Legal Document View

Unlock Advanced Research with PRISMAI

- Know your Kanoon - Doc Gen Hub - Counter Argument - Case Predict AI - Talk with IK Doc - ...
Upgrade to Premium
[Cites 14, Cited by 18]

Supreme Court of India

Katheeja Bai vs The Superintending Engineer & Ors on 10 May, 1984

Equivalent citations: 1984 AIR 1388, 1984 SCR (3) 798, AIR 1984 SUPREME COURT 1388, 1984 LAB. I. C. 1023, 1984 UJ (SC) 763, 1984 SCC (L&S) 564, (1984) 2 LAB LN 215, 1984 (3) SCC 518, (1984) 2 SERVLR 334

Author: O. Chinnappa Reddy

Bench: O. Chinnappa Reddy, A.P. Sen, E.S. Venkataramiah

           PETITIONER:
KATHEEJA BAI

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE SUPERINTENDING ENGINEER & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT10/05/1984

BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)

CITATION:
 1984 AIR 1388		  1984 SCR  (3) 798
 1984 SCC  (3) 518	  1984 SCALE  (1)865


ACT:
     Tamil Nadu	 Electricity  Board  Contributory  Provident
Fund Regulation Framed by Tamil Nadu Electricity Board under
Electricity Supply  Act 1948-Regulation	 37 Whether  Special
Contribution  to   be  made  by	 Electricity  Board  to	 the
Conbributory Provident	Fund of	 the employees	is  same  as
Gratuity under	Payment of Gratuity Act 1972-Whether Payment
of Gratuity  under Payment of Gratuity Act debars payment of
Special Contribution to be made under Regulation 37.
     Public Interest Litigation-Letter to Judge treated writ
petition.



HEADNOTE:
     Regulation 37  of	the  Tamil  Nadu  Electricity  Board
Contributory Provident	Fund Regulations framed by the Tamil
Nadu Electricity  Board under  the Electricity	Supply	Act,
1948 provides  that the	 Electricity Board shall credit to a
member's  provident  fund  account  a  special	contribution
calculated in  the specified  manner,  in  addition  to	 the
contribution credited  under Regulation	 11, if the Board is
satisfied that	the service  of the  member  has  been	good
efficient and faithful and the member has not been dismissed
from service or the member has not been removed from service
in which case the sanction of the Board had to be obtained.
     The Payment  of  Gratuity	Act,  1972  which  was	also
applicable to  the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board provided for
the payment  of gratuity to employees who would retire after
rendering service for a specified number of years.
     The petitioner's  husband retired in 1976 after serving
the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board for about 34 years and died
three  months	thereafter.  The  petitioner  was  paid	 her
husband's subscription	to the	Contributory Provident	Fund
and interest  and the  Electricity Board's  contribution and
interest and also the gratuity under the payment of Gratuity
Act, 1972.  The Electricity  Board did	not pay	 the Special
Contribution to	 be made by it to the contributory Provident
Fund under  Regulation 37  on the  ground that	the  special
contribution  being   nothing  other  than  the	 payment  of
gratuity, they	could not  be asked  to pay  gratuity  twice
over, once  under Payment  of Gratuity	Act and	 again under
Regulation 37.	The petitioner	having got  no	relief	from
anywhere wrote	a letter  to a	Judge of  the Supreme  Court
which was treated as a writ petition.
     Allowing the petition,
799
^
     HELD: The Electricity Board cannot avoid payment of the
special Contribution  to  Provident  Fund  under  their	 own
Provident Fund Regulations on the pretext that it is akin to
or the	same  as  Gratuity  payable  under  the	 Payment  of
Gratuity Act.  In the  first  place,  the  Board,  in  their
Regulations,   have    themselves   labelled   the   Special
Contribution under  Regulation 37  as a Special contribution
to Provident  Fund and not as Gratuity. It is not as if they
were unaware  of the word 'Gratuity' and that it meant since
it is  found that  there is a reference in Regulation 5 to a
Gratuity Scheme	 of the Tamil Nadu Government which had been
adopted	 by   the  Board.  The	Special	 Contribution  under
Regulation 37  is part	of a well thought out Provident Fund
Scheme designed	 to benefit  'good, efficient  and faithful'
employees (borrowing  the words	 from the Regulation itself)
by making  annual contributions	 in addition  to the monthly
contributions under Regulation 11. This is what appears from
Regulation 37  itself. There  is no  justification for first
dubbing it  as a  gratuity on the ground that it has some of
the known characteristics of gratuity and then proceeding to
deny the  employees the	 befit of  it on the ground that the
Board are paying gratuity under the Payment of Gratuity Act.
If the	Special Contribution  has some	common features with
gratuity, it has also distinctive features which distinguish
it from	 gratuity payable under the Payment of Gratuity Act.
[803B-F]
     In view  of the finding that Special Contribution under
Regulation 37  is not  the same as gratuity under Payment of
Gratuity Act,  the argument  that the  provision for Special
Contribution under  Regulation 37  was inconsistent with the
provisions of  the Payment of Gratuity Act and therefore the
latter should  prevail to  the exclusion  of the former must
fail. [804H; 805A]



JUDGMENT:

ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 13009 of 1983. (Under article 32 of the Constitution of India) Gopal Subra aniam (A.C) for the Petitioner Dr. Y.S. Chitale, A.V. Rangam and Mrs. Sarla Chandra for the Respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. Smt. Katheeja Bai, is the widow of Abdul Salam who retired as a Line Inspector, Grade I, in the employment of the Tamil Nadu State Electricity Board on 31.7.76 and who unfortunately died on 15.10.76. Smt. Katheeja Bai failed to get from her late husband's employers certain amounts which she claimed were due to her husband. She knocked continuously but in vain, at the doors of the Regional Provident Commissioner, Madras, Central Provident Commissioner, New Delhi and the Minister for Labour Government of India for several years for 800 redress. In sheer desperation she ultimately turned to this Court as a last resort. Unable to engage a lawyer, she addressed a letter to a learned judge of the Court setting forth her grievance. After being processed in the Registry, the letter was treated as a Writ Petition under Art 32 of the Constitution. A Rule Nisi was issued and the Tamil Nadu State Electricity Board have appeared before us through counsel. At our request Sri Gopala Subramanyam argued the case for the widow as amicus curiae. He presented the . case with understanding and thoroughness and we are grateful to him, as also to Dr. Chitaley who presented the employer's case with his usual fairness.

In exercise of the powers conferred by s.79(c) of the Electricity Supply Act, 1948, the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board made the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board Contributory Provident Fund Regulations. Regulation 3 Provides for this establishment of a fund known as the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board Employees'' Contributory Provident Fund, with effect from 1.7.57. Regulation 3-A to 3-K provide for the management and administration of the fund by the Board of Trustees. Regulation 4 prescribes that the Fund shall be governed by regulation a i may be in force for the time being but provides that no addition, alteration or repeal, of any regulation which may adversely effect a subscriber shall be retrospective. Regulation 5 provides that all employees who are eligible for the Contributory Provident Fund (Tamil Nadu) Scheme and Gratuity Scheme of the Government of Tamil Nadu except certain categories of employees with whom we are not concerned shall become subscribers to the fund on completion of three months continuous service. Regulation 6 prescribes that an account shall be opened in the name of each member in which shall be credited, the member's subscriptions and interest thereon, the contributions made by the Electricity-Board to his account and interest thereon and the pre-existing account before the Electricity Department was taken over by the Electricity Board. Regulation 9 provides for subscription to the fund by members at a the rate of 7-1/2% of pay plus dearness allowance. Regulation 11 provides for contribution by the Electricity Board to the account of each member at the rate of 7% of pay plus dearness allowance. The member's subscription along with the Electricity Board's Contribution is required to be credited to the individual account of the member before the 15th of every month. Regulation 37 prescribes that the Electricity Board shall credit to a member's Provident Fund account a special contribution calculated in the specified manner in addi-

801

tion to the contribution credited under Regulation 11, if the Board is satisfied that the service of the member has been good, efficient and faithful and the member has not been dismissed from service or the member has not been removed from service in which case the sanction of the Board has to be obtained. In the case of a Class I or Class II employee who quits service on attainment of the age of superannuation, he is to be credited, if his service exceeds 18 years with six months pay plus half a month's pay for each completed year of service after the 18th but not so is to exceed, in all, twelve months' pay or rupees twenty-five thousand, whichever is less. If the employee's service does not exceed 18 years, he is to be credited with half a month's pay for each completed year of service so as not to exceed six months' pay. In the case of a Class III or Class IV employees who has attained the age of superannuation after 15 years' service, the Electricity Board is required to credit his account with half a month'S pay for each completed year of service, but not so as to exceed to 15 months' pay. If the service is short of 15 years, he is to be credited with half a month's pay for each completed year of service so as not is exceed six months' pay. It is provided in Regulation 37 that pay for the purpose of reckoning special contribution shall be the pay last drawn during the last three years of service, whichever is more. The Board is also empowered to withhold or reduce the Special Contribution in any particular case.

At this stage, we may refer to s. 12 of the Employees' Provident Funds, And Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952 which prohibits all employer from reducing directly or indirectly the total quantum of benefits in the nature of old age pension, gratuity or Provident Fund or Life Insurance to which the employee is entitled under the terms of his employment, express or implied, by reason only of his liability for the payment of any contribution to the fund (which is defined by s. 2(h) as meaning a Provident Fund established under the employees' Provident Fund Scheme framed under s. 5).

In 1972, Parliament enacted the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972 to provide for a scheme for the payment of gratuity to employees in certain establishments. There is no dispute that the Act applies to the Tamil Nadu State Electricity Board. Section 4 of the Act requires payment of gratuity to an employee who has rendered continuous service for not less than five years, on the termination of his employment on superannuation or on retirement or on his 802 death or disablement due to accident or disease. The employer is required to pay the gratuity to the employee at the rate of fifteen days' wages for each completed year of service or part thereof in excess of six months. The amount of gratuity is not to exceed 20 months' wages. The employer is not required to pay any gratuity to an employee if the service of the employee has been terminated for any act, wilful omission or negligence causing any damage or loss to, or destruction of, property belonging to the employer, or if the services of the employee have been terminated for riotous or disorderly conduct or any other act of violence on his part or if his a services have been terminated for any act involving moral turpitude provided that such offence is committed by him in the course of his employment. Section 14 provides that the contribution of the Act shall have effect notwithstanding anything inconsistent therewith contained in any enactment other than this Act or in any instrument or contract having effect by virtue of any enactment other than the Payment of Gratuity Act.

Abdul Salam, who held a non-pensionable post, retired on 31.7.76, after a service of 34 years and live months. He died on 15.10.76 within three months after his retirement. He was entitled or, in this case his widow was entitled to the payment of the entire amount standing to his credit in his Provident Fund account and the gratuity payable under the Payment of Gratuity Act. The Electricity Board, however, took the stand that she was entitled to be paid the member's subscription and interest, the employer's contribution and interest and gratuity but not the special contribution under Regulation 37 of the Tamil Nadu State Electricity Board Contributory Provident Fund Regulations. The reason for the Board's attitude was that the special contribution Required to be paid under Regulation 37 was nothing other than payment of gratuity and that they could not be asked to pay gratuity twice over, once under the Payment of Gratuity Act and again under Regulation 37. Since they were ready to pay the gratuity payable under the Payment of Gratuity Act, which was more favourable to the employee, they were not obliged to make payment of the contribution under Regulation

37. We may mention here that the Board has paid to the widow, the member's subscription with interest and the employer's contribution with interest but not the special contribution under Regulation 37. The Board has paid a sum of Rs. 4275/- towards gratuity under the payment of Gratuity Act but a sum of 803 Rs. 3167/- is admittedly yet due from the Board towards gratuity. In the counter affidavit filed on behalf of the Electricity Board we are not able to find any reason for non-payment of the balance of gratuity.

We are unable to appreciate how the Electricity Board can avoid payment of the Special Contribution to Provident Fund under their own Provident Fund Regulations on the pretext that it is akin to or the same as Gratuity payable under the Payment of Gratuity Act. In the first place, the Board, in their Regulations, have themselves labelled the Special Contribution under Regulation 37 as a Special Contribution to Provident Fund not as a Gratuity. It is not as if they were unaware of the word 'Gratuity' and what it meant since we find that there is a reference in Regulation 5 to a Gratuity Scheme of the Tamil Nadu Government which had been adopted by the Board. The Special Contribution under Regulation 37 is part of a well thought out Provident Fund Scheme designed to benefit 'good' efficient and faithful employees (we borrow the words from the Regulation itself) by ranking annual contributions in addition the monthly contributions under Regulation 11. This is what appears from Regulation or itself, we see no justification for first dubbing it as a gratuity on the ground that it has some of the known characteristics af gratuity and then proceeding to deny the employees the benefit of it on the ground that the Board are paying gratuity under the Payment of Gratuity Act. If the Special Contribution has some common features with gratuity, it has also distinctive features which distinguish it from gratuity payable under the payment of Gratuity Act, For example, one important feature which discriminates the Special Contribution under Regulation 37 from gratuity under the Payment of Gratuity Act is that while the Payment of the latter is obligatory and can only be denied if the employee's services have been terminated for his riotous or disorderly conduct or any other act of violence on his part or any act which constitutes an offence involving moral turpitude and can also be denied to the extent of the damage or loss caused by the employee, where the employee's services have been terminated for any act, wilful omission or negligence causing any damage or to loss, or destruction of property belonging to the employer, the payment of the former is discretionary and may not be made if the service of the employee has not been good, efficient and faithful. The employee has also the discretion to withhold or reduce the Special Contribution in any particular case. Of course, 804 the employer cannot arbitrarily claim that the employee's service was not good, efficient and faithful, or with-hold or reduce the Special Contribution in an arbitrary fashion. Even so, the distinction between the mandate of the Payment of Gratuity Act and the discretion involved in making the Special Contribution under Regulation 37 is intelligibly clear. Another feature which distinguishes the two is that the benefit of the Payment of Gratuity Act is confined to persons drawing wages not exceeding Rs. 1000 and does not extend to persons employed in a managerial or administrative capacity whereas the Special Contribution under Regulation 37 is not so confined and extends to every employee of the Board a except casual employees, State or Central Government employees employed with the Board on foreign service terms etc. etc. For the purpose of contribution of Provident Fund under Regulation 11 or Regulation 37 it makes no difference that a person is employed in a managerial or administrative capacity on that he draws wages more than Rs. 1000 per month. A third feature which marks the two apart is that the contribution to the Provident Fund whether under Regulation 11 or Regulation 37 becomes part of the Fund established by Regulation 3 and is to be managed and administered by trustees under Regulation 3-A to 3-K, whereas the payment of Gratuity Act does not provide for the Constitution of a fund to be managed and administered by trustees. In addition to these broad features, we have the outstanding circumstance that the Board themselves have described the contribution under Regulation 37 as a contribution to Provident Fund and have chosen to include it in their Provident Fund Scheme. That should conclude the matter.

Dr. Chitaley invited our attention to s. 14 of the Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972 which provides, "The provisions of this Act or any rule made thereunder shall have effect notwithstanding anything inconsistent therewith contained in an enactment other than this Act or in any instrument or contract having effect by virtue of any enactment other than this Act." He argued that the provision for Special Contribution under Regulation 37 was inconsistent with the provisions of the Payment of Gratuity Act and therefore the latter should prevail to the exclusion of the former. This argument is dependent on the assumption that the Special Contribution under Regulation 37 is the same thing as the gratuity contemplated by the Payment of 805 Gratuity Act. We have held that it is not and the argument, therefore, fails.

There was then the usual lament that a large number of employees were involved and, therefore, the cost will be heavy. We do not understand this argument at all. Does it mean that beneficent legislations and beneficent schemes must be confined to small establishments employing a few workers only ? On the other hand, it is misleading to say that the cost is heavy. The cost is made to appear heavy divorced from the size of the establishment. If the establishment is huge and if a large number of workmen are employed the total wage bill may appear to be heavy, but is it really so ? Is it disproportionate to the size of the establishment, its resources, its revenues and its other expenditure ? Is the individual wage-bill also very high ? To talk of heavy cost without reference to other circumstances is to present an entirely unfaithful picture. We heed make no further comment.

In the result we direct the respondent Board to pay to the petitioner the whole of the Special Contribution under Regulation 37 which was payable to her husband and the balance of the Gratuity payable under the Payment of Gratuity Act, part of which we are told has been paid leaving the sum of Rs. 3167 unpaid. These amounts should be paid to the petitioner with interest at 15% per annum from the date on which the amounts fell due. The respondent Board should also pay a sum of Rs. 2500 to the petitioner towards compensatory costs. We must add that the case had left us with the feeling of uneasiness and distress at the plight of helpless persons like the petitioner whose repeated representations to those in authority were left uncared for so the tediously long despite frequent protestations of social justice.

H.S.K. Petition allowed.

806