Sankar Mukherjee And Others
v.
Union Of India And Others
(Supreme Court Of India)
Writ Petition No. 2123 Of 1982 | 16-11-1989
1. The Parliament enacted the Contract Labour (Regulation and Abolition) Act, 1970 (hereinafter called the) with the object of abolition of contact labour in respect of such categories as may be notified by the appropriate government in the light of criteria laid down in the and also regulating the service conditions of contract labour where abolition is not possible. Section 10 of thewhich is relevant is as under:
"Prohibition of employment of contract labour. - (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act, the appropriate government may, after consultation with the Central Board or, as the case may be, a State Board, prohibit, by notification in the official Gazette, employment of contract labour in any process, operation or other work in any establishment
(2) Before issuing any notification under sub-section (1) in relation to an establishment, the appropriate government shall have regard to the conditions of work and benefits provided for the contract labour in that establishment and other relevant factors such as -
(a) Whether the process, operation or other work is incidental to, or necessary for the industry, trade, business, manufacture or occupation that is carried on in the establishment;
(b) Whether it is of perennial nature, that is to say, it is of sufficient duration having regard to the nature of industry, business, manufacture or occupation carried on in that establishment;
(c) Whether it is done ordinarily through regular workmen in that establishment or an establishment similar thereto;
(d) Whether it is sufficient to employ considerable number of whole time workmen
Explanation : If a question arises whether any process or operation or other work is of perennial nature, the decision of the appropriate government thereon shall be final."
2. In exercise of the powers under Section 10(1) of the Act, the Government of West Bengal issued a notification dated February 9, 1980 prohibiting the employment of contract labour is 16 departments covering 65 jobs in the establishments of M/s. Indian Iron and Steel Co. Ltd. (hereinafter called the company) situated at Burnpur in the State of West Bengal. The list of the departments and the jobs is given in the schedule attached to the notification and paragraph 9 therein, relating to the Brick Department, in as under:
"Cleaning and stacking and other allied jobs except loading and unloading of bricks from wagons and trucks."
3. It is thus obvious that the job of loading and unloading of bricks from wagons and trucks in the Brick Department has been specifically excluded from the beneficial purview of the notification. The said action of the State Government has been challenged in this writ petition under Article 32 of the Constitution of India by the affected workmen on the ground that the petitioners have been subjected to hostile discrimination so much so that the workmen doing the same job in other departments and allied jobs in the same department have been rescued from the archaic system of contract labour whereas the petitioners have been singled out and left to be grinded under the pernicious effect of this primitive system. The action according to the petitioners is arbitrary, discriminatory and is violative of Article 14 of the Constitution of India.
4. Mr. R. K. Garg, learned counsel appearing for the petitioners, has contended that the job of loading and unloading is not peculiar to the Brick Department, rather such jobs are being operated in the Stores (iron and steel), traffic (steel) and Coke ovens departments. The benefit of notification dated February 9, 1980 has been extended to the loaders in all these departments. He further argued that the work of stacking is directly dependent on the loading and unloading of bricks. The two jobs, according to him, are allied and incidental and as such the workmen holding these jobs cannot be treated differently.
5. The learned counsel for the respondents on the other hand has argued that the job of loading and unloading of bricks in the Brick Department is not of perennial nature, the supply of bricks is intermittent depending upon the requirement, availability of bricks as also the availability of the wagons and trucks. It is further submitted that the decision of the appropriate government to the effect that the job is not of perennial nature is final under the.
6. It is surprising that more than forty years after the independence the practice of employing labour through contractors by big companies including public sector companies is still being accepted as a normal feature of labour employment. There is no security of service to the workmen and their wages are far below than that of the regular workmen of the company. This Court in Standard-Vacuum Refining Co. of India Ltd. v. Its workmen and Catering Cleaners of Southern Railway has disapproved the system of contract labour holding it to be archaic, primitive and of baneful nature. The system, which is nothing but an improved version of bonded labour, is sought to be abolished by the. The Act is an important piece of social legislation for the welfare of labourers and has to be liberally construed.
7. It is not denied that the bricks handled by the Brick Department are used in furnaces of the company as refractory. Therefore the work done by the Brick Department including loading and unloading of bricks is incidental to the industry carried on by the company. It is also not denied that the petitioners are employed as contract labour by the company for last 15/20 years. Then where is the justification to treat the petitioners differently and deny them the right of regular appointment
8. We may examine the case from another aspect. The petitioners have specifically averred in paras 7 and 11 of the writ petition that the job of loading and unloading of bricks is allied and incidental to the job of stacking of bricks. Para 7 is as under:
"It is submitted that loading and unloading of bricks from wagons and trucks is an essential feature of; and/or a job allied and/or incidental to the job of stacking of bricks. It is further submitted that the job of loading and unloading of bricks from wagons and trucks cannot be separated from the job of stacking and other allied jobs in the case of the petitioners."
9. Further para 11 is as under:
"It may be stated here that "stacking" as such was never the job of contract labour. The job of stacking and the job of loading and unloading of bricks are jobs ancillary, including and/or supplemented to each other. It may be made clear that the job of stacking and/or loading and unloading of bricks has to be done by competent and technical hands. The bricks used in the furnace are a very costly and technical material requiring perfect dimensions and precision. These bricks are also imported from outside India. Such bricks are manufactured indigenously too, but depending upon the consumption and demand, the bricks are purchased locally and/or imported from outside India. Such a costly material has to be handled by skilled workmen. The job of loading and unloading of such bricks and their stacking is done by skilled workmen and this work cannot be done by casual labour which may be engaged or disengaged as contract labour depending upon the sweet will of the management. It is submitted that loading and unloading and stacking of bricks are jobs which are supplementary to each other carried out by the same set of workmen and is essential for the day-to-day production. The petitioners submit that it is not possible to engage one set of workmen for stacking and another set of workmen for loading and unloading of bricks."
10. In the counter-affidavit on behalf of the company filed by its Deputy Chief Personnel Manager, there is no specific denial to the above averments. Though it has been stated that the petitioners are not doing the job of stacking the bricks, there is no denial nor any averment or material on the record to show that the job of loading and unloading of bricks is not incidental or allied to the stacking of the bricks. Even otherwise we fail to understand how the stacking of bricks is a job which is not incidental to loading and unloading. The purchase of bricks, transportation to the factory, unloading, stacking and use in the furnace are the jobs in one continuing process and it is difficult to accept that these jobs are not incidental or allied to each other. That being so all the workmen performing these jobs are to be treated alike. On the same reasoning it can not be said that the loaders job is not, and other jobs in the Brick Department are, of Perennial nature. In any case there is no material or basis to show that the job of loading and unloading of bricks is not of perennial nature.
11. We, therefore, see no justification for excluding the job of loading and unloading of bricks from wagons and trucks from the purview of the notification dated February 9, 1980. We allow the writ petition and strike down the words "except loading and unloading of bricks from wagons and trucks" in paragraph 9 of the said notification issued by Government of West Bengal being discriminatory and as such violative of Article 14 of the Constitution of India. We direct that the petitioners and other workers doing the job of loading and unloading of bricks from wagons and trucks in the Brick Department be treated at par with effect from the date of notification, with those who are doing the job of cleaning and stacking in the said department. It is further directed that the workmen doing the job of loading and unloading who have been retrenched during the pendency of the writ petition be put back into service with all back wages and consequential benefits. There shall be no order as to costs.
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 KULDIP SINGH
HON'BLE JUSTICE M. N. VENKATACHALIAH
Eq Citation
(1990) 1 UPLBEC 533
AIR 1990 SC 532
(1990) SUPPL. SCC 668
[1989] (SUPPL.) 2 SCR 182
JT 1989 (4) SC 330
1990 (60) FLR 20
(1990) 2 LLJ 443
1989 (2) LLN 953
1990 (1) SLJ 151
1990 (1) SLR 154
1989 (2) SCALE 1119
LQ/SC/1989/577
HeadNote
Labour Law — Contract Labour Regulation and Abolition Act, 1970 — S. 10(1) — Prohibition of employment of contract labour — Notification issued by appropriate government under S. 10(1) of the Act — Exclusion of certain jobs from the purview of the notification — Held, the exclusion of certain jobs from the purview of the notification is arbitrary, discriminatory and violative of Art. 14 of the Constitution — The purchase of bricks, transportation to the factory, unloading, stacking and use in the furnace are the jobs in one continuing process and it is difficult to accept that these jobs are not incidental or allied to each other — Contract Labour Regulation and Abolition Act, 1970, S. 10(1) — Constitution of India, Art. 14