31 January 1997
Supreme Court
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M/S. AGENCIA E. SEQUEIRA M/S. FABRIL GASOSA Vs LABOUR COMMISSIONER & OTHERS


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PETITIONER: M/S. AGENCIA E. SEQUEIRA M/S. FABRIL GASOSA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: LABOUR COMMISSIONER & OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       31/01/1997

BENCH: A.S. ANAND, S.B. MAJMUDAR

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                             WITH                 CIVIL APPEAL NO. 565 OF 1997          (Arising out of SLP (C) NO. 23763 OF 1995)                       J U D G M E N T DR. ANAND, J.      Leave granted in both special leave petitions.      The  appellants  are  sister  concerns.  Their  Letters Patent Appeals  were disposed  of by  a common  judgment and order dated  19.6.1995  upholding  the  judgment  and  order passed by  the learned  Single Judge on 18.7.1994 dismissing the Writ  Petitions filled  by the appellants. These appeals are directed  against the  common judgment  and order  dated 19.6.1995.      On 9th  of December,  1986 a  settlement was arrived at between the  appellants and  the employees union relating to service conditions  of the  workmen for the period 1.1.86 to 30.6.88.  The   settlement  inter  alia  provided  that  VDA (variable dearness  allowance) shall  be paid at Rs. 2/- per point of  rise per  month beyond  AICPI 450 and the wages of the employees  were linked with the VDA. The employees union issued a notice of its intention to terminate the settlement with a  view to submit a fresh charter of demands on 1.7.88. A fresh  charter of  demands was  submitted by the employees union demanding  an increase  in the  salary etc. on 17.7.88 but it  was mentioned therein that the service conditions in force would continue to remain unchanged unless specifically agreed to  otherwise. The  employees union  did not seek any change in  the charter  of demands  in so far as the rate of VDA was  concerned. No fresh settlement appears to have been arrived at  between the  parties but  the appellants relying upon the  notice of  termination  and  the  new  charter  of demands, unilaterlly  freezed VDA  with effect  from 4.8.88. Negotiations between  the employees union and the appellant, did  not,   however,  produce   any  fresh  settlement.  The employees union (respondent No. 3) issued a demand notice to the employer  on 21.1.91  demanding  VDA  with  effect  from 1.7.88. It  was claimed  that the unilateral freezing of the VDA was  illegal and  that the obligations in the settlement dated 9.12.1986  were in  force and  binding on the parties. The employees  union,  it  appears  apart  from  filling  an

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application before  the authorities  under  the  payment  of Wages  Act  alleging  illegal  deduction  from  wages,  also approached the State Government for issuance of the recovery certificate for the arrears of VDA. The Labour Commissioner, on behalf  of the  State Government,  issued a notice to the appellants on  the application  filed by the employees union with regard to the payment of VDA on 14.5.91. The appellants were required  by the  Labour Commissioner  to reply  to the claims of the respondent union. The appellants were required by the  Labour Commissioner  to reply  to the  claims of the respondent union.  The appellants  took the  stand in  their reply that  the settlement  of  1986  stood  terminated  and referred to  the letter  of the employees union dated 1.7.88 conveying their  intention to  terminate the  settlement and the  fresh   charter  of  demands.  The  appellants  further resisted the  claim of  the union  inter-alia by  taking the plea that there was an oral agreement arrived at between the parties to  freeze the VDA at June, 1988 point and therefore the  claim   of  the  employees  union  was  untenable.  The appellants, however,  produced no evidence in support of its plea of  oral agreement.  The Labour Commissioner found that no oral agreement had been proved and that obligation of the employer to  pay the  VDA under  the 1986 continued to be in force and  with a  view  to  ensure  implementation  of  the settlement, a  notice of demand was issued to the appellants by the  Labour Commissioner  for payment  to the  VDA to the workmen for  the period  1.7.88 to  28.2.91.  An  order  for payment of Rs. 2,14,990.30 P. towards the VDA for the period 1.3.91 to  30.9.91 was  also issued.  Coercive  process  for recovery of  Rs. 5,29,720/- as arrears of VDA between 1.7.88 and 28.2.91 was initiated.      The appellant  filed writ  petitions No.  37 and  38 of 1994 in  the High  Court of  Bombay challenging  the notices dated 13.9.91  and 27.12.91  and certain  other notices  and proceedings taken  by the  Labour Commissioner in connection with the  claim of the workmen regarding payment of VDA. The main Plea raised by the appellants in the writ petitions was that the  settlement dated  9.12.86 was time bound till 30th June, 1988  and since  it was sought to be terminated by the Union through their notice dated 1.7.88, the employees union could not  maintain any  application 33C  (1)  of  the  Act. Besides, an  oral agreement  between the  parties which  had varied the  terms of  the settlement  particularly to freeze the VDA  after the expiry of the time bound settlement dated 9.12.86 was  also pleaded  and it  was  canvassed  that  the employees union  could take  recourse to seeking a reference under Section  10(1) of  the Act  or to  file an application Sec.(2) of  the Act  ut not to the provisions of Section 33C (1) of the Act. It was asserted that a settlement arrived at under the  provisions of  the Industrial Disputes Act ceased to be  a  settlement  as  defined  under  the  Act,  on  its termination and  turns itself  into a  mere contract between the  parties   and,  therefore,   on  termination   of  such settlement, the  rights recognised  by the settlement cannot be enforced in the manner prescribed under Section 33C(1) of the Act  but only  as contractual  obligations. The  learned Single Judge  rejected the  plea that there had been an oral agreement between  the parties  which had in turn varied the terms of  the settlement of 1986 were subsisting between the parties inspite  of the time bound settlement and as such no fault could  be found  with the  exercise of jurisdiction by the Labour  Commissioner under  Section 33C  (1) of the Act. The Learned  Single Judge also rejected the argument that in the facts and circumstances of the case, the employees union could only  prefer a  claim either  under Section 33C (2) of

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the Act  or seek a reference under Section 10(1) of the  Act for recovery  of the  arrears of  VDA. It  was held that the application filed  by  the  employees  union  under  Section 33C(1) was maintainable and the obligations flowing from the settlement regarding  payment of VDA could be enforced under the provisions  of Section 33C (1) of the Act and that those obligations  flowing  from  the  1986  settlement  were  not contractual in  nature. The  writ petitions were accordingly dismissed on  18.7.1994.  The  Letter  Patent  Appeals  also failed since  the Division  Bench also  found that there had been no  oral  agreement  varying  the  terms  of  the  1986 settlement and  that with  the expiry  of the period of time bound settlement,  the obligations  under the settlement did not cease  and went  on to opine that with the expiry of the period of  settlement,  only  a  stage  was  set  for  fresh negotiations to  take place  and till the settlement of 1986 was  superseded  by  a  fresh  settlement,  the  obligations flowing from  the settlement  of 1986  were binding  on  the parties and  were enforceable  under Section  33C (1) of the Act.      In these  appeals by special leave, learned counsel for the appellants  has once  again canvassed  the same  grounds which had  been unsuccessfully  raised  before  the  learned single Judge  and the  Division Bench.  Learned  counsel  in support of  the assertions  that the terms of the settlement stood varied  by an oral agreement and could not be enforced as terms  of the  settlement but  only as  a contract,  laid emphasis on the fact that for over two years the workmen had not demanded  payment of  the VDA  after it was freezed with effect from  1.7.88 and  their silence went to establish the existence of an oral agreement as alleged by the appellants. Plea regarding the non-maintainability of the petition under Section 33C  (1) of  the Act was also reiterated on the same grounds which were canvassed in the High Court.      Learned counsel  for the  respondents on the other hand countered these  submission by  urging that on facts no oral settlement at  all had  been arrived  at between the parties and that  the Labour  Commissioner as well as the High Court had rightly  found that  there was no oral settlement, which had superseded  the terms  of the  earlier settlement.  With regard to  the  maintainability  of  the  application  under Section  33C  (1)  of  the  Act,  learned  counsel  for  the respondents submitted  that verification  of  the  claim  of money which  stood  determined  under  the  1986  settlement squarely falls  within the  scope of  Section 33C (1) of the Act and  therefore it  was not obligatory on the part of the employees union to file any proceedings either under Section 10(1) or Section 33C (2) of the Act.      For what  follows, we have not been persuaded to take a view different than the one taken by the Labour Commissioner and the High Court.      The Labour  Commissioner, on  the basis of the material on  the   record  found   that  there   had  been   no  oral understanding or  agreement superseding  the 1986 settlement and therefore the obligations under the old settlement, even after the  expiry of  the period  of  its  operation,  would continue in  force till  fresh negotiations take place and a new settlement  is arrived  at.  The  learned  Single  Judge agreed with the Labour Commissioner and observed:-      " In the facts and circumstances of      the case I am inclined to hold that      the so  called  oral  understanding      whereby the  workmen are  purported      to have  given up or deferred their      right to  be paid  VDA in  exchange

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    for some  extra benefits  till  the      finalisation of  another settlement      in place  of the  terminated one is      ex-facie bad and apparently without      any authority  of law which nowhere      provides  for  this  type  of  oral      agreements  as  valid  and  legally      sufficient to  modify the terms and      conditions of  a contract  which is      deemed  to   operate  and   subsist      consequent upon  the termination of      the old settlement."      The learned  Single Judge  also examined  the effect of the letter of the employees union dated 1.7.88 and held that the terms  and conditions  of the  settlement of   1986 were subsisting and  the right  of the workmen to receive VDA was not effected  in any  manner. Dealing with the submission of the appellants, that the silence of the workmen to claim VDA till 1991,  was indicative  of the fact that the parties had agreed to  the freezing  of the VDA with effect from 4.8.88. the learned Single Judge observed:      "  Therefore   if  the   terms  and      conditions  of  the  settlement  of      1986 are  to be  held as subsisting      inspite of  its valid  termination,      obviously the  right of the workmen      to claim  the overdue VDA could not      have   been    disputed   by    the      petitioner, bearing  in  mind  that      this was  one of  the items  agreed      and   inserted   in   the   earlier      settlement  which  could  not  have      been thus  disturbed even  after it      ceased to  operate unless  replaced      by any  other one  or by a contract      with the  same force  and authority      of fresh  settlement. Similarly the      fact   of    the   workmen   having      abstained   from    demanding   its      payment fro all this period of more      than  two   years   following   the      cessation   of    the    settlement      ostensibly  during  the  period  of      negotiations of anew agreement need      not be  also construed  as a waiver      of their  right to  press  for  its      demand or  as an  indication of the      existence  of   a  fresh  concluded      agreement  whereby  the  terminated      settlement  stood   modified   with      regard to  the terms and conditions      of the pre-existing contract deemed      to operate after the termination of      the settlement of 1986.      and  dismissed   the  writ   petitions  filed   by  the appellants.      The Division  Bench while  deciding the  Letter  Patent Appeals agreed  with the  dindings recorded  by the  learned Single Judge and observed:      "The employers  contend that  there      was an  oral understanding  between      the  parties  whereby  the  workmen      agreed  to   freeze  the   dearness      allowance calculated  as on the Ist      July, 1988  and had  agreed not  to

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    claim VDA  in accordance  with  the      formula set  out in  the settlement      dated  9th   December,  1986.   The      learned Single  Judge  has  rightly      rejected  the   contention  of  the      employers on  this  aspect  of  the      unnecessary controversy  raised  on      behalf  of   the  petitioners.  The      alleged oral  understanding has not      been proved in law. There could not      be any oral understanding in law so      as to modify a written settlement."      Thus, we  find that  on facts, it has been found by the Labour Commissioner  and the  High Court  and in  our opinin rightly, that  there was  no oral understanding or agreement as pleaded  by the  employer to give up or defer the payment of VDA  by the  employees union.  The findings  are based on proper  appreciation   of  material   on  the  record.  Even otherwise, no  oral agreement  could  be  pleaded  to  vary, modify or supersede a written settlement.      Section 2(p) of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 reads as under :      "Settlement"  means   a  settlement      arrived  at   in  the   course   of      conciliation     proceeding     and      includes   a    written   agreement      between the  employer  and  workmen      arrived at  otherwise than  in  the      course of  conciliation  proceeding      where  such   agreement  has   been      signed by  the parties  thereto  in      such manner  as may  be  prescribed      and a copy thereof has been sent to      an  officer   authorised  in   this      behalf    by     the    appropriate      Government  and   the  conciliation      officer." (Emphasis Supplied)      A bare  reading of the above definition of ‘settlement’ shows  that   the  settlement   contemplated  by  the  above provision excludes  any oral  understanding or  agreement to supersede an  earlier written  agreement or  settlement.  In this connection  a reference  to Rule  58 of  the Industrial Disputes (Central)  Rules, 1957 would also be relevant. That Rule to the extent relevant reads :      58. Memorandum of settlement :- (1)      A  settlement  arrived  at  in  the      course of  conciliation proceedings      or otherwise, shall be in Form ‘H’.      (2) The  settlement shall be signed      by -      (a) in  the case of an employer, by      the employer  himself,  or  by  his      authorised  agent,   or  when   the      employer is an incorporated company      or other  body  corporate,  by  the      agent, manager  or other  principal      officer of the corporation:      (b) in  the case of the workmen, by      any officer of a trade union of the      workmen  duly  authorised  in  this      behalf at  a meeting of the workmen      held for the purpose:      (c) in  the case  of the workman in      an industrial dispute under Section

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    2-A of  the  Act,  by  the  workman      concerned.      ..................      (3) Where  a settlement  is arrived      at in  the course  of  conciliation      proceeding the conciliation Officer      shall send  a report thereof to the      Central Government  together with a      copy   of    the   memorandum    of      settlement signed by the parties to      the dispute.      (4) Where  a settlement  is arrived      at  between   an  employer  an  his      workmen  otherwise   than  in   the      course of  conciliation  proceeding      before a  Board or  a  Conciliation      Officer,   the   parties   to   the      settlement  shall  jointly  send  a      copy   thereof   to   the   Central      Government,   the    Chief   Labour      Commissioner (Central),  New Delhi,      and     the     Regional     Labour      Commissioner (Central) concerned."      A conjoint  reading of Section 2(p) of the Act and Rule 58(supra)   unmistakably    shows   that    the   settlement contemplated by  the said provisions is a written settlement and not  an oral  settlement. It  is not in dispute that the 1986 settlement  was a written settlement arrived at between the parties.  It could not, therefore, be varied or modified except by  a   written settlement or by a written memorandum duly signed by the parties incorporating the terms of the so called understanding.  Section 92  of the Evidence Act, 1872 also lays down that when the terms of any contract, grant or settlement, as are required by law to be reduced to the form of a  document, have  been proved  as per  the provisions of Section 91  of the  Evidence Act,  no evidence  of any  oral agreement or  settlement shall  be admitted  as between  the parties to  any such  instrument or their representatives in interest for  the purpose of contradicting varying adding to or subtracting  from its  items. Thus,  both on facts of the instant case  as well  as on  the interpretation of law, the conclusion arrived  at by  the High  Court that there was no oral understanding  between the  parties  and  that  the  so called oral agreement pleaded by the appellants could not in any  case   vary  the   terms  of  the  1986  settlement  is unexceptionable.      Coming now  to the  second submission  of  the  learned counsel for  the appellants regarding the maintainability of the application  under Section  33C(1) of the Act. According to the  learned counsel  for the appellants, the obligations which flow  the 1986  settlement, after  the expiry  of  the period of  settlement, could  be  examined  only  through  a reference under  Section 10(1)  of the  Act or by the labour court under  Section 33C(2)  of the  Act and recourse to the provisions  of   Section  33C   (1)  of   the  Act  was  not permissible.  According  to  the  learned  counsel  for  the respondent on the other hand, the claim for money due, which only was required to be calculated and not determined, could be made  under Section  33C (1)  of the  Act and the workmen were not obliged to take recourse to either Section 10(1) or Section 33C (2) of the Act.      To appreciate the submission of the learned counsel for the parties,  it would  be advantageous  at  this  stage  to notice Sections  33C (1)  and (2)  of the  Act to the extent relevant. Those provisions read thus :

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    33C. Recovery  of money due from an      employer -  (1) Where  any money is      due to  a workman  from an employer      under a  settlement or  an award or      under the provisions of Chapter V-A      or Chapter  V-B the workman himself      or any  other person  authorised by      him in  writing in this behalf, or,      in the  case of  the death  of  the      workman, his assignee or heirs may,      without  prejudice  application  to      the appropriate  Government for the      recovery of  the money  due to him,      and if  the appropriate  Government      for is  satisfied that any money is      so   due,    it   shall   issue   a      certificate for  that amount to the      Collector  who   shall  proceed  to      recover the  same in  the manner as      an arrear of land revenue :      ...........................      ...........................      (2) Where  any workman  is entitled      to receive  from the  employer  any      money  or   any  benefit  which  is      capable of  being computed in terms      of money and if any question arises      as to  the amount of a money due or      as to  the  amount  at  which  such      benefit should  be  computed,  then      the question  may, subject  to  any      rules that  may be  made under this      Act,  be  decided  by  such  Labour      Court as  may be  specified in this      behalf    by     the    appropriate      Government  within   a  period  not      exceding three months :      ............................      (3) ........................      (4) ........................      (5) ........................      In the instant case the period of earlier settlement of 1986 had  expired but  the expiry  of that  period would not affect the  enforcement of  the binding  obligations flowing from the  earlier settlement  till substituted  by  a  fresh settlement.  The   obligations  arising   from  the  earlier settlement would  continue to  remain in  force, though as a contract and  not as  a binding  settlement, but  that would make  no  difference  to  the  maintainability  of  a  claim petition under  Section 33C  (1) of  the Act  so long as the requirements of  that  sub-section  are  satisfied  and  the obligations sought  to be  enforced  flow  from  an  earlier settlement or an award or under chapter VA or VB of the Act.      That the  rate of  VDA had  been agreed to and provided for in the 1986 settlement is not in dispute. It is also not in dispute  that the  claim petition  filed by the employees union under  section 33C (1) of the Act was for the recovery of the  VDA at the rate agreed to between the parties as per the terms  of the  1986 settlement  for the period for which the same  had ben  withheld by  the employer. Thus, both the rate of VDA and the period for which it was payable were not in  dispute   could  the  employees  union,  therefore,  not maintain an application under Section 33C (1) of the Act for the recovery of the VDA arrears?      Section 33C  is in  the nature of execution proceedings

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designed to  recover the  dues to  the workmen. Vide Section 83C (1)  and (2),  the legislature  has  provided  a  speedy remedy to  the workmen  to have the benefits of a settlement or award  which are  due to  them and  are capable  of being computed  in  terms  of  money,  be  recovered  through  the proceedings  under   those  sub-sections.   The  distinction between sub-section  (1) and  sub-section (2) of Section 33C lies mainly  in the  procedural  aspect  and  not  with  any substantive rights of workmen as conferred by these two sub- sections. Sub-section  (1)  comes  into  play  when  on  the application  of  a  workman  himself  or  any  other  person assignee or  heirs in  case of  his death,  the  appropriate Government is  satisfied that the amounts so claimed are due and payable  to that  workman. On  that  satisfaction  being arrived at,  the Government  can initiate  action under this sub-section for  recovery of  the amount provided the amount is a  determined one  and requires  no  ‘adjudication’.  The appropriate Government  does not have the power to determine the amount due to any workman under sub-section (1) and that determination can  only be  done by  the Labour  Court under sub-section (2) or in a reference under Section 10(1) of the Act. Even  after the  determination is  made by  the  Labour Court under  sub-Section (2) the amount so determined by the Labour Court,  can be  recovered  through  the  summary  and speedy procedure  provided by  sub-section (1).  Sub-section (1) does  not control  or affect  the ambit and operation of sub-section (2)  which is  wider in  scope than  sub-section (1). Besides  the rights  conferred under  Section  33C  (2) exist in  addition to  any other  mode of recovery which the workman has  under the  law. an  analysis of  the scheme  of Sections 33C  (1) and  33C (2)  shows  that  the  difference between the  two sub-sections  is quite  obvious. While  the former sub-section  deals with cases where money is due to a workman from  an employer  under a settlement or an award or under the  provisions of Chapter V-A or V-B, sub-section (2) deals with cases where a workman is entitled to receive from the employer  any money  or any  benefit which is capable of being computed in terms of money. Thus, where the amount due to  the  workmen,  flowing  from  the  obligations  under  a settlement, is  per-determined and  ascertained  or  can  be arrived at  by any  arithmetical calculation  or simplicitor verification and  the only  inquiry that  is required  to be made is whether it is due to the workman or not, recourse to the summary  proceedings under Section 33C (1) of the Act is not  only   appropriate  but   also  desirable   to  prevent harassment to  the workmen.  Sub-section (1)  of section 33C entitles the  workmen to apply to the appropriate Government for issuance  of a certificate of recovery for any money due to them  under  an  award  or  a  settlement  or  under  the provisions of  chapter-VA and  the Government. If satisfied, that a  specific sum  is due  to the  workmen, is obliged to issue a  certificate for  the recovery  of the  amount  due. After the  requisite certificate is issued by the Government to the collector, the collector is under a statutory duty to recover the amounts due under the certificate issued to him. The procedure  is aimed  at providing  a speedy,  cheap  and summary manner  of recovery  of the  amount due,  which  the employer has  wrongfully withheld.  It,  therefore,  follows that where  money  due  is  on  the  basis  of  some  amount predetermined  like  the  VDA,  the  rate  of  which  stands determined in  terms  of  the  settlement  an  award  stands determined in  terms of  the settlement  an award  or  under Chapter V-A or V-B, and the period for which the arrears are claimed is  also known,  the case  would be  covered by sub- section (1)  as only a calculation of the amount is required

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to be made.      A Constitution Bench of this Court in Kays Construction Co. (P)  Ltd. vs. State of Uttar Pradesh and Others [ (1965) 2 SCR,  276 ] while considering the scope of Section 6-H (1) and (2)  of the  U.P. Industrial  Disputes Act,  1947, which provisions are  in pari  materia to  Section 33C (1) and (2) opined :      " The  contrast  in  the  two  sub-      sections between  "money-due" under      the  first   sub-section  and   the      necessity of  reckoning the benefit      in  terms   of  money   before  the      benefit becomes  "money due"  under      the second  sub-section shows  that      mere arithmetical  calculations  of      the amount  due are not required to      be   with   under   the   elaborate      procedure  of   the   second   sub-      section.  The  appellant  no  doubt      conjured    up    a    number    of      obstructions in  the  way  of  this      simple      calculation.      These      objections dealt  with the  "amount      due"    and    they    are    being      investigated     because      State      Government   must   first   satisfy      itself that  the amount  claimed is      in fact  due.  But  the  antithesis      between "money  due" and a "benefit      which must  be computed in terms of      money"  still   remains,  for   the      inquiry being  made is  not of  the      kind  contemplated  by  the  second      sub-section  but  is  one  for  the      satisfaction    of     the    State      Government  under  the  first  sub-      section. It  is verification of the      claim to  money  within  the  first      sub-section and  not  determination      in terms of money of the value of a      benefit."      The law  laid down  by the  Constitution Bench  applies with full  force to facts of the instant case and in view of the  stablished   facts  and  circumstances  of  this  case, recourse to the proceedings under Section 33C (1) of the Act by the union was just and proper.      The  Division  Bench  of  the  Bombay  High  Court  was therefore, right  in holding  that the recovery certificates issued by the Labour Commissioner for recovery of the mounts claimed by  the workmen in the proceedings under section 33C (1) of  the Act  were perfectly  valid,  legally  sound  and suffered from  no infirmity  whatsoever. We  do not find any merit in  these appeals  and consequently  dismiss the  same with costs. One of fee only in two appeals.      Before parting  with the  judgment, we  would, however, like to clarify that the application which has been filed by the employees  union before  the Labour  Court under Section 33C (2)  of the  Act for recovery of benefits/amounts, other than those  claimed in  their application  under Section 33C (1) of  the Act  shall be decided by the Labour Court on its own merits and the findings recorded by us hereinabove shall be considered  as confined only to the recovery certificates issued by  the Labour  Commissioner under Section 33C (1) of the Act,  which are the subject matter of the appeals hereby disposed of by us.

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