06 January 1994
Supreme Court
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WORKMEN Vs KETTLEWELL BULLEN & CO. LTD.


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PETITIONER: WORKMEN

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: KETTLEWELL BULLEN & CO. LTD.

DATE OF JUDGMENT06/01/1994

BENCH: AGRAWAL, S.C. (J) BENCH: AGRAWAL, S.C. (J) KULDIP SINGH (J)

CITATION:  1994 AIR 1550            1994 SCR  (1)  22  1994 SCC  (2) 357        JT 1994 (1)    18  1994 SCALE  (1)30

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT: The Judgment of the Court was delivered by AGRAWAL, J.- This appeal by the workmen of Kettlewell Bullen &  Company Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as  ’the  workmen’) involves  the question whether the workmen are  entitled  to customary  bonus at the rate of 10.5 per cent of  the  total annual salary or wages in respect of the years 1974 to 1977. 2.   By  order  dated September 11, 1979 the  Government  of West  Bengal  referred  to the  Eighth  Industrial  Tribunal (hereinafter  referred to as ’the Tribunal’)  the  following dispute for adjudication under Section 10 of the  Industrial Disputes Act, 1947:               "Whether the workmen are entitled to customary               bonus  for  the accounting years  1974,  1975,               1976 and 1977?  If so, at what rate?" Before the Tribunal it was submitted by the workmen that the bonus  was being paid to them since the year 1959  and  that for  the  years 1959 to 1963 bonus was paid at the  rate  of three  and a quarter months’ basic wages and for  the  years 1965 to 1973 it was paid at the rate of 10.5 per cent of the total  annual salary or wages and that in the year 1964,  it was  paid at the rate of 4 per cent on the basis of  Payment of Bonus Ordinance, 1965.  The Management disputed the  said claim of the workmen and asserted that the workmen were  not entitled  to claim customary bonus and that they  were  only entitled  to  statutory  bonus at the rate  of  4  per  cent payable  under the Payment of Bonus Act,  1965  (hereinafter referred to as the ’Bonus Act’).  The Tribunal by its  award dated  April 16, 1982 found that the bonus was paid  by  the Management  for a long period from 1959 onwards not  on  the basis of the profit calculation and usually in the month  of September before Puja festival and that from 1965 to 1973 it was  being paid at the uniform rate of 10.5 per  cent,  and, therefore, the bonus which was being paid by the  Management had ripened into a customary bonus due to a long usage.  The

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Tribunal  held  that  the workmen  were  entitled  to  fixed customary bonus at the 360 rate  of 10.5 per cent of the annual salary or wages  earned by  each workman concerned for the years 1974 to 1977.   The said  award  was  challenged by the  Management  before  the Calcutta  High Court in a writ petition filed under  Article 226 of the Constitution.  The said writ petition was allowed by a learned Single Judge of the said High Court by judgment dated  September 21, 1982 whereby the learned  Single  Judge set  aside the award made by the Tribunal on the  view  that the workmen had failed to establish that they were  entitled to  payment  of customary bonus.  The said decision  of  the learned Single Judge was confirmed, in appeal, by a Division Bench of the High Court by judgment dated November 17, 1986. The present appeal is directed against the said judgment  of the Division Bench of the High Court. 3.   Since the appeal relates to demand for customary bonus, it is necessary to mention that customary bonus differs from the  bonus  (as normally understood) based  on  the  general principle  that labour and capital should share the  surplus profits  available after meeting prior  charges.   Customary bonus has also to be distinguished from bonus claimed as  an implied   term   of  the  contract   of   employment.    The circumstances in which an implied agreement may be  inferred have  been laid down in Ispahani Ltd. Calcutta  v.  Ispahani Employees’ Union’. 4.  In  Graham  Trading Co. v. Workmen2 bonus  sought  as  a matter  of tradition or custom, has been distinguished  from bonus  payable as an implied term of employment and  it  has been  laid  down that for determining whether the  bonus  is payable by way of custom or tradition the following  matters be taken into consideration: (SCR pp.  111- 12)               "(i)  whether  the payment has  been  over  an               unbroken series of years; (ii) whether it  has               been  for a sufficiently long  period,  though               the  length of the period might depend on  the               circumstances  of  each  case :  even  so  the               period  may  normally  have to  be  longer  to               justify   an  inference  of  traditional   and               customary Puja bonus than may be the case with               Puja  bonus  based  on  an  implied  term   of               employment;  (iii) the circumstance  that  the               payment  depended upon the earning of  profits               would  have  to be excluded and  therefore  it               must  be shown that payment was made in  years               of  loss.   In dealing with  the  question  of               custom,  the fact that the payment was  called               ex  gratia by the employer when it  was  made,               would,  however,  make no difference  in  this               regard  because  the proof of  custom  depends               upon  the  effect  of  the  relevant   factors               enumerated   by  us;  and  it  would  not   be               materially affected by unilateral declarations               of  one party when the said  declarations  are               inconsistent   with  the  course  of   conduct               adopted by it; and (iv) the payment must  have               been  at a uniform rate throughout to  justify               an inference that the payment at such and such               rate  had become customary and traditional  in               the particular concern." 1  (1960) 1 SCR 24 : AIR 1959 SC 1147 : (1959) 2 LLJ 4 2  (1960) 1 SCR 107 : AIR 1959 SC 1151 : (1959) 2 LLJ 393 361 5.   In  Tulsidas Khimji v. Workmen3 Sinha,  C.J.,  speaking

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for  the  majority,  has  held  that  the  four   ’so-called conditions’  laid down in the Graham Trading Co.  case2  are not  really  in the nature of conditions precedent  but  are circumstances  which  have been taken into account  in  this Court in that case for coming to a conclusion as to  whether or not the claim to customary or traditional bonus had  been made  out and that the observations in Graham  Trading  Co.2 "must  be understood as based on consideration of  substance and not of form".  It was further observed: (SCR p. 688)               " [W]hat is more important to negative a  plea               for customary bonus would be proof that it was               made ex gratia, and accepted as such, or  that               it was unconnected with any such occasion like               a festival........" 6.   In that case the appellant firm had an unbroken  record of profits year after year.  The Court upheld the finding of the  Industrial Tribunal that the traditional  or  customary bonus  had been established notwithstanding that it bad  not been  shown,  as it could not have been shown, that  it  was paid in a year of   loss. 7.   In Vegetable Products Ltd. v. Workmen4 the observations in the Graham  Trading Co. case2 have been thus explained:               "The third circumstance lays down that it  has               to  be proved that the payment has  been  made               even  in years of loss.  This only means  that               where  there have been years of loss,  payment               should  have  been made in those  years  also.               But it does not mean that where there has been               no  year  of loss at all and the  concern  has               been  fortunate enough always to earn  profit,               there can be no customary or traditional bonus               connected  with  a festival  like  Puja,  even               though payment at a uniform rate has been made               for   a   large   number   of   years.    This               circumstance  should, therefore, be read  only               thus:  in case there have been years of  loss,               it  must be proved that payment has been  made               in those years also.  The fourth  circumstance               mentioned above is to the effect that  payment               should  have  been  made  at  a  uniform  rate               throughout.  That, however, does not mean that               uniformity  should  be  established  from  the               beginning  to the end.  Take a case where  for               the first few years payment at a certain  rate               was  made.   But later on, for a  much  larger               number   of  years  payment  at   a   somewhat               different but uniform rate has been made.   In               those  circumstances,  the Tribunal  may  well               come to the conclusion that the payment was at               a uniform rate ignoring the first years." In Mumbai Kamgar Sabha v. Abdulbhai Faizullabhai5 this Court has  dealt with the contention that custom based bonus  must be linked with some festival or other.  Negativing the  said contention  it has been observed: (SCR pp. 600-01 :  SCC  p. 841, para 17) 3 (1963) 1 SCR 675 : AIR 1963 SC 1007 : (1962) 1 LLJ 435 4  AIR 1965 SC 1499 :(1965) 1 LL,J 468 5 (1976) 3 SCC 832: 1976 SCC (L&S) 517 :(1976) 3 SCR 591 362               "Surely,  communal festivals are occasions  of               rejoicing  and  spending  and  employers  make               bonus payments to employees to help them  meet               the  extra  expenses their  families  have  to               incur.  Ours is a festival-ridden society with               many    religions   contributing   to    their

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             plurality.  That is why our primitive practice               of   linking  payment  of  bonus   with   some               distinctive  festival  has  sprouted.   As  we               progress  on  the  secular road,  may  be  the               Republic  Day or the Independence Day  or  the               Founder’s Day may well become the occasion for               customary bonus.  The crucial question is  not               whether there is a festival which buckles  the               bonus and the custom.  What is legally telling               is  whether  by  an unbroken  flow  of  annual               payments  a custom or usage has  flowered,  so               that  a  right to bonus based thereon  can  be               predicted.   The  custom  itself  precipitates               from  and is proved by the  periodic  payments               induced  by  the  sentiment  of  the  pleasing               occasion,  creating  a  mutual  consciousness,               after  a  ripening  passage  of  time,  of  an               obligation to pay and a legitimate expectation               to receive." Having set out the principles governing payment of customary bonus, we may now come to the facts of the present case. 8.   With  regard  to payment of bonus for the year  1959  a dispute was raised by the workmen and the same was discussed in joint conference of the representatives of the workmen as well as the Management before the Conciliation Officer and a settlement was reached on July 25, 1962 whereby the  parties mutually agreed to settle not only the bonus issue for  1959 but  also  to enter into an agreement of bonus for  all  the years  up to and including 1966.  The relevant terms of  the said settlement are as under: "(a)  All workmen of Messrs Kettlewell Bullen & Co.  working at  21,  Strand Road, Calcutta 1, will be paid three  and  a quarter months’ basic salary as bonus for each of the  years 1962  to  1965 (both inclusive).  The calculation  of  bonus will be as under: Total basic salary received during the year x 3 1/4 ----------------------- 12 (b)  The above quantum of bonus will be paid irrespective of working results of the Company during the years 1962 to 1966 (both  inclusive) which will, however, not be treated  as  a condition of service for further years. The  Union  also  agrees not to make  any  demands  for  any additional  bonus of any kind during these years  as  stated hereinabove. (c)  Regarding the quantum of bonus for the years 1959, 1960 and  1961,  it  is  also agreed  that  all  the  workmen  of Kettlewell  Bullen & Co. Ltd., working at 21,  Strand  Road, Calcutta  1, will receive the said quantum of bonus  on  the same conditions as specified in clauses (a) and (b)  above of this agreement. 363 (d)  The quantum of bonus agreed upon for the years 1959  to 1961 (both inclusive) will be paid in two equal instalments, one in the month of September 1962 and another in the  month of April 1963. (e)  Bonus  in  respect of each of the years  1962  to  1966 (both  inclusive)  will be paid in each  of  the  succeeding years before the Pujas" 9. While  the said settlement was in operation, the Payment  of Bonus  Ordinance,  1965  was promulgated on  May  29,  1965. Relying upon the provisions contained in the said Ordinance, the Management refused to honour the settlement and for  the year 1964 bonus was paid at the rate of 4 per cent.

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10.  On  October 15, 1966 the parties  the workmen  and  the Management   entered  into another settlement  covering  the period  of five accounting years, i.e., 1965 to  1969  (both inclusive), whereby it was agreed as under:               "(a) All the clerical and subordinate staff of               the  Company  working  at  21,  Strand   Road,               Calcutta  1, will be paid bonus in respect  of               each  of  the accounting years  1965  to  1969               (both  inclusive)  at the rate of 10  1/2  per               cent  (ten and half per centum) of  the  total               salary   and   wages  (salary   and   dearness               allowance only and excluding attendance bonus,               overtime,  or any other allowance or  payment)               earned  by  them during each of  the  relevant               accounting  years  ending 1965 to  1969  (both               inclusive).               (b)   Bonus  as  aforesaid  for  each  of  the               accounting years mentioned in clause (a) above               will  be  paid  in the  next  succeeding  year               approximately two weeks before the Pujas." In  the  said  settlement, it was stated that  it  had  been arrived at in terms of Section 34(3) of the Payment of Bonus Act, 1965. 11.  The  said  settlement  was followed  by  Memorandum  of Settlement dated September 20, 1971 covering the  accounting years  ending  December  31, 1970,  December  31,  1971  and December 31, 1972.  Under the said settlement it was  agreed as under:               "(a) All the clerical and subordinate staff of               the  Company  working  at  21,  Strand   Road,               Calcutta  1, will be paid bonus in respect  of               each  of the accounting years ending  December               31,  1970, December 31, 1971 and December  31,               1972 (all inclusive) at the rate of 10 1/2 per               cent (ten and a half per centum) of the  total               salary and wages (basic and dearness allowance               only and excluding attendance bonus,  overtime               or  any other allowance or payment) earned  by               them during the said accounting year.               (b)   Bonus  as  aforesaid  for  each  of  the               accounting years mentioned in clause (a) above               will  be  paid to the employees  in  the  next               succeeding   year  approximately  four   weeks               before the Pujas." In  the  said  settlement also it was  stated  that  it  was arrived at under Section 34(3) of the Payment of Bonus  Act, 1965. 364 12.  On September 26, 1974 the parties entered into  another settlement in respect of the accounting year ended  December 31, 1973 and agreed as under:               "  (a) All the clerical and subordinate  staff               of  the  Company working at 21,  Strand  Road,               Calcutta  1, will be paid bonus in respect  of               the accounting year ended December 31, 1973 at               the rate of 10.50 per cent (ten and a half per               centum)  of the total salary and wages  (basic               and  dearness  allowance  only  and  excluding               attendance  bonus,  overtime,  or  any   other               allowance  or payment) earned by  them  during               the said accounting year." In that settlement also it was provided that it was  arrived at under Section 34(3) of the Payment of Bonus Act, 1965. 13.  Before  the Tribunal Shri Kasi Nath  Banerjee,  General Secretary of the Employees’ Union, had appeared as a witness

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and  has  stated that the bonus was being  paid  since  1959 before the commencement of Puja. 14.  From  the settlements referred above and  the  evidence that was produced before Tribunal it appears that (i)  bonus was  being paid by the appellant ever since the  year  1959, (ii)  for the years 1959 to 1963 bonus was paid at the  rate of  3 1/4 months’ basic pay, (iii) for the year 1964,  bonus was  paid at the rate of 4 per cent in accordance  with  the Payment of Bonus Ordinance, 1965, (iv) for the years 1965 to 1973,  bonus was paid at the rate of 10.50 per cent  of  the salary  or wages, and (v) the said bonus was generally  paid before the commencement of Puja festival. 15.  The Tribunal has found that:               "Bonus  was paid by the Management for a  long               period  from 1959 onwards not on the basis  of               profit calculation and usually in the month of               September  before  the Puja festival  and  the               facts  and circumstances prove that there  was               continuous  payment of bonus since 1959  at  a               relevant  time without calculation of  profits               according  to the salary and wages since  1959               and  the payments were made from 1965 to  1973               at  the  rate of 10.5 per cent  under  Section               34(3) of the Payment of Bonus Act at a uniform               rate and that too before the Puja festival and               not  being  based on any  calculation  of  the               profit  and  loss of the  Company.   The  only               possible  inference in such  circumstances  is               that  the  Management  paid  bonus  which  has               ripened  into  a customary bonus due  to  long               usage  from 1959 onwards covering a period  of               15 years."               The  learned Judges on Division Bench  of  the               High Court have also observed :               "However, we may point out that we are of  the               opinion  that from the various  agreements  it               was  clear  that provisions for  payment  were               being  made  irrespective of  the  quantum  of               profit and loss." It can, therefore, be said that the payment had been made by the  Management  of the respondent by way of bonus  over  an unbroken series of years and the said payment did not depend upon the earning and profits. 365 16. The learned Judges on the Division Bench have held  that the  said payment could not be regarded customary bonus  for the following reasons-               (i)   it was not being paid at a uniform  rate               throughout, and               (ii)  the  settlements that were entered  into               on  October 15, 1966, September 20,  1971  and               September  20,  1973  stated  that  the   said               settlements  were entered into  under  Section               34(3)  of the Payment of Bonus Act,  1965  and               that the bonus paid under the said settlements               was  bonus contemplated under the  Payment  of               Bonus Act. 17.  As  regards  the first reason given by the  High  Court that the bonus was not   being   paid  at  a  uniform   rate throughout,  it may be stated that though during  the  years 1959 to 1963 it was paid at the rate of three and a  quarter months’  basic  pay  (which amount, as pointed  out  by  the learned  Judges of the High Court, varied between 10.81  per cent to 12.95 per cent of total salary or wages) and in  the year  1964  it  was paid at the rate of 4 per  cent  but  in

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subsequent years from 1965 to 1973 it was paid at a  uniform rate  of 10.50 per cent of the salary or wages.  As  noticed earlier,  in Vegetable Products Ltd.4 it has been held  that it  is not necessary that uniformity in the rate  should  be established  from  the beginning to the end and  in  a  case where for the first few years payment at a certain rate  was made  but  later  on for a much    larger  number  of  years payment  at  a somewhat different rate had  been  made,  the Tribunal could well come to the conclusion that the  payment was at a uniform rate ignoring the first few years.   Having regard  to  the said decision, the payment made  during  the years 1959 to 1964 could be ignored and, on the basis of the payment  made during the years 1965 to 1973 at  the  uniform rate  of 10.50 per cent of the salary or wages it  could  be said that the payment was made at a uniform rate during  the period 1965 to 1973. 18.  The   question   is  whether  the   said   period   was sufficiently  long  to draw an inference about  the  payment being  customary  in  nature.  In Graham  Trading  Co.2  the payment had been made continuously from 1940 to 1952 at  the rate of one month’s wages and this Court upheld the claim of the  workmen  for  bonus  as  a  customary  and  traditional payment.   In Vegetable Products Ltd.4 bonus was  paid  from 1954 to 1961 and the said payment was at a uniform rate  (30 days’ wages) from 1956 to 1961.  In view of the said payment at a uniform rate from 1956 to 1961 the Industrial  Tribunal had  held that there was a custom of payment at the rate  of 30  days’  wages as bonus before Puja in the  said  concern. This  Court,  however, found that payment was  made  without dispute and without condition from 1956 to 1958 and that  in 1959 the payment was made ex gratia and accepted as such and that in 1960 and 1961 the payment was made on condition that it  would  be  adjusted  towards the  profit  bonus  of  the previous  year  and  was  accepted  as  such.   The   Court, therefore,  set  aside the conclusion of the  Tribunal  that payment  of customary or traditional bonus was  established. In  the instant case there was payment at a uniform rate  of 10.5  per cent of salary or wages for an unbroken period  of nine years, from 1965 to 1973, which was a 366 sufficiently  long  period,  and  the  Tribunal  could  have reasonably  drawn  an inference that the  said  payment  was customary  or  traditional  bonus on the  occasion  of  Puja festival, 19.  With  regard  to  the other reason given  by  the  High Court,  namely, reference to Section 34(3) of the Bonus  Act in the various settlements, it may be stated that the  Bonus Act  is confined, in its application, to profit  bonus,  and other  kinds of bonus recognised in industrial law  are  not covered  by  the provisions of the Act.   In  Mumbai  Kamgar Sabha,  Bombay5 it has been held: (SCR p. 608 : SCC p.  848, para 35)               "The  conclusion  seems to  be  fairly  clear,               unless  we strain judicial  sympathy  contrary               wise,  that  the  Bonus Act  dealt  with  only               profit  bonus and matters connected  therewith               and  did not govern customary, traditional  or               contractual bonus." 20.  The same view was reiterated in Hukum Chand Jute  Mills Ltd. v. Second Industrial Tribunal6 wherein it was held that the  customary or contractual bonus were excluded  from  the provisions  of the Act and it was laid down: (SCR p.  647  : SCC p. 263, para 5)               "The Bonus Act (1965) was a complete code  but               was  confined to profit-oriented  bonus  only.

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             Other kinds of bonus have flourished in Indian               industrial law and have been left uncovered by               the  Bonus  Act.   The  legislative   universe               spanned  by the said statute cannot  therefore               affect the rights and obligations belonging to               a different world or claims and conditions." In  Hukam  Chand Jute Mills Ltd. case6  while  referring  to Section  17 of the Bonus Act, this Court has observed:  (SCR p. 649 : SCC p. 264, para 9)               "That section in express terms refers to  Puja               bonus  and other customary bonus as  available               for deduction from the bonus payable under the               Act,  thus making a clear distinction  between               the  bonus  payable under the Act  and  ’Puja’               bonus  or other customary bonus.  So  long  as               this  section  remains without  amendment  the               inference is clear that the categories               covered  by the Act, as amended, did not  deal               with customary bonus." 21.  As  indicated  earlier the High Court  has  found  that payments  made  under the settlements had no link  with  the profit.  In the circumstances the reference to Section 34(3) of  the  Bonus Act in the settlements would  not  alter  the nature of the payment so as to convert it into a bonus  paid under  the said Act.  The reference to Section 34(3) of  the Bonus  Act  must be regarded as having been made by  way  of abundant  caution to exclude the liability of the  appellant for bonus under the Act, but that would not alter the nature of  the  payment.   Moreover, Section 17 of  the  Bonus  Act provides as under: "17.  Adjustment of customary or interim bonus against bonus payable under the Act.- Where in any accounting year- 6 (1979) 3 SCC 261 : 1979 SCC (L&S) 266: (1979) 3 SCR 644 367 (a)  an employer has paid any Puja bonus or other  customary bonus to an employee; or (b)  an employer has paid a part of the bonus payable  under this Act to an employee before the date on which such  bonus becomes payable, then, the employer shall be entitled to deduct the amount of bonus  so  paid from the amount of bonus payable by  him  to employee  under this Act in respect of that accounting  year and  the  employee  shall be entitled to  receive  only  the balance." 22.  In  Mumbai Kamgar Sabha5 this Court has observed:  (SCR p. 607: SCC p. 847, para 33)               "For this reason it is provided in Section  17               that where an employer has paid any Puja bonus               or other customary bonus, he will be  entitled               to deduct the amount of bonus so paid from the               amount of bonus payable by him under the  Act.               Of  course,  if the customary  bonus  is  thus               recognised statutorily and, if in any instance               it  happens to be much higher than  the  bonus               payable  under the Act, there is no  provision               totally cutting off the customary bonus.   The               provision for deduction in Section 17, on  the               other   hand,   indicates   the    independent               existence of customary bonus although, to some               extent,  its  quantum  is  adjustable  towards               statutory bonus." This can only mean that if the bonus that was being paid  by the  respondent  is  found to be customary  bonus  then  the respondent  would be entitled to deduct the amount  so  paid from  the amount of bonus payable to the employee by way  of

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bonus under the Act in respect of that accounting year. 23.  Shri G.B. Pai, learned senior counsel appearing for the respondent, placed reliance on the decision of this Court in Upendra  Chandra Chakraborty v. United Bank of  India7.   In that  case,  it  was held that the  bonus  received  by  the workmen  did not have the characteristic of customary  bonus as  known to law.  It was found that no bonus was  paid  for the  years 1950 to 1958 and from 1959 onwards the  rate  had not been uniform and there was no evidence to show that  the payment  was  unrelated to the profits and it  was  nobody’s case that the bonus was not paid in any year of loss and  it was  also observed that the concept of any  customary  bonus was  unknown  to  nationalised banks and  that  in  all  the nationalised  banks which are wholly owned  undertakings  of the Government of India, the employees must be dealt with on a common denominator in the matter of bonus.  Having  regard to  the aforesaid circumstances, it was held  that  although the  payment  was made in the month of  September  but  that payment  was not customary bonus.  In our opinion, the  said decision  has  no application to the facts  of  the  present case. 24.  Having  considered  the award made by the  Tribunal  as well  as the judgments of the learned Single Judge  and  the Division Bench of the High 7   1985 Supp SCC 26: 1985 SCC (L&S) 546: (1985) 3 SCR 1057 368 Court,  we are of the view that an inference that the  bonus that  was  being  paid  by  the  respondent-Company  to  the appellants  was customary bonus payable at the rate of  10.5 per  cent of the salary or wages could be justifiably  drawn by the Tribunal having regard to the facts and circumstances of  the  case, and the High Court was in  error  in  setting aside the award and holding that the bonus that was paid was not in the nature of customary bonus. 25.  The  appeal is, therefore, allowed.  The  judgment  and order of the Division Bench of the High Court dated November 17, 1986 in Appeal No. 103 of 1983 as well as that of teamed Single  Judge dated September 21, 1982 in Matter No. 754  of 1982  are set aside and the award dated April 16, 1982  made by the Eighth Industrial Tribunal holding that for the years 1974  to  1977 the appellants were entitled  to  payment  of customary  bonus at the rate of 10.5 per cent of the  annual salary  or  wages earned by each workman concerned  in  each such  year is restored.  The parties are left to bear  their own costs. 369