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Sain Steel Products v. Naipal Singh And Others

Sain Steel Products
v.
Naipal Singh And Others

(Supreme Court Of India)

Civil Appeal No. 11893 Of 1996 | 15-02-2001


In this appeal the aggrieved employer is the appellant. His case is that respondent no. 2 (hereinafter referred to as the respondent) who was employed pursuant to an appointment order dated 10.9.1974 for a period of 11 months to be on probation and to be continued only on satisfactory completion of the probation but by an order made on 8.9.1975 his services were terminated. On the ground that he had been illegally retrenched from service, a dispute was raised under the Industrial Disputes Act (for short the) and the matter was referred to the Labour Court. The Labour Court held that the termination of the services to the respondent did not comply with the provisions of Section 25-F of theand therefore illegal and directed his reinstatement with wages at Rs. 137/- per month which was the last drawn wage or the minimum wages permissible under the Minimum Wages Act whichever is higher till the date of his reinstatement. This order was challenged in a writ petition before the High Court. The High Court dismissed the same. Hence this appeal by special leave

In this Court the learned Counsel for the appellant raised several contentions of which two are important in relation to termination of the services of the respondent. Firstly, he contended that the appointment of the respondent was for a period and if it is for a period, his termination was in terms of Section 2(oo) proviso (bb); that on being brought to his notice that on the date of this termination of the services of respondent the said provision was not available, he did not pursue with this line of argument

Secondly, he contended that the termination of services of the respondent was in terms of Section 25-F of theas the order of termination discloses that it is open to the respondent to collect the dues before leaving and in this context he relied upon two decisions of this Court in 1962 SC 51] The Straw Board Manufacturing Co. Ltd. Saharanpur v. Govind and Management of Delhi Transport Undertaking v. Industrial Tribunal, Delhi & Anr. to contend that even an offer of payment is as good as payment itself in terms of Section 25-F of the. However, a reading of the letter dated 8.9.1995 on which reliance is placed, it is clear that all that is stated is to ask the respondent to collect whatever is due to him but it does not spell out whether it included the amount as contemplated under Section 25-F or not. In these circumstances we cannot take this sentence to be making an offer in terms of Section 25-F of theto comply with the terms thereof. Hence the view taken by the Labour Court as affirmed by the High Court stands to good reason and it does not call for any interference at our handsConsidering the fact that the respondent has not been in employment of the appellant since 1975 for well over quarter of a century we do not think it appropriate to put him back in service of the appellant. It would be proper that some reasonable compensation be paid to him in lieu of back wages and reinstatement. We think, in the circumstances of the case, appropriate relief to be granted is a sum of Rs. 50, 000/- which shall be paid to the respondent or deposited with the Labour Court within a period of one month from today to be drawn by the respondent. Award made by the Labour Court as affirmed by the High Court shall stand modified in terms stated above

The appeal is accordingly allowed in part.

Advocates List

For

For Petitioner
  • Shekhar Naphade
  • Mahesh Agrawal
  • Tarun Dua
For Respondent
  • S. Vani
  • B. Sunita Rao
  • Sushil Kumar Pathak

Bench List

HON'BLE JUSTICE S. R. BABU

HON'BLE JUSTICE S. N. PHUKAN

Eq Citation

(2003) 4 SCC 628

2002 (1) SCT 243 (SC)

AIR 2001 SC 2401

2001 (89) FLR 356

(2001) 2 UPLBEC 1250

(2001) 1 LLJ 1345 (SC)

JT 2001 (3) SC 578

2001 MPLJ 11 (SC)

LQ/SC/2001/426

HeadNote

Labour Law — Retrenchment/Lay-off — Termination of services — Payment of retrenchment compensation — Compliance with S. 25-F, ID Act — Held, the letter dt. 8.9.1975 on which reliance was placed, stated that the respondent should collect whatever was due to him but it did not spell out whether it included the amount as contemplated under S. 25-F or not — Hence, held, the view taken by the Labour Court as affirmed by the High Court stands to good reason and it does not call for any interference