09 November 1962
Supreme Court
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MOHMEDALLI AND OTHERS Vs UNION OF INDIA AND ANOTHER

Case number: Writ Petition (Civil) 56 of 1962


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PETITIONER: MOHMEDALLI AND OTHERS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: UNION OF INDIA AND ANOTHER

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/11/1962

BENCH: SHAH, J.C. BENCH: SHAH, J.C. SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. WANCHOO, K.N. GUPTA, K.C. DAS

CITATION:  1964 AIR  980            1963 SCR  Supl. (1) 993  CITATOR INFO :  R          1979 SC 607  (8)  R          1979 SC1803  (41)  RF         1991 SC1289  (10)

ACT: Provident  Fund-Constitutional  validity  of  enactment  and scheme  framed  thereunder-Employees’ Provident  Funds  Act, 1952  (19  of 1952) as amended by Act 46 of 1960,  ss.  1(3) (b), 16,17-Constitution of India, Art. 14.

HEADNOTE: By a notification issued by the Central Government under  s. 1  (3) (b) of the Employees’ Provident Funds Act,  1952  the petitioners’  restaurant  was brought under the Act.   By  a further  notification under s. 5 read with s. 7 (1)  of  the Act,  the  Employees’  Provident  Fund  (Second   Amendment) Scheme,  1961, was introduced.  The  petitioners  challenged the  constitutional  validity  of the said  scheme  and  the sections  under  which  it was made  and  applied  to  their restaurant.   It  was  urged that s. 1 (3) (b)  of  the  Act conferred   uncontrolled  and  uncanalised,  power  on   the Government,  that  the  Act had application  only  to  wage- earners and not to salaried employees as those, employed  in the   petitioners’  restaurant  and  that  the  scheme   was discriminatory   and  therefore  hit  by  Art.  14  of   the Constitution. Held, that whether or not a particular piece of  legislation suffers from excessive     delegation has to  be judged on a consideration  of the      facts and circumstances that  led to   the  enactment of the impugned statute. If the Act  and its   preamble  do  not  clearly  indicate  the   underlying principles     or  the  criteria for  its  application,  the inevitable conclusion must be that the delegate is entrusted not  merely  with  the function of  applying  the  law,  but substantially with the legislative power itself.  So judged, it  could  not be said that the power entrusted  to  Central Government  to bring by notification such establishments  as it  thought fit within the purview of the impugned  Act  was uncontrolled or uncanalised.

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The  Edward  Mills Co. Ltd.  Beawar v. The State  of  Ajmer, [1955]  1  S.  C. R. 735,  Vasantlal  Maganbhai  Sanjanwala, [1951) 1 S. C. R. 341 and Hamdard Dawakhana Wakf) Lal  Kuan, Delhi  v. Union of India, [1960] 2 S. C. R(W. 671,  referred to. 994 The  Act makes no distinction between wages and salary.   In principle there is no difference between the two and it  was not correct to say that the Act was not intended to apply to salaried  employees, if by salary was meant  fortnightly  or monthly wages running into hundreds per month. The Act was not discriminatory and did not infringe Art. 14. It applied to all establishments since s. 16 was amended  by Act  46  of  1960 except .those  registered  under  the  Co- operative  Societies Act, 1912, and those newly set up  till the  expiry  of three or five years.  As was  held  by  this Court  co-operative societies stood on a  different  footing from other establishments.  Exemption under s. 17 also could not   be  said  to  be  discriminatory.   The   petitioners’ establishment,  which came within the notification, was  not therefore, discriminated against.

JUDGMENT: ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Petition No. 56 of 1962. (Under  Article  32  of the Constitution of  India  for  the enforcement of Fundamental Rights). N.   C.  Chatterji,  S.  K. Kapur and K. K.  Jain,  for  the Petitioners. H.   N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor General of India, M. S. K. Sastri and R. H. Dhebar, for the Respondents. 1962.   November 9. The judgment of the Court was  delivered by SINHA,   C.   J This  petition,  under  Art.  32   of   the Constitution, challenges the vires of certain provisions  of the  Employees’  Provident  Funds Act  (19  of  1952)  which hereinafter  will be referred to as the Act, and the  scheme framed  thereunder.  The respondents to this petition I  are the   Union  of  India  and  the  Regional  Provident   Fund Commissioner. The  petition is founded on the following allegations.   The petitioners,  5  in number, are citizens of  India  and  are carrying  on  business of running a restaurant  and  general stores under the name and style of "Messrs George Restaurant and Stores" at  995 20,  Appollo Street, Fort, Bombay-1, since September,  1958. They  are.  running  this business as  a  partnership  firm, registered  under  the  Indian Partnership  Act.   The  firm employs  43 persons, including cooks,  waiters,  tea-makers, bill clerks and two store-clerks.  Besides paying salary  to their  employees, the  petitioners give them free  food  and other personal allowances, which it is not necessary to  set out  in detail.  In exercise of the powers conferred  by  s. 1(3)(b)  of  the  Act, the  General  Government  issued  the notification  No.  G.S.R. 704, dated May 16,  1961,  in  the following terms:               "G.S.R.  704--In exercise of the ,powers  con-               ferred  by  Clause  (b) of  sub-section  3  of               Section  1  of the Employees’  Provident  Fund               Act, 1952 (19 of 1952), the Central Government               hereby directs that. with effect from June 30,               1961,  the  said  Act  shall  apply.  to   the               following  classes of establishments, in  each

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             of which twenty or more persons are  employed,               namely               i. Hotels.               ii. Restaurants. As a result of the notification aforesaid, the operation  of the  Act  has  been  extended  to  hotels  and  restaurants, including the one run by the petitioners.  Subsequently, the Central  Government issued a notification ’under s. 5,  read with s. 7(1), of the Act, the relevant portions of which are in these terms :               " G.S.R. 783.-In exercise 1 of the powers con-               ferred  by section 5 read with subsection  (1)               of  section  7, of  the  Employees’  Provident               Funds  Act,  1952 (19 of  1952),  the  Central               Government  hereby makes the following  Scheme               further to amend the Employees’ Provident Fund               Scheme, 1952, namely               1.    This Scheme may be called the Employees’               996               Provident  Funds  (Third  Amendment)   Scheme,               1961.               2.    In the Employees’ Provident Fund Scheme,               1952,  in clause (b) of sub-paragraph. (3)  of               paragraph  1,  sub-clause (xvii)shall  be  re-               numbered  as sub-clause (xix) thereof and  the               following shall be inserted as sub-clauses               (xvii) and (xviii), namely:-               "(xvii)  as respects hotels  and,  restaurants               Covered by the notification of  the,Government               of  India  ’in  the  Ministry  of  Labour  and               Employment  No. G.S.R. 704 dated May 16,  1961               come  into  force  on the  30th  day  of  June               1961;.... The   said  notification  introduced  the  scheme,  as   the Employees’  Provident Funds (Third Amendment) Scheme,  1961. The  petitioners  challenge  the  constitutionality  of  the scheme aforesaid, and the section of the Act in pursuance of which it was brought into existence.  The   petitioners pray for a writ or order or direction quashing the said notifica- tions and for issue of a mandamus to the respondents not  to apply the said scheme to the petitioners establishment. Before dealing with the specific grounds of attack raised in support of the petition, it is necessary     to   set    out briefly   the relevant provisions of the Act. The Act  applies to every establishment which is a  factory  engaged  in  any industry specified in schedule     1 and in which 20 or more ’persons are employed, and    to  any  other   establishment employing 20 or more persons or class of such establishments which  is  Central  Government may by  notification  in  the Official  Gazette,  specify in this behalf.  ‘Employee’  has been defined ’in S. 2(f) as follows:               "  employee’ means any person who is  employed               for wages in any  kind of’ work, manual or 997 otherwise,  in  or  in  connection  with  the  work  of   an establishment, and who gets his wages directly or indirectly from  the employer, and includes any person employed  by  or through  a contractor in or in connection with the  work  of the establishment." Section  5  authorises  the Central Government  to  frame  a scheme  to be called the Employees’ Provident  Fund  Scheme, for  the establishment of provident funds under the Act  for employees  or any class of employees and  establishments  or class of establishments to which the scheme may be  applied, by  notification in the Official Gazette.  The  contribution

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of the employer to the fund shall be 61% of the basic  wages and dearness allowance and retaining allowance, if any,  and the employees contribution shall be equal to the  employer’s contribution,  subject to his contribution being  raised  to the  maximum of 6 1/3 %, if the employee so desires and  the scheme so provides.  Dearness allowance for the purposes  of contribution shall be deemed to include also the cash  value of  any food concession allowed to the employee.  Section  7 authorises  the Central Government to add to, amend or  vary any  scheme framed under the Act.  By s. 16 it  is  provided that the Act shall not apply to any establishment registered under  the  Co-operative Societies Act of 1912,  or  to  any other  establishment employing 50 or more persons or  20  or more but less than 50 persons until the expiry of 3 years in the  case  of  the former and 5 years in  the  case  of  the latter, from the date on which the establishment is set  up. Section   17   empowers  the  appropriate   Government,   by notification  in the Official Gazette, to exempt  .from  the operation of all or any of the provisions of any scheme  any establishment to which the Act applies, if in the opinion of the Government the rules of its provident fund with  respect to  the rates of contribution are not less  favourable  than those  specified  in  s. 6 and the  employees  are  also  in enjoyment 998 of other provident fund benefits which on the whole are  not less  favorable to the employees than the benefits  provided under  this Act, as also any establishment if the  employees of  such establishment are in enjoyment of benefits  in  the nature or provident fund, pension or gratuity, which on  the whole are not less favorable to such employees.  Section  19 provides for delegation of powers. It  has been contended (1) that s. 1(3)(b) under  which  the notification  including restaurants and hotels were  brought under  the  operation  of the  Act,  is  invalid  because-it confers   uncontrolled   and  uncanalised   power   on   the Government;  (2)  that the    Act was intended to  apply  to mere  wage  earners  and not to salaried  people  and  that, therefore,  the two,notifications as a result of  which  the petitioners  employees have been brought within the  purview of the Act are bad inasmuch as  they are salaried  employees and  not mere wage-earners; and (3) that the scheme  is  bad under  Art.  14  of  the Constitution  because  it  is  dis- criminatory. In  our  opinion there is no substance in any one  of  these contentions.   It’  cannot  be  asserted  that  the   powers entrusted  to  the Central Government to  bring  within  the purview   of  the  Act  such  establishments  or  class   of establishments as the Government may by notification in  the Official  Gazette specify is uncontrolled  and  uncanalised. The  whole Act is directed to institute provident funds  for the   benefit,   of  employees  in   factories   and   other establishments, as the preamble indicates.  The  institution of provident fund for employees is too, well-established  to admit of any doubt about its utility as a measure of  social justice.   The underlying idea behind the of the Act  is  to bring all kinds of employees within its fold as and when the Central  Government  might think fit,  after  reviewing  the circumstances  of each class of establishments.  Schedule  1 to the Act contains a list of a large variety of  industries engaged in  999 the  manufacture of diverse commodities, mentioned  therein. To  all establishments which are factories engaged  in.  the industries enumerated in Schedule 1, the Act has been  made)

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applicable of its own force, subject to the provisions of s. 16, which has indicated the establishments to which the  Act shall  not apply.  The Schedule is liable to be added to  or modified so as to include other categories of industries not already  included  in schedule 1. So far  as  establishments which  do  not  come with in the  description  of  factories engaged in industries the Central Government has been vested with the power of specifying such establishment and class of establishments,  as it might determine to be brought  within the  purview.  of  the Act.  The Act  has  given  sufficient indication  of the policy underlying its provisions  namely, that it shall apply to all factories engaged in any kind, of industry  and  to all other establishments employing  20  or more  persons.This  court has repeatedly laid it  down  that where the discretion to apply the provisions of a particular statute  is left with Government, it will be  presumed  that the  discretion so vested in such a high authority will  not be abused.  The Government is in a position to have all  the relevant and necessary information in relation to each  kind of  establishment  enabling it to determine  which  of  such establishments  can  bear the additional  burden  of  making contribution  by way of provident fund, for the  benefit  of its   employees.   The  power  to  exempt  given,   to   the appropriate  Government  under  s. 17  is,  not  uncanalised because both cls. (a) and (b) of that section postulate that the  exemption  would  be granted on  the  ground  that  the employees  of  ’those  establishments  are  already  in  the enjoyment  of  benefits  in the nature  of  provident  fund, pension  or gratuity not less favorable to them  than  under the Act.  Sub-section (3) of s.1 lays down the general  rule in these terms as regards the applicability of the Act:               (3) Subject to the-provisions contained in               1000               section 16, it applies-               (a)   to   every  establishment  which  is   a               factory  engaged in any industry specified  in               Schedule 1 and in which twenty or more persons               are employed, and               (b)   to  any  other  establishment  employing               twenty  or  more  persons  or  class  of  such               establishments  which the; Central  Government               may, by notification in the Official  Gazette,               specify  in  this behalf : Provided  that  the               Central Government may, after giving not  less               than two months notice of its intention so  to               do, ’by notification in the Official  Gazette,               apply  the      Provision of this Act  to  any               establishment employing such number of persons               less  than twenty as may be specified  in  the               notification."      The term ,industry’ used in the sub-section,quoted      above, is defined ’in s. 2(i), as follows      "’industry’ means any industry specified in  Schedule               ’1, and includes any other  industry     added               to the Schedule by notification under    section               4." By  s. 4, the Central Government has been authorised to  add to  the  Schedule  any  other industry  in  respect  of  the employees  whereof it is of opinion   that a provident  fund scheme  should  be  framed under the Act, and  when  such  a notification  1st  issued, the industry so  added  shall  be deemed  to  been industry specified in  the  Schedule.   The general rule as to the application of the Act has been  laid down  in  that  sub-section.  By way of  exception  to  that general   rule,   the  Appropriate  Government   has   been-

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authorised  by s. 17 to exempt from the operation of all  or any  of the provisions of any scheme framed under  the  Act. The scheme is to be framed by the Central Government,  under s. 5, for the establishment of provident fund  1001 under  the Act for employees or any class of  employees,  in pursuance  of the provisions of the Act.  And the scheme  in question  in this case, as already indicated, has  actually- been  framed  and  is under challenge  in  this  case.   The relevant provisions of s. 17 are in these words :               "17.   Power  to exempt.-(1)  The  appropriate               Government   may,  by  notification   in   the               Official   Gazette,   and  subject   to   such               conditions   as  may  be  specified   in   the               notification, exempt from the operation of all               or any of the provisions of any Scheme-               (a)   any  establishment  to  which  this  Act               applies if, in the opinion of the  appropriate               Government,  the rules of its  provident  fund               with respect to the rates of contribution  are               not  less  favorable than those  specified  in               section  6  and  the  employees  are  also  in               enjoyment  of  other provident  fund  benefits               which  on the whole are not less favorable  to               the employees than the benefits-provided under               this  Act  or any Scheme in  relation  to  the               employees  in  any other  establishment  of  a               similar characters; or               (c)   any  establishment if the  employees  of               such   establishment  are  in   enjoyment   of               benefits  in  the nature  of  provident  fund,               pension   or  gratuity  and  the   appropriate               Government  is of opinion that such  benefits,               separately  or  jointly are on the  whole  not               less  favorable  to such  employees  than  the               benefits provided under this Act or any scheme               in  relation to employees An any  other  esta-               blishment of a similar character." It would appear from the terms of the relevant portion of s. 17 Chat the exemption to be granted by 1002 the   appropriate  Government  is  not  in  the  nature   of completely  absolving the establishments from all  liability to  provide  the facilities contemplated by  the  Act.   The exemptions  are to be granted by the appropriate  Government only  if  in  its opinion  the  exempted  establishment  has provisions made for provident fund, in terms at least equal, if  not more favorable, to its employees.  In  other  words, the  exemption  is with a view to avoiding  duplication  and permitting the employees concerned. the benefit of the pre- existing   scheme,   which  presumably  has   been   working satisfactorily,  so  that  the exemption  is  not  meant  to deprive  the  employees  concerned  of  the  benefit  of   a provident fund but to ensure to them the continuance of  the benefit  which  at least is not in terms less  favorable  to them.  As the whole scheme of provident fund is intended for the  benefit  of employees, s. 17  only  saves  pre-existing schemes   of   provident  fund  pertaining   to   particular establishments.  Hence, the provisions of sub-s. (3), of  s. 1,  read alongwith those of s. 17, quoted above,  cannot  be said to have conferred uncontrolled and uncanalised power on the   appropriate  Government.   In  this  connection.   the decision of this Court in The Eduard Mills Co. Ltd.,  Beawar v. The State of Ajnwr(1) may be referred to.  In that  case, the  provisions  of s. 27 of the Minimum Wages  Act  (11  of

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1948)  were questioned as having given   uncanalised  power. The  provisions  of that Act run more or  less  on  parallel lines  to  those  of the Act impugned  in  this  case.   The Schedule  attached to the Minimum Wages Act gave a  list  of the employments in respect of which minimum wages were to be fixed.  Under S. 27 of that Act, power had been given to the "appropriate   Government"  to  add  to  the  Schedule   any employment  in respect of which it was of the  opinion  that minimum  wages  should  be  fixed.   Those  provisions  were attacked as lacking in legislative (1)  [1955] 1 S.C.R. 735.  1003 policy  according to which a particular employment shall  be chosen  for being included in the schedule.  The  contention in  that case that no principles had been prescribed and  no standards laid down which could furnish an intelligent guide to  the  executive  authority in  making  the  selection  of employments was repelled by this Court.  A similar  question was  raised in this Court in the case of Vasantal  Maganbhai Sanjanuwala v. The State of Bombay (1) challenging the vires of s. 6 (2) of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act (Bom. 67 of 1948), which read as follows :               "The  Provincial Government may, by  notifica-               tion in the Official Gazette, fix a lower rate               of the maximum rent payable by the tenants  of               lands  situate in any particular area  or  may               fix  such rate on any other suitable basis  as               it thinks fit." This  Court,  on  a consideration of  the  preamble  of  the statute  and its relevant provisions came to the  conclusion that the power delegated to the Provincial Government by  s. 6 (2) was not vitiated by excessive delegation.  It will  be noticed that the terms of the section quoted above had given much  wider powers to the executive.  But the Court  pointed out that the legislature enunciated its policy and laid down the  principle  for the guidance of the  delegate  in  clear terms,  and that, therefore, the impugned provisions of  the Act  in that case did not suffer from the vice of  excessive delegation. But strong reliance was placed on behalf of the  petitioners on  the decision of this Court in Hamdard  Dawakhana  (Wakf) Lal  Kuan, Delhi v. Union of India (2).  In that  case  the provisions  of  cl.  (d) of s. (3) of the  Drugs  and  Magic Remedies  (Objectionable  Advertisements) Act, 1954  (21  of 1954) were (1) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 341. (2) [1960] 2 S.C.R. 671, 1004 struck down as having conferred uncanalised and uncontrolled power  on  the executive.  In that case, the whole  Act  had been  challenged as having infringed the fundamental  rights of a citizen under Art. 19 (1) (a) & (g).  This Court upheld the constitutionality of the Act as a whole, in view of  the scope and object of the Act, which was not to interfere with the  right of freedom of speech but had reference  to  trade and business.  This Court held that the provisions  attacked on those grounds were reasonable restrictions on the  rights of  a citizen to carry on any trade or business.   But  this Court  held further that the words "or any other disease  or condition which maybe specified in the rules made under this Act"  in  cl.  (d) of s. 3,  which empowered  the  Central Government to add to the list of diseases falling within the mischief  of  s.  3  suffered from  the  vice  of  excessive delegation.  This Court struck down that portion of the sub- section  as, in its opinion, the words impugned  were  vague

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and  Parliament  had not established any criteria  nor  laid down  any standards nor prescribed any principle on which  a particular  disease or condition was to be specified in  the Schedule.   It  is  clear  that  the  last  mentioned   case illustrates  the  rule that the question whether  or  not  a particular  piece  of legislation suffers from the  vice  of excessive  delegation must be determined with  reference  to the facts and circumstances in the back-ground of which  the provisions of the statute impugned had been enacted.  If, on a  review  of  all the facts and circumstances  and  of  the relevant  provisions  of  the statute, the Court  is  in  a, position  to say that the legislature had clearly  indicated the  underlying principle of the legislation and  laid  down criteria  and proper standards but had left the  application of  those principles  and standards to individual  cases  in the hands of the executive, it cannot be said that there was excessive  delegation of powers by the legislature.  On  the other hand, if a review of all those facts and circumstances and  1005 the  provisions  of  the statute,  including  the  preamble, leaves   the  Court  guessing  as  to  the  principles   and standards, then the delegate has been entrusted not with the mere  function of applying the law to individual cases,  but with  a  substantial portion of  legislative  power  itself. Applying those principles which are now well-established  by quite a number of decisions of this Court, can it be said in the  instant  case that the. legislature had  not  indicated clearly  the principles underlying the legislation  and  the standards to be applied ? In our opinion, the answer must be an emphatic "No". It  was  next  contended  that  the  Act  was  intended   by Parliament to apply to employees who were mere  wage-earners and not to salaried servants, and that in the instant  case, the employees of the petitioners were not mere wage-earners. It  is  a little difficult to  appreciate  the distinction sought to be made.  Both ’Salary’ and ’Wages" are emoluments paid  to  an employee by way of recompense for  his  labour. Neither  of the two terms is a ’term of art’.  The  Act  has not defined wages; it has only defined "basic wages" as  all emoluments which are earned by an employee while on duty or, on  leave  with wages in accordance with the  terms  of  the contract of employment and which are paid or payable in cash to  him, but does not include......, "(s. 2(b).  (Exclusions are  not relevant for our present purposes  and,  therefore, need  not  be  read.)  ’Salary’,  on  the  other  hand,   is remuneration paid to an employee whose period of  engagement is  more  or  less permanent in character,  for  other  than manual  or  relatively unskilled  labour.   The  distinction between  skilled  and unskilled labour itself  is  not  very definite  and it cannot be argued, nor has it been  argued.. that  the  remuneration for skilled labour is  not  ’wages’. The Act itself has not made any distinction between  ’wages’ and  ’salary’.   Both  may be paid  weekly,  fortnightiy  or monthly  though  remuneration  for the  day’s  work  is  not ordinarily 1006 termed  "salary’.   Simply because wages for the  month  run into  hundreds,  as they very often do now, would  not  mean that the employee is not earning wages, properly so  called. A  clerk  in an office may earn much less than  the  monthly wages  of a skilled laborer.  Ordinarily he is said to  earn his salary.  But in principle there is no difference between the  two.  It is,  therefore, not established that  the  Act was  not  intended  to apply to salaried  employees,  if  by

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salary  is meant fortnightiy or monthly wages  running  into hundreds  per month.  It is manifest that there is no  force in this contention. It now remains to consider the third and the last contention raised on behalf ’of the petitioners,, namely, that the  Act suffers  from  the vice of  discrimination  and,  therefore, ’infringes  Art.  14 of the Constitution.  It is  even  more difficult to understand this contention, because, as already pointed  out, the Act applies to all establishments,  except those recited in s. 16, which before its amendment by Act 46 of 1960, exempted establishments belonging to Government  or to a local authority.  But whatever vice there may have been in that provision has been removed by amending the  section, which stands after the amendment as under:               "16 (1) This Act shall not apply-               (a)   to  any establishment  registered  under               the Co-operative Societies Act, 1912, or under               any   other  law for the time being  in  force in               any    State   relating  to   Co-operative               Societies  employing less than  fifty  persons               and working without the aid of power; or               (b)   to  any  other  establishment  employing               fifty  or more persons or twenty or  more  but               less  than fifty persons until the  expiry  of               three                1007               years in the case of the former and five years               in  the case of the latter, from the  date  on               which the establishment is or has been set up"               Explanation.-For  the removal of doubt  it  is               hereby  declared that an  establishment  shall               not  be  deemed to be newly set up  merely  by               reason of a change in its location." Clause  (a)  of  s.  16, as  it  now  stands,  has  exempted establishments  registered under the Co-operative  Societies Act, because it is well-known that it is the settled  policy of  the Government to foster co-operative societies  with  a view to their development and growth in the interest of  the community. It is not necessary to cite instances where this Court has held that cooperative societies stand on a special footing  which distinguishes them from other  establishments or corporations.  Clause (b) has reference to establishments which  have  been in existence for less than 3  years  or  5 years,  as  the  case may be.   That  is  an  understandable classification   with   a  view  to   save   newly   started establishments   from  the  additional  burden   of   making contribution to provident fund in respect of its  employees. It is clear that the exemption is a short-lived one  because with  the  efflux  of  3  or  5  years’  period,  they  will automatically  come under the scheme framed under  the  Act. The  operation of s. 17 has already been discussed,  and  it has  already  been indicated that  an  establishment  coming under  the exemptions granted or to be granted under  s.  17 does  not mean that the establishment bears less  burden  of its  share  of contribution to the fund.  It  has  not  been contended before us that the petitioners’ establishment does not  come within the general rule laid down in s. 1  (3)  of the Act or within the scope of the scheme framed under s. 5. It  is  equally clear that all hotels and  restaurants  come within’ the scope of the notification impugned in this case. Hence, there is absolutely no reason for complaint that the 1008 petitioners’ establishment of that class has been chosen for hostile discrimination. As  all the contentions raised on behalf of the  petitioners

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fail, the petition is dismissed with costs.                             Petition dismissed. 1