Shri Narakesari Prakashan Ltd &
Ors Vs. Employees State Insurance Corporation [1984] INSC 191 (15 October 1984)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J) VENKATARAMIAH, E.S.
(J) SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION: 1984 AIR 1916 1985 SCR (1) 962 1984
SCC (4) 627 1984 SCALE (2)597
ACT:
Employees' State Insurance Act 1948, section
2(9)- Members of the administrative staff and editorial staff of printing
presses-whether 'Employee'.
Words and Phrases: 'employee'-'any person
employed for wages on any work connected with the administration of the
factory'-Meaning of. Employees' State Insurance Act 1948, section 2(9).
Interpretation of Statutes-When can the
provisions of an Act be controlled by the provisions of another Act.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants in the appeals were printers
and publishers of newspapers. The Assistant Regional Director of the Employee's
State Insurance Corporation issued a notice to the appellants on October 1,
1975 calling upon them to make contributions in respect of the administrative
and editorial staff of the newspapers, with effect from January 28, 1968 on the
ground that the aforesaid staff came within the definition of the expression
'employee' in section 2(9) of the Employee' a State Insurance Act 1948 as
amended by the Amending Act No. 44 of 1966. After the aforesaid demands were
made, the appellants filed applications before the Employees' State Insurance
Court under section 75 of the Act questioning the liability to make
contribution, in respect of the said employees during the period between
January 28, 1968 and November 19, 1976. They however did not dispute their
liability in respect of the period subsequent to November 19. 1976 on which
date the notification was issued under section 1 (5) by the State Government.
These applications were contested by the Employees' State Insurance
Corporation.
The Employees' Insurance Court allowed the
applications holding that until the notification under section 1(5) of the Act
was issued by the State Government making the Act applicable to the
establishments of the appellants viz the administrative and editorial sections
of the presses, the said employees could not be considered as 'employees' as
defined by section 2(9) of the Act.
The Corporation thereupon filed appeals
before the High Court’s under section 32 of the Act, which were allowed,
holding that the employees concerned came within the definition given in
section 2(9) aud, therefore, the 963 appellants were liable to make
contributions during the relevant period in respect of them also under the Act.
Dismissing the Appeals to this Court,
HELD: 1 An examination of the provisions of
the Employees' State Insurance Act 1948 indicates that the persons employed for
wages in the administrative section and the editorial section of each of the
printing presses are employees as defined in section 2(9) of the Act and the
demand made by the Employees' State Insurance Corporation is a justified one.
[970E]
2. The object of the Employees' State
Insurance Act, 1948 is to provide for certain benefits to employees in case of
sickness, maternity and employment injury and to make provisions for certain
other matters in relation thereto.
Section 1(4) of the Act provides that it
shall apply in the first instance, to all factories (including factories
belonging to the Government) other than seasonal factories.
Section 1(5) of the Act, however, provides
that the appropriate Government, in consultation with the Employees' State
Insurance Corporation and where the appropriate Government is a State
Government with the approval of the Central Government after giving six months'
notice of its intention of so doing by a notification in the official Gazette,
extend the provisions of the Act or any of them to any other establishment or
class of establishments, industrial, commercial, agricultural or otherwise. The
expression 'establishment' however was not defined in the Act. [967A-E]
3. Section 2(9) of the Act defines the
expression 'employee' to mean any person employed for wages in a factory or any
person employed for wages in connection with the work of a factory. It also
means any person employed for wages in or in connection with the work of an
establishment to which the Act applies. [967H] In the instant cases, the
members of the administrative staff and of the editorial staff in each of the
printing presses have to be treated as employees under section 2(9).
They are directly employed by the management
concerned on work incidental or preliminary or connected with the work of the
factory. The work of the factory in each case being printing and publication of
a newspaper, its work cannot be carried on without the assistance of the
members of the editorial staff who are engaged in preparing the material for
printing the newspaper and of the administrative staff which is needed for
managing the affairs of the factory.
[969C-D] Hyderabad Asbestos Cement Products
Ltd. v. The Employees Insurance Court and Anr., [1978] 2 S.C.R. 345, Royal
Tulkies, Hyderabad and Ors. v. Employees State Insurance Corp., [1979] 1 S.C.R.
80 and Nagpur Electric Light and Power Co. Ltd. v. Regional Director Employees,
State Insurance Corporation etc., [1967] 3 S.C.R. 92, referred to.
4. The members of the editorial staff clearly
fall under clause (i) of section 2(9) of the Act. The administrative staff fall
under the clause containing the words 'includes any person employed for wages
on any work connected with the administration of the factory'.
[969H; 970A]
5. The effect of an Act cannot be controlled
by the provisions of another Act unless the provisions in one have bearing on
the provisions of the other. [970D]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals
Nos. 3296- 67 of 1984.
Appeals by special leave from the Judgment
and Order dated the 23rd January, 1981 of the Bombay High Court in F.A. Nos. 35
of 1978 & 139 of 1973.
B. Kanta Rao and Vijay Phadke for the
Appellants.
Abaul Khader and R.N. Poddar for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAN, J. Shri Navakesari Prakashan Ltd. and Nav Samaj Ltd., Nagpur are
the appellants in the above two appeals by special leave filed under Article
136 of the Constitution. The appellants respectively are printers and
publishers of newspapers known as 'Tarun Bharat' and 'Nagpur Times'. Their case
is that their employees working for wages in the administrative and editorial
sections of their respective concerns were not 'employees' as defined in
section 2 (9) of the Employees' State Insurance Act, 1948 (hereinafter referred
to as 'the Act') prior to November 19, 1976 on which date by a notification
issued under s. 1 (5) of the Act the Government of the State of Maharashtra
made the Act applicable to the said employees also and that therefore they were
not liable to make any contributions under the Act in respect of the employees
up to that date.
They however admit their liability to make
contributions during that period in respect of persons employed by them for
wages in the printing presses belonging to them.
The dispute regarding the liability of the
appellants to make contributions under the Act in respect of the members of the
administrative and editorial staff arose on the Assistant Regional Director of
the Employees' State Insurance Corporation calling upon them by notice issued
on October 1, 1975 to make contributions in respect of the said members also
with effect from January 28, 1968 on which date the amended definition of the
expression 'employee', in section 2 (9) of the Act as per the Amending Act No.
44 of 1966 came into force. After the above demands were made, the appellants
filed 965 applications before the Employees' Insurance Court, Nagpur under
section 75 of the Act questioning their liability to make contributions in
respect of their employees working in the administrative and editorial sections
of their presses during the period between January 28, 1968 and November 19,
1976. They, however, did not dispute their liability in respect of the period
subsequent to November 19, 1976 on which date the notification was issued under
section 1(5) of the Act by the Maharashtra State Government. The applications
were contested by the Employees' State Insurance Corporation The Employees
Insurance Court allowed the applications holding that until the notification
under section (5) of the Act was issued by the State Government making the Act
applicable to the establishments of the appellants viz the administrative and
editorial sections of their presses, the employees working in those sections could
not be considered as 'employees' as defined by section 2(9) of the Act.
Aggrieved by the judgment of the Employees' Insurance Court, the Employees'
State Insurance Corporation filed appeals before the High Court of Bombay under
section 82' of the Act. The High Court allowed the said appeals holding that
the employees concerned came within the definition given in section 2 (9) of
the Act and, therefore the appellants were liable to make contributions during
the relevant period in respect of them also under the Act. The appellants have
filed these appeals against the judgment of the High Court.
Before dealing with the contentions raised by
the appellants, it has to be stated that the members of the administrative
staff and the editorial staff of each of the printing presses are employed by
the management concerned for the purpose of carrying on the business of
printing and publishing the newspaper brought out by it. The correctness of
this finding of fact recorded to the above effect by the High Court is not
assailed before us. The main contention of the appellants however is that since
during the relevant period they had maintained a distinction between the
factory sections of their printing presses and the establishment sections which
included the administrative and editorial sections of their presses, the
employees in the establishment sections could not be treated as employees to
whom the Act was applicable until the notification issued under section 1 (5)
of the Act expressly brought the said establishment sections also within the
scope of the Act.
Section 2 (9) of the Act which defines the
expression 'employee' during the period in question read thus:
966 "2(9)" employee" means any
person employed for wages in or in connection with the work of a factory or
establishment to which this Act applies and- (i) who is directly employed by
the principal employer on any work of, or incidental or preliminary to or
connected with the work of, the factory or establishment whether such work is
done by the employee in the factory or establishment or elsewhere: or (ii) who
is employed by or through an immediate employer on the premises of the factory
or establishment or under the supervision of the principal employer or his
agent on work which is ordinarily part of the work of the factory or
establishment or which is preliminary to the work carried on in or incidental
to the purpose of the factory or establishment; or (iii) whose service are
temporarily lent or let on hire to the principal employer by the person with whom
the person whose services are so lent or let on hire has entered into a
contract of service; and includes any person employed for wages on any work
connected with the administration of the factory or establishment or any part,
department or branch thereof or with the purchase of law materials for, or the
distribution or sale of the products of, the factory or establishment; but does
not include- (a) any member of the Indian naval, military or air forces, or.
(b) any person so employed whose wages excluding
remuneration for overtime work exceed five hundred rupees a month:
Provided that an employee whose wages
excluding remuneration for overtime work exceed five hundred rupees a month at
any time after and not before the beginning of the contribution period, shall
continue to be an employee until the end of that period." The object of
the Act is to provide for certain benefits to 967 employees in case of
sickness, maternity and employment injury and to make provisions for certain
other matters in relation thereto. Section 1(4) of the Act provides that it
shall apply, in the first instance, to all factories (including factories
belonging to the Government) other than seasonal factories. The expression
'factory' is defined by section 2 (12) of the Act as any premises including the
precincts thereof whereon twenty or more persons are employed or n were
employed for wages on any day of the preceding twelve months and in any part of
which a manufacturing process is being carried on with the aid of power or is ordinarily
so carried on but does not include a mine subject to the operation of the Mines
Act, 1952 or a railway running shed. It is admitted, as mentioned earlier, that
the printing presses owned by the managements where the newspapers are printed
and published are factories and are governed by the Act. Section 1 (5) of the
Act, however, provides that the appropriate Government, in consultation with
the Employees' State Insurance Corporation and where the appropriate Government
is a State Government with the approval of the Central Government after giving
six months' notice of its intention of so doing by notification in the official
Gazette, extend the provisions of the Act or any of them, to any other
establishment or class of establishments, industrial, commercial, agricultural
or otherwise. The expression 'establishment is not defined in the Act. It may
be any industrial, commercial, agricultural or any other establishment where
employees are engaged in connection with the business of the establishment.
Section 38 of the Act provides that subject to the provisions of the Act, all
employees in factories or establishments to which the Act applies shall be
insured in the manner provided by the Act.
Section 39 of the Act states that the
contribution payable under it shall comprise contribution payable by the
employer and contribution payable by the employee. The contributions have to be
paid at the rates specified in the First Schedule to the Act except where the
employees concerned are excluded from some of the benefits under the Act in
which case the Corporation is authorised to fix the rates of the contributions.
Now reverting to section 2 (9) of the Act it
is seen that the expression 'employee' means any person employed for wages in a
factory or any person employed for wages in connection with the work of a
factory, it also means any person employed for wages in or in connection with
the work of an establishment to which the 968 Act applies. If it is held in
these cases that the employees in the administrative or editorial sections of
the printing presses are employed in connection with the work of the printing
presses which are admittedly factories, then they have to be treated as employees
under section 2 (9) of the Act even though no notification is issued under
section 1 (5) of the Act making the Act applicable to those sections.
The fact that such a notification has been
issued, either as a matter of abundant caution or on a wrong understanding of
the true implication of the definition in section 2 (9), becomes irrelevant.
The members of the administrative and editorial staff of the appellants are no
doubt not working in the printing presses. But the question is whether they are
not working in connection with the work of the printing presses which are
factories under section 2 (12) of the Act.
In Royal Talkies, Aydraboe & Ors. v.
Employees State Insurance Corp. employees working in a canteen and at the cycle
stand attached to a cinema theatre were held to be persons employed in
connection with the work of the cinema theatre. The Court, however, observed
that merely being employed in connection with the work of a factory or of an
establishment in itself did not entitle a person to be an employee but it must
be proved that he was not only employed in connection with the work k of the
establishment but also be shown to be employed in one or other of the three
categories mentioned in section 2 (9) of the Act.
At this stage, two decisions of this Court
are required to be considered. In Hydrabad Asbsets Cement Products Ltd. v. The
Employees Insurance Court & Anr the appellant company which had a factory
at Sanatnagar where it was manufacturing asbestos sheets contained that the
employes working in its zonal offices situated at various other places who were
doing the work of canvassing for the sale of products manufactured by it at
Sanatnagar were not employees within the definition of section 2 (9) of the Act
as the zonal offices were establishments and not factories. Negativing the
above contention, this Court held that any person employed for wages in the
zonal offices for the purpose of purchase of raw materials or distribution or
sale of the products of the factory or for 969 administrative purposes of the
factory was a person employed in connection with the worker of the factory and
hence was an employee as defined by section 2 (9) of the Act. The Court in
reaching the conclusion also relied on the amendment of section 2 (9) of the
Act by Act No. 44 of 1966 which provided that the expression 'employee'
included 'any person employed for wages on any work connected with the
administration of the factory'.
When the present appeals are considered in
the light of the above decisions, the members of the administrative staff and
of the editorial staff in each of the printing presses in question have to be
treated as employees under section 2(9) of the Act. These persons are directly
employed by the management concerned on work incidental or preliminary or
connected with the work of the factory. The work of the factory in each case
being printing and publication of a newspaper, its work cannot be carried on
without the assistance of the members of the editorial staff who are engaged in
preparing the material for printing the newspaper and of the administrative
staff which is needed for managing the affairs of the factory. It is a matter
of common knowledge that the members of the editorial staff work almost round
the clock at the premises where the printing press is situated or at the
precincts thereof. Their principal job is to pick up and select from out of the
mass of information which flows in to the press, messages which have news
value, trim them and make them fit for communication through newspaper. Even
though they may not be actually engaged in operating the printing machines,
their presence at the spot is essential right upto the moment the 'strike
order' is given for the printing of the newspaper.
There are cases where changes in the matter to
be printed are effected even a few minutes before the process of printing is
begun and cases where even after a few copies of newspaper are printed, they
are withheld and destroyed on the last minute advice of a responsible members
of the editorial staff are not unknown. The editors, news editors, sub-editors,
reporters etc. who constitute the editorial staff at the press are the
collectively referred to as the gate keepers' of news because they determine
what should be published and what should not be published. A printing press
established for the purpose of publishing a newspaper cannot effectively
function at all without the services of the members of the editorial staff
being made available almost till the time the newspaper comes out of the printing
machine. They virtually constitute an integral part of the newspaper press and
they are employed in connection with the work done at the printing press. The
members of the editorial staff clearly fall under clause (i) 970 of section
2(9) of the Act. It is so even in the case of the administrative staff. They
fall under the clause containing the words includes any person employed for
wages on any work connected with the administration of the 'factory'. It may be
stated here that even without the amendment made by Act No. 44 of 1966 this
Court in Nagpur Electric Light & Power Co. Ltd. v. Regional Director
Employees State Insurance Corporation etc had taken the view that the clerical
staff etc. of a factory whether they worked within the factory or outside its
premises would be employees under section 2(9) of the Act as it stood before
its amendment.
The argument that since a person mainly
employed in a managerial or administrative capacity cannot be treated as a
working journalist under section 2(9) of the Working Journalists (Conditions of
Service) and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1955, the members employed in the
administrative staff should not be treated as employees in a printing press is
an extremely Jenuous argument and it is not worth probing further. The effect
of on Act cannot be controlled by the provisions of another Act unless the
provisions in one have bearing on the provisions of the other. No such
provision is brought to our notice. The contention that since the Act is not
expressly made applicable to newspaper establishments by the Working
Journalists (Conditions of Service) Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1955 as it
has made certain laws applicable by sections 3, 14 and 15 thereof, the Act
should not be applied to the editorial staff has also no merit. We are
satisfied that section 2(9) of the Act clearly brings them within the scope of
the Act.
On an examination of the provisions of the
Act, we are of the view that the persons employed for wages in the
administrative section and the editorial section of each of the printing
presses in question are employees as defined in section 2(9) of the Act and the
demand made by the Employees' State Insurance Corporation is a justified one.
In the result the appeals fail and they are
dismissed with costs.
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