hours. According to the material on record
working hoursin these offices vary and there is no uniform practice. But the
fact that in some of the other offices the working hours are 6 1/2 hours per
day, cannot be the determining factor. The office at Baroda being the
controlling office its requirements and exigencies of work are such that fixing
of 8 hours of work a day is fully justified. The mere fact that the staff at
Baroda is liable to transfer to other projects is of little importance.[493 F]
(iii) Once it is found that 8 hours a day has been properly fixed for work in
the administrative office there can be no question of payment of any
compensation, for working for 8 hours a day in the past. [494A] 484 Workmen of
B.O.A.C. v. B.O.A.C., [1962] 1 I.L.J. 257 and Nawabganj Sugar Mills v. Its
Workmen, [1964] 1 L.L.J. 750, held inapplicable.
May & Baker (P) Ltd. v. Their Workmen,
[1961] II L.L.J. 94, Workmen of Hindustan Shipyard (P) Ltd. v. industrial
Tribunal, Hyderabad, [1961] H L.L.J. 526 and Associated Cements Staff Union v.
Associated Cement Company Ltd., [1964] I L.L.J. 12, referred to.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal
No. 391 of 1972.
Appeal by special leave from the Award dated
November 18, 1971 of the National Industrial Tribunal, New Delhi in Reference
No. NIT 4 of 1970.
Niren De Attorney,-General for India and B.
Dutta, for the appellant.
M. C. Bhandare, P. H. Parekh and S. Bhandare,
for respondent No. 1.
P. S. Kheri and S. K. Nandi, for respondent.
No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DUA, J. This is an appeal by special leave from the award of the National
Industrial Tribunal, New Delhi dated November 18, 1971. While granting special
leave on February 24, 1972, this Court directed that costs of the respondents
should in any event be paid by the appellant.
By notification dated August 21, 1968 (No.
S.O. 3088) the Central Government constituted a National Industrial, Tribunal
at Dhanbad with Shri Kamal Sahai as the Presiding Officer and referred to it
for adjudication the following industrial dispute SCHEDULE "(1) Whether
the demand of the workmen that the Oil and Natural Gas Commission, Baroda,
should stop the extra hours of work which is being taken from the office
administrative staff in workshop and fix their working hours on the lines of
those of the office staff of the Commission is justified ? (2) whether the
demand that the Commission should pay compensation to the administrative staff
for the extra hours of work taken from them from June, 1965, at the overtime
rate or pay Factory allowance at the rate of 20 per cent of the pay to the
office administrative staff, who have been asked to work for 8 hours from June,
1965 is justified'? (3) If so, to what reliefs are the workmen entitled ?"
485 As a result of the retirement of Shri Kamal Sahai, the Central Government
on December 10, 1970 referred the said dispute to the Tribunal presided over by
Mr. Justice N. Chandra. On the pleadings of the parties the learned Tribunal
settled the following. issues for determination :
"(1) Whether the demand of the workmen
that the Oil & Natural Gas Commission, Baroda should stop the extra hours
of work which is being taken from the office/administrative staff in workshop
and fix their working hours on the lines of those of the office staff of the
Commission is justified ? (2) Whether the demand that the Commission should pay
compensation to the administrative staff for the extra hours of work taken from
them from June, 1965, at the overtime rate or pay factory allowance at the rate
of 20 per cent of the pay to the office/administrative staff who have been
asked to work for 8 hours from June 1965 is justified ? (3) If so, to what
reliefs are the workmen entitled ? (4) Was there a valid and binding settlement
between the parties on 20th January, 1968 as alleged ? If so, is the Reference
beyond the jurisdiction of this Tribunal ? (5) Are the demands of the staff
working in Purchase, P & D and Accounts sections and Stores Department not
covered by the present Reference and beyond the jurisdiction of this Tribunal
?" Issues 4 and 5 were not pressed before us by the learned Attorney
General. The principal controversy in this Court is thus confined to issues
nos. 1 to 3.
The appellant, the Oil & Natural Gas
Commission, has several projects and workshops in the country. At Baroda it has
a central workshop which controls all the workshops in the western region. The
workmen are liable to be transferred for exigencies of service from one
workshop to another as also from one region to another. At Baroda, when the
workshop was under construction and there was insufficient accommodation at the
site of the workshop, the office/administrative staff used to work in a shed at
a distance of about 2 k.m. from the workshop. At that time the working hours of
the administrative staff were from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. with an interval of half
an hour. These working hours lasted from December, 1964 to June, 1965, when on
completion of the construction at the site of the workshop the administrative
staff shifted there. With this shifting of the office to the site of 486 the
factory the working hours of the administrative staff were fixed from 8 a.m. to
5 p.m. with an interval of one hour. These facts are not in dispute. The
workmen claimed that working hours of the administrative staff should have
continued to be 6 1/2 hours per day and complained that fixation of 8 hours per
day with effect from June, 1965 was violative of s. 9A of the Industrial
Disputes Act (hereinafter called the Act). It was further complained that the
fixation of 8 hours per day was not justified from the point of view of
convenience and was also at variance with the practice uniformly prevailing in
other administrative offices of the workshops of the Oil & Natural Gas
Commission.
The Tribunal, came to the conclusion that
there was nothing to show that it was a condition of service of the employees
in the administrative office to work only for 61 hours per day. There was no
term to that effect in the appointment letters of employees. The contention
that since the workmen had as a matter of fact been working from December 1964
till June 1965 for only 6 1/2 hours a day, it had become a condition of their
service was also repelled. The Tribunal observed that the mere fact that while
the workshop was under construction and there was not enough accommodation for
the office/administrative staff in the workshop building at the site, they were
accommodated in another building which worked there along with other clerks for
only 6 1/2 hours a day for a period of six month does not mean that 61/2 hours
a day was a condition of their service. The Tribunal was also not satisfied
that the administrative staff in all the projects of the Oil & Natural Gas
Commission worked only for 6 1/2 hours per day. It was pointed out that in the
Jammu project three persons of the administrative staff worked for 9 hours
including one hour's rest interval and two persons for 8 1/2 hours including
half-an-hour's rest interval. In the headquarters central auto-workshop, Dehra Dun,
three persons of office staff worked for 8 1/2 hours, including half an hour's
rest interval. In the Cauvery project some clerks work for 81 hours including
half an hour's rest interval. In other projects of the Oil & Natural Gas
Commission, the administrative staff is working 6 1/2 hours or less than 8
hours excluding rest interval. After referring to these instances the Tribunal
observed that there was no uniform practice of working either for 61 hours only
or for 8 hours, excluding rest intervals, for office staff, at all places.
In the opinion of the Tribunal, therefore,
there was no presumption of there being any condition of service either way. On
this reasoning S. 9A of the Act was held inapplicable to the case of the
workmen at Baroda.
The Tribunal next dealt with the contention
that the change in the hours of work was not justified from the point of view
of 487 convenience and that the workmen being transferable all over the country
and the pay scales being similar, hours of work in the Baroda workshop should
not have been changed from 6 1/2 hours, including half an hour rest interval to
9 hours, including rest interval for one hour. It was successfully contended by
the workmen that though under the Factories Act the workmen may be asked to
work for 48 hours a week or 8 hours a day, it does not necessarily follow that
the clerical staff should also be made to work 8 hours a day when they had been
working for only 6 1/2 hours a day from December 1964 to June 1965. Emphasis
was laid on behalf of the workmen on the submission that industrial law
recognises the distinction between workers in factories and workers in offices.
This approach found favour with the Tribunal. The workmen further contended
that the management had wrongly claimed that work in the factory would suffer
by reducing the working hours of the clerical staff from 8 hours to 61 hours.
The Tribunal also agreed with this submission, basing its conclusion on the
evidence of Shri S. Hassan (M.W. 1). In the case of time-keepers and the storekeepers,
however, the Tribunal felt that reducing the working hours in their case would
prejudicially affect the working of the factory. The contention on behalf of
the management that change in the working hours of the clerical staff from 8
hours to 6 1/2 hours is likely to give rise to dissatisfaction among other
workers was repelled on the ground that in case of two projects, namely, Cambay
and Navagaon, the working hours of the clerical staff were less than those of
the technical staff. According to the Tribunal the technical staff generally
works for 8 hours a day while the clerical staff in many projects of the
workshop itself work only for 61 hours a day.
Dealing with issue no. 2 the Tribunal
observed that compensation at the rate of 10 % of pay to the office
administrative staff (excluding time-keepers and storekeepers) was justified
for the period for which they were made to work for 8 hours a day.
On appeal the learned Attorney General has
assailed the line of reasoning and the conclusion of the Tribunal. On behalf of
the respondent also the conclusion of the Tribunal that there was no term or
condition of service fixing the daily working hours of the administrative staff
at 61 hours was questioned. It was contended on their behalf that it was a term
of their service that they should work only for 6 1/2 hours per day, and,
therefore, change from 61 hours to 8 hours per day without proper notice was
violative of s. 9A of the Act.
In our opinion, on the facts and
circumstances of this it cannot be said that 6 1/2 working hours a day was a
term of service, 488 for the simple reason that it was only during a period of
the first six months, when the factory was being constructed at the site of the
workshop that, due to shortage of accommodation, the administrative office was,
as an interim arrangement, temporarily located in tests at a place about 2 k.m.
away, that the staff in this office was not required to work for more than 6
1/2 hours per day. There is no evidence that 6 1/2 hours per day was a
condition of service; neither is there any such term of service in their
letters of appointment, nor is such a term of service otherwise discernible
from other material on the record. As soon as the construction at the site of
the factory was complete and the workshop was ready to start its normal and
regular working, the administrative office was shifted to its permanent abode
at the site of the factory. It was then that the proper regular working of the
administrative office and its staff started at the site of the factory with
working hours being appropriately fixed at 8 hours per day so as to facilitate
efficient functioning of the workshop to the expected capacity.
The Tribunal dealt with the part of the case
in these words "There is nothing to show that it was a condition of
service that an employee would work 6 1/2 hours only. Nor is there anything to
that effect in the appointment letter of the employee. Nor is it a condition of
service that he would work 8 hours. There is nothing to that effect either in
the appointment letter.
The contention on behalf of the workmen is
that since they had been working from December 1964 till June 1965 only for 6
1/2 hours a day, it had become a condition of their service. This contention is
without force.
The mere fact that while the workshop was
under completion and there was not enough accommodation for the
office/administrative staff in the workshop building, they were accommodated in
another building and worked there along with other clerks for only 6 1/2 hours
in a day for a period of 6 months, will not make it a condition for their
service." Nothing cogent has been urged against this reasoning with which
we are in complete agreement. Incidentally, looking at the terms of reference
also it is clear that no specific dispute was raised by the workmen on the
basis of any claim that the term of their employment to work only for 61 hours
per day had been varied without the requisite notice under S. 9A. This
challenge against the award by the respondents is accordingly repelled.
489 The controversy indeed mainly rests on
the question whether fixation of 8 hours of work per day is otherwise
objectionable and the working hours have been rightly reduced by the Tribunal
to 6 1/2 hours a day and whether the Tribunal has rightly directed payment of
overtime compensation at 10 % of pay to the office administrative staff
(exclusive of time-keepers and store-keepers) for the extra work taken from
them in the past. The rival contentions raised before the Tribunal on this
aspect may be stated in the words of the Tribunal itself :
"The next contention on behalf of the
workmen is that the change in the hours of work was not justified from the
point of view of convenience and that services are transferable all over the
country and pay scales are one and the same and that consequently the hours of
work in the Baroda workshop should not have been changed from 7 hours including
half an hour's rest interval, to 9 hours including one hour's rest interval.
There is no doubt that a change has been made
in June 1965 from 61 hours of work to 8 hours of work after the staff was
shifted to the workshop premises. The contention on behalf of the management is
that the Factories Act applies to the workshops and that consequently the
management is not doing anything wrong in asking the administrative staff in
the workshop to work for 8 hours. It is also contended by the management that
if this is not done, the work in the workshop will suffer." The Tribunal
noticed that under the Factories Act a workman may be required to work for 48
hours a week but in its view "it does not necessarily follow that the
clerical staff should also be made to work 8 hours a day although they had been
working only 6 1/2 hours a day from December 1964 to June 1965" for even
in the case of working shifts, many shifts work for less than 8 hours a day.
The Tribunal, after referring to the decision in the Workmen of B.O.A.C.
v. B.O.A.C. (1) and to the decision in
Nawabganj Sugar Mills v. Its Workmen (2) observed that it was "a question
for consideration whether in the other projects of the ONGC itself and other
offices in Baroda, the Administrative Office staff was made to work 8 hours a
day or only 61 hours a day." According to the Tribunal the technical staff
generally works for 8 hours a day whereas the clerical staff in many of the
projects of the workshop itself works only 6 1/2 hours a day. The Tribunal also
observed that it was not correct that the factory would suffer if the working
hours of the clerical (1) [1962] 1 I. L J. 257 (2) [1964] 1 I. L. J. 750.
490 staff in the Baroda workshop were reduced
from 8 hours to 61 hours a day. For this conclusion reference has been made in
the award to the statement of M.W. 1 Shri S. Hassan, Deputy Manager
(Establishment).
The learned Attorney General has submitted
that the ratio of the decision in the B.O.A.C. case (supra) to which the Tribunal
has referred in the award does not support the view taken by it. Our attention
has been invited to the following passage in that judgment "It is in the
light of all these features of the service expected of the appellants that we
have to consider the question as to whether the tribunal was right in fixing
the weekly hours of work at forty-eight. It is clear that until 1964 there was
no occasion to prescribe the weekly hours as such because the extent and volume
of the work did not justify any such fixation. Sometimes, employees in the
three respective categories were not required to do as much weekly work as was
regarded as normal. Sometimes, if the work was heavier and the vagaries of the
arrival or departure of the aircraft imposed additional burden, the normal
working hours were exceeded. Until 1964 no question of payment of overtime
wages arose. In 1954, the respondent started paying overtime wages in the
manner already indicated. Therefore, the question as to whether in fixing
forty-eight hours as the normal working hours in a week, the tribunal has
committed an error must be judged not so much by a reference to the existing
normal working weekly hours but by a reference to the principles which
generally apply to the fixation of weekly working hours.
In our opinion, judged in that way, it would
be difficult to sustain the argument of the appellants that forty eight hours
in a week is either unduly reasonable (unreasonable ?) or excessive. That is
why we do not think that the general argument urged by the appellants that the
existing working hours should be standardized can be accepted." The
reported case dealt with an establishment which bad peculiar characteristics.
It had three categories of employees, one of which used to work for 36 hours
and the other for 39 hours and the third for 42 hours. The respondent
corporation in that case fixed 48 hours per week as normal duty hours for all
employees. The Tribunal had held that the Corporation was entitled to so fix
the working hours. On appeal by the workmen, after noting the peculiar features
of the service expected of the 491 workmen, this Court made the above
observation. In regard to the office staff which had always been working for 36
hours a week it was conceded in that case that it should work only for 36 hours
a week as it used to do. This decision, therefore, in our opinion, does not
help the respondents. Nawabgunj Sugar Mills (supra) dealing with rationing
allowance is equally-if not more-unhelpful. The learned Attorney General drew
our attention to the decision in May & Bekar Ltd. v. Their Workmen(1) for
the proposition that it is not open to the Industrial Tribunal to reduce the
working hours either directly or indirectly where the employer was following
the working hours prescribed by a statutory provision. In this reported case
the relevant provision of Delhi Shops & Establishments Act, 1954 fell for
consideration. Reference was also made by the learned' Attorney General to the
decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Workmen of Hindustan Shipyard (P)
Ltd. v. Industrial Tribunal, Hyderabad(2) in support of the proposition that
the management has the power to vary the working hours within the limits
prescribed by law. In that case the provisions of the Factories Act and of the
Madras Shops & Establishments Act, 1958 fell for consideration by the
court. The learned Attorney General also drew our attention to Associated
Cements Staff Union v. Associated Cement Company Ltd.(3) where this Court
pointed out that it was not the function of industrial adjudication to fix the
working hours with an eye to enable the workmen to earn over-time wages and it
pointed out that the various factors relevant for fixing hours of work. The
learned Attorney General emphasised the fact that the Tribunal failed to
consider the question of adverse effect of the reduced working hours of the
office staff on production which is a relevant factor to consider. He further
contended that 8 hours a day is not shown to impair the health of the workmen.
It was also argued that there is no general uniform pattern of 61 hours of work
per day in the offices of the other projects of the Oil & Natural Gas
Commission and that each project has its own pattern to suit its requirements.
Considerable stress has also been laid on the submission that administrative
offices attached to all factories of the appellant have to work for 48 hours a
week., It must be particularly so in the case of the administrative office
attached to the central workshop at Baroda which, according to the appellant's
submission, controls all the workshops in the western region.
In our opinion, there is merit in the learned
Attorney General's submission. The management must, in our opinion, have (1)
[1961] II L.L.J. 94. (2) [1961] II L.L.J. 526.
(3) [1964] I L.L.J. 12.
14-L498Sup. Cl/73 492 full power and discretion
in fixing the working hours of the administrative staff within the limits
prescribed by the statute. When the change in the working hours is covered by
s. 9A read with the First Schedule of the Act, compliance with the said section
would undoubtedly be necessary for its sustenance. In the present case, as
already observed, s. 9A is not attracted. When the administrative office at
Baroda was temporarily located about a couple of kilometers away awaiting
completion of its permanent abode, the factory was in the process of being
constructed and there was no question of fixing the working hours of the
administrative office on a permanent basis. Perhaps there was not even enough
work for the office staff to keep them occupied for more than 61 hours per day.
It was only when the factory was completed and the administrative staff
attached to it shifted to its own building at the factory site, that the
management apparently on an overall assessment of its requirements fixed 8
working hours per day. This, in our opinion, was within the competence of the
management. The Tribunal was also, in our view, not right when it observed that
the work in the factory would not suffer by reducing the working hours of the
clerical staff in the Baroda workshop from 8 hours to 6 1/2 hours a day.
According to the Tribunal itself Shri Hasan had stated that he did not think
that working of the factory would be adversely affected if the timings of the
general staff and the office staff are changed with the number of working hours
remaining the same and that change of half an hour this way or that way is done
at times when required. In other words the Tribunal itself did not understand
Shri Hasan to refer to the regular reduction of working hours by an hour and a
half on a permanent basis. We may now turn to the actual statement of Shri
Hasan (M.W. 1). He has stated :
"The Baroda workshop differs from the
other workshops of the Commission as it is a Central Workshop and takes up
major repairs and controls all other shops in the Western Region. There are 8
to 9 departments in the office of the workshop. They are : (1) Office
Administration, (2) Technical Administration, (3) Stores, (4) Accounts, (5)
Transport, (6) Security, (7) Works Manager (i), (8) Works Manager (ii), (9)
Planning and Designing. All these Departments have different controlling
heads'.
If the hours of the staff working in the
office of the workshop are reduced, it will adversely affect the working
because the whole work is connected. It Would certainly affect other workshops
of the Commission because there will be agitations and dissatisfaction in other
workshops.
493 Transfers from the office of the main
workshop to other workshops offices are quite frequent.
The staff may be transferred to any part of
India. Similarly, the staff from other parts of India may be transferred to the
office of the Baroda workshops." The passage on which the Tribunal has
relied on for its view is :
"I do not think that the working of the
factory would be adversely affected if the timings of the 'general shift' and
the office staff are changed with the number of working hours remaining the
same. Change of half an hour this way or that way is done at times when
required.
If a change is made of one hour in the
timings with the number of working hours remaining the same, it is likely to
affect adversely the working." This passage does not in any way attract
from the categorical statement made earlier that if the hours of the staff,
working in the office of the Workshop, are reduced, it will adversely affect
the working because the whole work is connected. The Tribunal does not seem to
have correctly read Shri Hasan's statement. The view of the Tribunal that
reduction in the hours of work of the office staff from 8 to 6 1/2 hours would
not adversely affect the working is, in our opinion, not only not supported by
the evidence on the record but appears to be contrary to the statement of Shri
Hasan.
The Tribunal was also not right in saying
that in other projects the working hours of administrative office are 6 1/2
hours. Working hours in these offices, according to the material on the record,
vary and there is no uniform practice. But the fact that in some of the other
offices, the working hours are 61 hoursper day, cannot be the determining factor.
The office at Baroda being the controlling office its requirements and
exigencies of work are such that fixing of 8 hours work a day is, in our opinion,
fully justified, and the Tribunal was wrong in reducing its working hours to 6
1/2 hours a day. The mere fact that the staff at Baroda is liable to transfer
to other projects is, in our view, of little importance. Assuming that by
transfer to some other projects the employee concerned would have to work for 6
1/2 hours a day, that would not, render the fixation of 8 hours a day for the
administrative office at Baroda objectionable or open to interference by the
Tribunal. The Tribunal has itself already observed that in the other projects
the working hours in the administrative offices vary. If that is so then this
could not be a 494 cogent ground for reducing the working hours from 8 to 6 1/2
in the Central Office at Baroda. Once it is found that 8 hours a day has been
properly fixed for work in the administrative office there can be no question
of payment of any compensation, for working for 8 hours a day in the past.
The respondents' learned counsel, Shri
Bhandare, has submitted that this Court should not interfere with the
conclusions of the Tribunal under Art. 136 of the Constitution as those conclusions
are based on appreciation of evidence. However erroneous they may be, according
to Shri Bhandare, it is not the practice of this Court to interfere with such
conclusions. In our view, the Tribunal has not only made some contradictory
observations about the practice prevailing in the other projects of the Oil
& Natural Gas Commission but has also misread the statement of Shri Hasan
(M.W. 1). It has indeed wrongly interfered with the appellant's decision in
fixing the hours of work which was fully within its competence, and was not
open to any valid objection. The conclusions of the Tribunal are, therefore,
tainted with serious infirmity justifying reappraisal of the evidence by this
Court for coming to its own independent conclusion on such reappraisal.
The result, therefore, is that this appeal
succeeds and allowing the same we set aside the award reducing the working
hours from 8 to 6 1/2 hours per day in the Baroda Central Offices and also set
aside the order granting compensation at 10 % of the salary. The appellant will
of course pay the costs of the respondent in this Court.
K.B.N.
Appeal allowed.
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