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[Cites 7, Cited by 98]

Supreme Court of India

J. D. Jain vs The Management Of State Bank Of India & ... on 17 December, 1981

Equivalent citations: 1982 AIR 673, 1982 SCR (2) 227, 1982 (1) SCC 143, AIR 1982 SUPREME COURT 673, 1982 LAB. I. C. 356, (1982) 44 FACLR 65, 44 FACLR 65, 1982 UJ (SC) 73, (1982) IJR 29 (SC), 1982 (14) LAWYER 33, 1982 SCC(CRI) 122, 1982 APS LAB CAS 85, 1982 (1) SCJ 176 (2), 1982 SCC (L&S) 68, (1982) 1 LABLJ 54, (1982) 1 LAB LN 33, (1982) 1 SCWR 243, (1982) 60 FJR 50, (1982) 1 SCJ 176(2), (1981) 3 SERVLR 175, (1982) 2 SERVLJ 96

Author: Baharul Islam

Bench: Baharul Islam, V.D. Tulzapurkar, A. Varadarajan

           PETITIONER:
J. D. JAIN

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE MANAGEMENT OF STATE BANK OF INDIA & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT17/12/1981

BENCH:
ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)
BENCH:
ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)

CITATION:
 1982 AIR  673		  1982 SCR  (2) 227
 1982 SCC  (1) 143	  1981 SCALE  (3)1884


ACT:
     Constitution of India 1950 Art. 226-Award of Industrial
Tribunal-Jurisdiction	of    High   Court-interference-When
arises.
     Industrial	 Disputes   Act	 1947	S.  11	A-Complaint-
Depositor against  bank employee-Debit	authority alteration
of-Withdrawal of  excess  money-Confession  by	employee  to
officer of  alteration and  withdrawal-Holding	of  domestic
enquiry-Non examination	 of depositor-Charge  of  fraud	 and
misappropriation proved-Employee  discharged  from  service-
Dispute raised-Issue  referred to  Tribunal-Tribunal holding
depositor  (complainant)   not	 examined-Evidence   against
employee  'hearsay'-Directing  reinstatement-High  Court  in
writ petition  setting aside  of tribunal-High Court Whether
correct in  interfering with award-Award whether vitiated by
misconception of law.
     Labour  Law-Domestic   enquiry-Guilt  whether   to	  be
established  beyond  reasonable	 doubt-Proof  of  misconduct
alone-Whether sufficient,
     Words & Phrases 'hearsay'-Meaning of



HEADNOTE:
     The Appellant  was working	 as a  Cashier in  a Bank. A
depositor who  had a Savings Bank Account with the Bank came
to the Bank to receive his Pass Book. On receipt of his Pass
Book from  the Counter	Clerk he  complained to	 the  ledger
keeper that, on a certain date he had withdrawn only Rs. 500
but a  debit entry  of Rs,  1,500 had been shown in the Pass
Book. The Ledger keeper took the depositor to the Supervisor
and The	 Agent and  his complaint  was	recorded.  When	 the
documents pertaining  to the withdrawal were examined it was
found that  the depositor had given a letter of authority to
the appellant  authorising withdrawal  from his account. The
letter of authority showed that it was for withdrawal of Rs.
1500  though   there  appeared	 to  be	 some  interpolation
suggesting that	 the figure  of Rs.  500 had been altered lo
the figure of Rs. 1500.
     A memorandum  of charge  was served on the appellant by
the Management	respondent No.	I and a disciplinary enquiry
was held.  The Enquiry	Officer submitted his report and his
findings were  that the	 appellant had	fraudulently altered
the  amount   in  the  letter  of  authority  given  by	 the
depositor, withdrew  Rs. 1500  from the	 depositor's account
and paid Rs. 500 only to the depositor and
228
misappropriated Rs.  1500. In  pursuance of  the enquiry the
appellant was discharged from service.
     The appellant  having raised  an industrial dispute the
matter was  referred to	 the Industrial Tribunal. Before the
Tribunal the  appellant denied	the charges and pleaded that
as the	depositor  was	not  examined  in  the	disciplinary
enquiry there  was no  legal  evidence	before	the  Enquiry
officer for  finding that he was guilty. Before the Tribunal
the Management	examined no witnesses but produced documents
and relied  on them.  The Tribunal held that on the evidence
before it  the appellant  could not be held guilty as in the
absence of  the evidence  of  the  depositor,  the  evidence
recorded was  'hearsay' and  directed reinstatement  to	 the
appellant with full back wages.
     The respondent  moved the	High Court under Article 226
and 227 which held that the charge against the appellant had
been established and quashed the award of the Tribunal.
     In the  appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf
of the appellant: (1) that the Tribunal exercised its powers
under Section  11 A  of the  Industrial Disputes Act and the
High Court  exercising powers  under Article  226/227 had no
jurisdiction to	 interfere with	 the award; (2) the Tribunal
rightly refused	 to rely  on the evidence which was hearsay;
the depositor  not having  been examined,  and (3)  the High
Court committed	 an error  in not  considering	the  receipt
executed by the depositor showing payment of Rs. 1000 to the
depositor.
     Dismissing the appeal,
^
     HELD:  The	  award	 of  the  Tribunal  is	vitiated  by
misconception of  the law involved. It erred in holding that
as  Kansal   (depositor)  was	not  examined,	 fraud	 and
misappropriation on  the part of appellant cannot be held to
be proved  and in  failing to appreciate the confession made
by the	appellant to  the higher officer that he had altered
the amount in figures and words in his own hand. [236 G]
     1. In  an application  for a  writ of  certiorari under
Article 226 for quashing the award of an Industrial Tribunal
the jurisdiction  of the High Court is limited. It can quash
the award  when the  Tribunal has  committed an error of law
apparent on  the face  of the  record or when the finding of
facts of the Tribunal is perverse. [233 B]
     In the instant case, three kinds of proceedings against
the delinquent	were possible:	(i) departmental proceedings
and  action,  (ii)  Criminal  prosecution  for	the  alleged
misappropriation of  the amount, and (iii) civil proceedings
for recovery  of the  amount alleged  to be misappropriated.
The respondent	adopted the  first course and instituted the
domestic enquiry.  In such  an enquiry	guilt  need  not  be
established beyond reasonable doubt; proof of misconduct may
be sufficient. [234 G-235 A]
     State of  Haryana &  Anr. v.  Rattan Singh	 A.I.R. 1977
S.C. 1512, referred to
229
     2. The  word  'hearsay'  is  used	in  various  senses.
Sometimes it means whatever a person declares on information
given by someone else. [235 E]
     In the  instant case,  the Tribunal after having made a
detailed reference  to the  evidence of	 the witnesses found
that a	complaint was  made by Kansal and that the appellant
confessed that	he had altered the debit authority, but held
That as	 Kansal	 was  not  examined,  this  was	 not  direct
evidence but  was of  the nature of 'hearsay' evidence, with
regard to  the fact  whether the  appellant manipulated	 the
documents, withdrew  the excess	 amount and  misappropriated
it, there  is no  direct evidence  of any  of the  witnesses
except the  appellant's confession.  The evidence  on  which
reliance has  been taken by the respondent is the confession
and circumstantial  evidence. The  evidence of	Kansal would
have been  primary and	material. if  the fact in issue were
whether	 Kansal	  authorised  the   appellant  to  make	 the
alterations in	the authority letter. But Kansal's complaint
was to the contrary. No rule of law enjoins that a complaint
has to	be in  writing as  insisted by the Tribunal. For the
purpose of  a departmental  enquiry, complaint substantiated
by circumstantial  evidence is	enough. What  the respondent
sought to  establish in the domestic enquiry was that Kansal
had made a verbal complaint with regard to the withdrawal of
excess money by the appellant. On the factum of complaint of
Kansal the  evidence of	 these four  witnessess is direct as
the complaint  is said	to have been made by Kansal in their
presence and  hearing. It  is not  therefore 'hearsay'.	 The
respondent has	succeeded in  proving that  a complaint	 was
made by Kansal on the evidence of these four witnesses. [236
A-E]
     Subramaniam v  Public Prosecutor  [1956]1	W.L.R.	965,
referred to
     3. The  receipt executed  by Kansal  showing payment by
the appellant  of Rs.  1000 to	the former is destructive of
the appellant's	 defence and  on  the  contrary	 proves	 the
respondent's case. [236 H-237A]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 495 of 1979.

Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated the 18th October, 1978 of the Delhi High Court in Civil Writ Petition No. 1292 of 1975.

R.R. Garg, U.R. Lalit and Randhir Jain for the Appellant.

M.C. Bhandare, S.A. Shroff, S.S. Shroff and Miss C.K Sachurita for Respondent No. 1.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by BAHARUL ISLAM J. This appeal by special leave is by the appellant, J.D. Jain. who was a workman and whose services have been terminated by the management of the State Bank of India (hereinafter called the respondent).

230

2. The material facts are these.

The appellant was working as a cashier in the Meerut City Branch of the State Bank of India. On June 21, 1971, one Dishan Prakash Kansal ('Kansal' for short) who had a Savings Bank account with the said branch of the State Bank came to the Bank to receive 3 his Pass Book. On receipt of the Pass Book from the counter clerk, Kansal complained to Wadhera who was the Ledger-keeper, that on February 8, 1971, he had withdrawn only Rs. 500 but a debit entry of Rs. 1,500 had been shown in the Pass Book. Wadhera thereupon took Kansal to the the Supervisor, R.P. Gupta, before whom Kansal repeated his complaint. Necessary documents pertaining to the said withdrawal were then examined and it was found that Kansal had given a 'letter of authority' (which expression means, we are told, the withdrawal application form) to the appellant on February 8, 1971 authorising him to withdraw the amount from his account. The letter of authority showed that it was for withdrawal of Rs. 1,500 though there appeared to be some interpolation suggesting that the figure of Rs. 500 had been altered to the figure of Rs. 1,500. The matter was then brought to the notice of M. Ramzan, the Agent of the State Bank, before whom also Kansal is said to have repeated his complaint.

3. Eventually on September 18, 1972, a memorandum of charges was served on the appellant by the respondent stating, inter alia that in the letter of authority, the appellant altered in his own handwriting with different ink the amount of Rs. 500 to Rs. 1,500 and thus received Rs. 1,000 in excess, passing only Rs. 500 to the pass-book holder, and that he subsequently, on June 24, 1971, deposited Rs 250 in the account of Kansal to liquidate a part or the amount misappropriated by him. The appellant replied to the charges. He denied the allegations. Thereupon the respondent appointed one Rajendra Prasad as an Enquiry officer and a formal disciplinary enquiry was held against the appellant. The Enquiry Officer submitted his report to the respondent on February 13, 1973. The findings of the Enquiry officer were that The appellant had fraudulently altered the amount in the letter of authority given to him by Kansal, withdrew Rs. 1,500 from Kansal's account and paid Rs. 500 only to Kansal and misappropriated Rs. 1000. The disciplinary authority on receipt of the report of the Enquiry officer passed the following order (material portion only):-

231
"2. Although, the charges against you are of a serious nature which would, in normal course, warrant your dismissal from the service of the Bank, yet keeping in view your past record, I am inclined to take a lenient view in the matter. Upon consideration of the matter, I have tentatively come to the decision that your misconduct be condoned and you be merely discharged of in terms of paragraphs 521 (5) (e) of the Sastry Award read with para graph 18.28 of the Desai Award and paragraph 1.1 of the Agreement dated the 31st March 1967 entered into between the Bank and the State Bank of India Staff Federation. Before, however, I take a final decision in the matter I would like to give you a hearing as to why the proposed punishment should not be imposed upon you. To enable you to do so, I enclose copies of the proceedings of the enquiry and findings of the Enquiry officer.
3. You may ask for a hearing or if you so prefer show cause in writing within one week of receipt by you thereof. If you fail therein, I will conclude that you have no cause to show in this behalf."

The appellant then submitted a representation to Shri V.B. Chadha, the Regional Manager of the State Bank of India on June 15, 1973. Shri Chadha after perusing the representation of the appellant and hearing him in person, recommended that the proposed punishment should not be imposed upon the appellant, on the grounds that Kansal had not been examined as a witness and that there had been no written complaint against the appellant. The respondent, however, did not accept the recommendation, and, by its memorandum of December 7, 1973, discharged the appellant from service with effect from the close of the business on December 22, 1973.

4. The appellant then having raised an industrial dispute, the Central Government, by its order dated January 17, 1975, referred the following issue to the Central Government Industrial Tribunal at Delhi for adjudication:

"Is the management of State Bank of India justified in discharging from service Shri J.D. Jain, Cashier of Meerut Branch, with effect from 22nd December, 1973? If not to what relief is he entitled ?"
232

5. Before the Tribunal, the appellant denied the charges, He inter alia, pleaded that as Kansal was not examined in the enquiry, there was no legal evidence before the inquiry officer for a finding that he was guilty.

The Tribunal framed the following two issues:-

"1. Whether a proper and valid domestic enquiry was held by the Bank and its effect ?
2. Is the management of State Bank of India justified in discharging from service Shri J.D. Jain, Cashier of Meerut Branch with effect from 22nd December, 1973 ? If not to what relief is he entitled ?"

Before the Tribunal, the Management examined no witnesses but produced certain documents and relied on them. The appellant also did not adduce any evidence.

On a perusal of the evidence recorded by the Enquiry officer, the Tribunal held that on the evidence before it, the appellant could not be held guilty as, according to it, in the absence of the evidence of Kansal, the evidence recorded was hearsay, with the result that it directed reinstatement of the appellant with full back wages from 22nd December, 1973. The respondent moved the High Court under Article 226 and 227 of the Constitution of India for quashing the award of the Tribunal. The High Court held that the charges against the appellant had been established and quashed the award of the Tribunal. It is against this judgment of the High Court that the present appeal by special leave is directed.

6. Mr. R.K. Garg, learned counsel appearing for the appellant makes three submissions before us:-

(1) That the Tribunal exercised its powers under Section 11 A of the Industrial Disputes Act and the High , Court, exercising powers under Article 2261227 of the Constitution, had no jurisdiction to interfere with the award of the Tribunal; (2) The Tribunal in the perspective of the broad contours of the case rightly refused to rely on the evidence which was hearsay? Kansal not having been examined;
233
(3) Assuming the evidence could be relied on, the High Court committed error in not considering the receipt executed by Kansal showing payment of Rs.

1000 to Kansal and its judgment is vitiated.

7. In an application for a Writ of Certiorari under Article 226 of the Constitution for quashing an award of an Industrial Tribunal, the jurisdiction of the High Court is limited. It can quash the award, inter alia, when the Tribunal has committed an error of law apparent on the face of the record or when the finding of facts of the Tribunal is perverse. In the case before us, according to the Tribunal, as Kansal was not examined, the evidence before it was hearsay and as such on the basis thereof the appellant could not be legally found guilty.

8. Before the Enquiry officer, the respondent examined the following witnesses:

Gupta (Witness 1), Wadhera, the Ledger Keeper (Witness 2), Mahesh Chander who was incharge of Savings Bank account on 8.2.1971 (Witness 3), M. Ramzan, Agent of the Bank (Witness 4), Sarkar (Witness 5), and Bhardwaj (Witness 6).
Bhardwaj was a leader of the employees' union of the respondent. He did not support the case of the respondent. The other witnesses supported the case of the respondent. Witnesses Nos. 1, 2, 4 and 5 depose that a verbal complaint was made by Kansal in their presence to the effect that he had authorised the appellant to withdraw Rs. 500 which sum was paid to him, but the entries showed that Kansal had withdrawn Rs. 1,500. Witnesses Vadhera, Ramzan and Sarkar also deposed that the appellant had confessed before them that he had made the alterations in the figure and in words of the sum. The Tribunal after having made detailed references to the evidence of the above witnesses in fact found, "All that this evidence thus, proves is that a complaint was made by Shri Kansal and that the workmen confessed that he had altered the debit authority. (emphasis added). Curiously, however, it held, "This evidence, by no means prove that the workman altered the debit authority to defraud or that he actually defrauded or that he mis.

appropriated the amount of Rs. 1,000 after paying Rs. 500 only to Mr. Kansal from the amount of Rs. 1,500 withdrawn from the bank by him as it was not direct evidence but was in the nature of 234 hearsay evidence since it was learnt through the medium of a third person and that person was not available." It further held, "There can be no hesitation, therefore, that the enquiry officer relied on hearsay evidence in arriving at his findings and it vitiated the enquiry." It went on, "All this could be enough for raising a suspicion only. In order to be called 'proved' it needed evidence which was not there." It further observed, "But the question was whether it was done without the consent or knowledge of Mr. Kansal. There was no evidence on the record to prove it. The only person who could speak about it was Mr. Kansal. He did not appear before the inquiry officer, therefore, there was no direct evidence that the change that was admittedly made by the workman in the debit authority was without Mr. Kansal's consent or knowledge or that it was designed to defraud "

(emphasis added) The positive findings of the Tribunal are:
(i) Kansal made the complaint as alleged by the management.
(ii) The appellant confessed that he had made the alterations charged with, as alleged by the management,
(iii) By implication it has also found that Rs. 1,000 in excess of the original amount of Rs. 500 was received by the appellant as a result of the alternations. But it has held that as Kansal was not examined, fraud and misappropriation on the part of the appellant cannot be held to be proved, as the evidence was 'hearsay'.

9. The learned Tribunal, it appears, was obvious of the fact that it was examining the evidence in a domestic enquiry, and not the evidence in a criminal prosecution entailing conviction and sentence.

In a case like the one before us, three kinds of proceedings against the delinquent are possible .

(i) departmental proceedings and action,

(ii) original prosecution for forgery and misappropriation,

(iii) civil proceedings for, recovery of the amount alleged to be misappropriated.

235

The respondent herein adopted course (i) and instituted the domestic enquiry in which the principle applied by the Tribunal is not applicable; in such an enquiry guilt need not be established beyond reasonable doubt, proof of misconduct may be sufficient.

The learned Tribunal has committed another error in holding that the finding of the domestic enquiry was based on "hearsay" evidence. The law is well-settled that the strict rules of evidence are not applicable in a domestic enquiry.

This Court in the case of State of Haryana & Anr. v. Rattan Singh held:

"It is well-settled that in a domestic enquiry the strict and sophisticated rules of evidence under the Indian Evidence Act may not apply. All materials which are logically probative for a prudent mind are permissible. There is no allergy to hearsay evidence provided it has reasonable nexus and credibility."

10. The next question is, is the evidence in the domestic enquiry really hearsay, as held by the Tribunal ?

The word 'hearsay' is used in various senses. Some times it means whatever a person is heard to say; some times it means whatever a person declares on information given by someone else. (See Stephen on Law of Evidence).

The Privy Council it the case of Subramaniam v/s. Public Prosecutor, observed: "Evidence of a statement made to a witness who is not himself called as a witness may or may not be hearsay. It is hearsay and inadmissible when the object of the evidence is to establish the truth of that is contained in the statement. lt is not hearsay and is admissible when it is proposed to establish by the evidence, not the truth of the statement but the fact that it was made. The fact that it was made quite apart from its truth, is frequently relevant in considering the mental state and conduct thereafter of the witness or some other persons in whose presence these statements are made."

236

11. In the instant case, the alleged misconduct of the appellant was that he forged documents, withdrew Rs. 1,500. 1,000 in excess of the amount he was authorised to do and misappropriated the excess amount of Rs. 1,000. With regard to the fact whether the appellant manipulated the documents, withdrew excess amount and misappropriated it, there is, of course, no direct evidence of any eye witness except the appellant's 'confession' referred to above. The evidence on which reliance has been taken by the respondent is the confession and circumstantial evidence, namely, the authority letter containing the admitted interpolations by the appellant in his own handwriting in different ink, and the addition of the digit "I" before 500. The evidence of Kansal would have been primary and material, if the fact in issue were whether Kansal authorised the appellant to make the alterations in the authority letter. But Kansal's complaint was to the contrary. For the purpose of a departmental enquiry complaint certainly not frivolous, but substantiated by circumstantial evidence, is enough. What the respondent sought to establish in the domestic enquiry was that Kansal had made a verbal complaint with regard to

1) the withdrawal of excess money by the appellant in presence of the four witnesses, namely, Wadhera, Gupta, Ramzan and Sarkar, aforesaid, against his advice. On the complaint of Kansal, the evidence of these four witnesses is direct as the complaint is said to have been made by Kansal in their presence and hearing; it is therefore, not hearsay. As the respondent has succeeded in proving that a come plaint was made by Kansal on the evidence of the above-named four witnesses, the respondent has succeeded. No rule of law enjoins that complaint has to be in writing as insisted by the Tribunal.

12. The learned Tribunal has committed yet another grevious error, in failing to appreciate the confessions made by the appellant "in the presence of witnesses and to the higher officer who appeared as witness" (as found by itself) namely, Wadhera, Ramzan, Gupta and Sarkar, aforesaid. The confessions of the appellant before the said witnesses were to the effect that he had altered the amount in figure and words in his own hand.

The award of the Tribunal, therefore, has been vitiated by misconception of the law involved in the case.

13. The last submission of Mr. Garg that the judgment of the High Court had been vitiated as it had not taken into consideration the receipt executed by Kansal showing payment by the appellant of Rs. 1000 to the former is destructive of the appellant's defence. In 237 Our opinion, this payment on the contrary, proves the respondent's case and destroys the appellant's defence which was that he had withdrawn Rs. 1,500 as advised by Kansal and paid the full amount to Kansal.

14. In our opinion the High Court was fully in its jurisdiction in quashing the award of the Tribunal. This appeal has no merit and is dismissed. We, however, leave the parties to bear their own costs.

N.V.K.					   Appeal dismissed.
238