Bombay High Court
Parsu Dhondi vs The Trustees Of The Port Of Bombay on 31 July, 1929
Equivalent citations: (1929)31BOMLR1304, AIR 1930 BOMBAY 44
JUDGMENT Murphy, J.
1. The workman in this case was injured while stacking certain bales in a shed alongside the wharf in the Victoria Docks, Bombay. It is contended before us that the words "for the purpose of" unloading, loading, &c, which are to be found in Schedule II (5) of the Workmen's Compensation Act VIII of 1923, should be interpreted very liberally, and as implying a wider meaning than had the word "in" been used in their place. But it seems to me that such a meaning cannot be read into them and that the expression "for the purpose of" used in this connection means the same thing as "in" and that other words would have been used had it been intended to include a man, injured while engaged in preparations for the purpose of ultimately, loading bales on to a ship, In fact the same argument might be used to apply to the case of every person engaged in working on such bales at any one of the many steps which intervene from where the bales are pressed in the mill to where they are stacked ready for loading into a ship, and it is clear that a line must be drawn somewhere. I think that the meaning of the term used is clear, and that protection under the Act is meant for the workmen who are actually engaged in the process of handling the bales, so as to transfer them from the wharf to the hold of a ship which is actually being loaded. But the workman in question was only stacking the bales in a shed and it does not appear that the ship which was to carry them was then being loaded. I agree with the answer proposed by the learned Chief Justice to the question in the reference and think that the claimant cannot be awarded compensation in this case.