08 February 1962
Supreme Court
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THE ATLAS CYCLE INDUSTRIES, LTD. SONEPAT Vs THEIR WORKMEN

Case number: Appeal (civil) 188 of 1961


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PETITIONER: THE ATLAS CYCLE INDUSTRIES, LTD. SONEPAT

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THEIR WORKMEN

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/02/1962

BENCH: AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA BENCH: AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) SUBBARAO, K. AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA MUDHOLKAR, J.R.

CITATION:  1962 AIR 1100            1962 SCR  Supl. (3)  89  CITATOR INFO :  R          1992 SC1277  (37,91)

ACT: Industrial  Dispute-Constitution of  Tribunal-Qualifications of  members-"Qualified for appointment as a Judge of a  High Court", meaning of-Validity of Reference-Industrial Disputes (Punjab   Amendment)  Act,  1957(Punj.8  of  1957),  s.   3- Industrial  Disputes Act, 1947 (14 of 1947), s. 7  (3)  (c)- Constitution of India, Arts.14, 165,217.

HEADNOTE: On  February  14, 1953, the Government  of  Punjab  referred certain  disputes  between  the appellant  company  and  its workmen  to the Industrial Tribunal which had  been  consti- tuted on August 29, 1953, by a notification issued under  s. 7 of the industrial Disputes Act, 1947, by which G, an Advo- cate,  was appointed as the Industrial Tribunal for  Punjab. When  the  reference was pending the Act was  amended.   The Amendment Act inter alia repealed s. 7 of the principal  Act and replaced it by ss. 7A, 7B and 7C, and by s. 30  provided for  a saving clause in respect of the  proceedings  pending before the Tribunal constituted under the principal Act.  On April 19, 1957, the Punjab Government issued a  notification under  s.  7  of  the Act and s. 30  of  the  Amendment  Act extending  the  life of the Tribunal constituted  under  the repealed  s.  7  and also extending the term  of  G  as  the member.   On the same date another Notification  was  issued under  s.  7A  of the Act constituting a  new  Tribunal  and appointing  G as the Presiding Officer up to June  3,  1957. Under s. 70 (b) the age of retirement for members was  fixed at  sixty  five  and under that provision G  would  have  to retire  by June 3, 1957.  The Punjab  Government  intervened and  passed the Industrial Disputes (Punjab Amendment)  Act, 1957,  raising  the age of retirement of  members  to  sixty seven  years.   After  G had retired on June  3,  1959,  the Punjab  Government issued a notification appointing  another person as the Presiding Officer of the Industrial Tribunal. The  appellant challenged the legality of the  reference  on the grounds, inter alia, (1) that G was not qualified to  be

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appointed to the Tribunal under s. 7 (3) (c) of the Act,  as he was over sixty years and, therefore, the reference to him dated 90 February 14, 1955, was incompetent, and (2) that the  Indus- trial Disputes (Punjab Amendment) Act, 1937, was passed with a  view to benefit a single individual, G,  and,  therefore, was void as offending Art. 14 of the Constitution of India. Held,  (1) s. 7(3)(c) of the Industrial Disputes Act,  1947, did  not  import any qualification based on the age  of  the person  to  be appointed, and that the appointment of  G  on August 29, 1953, was valid under that section. On the true Construction of Art. 217 of the Constitution  of India,  the  prescription  of age  therein  is  a  condition attached to the duration of the office and not a "qualifica- tion" for appointment to it. G.D.  Karkare v. T.L. Shevde, I.L.R. [1952] Nag. 409  and Prabhudayal  v.  State of Punjab, A. I. R. 1959  Punj.  460, approved. (2)  the Industrial Disputes (Punjab Amendment) Act,1957,not contravene Art. 14 of the Constitution, because thoughthe occasion which inspired the enactment of the statutemight be  to benefit an individual, it was of general  application and could not therefore be held to be discriminatory. Ameerunissa v. Mehboob,[1953] S.C.R. 404, distinguished.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 188 of 1961. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated September  11,1959,  of  the  Industrial  Tribunal,  Punjab, Patiala in Reference No. 30 of 1957. G.S. Pathak, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and  Ravinder Narain, for the appellants. Bawa   Shivcharan   Singh  and  Janardan  Slwrma   for   the respondents. 1962.   February 8. The Judgment of the Court was  delivered by VENKITARAMA  AIYAR,  J.-This is an appeal by  special  leave against the Order of the Industrial Tribunal, Punjab,  dated September 11, 1959, in Reference No. 30 of 1957,  overruling certain  preliminary objections raised by the  appellant  to the 91 jurisdiction  of  the Tribunal to hear the  reference.   The facts  are  that  on February 14,,1955,  the  Government  of Punjab referred under s. 10(1)(c) of the Industrial Disputes Act,  1947,  hereinafter referred to as "the  Act",  certain disputes  between the appellant and the respondents  to  the Industrial  Tribunal Punjab, Jullundur,  for  adjudication.’ That was numbered as Reference No. 3 of 1955.  This Tribunal had  been constituted on August 29, 1953, by a  Notification issued by the Government of Punjab, which is as follows               "In  exercise  of the powers  conferred  under               section 7 of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947               (Act XIV of 1947), the Governor of Punjab,  in               consultation  with the Punjab High  Court,  is               pleased  to appoint Shri Avtar  Narain  Gujral               ’Advocate, as Industrial Tribunal’for Punjab." The  main  contention pressed before us on  %behalf  of  the appellant is that Shri A.N. Gujral was ’not qualified  under s.  7(3)(c)  of the Act under which  the  Notification  was issued to be appointed as Tribunal on August 29, 1953, as he was  very sixty years of age on that date, having been  born on  June 4, 1

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892, and that there was therefore no  Tribunal validly  constituted in existence, and that  in  consequence the  reference, to that so-called Tribunal on  February  14, 55, was wholly inoperative. While  Reference  No.  3  of 1955  was  pending  before  the Tribunal,  the  provisions of the Industrial  Disputes  Act, 1947, were amended by the Industrial Dispute (Amendment  and Miscellaneous  Provisions) Act, 1956 (Act No. 36  of  1956), which came into force on March 10, 1957.  This Amendment Act repealed  s. 7 of the principal Act, and replace it  by  ss. 7A,  7B and 7C.  Section 30 of the Amendment Act contains  a saving as regards proceedings in relation to any  industrial dispute which had been pending before a Tribunal constituted under the principal Act.  Acting under this section, the 92 Punjab  Government issued on April 19, 1957,  the  following Notification :-               "No. 4194-0.  Lab-57/652-RA In continuation of               Punjab  Government Memorandum No.  3078-C-Lab-               57/4224,  dated the 1st/llth March, 1957,  and               in exercise of the powers conferred by section               7 of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, as  in               force   before   the   commencement   of   the               Industrial     Disputes     (Amendment     and               Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1956, read with               Section  30  of the latter Act and  all  other               powers   enabling  him  in  this  behalf   the               Governor of Punjab is pleased to extend-               (a)the   period  for  which   the   Industrial               Tribunal,  Punjab, Jullundur, is  constituted,               and               (b)the term of appointment of the Role  Member               thereof.               up  to the last day of October, 1957, or  such               date   as  the  proceedings  in  relation   to               industrial   disputes  pending  in  the   said               Tribunal  immediately before the  10th  March,               1957, are disposed of, whichever is earlier." To  put it briefly, this Notification extended the  life  of the  Tribunal constituted under the repealed s. 7,  for  the period specified therein, and it also continued the term  of Shri A,N.  Gujral, as a Member thereof, for the said period. The  contention  of  the appellant with  reference  to  this Notification  is  that  s. 30 of Act 36  of  1956  does  not authorise  the  appointment  of a  Member  to  the  Tribunal constituted under s. 7, and that the Notification in so  far as  it  continued  Sbri  A.N. Gujral. as  a  Member  of  the Tribunal  after his term of office had expired on  Mach  10, 1957, was unauthorised and void. 93 On the same date on which the above Notification was issued, that is on April 19, 1957, the Government of Punjab issued a Notification  under s. 7A of the Act of which  the  relevant portion is as follows :--               "No.  4194-C-Lab-57/66t-RA-In exercise of  the               powers   conferred  by  Section  7A   of   the               Industrial Disputes Act, 1917, as inserted  by               section   4   of   the   Industrial   Disputes                             (Amendment  and Miscellaneous Provisions)  Act ,               1956,  (No. 36 of 1956), and all other  powers               enabling  him in this behalf, the Governor  of               Punjab is pleased to constitute an  Industrial               Tribunal with Headquarters at Jullundur and to               appoint Shri Avtar Narain Gujral, B.A., LL.B.,

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             as its Presiding Officer with effect from  the               date  of the publication of this  notification               in the Official Gazette up to 3rd June, 1957." It   will   be  noticed  that  this   Notification   firstly constituted  a now Tribunal being the  Industrial  Tribunal, Jullundur,  and secondly it appointed Shri A. N.  Gujral  as its Presiding Officer ’up to June 3, 1957.  The significance of  that  date  is  that, under s. 7C  (b)  enacted  by  the Amendment  Act, 1956, the age of retirement for members  was fixed  at  sixty-five, and under that provision,  Shri  A.N. Gujral  would  have to retire on June 3, 1957.   The  Punjab Legislature  intervened  at  this  stage  and  enacted   two statutes which are material for the present dispute.  One of them  was the Industrial Disputes (Punjab Amendment)  Act  8 of.  1957.  Section 3 of this Act amended s. 7C (b)  of  the principal Act by substituting for the words "he has attained the age of sixty-five years", the words "he has attained the the  age of sixty-seven years".  Thus the age of  retirement was  raised to sixty-seven years.  By the operation of  this Act, the tenure of Shri A. N. Gujral could be extended from 94 June 3, 1957 to June 3, 1959, and that in fact was done by a number  of  Notifications  issued from time  to  time.   The appellant  contends  that this legislation was  intended  to benefit  a  single  individual  Shri  A.N.  Gujral,  and  is therefore  void  as offending Art. 14 of  the  Constitution. The  result, according to the appellant, is that after  June 3,  1957,  there was no one validly holding  the  office  of Member of the Industrial Tribunal. The  second statute enacted by the Punjab Government is  the Industrial Disputes (Amendment and Miscellaneous Provisions) (Punjab Amendment) Act 9 of 1957.  It introduced in s. 30 of the Amendment Act, 1956, a new sub s. (2) conferring on  the ,State   Government  authority  to  re-constitute   Tribunal established  under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947,  where those  Tribunals had come to an end and there  were  matters pending  before  them for adjudication.  Going back  to  the Tribunal  which was constituted under the repealed s.  7  of the  Act it will be remembered that a Notification had  been issued on April 19, 1957, under s. 30 of the Amendment  Act, 1956,  keeping it alive until the pending matters were  dis- posed  of or until October 31, 1957, whichever was  earlier. The  expectation that the proceedings before  that  Tribunal would  be completed by that date was however,  not  realised and therefore acting under s., 33B (1) of the Act, and s. 30 of the Amendment Act 1956, as further amended by Punjab Act, 9  of 1957. the Government of Punjab issued on  October  31, 1957 a Notification transferring the matters pending  before the old Tribunal constituted under s. 7 to the new  Tribunal constituted  on April 19, 1957, under s. 7A.  In  accordance with  this  Notification,  Reference  No.  3  of  1955   was transferred to the new Tribunal and was renumbered as 30  of 1957.   The contentions urged by the appellant against  this order  of transfer are, firstly, that the Tribunal to  which the transfer had been made was not, for the reasons  already given, validly constituted and had no legal existence, and, 95 secondly,  that the new provision introduced by  the  Punjab Act  9 of 1957 has no retrospective operation and  that,  in consequence,  the proceedings which had been pending  before the old Tribunal on March 10, 1957, could not be transferred to the new Tribunal under this section. The  present reference 30 of 1957 was pending till  June  3, 1959, when Sbri A.N. Gujral retired.  The Punjab  Government then issued a Notification appointing Sri Kesho Ram  Passey,

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retired  Judge  of the Punjab High Court  as  the  Presiding Officer of the Industrial Tribunal, Jullundur.  Before  him, the  present appellant filed an application on September  4, 1959,  raising  a number of preliminary  objections  to  the hearing of the reference.  By its Order dated September  11, 1959,  the  Tribunal overruled these objections  and  posted the.   matter  for  hearing  on  the  merits.   It  is   the correctness  of this Order that is DOW challenged before  us in this Appeal. Though a number of objections were raised to the bearing  of the  rieference  be,.fore  the  Tribunal,  the   contentions advanced before us for the appellant are the following :- (1)  Shri A. N. Gujral was riot qualified to be appointedto the Tribunal under s. 7(3)(c) of the Act that, in consequence, the   reference  to  him  dated   February  14,  1955,   was incompetent; (2)that  the Notification. of the Punjab Government  dated April  19, 1957 appointing Shri A. N. Gujral as a Member  of the  Industrial  Tribunal,  Juilundur,  and  the  subsequent Notifications   extending   bis  tenures   of   office   are unauthorised and inoperative; (3)that  the Notification of the Punjab  Government  dated Ootober  31,  1957, transferring  the  proccedings.  pending before the old Tribunal to the new Tribunal was inoperative, because (i) the Punjab Act 8 of 1957 is void being repugnant to Art. 14 of the, Constitution and the appointment of  Shri A.   N. Gujral as Member under that Act is also void; 96 and  (ii)  s. 30(2) enacted by Punjab Act 9  of  1957  under which  the transfer was made, did not authorise transfer  of proceedings,  which had been pending on or before March  10, 1957. (1)  Taking up first the, contention that Shri A. N.  Gujral was not qualified to be appointed to the Tribunal on  August 29, 1953, by reason of the fact that he was over sixty years of  age,  the  question  is one  of  interpretation  of  the language of s. 7(3)(c) of the Act.  Section 7, in so far  As it is material for the present purpose, is as follows:-               "7. Industrial Tribunals.-(1) The  appropriate               Government   may  constitute,  one  or more                             Industrial  Tribunals for the, adjudication  o f               industrial  disputes  in accordance  with  the               provisions of this Act.               (2)A Tribunal shall consist of such  number               of  independent  members  as  the  appropriate               Government  may  think fit  to  appoint,,  and               where  the Tribunal  consists of two or  more               members, one of them shall be appointed as the               Chairman thereof.               (3)Where  a  Tribunal consists of  one  member               only,  that member, and where it  consists  of               two  or  more  members, the  Chairman  of  the               Tribunal, shall be a person who-               (a)is or has been a Judge of a High Court; or               (b)   is or has been a District Judge or                (c)  is qualified for appointment as a  Judge               of a High Court:               Provided   that  no  appointment  under   this               subsection to a Tribunal shall be made of  any               person Dot qualified under clause (a) or  (b)               except with the approval of the High Court of               97               the  State  in which the Tribunal has,  or  is               intended to have its usual seat."

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Shri  A. N. Gujral was appointed under s. 7(3)(c)  being  an Advocate.   The question is, whether he was  then  qualified for  appointment  as  a Judge of a  High  Court  under  that clause.  The Constitutional provision hearing on this  point is Art. 217, which in so far as it is material is as follows :-               "217. (1) Every Judge of a High Court shall be               appointed  by the President by  warrant  under               his hand and seal after consultation with  the               Chief  Justice of India, the Governor  of  the               State,  and, in the case of appointment  of  a               Judge other than the Chief Justice, the  Chief               Justice  of  the High Court,  and  shall  hold               office in the case of an additional or  acting               Judge, as provided in article 224, and in  any               other  case until he attains the age of  sixty               years;               Provided that...............               (2)A  person  shall not  be  qualified  for               appointment as a Judge of a High Court  unless               he is citizen of India and-               (a)   has for at least ten years held an                Judicialoffice  in the territory of  India,               or                (b)  has  for  at  least  ten  years  been  a               advocate  of  a High Court or of two  or  more               such Courts in succession.               Explanation........ While  Art.  217  (2)  prescribes  the  qualifications   for appointment as a Judge, Art. 217(1) lays down that the Judge shall  hold office until he attains the age of sixty  years. The  whole of the controversy before us is as to the  inter- relation  between these two clauses.  The contention of  Mr. Pathak,  learned counsel for the appellant, is  that  though Art.  217 (1) refers, in terms, to the termination  of the office of Judge, in substance, it lays down a 98 qualification for appointment, because the appointment of  a person  over sixty as a Judge would clearly be repugnant  to Art.   217(1)   even  though  he  might  satisfy   all   the requirements of Art. 217(2).  It is accordingly argued  that it  is an implied qualification for appointment as  a  Judge under Art. 217 that the person should not have attained  the age of sixty at the time of the appointment. We agree that there is implicit in Art. 217(1) a prohibition against appointment as a Judge of a person who has  attained the  age  of sixty years.  But in our view, that is  in  the nature  of  a  condition governing the  appointment  to  the office-not a qualification with reference to a person who is to be appointed thereto.  There is manifest on the terms and on  the  scheme of the article a clear  distinction  between requirements  as  to  the  age of  a  person  who  could  be appointed as a Judge and his fitness based on experience and ability  to  fill the office.  Art. 217(1)  deals  with  the former, and, in form, it has reference to the termination of the  office  and  can therefore be  properly  read  only  as imposing,  by  implication  a  restriction  on  making   the appointment.   In  strong contrast to this  is  Art.  217(2) which  expressly refers to the qualifications of the  person to  be appointed such as his having held a judicial post  or having  been an Advocate for a period of not less  than  ten years.  We think that on a true construction of the  article the  prescription as to age is a condition attached  to  the duration   of  the  office  and  not  a  qualification   for appointment to it.

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Mr.  Pathak  also  relied on Arts. 224 and  376  as  lending support  to his contention that age is to be regarded as  an implied  qualification under Art. 217.  Art. 224 relates  to the  appointment of additional and acting Judges and  it  is provided in els. (1) and (2) that the person to be appointed as  additional or acting Judge by the President should be  a duly  qualified person.  There is nothing about the  age  of the person to be appointed in these clauses. 99 That  is provided in Art. 224(3) when enacts that no  person appointed  as an additional or acting Judge of a High  Court shall  hold office after attaining the age of sixty  years." This  article is also framed on the same lines as  Art.  217 and  does  not  carry  the matter  further.   Nor  is  there anything in Art. 376 which throws any further light on  this point.   It has reference to persons who were Judges in  the High  Courts  of the States specified in part of  the  First Schedule at the time when the Constitution came into  force, and  provides  that  they shall become Judges  of  the  High Courts  in  those States under the  Constitution,  and  then enacts a special provision that they "shall  notwithstanding anything in clauses (1) and (2) of article 217 but  subject to  the proviso to clause (1) of, that article, continue  to hold  office  until  the expiration of such  period  as  the President  may  by order determine." We see nothing  in  the terms  of  this  article  which lends  any  support  to  the contention that age is to be regarded as a qualification. More  to the point under consideration is Art. 165 (1)  that the  ",Governor of each State shall appoint a person who  is qualified to be appointed as a Judge of a High Court to  be Advocate-General  for  the  State." The  question  has  been discussed whether on the terms of this article" a person who has  attained  the  age of sixty could be  appointed  as  an Advocate-General.  If the age of a person is to be  regarded as one of his qualifications, then he   could  not be.   The point arose for decision in G.     D.   Karkare  v.  T.   L. Shevde  (1),  where a Judge who had retired at the  age of sixty had been appointed as Advocate-General.  The  validity of the appointment was challenged on the ground that he was disqualified  by reason of his age.  The learned  Judges  of the  Nagpur High Court held that cl. (1) of Art. 217 of  the Constitution prescribed only the duration of the appointment of a Judge of the High Court and could not be construed (1)  I. L.R. [1952] Nas. 409. 100 as  prescribing a qualification for his appointment.  It  is argued  for  the  appellant  that  the  appointment  of   an Advocate-General  under Art. 165 might stand on a  different footing from that of a Judge under Art. 217. because of  the special provision in     Art.  165(3)  that  the   Advocate- General  is  to hold office, at pleasure,  whereas  a  Judge holds  office  during good behavior.   But  this  difference bears  only  on the power of the  appropriate  authority  to terminate  the appointment and not on the  qualification  of the person to be appointed to the office.  In our view,  the interpretation put upon Art. 217 in G.  D.  Karkare’s   case (1) is correct. Though  the true meaning of Art. 217 has figured largely  in the  argument  before  us, it is to be  noted  that  we  are primarily  concerned in this appeal with the  interpretation of  s. 7(3)(c) of the Act, and that must ultimately turn  on its own context.  Section 7(3)(a) provides for the  appoint- ment of a High Court Judge, sitting or retired, as a  Member of  the Tribunal.  Age is clearly not a qualification  under this  sub-clause, as the age for retirement for a  Judge  of

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the High Court is sixty.  Likewise, el. (b) provides for the appointment  of a District Judge, setting or retired,  as  a Member.   A  retired District Judge who is aged  over  sixty will be eligible for appointment under this subclause.  Thus the  age of a person does not enter into his  qualifications under   sub-cls.  (a)  and  (b).   It  would  therefore   be legitimate  to  construe sub-el. (c) as  not  importing  any qualification  on  the ground of age.  But it is  said  that sub-cls. (a) and (b) form a distinct group having  reference to  judicial  officers,  whereas, cl.  (c)  is  confined  to Advocates,  who form a distinct category by themselves,  and that  in view of this difference, considerations as  to  age applicable to cl. (a) and (b) need not be applicable to  el. (c).  There is undoubtedly a distinction (1)  I. L. R.[1952] Nag. 409. 101 between cls. (a) and (b) on the one hand and c1. (c) on  the other.  But the  question is whether this has any reasonable relation  to  the  difference which is  sought  to  be  made between  the  two  classes  with reference  to  the  age  of appointment.   If  a retired Judge of the age of  sixty  can fittingly fill the office of a Member of the Tribunal  under s.  7, an Advocate of that age can likewise do so.   In  our view,  there  is no ground for importing in  s.  7(3)(c)  an implied qualification as to age, which is not applicable  to el. 7(3)(a) and (b). This  question was considered by a Bench of the Punjab  High Court  in  Prabhudayal v. State of Punjab  (1).   There  the validity  of the appointment of Shri A. N. Gujral under  the notification dated August 29, 1953, which is the very  point now  under debate, was challenged on the ground that  as  he was  over  sixty on that date, he was not  qualified  to  be appointed  under s. 1 (3)(c).  The Court held  approving  of the  decision  in  G.  D.  Karkare’s  case  (2),  that   the prescription   as  to  age  in  Art.  217  (1)  was  not   a qualification  to the office of a Judge under  Art.  217(2), and that a person who was more than sixty was qualified  for appointment under s. 7(3)(c). Reliance  is placed for the appellant on the terms of s.  7C which was substituted by the Amendment Act 36 of 1956 in the place  of  s. 7 as supporting the contention that age  is  a qualification for appointment under s. 7(3) (c). Section 7C is as follows :-               "No person shall be appointed to, or  continue               in,  the office of the presiding officer of  a               Labour  Court, Tribunal or National  Tribunal,               if-               (a)   he is not an independent pet-son or                (1) A. 1. R (1959) Pun. 460.                (2) 1.1 R.[1952] Nag. 409.               102               (b)   he  has attained the age  of  sixty-five               years’ " The  marginal note to that section which was also relied  on is as follows :-               "    Disqualifications   for   the   presiding               officers  of  Labour  Courts,  Tribunals   and               National Tribunals." The  argument of the appellant is that, in  prescribing  the age  as  a qualification under s. 7C, the  Legislature  only made  explicit  what was implicit in a.  7(3)(c),  and  that therefore the qualification on the basis of age should  also be imported in s. 7(3)(c).  This inference does not, in  our opinion,  follow.  The insertion of age qualification in  s. 7C  is more consistent with an intention on the part of  the

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Legislature  to  add,  in the light of the  working  of  the repealed  s.  7,  a new provision  prescribing  the  age  of retirement  for Members.  We agree with the decision of  the Punjab High Court in Prabhudayals case (1) and hold that  s. 7 (3) (c) does not import any qualification based on the age of  the person to be appointed, and that the appointment  of Shri A.   N.  Gujral on August 29, 1953, was valid under  a. 7(3)(c). (2)The next contention advanced for the appellant is  that the Notification dated April 19, 1957, appointing Shri A. N. Gujral as a Member of the Tribunal issued under s. 30 of the Amendment Act 36 of 1956 was not authorised by the terms  of that  section  and  that  therefore  there  was  no  validly constituted Tribunal from that date. Section 30 is as follows :-               "Savings  as  to  proceedings  pending  before               Tribunals   :   If  immediately   before   the               commencement of this Act there is pending  any               proceeding   in  relation  to  an   Industrial               dispute before a Tribunal constituted               (1)   A. I. R. [1959] Punj 460.               103               under the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 (14 of               1947),  as in force before such  commencement,               the   dispute  may  be  adjudicated  and   the               proceeding disposed of by that Tribunal  after               such commencement, as if this Act had not been               passed." The  contention  urged before us is that s. 7  under  ,Which Shri A. N. Gujral had been constituted Tribunal was repealed on  March 10, 1957, the notification dated April  19,  1957, appointing  him as a Member of the Tribunal is void.   There is  no substance in this contention.  Section  30  expressly provides for the life of the Tribunal being extended for the period  specified  therein, and that necessarily  implies  a power to continue Shri A. N. Gujral as the Tribunal, and  we should add that in view of our decision on point No. 3  this objection is practically of no importance. (3)Lastly,  it  is  contended that  the  transfer  of  the proceedings  pending  before  the old Tribunal  to  the  new Tribunal under the Notification dated October 31, 1957,  was invalid and inoperative.  Two grounds were urged in  support of  this contention.  One is that Shri A.N. Gujral  attained the  age  of  sixty-five on June 4, 1957, and  his  term  of office  would have then expired under s.7C. Then the  Punjab Legislature  enacted  Act  8  of 1957  raising  the  age  of retirement  under  s.70(b) from sixty-five  to  sixty-seven. That  was  with  a, view to continue  Shri  A.N.  Gujral  in office.   And this legislation came into force only on  June 3, 1957.  This Act, it is said offends Art. 14 as its object was  to benefit a particular individual, Shri  A.N.  Gujral, and  reference  was  made to a decision  of  this  Court  in Ameeroonissa  v. Mehboob (1) as supporting this  contention. There is no force in this contention.  There the legislation related to the estate of one (1)  [1953] S.C.R. 404. 104 Nawab  Waliuddoula,  and  it provided  that  the  claims  of Mahboob Begum and Kadiran Begum, who claimed as heirs  stood dismissed thereby and could not be called in question in any court of law.  And this Court held that it was repugnant  to Art.  14, as it singled out individuals and denied them  the right which other citizens have of resort to a court of law. But  the impugned Act, 8 of 1957 is of general  application, the  age being raised to sixty-seven with reference  to  all

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persons holding the office under that section.  The occasion which  inspired  the enactment of the statute might  be  the impending retirement of Shri A. N. Gujral.  But that is  not a   ground  for  holding  that  it  is  discriminatory   and contravenes  Art. 14, when it is, on its terms,  of  general application. The second ground of attack against the order of transfer is that it is not competent under s.30(2) of the Amendment  Act 36  of 1956 as further amended by the Punjab Act 9 of  1957. Section 30(2) is as follows :               "If  immediately  before the  commencement  of               this  Act there was pending any proceeding  in               relation  to  an industrial dispute  before  a               Tribunal  constituted  under  the   Industrial               Disputes  Act, 1947, as in force  before  such               commencement and such proceeding could riot be               disposed  of  by  that  Tribunal  due  to  the               Tribunal  having come to an end on the  expiry               of  the period for which it  was  constituted,               the  State  Government may  reconstitute  that               Tribunal  for  adjudicating that  dispute  and               disposing   of  that  proceeding  after   such                             commencement  as  if  this  Act  had  not  bee n               passed, and the proceeding may be continued by               that Tribunal from the, stage at which it  was               left." 105 The contention urged before us is that this provision has no retrospective   operation  and  that  in   consequence   the proceedings  which had been pending before the old  Tribunal on  March  10,  1957, could not be transferred  to  the  new Tribunal  under  this section.  This contention  is  clearly untenable, because the whole object of s.30(2) is to provide for  the hearing of disputes which were pending  before  the old  Tribunal, and its operation is entirely  retrospective. This contention must there. fore be rejected. In the result, the repeal fails and is dismissed with costs. Appeal dismissed.