28 March 1966
Supreme Court
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M/S. OM OIL & OILSEEDS EXCHANGE LTD., DELHI Vs THEIR WORKMEN

Case number: Appeal (civil) 131 of 1966


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PETITIONER: M/S.  OM OIL & OILSEEDS EXCHANGE LTD., DELHI

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THEIR WORKMEN

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/03/1966

BENCH: SHAH, J.C. BENCH: SHAH, J.C. WANCHOO, K.N. SIKRI, S.M.

CITATION:  1966 AIR 1657            1966 SCR   74  CITATOR INFO :  R          1980 SC1454  (6)

ACT: Industrial  Law-Retrenchment-Rule of "first come  last  go". When can be departed from-Employees properly retrenched-Com- pensation payable.

HEADNOTE: The respondents (workmen of the appellant) raised on  indus- trial  dispute and pleaded before the Labour Court that  the appellant’s action in retrenching some of its employees  was mala fide, as the appellant did not follow the "first  come. last  go" rule.  The appellant justified its action  on  the ground  that  the appellant had recorded valid  reasons  for departing from the rule.  The reasons were that, one of  the employees  retained was the only person capable  of  looking after the appellant’s share work and court work, another was the  only typist with the appellant, a third was the  record keeper  who alone knew where the different types of  records were kept, and the other two were peons who were retained as chowkidars  because, there was no other person who could  do that  work.   The  Labour Court  accepted  the  respondents’ contention, ordered the reinstatement of those employees who were  affected by the departure from the rule, and  directed that those employees who were properly retrenched should  be paid  in addition to the retrenchment compensation under  s. 25F  of  the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, which  had  been paid  by the appellant 50 % of their wages  as  compensation till the date when the award, became enforceable. In appeal to this Court. HELD:(i)  The  Labour Court was in error in  inferring  mala )ides  merely because the management departed from the  rule of "first come, last go." Where  other things are equal, the ordinary industrial  rule has  to  be followed by the employer, but the  rule  is  not immutable.   It is for the management to ascertain  who,  on retrenchment,  should  be retained in the interests  of  the business,  and  the industrial tribunal will  not  interfere with  the  decision of the management,  unless  preferential treatment  is actuated by mala fides.  Preference  given  to the retained employees on the ground of mere experience  may

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justify an inference of mala fides; but in the present case, the  employees  retained  had,  beside  experience,  special skill, or aptitude in the Particular branch of the  business of the appellant they were attending to, and the  management had retained them because of that skill, or aptitude. [76 E- F 79B-E]. Swadesamitran  Ltd.  V. Their Workmen, [1960] 3  S.C.R.  144 and J.K. Iron and Steel Company Ltd. v. its Workmen.  [1960] 2 L.L.J. 64, referred to. (ii) Where  retrenchment  has been properly  made  and  that order has not been set aside, there is no justification  for directing  payment  of compensation  to  employees  Properly retrenched   in  addition             to  the   retrenchment compensation statutorily payable. [8O E]. 75

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 131 of 1966. Appeal by special leave from the Award dated, the  September 10, 1965 of the Labour Court, Delhi, in I.D. No. 23 of 1965. M.   C. Setavad, B. P. Maheshwari and M. S. Narasimhan,  for the appellant., Madan Mohan, for the respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered-by Shah,  J.  The  appellant  is engaged  in  carrying  on  the business  of regulating forward trade in groundnut  oil  and mustard-seed,  and  is recognised as an Exchange  under  the provisions  of the Forward Contract Act, 1952.  On  June  1, 1964  the  Government of India issued an  order  prohibiting trading  in diverse commodities including groundnut oil  and mustard-seed, and in consequence thereof no further business could,  be carried on through. the appellant  Exchange.   On July  17, 1965 the appellant served notices of  retrenchment upon 30 out of its 37 employees and paid them salary for the period of notice and retrenchment compensation under s.  25F of the Industrial Disputes Act 14 of 1947.  The workmen then raised  an industrial dispute.  Conciliation proceedings  to solve  the dispute having failed, the  Delhi  Administration referred   to   the  Labour  Court   the   dispute   whether retrenchment of the workmen by the appellant was unjustified and illegal.  The workmen pleaded that retrenchment "on  the ground  of the ban imposed on forward trading  in  groundnut oil  and mustard-seed was mala fide" and that  in  retaining seven  workmen  the appellant did not  follow,  without  any adequate ground, "the first come last go" rule, and on  that account all the workmen were entitled to be reinstated  with full wages from the date of determination of employment  and with  continuity of service.  The appellant denied  that  in retrenching the workmen the management had acted mala  fide, or that retrenchment amounted to an unfair labour  practice. The  appellant  further submitted that retrenchment  of  the workmen was not liable to be challenged, because some junior members  of the staff were retained, since the  Company  had recorded  in the resolution its reasons for departing  from the  rule  "first come, last go", and had  "adhered  to  the principles  contained in s. 25F of the Industrial,  Disputes Act as far as possible". At  the  hearing of the reference before the  Labour  Court, Delhi,  counsel for the workmen conceded that the  appellant was  justified  in retrenching its employees  and  that  the number of employees required to carry on the work after  the imposition  of a ban against the business of  the  appellant could  not  exceed  the number retained  by  the  appellant.

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Counsel however contended that since the appellant failed in effecting retrenchment of the workmen 76 to observe the principle of "first come, last go", the order in its entirety was illegal.  The Labour Court accepted  the contention  of  the workmen and held that departure  from  a principle  which was part of the law relating to  industrial employment   rendered  the  retrenchment  of   all   workmen unjustified and improper and on that account retrenchment of clerks and peons who were affected by the departure from the rule was "illegal and mala fide".  In the view of the Labour Court,  workmen Nos.  1 to 14 and 16 to 23 in Ext.   W-1-the List  of  Seniority-were  so  affected.   The  Labour  Court ordered that as the appellant required only four clerks  in- cluding the Accountant R. N. Seth, the Accountant and  three senior  clerks  Shiv  Das  Sharma,  Kishan  Lal  Grover  and Surinder Singh be retained, and that the senior clerks named be reinstated with full "back wages", subject to  adjustment of  compensation  money paid to them against  their  salary. The Court also directed that clerks Nos. 4 to 14 be paid, in addition  to the retrenchment compensation received by  them "50  per  cent of the wages as compensation for  the  period they  remained  in unemployment up till the  date  when  the award  became enforceable", but they may not be  reinstated, and  that  peons Tara Shanker and Om Prakash  be  reinstated with full wages and peons Nos. 18 to 23 in Ext.  W-1 be paid in  addition to the retrenchment compensation, "50 per  cent of the wages they would have been entitled to." With special leave, the Company has appealed to this Court. It  is  an  accepted principle of  industrial  law  that  in ordering  retrenchment  ordinarily  the  management   should commence with the latest recruit, and progressively retrench employees higher up in the list of seniority.  But the  rule is  not  immutable, and for valid reasons  may  be  departed from.   It was observed by this Court in Swadesamitran  Ltd. v. Their Workmen(1) that if a case for retrenchment is  made out,  it would normally be for the employer to decide  which of the employees should be retrenched; but there can. be  no doubt  that the ordinary industrial rule of retrenchment  is "first  come,  last go", and where other things  are  equal, this  rule has to be followed by the employer  in  effecting retrenchment. The question then is whether in departing from the rule, the management had acted mala fide, or that its action  amounted to an unfair labour practice.  The Tribunal has to determine in  each  case  whether  the  management  has  in   ordering retrenchment  acted  fairly and properly and  not  with  any ulterior  motive: it cannot assume from mere departure  from the  rule  that  the management  was  actuated  by  improper motives  or  that  the  management had  acted  in  a  manner amounting  to  an  unfair  labour  practice.   Nor  has  the Tribunal authority to sit in appeal over the decision of the management   if  for  valid  and  justifiable  reasons   the management  has  departed  from the  rule  that  the  senior employees may be retrenched before his junior in employment (1)  [1960] 1 L.L.J. 504. 77 The  management of the appellant has recorded  a  resolution which  sets out the reasons for retention of  the  employees Ram  Lal  Sethi,  Jagdish Pershad, Kidar  Nath  Thukral,  Om Prakash  Juneja,  Jai Narain, Budhpal  Singh  and  Laljimal. About  Ram  Lal  Sethi the Company has stated  that  he  was looking  "after  the accounts" and income-tax cases  of  the Company and he was the only Accountant in the service of the Company  and  the  senior-most  employee  in  the   Accounts

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Section.   The  Labour Court has upheld his  retention,  and nothing  more need be said about him.  Jagdish Pershad  was, it was stated, looking "after the share work, collection  of building  rent and court work and the realisation of  rents" and  that he was "in charge of the share work for  the  last many years".  The Labour Court was of the view that a  clerk employed in general office duties may be styled as a general assistant, and that the posts of clerks are  interchangeable and  since clerks are not trained to handle  any  Particular kind  of  work,  the reasons given  by  the  management  for retaining this and other clerks cannot be accepted.  However there  was  not in the employment of the Company  any  other clerk  who could competently handle "share work" and  attend to "court work".  Clerical work ordinarily does not  require specialisation  and  clerks  may  be  transferred  from  one department  to  another without detriment to  the  business. But if a clerk has been working in a branch of the  business and he is shown to possess special aptitude for a particular duty,   performance  of  which  requires   application   and experience,  the  management  may in the  interests  of  the business  while retrenching others retain him even if he  is junior  to  others.  The rule of "first come,  last  go"  is intended  to secure an equitable treatment to the  employees when, having regard to the exigencies of the business, it is necessary   to   retrench  some  employees.   But   in   the application of the rule the interests of the business cannot be  overlooked.   The  rule has to be  applied  where  other things  are equal.  The management of the business must  act fairly  to the employees, where however the management  bona fide  retains  staff  possessing  special  aptitude  in  the interests  of  the business, it cannot be  assumed  to  have acted unfairly merely because the rule "first come, last go" is  not  observed.  If retention of a clerical  employee  is regarded as necessary by the management in the interests  of the business, that opinion cannot be discarded merely on the ground  that  the  clerk concerned is  not  the  seniormost. There is nothing on the record to show that there was, among the senior employees, a clerk possessing the aptitude  which Jagdish  Pershad possessed.  Kidar Nath Thakural  was  doing "typing  work" and he was retained because he was  the  only typist with the Company.  Our attention has not been invited to  any  evidence  that there were other  typists  who  were senior  to  him and they had been retrenched.  A  typist  is undoubtedly a clerk in a business concern but that does  not mean that every clerk, unless specially trained, can  become a competent typist.  Om Prakash Juneja was 78 retained  because  he was looking after the records  of  the Company and was "fully conversant as to where different type of  records" were "lying", and that this employee was  doing the  work  satisfactorily.   A  record-keeper’s  work  in  a business  cannot  be performed efficiently  without  special training or long experience.  It would be difficult to  hold that in retrenching employees, if the management retains  an efficient record-keeper in preference to a senior clerk  who has  no  training  or  experience  in  record-keeping,   the management  acts mala fide or improperly, or perpetrates  an unfair labour practice. The  Labour Court was of the view that retention  of  junior clerks in service could not be sustained on the ground  that they  had  gained  experience  in  a  particular  branch  of clerical  work.   To  accept  that  ground  of   preference, observed  the Labour Court, was to destroy the  rule  "first come,  last  go"  itself, since  clerks  are  not  specially trained to handle only a particular kind of work, and  their

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work  is  easily  convertible and one  can  replace  another without   dislocation  in  the  department.   For   ordinary clerical  work this is undoubtedly true, but even among  the clerical  staff if a degree of specialisation  is  necessary for  discharging clerical duties efficiently retention of  a junior  clerk on the ground that the duty performed  by  him requires  experience,  and  aptitude, will  not  expose  the management  to a charge of mala fide, or perpetration of  an unfair labour practice. It  was submitted than in J. K. Iran and Steel Company  Ltd. v. Its workmen(1) this Court has hold that in the matter  of retrenchment  of  clerical staff, departure  from  the  rule "first  come,  last  go" may not be recognised  when  it  is sought  to  be  justified on the  ground  that  the  workman retained  has  experience  of a  particular  branch  of  the clerical  work, and reliance was placed upon  the  following observations of Subba Rao, J.               "But  if the preferential treatment  given  to               juniors ignores the well recognized  principle               in  the industrial law that the  "first  come,               last  go" without any acceptable "   or  sound               reasoning,  a tribunal or an adjudicator  will               be  well justified to hold that the action  of               the management is not bona fide.... In  regard               to   the  clerks,  what  is  the   ground   of               preference  given  by the management?   It  is               said  that junior clerks, who  were  retained,               have  experience  in a  particular  branch  of               clerical  work.   To  accept  this  ground  of               preference  without  more is  to  destroy  the               principle  itself.  It may be that the  clerks               entrusted  with such works may continue to  do               the same work till a readjustment of the  work               is made.  There is no particular or scientific               skill  required  in one class of  work  rather               than  in  another.  Clerks are  not  specially               trained to handle               (1)   (1960) 2 L.L.J. 64.                                     79               only a particular kind of work.  Their work is               easily convertible and one can replace another               without any dislocation in the department." But  the judgment does not enunciate a different  principle. Ordinarily  it  is for the management to  ascertain  who  on retrenchment  should  be retained in the  interests  of  the business and the Industrial Tribunal will not interfere with the   decision  of  the  management,   unless   preferential treatment is actuated by mala fides.  Where those retrenched and those retained are doing substantially the same kind  of work and no special skill or aptitude is required for  doing the work which the retained clerk is doing, preference given to  the  retained clerk on the ground that he has  some  ex- perience in the branch may justifiably raise an inference of mala  fides.   Apparently in J.K. Iron and  Steel  Company’s case,(1) the work required to be done by the clerks retained needed no special aptitude, and the clerks retrenched  could as  well do the work which was done by the  clerk  retained. It was in those circumstances that the Court held that  mere experience  in  a  particular branch  requiring  no  special aptitude  was not sufficient to justify departure  from  the rule "first come, last go". In the present case the four clerks retained had, beside ex- perience,  special  skill  and aptitude  in  the  particular branch of the business of the appellant they were  attending to,  and  the management had retained them because  of  that

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skill  or  aptitude.  The Labour Court inferred  mala  fides merely because the management departed from the rule  "first come,  last go".  Whether the management in  departing  from the  rule  has  acted  mala  fide,  must  depend  upon   the circumstances  of  the case : it cannot be  inferred  merely from departure from the rule. We  may  turn to the cases of the three peons,  Jai  Narain, Budhpal  Singh Laljimal.  Retention of Jai Narain  has  been upheld  by the Labour Court and, nothing more need  be  said about  him.   The  other two peons  are  Budhpal  Singh  and Laljimal  who were working as chowkidars.  They are said  to be "the senior-most chowkidars", and there is no evidence to show that there were in the employment of the Company  other persons who could have worked as chowkidars.  Peons  Budhpal Singh  and  Laljimal  were retained because  they  were  the "senior-most  chowkidars".   Retention of  the  "senior-most chowkidars" would not be interfered with by the Tribunal  in the  absence  of clear proof of mala fides.   It  cannot  be assumed  without more that every peon can do the work  of  a chowkidar.   The  management  may  ordinarily  require   the chowkidar  to possess good physique and ability to  maintain watch  over  the  building  and its  assets.   There  is  no evidence that the two peons Tara Shanker and Om Prakash  had ever  worked  as  chowkidars or were suitable  for  work  as chowkidars.  The order (1)  [1960] 2 L.L.J. 64. 80 of  reinstatement of Tara Shanker and Om Prakash will  stand vacated. The second part of the order directing that clerks from Nos. 4 to 14 and peons from Nos. 18 to 23 in the seniority  list, shall   be   entitled  in  addition  to   the   retrenchment compensation  already paid to them 50 per cent of the  wages as  compensation for the period they remained unemployed  is wholly  indefensible.   These employees  had  been  properly retrenched:  that was conceded before the Labour Court.   It was  also conceded that for carrying on the business of  the appellant  after  imposition  of  the  ban  by  the  Central Government, not more than seven employees were required.  If the  management was entitled to retrench 30 workmen and  did so after paying wages for the period of notice and retrench- ment  compensation,  we fail to appreciate  the  grounds  on which  an order for payment of 50 per cent of the  wages  in addition   to   retrenchment  compensation  may   be   made. Retrenchment   compensation   is  paid   as   solatium   for termination of service resulting in unemployment and if that compensation  be  paid there can be no ground  for  awarding compensation   in   addition   to   statutory   retrenchment compensation.   If  the  Industrial Tribunal  comes  to  the conclusion  that an order of retrenchment was  not  properly made  and the Tribunal directs reinstatement, an  order  for payment  of  remuneration for the period  during  which  the employee   remained  unemployed,  or  a  part  thereof   may appropriately be made.  That is because the employee who had been retrenched for no fault of his had been improperly kept out of employment, and was prevented from earning his wages. But where retrenchment has been properly made and that order has  not been set aside, we are not aware of  any  principle which may justify an order directing payment of compensation to   employees  properly  retrenched  in  addition  to   the retrenchment compensation statutorily payable. The  appeal is therefore allowed and the award made  by  the Labour Court is substituted by the following award:               "That  retrenchment  of the  workmen  was  not               unjustified or illegal and the workmen are not

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             entitled to any relief".               In  the circumstances of the case, there  will               be no order as to costs.               Appeal allowed. 81