02 February 1971
Supreme Court
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ALLOY STEEL PROJECT Vs THE WORKMEN


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PETITIONER: ALLOY STEEL PROJECT

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE WORKMEN

DATE OF JUDGMENT02/02/1971

BENCH: [J. M. SHELAT, V. BHARGAWA C.A. VAIDIALINGAM, J.J.]

ACT: Payment of Bonus Act 21 of 1965-Exemption under s. 16(1)  to new   establishments-Alloy  Steel  Project  controlled   and managed  by Hindustan Steel Ltd. whether an  ’establishing’- Word  ’establishment  whether  synonymous  with   company’-A department  or undertaking of an establishment  is  separate establishment for computation of bonus under the proviso  to s. 3 if separate accounts are maintained as in case of Alloy Steel   Section  16(2)  comes  in  way  only  if  bonus   is distributed  on  basis of consolidated  accounts  which  was never done in the case of Hindustan Steel.

HEADNOTE: The  Alloy Steel Project was an undertaking  controlled  and managed by a government company, namely, the Hindustan Steel Ltd.   Alloy  Steel  was  started  in  1961  and  went  into production in 1964-65.  No profit was earned up to  1967-68. The  workmen  claimed bonus at the minimum  rate  prescribed under the Payment of Bonus Act, 21 of 1965 in respect of the year  1965-66.   On  behalf  of  the  Alloy  Steel   Project exemption  from payment of bonus was claimed under s.  16(1) of the Act on the ground that it was a new establishment and had  not  made profits.  The Industrial  Tribunal  to  which reference  was  made  held that Alloy  Steel  could  not  be treated as a separate establishment because under the Act  a company  is itself an establishment so that all units  of  a company  like  Hindustan  Steel  Ltd.  will  constitute  one establishment.   However,  since Alloy Steel  had  not  been earning  profits the Tribunal directed payment of  bonus  at the  minimum rate of 4% of wages as prescribed by  the  Act. Aggrieved  by  this  Award  of  the  Tribunal  the   company appealed. HELD   :   The   Tribunal  erred   in   holding   the   word ’establishment’  to be synonymous with ’company’.  In  doing so  it ignored the indications which are manifest  from  the language  of  the  Act.  The  significant  words  are  those contained in s. 2(16) which show that an establishment in  a public  sector has to be owned, controlled or managed  by  a Government  company  or  by  a  corporation  of  the  nature described   in   the   clause.    Obviously   therefore   an ’establishment  in  private sector’-defined in s.  2(15)  to mean an establishment not in the public sector-would be  one which  is owned, controlled or managed by a person  or  body other  than  a Government company or a  corporation  of  the nature described in s. 2(16).  In this view an establishment cannot be identified with a company.  It would be absurd  to say  that  a company is owned, controlled or  managed  by  a

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Government  company  or  corporation  Obviously,  the   word ’establishment’ is intended to indicate something  different from  a company as defined in the Companies Act. [631  F-632 D] (ii) Alloy  Steel was a separate establishment by virtue  of the  proviso  to  s. 3 of the Act because for  each  of  the undertakings  of Hindustan Steel Ltd. including Alloy  Steel separate  accounts  were  kept though  for  the  purpose  of compliance  with  the  provisions of  the  Companies  Act  a consolidated balance-sheet and profit and loss account  were also  prepared.   There was no substance in  the  contention that  the  proviso  to  s. 3  applies  only  to  departments undertaking or branches controlled and managed by persons 630 other  than  companies.   It would be a  strange  method  of construction  of  language to hold  that  the  establishment referred  to  in  the main part of s.  3  will  include  all different   departments  undertakings  and  branches  of   a company, while it will not do so in the proviso to the  same section.  There is no reason for interpreting the proviso to s.  3 in this manner simply because in the case of  separate departments,  undertakings or branches of the  establishment of  a company, it may not be possible to make a deduction  @ 8.5%  of the paid up equity share capital. [635 C-D; 633  G- 634 H] (iii)     Sub-Section  (1)  of s. 16 grants  exemption  from payment of bonus to establishments newly set up for a period of  six  years following ,the accounting year in  which  the goods  produced or manufactured are sold for the first  time and,  in  the  alternative;  upto  the  year  when  the  new establishment  results in profit, whichever is earlier.   If the  Alloy  Steel Project was treated  as  an  establishment newly  set  up for the purposes of s.  16(1)  the  exemption claimed would be fully justified.  Section 16(2) of the  Act makes  it  clear that the provisions of sub-s.  (1)  are  to apply even to new departments, undertakings, or branches set up  by existing establishment.  Consequently, even if  Alloy Steel Project was treated as a new undertaking set up by the existing   establishments  of  Hindustan  Steel   Ltd.   the exemption under s. 16(1) would be available to it. [637 D-E] The proviso to Sub-s. (2) of s. 16 only comes in the way  if bonus is paid in any year to the employees of all the  units on  the basis of the consolidated accounts.  That had  never been   done  in  the  case  of  the  Hindustan  Steel   Ltd. Consequently  the  Alloy  Steel  Project  should  have  been treated as a separate establishment newly set up in the year 1961. , It went into production in 1964-65 and did not  earn any  profits  at all till 1967-68.  Therefore no  bonus  was payable  to  the workmen of this undertaking  for  the  year 1965-66  in view of the provisions of s. 16(1) of  the  Act. [638 A-B]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2128 of 1969. Appeal  by special leave from the Award dated July 19,  1969 of  the Ninth Industrial Tribunal, West Bengal, Calcutta  in case No. VIII-396 of 1968. C.   K.  Daphtarv.  Santosh Chatterjee and D. N.  Mukherjee, for the appellant. S.   C.  Gupta,  Manju  Gupta and S. C.  Agarwala,  for  the respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Bhargava,  J. The appellant, Messrs Alloy Steel Project,  is

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an undertaking owned, controlled and managed by a Government Company,  viz.,  Messrs Hindustan Steel  Ltd.   Alloy  Steel Project  was  started  in the year 1961  and  it  went  into production  in  the year 1964-65.  No profit was  earned  at least right up to the year ’1967-68.  The workmen,  however, claimed  bonus  at  the minimum rate  prescribed  under  the Payment of Bonus Act No. 21 of 1965 (hereinafter referred to as "the Act") in respect of the year 1965- 631 1966 on’ the plea that this Alloy Steel Project was a / part of  the Hindustan Steel Ltd. and could not be treated  as  a new  establishment  for purposes of section 16 of  the  Act. Hindustan  Steel Ltd. was itself an establishment which  had been  in  existence  for a long period  and  had  been  even earning  profits, so that exemption could not be granted  to this  Company in respect of payment of bonus under s. 16  of the  Act.   This claim of the workmen was resisted,  by  the Company on the plea that Alloy Steel Project was a  separate establishment  in respect of which  separate  balance-sheets and  profit  and loss accounts were maintained, so  that  no bonus  was payable until either this Project  itself  earned profits,  or  from the sixth accounting year  following  the year  1964-65 when this Project went into  production.   The dispute  between the work-men and the Company. could not  be resolved  amicably and, consequently, a reference  was  made under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 which came up before the  Ninth Industrial Tribunal, West Bengal.   The  Tribunal held  that  Alloy Steel Project could not be  treated  as  a separate establishment because, under the Act, a Company  is itself an establishment, so that all units of a Company like Hindustan  Steel  Ltd. will  constitute  one  establishment. Since  this  Project had not been earning  any  profits  the Tribunal directed payment of bonus at the minimum rate of  4 per cent of wages prescribed by the Act.  Aggrieved by  this award  of  the  Tribunal, the Company has come  up  in  this appeal  to this Court by special leave, though the  name  of the  appellant is shown as Alloy Steel Project,  because  it was under this name that the reference was dealt with by the Tribunal. The main basis of the decision of the Tribunal is that  ’the word establishment’ has been used in this Act to indicate  a "Company" as called in common parlance." It was on this view that the Tribunal further Proceeded to consider whether this Alloy  Steel  Project could be held to be  an  establishment separate from Hindustan Steel Ltd., or it had to be  treated as a part of the parent establishment, viz., Hindustan Steel Ltd.   In  this  approach, it is  clear  that  the  Tribunal committed  an obvious error, as it ignored  the  indications which  are manifest from the language used in the  Act.   In section  2, sub-section (15) and (16),  establishments  have been  divided  into two classes and their meaning  has  been defined.   In clause (16), "establishment in public  sector’ is defined as meaning an establishment owned, controlled  or managed by-               (a)   a  Government  company  as  defined   in               section 617 of the Companies Act, 1956;               (b)   a  corporation  in which not  less  than               forty per cent of its capital is held (whether               singly or taken together) by-               632               (i)   the Government; or               (ii)  the Reserve Bank of India; or               (iii) a  corporation owned by  the  Government               or’ the Reserve Bank of India. In clause (15) of S. 2, "establishment in private sector" is

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defined   to   mean   any  establishment   other   than   an establishment  in  public sector.  Thus, between  these  two clauses,   all   establishments   are   covered.    If    an establishment  is  in public sector, it is  covered  by  the definition  in clause (16).  If the establishment is not  in public  sector,  it  will be covered by  the  definition  of "establishment  in  private  sector" in  clause  (15).   The significant  words are those contained in clause (16)  which show  that  an establishment in a public sector  hag  to  be owned, controlled or managed by a Government company, or  by a  corporation  of  the nature  described  in  that  clause. Obviously,  therefore, an establishment in a private  sector would  be  one which is owned, controlled or  managed  by  a person or body other than a Government company or a corpora- tion of the nature described in clause (16).  In this  view, an  establishment cannot be identified with a  company.   It would  be absurd to say that a company is owned,  controlled or  managed  by  a  Government  company  or  a  corporation. Obviously, the word "establishment" is intended to  indicate something  different  from  a  company  as  defined  in  the Companies Act.  This is further clarify by the provisions of sub-s. (3) of section I which lays down the applicability of the Act.  The Act has been made applicable to every  factory and  every  other  establishment in  which  twenty  or  more persons  are employed on any day during an accounting  year. Supposing  a company has a factory in one premises  and  has another  workshop entirely distinct and separate  from  that factory,  in  which the number of persons employed  is  less than 20.  The Act itself will apply to the factory, but will not apply to the other establishment in which the number  of employees  is less than 20.  This applicability of  the  Act will  be  independent of the other provisions  of  the  Act. Learned counsel for the respondent-workmen relied on section 3  of the Act to urge that even the establishment  employing less  than  20  persons  will  be  a  part  of  the   parent establishment  consisting of the factory.  Section 3  is  as follows :-               "3.   Where  an  establishment   consists   of               different  departments or undertakings or  has               branches,  whether situated in the same  place               or  in different places, all such  departments               or  undertakings or branches shall be  treated               as  parts  of the same establishment  for  the               purpose of computation of bonus under this Act               633.               Provided that where for any accounting year  a               separate  balance-sheet  and profit  and  loss               account are prepared and maintained in respect               of  any  such  department  or  undertaking  or               branch,  then, such department or  undertaking               or  branch  shall  be treated  as  a  separate               establishment  for the purpose of  computation               of bonus under this Act for that year,  unless               such department or undertaking or branch  was,               immediately  before the commencement  of  that               accounting   year  treated  as  part  of   the               establishment  for the purpose of  computation               of bonus." It is to be noted that the principal part of section 3  lays down that different departments or undertakings or  branches of  an establishment are to be treated as part of  the  same establishment  only for the purpose of computation of  bonus under  the  Act.   They cannot be treated  as  part  of  one establishment for purposes of subsection (3) of section 1 of the  Act.  In fact, section 3 cannot be, resorted to at  all

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when the Act itself is inapplicable in view of the provision contained  in  section 1, sub-s. (3).  It  is,  thus,  quite clear that the Tribunal went entirely wrong in holding  that simply because Alloy Steel Project is owned, controlled  and managed  by Hindustan Steel Ltd., it has to be treated as  a part   of   Hindustan  Steel  Ltd.  which   is   itself   an establishment.  Hindustan Steel Ltd. cannot be described  as an  establishment.  The facts appearing on the  record  show that  Hindustan Steel Ltd. has a number of.  establishments. These  include Alloy Steel Project besides the Head  Office, Rourkela  Steel  Plant, Bhilai Steel Plant,  Durgapur  Steel Plant, Coal Washeries Project and Bokaro Steel Project.  The Company,  Hindustan Steel Ltd., cannot be equated  with  any one  of  these units.  They are all  separate  undertakings, departments or branches owned, controlled and managed by one single  Company and, consequently,. the point raised has  to be  decided  on  the basis whether,  under  the  proviso  to section  3  the Alloy Steel Project is to be  treated  as  a separate  establishment, or is to be treated as part of  the main establishment owned by Hindustan Steel Ltd. Learned   counsel  for  the   respondent-workmen,   however, advanced a new argument which was not put forward before the Tribunal.  His submission was that, if an establishment of a Company consists of a number of departments, undertakings or branches, the principal part of section 3 will apply and all such  departments, undertakings or branches must be  treated as  parts  of  one  single  establishment  for  purposes  of computation  of  bonus  under the Act, but  the  proviso  to section 3 will not apply in such a case.  According to  him, the  proviso  to  section 3  will  apply  to  establishments consisting   of  different  departments,   undertakings   or branches  which are owned, controlled or managed by  persons other 634 than  companies.  This argument was based on  the  reasoning that,   in   order  to  calculate  available   surplus   for distribution of bonus in the case of a company the Act  lays down in section, 6 (d) read with the Third Schedule that the deductions  to be made from net _profits will  also  include dividends  payable on , preference share ,capital,  and  8.5 per  cent  of its paid up equity share, capital  as  at  the commencement of the accounting year.  This provision  cannot be  given  effect  to  in respect of  separate  units  of  a Company,  .because  the paid up capital  or  the  preference share capital is not ,allocated between different units.  In the case of the present Company, viz., Hindustan Steel Ltd., the  entire paid up capital is shown in the accounts of  the Head  Office.  The money needed for working of  the  various units,  including  the  Alloy Steel  Project,  is  shown  as remittance received from the Head Office and not as. paid up capital of the Alloy Steel Project etc.  The result is that, if  Alloy  :Steel Project or other units  of  the  Hindustan Steel  Ltd.  are  treated  as  separate  establishments  and available  surplus is calculated separately for  each  unit, there  will be no deduction @ 8.5 per cent ,of the  paid  up equity share capital as envisaged by section, 6(d) ,and  the Third Schedule of the Act. We  do not think that there is any force in  this  argument. First,  it  would  be a strange method  of  construction  of language  to hold that the establishment referred to in  the main   part  of  section  3  will  include   all   different departments, undertakings and "branches of a company,  while it will not do so in the proviso to ’the same section.  Such different  meanings  in the same section in respect  of  the same  words or expression cannot be accepted.  Secondly,  it

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seems to us that no difficulty of the nature pointed out  by learned counsel can arise in calculating available  surplus. ’Wherever  the Act lays down that certain deductions are  to be  made, it is obvious that those deductions will  only  be effective  if,  in fact, circumstances do  exist  justifying such deductions.  In the ’Third Schedule itself, the  first’ deduction envisaged is dividend payable on preference  share capital.  A number of companies do not have preference share capital.   In such cases, clearly, no ,occasion would  arise for  making such a deduction.  Very similar is the  position with   regard   to  certain  other  deductions   which   are permissible under the Second Schedule which principally lays down the method of calculation of available surplus.-  There is,  therefore,  no reason for interpreting the  proviso  to section  3  in the manner urged by  learned  counsel  simply because,  in the case of separate departments,  undertakings or branches of the establishment of a company, it may not be possible  to make a deduction @ 8.5 per cent of the paid  up equity share capital. In  the  present case, there is very  clear  evidence  that, though  the Company, Hindustan Steel Ltd., has a  number  of undertakings, 635 Separate  accounts are kept for each  separate  undertaking. The annual reports for three years were produced before  the Tribunal.  They clearly indicate that separate balance-sheet was  prepared  for each unit and separate  profit  and  loss account  was worked out for each unit, except that, for  the Head  Office, though a separate balance-sheet  was-prepared, the  profit  and  loss was worked out on the  basis  of  the consolidated accounts.  The Tribunal, in support of its view that  Alloy  Steel Project is a part  of  the  establishment constituted by the Company, Hindustan Steel Ltd., relied  on the  circumstance  that  a  consolidated  balance-sheet   is prepared  for  the Company in respect of all its  units  and after such consolidation, profit and loss is also worked out for  all the establishments together so as to find  out  the actual  profit  and loss earned or incurred by  the  Company itself.  From this, the tribunal sought to infer that  there were  no  separate accounts in respect of each unit  as  are required  to  be maintained before they can  be  treated  as separate establishments under the proviso to section 3.  The Tribunal has obviously gone wrong in ignoring the fact  that separate balance sheets and profit and loss accounts are  in fact maintained for each separate unit and the  consolidated accounts are prepared only for the purpose of complying with the  requirements of the companies Act.  The  Companies  Act does  lay down the requirement that a consolidated  balance- sheet  and profit and loss account for all the units of  the Company  must be prepared and, for, that purpose,  quarterly statements  of accounts have to be sent by each unit to  the Head  Office.  There is, however, no provision even  in  the Companies  Act  containing a prohibition to  maintenance  of separate   balance-sheets  and  separate  profit  and   loss statements  for  each unit for purposes of  the  Act.   That accounts are separately maintained for each unit is not only established from the various annual reports filed before the Tribunal and the evidence of, the Company’s witness  Umapada Chakraborty, but is also admitted by Suprakash Kanjilal, the only witness examined on behalf of the workmen.  The  latter also  admitted  that separate bonus calculation is  made  in respect  of each unit and bonus was declared  separately  in each  unit.  No bonus was, however, declared in  respect  of the  Alloy  Steel Project.  That declaration  was  not  made because  of  the claim that Alloy Steel Project  was  exempt

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from payment of bonus under section 16 of the Act.   Section 16 runs as follows:-               "16.  (1) Where an establishment is newly  set               up,  whether before or after the  commencement               of   this   Act,  ,the   employees   of   such               establishment  shall  be entitled to  be  paid               bonus under this Act only-               (a)  from  the accounting year  in  which  the               employer    derives    profit    from     such               establishment; or               918Sup CI/71               636               (b)   from the sixth accounting year following               the  accounting  year in  which  the  employer               sells  the goods produced or  manufactured  by               him  or renders services, as the case may  be,               from such establishment,               whichever is earlier               Provided   that  in  the  case  of  any   such               establishment the employees thereof shall not,               save  as otherwise provided in section 33,  be               entitled  to be paid bonus under this  Act  in               respect  of any accounting year prior  to  the               accounting  year commencing on any day in  the               year 1964.               Explanation   I.-For  the  purpose   of   this               section, an establishment shall not be  deemed               to  be  newly  set up merely by  reason  of  a               change  in its location, management,  name  or               ownership.               Explanation II.-For the purpose of clause (a),               an  employer  shall  not  be  deemed  to  have               derived profit in any accounting year unless-               (a)   he  has made provision for  that  year’s               depreciation to which he is entitled under the               Income-tax  Act or, as the case may be,  under               the agricultural income-tax law; and               (b)   the  arrears  of such  depreciation  and               losses  incurred  by  him in  respect  of  the               establishment  for  the  previous   accounting               years  have  been fully set  off  against  his               profits.               Explanation  III.-For  the purpose  of  clause               (b),   sale   of   the   goods   produced   or               manufactured  during the course of  the  trial               run of any factory or of the prospecting stage               of any mine or an oil-field shall not be taken               into  consideration  and  where  any  question               arises  with  regard  to  such  production  or               manufacture,  the decision of the  appropriate               Government,  made after giving the  parties  a               reasonable  opportunity  of  representing  the               case,  shall be final and shall not be  called               in question by any court or other authority.               (2)   The provisions of sub-section (1) shall,               so far as may be, apply to new departments  or               undertakings  or branches set up  by  existing               establishments               6 3 7               Provided that if an employer in relation to an               existing establishment consisting of different               departments   or  undertakings   or   branches               (whether or not in the same industry) set  up,               at different periods has, before the 29th May,               1965,  been paying bonus_to the  employees  of

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             all   such  departments  or  undertakings   or               branches  irrespective  of the date  on  which               such  departments or undertakings or  branches               were set up, on the basis of the  consolidated               profits  computed  in  respect  of  all   such               departments or undertakings or branches, then,               such employer shall be liable to pay bonus  in               accordance with the provisions of this Act  to               the  employees  of  all  such  departments  or               undertakings  or  branches  (whether  set   up               before  or  after that date) on the  basis  of               consolidated profits computed as aforesaid." Sub-section (1) of section 16 grants exemption from  payment of bonus to establishments newly set up for a period of  six years,  following  the accounting year in  which  the  goods produced or manufactured are sold for the first time and, in the alternative, up, to the year when the new  establishment results in profit, whichever is earlier.  If the Alloy Steel Project  is  treated as an establishment newly  set  up  for purposes  of s. 16(1), the exemption claimed would be  fully justified.  Section 16(2) of the Act makes it clear that the provisions  of  sub-section  (1) are to apply  even  to  new departments,  undertakings  or branches set up  by  existing establishments.   Consequently, even if Alloy Steel  Project is  treated  as  a new undertaking set  up  by  the-existing establishments of Hindustan Steel Ltd., the exemption  under section  16(1)  would be avail-able to it.  The  proviso  to sub-s.  (2) of section 16 also does not stand in the way  of this claim, because there is no evidence at all that in  any year, after Alloy Steel Project was set up bonus was paid to the employees of all the units on the basis of  consolidated profits  of all such units.  The only exception has been  in the  case, of workmen of the Head Office where  no  separate profit and loss was worked out and the bonus was paid on the basis of the consolidated Profits of all the units belonging to  Hindustan  Steel  Ltd.   That,  of  course,  was   fully justified,  because the Head Office was working for all  the units, though as a separate unit.  It was in the accounts of the Head Office that the entire paid up capital was credited and  advances  were made by the Head Office to  the  various units out of this capital or out of loans taken by the  Head Office.   In  the case of the Head  Office,  therefore,  the calculation  of bonus on the basis of consolidated  accounts was Justified; but that does not affect the principle to  be applied  to the separate units for which separate  accounts, separate   balance-sheets  and  separate  profit  and   loss statements are maintained.  The proviso to sub-- 638 section (2) of section 16 only comes in the way it bonus  is paid  in any year to the employees of all the units  on  the basis of consolidated accounts.  That has never been done in the  case  of the Hindustan Steel  Ltd.   Consequently,  the Alloy  Steel Project should have been treated as a  separate establishment  newly set up in the year 1961.  It went  into production  in 1964-65 and did not, earn any profits at  all till  1967-68.   Therefore, no bonus was  payable,  to,  the workmen of this undertaking for the year 1965-66 in view ,of the provisions of section 16(1) of the Act. The  appeal  is allowed, the order of the  Tribunal  is  set aside,  and  the  reference  of  the  dispute  is   answered accordingly.   In the circumstances of this case, we  direct parties to bear their own ,costs of the appeal. G.C.                               Appeal allowed. 639

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