Chandrakant
Tukaram Nikam & Ors Vs. Municipal Corporation of Ahmedabad & Anr [2002]
Insc 61 (6 February
2002)
G.B.
Pattanaik, R.P. Sethi & Bisheshwar Prasad Singh Pattanaik, J.
These
appeals are directed against the judgment of the Division Bench of Gujarat High
Court in Letters Patent Appeals filed against a common judgment of a learned
Single Judge dated 22nd
September, 1990. The
workmen of Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation challenged the orders of
dismissal/removal from service, by filing a Civil Suit. The City Civil Court framed four issues, one of which is
whether the suit is bad for want of jurisdiction. On the said issue it came to
the conclusion that the Civil
Court had no
jurisdiction to entertain and try the suit, accordingly the suit was dismissed.
Identical suits filed by different employees against the order of termination
having been dismissed by the City Civil Court,
individual appeals had been preferred and all those appeals, six in number,
stood disposed of by a common judgment of the learned Single Judge of Gujarat
High Court. The Single Judge came to the conclusion that the Civil Court will
have the jurisdiction to go into the question, as to whether the orders of
termination of services were null and void, having been passed by an authority
who had no competence to pass the same, but it had no jurisdiction to examine
the alleged lacuna in the procedural part of disciplinary inquiry which is
governed by Standing orders and the jurisdiction of the Civil Court to enter
into such question must be held to be impliedly barred. With this conclusion
the learned Single Judge having set aside the judgment of the City Civil Court
and having remitted the matter for adjudication, as to whether the order of
termination could be interfered with on the ground of want of competence on the
part of the authority, who had passed the order, the plaintiff/workman assailed
the same by filing Letters Patent Appeal contending inter alia that the City
Civil Court will have no jurisdiction to go into the procedural irregularities
because the provisions of Industrial Disputes Act and implied ouster of
jurisdiction of Civil Court is not correct. Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation
filed cross- objection in the Letters Patent Appealss challenging that part of
the judgment and decree of the learned Single Judge whereunder the Single Judge
had quashed the decree of the City Civil Court and remanded the matter to City
Civil Court for deciding as to whether declaration prayed for by each of the
workman can be granted on the ground of want of competence on the part of the
authority who had passed the order of dismissal/removal. All these Letters
Patent Appeals as well as the corss-objections were disposed of by a common
judgment, which is the subject matter of consideration in these appeals. The
Division Bench of the High Court was of the opinion that the City Civil Court
was right in holding that it has no jurisdiction to hear the suits instituted
by the employees/plaintiffs and the learned Single Judge was not right in
holding that the question of competence of the authority, who had passed order
of dismissal or who had passed the order to initiate disciplinary proceedings
could be decided by the Civil Court. According to the Division Bench even that
question about the competence of the authority who passed the order can be gone
into by the Labour
Court or Industrial
Tribunal, and therefore, Civil
Court's jurisdiction
to entertain a suit has to be held to have been impliedly barred. The Letters
Patent Appeals having been dismissed and cross-objections filed by the
Corporation having been allowed, the present appeals have been preferred. When
these appeals were listed before a bench of this Court, by order dated 13th October, 1993, Bench referred the cases to a
Constitution Bench of 5 Hon'ble Judges. When the appeals were listed before a
Constitution Bench it was represented by the counsel that the matter has been
resolved by a judgment of this Court in Rajasthan State Road Transport
Corporation and another vs. Krishna Kant and others (1995) 5 SCC 75, and
therefore, the Constitution Bench thought it fit to direct that the Civil
Appeals should be placed before a Bench of three learned Judges, and that is
why these appeals came before us.
Mr. Ahmadi,
learned counsel appearing for the appellants contended, that under Section 9 of
the Code of Civil Procedure the Civil Courts have the jurisdiction to try all
suits of civil nature excepting suits of which their cognizance is either
expressly or impliedly barred. In view of language of Section 9, the counsel
urged that there should be presumption in favour of the jurisdiction of a Civil Court and exclusion of the jurisdiction
should not be readily inferred unless such exclusion is either explicitly
expressed or clearly implied. According to Mr. Ahmadi, a law ousting the
jurisdiction of a Civil
Court should be
strictly construed and the onus lies on the party who seeks to oust the
jurisdiction of the Civil
Court, to establish
the same.
According
to the learned counsel a litigant having a grievance of a civil nature has,
independently of any statute, a right to institute a suit in a Civil Court and that right cannot be taken away
unless the same is either expressly barred or impliedly inferred. According to
the learned counsel the suits filed in the case in hand and the relief sought
for, being civil in nature the jurisdiction of the Civil Court ought not to be held to be
impliedly barred merely because the Industrial Tribunal or Labour Court can entertain the dispute and grant
the relief in question. It is also urged that the Industrial Disputes Act does
not contain any provision barring the jurisdiction of a Civil Court. That being the position, the High
Court committed error in holding that the jurisdiction of the Civil Court must be impliedly held to have been
barred.
According
to Mr. Ahmadi, if the right claimed is not purely a creature of the Industrial
Disputes Act, but is a common law right and the Industrial Disputes Act
entrusts to a special Tribunal for adjudication of such right and at the same
time does not expressly oust the jurisdiction of the Civil Court, the intention
of the legislature must be held to be that the jurisdiction of the Civil Court
is not barred and in such a case it would be open to the party concerned to
elect one of the forum for the remedies, which he is seeking for. The learned
counsel for the respondent Mr. Anand, on the other hand contended, that the
Parliament having enacted the provisions of Industrial Disputes Act for speedy,
inexpensive and efficacious remedies in relation to a dispute between the
employer and the employee, it must be held that the jurisdiction of the Civil
Court is barred if the relief sought for could be properly given by a forum
under the Industrial Law.
According
to Mr. Anand the very purpose of the enactment would be frustrated if it is
held that the Civil
Court still retains
the jurisdiction over a dispute which could be otherwise adjudicated upon by a
forum under the Industrial Disputes Act.
In
view of the rival submissions at the bar, the question that arises for
consideration is whether the relief sought for by the plaintiffs in these suits
can come within the ambit of an industrial dispute under the Industrial
Disputes Act, and if the answer is in affirmative then whether the conclusion
of the High Court that the jurisdiction of the Civil Court is barred is correct
or not? One of the leading authorities on the point is the case of Dhulabhai
and others vs. The State of Madhya Pradesh and another - (1968) 3 SCR 662. A
Constitution Bench of this Court after examining the diverse views expressed in
several earlier decisions came to hold that an exclusion of jurisdiction of
Civil Court is not readily to be inferred unless the statute gives a finality
to the orders of the special Tribunals and the Tribunals would be entitled to
confer adequate remedy what the Civil Courts would normally do in a suit and
only in such circumstance the Civil Courts' jurisdiction can be inferred to be
excluded, but the Court hasten to add that even in such cases also the Civil
Courts' jurisdiction cannot be said to be excluded, if it is alleged that the
provisions of particular Act had not been complied with or that the statutory
Tribunal have not acted in conformity with the fundamental principles of
judicial procedure. Mr. Ahmadi, no doubt placed reliance on the decisions of
this Court in Sirsi Municipality by its President, Sirsi vs. Cecelia Kom
Francis Tellis - (1973) 1 SCC 409 and Ram Kumar vs. State of Haryana 1987
(Supp.) SCC 582, but in both these aforesaid cases the question of implied
ouster of the jurisdiction of Civil Court where an Industrial Court can grant
relief sought for was not the subject matter for consideration. The
consideration in both the cases was whether the dismissal of a workman being
assailed, can the Civil
Court entertain and
try the suit and the answer was in affirmative. Nobody disputes with the
aforesaid proposition.
The
point in issue in the case in hand was not before this Court in the aforesaid
two cases. In the case of The Premier Automobiles Ltd. etc. vs. Kamlekar Shantaram
Wadke of Bombay and others etc. etc,. (1976) 1 SCC 496 the question of ouster
of jurisdiction of the Civil Court in relation to a labour dispute came up for
consideration directly. The Court held in the aforesaid case that if a statute
confers a right and in the same breath provides for a remedy for enforcement of
such right the remedy provided by the statute is an exclusive one. It further
held that under Section 9 of the Code, the Courts have subject to certain restrictions,
jurisdiction to try suits of civil nature excepting suits of which their
cognizance is either expressly or impliedly barred. The Court examined the
provisions of the Industrial Disputes Act and came to the conclusion that the
Act envisages collective bargaining, contracts between union representing the
workmen and the management and such a matter was held to be outside the realm
of the common law or Indian Law of Contract. The Court also held that the
powers of the authorities deciding industrial disputes under the Industrial
Disputes Act are very extensive, much wider than the powers of a civil court
while adjudicating a dispute which may be an industrial dispute. But under the
provisions of the Industrial Disputes Act since the workman cannot approach the
labour court or tribunal directly and the government can refuse to make a
reference even on grounds of expediency, such handicap would lead to the
conclusion that for adjudication of an industrial dispute in connection with a
right or obligation under the general or common law and not created under the
Act, the remedy is not exclusive, and on the other hand is alternative, and
therefore, the Civil Court will have no jurisdiction to try and adjudicate upon
an industrial dispute if it concerned enforcement of certain right or liability
created only under the Act and not otherwise. In other words it was held that
if the dispute is not an industrial dispute, nor does it relate to enforcement
of any other right under the Act, the remedy lies only in the Civil Court. But
if the dispute is an industrial dispute arising out of the right or liability
under the general or common law and not under the Act, the jurisdiction of the
Civil Court is alternative, leaving it to the election of suitor concerned to
choose his remedy for the relief which is competent to be granted in a
particular remedy. It was also held that if the industrial dispute relates to
the enforcement of a right or an obligation created under the Act, then the
only remedy available to the suitor is to get an adjudication under the Act.
Mr. Ahmadi, learned counsel appearing for the appellants strongly relied upon
the aforesaid observations for his contention that the dispute in the case in
hand cannot be held to be dispute arising out of a right or liability under the
Act, and on the other hand, is a dispute arising out of a right or liability
under the common law, and as such, the jurisdiction of the Civil Court could
not have been held to have been barred. This decision of the Court was considered
by this Court in Rajasthan State Road Transport Corporation & Anr. vs.
Krishna Kant and others. (1995) 5 SCC 75. After quoting the principles
enunciated by the Court in The Premier Automobiles' case (supra) and on
consideration of a large number of decisions, it was held :- "Para 28. Now, coming back to Principle No.2 and its
qualification in para 24, we must say that para 24 must be read harmoniously
with the said principle and not in derogation of it- not so as to nullify it
altogether. Indeed, Principle No.2 is a reiteration of the principle affirmed
in several decisions on the subject including Dhulabhai.
Principle
No.2 is clear whereas para 24 is more in the nature of a statement of fact. It
says that most of the industrial disputes will be disputes involving the rights
and obligations created by the Act. It, therefore, says that there will hardly
be any industrial dispute which will fall under Principle No.2 and that almost
all of them will fall under Principle No.3. This statement cannot be understood
as saying that no industrial dispute can ever be entertained by or adjudicated
upon by the civil courts. Such an understanding would not only make the
statement of law in Principle No.2 wholly meaningless but would also run
counter to the well-established principles on the subject. It must accordingly
be held that the effect of Principle No.2 is in no manner whittled down by para
24. At the same time, we must emphasise the policy of law underlying the
Industrial Disputes Act and the host of enactments concerning the workmen made
by Parliament and State Legislatures. The whole idea has been to provide a
speedy, inexpensive and effective forum for resolution of disputes arising
between workmen and their employers. The idea has been to ensure that the
workmen do not get caught in the labyrinth of civil courts with their layers
upon layers of appeals and revisions and the elaborate procedural laws, which
the workmen can ill afford. The procedures followed by civil courts, it was
thought, would not facilitate a prompt and effective disposal of these
disputes. As against this, the courts and tribunals created by the Industrial
Disputes Act are not shackled by these procedural laws nor is their award
subject to any appeals or revisions. Because of their informality, the workmen
and their representatives can themselves prosecute or defend their cases. These
forums are empowered to grant such relief as they think just and appropriate.
They can even substitute the punishment in many cases. They can make and
re-make the contracts, settlements, wage structures and what not . Their awards
are no doubt amenable to jurisdiction of the High Court under Article 226 as
also to the jurisdiction of this Court under Article constraints. It is,
therefore, always in the interest of the workmen that disputes concerning them
are adjudicated in the forums created by the Act and not in a civil court. That
is the entire policy underlying the vast array of enactments concerning
workmen. This legislative policy and intendment should necessarily weigh with
the courts in interpreting these enactments and the disputes arising under
them.
Para 29. Now let us examine the facts of
the appeals before us in the light of the principles adumbrated Premier
Automobiles. The first thing to be noticed is the basis upon which the
plaintiffs-respondents have claimed the several reliefs in the suit. The basis
is the violation of the certified Standing Orders in force in the appellant-
establishment. The basis is not the violation of any terms of contract of service
entered into between the parties governed by the law of contract. At the same
time, it must be said, no right or obligation created by the Industrial
Disputes Act is sought to be enforced in the suit.
Yet
another circumstances is that the Standing Orders Act does not itself provide
any forum for the enforcement of rights and liabilities created by the Standing
Orders. The question that arises is whether such a suit falls under Principle
No.3 of Premier Automobiles or under Principle No. 2? We are of the opinion
that it falls under Principle No.3. The words "under the Act" in
Principle No.3 must, in our considered opinion, be understood as referring not
only to Industrial Disputes Act but also to all sister enactments-[like
Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act] which do not provide a special
forum of their own for enforcement of the rights and liabilities created by
them. Thus a dispute involving the enforcement of the rights and liabilities
created by the certified Standing Orders has necessarily got to be adjudicated
only in the forums created by the Industrial Disputes Act provided, of course,
that such a dispute amounts to an industrial dispute within the meaning of
Section 2(k) and 2- A of Industrial Dispsutes Act or such enactment says that such
dispute shall be either treated as an industrial dispute or shall be
adjudicated by any of the forums created by the Industrial Disputes Act.
The
civil courts have no jurisdiction to entertain such suits. In other words, a
dispute arising between the employer and the workman/workmen under, or for the
enforcement of the Industrial Employment Standing Orders is an industrial
dispute, if it satisfies the requirements of Section 2(k) and/or Section 2-A of
the Industrial Disputes Act and must be adjudicated in the forums created by
the Industrial Disputes Act alone. This would be so, even if the dispute raised
or relief claimed is based partly upon certified Standing Orders and partly on
general law of contract." The Three Judge Bench in Rajasthan State Road Transport
Corporation (supra) summarised the principles as below:- "(1) Where the
dispute arises from general law of contract, i.e., where reliefs are claimed on
the basis of the general law of contract, a suit filed in civil court cannot be
said to be not maintainable, even though such a dispute may also constitute an
"industrial dispute" within the meaning of Section 2(k) or Section
2-A of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947.
(2) Where,
however, the dispute involves recognition, observance or enforcement of any of
the rights or obligations created by the Industrial Disputes Act, the only
remedy is to approach the forums created by the said Act.
(3)
Similarly, where the dispute involves the recognition, observance or
enforcement of rights and obligations created by enactments like Industrial
Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946 which can be called "sister
enactments" to Industrial Disputes Act and which do not provide a forum
for resolution of such disputes, the only remedy shall be to approach the
forums created by the Industrial Disputes Act provided they constitute
industrial disputes within the meaning of Section 2(k) and Section 2-A of
Industrial Disputes Act or where such enactment says that such dispute shall be
either treated as an industrial dispute or says that it shall be adjudicated by
any of the forums created by the Industrial Disputes Act. Otherwise, recourse
to civil court is open.
(4) It
is not correct to say that the remedies provided by the Industrial Disputes Act
are not equally effective for the reason that access to the forum depends upon
a reference being made by the appropriate Government. The power to make a
reference conferred upon the Government is to be exercised to effectuate the
object of the enactment and hence not unguided. The rule is to make a reference
unless, of course, the dispute raised is a totally frivolous one ex facie. The
power conferred is the power to refer and not the power to decide, though it
may be that the Government is entitled to examine whether the dispute is ex
facie frivolous, not meriting an adjudication.
(5)
Consistent with the policy of law aforesaid, we commend to Parliament and the
State Legislatures to make a provision enabling a workman to approach the Labour
Court/Industrial Tribunal directly -- i.e., without the requirement of a
reference by the Government in case of industrial disputes covered by Section
2-A of the Industrial Disputes Act. This would go a long way in removing the
misgivings with respect to the effectiveness of the remedies provided by the
Industrial Disputes Act.
(6)
The certified Standing Orders framed under and in accordance with the
Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act, 1946 are statutorily imposed
conditions of service and are binding both upon the employers and employees, though
they do not amount to "statutory provisions". Any violation of these
Standing Orders entitles an employee to appropriate relief either before the
forums created by the Industrial Disputes Act or the civil court where recourse
to civil court is open according to the principles indicated herein.
(7)
The policy of law emerging from Industrial Disputes Act and its sister
enactments is to provide an alternative dispute-resolution mechanism to the
workmen, a mechanism which is speedy, inexpensive, informal and unencumbered by
the plethora of procedural laws and appeals upon appeals and revisions
applicable to civil courts. Indeed, the powers of the courts and tribunals
under the Industrial Disputes Act are far more extensive in the sense that they
can grant such relief as they think appropriate in the circumstances for
putting an end to an industrial dispute." It may be borne in mind that the
Industrial Disputes Act was enacted by the Parliament to provide speedy,
inexpensive and effective forum for resolution of disputes arising between
workmen and the employers, the underlying idea being to ensure that the workmen
does not get caught in the labyrinth of civil courts which the workmen can ill
afford, as has been stated by this Court in Rajasthan State Road Transport Corpn.
case(supra). It cannot be disputed that the procedure followed by Civil Courts
are too lengthy and consequently, is not an efficacious forum for resolving
Industrial Disputes speedily. The power of Industrial Courts also is wide and
such forums are empowered to grant adequate relief as they think just and
appropriate. It is in the interest of the workmen that their disputes,
including the dispute of illegal termination are adjudicated upon by an
industrial forum. To our query Mr. Ahmadi, learned counsel appearing for the
appellants was not in a position to tell that the relief sought for in the
cases in hand, cannot be given by a forum under the Industrial Disputes Act.
The legality of order of termination passed by the employer will be an industrial
dispute within the meaning of Section 2(k) and under Section 17 of the
Industrial Disputes Act, every Award of Labour Court, Industrial Tribunal or
National Tribunal is required to be published by the appropriate government
within a period of thirty days from the date of its receipt and such Award
published under sub-section (1) of Section 17 is held to be final.
In the
aforesaid premises and having regard to the relief sought for in the suits
filed in the Civil Court, we have no manner of hesitation to come to the
conclusion that in such cases the jurisdiction of the Civil Court must be held
to have been impliedly barred and the appropriate forum for resolution of such
dispute is the forum constituted under the Industrial Disputes Act. We, therefore,
do not find any infirmity with the impugned judgment of the High Court
requiring our interference. The appeals accordingly fail and are dismissed. We
would however observe that it would be open for the appellants-workmen to
approach the appropriate industrial forum and such forum if approached, will
dispose of the matter on its own merits. There will be no order as to costs.
............................................J.
(G.B.
PATTANAIK) ........................................J.
(R.P.
SETHI) ................................J.
(BISHESHWAR
PRASAD SINGH) February
06, 2002.
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