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State Of Bihar And Others v. Himanshu Kumar Vidyarthi And Others

State Of Bihar And Others
v.
Himanshu Kumar Vidyarthi And Others

(Supreme Court Of India)

S.L.P.(C) No.7957 of 1996 | 26-03-1997


1. Delay condoned.

2.This special leave petition arises from the judgment of the Division Bench of the Patna High Court, made on 1-7-1996 in LPA No. 1213 of 1995 confirming the order of the learned Single Judge in CWJC No. 2311 of 1995.

3. The admitted position is that Petitioner 1 came to be appointed as Assistant, Petitioner 2 as Driver and Petitioners 3 to 5 as Peons on different dates, viz., on 1-8-1988, 10-11-1989, 31-5-1987 and 22-4-1992. They were appointed in the Cooperative Training Institute, Deoghar by its Principal. They are admittedly daily-wage employees. Their services came to be terminated by the Principal. Calling that termination in question, they filed a writ petition in the High Court. The main grievance of the petitioners before us is that termination of their services is in violation of Section25-F of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947. The question for consideration, therefore, is : Whether the petitioners can be said to have been "retrenched" within the meaning of Section25-F of the Industrial Disputes Act Every department of the Government cannot be treated to be "industry". When the appointments are regulated by the statutory rules, the concept of "industry" to that extent stands excluded. Admittedly, they were not appointed to the posts in accordance with the rules but were engaged on the basis of need of the work. They are temporary employees working on daily wages. Under these circumstances, their disengagement from service cannot be construed to be a retrenchment under the Industrial Disputes Act. The concept of "retrenchment" therefore, cannot be stretched to such an extent as to cover these employees. The learned counsel for the petitioners seeks to contend that in the High Court, the petitioners did not contend that it is a case of retrenchment but termination of their services is arbitrary. Since they are only daily-wage employees and have no right to the posts, their disengagement is not arbitrary.

4. The special leave petition is accordingly dismissed.

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 K. RAMASWAMY

HON'BLE JUSTICE D.P. WADHWA

Eq Citation

(1997) 4 SCC 391

[1997] 3 SCR 368

AIR 1997 SC 3657

1997 (2) PLJR 38

JT 1997 (4) SC 560

1997 (3) SCALE 463

1997 (76) FLR 237

1997 LABIC 2075

(1998) 2 LLJ 15

1997 (2) LLN 982

1997 (2) SLR 570

(1997) SCC (LS) 1079

1997 (2) KLT 8 (SN)

LQ/SC/1997/570

HeadNote

A. Service Law — Retrenchment/Lay-off/Recall — Daily-wage employees — Termination of services — Whether amounts to retrenchment — Held, concept of "retrenchment" cannot be stretched to such an extent as to cover daily-wage employees who have no right to the posts and were not appointed in accordance with the rules but were engaged on the basis of need of the work — Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, S. 25-F