JAYDIP INDUSTRIES, THANA Vs. THE WORKMEN

PETITIONER:
JAYDIP INDUSTRIES, THANA

Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE WORKMEN

DATE OF JUDGMENT16/12/1971

BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.

CITATION:
1972 AIR  605          1972 SCR  (2) 920
1972 SCC  (3) 302
CITATOR INFO :
R        1974 SC 526     (14)

ACT:
Industrial  Tribunal-Jurisdiction  to fix minimum  wages  at
rates higher than those fixed by government during  pendency
of  industrial    dispute-Minimum     Wages Act  1948  S.  3(2A).
Industrial dispute-Minimum wages, what is.

HEADNOTE:
During    the  pendency of an industrial dispute    between     the
appellant and its workmen, arising out of the demand of     the
workmen for higher scales of pay, the appropriate government
fixed  under section 3 of the Minimum Wages Act,  1948,     the
minimum     rates    of  wages  for    the  employees    employed  in
scheduled  employments including the  appellant’s  industry.
The tribunal found that the appellant concern was not finan-
cially    stable.     It fixed the minimum wages at rates  higher
than  the  rate fixed by the government.  In its  award     the
tribunal referred to the minimum rates of wages fixed in the
several     awards     passed     by it from 1962  onwards  and    also
considered  the     rist in the cost of living.  It  also    took
into  account  the  consumer price index for  the  month  of
December, 1966, and that for the month of January, 1967, for
coming    to  the     conclusion that  rates     higher     than  those
specified in the notification published by government should
be  fixed  as minimum wages.  On the questions    whether     the
tribunal was right in fixing wages at rates higher than     the
rates  fixed  by the government under s. 3 of  the  Act     and
whether what was fixed by the tribunal were minimum wages,
HELD : (i) Sub-section (2A) of section 3 makes it clear that
even  after  the fixation of minimum rates of wages  by     the
appropriate government under s. 3 of the Act, it is open  to
an  Industrial Tribunal adjudicating an     industrial  dispute
relating  to wages payable to the employees in    a  scheduled
employment to fix minimum wages at higher or lower rates, if
the  dispute was pending at the time of fixation of  minimum
ages under s.  3. [924 G]
(ii ) Minimum wages can provide not only for the  sustenance
of life, but also for the preservation of the efficiency  of
the  worker.  The rates of wages fixed by the tribunal    were
neither fair wages nor wages bordering on fair wages.    They
were minimum wages as explained by this Court.    As such     the
capacity  of  the  industry  to     pay  was  not    a   relevant
consideration. [925 F]
U.  Unichovi v. State of Kerala. [1962] 1 S.C.R. at p.    957,
applied.
The tribunal was not wrong in taking into account the rates
of minimum wages fixed in the several awards for the workmen
employed  in  the city of Bombay as affording  criteria     for
fixing minimum rates of wages with suitable modification for
the workmen employed under the appellant. [926 E]

JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 912 of 1967.
921
Appeal    by Special Leave from the Award dated March 3,    1967
of the Industrial Tribunal, Maharashtra, Bombay in Reference
(IT) No. 1 of 1968.
I. N. Shroff for the appellant.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mathew,     J. This appeal Mathew, j. This appeal,     by  special
leave,    is from an award passed by the Industrial  Tribunal,
Maharashtra, Bombay, on March 3, 1967.
The  Government of Maharashtra referred to the    Tribunal  on
December 31, 1965, under section 10(1) (d) of the industrial
Disputes  Act,    1947, the industrial  dispute  between    M/s.
Jaydip    Industries,  Thana, and the workmen  employed  under
them,  arising    out  of the following demands  made  by     the
workmen
(A)  Following    monthly scales of pay should  be  introduced
for all categories of workmen :
Rs.
Unskilled                150-5.00-200.00
Semi-skilled            175-7.50-250.00
Skilled               225-10.00-325.00
Highly skilled           350-25.00-600.00
(B)   The above    scales     of   pay    are
consolidated  and are on the basis  of  Bombay
Working Class Cost of Living Index Number 480.
In  case    if index number move above  480     for
every  point  rise in  Index  Number,  workmen
should  be paid ten paise per day as  dearness
allowance.
(C)   The     above rates of pay should  be    made
effective from 1st February 1965.
(D)   For     the  conversion  of  present  daily
rates  into  monthly rates, the  present    rate
should  be multiplied by thirty.     The  amount
should  then be fitted in the above  grades.
If the amount fells short of minimum of Grades
demanded the same should be brought up to     the
minimum.
(E)   After  making  adjustment in  the  above
manner  adjustment increments at ‘the rate  of
one  for    every one year of  service  or    part
thereof  in  excess of six  months  should  be
added to the pay.
922
The  employer  is a partnership concern consisting  of    five
partners  and is carrying on the business  of  manufacturing
“paper    board”, at its factory situated in  Majiwada  within
the   limits  of  the  panchayat  of  that   village.     The
partnership  was started in the year 1959, on a capital     of
Rs.  1,50,0001-.  The capital has since then been  increased
and  it     was  Rs. 2 lakhs in 1965.  The     number     of  workmen
employed  in the concern, at the time of the reference,     was
about  150.  The workmen were being paid fixed    consolidated
wages.
The  employer contended before the Tribunal, by its  written
statement  dated February 8, 1966, that it has no  financial
capacity  to  pay  any    additional wages,  as  it  has    been
suffering heavy losses year after year.
During the pendency of the disputes before the Tribunal, the
Government  of Maharashtra fixed the minimum rates of  wages
for   the  employees  employed    in   scheduled     employments
including  the paper and paper-board manufacturing  industry
under section 3 of the Minimum Wages Act, 1948,     hereinafter
called the Act, by notification published in the Maharashtra
Government Gazette dated August 4, 1966.  In  implementation
of the notification, the wages of the workmen concerned were
raised    with  effect from October, 1966.  The  workmen    were
being paid wages at the following rates, before the date  of
the award, in pursuance of the notification :-
Unskilled                 Rs. 90 per month
Semi-skilled             Rs. 100 per month
Skilled-B                 Rs.115 per month
Skilled-A                 Rs. 130 per month
The Tribunal considered in detail the financial capacity  of
the  employer on the basis of the balance sheets and  profit
and loss accounts of the employer for the years 1960 to 1965
and  found that its total loss for those years    amounted  to
Rs. 78,000′ and on that basis its annual average loss worked
out  to     Rs. 13,000 and so the concern was  not     financially
stable.      The Tribunal then came to the conclusion,  on     the
basis  of  the    minimum rates of wages fixed by     it  in     the
awards in the case of M/s.  Kondivitta Paper and Board Mills
(Private)   Limited,   Bombay,    published   in     Maharashtra
Government Gazette, dated November 14, 1963, page 3750),  in
the   case  of    Bombay    Metal  Factory,     published  in     the
Maharashtra  Government     Gazette dated May  27,     1965  (page
1963),    and  in     the  case  of    Ratan  Industries,   Bombay,
published
923
in Maharashtra Government Gazette dated June 23, 1966  (page
1974),    that the rates of wages for the workmen employed  in
question should be fixed at the following rates:-
Daily-rated                Monthly-rated
Unskilled     Rs. 4 .50    Un-skilled   Rs. 117.00
Semi-skilled     Rs. 6 .00    Semi-skilled   Rs. 156.00
Skilled         Rs. 7 .50    Skilled         Rs. 195.00
Highly-skilled     Rs. 9 -50    Highly-skilled Rs. 247.00
and said that
“The  above wage rates shall be deemed  to  be
fixed as at Bombay Consumer Price Index figure
660.   For a rise of every ten points  in     the
Index  Figure  the workmen shall be  given  an
increase    in  the wages at the rate  of  seven
paise  per day.  And for a fall of  every     ten
points  in the Index Figure there shall  be  a
reduction     in the wages at the rate  of  seven
paise per day.”
The Tribunal also held that wages it fixed were the  minimum
rates  of wages for the workmen in question  and  therefore,
the capacity of the employer to pay was irrelevant.
It was argued for the appellant that the Tribunal was  wrong
in fixing minimum wages at higher rates than those fixed  by
the  Government     under section 3 of the Act  without  taking
into account the financial capacity of the employer to    pay.
In  other  words,  the    argument  was  that  when  once     the
appropriate  Government has fixed minimum rates of wages  in
the  employment under section 3 of the Act, it was not    open
to  the     Tribunal to fix higher rates of  wages     as  minimum
wages  and,  therefore,     the rates of  wages  fixed  by     the
Tribunal  were not minimum wages, but fair wages, or at     any
rate  wages bordering on fair wages, and so,  the  financial
capacity  of  the  employer to bear  the  additional  burden
should have been taken into account.
The short question for consideration, therefore, is  whether
the Tribunal was right in fixing wages at rates higher    than
the  rates  fixed by the Government under section 3  of     the
Act, and whether what was fixed by the Tribunal were minimum
wages.
Section     3(1)  of  the Act  provides  that  the     appropriate
Government may fix the minimum rates of wages payable to em-
ployees employed in employments specified in Part I or    Part
R  of  the Schedule thereof and in any employment  added  to
either
924
part  by  notification under section 27.  By clause  (b)  of
section     3(1), the appropriate Government is given power  to
review at such intervals as it may think fit, such intervals
not  exceeding    five years, the minimum rates  of  wages  so
fixed and  revise the minimum rates, if     necessary.   Sub-
section (2A) of section 3 provides
“(2A) Where  in  respect    of  an    industrial
dispute relating to the rates of wages payable
to   any    of  the     employees  employed  in   a
scheduled      employment,  any   proceeding      is
pending before a Tribunal or National Tribunal
under  the Industrial Disputes Act,  1947,  or
before any like authority under any other     law
for the time being in force, or an award    made
by  any  Tribunal, National Tribunal  or    such
authority is in operation, and a    notification
fixing or revising ‘the minimum rates of wages
in  respect  of the  scheduled  employment  is
issued during the pendency of such  proceeding
or   the     operation  of    the   award,   then,
notwithstanding  anything     contained  in    this
Act, the minimum rates of wages so fixed or so
revised  shall  not apply to  those  employees
during  the period in which the proceeding  is
pending  and  the     award made  therein  is  in
operation,  or, as the case may be, where     the
notification  is issued during the    pe
riod  of
operation of an award, during that period; and
where such proceeding or award relates to     the
rates of wages payable to all the employees in
the scheduled employment, no minimum rates  of
wages  shall be fixed or revised in  respected
that employment during the said period.”
It  is, therefore, clear that the minimum wage    can  provide
ceedings  before the Tribunal that the notification  by     the
Maharashtra  Government fixing minimum rates of     wages    came
into  operation.  The sub-section would make it     clear    that
even  after  the fixation of minimum rates of wages  by     the
appropriate  Government     under section 3 of the Act,  it  is
open  to an Industrial Tribunal adjudicating  an  industrial
dispute     relating  to wages payable to the  employees  in  a
scheduled employment to fix minimum wages at higher or lower
rates, if the dispute was pending at the time of fixation of
minimum wages under section 3 of the Act.  So it was open to
the  Tribunal to fix rates of minimum wages at rates  higher
than  the rates fixed by the Government under section  3  of
the  Act.  In other words the Tribunal was not bound by     the
fixation  of  the minimum rates of wages by  the  Government
under  the provisions of section 3 of the Act and could     fix
higher rates as minimum wages in its award.
925
In considering the question what are the component  elements
of  minimum  wages,  this Court observed as  follows  in  U.
Unichoyi v.    State of Kerala(1): -
“Sometimes the minimum wage is described as  a
bare  minimum wage in order to distinguish  it
from the wage structure which is    ’subsistence
plus’  or fair wage, but too much emphasis  on
the  adjective  ‘bare’  in  relation  to     the
minimum  wage is apt to lead to the  erroneous
assumption that the maintenance wage is a wage
which  enables  the worker to cover  his    bare
physical    needs  and keep himself     just  above
starvation.   That clearly is not intended  by
the  concept  of minimum wage.  On  the  other
hand,  since the capacity of the    employer  to
pay is treated as irrelevant, it is but  right
that  no    addition  should  be  made  to     the
components  of  the minimum wage    which  would
take the minimum wage near the lower level  of
the  fair     wage,    but  the  contents  of    this
concept must ensure for the employee not    only
his  subsistence    and that of his     family     but
must also preserve his efficiency as a worker.
The  Act contemplates that minimum wage  rates
should  be fixed in the  scheduled  industrial
with  the dual object of providing  sustenance
and maintenance of ‘the worker and his  family
and preserving his efficiency as a worker.”
It  is, therefore, clear that the minimum wage    can  provide
not  only for the bare sustenance of life but also  for     the
preservation  of  the efficiency of the worker.     We  do     not
think  that  the rates of wages fixed by the  Tribunal    were
fair  wages or wages bordering on fair wages.  The  Tribunal
has  referred  to The minimum rates of wages  fixed  in     the
several     awards     passed by it from 1962     onwards,  and    also
considered  the rise in the cost of living.  In     particular,
the  Tribunal was careful to take into account the  Consumer
Price  Index for the month of December, 1966. and  that     for
the  month  of January, 1967, for coming to  the  conclusion
that  rates higher than those specified in the    notification
published  by Government should be fixed as  minimum  wages.
As  the rates fixed by the Tribunal were minimum  rates     of
wages  as  explained in the case of U.    Unichoy     v.State  of
Kerala(1), we do not think that the capacity of the industry
to pay was a relevant consideration.
There  was also no material before the Tribunal to  come  to
the  conclusion     that the Government in fixing    the  minimum
rates  of wages, took into consideration all the  components
in the fixation
(1)  [1962] 1 S.C.R. 957.
926
Of  minimum wages as explained by this Court in U.  Unichoyi
v. State of Kerala(1).
In the light of the provisions of section 3 (2A) of the Act,
we  hold  that the Tribunal was not bound by  the  rates  of
minimum wages fixed by the Government under section 3 of the
Act  and  that it was open to the Tribunal to fix  rates  of
minimum     wages    to be paid to the workmen concerned  in     the
disputes   at  figures    higher    than  those  fixed  by     the
Government.
It  was     contended  on    behalf of  the    appellant  that     the
employer  has  his  place of business outside  the  city  of
Bombay and that in the city of Bombay, the wages for workmen
are  generally    higher    than those  outside  the  city,     and
therefore,  the     Tribunal went wrong in taking    the  minimum
rates  of wages fixed in the various awards for     workmen  in
the city of Bombay as criteria for fixing the minimum  wages
for workmen outside the city.  The Tribunal considered    this
question  and held that the rates of minimum wages fixed  by
the Government for the city of Bombay, the town of Thana and
also  for  the village of Majiwada,  where  the     appellant’s
factory is situate, are the same and so, the rates of  wages
at  Majiwada are not lower than the wage rates obtaining  in
the  city of Bombay and Thana.    We do not, therefore,  think
that  the  Tribunal went wrong in’ taking into    account     the
rates  of minimum wages fixed in the several awards for     the
workmen employed in the city of Bombay as affording criteria
for fixing minimum rates of wages with suitable modification
for the workmen employed under the appellant.
We dismiss the appeal but, since there is no appearance     for
the respondent, we make no order as to costs,.
K.B.N.                   Appeal dismissed.,
(1) [1962] 1 S.C.R. 957
927

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