21 January 1974
Supreme Court
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B. M. LAKSHMANAMURTHY Vs THE EMPLOYEES' STATE INSURANCE CORPORATION, BANGALORE

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1626 of 1967


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PETITIONER: B. M. LAKSHMANAMURTHY

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE EMPLOYEES’ STATE INSURANCE CORPORATION, BANGALORE

DATE OF JUDGMENT21/01/1974

BENCH: GOSWAMI, P.K. BENCH: GOSWAMI, P.K. REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN DWIVEDI, S.N.

CITATION:  1974 AIR  759            1974 SCC  (4) 218

ACT: Employees’    State    Insurance    Act--S.    2(9)(ii)    & 2(13)--’Employee’  & ’immediate employers’ meaning  &  scope of.

HEADNOTE: The  appellants  firm  was  carrying  on  the  business   of manufacturing   and  exporting  polished  granite   memorial stones.  The firm was a factory both under the Factories Act as  well  as  under  the  Employees’  State  Insurance  Act. Adjacent to this factory was another factory situated on the appellant’s land leased out to two contractors who  employed 50 workers in their factory for the purposes of cutting  and dressing  the granite stones.  The granite  stones  unloaded outside  the  factory  by the lorries were  brought  on  the portion of the leased land and after cutting them they  were sent  back  to  the  appellant’s  factory  where  they  were designed  and  polished.   The  Employees’  State  Insurance Corporation claimed from the appellant a certain sum as  the firms contribution on account of the workers employed by the two contractors described as ’immediate employers’ under the Act.   The  Employees’ State Insurance Court held  that  the contractors  were  not  ’immediate  employers’  within   the meaning  of s. 2(13) of the Employees’ State  Insurance  Act and  that they were independent contractors.  On appeal  the High Court held that the appellant was a principal  employer and  the contractors were the immediate employers under  the Act.   The High Court also held that the workers tinder  the contractors were employees within the meaning of s. 2(9)(ii) of the Act. Dismissing the appeal, to this Court, HELD  : (1) The underlying aim of the Act is to  insure  the employees  against ,various risks to their life, health  and well  being  and the charge is upon the  principal  employer even  though  he  may get his usual  work  done  through  an intermediary  who  is  described in the  Act  as  ’immediate employer’.   Any dispute between the principal employer  and the immediate employer has to be settled between  themselves de  hors,  the employees and the Act charges  the  principal employer with the liability to pay the contribution not only of  its  own but also that of the employees subject  to  his right to deduct the employees’ contribution from their wages

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under s. 40(2) Of the    Act. [147A] (2)  On  the  findings of fact the work  undertaken  by  the contractor’s  in  the adjoining vicinity is  preliminary  or incidental  to  the work in the  principal  employer-factory turning  out the finished product for export.  The  work  in the two places has intimate correlation and is a niece of an integrated  whole  and  the said  work  by  the  contractors through  their labour is ordinarily part of the work of  the principal  factory  undertaken by  the  contractors.   Their factory  is  situated  in the premises  of  the  appellant’s factory which, according to the definition clause,  includes the   precincts  thereof.   In  the  instant  case   on   an examination of the site plan and the evidence it is  evident that there is a definite environmental as well as functional unity between the two portions, namely, the main factory and the  contractors’  factory with the  precincts  even  though separated  by  a  wall  in which  there  was  a  door  which sometimes   was   closed.   The  work  undertaken   by   the contractors  and carried on in their portion of the area  is surely  componental to make it a part of the complex  whole. The principal requirement of the definition namely, that the work  or the ,construction is undertaken on the premises  of the factory is satisfied in the present ,case.  It therefore follows  that the two contractors are  ’immediate  employers within the meaning of s. 2(13) and the workers employed  for cutting  and  dressing the granite stones by  the  immediate employers  are  employees  within s. 2(9)(ii)  of  the  Act. [148B] Employees’  State  Insurance Corporation.  Bombay  v.  Raman (Chittur  Harihar Iyer),[1957] 1  L.L.J.267,Nagpur  Electric Light and Power Co.Ltd. v. Regional Director Employees State Insurancea Corporation, Etc. [1967] 3 S.C.R. 92, Employees’. 143 State  Insurance  Corporation, v. Peter Sewing  Machine  Co. etc.  A.I.R. 1970 Delhi 182, and M/s Hindustan  Construction Co.  Ltd. v. Employees’ State Insurance Corporation,  (1966) I.L.R. 18 Assam & Nagaland 87, referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1626 of 1967. Appeal  by Special Leave from the Judgment and Decree  dated the  14th  October,  1966 of the High  Court  of  Mysore  at Bangalore in Misc.  First Appeal No. 124 of 1966. M. Natesan and Saroja Gopalkrishnan, for the appellant Gobind Das and S. P. Nayar, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by GOSAMI,  J.-The appellant and his  brother,  Srinivasamurthy are  partners  of  a  firm  carrying  on  the  business   of manufacturing  and  exporting of polished  granite  memorial stones in the name and style of Messrs Narayanaswami & Sons. The  firm is admittedly a factory both under  the  Factories Act  as  well as under the Employees’  State  Insurance  Act (briefly the Act).  The appellant claims to directly  employ about 35 persons in his factory and has been paying  contri- bution  under the Act on their account.  It is  stated  that adjacent  to  his  own  factory  there  is  another  factory situated  on the appellant’s land leased out by him  to  two persons,  Chidambarchari and Shankarsubbachari  (hereinafter referred  to  as the contractors).  The  contractors  employ about  50 workers in their factory for purposes  of  cutting and  dressing the granite stones.  The lorry  drivers  bring granite  from the surrounding areas and unload them  outside the  factory’ The contractors get these to their portion  of

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the  leased land for cutting them.  After cutting these  are sent  back  to  the  appellant’s  factory  where  these  are designed and polished and thereafter exported. The  Employees  State  Insurance  Corporation  (briefly  the Corporation) applied to the Employees’ State Insurance Court at  Bangalore (briefly the Court) for recovery of an  amount of  Rs. 8893/- being the employees’ contribution payable  by the  appellant for the period commencing from  27-7-1958  to 31-1-1964  on  account of the workers employed  by  the  two contractors  described as ’immediate employers’  tinder  the Act.    The   court   decided   against   the    Corporation holding .that the contractors were not ’immediate employers’ within  the  meaning of section 2 (13) of the Act  and  they were  independent con tractors and hence the  appellant  was not  the  principal  employer in respect  of  the  employees working under the contractors.  The Corporation appealed  to the  High Court of Mysore against the aforesaid order  under section  82(2)  of the Act.  The High Court  held  that  the appellant was the principal employer an the contractors were the  immediate  employers  under the Act.   The  High  Court further  held  that the workers under the  contractors  were employees  within the meaning of section 2 (9) (ii)  of  the Act.   The  High  Court  thus accepted  the  appeal  of  the Corporation.  Hence this appeal by special leave. Before  the court evidence was given by both sides  and  the following  findings of the court are adverted to by the High Court 144 .lm15 "All  that can be said to have been proved by the  applicant corporation  in  this  case is that RWs 2 and  3  (the  con- tractors)  work at a place belonging to the  respondent  and execute  part of the work which is necessary to  manufacture the  final finished product for sale.  All that can be  said to have been proved in this case is that the contractors are doing  some work which would be the foundation for the  work that is finally done by the respondent". After examining the evidence the High.  Court also found  as follows               "There   is  evidence  to  show   that   these               employees   (under   ,the   contractors)   are               employed  in connection with the work  of  the               respondent-facory". The  respondent in the High Court’s judgment refers  to  the appellant  herein.   As  stated  earlier,  the  High   Court answered both the questions in favour of the Corporation. The same points are raised for consideration in this  appeal and Mr. Natesan on behalf of the appellant submits that  the contractors  owned  a separate factory and  are  independent contractors  and cannot be held to be ’immediate  employers’ within the meaning of section 2(13) of the Act and hence the appellant  is  not liable as principal employer to  pay  the contribution  on  account of the persons working  under  the contractors. Before  we  deal with the questions of law  raised  in  this appeal,  it  will be appropriate to refer  to  the  material provisions of the Act. The  Act,  as it appears from the preamble,  is  passed  "to provide  for  certain  benefits  to  employees  in  case  of sickness,  maternity  and  employment  injury  and  to  make provision  for certain other matters in  relation  thereto". Section  2  contains  the definitions.   By  section  2  (4) "contribution"  means the sum of money payable to  the  Cor- poration by the principal employer in respect of an employee and  includes  any  amount payable by or on  behalf  of  the

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employee in accordance with the provisions of this Act."  By section 2 (9) "employee" means any person employed for wages in  or  in  connection  with  the  work  of  a  factory   or establishment to which this Act applies and-               (i) who is directly employed by the  principal               employer  on  any work of,  or  incidental  or               preliminary to or connected with the work of ,               the  factory  or establishment,  whether  such               work is done by the employee in the factory or               establishment or elsewhere; or               (ii)   who  is  employed  by  or  through   an               immediate  employer  on the  premises  of  the               factory   or   establishment  or   under   the                             supervision  of the principal employer   or  his               agent on work which is ordinarily part of  the               work of the factory or establishment or  which               is  preliminary to the work carried on  in  or               incidental  to the purpose of the  factory  or               establishment;               *       *        *       * 145 By  section 2(12)"factory "means any premises including  the precincts  thereof  whereon  twenty  or  more  persons   are employed  or  were  employed for wages on  any  day  of  the preceding  twelve  months,  and  in  any  part  of  which  a manufacturing  process is being carried on with the  aid  of power or is ordinarily so carried on.  But does not  include a mine subject to the operation of the Mines Act, 1952 or  a railway running shed".           *       *        *        *         * By  section  2(13)  "immediate  employer",  in  relation  to employees employed by or through aim, means a person who has undertaken the execution, on the premises of a factory or an establishment  to  which  this Act,  applies  or  under  the supervision  of the principal employer or his agent, of  the whole  or any part of any work which is ordinarily  part  of the  work of the factory or establishment of  the  principal employer  or  is preliminary to the work carried on  in,  or incidental   to  the  purpose  of,  any  such   factory   or establishment.,  and includes a person by whom the  services of  an employee who has entered into a contract  of  service with  him  are  temporarily  tent or  let  on  hire  to  the principal employer". By  section 2(14) "insured person" means a person who is  or was an employee in respect of whom contributions are or were payable  under  this  Act and who  is,  by  reason  thereof, entitled to any of the benefits provided by this Act". By section 2(17) "principal employer" means- (1)  in a factory, the owner or occupier of the factory  and includes  the managing agent of such owner or occupier,  the legal  representative of a deceased owner or  occupier,  and where a person has been named as the manager of the  factory under the factories Act, 1948, the person so named".          *      *       *        *       *      * Chapter IV deals with contributions. The opening section 38 provides that-- "subject  to. the provisions of this Act, all  employees  in factories, or establishments to which this Act applies shall be insured in the manner provided by this Act."          *      *       *        *       *       * By Section 39(1) "the contribution payable under this Act in respect  of an employee shall comprise contribution  payable by  the employer (hereinafter referred to as the  employer’s contribution)  and  contribution  payable  by  the  employee

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(hereinafter referred to as the employee’s contribution) and shall be paid to the Corporation". By  section  40  (1) "the principal employer  shall  pay  in respect of every employee, whether directly employed by  him or by or through an immediate employer, both the  employer’s contribution and the employee’s contribution". 146 By   section  42(2)  "Contribution  (both   the   employer’s contribution  and  the employee’s  contribution),  shall  be payable  by the principal employer for each week in  respect of  the  whole  or part of which wages are  payable  to  the employee and not otherwise". Section  43 and section 97 empower the Corporation  to  make regulations.  Under section 44 every principal and immediate employer  has  to  submit returns, to  the  Corporation  and maintain registers and records. Section  68  provides  for  Corporation’s  rights  where   a principal   employer   fails   or  neglects   to   pay   any contribution.   By  section 72 an employer  is  barred  from reducing  wages  by  reason only of  his  liability  to  pay contribution. Chapter VA provides for certain transitory provisions.   The opening   section  73A  provides  for   employer’s   special contribution. Chapter  VI deals with adjudication of disputes and  claims. Under   section  74  (1)  Employee’s  Insurance   Court   is constituted.  Inter-alia  under  section  75  (1)  "If   any question or dispute arises as to-               (a)  whether any person is an employee  within               the  meaning  of  this Act or  whether  he  is               liable to pay the employees’ contribution, or                         *        *       *        *        *               *               (d)  the  person who is or was  the  principal               employer in respect of any employee;                         *       *        *       *         *               * such  question  or  dispute...... shall be  decided  by  the Employees’ Insurance Court in accordance with the provisions of this Act." Under  section 75(1) (g), inter-alia, any dispute between  a principal  employer and an immediate employer shall also  be decided by the court.  Under section 75 (2) (b) any claim by principal   employer  to  recover  contributions  from   any immediate  employer shall also be decided by the  Employees’ Insurance Court.  By section 75 (3) jurisdiction of a  civil court  is barred regarding, amongst others, any question  or dispute as specified in the section. Section  82 provides for appeals and under  sub-section  (2) thereof an appeal shall lie to the High Court from an  order of   the  Employees’  Insurance  Court  if  it  involves   a substantial question of law. Chapter VII provides for different penalties. Under  Chapter  VIII (Miscellaneous), section  94  provides, interalia,  that contributions due to the Corporation  shall have priority over all other debts. The  Act  is  thus a beneficial  piece  of  social  security legislation  in the interest of labour in factories  at  the first   instance   and  with  power  to  extend   to   other establishments.   Provisions  of  the Act will  have  to  be construed  with that end in view to promote the schemes  and avoid 147 the mischief.  From some of the material provisions set  out above,  the  underlying  aim of the Act  is  to  insure  the

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employees  against various risks to their life,  health  and well  being  and the charge is upon the  principal  employer even  though  he  may get his usual  work  done  through  an intermediary,  who  is described in the  Act  as  ’immediate employer.   Any dispute between the principal  employer  and the immediate employer is to be settled between  themselves, de  hors,  the employees and the Act charges  the  principal employer with the liability to pay the contribution not only of  its  own but also that of the employees subject  to  his right   to  deduct the employees’ contribution.  from  their wages  under section 40 (2) of the Act.  There is a  quicker mode  of recovery as arrears of land revenue  under  section 45B and 73D.  Chapter VA provides for transitory  provisions and  by section 73A every principal employer shall  have  to pay  a  special  contribution  in  lieu  of  the  employer’s contribution payable under Chapter IV.  Adjudication of  all kinds  of  specified disputes are also intended  to  be  ex- peditiously  disposed  of  by the  court  constituted  under section  74.   Such  disputes include a  dispute  between  a principal  employer  and an immediate  employer  as  noticed earlier.  Civil courts’ jurisdiction is barred in respect of matters  specified  in the Act.  There is only  one  special type  of  appeal  to  the High Court  and  that  also  in  a restricted  form.   The Act insists on compliance  with  its provisions on pain of penalties and the contributions due to the corporation have priority over other debts. Keeping  in view the scheme and the principal object of  the Act, we will now examine the questions of law raised in this appeal.   The definition of the ’immediate  employer’  under section  2  (13),  omitting what is not  necessary  for  our purpose, is as follows:-               "   ’immediate  employer’,  in   relation   to               employees employed by or through him, means  a               person  who his undertaken the  execution,  on               the  premises of a factory to which  this  Act               applies  of the whole or any part of any  work               which  is ordinarily part of the work  of  the               factory  or  establishment  of  the  principal               employer or is preliminary to the work carried               on  in, or incidental to the purpose  of,  any               such factory................." That  the appellant,, who is the principal employer   has  a factory  where granite memorial stones are manufactured  for export  is beyond question.  The finished articles  are  the dressed  and polished granite stones.  The raw  material  is the  stone from the quarry-brought therefrom, cut to  sizes, dressed, polished and then exported.The other factory of the contractors  on the leased land of the  principal  employer, adjoining the latter’s factory. is registered under the Fac- tories Act in the year 1963.  Although admittedly a factory, there is no evidence on the record that the contractors  pay any  contribution  under the Act or have been  even  charged separately as principal employers so far as their so  called direct employees are concerned.  The principal employer, the appellant,  is making a claim which, if correct,  will  make the  contractors also, principal employers liable under  the Act.  But it is easy for the appellant to make such 148 a  claim  to  avoid his personal  liability  which,  in  all fairness  to labour, should have been settled by  impleading the  contractors  as  parties in order to  make  the  entire position  clear.   It  is not necessary for  us  to  examine whether  this is a mere device of the principal employer  to avoid his liability under the Act. We  agree with the High Court that on the findings  of  fact

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the  work  undertaken by the contractors  in  the  adjoining vicinity,   even   though  their  factory  may   have   been subsequently   registered  under  the  factories   Act,   is preliminary  or  incidental  to the work  in  the  principal employer-factory  turning  out  the  finished  product   for export.   The  work  in  the  two  places  has  an  intimate correlation  and is a piece of an integrated whole  and  the said  work  by  the  contractors  through  their  labour  is ordinarily  part  of  the  work  of  the   principal-factory undertaken by the contractors.  Their factory is situated in the  premises of the appellant’s factory which according  to the  definition clause includes the precincts thereof.   It, therefore,  follows that the two contractors are  ’immediate employers’  within  the meaning of section 2  (13)  and  the workers employed for cutting and dressing the granite stones by  the immediate employers are employees within  section  2 (9)  (ii) of the Act, being employed through  the  immediate employers  on  the  premises of the  factory  including  the precincts  thereof.  The fact that in 1963 the  contractors’ factory was separately registered under the Factories Act or that, after meeting the prior requirements of the  principal employer,  work of some other parties was also  permissible, does  not, in our opinion, militate against the  predominant purposes  of  the  work of the contractors  being  part  and parcel  of the main work of the  principal  employer-factory for which the contractors mainly work. A  good  deal  of argument is advanced with  regard  to  the expression  on the premises of a factory" in the  definition clause  of "immediate employer" under section 2  (13).   The word  "premises" according to the dictionary means house  or building  with  its  ground  or  other  apurtenances.    The premises  include under section 2 (13) the precints  thereof The  word  "precincts" means the environs.   This  Court  in Ardeshir  H.  Bhiwandiwala v. The State of  Bombay(1)  dealt with the term "Premises" in the definition of factory  under section  2(m)  of the Factories Act and after  noticing  its meaning in various Law Lexicons and dictionaries observed:-               "The word "premises" has now come to refer  to               either land or buildings or to both, depending               on  the context........ It is therefore  clear               that  the  word "premises" is a  generic  term               meaning  open land or land with  buildings  or               buildings alone." The  contention in that ’case that the word "premises"  must be  restricted  to mean buildings and not taken to  cover  I open lands as well was repelled. In  the  instant case, on an examination of  the  site  plan (Ext.   P-1)  and  the evidence, it is evident  there  is  a definite  environmental as well as functional unity  between the two portions, namely, the main (1) [1961] 3 S.C.R. 592. 149 factory  (Portion A) and the contractors’ factory  with  the precincts  (Portion  B) even though separated by a  wall  in which there was a door which sometimes was closed.  The work undertaken  by  the  contractors and  carried  on  in  their portion of the area is surely componental to make it a  part of  the  complex whole.  The principal  requirement  of  the definition,  namely,  that the work or the  construction  is undertaken  on the premises of the factory and  about  which both  sides join issue, is satisfied in the present case  on the  evidence  on records and we hold accordingly.   We  are also  satisfied that the workers under the  contractors  are employees  employed  by the principal employer  through  the ’immediate employers’ on the premises of the factory in work

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which is ordinarily the normal work of the factory or is, at any  rate,  preliminary to the work or  which  is  certainly incidental  to  the  purpose  of the  main  factory  of  the appellant. Mr.  Natesan  laid great stress upon the  requirement  of  a unity  of  control  of  the  principal  employer  over   the manufacturing   process  of  the  work  undertaken  by   the contractors, but it will be obvious from the facts found and the  evidence  noted  below that the work  is  done  on  the premises of the factory.  We need not examine this aspect in detail  in  view of the uncontradicted evidence of  PW-1  as follows:-               "The  work  done in the Factory  consisted  of               manufacture  of granite stones for export.   I               found   raw   stones  lying   all   over   the               surrounding  area.   I found that  raw  stones               were moved to the premises marked B in Ex.  P.               1.  I found that about 50 persons  working  at               the spot.  I learnt from the partners those 50               persons had been employed by two or three con-               tractors.  Cutting and dressing of the  stones               were done by those fifty men.  There were  (1)               sand   blasting  machine  belonging   to   the               partners  and (2) Electric blower.  Power  was               used in these machines.  After the stones  are                             cut and dressed, they are removed to p remises A               for  designing and polishing.   Final  touches               are then given to them in the premises B. They               are  again  brought  back to  premises  A  for               packing and despatching.  The premises A and B               belong to the partners.  Only a wall separated               the two premises.  There was a connecting door               which appeared to have been closed". Again  RW-2 also deposed that "it is since last three  years that,  I  undertook the work of the second party"  i.e.  the appellant.   R  W-1  (partner of the  appellant)  stated  as follows in cross-examination:               "Ex.  P. 4 is the copy of the letter dated 19-               3-63  written by P.W. 1 to me for copy of  the               agreement  and plan.  Ex.  P. 5 is my  interim               reply,...............  By Factory premises  in               Ex. P. 5, 1 meant both the portions A and B in               Ex. p. 1". Mr.  Natesan has referred to a decision of the  Bombay  High Court  in Employees’ State Insurance Corporation, Bombay  v. Raman (Chittur Harihar Iyer)(1) but the High Court dealt  in that  case  with the definition of "employee" prior  to  the amendment of the Act in 1966 and is of no (1) (1957) I L.L.J. 267. 150 aid  to counsel.  This case was also distinguished  by  this Court in Nagpur Electric Light & Power Co. Ltd. v.  Regional Director  Employees State Corporation, Etc.(1) Counsel  also relied upon a decision of the Delhi High Court in Employees’ State  Insurance  Corporation v. Peter  Sewing  Machine  Co. etc.(2),  dealing  with the definition  of  ’factory’  under section 2 (12) of the Act.  The High Court, inter alia,  was posing  a question in that case as to whether the  whole  or any  part of the work of the contractors there consisted  of any  work  which was ordinarily a part of the  work  of  the factory  or  establishment  of the  principal  employer  and answered it in the negative on the finding of facts in  that case   "that  the  contractors,  manufacture   their   goods independently and not as a part of the goods manufactured by

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the  Peter  Sewing Machine Company".  On the facts  of  this case that question does not arise and we express no  opinion thereon.   The  decision  is therefore, of  no  aid  to  the appellant in this case. The  learned  counsel  further draws our  attention  to  M/s Hindustan   Construction  Co.  Ltd.  v.   Employees’   State Insurance  Corporation(3)  in  which  case  the  High  Court remanded  the matter to find out "whether the work  done  at the    site   can   be   regarded   as    a    manufacturing process............ We, however, do not fail to notice  that the judgment did not take note of the complete definition of " employee" under section 2 (9), the first part of which  is joined by a conjunctive ’and’ with two clauses.  Further the High Court is not correct in thinking that the definition of the word "factory" under the Factories Act "is same" as that of "factory" under the Employees’ State Insurance Act  which is   of  wider  amplitude  with  an  expanding  horizon   of objectives in the latter Act.  It is not necessary, however, to consider. in this case if these factors may have affected the decision in the above case.  At any rate, the  appellant does not derive any aid from this decision. The next decision in Nagpur Electric Light & Power Co., Ltd. (supra),  relied upon by the appellant for the  construction of  the definition of "employee" under section 2 (9) (i)  of the  Act  is not of assistance to him since we  are  dealing with a case under section 2(9) (ii).  We, of course, notice that the High Court in this case held as follows at page 20 of the judgment :-               "From  the  foregoing, it is  clear  that  the               contractors have been executing the work which               is ordinarily part of the work of the  factory               and   that   within  the   premises   of   the               respondent-factory". The  definition clauses of "immediate employer"  [section  2 (13)]  and  "employee"  [section 2 (9)  (11)],  contain  the expression "on the premises of a factory" and not within it. Even  so,  as detailed above after  examining  the  evidence ourselves, we are clearly of opinion (1) [1967] (3) S.C.R. 92.      (2) AIR 1970 Delhi 182. (3) [1966] I.L.R., 18 Assam & Nagaland 87. 151 that  the work of the contractors was undertaken by them  on the premises of the factory which may not be the same  thing as  in  or within the factory.  We are further of  the  view that  the  entire  site of the factory is  a  composite  one containing  portions  A as well as B and there is  no  doubt that  the contractors are the ’immediate  employers’  within the  meaning  of section 2 (13) of the Act and  the  workers employed by them are "employees" under the Act. In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs. P.B.R.                                Appeal dismissed. 152